Challenges and Opportunities!

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Number 108 Summer 2011 Challenges and Opportunities! At the moment, at Oxford Place, we seem to be passing through a period of significant challenges. In fact, the challenges sometimes appear so significant that it would be easy to get down-hearted. Inside Changing Places Sisters in Harmony Handwritten Bible Mission Staff (Superintendent Minister) Telephone: 0113 242 4951 The Revd Caroline Ryder (Chaplain to the Universities) Telephone: 0113 343 5071 The Revd Pat Creamer (Counsellor, MIND) Telephone: 0113 264 5831 The Revd Philip Bee (Director, Oastler Centre) Telephone: 01484 609 288 Deacon Jenny Jones Telephone: 0113 242 5254 Mr Trevor Parker (Mission Administrator) Telephone: 0113 245 3502 Chair of the District The Revd Dr Elizabeth Smith Telephone: 0113 278 5546 Circuit Stewards Mrs Gwen Pridmore Telephone: 0113 266 5093 Miss Marjorie Cossey Telephone: 0113 295 6373 Local Preachers 1984 Mr R K Lolley 1986 Mrs P Goacher 1991 Mrs E Waller 1994 Ms J Aitchison On Note Deacon Jenny Jones Worship Leaders Mrs Ann Bailey Day-by-day, week-by-week, we exercise a distinctive ministry in the city centre. People turn to us in their moment of need. We stand firm and confident in the grace of God that we express. We embrace all manner of folk with love of Christ that we have ourselves experienced. So why are we challenged? What is it that might make us down-hearted? The issue we face is the challenge of sustainability. How do we maintain the level of mission and ministry with diminishing resources? How do we keep the whole thing bouncing along when, quite frankly, the money is running out and we are getting tired? Did you realise that at the recent meeting of the Finance and Property Committee we identified that, if nothing changes, then the money will run out in two years time? I am sure that I do not need to write that this is a serious and significant challenge! When we have a crisis in our personal or family finances, or in our business or workplace, then we recognise what needs to be done. We cut our costs and we increase our income. We have already taken the serious decision to close the Lounge Café and so remove a serious deficit from our accounts. In our context the most significant cost is the cost of the three ministers and our lay employees. In order to reduce costs in this area we would need to reduce our staffing but then how would we see the work being done? It is quite possible that there is a different way of doing things but what is that different way? Think about it. St George s Crypt is a Christian Charity based underneath the thriving church of St George s, Leeds. It has been providing care and support for homeless, vulnerable and disadvantaged people since 1930. Don Robins first opened the doors of the Crypt to alleviate the considerable distress of many who found themselves with next to nothing as a result of the Great Depression. www.stgeorgescrypt.org.uk At Oxford Place the most significant income comes from rent from our tenants. Our tenants, however, have themselves significant challenges of finance which impact on their ability to do the work that they do. We have vacant space, which could be let, if there were organisations who could be attracted to come and take it. We have the significant challenge to market ourselves and so increase our income by getting more people on to the premises. Your regular giving is also a significant part of our income. Many of you pay by regular standing order, which is great, but can I challenge you to think about when you last adjusted your giving according to the increased cost of life. Yes, I know we are all on fixed incomes, but let me challenge you to have a look and see if you are doing all you can do. Let me offer some light in the apparent gloom of our situation. Although we have closed our work in the Lounge Café, an opportunity has arisen for that work to be taken up by others. The Nurture project at St George s Crypt is keen to use our (Continued on page 2)

(Continued from page 1) Lounge Café as part of their training of young men and women in the catering industry. Supported by the Pret Foundation Trust, the work moves men and women from homelessness and unemployment into purposeful work and confident futures. Having learned basic skills within the safety of the Crypt, the trainees would come and run a café in our lounge meeting paying customers for the first time. The end of the process is when the Pret Foundation Trust give the trainees placements in their shops and then they secure employment within the hospitality industry. Subject to getting the details sorted out, you will soon see our Lounge Café take on a new lease of life. Please be patient with us as we work through the details, and whilst we work to get things