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St. Peter’s News
St. Peter’s Church Magazine – For the Family in Faith
September 2020
Church Directory
Vicar: Rev Peter Smith 01257 433308
Email: vicarstpeter@gmail.com
Warden:
Carol Pearson: carolpearson@outlook.com
Pastoral Asst: Anne Forrest 01257 262334
Email anneforrest@aol.com
Holy Baptism: By arrangement with the Vicar
Confessions: By arrangement with the Vicar
Christian stewardship: Weekly pledged giving to the church
for its’ work and witness.
Church Website: www.stpeterschurchchorley.co.uk
For any of the following:
Spiritual Counsel; Marriages, Banns; Christenings;
Sick Visits; Holy Communion for the housebound,
Private prayer in church -
Please contact the Vicar. 01257 433308
What normally Goes on at
St. Peter's
Sunday Services:
8:00am: The Holy Eucharist
10:00am: The Parish Eucharist - The Church’s
family worship at which children are
welcomed into Sunday school in the church
meeting Room
Wednesday Service:
10am: Said Eucharist
Additional Services as advertised
Thursday:
9am: Morning prayer
Who’s Who at St Peter’s
PCC: Secretary Louise Benney Tel: 01257 434088
Treasurer Geoff Parkinson Tel: 01257 272979
Magazine: Editor Ann Treguer Tel: 07973 572990
01257 471140 or Email: annmarietreguer@gmail.com
Secretary Gail Breen Tel: 07725 831278
Advertising VACANT
Stewardship Recorder: Ronnie Hunter Tel: 01257 271992
Communion Ministers: Allan Hardman, Alice Kerfoot, Anne Forrest, Carol
Pearson, Anne Wilding, Eric Crompton & Ronnie Hunter.
Sunday School Superintendent: Rev. Peter Smith
Parish Lay Visitor: Alice Kerfoot Tel: 01257 273434
Stewardship Committee:
Chairman Ronnie Hunter Tel: 01257 271992
Events Committee:
Chairwoman: Carol Pearson
Members from each organisation
Electoral Roll Officer: Alan Kerfoot Tel: 01257 273434
Church Meeting Room Bookings: Ronnie Hunter Tel: 01257 271992
Flower Guild: Anne Wilding 01257 411252
Health & Safety Officer: Carol Pearson carolpearson@outlook.com
St. Peter’s Organisations
Sunday
Sunday School: 10am in the Parish Meeting Room
(behind the Church) during the service.
Enquiries: Reverend Peter Smith Tel: 01257 433308
Monday
Monday Club: 2pm in St Peter’s Club, Eaves Lane, Chorley,
Contact: Secretary Eric Crompton Tel: 01257 794372
Brownies: 6-7.15pm at St. Peter’s Primary School, Eaves
Lane, Chorley. Contact: Leader: Paulene Barnes Tel:
01257 271295 or Althea Morris 01257 266606 or mob:
07857 004796. Tuesday
Rainbows: 5.45-6.45pm in the Parish Meeting Room
Contact: Leader Lynne Redmayne Tel: 01772 312680
Guides: 7-8.30pm in the Parish Meeting Room
Contact: Leader: Ann Treguer Tel: 07973572990 / 01257
471140
Church Lads & Girls Brigade: 6-9pm at St. Peter’s Primary
School, Eaves Lane, Chorley.
Contact: Leader Michael McKenna Tel: 01257 410615
Wednesday
Mothers Union: 7.30pm in the Parish Meeting Room (on
the 1st & 3rd Wednesday each month)
Contact: Branch Leader: Anne Forrest Tel: 01257 262334
Thursday
Mums ‘n’ Tots: 1.15-3pm in the Parish Meeting Room
Contact: Anne Forrest: 01257 262334
From the Vicar……
It has been over three months since my last letter, due mainly to the restrictions
caused by Coronavirus. Has much happened in the life of our church? Well, yes,
in many ways. Despite the lockdown back in March, I have been recording
services to be shown on Facebook and YouTube. Also, I started a daily ‘blog’ and
these have all been well received.
