St Boniface Anglican News

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St Boniface Anglican News

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St Boniface Anglican News The Church of St Boniface Antwerp www.boniface.be Nr. 372 January - March 2018

The Church of Saint Boniface, Antwerp Anglican / Episcopalian www.boniface.be Facebook - St Boniface Anglican Church, Antwerp Chaplain The Rev'd Canon Andrew Wagstaff SSC 03 239 33 39 email Fr Andrew: chaplain@boniface.be MTS & Port chaplain The Rev'd Brian Millson 03 233 34 75 Reader & Lay Prison Chaplain Mr Egbert van Groesen 0470 67 35 46 Churchwardens Mr Edward Hiett 03 449 44 14 Lay Canon Ann Turner 03 440 25 81 Services SUNDAY 09:00 HOLY EUCHARIST (BCP) 10:30 SUNG EUCHARIST Coffee / lunch in the Hall WEEKDAY Tuesday at 19:30 Thursday at 10:30 Saturday 10:30 Confession by appointment with the clergy Bank Accounts Belgium vzw Stewardship & Donations BE87 2200 7812 9694 Kerkfabriek & Anglican News BE57 2200 2369 7035 The Netherlands Stichting Saint Boniface Foundation, Vlissingen Postbank Giro Account 426.00.80 The Friends of St Boniface is recognised by the tax authorities in the Netherlands and has an ANBI listing. For more information, contact Mr Immanuel John. Anglican News Annual subscription 14 (Belgium), 20 (Europe), 30 (outside Europe) Newsletters are only sent outside Belgium if the subscription is paid

The Chaplain writes. These days, it s a bit of a cliché to say that life is a journey. But for the Christian, that is a profound truth. Followers of Jesus follow Him who is the Way; indeed, the earliest Christians were called the People of the Way. A journey implies movement, progression and change. All the best adventure stories involve a quest, a journey. Unlike other religions, we are not people of a book, no matter how important the Bible may be to us. We are people of the living Word, followers of his teaching. And Lent is a time to reflect how far we have come on our journey, how we are keeping up. If nothing has changed in our spiritual lives, if we are stuck in a spiritual rut, now is the time to get moving. Bishop Norman will be with us at the start of Lent to encourage us in our spiritual journey. He will be focussing on one of western Christianity's greatest spiritual guides, St Teresa of Avila. Her insights have been the inspiration of countless People of the Way for centuries. She inspired the Carmelites way of living the religious life, and has found a new popularity for men and women in our own age. Do make every effort to be with us on Saturday 17th February. Further details are elsewhere in the newsletter, or on our website www.boniface.be This Lent, Bishop Robert Innes, our diocesan bishop is encouraging us all to reflect on another journey - the perilous journey undertaken by migrants fleeing from violence or poverty. The end of their journeys is often exploitation or even death as they try to enter Britain via the Channel ports. Read BIshop Robert's appeal letter, and consider how we might respond to these travellers and their needs. It is a complicated problem which raises many issues. But behind the politics are real people with real and urgent needs. The way we respond to the call of Christ and the way we respond to calls for help from the needy will define this year s Lent journey for us all. Find time to reflect and pray about your response. Come to the quiet day with Bishop Norman; come every Sunday to the Eucharist, and prepare quietly and reverently to hear the Word and receive the Blessed Sacrament; come to one or more of our weekday Eucharists; come to the Men's breakfasts, or the Thursday group. Do everything you can to open the way forward to a Christian life refreshed and renewed, a faith on the move.

Lent and Easter 2018 Ash Wednesday February 14th Services at: 10:30 - The Eucharist (said) 19:30 - Sung Eucharist Both with imposition of ashes SLOW BURN, BRIGHT FLAME Evangelism the Carmelite Way- a lent journey with St Teresa of Avila, led by the Bishop of Richborough, the Rt. Rev d Norman Banks. Saturday 17th February, 10:00-16:00. Lunch provided. Please let us know you re coming: chaplain@boniface.be Men s Lenten Breakfast 07:00 to 08:30 in the Vicarage February 21st, 28th, March 7th, 14th, 21st. We shall be using the book Experiencing God by Rt. Rev d Stephen Cottrell, available from Fr Andrew Wagstaff at 2.50 Thursday Study Group February 22nd, March 1st, 8th, 15th and 22nd. This group meets after the 10:30 Eucharist in the vicarage. We shall also be using the book Experiencing God available from Fr Andrew price 2.50