right. The gist of the deal is that we will hand the café over to the Nurture project, they will manage it, the staff will be their trainees, the management will come from the Crypt. As far as Leeds Methodist Mission is concerned this is a cost-neutral project. The costs will all be absorbed into the work and paid for by Nurture project itself. At the end of the first year we shall receive a donation equivalent to an agreed percentage of the annual profit of the work that has taken place in our lounge café. I don t know about you, but I think this is a brilliant project and a worthy project to get involved in. Why do I think that? First of all, I think that this project is an exciting development of our mission. It gives us the opportunity to be associated with work amongst the folk who so often get left behind in life s way. Think of the history of the Christian work in our city here is the group of people amongst whom we have traditionally had a significant m i s s i o n a n d ministry. Although it will not be our work as such, we St George s Church will be so closely associated with it as a concept that it will be perceived as our work by those who look on. Secondly, I am excited at the opportunity to work with our ecumenical colleagues at St George s that this project will enable. How long have we been lamenting our lack of connection with our closest Christian neighbour. I hope that you share my excitement too. I said that this new project was light in the gloom. Why do I think that? After all, has not our café just failed? Well, I have confidence that this café will not fail so long as we give it the space to do what it needs to do. The leadership of the Nurture project are professionals, the operations are led by a professional chef who has worked in significant restaurants in many cities. The leader of the management comes from a professional background of taking failed/failing cafés and restaurants and bringing them back to life. They What is the Pret Foundation Trust? Julian Metcalfe and Sinclair Beecham (the founders of Pret A Manger, the high street sandwich chain) set up The Pret Foundation Trust in 1995. Their aim was (and still is) to alleviate poverty in the UK, focusing on the plight of the homeless in particular. www.pret.com/pret_foundation_trust/about.html have a vision for how things might be at Oxford Place, they have a group of men and women to do the work, they have ideas about marketing and planning. And all of this from a rock solid Christian commitment and ethos. So, please join me in being excited about this project! Be encouraging of it and encouraged by it. Let s not become down-hearted, but do all we can to overcome the serious challenges that face us. T.S. Eliot wrote his Choruses from the Rock : Much to cast down, much to build, much to restore; Let the work not delay, time and the arm not waste; Let the clay be dug from the pit, let the saw cut the stone, Let the fire not be quenched in the forge. The scriptures are filled with examples of the people of God rising up from serious challenges and finding new ways of being Christian people in their time and place. The challenge that I am placing before you today is to be encouraging, to be encouraged, to play your part, to reconsider your financial support but most of all to pray. Pray with all your heart, and soul, and mind that God s Spirit will blow through this place and take us from where we are to where God would have us be. Blessings really do abound! The Church with a Mission by Colin Dews is the story of Oxford Place from 1835 to 2010. Copies are available from the Church Office or from Marjorie Cossey at 3.00 each. 2 Life and Work 108

Our Church Family and Friends We congratulate Marjorie Kirk on her 91st birthday in March We acknowledge A legacy to Oxford Place from Elsie Hippey We remember Richard Davison who died on the 20th April 2011 Irene Lolley who died on 31st May The Revd Richard M Davison A service to celebrate the life of Richard Davison, who died on the 20th April aged 86, was held at the Chorlton Methodist Church in Manchester on 5th May 2011. The church was full with family, friends and colleagues, and with many from the various places where Richard had served as a minister. Richard was superintendent minister at Oxford Place from 1974-1988. This time saw the change from a Victorian preaching house seating around 2000 to the building we have today, a change which because of Richard's vision and inspiration led to new ways of communicating the Gospel to the city of Leeds. Changing Places For about five weeks in the summer, Adrian will change places with a minister from Canada. Adrian, Janet, Rachel and Kacey will travel to Hamilton, Ontario. Adrian will take on the role of the Revd Dr Robin Wilkie at the Marshall Memorial United Church and the Burdon family will live in his family house. During the same period Robin and his wife Susan will come to live in Adrian s manse with Robin becoming involved at Oxford Place taking on some of the duties of Adrian. On Sunday 24th July our morning service will be a welcome service for Robin and his family. The service will be followed by a bring and share faith lunch. Marshall Memorial United Church, Ancaster, Hamilton, Ontario The Revd Dr Robin Wilkie Hamilton is on Lake Ontario at the western end of the strip of land that separates Lake Ontario from Lake Erie. At the eastern end of that same strip you will find Niagara Falls and the USA. Life and Work 108 3