The situation now is that our church is open as usual for all the main services
and a period for private prayer every Tuesday morning from 10:00am until noon.
So, if you’re in need of a quiet few minutes prayer or quiet reflection, please
make use of the church during that time.
Unfortunately, the size of our congregations has not recovered to pre-lockdown
levels; I would say about one third of the normal attendance. This is not
unexpected due to many of our members shielding or in a vulnerable group. If
you are contemplating on returning to church, be assured we have introduced
and working with government and diocesan guidance; produced risk
assessments and procedures to minimise risk to all worshippers.
Of you come to church, we have hand sanitiser (and masks available if you
require them) plus signs to guide you around and of course practise social
distancing. We can have communion services, but only giving out bread, not
wine. Unfortunately, as we go to press, we cannot yet have any congregational
singing, but our organist Peter Wynne, plays throughout the service, which has
really made a difference and is extremely uplifting. Sadly, I am still conducting
many funerals, some are now in church and the diocese has reinstated all fees
for these from July just gone.
Also, sadly, we have had to cancel most of the events we normally hold this time
of year and for the rest of the year. No Summer Fun Day, no Rose Queen
Crowning, no Christmas Tree Festival, no Parade Services. I am hoping to hold
some sort of Harvest Service, as our Bishop is encouraging us to keep providing
food for our Foodbanks etc. especially as this pandemic has affected many more
families than would normally be in need.
On a more positive note, we did not manage to hold our annual church AGM in
April, and this will now take place on September 13th (Sunday) after the 10:00am
service in the Hall. People are invited to attend, especially PCC members. We will
need to elect two new Wardens and three PCC members at that meeting. If you
are shielding or unable to attend for any other reasons but wish to comment on
any church business from last year; please email or write to the PCC via the
Secretary: Louise Benney, 9 Dorking Road, Chorley or ring her on 434088.
If you wish to stand (be nominated) for any of these positions, you can collect a
form from the back of church or contact Louise or the Vicar who will be pleased
to provide them.
If it all sounds bad news, let us not be too downhearted, as we know that when
we suffer, the Lord is always ready to listen. There is a saying that the Lord will
provide, and I and sure that if we all be the one body that God intended us to
be, then we will come through this and become a more faithful and stronger
spiritual family, if we all work as one.
Every blessing and may God protect you all.
Peter
Contact for Flower Guild:
Anne Wilding 01257 411252
Girlguiding - Tuesday's 7pm-8.30pm
Hi
There is good news for Girlguiding, we have been informed this week that we
can commence indoor guide meetings from 24 th September. However, we have
to have a risk assessment signed off by our District Commissioners first, which
we have to give to her 2 weeks in advance, we can also complete zoom
meetings. We are also limited to 12 total including leaders if meeting indoors.
This is all good news for guiding, however, for me it is a difficulty as I have been
rostered to work most Tuesdays through October and we are changing our
times of starting to 7.30pm, I will not be able to open our guide unit yet, as we
are now short of leaders. Due to the risk assessments, Lynne from Rainbows
will not be able to assist at Guides as well as running Rainbows. To complete
Zoom meetings, I will require Parents to return the permission forms for online
sessions, these were sent out several months ago, but unfortunately, no one
returned them.
Looking at my off duty, it is looking like the first meeting I would be able to hold
would be 20 th October, so I will aim and plan toward this date.
The annual subscriptions to Girlguiding UK will be due in February and we
have been informed that these will be increased again this year, we have
previously partly paid for them from subs received weekly from the Guides,
however, as we have not received any subs for the majority of the year, we will
need to ask parents to completely fund this annual subscription next year. As
yet, we have not been informed of the final subscription charge this year.
