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In the spring of 2007, a group was set up to review the
current arrangements for assessing and collecting parish
share in Derby Diocese, and to make recommendations. The
report of that group is now available.
Download Report
(PDF) >>
The report's summary and recommendations are as follows:
(i) The current parish share system has served the diocese
well over many years, but anomalies and inaccuracies
have grown, and its complexity means that it is not well
understood.
(ii) It would be possible to update the present system and
modify it in some minor ways. However, the working group
recommends that two alternative systems in particular should
be debated within the diocese:
(a) An offer-negotiation system of contribution to
the Diocesan “Common
Fund”
Mission and Ministry Areas and Deaneries
would make offers of contributions to the Diocesan “Common Fund”,
in the light of information on the costs of ministry
in the MMA, Deanery and Diocese, and the ability of MMAs
to
give. A process of negotiation would then follow in order
to match the diocesan budget with Deanery giving, and
to give flexibility within Deaneries and MMAs as local
circumstances
changed.
(b) A system based on congregational income surveys and church
attendance
Every four years, MMA congregations would carry out an anonymous
income survey, and MMA attendances would be measured. MMA
shares would be calculated according to these factors,
and a profile of share payments set for each MMA for the
following four years.
(iii) Whatever system is adopted, the working group recommends that serious attention be given to financial transparency,
effective communication with churches, and local ownership
of the system. Local churches, MMAs and the Diocesan Board
of Finance must work in partnership rather than against
each other.
It is expected that the report will be debated at Diocesan
Synod on Saturday 8th November 2008. Before that date, churches,
MMAs and Deaneries are urged to consider the report and discuss
it, and to submit any comments and suggestions to the chairman
of the review group, Christopher Harrison, at christopher.d.harrison@btinternet.com
If you would like to discuss the paper, or request someone
to speak about the paper at a local meeting, contact Christopher
by email or on 01335 390226.
The Diocese of Derby has appointed a team led by Revd Rob
Marshall, former media Adviser to the Archbishop of York,
to reinvigorate its communications.
Marshall, 48, is a former Communications Officer to the
Dioceses of Bradford and London before becoming Media Adviser
to Archbishop David Hope, the former Archbishop of York.
The Diocese of Derby has asked Marshall to look at internal
and external communications and to work closely with the
Bishops’ offices, Derby Cathedral, the Diocesan Synod
as well as the deaneries and parishes with a view to ensuring
that people know what is happening in the Church of England
across the Diocese.
“We have been served well in the past and felt that
working with a freelance team might give us a fresh perspective
on what it means to communicate as a Church to many different
audiences,” said Dr. Christopher Cunliffe, Archdeacon
of Derby, today.
A key area of Marshall’s work will be working with
the media at regional and local level on behalf of the Diocese.
“I am looking forward to working with people in the
Diocese of Derby. There is an enormous amount which is already
happening and our task will be to communicate the good news
which is out there,” said Marshall today.
His freelance team is called media33 and has a base in both
Yorkshire and London. Marshall is also a regular presenter
of Thought for the Day on BBC Radio 4 and the author of several
books.
Heritage
Matters in the East Midlands
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Places of Worship Grants Awareness Day
Thursday 15th May
2008
at Derby Conference Centre, London Road, Derby DE24 8UX
On a
drop-in basis - starts 2pm and finishes 7.30pm
- Are you a church, faith group or organisation with an interest
in heritage?
- Do you use a place of worship that is a heritage building?
Do you have features of interest that you wish to conserve
or interpret?
- Would you like to find out more about funding schemes
for places of worship?
The Heritage Lottery Fund can help with funding for projects
which restore, conserve and interpret historic elements
at your place of worship, and together with English Heritage
they can also help with the funding of repairs.
Booking is not essential for this event – please drop
in at any time to speak to representatives from both organisations
about any projects or repairs for your place of worship.
Please note we are unlikely to help if you simply want funding
for a kitchen or toilet.
For further information, contact Lindsey Wells at the Heritage
Lottery Fund on 01159 349050.