Kath Harwood writes For the last thirteen years, my sister Margaret and I have been raising money to support Samar Sahhar and the girls in the Lazarus Home in Bethany on the West Bank close to Jerusalem. In those years, with six friends, who are now members of Sisters in Harmony, we have been able to give 67,643 to the Lazarus Home. During the same period I have visited the home twice a year and have become very close to everyone there. About a year ago there appeared to be some deterioration in the relationships between Samar and the local Palestinian social service department. T h i n g s b e c a m e difficult, and in September 2010, with virtually no warning, the House was closed. Samar and the house mothers were suddenly unemployed and the girls split up seventeen went to a new purpose-built Muslim Home for Girls, the others were scattered. For the last few months we have continued to raise money, but instead of using it to support the girls, we have sent it to the Friends of the Lazarus Girls Home to Sisters in Harmony Kath with two of the girls at the new Muslim Girls Home hasten the completion of the new Christian-funded home they are building. After my recent visit to Bethany (in May) I have serious doubts about continuing our support for this charity. While I was there I visited the seventeen girls in the new Muslim home and was overwhelmed by the warmth and exuberance of their welcome. I also spent time with Rana, t h e i r f o r m e r headmistress, a close friend of Samar asnd a daily visitor to the Lazarus Home. She filled me in on the details of the closure. Samar, herself, was in Italy, but I telephoned her there and exchanged emails. I fear she will not be involved with the new home even when the building is completed. In addition, there is a serious difference of opinion between the Friends of the Lazarus Girls Home and the McCabe Trust (who raised 200,000 for the Lazarus Home during the Oberammergau pilgrimages last year) about the future of the new building when (or if) it is completed. In view of so many uncertainties about the future we The Gambia lies each side of the Gambia river in western Africa surrounded by the much large country of Senegal. 4 Life and Work 108

have decided to support a new charity, pending clarification of the Lazarus situation. I have always preferred to support small, struggling projects, with a lot of personal involvement, so we have agreed to raise money, during the coming year, for a school building project in the Gambia, at a village called Brikama. Joan and Allan Dyer started this project twelve years ago having visited Brikama and realised how desperately poor the school facilities were. They decided to build four classrooms. After those four classrooms were completed they aimed for a further four. Since Allan died in 2008, Joan has been trying to complete the project with very limited money. We wish to thank everyone who has helped us in our fund-raising. Although we do the entertaining, it is the kindness and generosity of people like you that has raised so much money for Lazarus. We hope you will continue to support us with our new Brikama project. With thanks and very best wishes Kath, Margaret and all the Sisters in Harmony. Kath Harwood would like to thank the people who sponsored her Lenten Fast and helped her raise 1020. This sum has been divided equally between MRDF (the Methodist Relief and Development Fund) all gift-aided and the Lazarus Home Building Fund. The Handwritten Bible The Oxford Place Pages Psalms 57 and 58 The year 2011 marks the 400th anniversary of the King James Bible one of the first Bibles to be written in the English language and the one that became widely available to ordinary people. As part of the British Methodist celebration, Conference 2010 resolved that the Districts would work collectively to handwrite the Bible. Having been given the encouragement to express maximum creativity, and cultural diversity to create a Bible of the people it seemed appropriate that here in the Mission we should endeavour to engage as many of those who come on to our premises during the week and so one wet Monday morning in February we set up a display and tables in the lobby