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Church Bells
18 Church Bells. [Decem ber 7, 1894. the ancient dilapidated clook, which he described as ‘ an arrangement of BELLS AND BELL-RINGING. wheels and bars, black with tar, that looked very much like an _ agricultural implement, inclosed in a great summer-house of a case.’ This wonderful timepiece has been cleared away, and the size of the belfry thereby enlarged. The Towcester and District Association. New floors have been laid down, and a roof of improved design has been fixed b u s i n e s s in the belfry. In removing the old floor a quantity of ancient oaken beams A meeting was held at Towcester on the 17th ult., at Mr. R. T. and boards, in an excellent state of preservation, were found, and out of Gudgeon’s, the room being kindly lent by him. The Rev. R. A. Kennaway these an ecclesiastical chair has been constructed. The workmanship is presided. Ringers were present from Towcester, Easton Neston, Moreton, splendid, and the chair will be one of the ‘ sights ’ of the church. Pinkney, Green’s Norton, Blakesley, and Bradden. It was decided to hold The dedication service took place at 12.30 in the Norman Nave, and was the annual meeting at Towcester with Easton Neston, on May 16th, 189-5. well attended, a number of the neighbouring gentry and clergy being present. Honorary Members of Bell-ringing Societies. The officiating clergy were the Bishop of Shrewsbury, the Rev. A. G. S i e ,— I should be greatly obliged if any of your readers who are Secre Edouart, M.A. -
Wepray Apr - May 2019
WEPRAY APR - MAY 2019 Praying for each other in Essex & East London #chelmsdioprayers Chelmsford Diocese Prayer Diary Prayer & conversation for Brexit April The Right Revd Stephen Cottrell, Bishop of Chelmsford has Be still and know that I am God. Psalm 46:1 joined the Archbishops of Canterbury and York in calling for communities to join together in prayer and conversation Mon 1 Frederick Denison Maurice, Priest, Teacher of the Faith, 1872 for the country and the Brexit process. Churches are invited North Woolwich (St John w Silvertown) Clergy: Princely Croos (PIC). to participate in a national prayer initiative for five days, from March 29 – 2 April and consider hosting community Our link Diocese of Mbeere (Kenya), The Rt Revd Moses Nthukah, Bishop events during this time too. The Dioceses of Wellington (Aotearoa NZ & Polynesia) and Idah (Nigeria) Bishop Stephen said: Tue 2 West Ham (St Matthew) Clergy: Christiana Asinugo (PIC), “Brexit will be a cause of celebration for some and David Richards (AC). lament for others, but one thing is clear - we can Stratford (St John w Christ Church) Clergy: David Richards (V), Christiana no longer continue to define one another by how Asinugo (AC), Annie McTighe (AC), Nicholas Bryzak (A), Robert Otule (A). Readers: Iris Bryzak, Rosemond Isiodu, Carol Richards, Sheva Williams. we voted in the referendum. The time has come for communities to come together to serve the common The Dioceses of Mbhashe (Southern Africa) and Wernyol (South Sudan) good, in our nation and in our relationship with the Wed 3 Stratford (St Paul) and (St James) Clergy: Ivo Anderson (V), rest of Europe.” Annie McTighe (AC), Jeanette Meadway (AC), Milen Bennett (A). -
The House of Bishops of the Church of England Has Today Welcomed Eight Women As Participant Observers to Its Meetings