We hope you will be able to attend this event and look forward
to meeting you.
Heritage Lottery Fund, English Heritage
Diocesan Synod is the main policy making body of the Diocese.
All deaneries are already represented and the Synod has recently
adopted proposals which it believes will make its business
more accessible and more relevant to the issues currently
facing the Church. A new Agenda Planning Group is in place
and the Group would welcome contributions and suggestions
of matters which you may believe the Synod should be addressing.
There are already routes by which Deanery Synods can propose
specific matters for formal debate, but this invitation for
contributions is being extended directly to Parochial Church
Councils and to individual church members.
Contact with the Group is via the Diocesan Secretary, Bob
Carey, either by letter to Church House or by email to finance@derby.anglican.org.
Please note that the Board of Finance undertakes the Synod’s
administration but your contributions are certainly not restricted
to financial matters.
News
from the Church of North India Partnership
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Visit of Indian Bishops
From Thu 10th to Wed 16th July
around 20 bishops from the Church of North India will be
staying in Derbyshire before going to the Lambeth Conference.
Come and welcome them at an open-air Songs of Praise Festival
at Carsington Water at 3pm on Sunday 13th July, when Bishop
Alastair will preach. Bring your picnics too! Wet weather
venue – St Oswald’s, Ashbourne.
More details:
Christopher Harrison, 01335 390226, Christopher.d.harrison@btinternet.com.
AGM 18th May
The Annual General Meeting of the Derbyshire Churches
North India Partnership will take place on Sunday 18th May
at All Saints' Church, Church Street, Ripley DE5 3DA. Indian
lunch will be available from 1.30
pm, the AGM begins at 2.30 pm.
There will be presentations of recent
visits, including those by members
of
Wingerworth Church and the chairman's visit to Assam. All
welcome.
Newsletter
The latest
newsletter of the Derbyshire
Churches CNI Partnership is
now
online.
Chairman's Visit to Assam
A report of a visit to Assam by the chairman of the partnership,
Christopher Harrison, can be read in the newsletter.
See
photos of the visit >>
Two
Counties Service 2008
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Sunday April 20th, 6.30pm
St Andrews with Castlegate URC
Goldsmith Street, Nottingham, NG1 5JT
Preacher:
Revd Canon J Wesley Blakey,
Chair, Nottingham & Derby Methodist District
Renewing
our covenants, Celebrating all that God is doing amongst
our churches
Download poster
and map >>
This initiative is a serious attempt to try and stop the
ongoing epidemic of theft of metal from churches. Kits were
sent last November to all churches insured by Ecclesiastical,
asking for completion and return of registration forms to
SmartWater as soon as the product had been applied. Registrations
have been slow coming in, so we are encouraging parishes
both to apply SmartWater and to register as soon as possible.
Any queries about the SmartWater initiative can be made
with Ecclesiastical, tel. 0845 777 3322, email information@eigmail.com or visit www.ecclesiastical.com. The Ven. Christopher Cunliffe, Archdeacon of Derby
The Ven.
David Garnett, Archdeacon of Chesterfield
Archbishop
and Sharia Law
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Reflections in the light of the Archbishop’s Lecture
on Civil and Religious Law
Sermon by the
Bishop of Repton >>
Address
by Canon Andie Brown >>
The Appeal Treasurer has announced that the 2007 appeal ‘Bringing
hope to children in India and Tanzania’ has closed.
A cheque for £12,700 has been sent to the Bishop of
Derby to be used for the education of disabled children in
Orissa, India, and for the Watoto Wa Africa Orphanage for
HIV/AIDS orphans in Tanzania. Many thanks to all those who
supported this appeal.
Bess
of Hardwick Anniversary
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Derbyshire is preparing to mark the 400th anniversary of
the death of Bess of Hardwick – an icon of Tudor England
who rose from being humble beginnings to become the second
most powerful woman in England, after Queen Elizabeth I.
The anniversary year is being backed by The National Trust,
Chatsworth and Derby Cathedral (Bess’s final resting
place), all of whom have a role in telling different parts
of Bess's story, and will therefore be staging various events
and exhibitions throughout 2008.