and asked people who were willing to write one verse of our allocated passages. It was a busy morning in the Mission. A popular musician at the Town Hall concert meant that the café was full. The rain ensured that they were additional visitors to the Person-to-Person Listening Service and there was a group meeting James Barnett, the new Pioneer minister to the gated communities. Our twenty two verses did not take long to complete pensioners, clergy, a homeless man, volunteers all helped to produce them faster than we anticipated. Some, of course, politely refused to participate, but so many expressed an interest and wanted to be part of the process it really felt like a community effort. Leeds Methodist Mission was asked to contribute Psalm 57 and Psalm 58 not the easiest of Psalms to ask members of the public to write. Psalm 57 was easier. It is psalm of praise and assurance under persecution. Psalm 58, on the other hand, is a prayer of vengeance rather violent. A brief exegesis was made available for anyone who wanted to know more about the background to these two psalms. On Saturday 7th May all the chapters that were written across the Leeds District were presented at Synod and will then be taken to Conference in Stockport in June. Jenny Jones Life and Work 108 5

On Sunday, 12 June, the Day of Pentecost, Keith stood up before the morning congregation and gave his testimony. He has allowed me to use his written notes so that readers of Life and Work can share in what he told us. Editor For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord. Romans 8:38-39 (King James Version) I was brought up in Leeds in the fifties and sixties. I was christened, though my parents were not churchgoers. I was, however, taught the Lord s Prayer and my Grandma bought us Bibles one Christmas. When I was twelve I attended a Children s Crusade at my local Methodist Church and took the decision to accept Christ as my Saviour. At fifteen I became a member of the Methodist Church. I carried on attending church until in my later teens I drifted away. I started going to the pub and my association with alcohol began. Putting things right with the Lord I have been married three times and am currently in the middle of a divorce. My first wife and I split up for personal reasons, but we have remained friends, and recently she helped me in setting up my new flat. My second wife was an Irish Catholic and we had two lovely children. I had problems with my in-laws because I would not send our children to a Catholic school. During this second marriage I suffered a number of bereavements my grandmother, followed by my mother and a few years later my father. It was at this time that my wife decided we should separate for reasons I shall never know as not long afterwards she was killed in a road traffic accident. Because of these events my health deteriorated and I blamed God. I remarried and moved the family to Otley. At first it was difficult, but in time we settled down. I went to the Methodist Church in Otley at Christmas and Easter but refused to commit myself. God was knocking at my heart s door but I was not listening. In my working life I was a clerk for Leeds Corporation Waterworks, a rent collector, and, until my retirement in 2001, I was employed by Post Office Counters ending my time with them as a manager. I have always been an active trade unionist and continue as a member of the Post Office Pensioners Union. After I retired I hit the bottle. Instead of turning to God I was admitted to St Anne s and completed a detoxification programme and remained abstinent for St. Anne s Community Services supports people with learning disabilities, mental health problems, homeless people, and people with drug or alcohol problems. www.st-annes.org.uk eight years. When my third wife and I separated I suffered a further breakdown and on my discharge from hospital I hit the bottle again. I wanted to die. Not only had my wife left me, I was heavily in debt. I continued in self-pity and drinking until October 2010. During this time my twin sister looked after me and without her help I would probably have died. In late October of last year, I was re-admitted to St Anne s and followed the rehab programme. This was successful. I sincerely believe this was due to the Lord s goodness. I have been strangely drawn to Oxford Place over many years. I believe this to be the Lord working on my heart and not letting go. I first came here in seventies and have used the Brunswick Prayer Chapel many times. It was always my desire to be a Methodist. In the week before last Christmas I decided it was time to put things right with the Lord. After attending worship at Oxford Place I went back to St Anne s and talked to the Master. I renewed my belief that Christ died for me, but more importantly, I asked God to take my life