The House of Bishops of the Church of England has today welcomed eight women as participant observers to its meetings. The welcome follows the election of the eight senior women clergy from regions across the country. In February of this year the House decided that until such time as there are six female members of the House, following the admission of women to the episcopate, a number of senior women clergy should be given the right to attend and speak at meetings of the House as participant observers. The necessary change to the House's Standing Orders was made in May. Elections for the eight senior women clergy were held in autumn of this year and the following were elected: • East Midlands - Ven Christine Wilson, Archdeacon of Chesterfield • West Midlands - Revd Preb. Dr Jane Tillier, Preb of Lichfield Cathedral • East Anglia - Ven Annette Cooper, Archdeacon of Colchester • South and Central - Ven Joanne Grenfell, Archdeacon of Portsdown • South East region - Ven Rachel Treweek, Archdeacon of Hackney • South West region - Ven Nicola Sullivan, Archdeacon of Wells • North East Very Revd Vivienne Faull, Dean of York • North West - The Rev Libby Lane, Dean of Women in Ministry, Chester Diocese Having taken up their role on 1st December, the two day meeting of the House of Bishops in York on December 9-10 will be the first meeting at which the participant observers will attend. ENDS Source URL: https://www.churchofengland.org/news-and-media/news-and-statements/bishops-welcome-participant-observers-first-meeting Page 1. -
An Annotated Translation of the Letters of John of Salisbury: Letters 107-135
Loyola University Chicago Loyola eCommons Master's Theses Theses and Dissertations 1943 An Annotated Translation of the Letters of John of Salisbury: Letters 107-135 Clare Rooney Loyola University Chicago Follow this and additional works at: https://ecommons.luc.edu/luc_theses Part of the Classical Literature and Philology Commons Recommended Citation Rooney, Clare, "An Annotated Translation of the Letters of John of Salisbury: Letters 107-135" (1943). Master's Theses. 344. https://ecommons.luc.edu/luc_theses/344 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses and Dissertations at Loyola eCommons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Master's Theses by an authorized administrator of Loyola eCommons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License. Copyright © 1943 Clare Rooney AN ANNOTATED TRANSLATION OF THE LETTERS OF JOHN OF SALISBURY LETTERS 107-135 by Clare Rooney A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILI.J4ENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS IN LOYOLA UNIVERSITY DECEMBER 1943 ON THE STYlE OF THESE LETTERS "Multa renascentur quae ,!!:! oecidere. oadentque Quae nunc aunt in honore vocabula. si volet usus. 'Q'Ueiii penes""arbitrium est et ius et norma loquendi·"l - -------~-- The letters in this group were written during the last years of the period in which John of Salisbury was secretary to Archbishop Theobald of Canterbury• who was suffering fr• an illness so severe that he had to l•ve his correspondence to his secretary. Of these twenty-nine letters. -
Durham E-Theses
Durham E-Theses The clergy of the deaneries of Rochester and mailing in the diocese of Rochester, c. 1770 1870 Lane, Gerald How to cite: Lane, Gerald (1995) The clergy of the deaneries of Rochester and mailing in the diocese of Rochester, c. 1770 1870, Durham theses, Durham University. Available at Durham E-Theses Online: http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/4880/ Use policy The full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that: • a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in Durham E-Theses • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. Please consult the full Durham E-Theses policy for further details. Academic Support Oce, Durham University, University Oce, Old Elvet, Durham DH1 3HP e-mail: [email protected] Tel: +44 0191 334 6107 http://etheses.dur.ac.uk 2 Abstract of a Thesis submitted for the degree of Master of Arts in the University of Durham, 1995. Gerald Lane. The Clergy of the Deaneries of Rochester and Mailing in the Diocese of Rochester, c. 1770 - 1870. This is a study of the concerns and life-style of the clergy of the established Church in two Kent Deaneries throughout the hundred year period, 1770 -1870. How far, it is considered, were episcopal hopes, which were expressed in the Charges of Bishop and Archdeacon, fufilled in the parishes, especially in the matters of residence and education. -