Derby Cathedral’s “Bess of Hardwick Silverware
and Needlework Exhibition” – an opportunity to
see a display of period silver and modern needlework – opens
on Saturday 9th February. Bess lived through the reign of
four Tudor sovereigns, the break with Rome and the reforming
of the church, a brief reuniting under Queen Mary and severance
of ties with the Pope again under Elizabeth I. At the end
of her life, Stuart King, James I, was the Governor of the
reformed Church of England.
The silver on exhibition, dating from 1491 to 1620, was
in existence or was mostly made in Bess’s lifetime.
There is also a Bishop’s Bible, or ‘Treacle’ Bible,
dated 1585. Bess was famous for her skills of embroidery
and worked with Mary Queen of Scots to produce needlework
still seen at Hardwick Hall today. On display too are modern
embroideries by the Derby Cathedral Embroidery Workshop depicting
Chatsworth, Hardwick and Bolsover, three houses closely associated
with Bess.
The exhibition will last throughout the year and will be
available on two sites, the Cathedral, open daily 9am-6pm,
and the Cathedral Centre, open 9.30am-5pm Monday to Saturday.
There is no charge for entry. If you wish to have a guided
tour of the Cathedral, including a talk about the exhibition,
contact Canon Elaine Jones on 01332 341201 to book and for
details of charges.
Retired Vicar
on top of the world
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David (right) pictured with John Currin

Himalayan view
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The Rev’d David Phypers, 68, recently retired from
Wormhill and Peak Forest with Peak Dale and Dove Holes, has
completed a seven day trek through the Annapurna mountains
of Nepal to raise money for a Church Mission Society project
to help poverty-stricken people across the globe. He was
with five other walkers, including the Rev’d John Currin,
former Vicar of Cromford and Matlock Bath, assisted by a
band of porters and sherpas who showed the way and provided
food and tents for the journey. David said: “I was
bowled over by the breathtaking views of the mountains ….
It was awesome – out of this world. I’ve learned
a tremendous amount. Seeing the conditions the people live
has given me an appreciation for the simple way of life of
the people living in the developing world. I had the experience
of a lifetime and I will never forget it.”
David still
works for Derby Diocese as Adviser for Christian Giving.
Anyone who wishes to sponsor him, or groups who would like
him as a guest speaker, can email him at david@phypers.co.uk.
Fair
Trade Fortnight
Monday 25th February – Sunday 9th March
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Supporting Fair Trade Fortnight is a practical way in which
we can play our part in creating a global economy in which
people receive a fair price for what they produce.
You can devote a whole service to fair trade, or clergy
might simply mention it in their sermons over this period.
Some might even find a way of combining the need for a fair
deal for child labourers with Mothering Sunday, which falls
in the middle of Fair Trade Fortnight.
There are of course lots of ways in which your church can
promote fair trade through other activities, but the Ashbourne
churches hope you won’t attempt to compete with their
bid to break the world record for the simultaneous consumption
of fair trade bananas on 1st March.
You can download general resources from www.fairtrade.org.uk/fortnight.htm , and worship materials etc from www.fairtrade.org.uk/get_involved_faiths.htm
At the very least, fair trade tea and coffee are now so
readily available in the shops, and of a far higher quality
than those pioneering gravelly-tasting brands some of us
recall from the 1970s, that there really is no excuse for
churches not to be serving these after services, and at meetings,
social events etc.
If you have not done so already, can your church also consider
applying for fair trade status? Only one in five churches
in Derby Diocese has so far done so, which is lamentably
below the target of one in two churches which we need to
achieve in order to become a fair trade diocese. All you
need to do is use fair trade tea and coffee in your church
activities, make progress on using other fair trade items,
and promote fair trade in some way during fair trade fortnight
and at other times in the year. You can download an application
form at the second of the two internet links above, or contact:
Christopher Harrison, World Development Adviser,
on 01335
390226.