and lead me in the ways that he desired. The transformation was immediate. I was filled with a feeling of calm and peace. The staff at St Anne s noticed the change, declaring it to be an Act of God. This is the truth. Since that time I have felt quite happy and content with life and have been fit and well. The desire for alcohol has left me, and I no longer need to take antidepressant drugs. Since then I have done things I never thought possible been interviewed by the Yorkshire Evening Post, and given a presentation to students at Leeds Metropolitan University. Love so amazing so divine, demands my soul, my life, my all. Isaac Watts (From Keith s Grandma s favourite hymn When I survey the wondrous cross ) Keith is now a mentor at St Anne s helping others through the detoxification programme where he is affectionately known as The Godfather. He is considering taking up employment again. We followed Keith s testimony by singing his favourite hymn. The chorus of it is: From sinking sand He lifted me, With tender hand He lifted me; From shades of night to plains of light, Oh, praise His Name, He lifted me! Charles H. Gabriel 6 Life and Work 108

Liz Our District Chair writes... Each month the Chair sends out a letter for publication in church magazines. As Life and Work appears quarterly, then it maybe some time before the Chair s letters appear on this page. Occasionally we will omit a letter that, in the Editor s judgement, seems out of date. The Church has got Talent? Along with others, I recently spent the warmest weekend of the year so far, engrossed in the business of Methodist Council, ahead of Methodist Conference in July. Were we privileged, or burdened, or blessed to be entrusted with this work? Well, probably all three, but we were certainly enriched in many ways by the experience. At each Council Meeting, once we come to terms with the daunting weight of paper, and look at the treasures within, we find ourselves greatly encouraged by the rich tapestry of the Methodist Church. For within the agenda we discover immense resource. There are resources of people and finance and property. Some of each of those things are being exercised to the full, and bearing tangible fruit; some are being explored or developed more tentatively, but showing green shoots to be nurtured and loved into fullness; some of each of these things people, finance and property appear still to be buried, or locked into unhelpful ways. We all need to be alert to contexts in which resources of any kind are wasted or undervalued. Jesus told stories about the use of resources. Two of them, in Luke s and Matthew s gospels, are stories about talents. The word talent has carried a dual meaning of money and giftedness. To most people in our communities it would now be understood in the Who s Got Talent? sense of potential for celebrity status. This is quite a long way from the parables that Jesus told, but echoes the idea that there is buried treasure among us, which we can discover and celebrate. My reflections on Methodist Council might be equally true of the Church in contexts that are closer to home for us the reports and conversations about church activities, and God s mission around us, in every context. We can often feel weary and defensive: stuck waiting for the seemingly inevitable, talent buried and denied. In contrast, the resourcefulness of people when they are really energised by their faith is astonishing and life-giving, in ways that speak of the generosity and grace of the gospel we proclaim. In the seasons of Easter and Pentecost may we rise to the challenge of being fully alive, stirred from sleep into the risks of offering the active engagement of all our resources in response to the needs and opportunities around us. (May 2011) For Such a Time as This Gardeners are addressing the damage to plants of the unusually cold winter. Some trees and shrubs have not survived; some may require more patience and nurturing on our part if they are to thrive again. When do we simply give up, and dig it out or chop it down? A number of stories in the gospels relate in some way to particular times and seasons. Some of these may sound more reasonable than others. A story of grain ripening in the fields until harvest time still speaks to us, even if harvesting grain in 2011 looks very different from the methods used in 1st Century Palestine. Looking for fruits on a fig tree, or grapes on a vine, are also very natural images drawn from Jesus own contemporary context. But what do we make of the fig tree being cursed for not bearing fruit, because it was not the right season for it to do so that seems a bit harsh! And what about the story of the landowner building large barns to store his grain at harvest so that he and his family would be comfortable for the coming years, which sounds a commendable action