Yours in Guiding
Ann Treguer
September
1 William Arnold Hart
John Wright
2 Thomas Schofield
6 Jessie Beardsmore
Robert Swift
8 William Pilkington
Michael Pryce
Ida MacDonald
Betty Lancaster
Bessie Clare
9 Charlotte Astley
10 Betty Lamb
11 Doris Rogers
Rita Baxter
Brian Sydney Bailey
Pauline Gould
12 Albert Sharrock
13 John Pilkington
16 Mabel Gray
Basil Frank Gough
17 James Sharrock
Andrew Phillip Hayward
18 Paul Antony Kay
19 Florrie Kevill
21 James Edward Kerfoot
Trevor Lloyd
22 William Mayor
23 Mary Alice Riding
Alan Blackburn
Joan Charnley
24 Ken Gray
25 Frances Ruddock
William Holden
Enid Howarth
27 Pamela Haslam
28 Barbara Bolas
30 Joseph Brown
Jean Derbyshire
Allan Hardman
Grant to the faithful departed the
eternal life promised by
Our Lord Jesus, and let light
perpetual shine upon them.
Amen
Events Committee
Always looking for new members and
volunteers, please think about
Joining us to plan social events in our Parish, if
interested in helping
contact Carol Pearson
to let her know of your interest.
Planned Events 2020:
Unfortunately cancelled due to Covid-19
until further notice.
On the Internet:
Keep in touch with what is going on with both our Church
Webpage and now our Mother’s Union page.
Photos and information of all meetings and events are
published on these pages.
St. Peter’s CE church Chorley
St. Peter’s Mother’s Union Chorley
Families & Friends of 4th Chorley St. Peter's Guides
Family & Friends of 4th Chorley St. Peter's Rainbows
Smile Lines
Put it this way…
~ A man's home is his castle, in a manor of speaking.
~ A pessimist's blood type is always b-negative.
~ My wife really likes to make pottery, but to me it's just kiln time.
~ A Freudian slip is when you say one thing but mean your mother.
~ I used to work in a blanket factory, but it folded.
~ Marriage is the mourning after the knot before.
~ Sea captains don't like crew cuts.
~ A gossip is someone with a great sense of rumour.
Where?
The police officer asked me where I had been between 5 and 6. He seemed
irritated when I answered "kindergarten."
Noah and the Ark – 2020 version
In the year 2020, Noah was living in England when the Lord came unto him
and said, "Once again, the earth has become too wicked to continue. Build
another Ark and save two of every living thing. You have six months before
I will start the unending rain for 40 days and 40 nights."
Six months later, the Lord looked down and saw Noah weeping in his
garden, but no Ark. "Noah", He roared, "I'm about to start the rain! Where is
the Ark?"
"Forgive me Lord", begged Noah "but things have been difficult. I needed
Building Regulations approval because the Ark was over 30 square metres.
I've been arguing with the Fire Brigade about the need for a sprinkler
system. My neighbours claim that I should have obtained planning
permission for building the Ark in my garden because it is a development of
the site even though in my opinion it is a temporary structure, but the roof
is too high.
Cont’d…
“The Local Area Access Group complained that my ramp was going to be
too steep and the inside of the Ark wasn't fully accessible. Getting the wood
has been another problem. All the decent trees have Tree Preservation
Orders on them and we live in a Site of Special Scientific Interest set up in
order to preserve the Spotted Owl. I tried to convince them that I needed
the wood to save the owls - but no go!
“When I started gathering the animals the RSPCA sued me for intending to
confine wild animals without the proper paperwork. The County Council,
the Environment Agency and the Rivers Authority have ruled that I can’t
build the Ark until they've conducted an Environmental Impact Study on
your proposed flood. The Trade Unions insist that I can't use my sons to
build the Ark; I can only employ members of the Shipbuilding and Allied
Trades union. Finally, Customs and Excise have seized all my assets,
claiming I am going to attempt to leave the country illegally with
endangered species.