Please return completed forms to him at christopher.d.harrison@btinternet.com
or
at The Vicarage, Parwich, Ashbourne DE6 1QD.

Harvey outside All Saints Church with the
Bishop of Derby, the Rt Rev’d Dr Alastair Redfern
(Photo:
Leah McLaren, Derby Evening Telegraph)
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Churchwarden Harvey Cross celebrated his 100th birthday
with a special service at All Saints Church in Dale Abbey
on Sunday 13th January. The church was packed as villagers
and friends joined Harvey at a service led by the Bishop
of Derby, the Rt Rev’d Dr Alastair Redfern.
Harvey was
presented with a Bishop’s badge, as a gesture
from the Diocese to acknowledge outstanding service to the
church. His lapel badge is actually an exact replica of the
one received in 1927 by Alice Moseley, mother-in-law of the
current Rector, Canon Ian Gooding. That was the year when
Derby became a diocese, and Alice received her badge when
she became one of the first people to be confirmed. In making
the award, Bishop Alastair said:” … everyone
here who knows you is very proud of your service and dedication.
You are the first person in Derbyshire to be given this award,
and it is a great honour for me to present you with it.”
After 67 years in the role of churchwarden, Harvey said: “It
has been a labour of love for me to act as churchwarden and
I have no intention of quitting just yet.”
Readers
licensed by Bishop Alastair
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Added
5/12/07
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Bishop
Alastair is pictured in the private chapel at his house in
Duffield with the two serving Readers he licensed
to the Diocese on Monday 26th November - Dr Malcolm Evans
(on the bishop’s right), to serve in the parish of
Alvaston, and Mark Ratcliffe, to serve in the North Wingfield
Team Ministry.
Bishop’s trip to the Church
of North India
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Added
2/11/07
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The
Rt Rev’d Dr Alastair Redfern and his wife Caroline
visited Dehli, North India in October. The Diocese of Derby
has a long-standing partnership with the
Church of North India and this was Bishop Alastair’s
first visit there since he was appointed in 2005. During
the visit, the Bishop
and his wife attended the service of the consecration of
the new Bishop of Delhi, the Rt Revd. Sunil Kamar Singhi.
Bishop Alastair and Caroline also visited Bishop’s
College Calcutta, to help build links that will enhance learning
around mission between the college and the Diocese of Derby.
They also met with members of the Delhi Brotherhood, including
Bishop Collin of Rajasthan. Bishop Collin will be visiting
Derby with 24 other Bishops from CNI next year prior to the
Lambeth Conference.
Read more about
the trip and view photos >>
Diocesan Prayer Festival
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Added
5/10/07
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On Saturday, September 29th, worshippers from all over
Derbyshire met at St Mary’s Church, Wirksworth, for
the Diocesan Prayer Festival. Here, Ros Bell from Melbourne
offers her
reflections on the day:-
“Wirksworth Church was certainly an ideal venue for
this annual event and Bishop Alistair described the medieval
building as being full of mystery and filled with smells,
colour and music. In his opening address, he reminded us
that prayer is a way in which to reflect upon our lives,
taking moral choices seriously by talking and listening to
God. On the one hand, some saw prayer as being highly disciplined
with much stress on purgation, but Bishop Alastair invited
us to approach prayer through the ‘amazingness of the
world, to use our imaginations and let the church and the
activities be a soul making factory where we could experience
the wonder of God’s creation and be filled with joy.’
“There was structure to our day with four short acts
of worship but between these there was freedom to explore
a myriad of approaches to prayer, using all our senses. Music
to listen to, slides of angels and facsimiles of illuminated
Gospels to gaze at in wonder; bread, honey and fruit to taste,
whilst contemplating relevant Scripture writings. We could
use our hands to create angels, prayer beads, illuminated
book marks and bread making. And who can resist the smell
of baking bread? It was at this activity that we were advised
by our baker that prayer can go on through everyday activities,
which reminded me so much of how Celtic prayer is woven through
our daily domestic duties. There were also reminders of how
others need our prayers, with displays of the diocesan links
with the Church in North India (which our Harvest
Appeal will support) and opportunities to find out about other church
Mission work throughout the world.