Mothering Sunday Lunch On Sunday March 4th at 12:30 we shall be holding our traditional Mothering Sunday Lunch. Price 12:50, children over 5, 5. Names and payment before February 28th to Sunny, d_jm_1@hotmail.com Palm Sunday and Holy Week Sunday March 25th: 10:30 Procession with palms Monday 26th: 19:30 Eucharist and address Tuesday 27th: 19:30 Eucharist and address Wed 28th: 19:30 Eucharist and address Thursday 29th: 19:30 Sung Eucharist and ceremonies for Maundy Thursday Friday 30th: 12 noon Stations of the cross (NL) Friday 30th: 15:00 Good Friday liturgy Chrism Masses Tuesday March 27th: Canterbury Cathedral at Noon - Bp Norman Brussels Pro- Cathedral at Noon - Bp Robert Madrid St George s at Noon - Bp David Wednesday March 28th at 11:30 Paris, St George s- Bp Robert EASTER 2018 Solemn Mass of the Dawn - 07:00 Followed by breakfast The Eucharist (BCP) 09:00 Family Eucharist - 10:30

First things first -one approach to mission from Bp Jonathan Goodall When we think about mission that is, if we think about mission (and I really hope that mission is quickly coming up the PCC agenda of every parish) we re probably thinking about some kind of plan even a local mission accon plan. Where to start? What to say? What to do? Who to? Why do it? Have we all got the plan? Synchronize watches And then stupid creatures that we are, only then we ask God to bless it, to swing in behind us, to endorse what we ve put together, to fill our plans with his life and love, and give success to the work of our hands. Put it like that, there s something clearly not quite right about that approach. It s dangerously close to thinking that it s our job to work out how we can take God, even smuggle God, into places and into lives where he s never been before, when of course! God is always, always already in people s lives, long before we turn up. When we stop and re-think (or when we ve learnt the hard way because our precious plans have collapsed) we realize that the real mission God gives to us is where he is already opening the door. Which giqs has God given in the congregacon that need to be given room to grow? Which new ministries can be offered? What opportunices or people, in our local neighbourhood is God bringing to our asencon? Which needs we can meet in the name of Jesus? Which places or needs further afield capture the compassion and imaginacon of our fellowship? Now of course, at some point, in any of these possibilices, parishes must be prepared and equipped for whatever possibilices for mission or service they channel energies into. But our plan is not the first thing. The first thing, the really key thing in mission, is something quite different, as every bishop, priest and deacon in the C of E knows. At every ordinacon, aqer a lot of quescons by the bishop and promises from the candidates, the bishop abruptly changes tack and says, I assume you do know (don t you?) that you can t do all this on your own? You can only do it with the grace and power of God. So then, we d beser start praying! I wish that were something we said to people who come to be bapczed and confirmed as well, because the point is the same: You do know, don t you, that you can t be a ChrisCan in your own strength? The first thing in ChrisCan life, the most important thing, is the grace and power of God. And that means, quite obviously, falling in love with God,