“So, forgive me Lord, but it will take me at least another ten years to finish
this Ark." Suddenly the skies cleared, the sun began to shine, and a
rainbow stretched across the sky. “No need for me to destroy the world
after all,” observed God. "The government has the matter already in hand.”
Moses revisited
Nine-year-old Joseph was asked by his mother what he had learned in
Sunday school.
"Well, Mum, our teacher told us how God sent Moses behind enemy lines on
a rescue mission to lead the Israelites out of Egypt. When he got to the Red
Sea, he had his engineers build a pontoon bridge and all the people walked
across safely. Then he radioed headquarters for reinforcements. They sent
bombers to blow up the bridge and all the Israelites were saved."
"Now, Joseph, is that really what your teacher taught you?" his mother
asked, somewhat alarmed. "Well, no, Mum. But if I told it the way the
teacher did, you'd never believe it!"
Sorry
Our minister, an avid golfer, was once taking part in a local tournament. As
he was preparing to tee off, the organiser of the tournament approached
him and pointed to the dark, threatening storm clouds which were
gathering. “Sir," the organiser said, "I trust you'll see to it that the weather
won't turn bad on us." Our minister shook his head. "Sorry," he replied.
"I'm in sales - not management!”
God in the Arts – Francis of Assisi
Editor: The Revd Michael
Burgess continues his series on
animals and birds as seen in art
and scripture… this month he
considers ‘St Francis of Assisi
preaching to the fish’ by Luc-
Olivier Merson.
He gave us eyes to see them: ‘St Francis of Assisi preaching to the fish’
On 4 th October we give thanks for one of the most loved saints in the church
- Francis of Assisi. He died in 1226, but his example and witness have lived
on to inspire Christians through the centuries.
His was a life focused on the crib and the cross, Lady Poverty and the
stigmata, suffering and transfiguration. But also, it was a life marked by a
deep love of creation: St Francis had a special nearness to all creatures great
and small. As we read the stories of Thomas of Celano, we learn how he
tamed a wolf in Gubbio, how swallows would chirp and fly around his head,
how lambs would come close and gaze with delight, how his faithful donkey
wept as the saint approached death, and in this month’s painting, how fish
would come to the shore to hear him preach.
Thomas relates how Francis returned some fish that had been caught to the
water, telling them not to be caught again. They lingered near the boat,
listening to the saint until he gave them permission to leave. The sermon to
the fish is portrayed in this work by Luc-Olivier Merson, a French artist who
lived from 1846 to 1920. He is better known for his work with designs for
banknotes, postage stamps, and the basilica of Sacré - Coeur in Montmartre.
Here in this canvas, we see St Francis with followers young and old, a faithful
dog and the fish at the water’s edge.
What was the saint telling them? I think that they were loved and valued as
part of the rich tapestry of God’s creation, and they must return that love. It
is the mood of the Benedicite where all things that move in the earth, the
skies and the seas are exhorted to praise the Lord and magnify him forever.
St Francis captures that mood in his own Canticle of the Sun.
In the weeks and months of lockdown many of us have had the time to look
afresh at our relationship with the world of nature as we have journeyed
through the seasons of spring and summer.
We have learnt to wonder at the richness and variety of creation. We need
to take that lesson into the ‘new normal' as restrictions are gradually
relaxed. The clock and the complexity of life may easily take over again, but
St Francis is inviting us to journey with him in simplicity and joy as we praise
God with all His creatures:
‘Let all things their Creator bless
and worship Him in humbleness.’
Story of ‘Onion Johnny’ – The Onion Sellers from Brittany
“Onion Johnny,” also “Johnny Onions,” was a generic name for any onion-seller
from Brittany, especially from the town of Roscoff, who sold onions door-todoor
around the coasts of England, Wales and Scotland.
This interesting article was published in the Milngavie and Bearsden Herald and
Dumbarton County Courier (Milngavie, Dunbartonshire, Scotland) of Friday
30 th March 1928:
ONION-JOHNNY.