Deprived Cathedral Clergy and English Catholicism, 1553-1574’ (Mphil Thesis, Cambridge, 2015)
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Apollo 1 THE ORIGINS OF RECUSANCY IN ELIZABETHAN ENGLAND RECONSIDERED FREDERICK E. SMITH Clare College, University of Cambridge ABSTRACT. Most historians now acknowledge that Catholic recusancy existed in small pockets throughout 1560s and early 1570s England thanks to the sporadic efforts of a handful of former Marian priests. However, it is widely agreed that the influx of continentally trained seminarians and missionaries from abroad after 1574 was responsible for transforming the ‘curious and confused’ activities of these Marian clergymen into a fully fledged, intellectually justified campaign in favour of non-conformity. This article challenges this consensus through investigation of a neglected group of clerics – the cathedral clergy of Mary I’s reign. Drawing on insights emerging from recent research into the nature of Mary’s church, it demonstrates how these clerics became key agents in the so-called ‘invention of the Counter-Reformation’ in Marian England. It suggests that this ‘upbringing’ gave these priests the determination and skills to become leaders of a co-ordinated campaign in favour of principled non-conformity following Elizabeth’s accession. Far from lacking the zeal of their seminary and missionary counterparts, this study sees the former cathedral clergy imitating the practices of their adversaries and anticipating the strategies of the later English mission in order to promote recusancy throughout England from as early as 1560. On 24 June 1559, less than a year after the state-sponsored restoration of English Catholicism came to an abrupt end with the death of Mary Tudor, Elizabeth I’s government passed ‘An act for the uniformity of common prayer and divine service’. -
Fordham Rectors
All Saints Church Fordham, Essex Notes on The Rectors From 1198 A Supplement to the Church Guide Pat Lewis 2009 Illustrations by John Kay 1 CONTENTS Introduction 3 Background Information 4 Part 1 LIST OF RECTORS 1198-1533 5 Roland Kirkby. 1492 6 Danson. 1492 6 Part 2 LIST OF RECTORS 1533-1914 7 William Brabyne 1533 8 Simon Baghot 1544 9 Peter Walker 1558 10 Thomas Upcher.1561 10 Dr. Thomas Wither 1596 12 William Eyre 1616 12 Robert Cotton 1617 13 John Alsop 1633 15 John Owen. 1643 16 Richard Pulley 1646 17 John Bulkley 1649 18 Richard Pulley, restored.1660 19 Thomas Bayley 1677 20 John Pulley 1689 20 Henry Craske 1731 21 James Husbands 1743 21 Hadley Cox 1750 22 Charles Onley 1763 23 Thomas Twining, Curate 1763 24 Moses Dodd. 1804 26 William Harvey Herring 1839 28 T.L.Lingham 1868 29 Major William Meese Dunn 1897 30 Part 3 LIST OF RECTORS 1914-1993 31 Herbert Lilley 1914 31 William Oddie 1936 31 Lesley Ronald Frank Buttle 1958 32 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I would like to thank the following for their help, encouragement and patience over a considerable time while I was searching for information on Fordham:Canon Hugh Barber, Simon Batt, John Bensusan-Butt, John and Jenny Kay and Clayton Lewis. 2 INTRODUCTION When I first came to Fordham to research my Family Tree I stood in the churchyard at the east end of All Saints Church, and looked towards Colchester. I wondered what I would have been able to see at the time of the Siege of Colchester, in 1648, during the Civil War. -
Printed Sources in English for the Anglican Theology of Prayer 1641 -1700