allowing ourselves to become dependent on his mercy, and kindness, and gentleness. And only then, when we love God and one another, have we got anything to share in mission, whatever kind of mission it is. If we think about it, we already know all this, because these two things falling in love, and le[ng it show happen every Cme we celebrate the Mass. There are two very ancient moments in the Mass when, instead of being encouraged to do something ( Let us do such and such ), we re ordered, presy abruptly, to do something. First, the bishop or priest says Up with your hearts! Give God your love and gractude. Hold nothing back. And the congregacon thunders back, We already have they re with the Lord! And the second order is when the deacon says, Go! The mass has ended; the mission has begun! Falling in love with God, and then le[ng it show. What makes any parish effeccve in terms of mission and witness is this apostolic way of life being in love with God in prayer and the Eucharist, and extending that love to others. The main point is clear: the mission of the Church is bound up with people who are in love with God the Father of Jesus Christ, who are not ashamed of depending on him, and with our willingness to share with everyone what we have received. Now that we re passing into 2018, let s help the whole Church to learn to put first things first: the love of Christ before all things! + Jonathan, Ebbsfleet T a k e n, w i t h p e r m i s s i o n, f r o m Together Newsletter 2017 Diary Dates February 14th: Ash Wednesday - Eucharist and imposition of ashes at 10:30 and 19:30 February 17th: Quiet Day for Lent- 10:30-16:00 with Bishop Norman Banks, Bishop of Richborough March 11th: Mothering Sunday Lunch at 12:30 after the Eucharist April 1st: Easter Day - See Lent page, notice board or website for times of services June 23rd: Friends of St Boniface Summer Fair - 11 to 17:00 October 7th: Harvest Festival and Lunch with Summer Tombola Draw November 24th: St Boniface Christmas Fayre - 11 to 16:00

Bishop Robert s Lent Appeal 2018 Sustaining a Ministry of Hope for Refugees in the Calais area of France I send you this appeal on the day w h e n w e r e m e m b e r t h e Presentation of Christ in the Temple. In all the fragility of human flesh, the baby who had been born far from home and laid in a manger is presented by his proud young parents in the Jerusalem Temple. It is a day when we especially recall the immense dignity of human nature. God not only makes human beings in his image, but redeems them by taking human nature upon himself. Sadly, in today s world the dignity of those who are refugees is often not regarded or respected. This year s Lent Appeal relates to a group of refugees who are in particularly acute need. The purpose of the Appeal is to aid the plight of unaccompanied child migrants in the Calais area. These youngsters have been reduced to sleeping rough in the open since the closure of the refugee camps last year. They are extremely vulnerable. The funds raised will be shared between two projects. Firstly, a safe house and outreach ministry to child migrants run by an Old Catholic monk Br Johannes Maertens who is a member of our congregation in Calais. The project is called Maria Skobtsova House, named after an Orthodox Saint and Martyr who took care of Russian refugees, migrants, the homeless and Jewish people in Paris during the last century. Brother Johannes asks us to help in the following words: As you have seen on social media the situation in Calais is getting tense and goes from worse to dramatic. It is estimated that around 600 refugees now live on the streets, parks and grasslands of Calais. The refugees a r e d e p e n d e n t o n t h e l o c a l associations for a warm meal, clothes and sleeping bags. Refugees are often exposed to violence on the streets and their sleeping bags are taken by the police. One Eritrean refugee who speaks good French says he wants to leave France as he doesn t feel safe anymore. They treat us almost as if we are animals. I don t feel safe here. The average age of refugees is young to young adults, some boys are only 14 years old, and girls 16. These are very vulnerable to being trafficked as they are often unaccompanied minors. The police don t seem to distinguish between the adults and minors; they DO NOT guide the minors to the social services responsible for minors. We need an urgent Christian response to this inhumane situation. In partnership with Canterbury

Diocese and the USPG, we are recruiting a priest who will serve as Chaplain to the Pas-de-Calais congregations and as a refugee project officer to give pastoral support and assistance, liaising with the various NGOs and agencies present on the ground. So, the second purpose of the Appeal is to raise funds to help the new priest by having financial resources to hand to support small projects. Being able to get out of the cold for a while and talk to a friendly face, to have help to understand the administrative system, to have help with language learning or other practical skills, these are all small tasks that our fund could help with. Helping with these small tasks could make a world of difference to the lives of the stranded migrants in the Calais area. The plight of the many migrants from the horn of Africa and the Middle East, including many children without accompanying parents, who have ended up on the north coast of France is repeatedly in and then out of the news. When the news cameras move on elsewhere they do not cease to exist. If anything their plight is worse than when they are in the spotlight of media attention. The Calais Jungle Camp which was demolished in October 2016 may no longer be there nor the official refugee camp which caught fire in Dunkirk, but the number of migrants subsisting in the surrounding area sleeping out under the trees or the stars has h a r d l y c h a n g e d. V a l i a n t volunteers from France and Britain struggle to meet the most basic needs of these migrants (with generously donated food, clothing & blankets). But what they and the migrants themselves are urgently seeking is human warmth and hope. In the middle of 2017, a survey of unaccompanied minors who had been living in the area on average 7-9 months was undertaken. A fifth had been there for more than a year. More than 95% had experienced police brutality. 75% had been arrested and detained for varying periods of time. More than half had experienced being woken up in the middle of the night and moved on with nowhere to go. More than a third had family in the UK but the process of getting permission for reuniting with their family was causing long delays. Less than five percent had been given any access to information about asylum law. Do keep an eye out for regular u p d a t e s o n t h e D i o c e s a n Website. And please do consider how you an support my appeal.as usual, you can give money to this appeal through your church treasurer, who will forward money to the diocesan office. With every blessing, Bishop Robert