At many doors all over seaside towns in England, Wales, and Scotland, and far
inland, is appearing just now that smiling-faced young foreigner with his
vegetable merchandise known as “Ingan 1 (Anglice, Onion) Johnny.” His
engaging frankness and good temper, his persistency, and business flair more
than compensate for his deficiencies in the English tongue. Of this last the
totality on his first visit to our shores as the youngest member of the onionsellers’
equipe (gang) is the eloquent phrase, uttered with beaming smile and a
show of perfect teeth, “Onyons, sheep!”
He is a familiar figure in Britain and the Isle of Man, and sells hundreds of tons
of onions at a price which, considering the value of the franc, safely places the
growing of onions in Britanny for the markets on this side of the Channel as
one of the most lucrative branches of French agriculture.
The two great centres of the onion-growing districts in Britanny are Morlaix
and Roscoff. The latter place may safely be called the onion metropolis. This
flourishing little town is situated on a promontory of the Breton Department of
Finistère, about 100 miles southeast from Land’s End, in Cornwall. Roscoff—
which, by the way, has the same derivation as Rosyth 2 (Haven Behind the
Promontory)—is a typical Breton ville, where the old Breton tongue is universal
except among the French-speaking official class. It has a special interest for
Scottish people, for it was from this old seaport of France that the
young Queen Mary of Scots embarked for home after her childhood spent in La
Belle France. All around in the neighbouring “pays,” blessed with an extremely
mild and even warm climate all the year round, where centuries of laborious
industry and intensive cultivation have produced of the once shallow and rockcumbered
soil, rich tracts of land worth its weight in gold, the Roscoff
“cultivateurs” annually raise thousands of tons of the homely health-giving
vegetable.
Here for many generations has existed an almost Communistic system of cooperation
in industry. All middlemen are eliminated by the adoption of family
co-operation in every operation—from the sowing of the onion seeds to the
book-keeping and division of the proceeds of the sale of the vegetables. A
“famille” may consist of 150 or more members, all generally relations—
brothers, cousins, second cousins, and to the fifth- and sixth-degree German. It
farms and owns the land—from 15 to 50 acres—under intensive cultivation. All
the tools, drying racks, and sheds necessary for the cultivation and storage of
the crop belong to the “famille,” which owns the stout ketches and topsail
schooners in which the onions are shipped to England and Scotland. The
“famille” also provides and finances the seamen of the onion fleet, and
furnishes from its members the “equipe” or gang of nine or ten young
salesmen—the “Onion Johnnys”—attached to each onion boat.
These last leave Brittany for these islands with the first of the season’s crop in
late July or in August of each year. These Breton lads are racially more truly
Britons than we ourselves. They are the direct descendants of that mighty
exodus which settled in Brittany and Vendée 3 , from the Dorset, Devon, and
Cornish coasts at the time when the heathen hordes were sweeping England
with fire and sword all along the Saxon shore after the departure of the Roman
legions 4 . To many of them the French language is a foreign one, for their own
is the old Breton tongue, once universal in England and still almost so in Wales.
Roscoff and Morlaix men have often told the writer that in Wales they
perfectly understand the Cymric tongue and are perfectly understood by the
Welsh in their own Breton. Wales, in fact, is their favourite part of Britain.
The onion-seller’s “equipe” or gang of eight or ten consists generally of five or
six boys or youths and three or four elder men, who act as section leaders in
separate districts. All the gang work from a common centre—some seaport
where the ketch or schooner discharges, and where the bulk cargo is stored
and strung on the familiar straw cunches [= ?] which hang from “Onion
Johnny’s” shoulder-pole. One of the older men acts as advance agent for the
equipe, and hires storage sheds and secures lodgings for the gang. Sometimes
he purchases a horse and cart, which are resold at the end of the season—
seldom, it may be stated, at a loss, for the Breton is a born “commercant”
(bargainer), as housewives who are acquainted with his system of “Dutch
auction” on their doorsteps can testify. Cardiff, Newcastle, Leith, Plymouth,
and Douglas (Isle of Man) are favourite ports of the Roscoff men, and the
writer has known them to dispose of sixty tons of onions in one month in the
Manxland capital! In this instance the “equipe” was a small one of only half a
dozen lads.