Durham E-Theses Aspects of the public debate about praying in early modern England: printed sources in English for the Anglican theology of prayer 1641 -1700 Ginn, Richard John How to cite: Ginn, Richard John (2003) Aspects of the public debate about praying in early modern England: printed sources in English for the Anglican theology of prayer 1641 -1700, Durham theses, Durham University. Available at Durham E-Theses Online: http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/4093/ Use policy The full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that: • a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in Durham E-Theses • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. Please consult the full Durham E-Theses policy for further details. Academic Support Oce, Durham University, University Oce, Old Elvet, Durham DH1 3HP e-mail: [email protected] Tel: +44 0191 334 6107 http://etheses.dur.ac.uk 2 A copyright of this thesis rests with the author. No quotation from it should be published without his prior written consent and information derived from it should be acknowledged. Aspects of the Public Debate about Praying in Early Modern England: Printed Sources in English for the Anglican Theology of Prayer 1641 -1700 Richard John Ginn University of Durham Department of Theology M. -
Archdeacons Deprived Under Queen Elizabeth
Ampleforth Journal 17:1 (1911) 38-49 ARCHDEACONS DEPRIVED UNDER QUEEN ELIZABETH J.B.Wainewright HE LIVES OF THE LAST CATHOLIC BISHOPS of the ancient sees of England after that ‘by too severe a fate’ they were ‘fallen from their high estate’, have been written by TFr. Phillips of Ushaw College. The present writer in the pages of the Downside Review for 1910 gave some account of the last Catholic Deans, which will be hereinafter referred to as ‘Deans’. In the following pages an attempt will be made to tell the story of the last Catholic Archdeacons in this land. A R C H D E A C O N S D E P R I V E D JOHN BLAXTON, B. Can. L. Oxon 1532-3, Archdeacon of Brecknock, 1554, Treasurer of Exeter, 1558, Prebendary of Salisbury, (Bedminster, and Radcliffe) 1555, and Incumbent of Bracton, Worcestershire 1554, was deprived in 1559. In a letter from Scory, the Bishop of Hereford, to-Cecil dated the 17th of August, 1561 (S.P. Dom. Eliz. XIX, 24, quoted Gee p. 161), we read ‘ Mug, Blaxton, Arden, Gregory, Ely, Havard, that were driven out of Exeter, Worcester and other places, have been so maintained, feasted and magnified, with bringing them through the streets with torchlight in the winter, that they could not much more reverently have entertained Christ Himself.’ Besides our Archdeacon, the persons to whom Scory alludes can be confidently identified by the aid of S.P. Dom. Add. Eliz. XI, 45, as :— Walter Mugge, Prebendary of Exeter ; Thomas Arden, Prebendary of York, Worcester, and Hereford ; Friar Gregory Basset, B.D., Vicar of Sowton, Devon, formerly one of the Oxford Franciscans ; William Ely, President of St. -
St. Martin's Monthly
St. Martin’s Monthly February 2014 50p PPrreesseennttaattiioonn ooff CChhrriisstt iinn tthhee TTeemmppllee CChhuurrcchh ooff OOuurr LLaaddyy,,, MMeecchheellleenn,,, BBeelllggiiiuumm St Martin’s Church, Hale Gardens, Acton W3 9SQ (Registered charity no. 1132976) www.stmartinswestacton.co.uk www.stmartinswestacton.com Email: [email protected] Skype: smartins.westacton Vicar The Revd Dr Nicholas Henderson (also Chaplain to Acton Care Centre) 020 8992 2333 SS Associate Priest The Revd Bruce Barnett-Cowan 020 8896 3065 Assistant Priest The Revd Canon Dr Alyson Barnett-Cowan Commissioned Lay Minister to the Japanese Anglican Church UK Mrs Yuki Johnson (07572 324107) [email protected] Parish Secretary (9.30am – 1.30pm weekdays) Parish Office, 25 Birch Grove, W3 9SP 020 8992 2333 (Fax: 020 8932 1951) Reader Dr Margaret Jones (020 8997 1418) Reader Emeritus Mrs Lynne Armstrong (020 8992 8341) Churchwardens Lisa Ambridge (020 8992 3029) John Trussler (020 8992 4549) Director of Music Kenneth Bartram (c/o Parishes Office) Magazine Editor Clive Davis ([email protected]) The Vicar is available for consultation and enquiries by appointment. Please ring the Parish Office. Articles for the next month’s magazine should be sent to Clive Davis (email: [email protected]) They should reach the Editor by 9th February. The March magazine will be on sale by 23rd February. Come Candlemas … When I was young (a very long time ago now) Candlemas was unknown or at best confined to an obscure liturgical corner as the old Book of Common Prayer’s ‘Purification of St Mary’ and as a legal quarter day in Scotland. -