ACB helps Syrian asylum seekers The Anglican Church in Belgium, often known as Anglican Council for Belgium (ACB), has joined other religious groups in the country to support and fund visas for 150 asylum-seekers from Syria. With the help of the Christian charity San t Edidio, the Anglican, Roman Catholic, Protestant and Eastern Orthodox Churches, together with Judaism and Islam, have come together to raise money for the initiative. The president of the Central Committee of the Anglican Church in Belgium, Canon Jack McDonald, said, Occasionally miracles happen. On November 22nd, 2017, the group agreed to fund 150 visas and support the asylum seekers once they came to Belgium. This plan was supported by the government. Canon McDonald was quoted as saying it will help 150 refugees who are in the most dire situations to have their lives rebuilt in Belgium. It is a good concrete project of absolute worth. We are doing it together through religious solidarity, and I m delighted. ACB has together raised enough money to support four assylumseekers, possibly a family, of the total 150 who are expected to come to Belgium. The 10 parishes have raised 17,000 to pay for visas and then care for the family for a year when they arrive. There has been real encouragement from smaller, poorer parishes such as Luik where there s a large Nigerian and Ghanaian congregation. The Bishop in Europe, Robert Innes has given the project his full support, too. The Syrian refugees will be chosen by the charity from camps in Turkey and Lebanon and they ll arrive on humanitarian visas. The religious groups are relying on San t Egidio, which is seasoned and experienced in this work. They will be selecting people in the worse s i t u a t i o n s - t h o s e w h o a r e handicapped, in danger of death or who have medical needs: people who would otherwise have no chance. Refugees will not be chosen or allocated based on their religion. There are currently 5.5 million Syrian regugees and between 2011 and 2017, Belgium took in 19,384 asylum seekers. The Friends of St Boniface has supported this initiative and in 2017 made a donation of 500 to Anglican Council for Belgium, towards this important work.

News from around the parish. R.I.P. Willy Bogaert We were saddened to hear of the death of Willy Bogaert in January. Willy had been ill for many months. May he rest in Peace and rise in Glory. Our thoughts and sympathy are extended to Denise and family. Joan Bridges - now in the U.K. Many of you remember Joan Bridges with fondness - Joan has now moved to a retirement residence in England close to her daughter, Anne. We shall try to stay in touch with her and she ll keep up to date on our news via this newsletter. Sunday morning assistance? We are looking for some extra people to hand out the books on a Sunday and tidy up after the service. Could you do this once every 6 weeks or so? Please let Egbert van Groesen or one of the Churchwardens know. Walsingham Pilgrimage, June 2018 There are still two places available on our Walsingham pilgrimage June 24 to 28. Accommodation (full board) is 250 depending on the exchange rate. It may be possible to share transport with other pilgrims. If you d like more information please contact Ann Turner, ann@turner.be, before March1st. Do you sometimes lose your Anglican News and wonder when events are taking place? Search no further than: www.boniface.be All dates and events are updated here very regularly!

Drie maandelijks tijdschrift Quarterly magazine Erkenningsnummer P206501 Postkantoor van afgift: 2000 Antwerpen V.U. The Rev'd Andrew R Wagstaff Gretrystraat 39, 2018 Antwerpen buitenland drukwerk tegen verminderd tarief printed paper at reduced rate impreme a taxe reduite The Church of St Boniface Antwerp Anglican / Episcopalian Nr. 372 January - March 2018