By the time their vessel arrives they are already on the spot, having come over
by mail steamer from St. Malo or Le Havre to Southampton, and thence by
railway. All are up long before sunrise unloading the little ship and carrying
sacks of the onions, which are carried in the vessel’s hold in bulk, like coals or
lime, across the quays to the storage sheds. These Breton boys know nothing
of an eight-hour day nor believe in it, as each one of them has an interest in
the whole industry which is personal. However young he may be his share is
already calculated and secured at the great annual meeting of the “famille”
when accounts are settled for the past season and wages, share-moneys, and
bonuses are paid to him as a member of the “famille.” They are astir at 1 a.m.
in the storage shed stringing the onions which will later appear on the
shoulders of Marcel or Jules. Coffee and bread at 6 a.m. breaks their fast, and
at 7 a.m. begins the days’ work—continued until five in the afternoon—of
unloading the onion-boat. A halt is called about eleven o’clock for “déjeuner”
(lunch), which consists of a little soup and meat at the adjacent lodgings. A
simple cup of coffee serves until work is over, when a genuine hearty French
dinner is ready for all—soup, beef, a fowl, vegetables, bread and cheese, and
the everlastingly popular coffee. The tired and satisfied “equipe” are glad to sit
around and rest for an hour smoking a “caporal” or hand-rolled zouave
cigarette after their seventeen-hour day! By curfew hour—8 p.m.—all are abed
and fast asleep, for, until the onions are unloaded and strung on the strawropes,
1 a.m. is their hour for starting the day’s toil. By the time the empty
ketch hoists the Tricolour of France to the mizzen-peak and heads out of the
harbour southwards for Roscoff, the gang have strung enough onions for a
month’s sale and are busy in town and country around.
Good-natured, hardy, frugal, and industrious, Onion Johnny has his Sabbath
Day rest, and Mass sees him regularly at the nearest Catholic church every
seventh day. That afternoon is his very own, and, dressed in his best clothes,
he may be seen abroad taking a sober pleasure in inspecting the local shipping
or architectural “lions.” During the war he was on service to a man—either in
the famous “Fusiliers Marins” (of whom 70 per cent. are Bretons) or in the
Navy as loup-de-mer (Jack Tar).
His daily takings are handed over to the gang foreman to be banked, and each
spring in his native Bretagne at the great meeting of the co-operative “famille”
his share of the trading profits and his wages balance—a substantial total—
rewards the participant in an honest if minor industry.
1
The spelling “ingan” transcribes a southern-English pronunciation of “onion.”
2
Rosyth is a town on the Firth of Forth, in Scotland.
3
Vendée is a département (administrative district) south of Brittany.
4
Brittany was occupied in the 5 th and 6 th centuries by Britons fleeing the
Saxons.
Pascal Treguer
Need for healing
Heavenly Father,
We bring to you all those struggling with their mental health just now.
We pray:
For everyone who is smiling, when inside they’re in pain.
For everyone who is saying they’re fine, when inside they feel drained and empty.
For everyone struggling with fear and worry as the easing of the lockdown brings new
anxieties.
Be with them in their suffering, as so much of their world has been stripped back and
emptied.
When loved family and friends have been taken by illness,
Or made distant by lockdown.
Pour your healing balm into their pain and sadness.
May you walk with them besides still waters
May you speak to them in a still small voice.
May you heal them, and fill them, and bless them with your abundant love and fullness
of life.
And may they know that they are loved by you for the beautiful unique person that they
are, created in the image of their heavenly creator and loving Lord.
In the Name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit,
Amen.
By the Revd Peter Crumpler
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