Cost of Ministry 2020
COST OF MINISTRY 2020 The Church of England in Essex and East London Diocese of Chelmsford FOREWORD FROM BISHOP STEPHEN It costs £22.1M to support mission and ministry in the Diocese of Chelmsford. When we received a subsidy from the National Church of £3.1M we were able to pass this on to parishes. This meant that even though many parishes faithfully paid 100% of the parish share we asked from them, this was less than the actual costs of providing a priest. All this has changed. The subsidy we received is disappearing. In parallel, we have a rising deficit. We now have to pay the entire cost of ministry. And we are no longer able to subsidise most parishes, albeit we remain committed to financially supporting parishes in deprived areas. This is one of the reasons we have been forming Mission and Ministry Units. MMUs enable us to ensure a sustainable ministry in each place. Each MMU can have at least one stipendiary priest and hopefully a number of self-supporting clergy and licensed and authorised lay ministers. But all this has to paid for. This is why our new share scheme is based upon a cost of ministry model. This booklet is designed to help you understand how the finances of the diocese work and particularly the cost of a stipendiary priest. Paying for this must be the responsibility of the parishes working together in their Mission and Ministry units. See Bishop Stephen’s March 2019 Synod address: https://youtu.be/ueJLzH9Kzdk 2 PARISH STANDARD COST 2020 DIOCESE OF CHELMSFORD SUMMARY 2020 Direct Ministry Costs A £51,097 B1 Future Ministry Costs £14,487 B2 Services to Parishes £8,800 B3 Other Expenditure £5,800 £80,184 3 CLERGY DIRECT COSTS 2020 2020 A Stipends An increase of up to 2% is assumed from 1st April 2020 .. -
Report of Proceedings 2012 General Synod November Group of Sessions
Report of Proceedings 2012 General Synod November Group of Sessions Volume 43 No. 3 Officers of the General Synod Presidents The Archbishop of Canterbury The Archbishop of York Prolocutors of the Lower Houses of the Convocations Canterbury York Ven. Christine Hardman Revd Canon Glyn Webster The House of Laity Chair Vice-Chair Dr Philip Giddings Mr Tim Hind Secretary General Mr William Fittall Clerk to the Synod Chief Legal Adviser and Registrar Dr Colin Podmore Mr Stephen Slack Administrative Secretary to the House of Bishops Standing Counsel Mr Ross Gillson Sir Anthony Hammond KCB QC Secretary to the House of Clergy Deputy Legal Adviser Mr Jonathan Neil-Smith Revd Alexander McGregor Secretary to the House of Laity Mr Nicholas Hills Officers of the Convocations Synodical Secretary of the Convocation of Canterbury Registrar Revd Stephen Trott Mr Stephen Slack Synodal Secretary of the Convocation of York Registrar Ven. Alan Wolstencroft Mr Lionel Lennox Contents Full Synod: First Day Monday 19 November 2012 Introductions 1 Progress of Measures and Statutory Instruments 1 Report by the Business Committee 2 Anglican Consultative Council Meeting 8 Draft Act of Synod Adopting the Anglican Communion Covenant 18 Questions 33 Second Day Tuesday 20 November 2012 Legislative Business: Draft Bishops and Priests (Consecration of Women) Measure and Draft Amending Canon No. 30 81 Third Day Wednesday 21 November 2012 Presidential Statement 157 Diocesan Synod Motion: Amendment to Canon B12 and Regulations 160 Private Member’s Motion: Living Wage 177 Dates of Groups of Sessions in 2013 194 Farewells 200 Youth Unemployment 205 Farewell to the Archbishop of Canterbury 227 Index 239 i Full Synod: First Day Monday 19 November 2012 THE CHAIR The Archbishop of Canterbury (Dr Rowan Williams) took the Chair at 2.15 p.m.