“I’m sure that we all came away with something
different that had touched us, but we all felt overwhelmingly
touched by the day.”
Ros Bell
Flood
in Bihar
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Added
12/9/07
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The Diocese of Derby has a long-standing Partnership
with the Church of North India. We are distressed to
hear of the terrible flooding in dioceses in the region.
Flooding in recent weeks has been the "worst
in living memory," according to the United Nations.
Across northern India, countless villages have been flooded,
leaving tens of millions displaced and stranded. "The
sheer size and scale of flooding and the massive numbers
of people affected pose an unprecedented challenge to the
delivery of desperately needed humanitarian assistance," the
UN said.
Bihar's worst floods have not only rendered hundreds of
thousands homeless, it has also damaged lakhs of hectares
in standing crops, thousands of houses, roads, bridges, embankments
and hundreds of schools. The Diocese in Bihar, the Diocese
of Patna has already mobilized their Church School for extending
relief in the area and a proposal has been drawn up which
can be downloaded here.
If churches and individuals are able to make donations
to help the relief work, please send them to the treasurer
of the Derbyshire Churches CNI Partnership:
Mr John Spray, 6 Onslow Road, Mickleover, Derby DE3 5JJ.
Cheques should be payable to the Derbyshire CNI Partnership.
News from Ecclesiastical
Insurance
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Added
16/7/07
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Ecclesiastical Insurance, the UK’s leading church
insurer, has received more than 300 claims for theft of external
metals from churches over the past 12 months*.
The thefts of lead, copper and other metals – from
roofs, guttering and lightning conductors – are prompted
by the rising price of these materials.
It’s not just the cost of replacing the materials
that is the problem, thieves have also torn holes in roofs
causing them to leak and ripped stonework away from pinnacles
and towers. Yet the thieves get a fraction of the cost for
scrap.
John Coates, Ecclesiastical’s Church Insurance Manager,
said: “We highlighted this problem last year in an
effort to stop the problem, but it only seems to be getting
worse. We don’t insist on costly anti-theft measures,
but in some cases they are the last defence we have. The
real solution is for communities to rally round their churches,
keeping an eye out and refusing to let thieves steal from
under our noses.”
He offers this important advice for churches to prevent
theft of metals:
- Make friends with your neighbours – they’re
the very best people to keep an eye out.
- Consider anti-climb paint**, CCTV,
intruder alarms or security lighting if your church is
particularly at risk.
- Restrict vehicle access and remove
ladders – make the
thieves’ job harder.
- Where possible, replace with
less expensive materials to make sure there’s no
incentive for the thieves to re-visit (The replacement
of stolen roof material will
require faculty
approval.
- A change of materials may also require consultation
with English Heritage on a listed church building, and
planning permission if it affects the external appearance.)
For more information or advice, churches can contact
their local Ecclesiastical insurance surveyor by
calling 0845
777 3322.
For further information please contact:
Chris Pitt, PR Manager, Ecclesiastical Insurance Group
Tel: 01452 334984
Mobile 07730 068821
Email: pressoffice@eigmail.com
Visit www.ecclesiastical.com
Beaufort House, Brunswick Road, Gloucester, GL1 1JZ.
Notes:
*These figures are taken from Anglican churches Ecclesiastical
insures.
**Anti-climb paint should only be used over two metres in
height and warning notices should be displayed.
Visiting India
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Added
17/4/07
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On March 3rd, seventeen people from Derby Diocese began
a visit to three dioceses of the Church of North India: Eastern
Himalaya, Phulbani, and North East India. The aim was to
develop links between churches and schools in Derbyshire
and India which had been established in recent years, and
to initiate new ones. Diocesan World Development Adviser
the Rev’d Christopher Harrison has provided a Powerpoint
presentation of photos and a report
from the trip.
Presentation Part
1 >>
Presentation Part
2 >>
The Diocese of Derby has a long standing link with the Church
of North India. Read more about it here.
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