but is held up as utter folly, given the wider perspective of the day of judgement. Jesus challenged the religious leaders of the day for being better at forecasting the weather, than interpreting the signs of the times. He wept over the city of Jerusalem, with the cry, If you, even you, had only recognised on this day the things that make for peace! The ability to recognise the season we are in, and to interpret the signs of the times, requires deep listening and attentiveness to the many clamouring voices around us, and to the silences, and to the deepest questions of what it means to be human beings alive today. Such attentiveness to the moment, and knowing when to speak, or when to take action, demands wisdom. If we are to respond in the right way at the right time to the signs of the times, we need to be travelling light, attuned to the now of God s Spirit moving. Women s Network has grasped this moment to become a renewed movement for women in the Church, as Methodist Women in Britain. [MWiB]. The theme of their launch event in Southport is For Such a Time as This. As we celebrate the new season they have discerned, let us also be attentive to the time and season that is ours to recognise, and act upon. (July 2011) OP Charity of the Year The amount raised so far is: 205.27 With an additional amount of 44.10 sent directly through the MRDF envelopes. Life and Work 108 7

July August September 3 Ordinary 14 10.30 Holy Communion The Revd Caroline Ryder World Church: Togo 10 Ordinary 15 10.30 Mr Rob Lolley 6.30 Reflective Worship World Church: Chile 17 Ordinary 16 10.30 6.30 Time to Talk World Church: India 24 Ordinary 17 10.30 Deacon Jenny Jones World Church: Solomon Islands 31 Ordinary 18 10.30 The Revd Dr Robin Wilkie World Church: Mission partners Sundays 7 Ordinary 19 10.30 Holy Communion The Revd Dr Robin Wilkie The Revd Caroline Ryder World Church: Zambia 14 Ordinary 20 10.30 The Revd Dr Robin Wilkie 6.30 Reflective Service The Revd Dr Robin Wilkie World Church: Canada 21 Ordinary 21 10.30 The Revd Caroline Ryder 6.30 Time to Talk Deacon Jenny Jones World Church: China 28 Ordinary 22 10.30 Mrs Patricia Goacher World Church: Czech Republic 4 Ordinary 23 There will be no service at Oxford Place. Instead we will join the congregation at Leeds Parish Church 11 Ordinary 24 10.30 6.30 Reflective Service World Church: Belize/Honduras 18 Ordinary 25 10.30 Mrs Patricia Goacher 6.30 Time to Talk World Church: Upper Myanmar 25 Ordinary 26 10.30 Mr Rob Lolley World Church: Tonga The 10.30 Sunday Service is for all ages. On most Sundays a number of people are involved in the service. The above plan normally only gives the name of the preacher and where appropriate the person presiding at Holy Communion. Each Sunday we are invited to remember the Methodists and other Christians in a particular part of the world. A separate activity may be available for children. Tea and Coffee are served after the service. Time to Talk is an informal worship service in the Lounge Café. The Lounge Café closed at the end of May. As is explained in the article on the front page there is the possibility that something will replace it. In the meantime the premises will be open during the day as usual though this may not always be practical during the holiday period. Weekday Worship at Oxford Place Wednesday 12.30pm Service of Holy Communion Oxford Place Anniversary Sunday, 9th October 2011 10.30am Anniversary Service Preacher: Mike King, who leads the Connexional Team for World Church Relationships Dates July 22 Adrian and his family leave for Canada (more on page 3) 23 The Revd Robin Wilkie and his wife arrive in Leeds 24 10.30am Welcome service for Robin and Susan August September 10 Joint Anglican and Methodist Racial Justice Service at Oxford Place 21 7.30pm SAMM Memorial Service SAMM provides support after Murder and Manslaughter October 3 7.30pm Management Committee 9 10.30pm Anniversary Service (more in the panel on the left) 17 7.30pm Church Council Please let the Editor know of any dates that might usefully be included on this page. Deadline for the Autumn issue is11th September LIFE AND WORK of the Oxford Place Methodist Centre is published quarterly: Winter (January), Spring (April), Summer (July) and Autumn (October) by Leeds Methodist Mission. Correspondence and contributions should be addressed to: The Editor, Life and Work, Oxford Place Methodist Centre, Oxford Place, Leeds LS1 3AX. Telephone: (0113) 245 3502 (office hours) or may be sent by e-mail to kenneth.tait@btinternet.com (Text attachments are preferred in plain text, Microsoft Word, Microsoft Publisher, RTF, or Open Document format. Images and pictures can be accepted in most formats.) Please visit our web site at www.oxfordplace.org.uk Oxford Place Church is in the Leeds (Mission) Circuit (Registered Charity No: 1138731)