Coronavirus: Sunday 15th March – preparing for an uncertain few weeks

At today’s morning service (15th March) which included self-service communion and a special Church Meeting a number of suggestions were put forward as how best MBC can prepare for the expected escalation in the Covid-19 situation. The gallery of slides below set out just some of the ideas under consideration. Simply click on any of them to see a bigger image.

However, perhaps the most practical suggestion is the one above. It’s a piece of paper headed… if you are self-isolating, I can help. So if, or should that be when push comes to shove and I and my fellow oldies are confined to barracks and all those of you lucky enough to have been born post 1950 are wondering how best to help maybe downloading this would be a good starting point.  

In the meantime please keep checking this website for updates, and for good measure you can also follow MBC on Facebook and/or Twitter both of which you can set up via the links on our Home page.

Should you need to contact us MBC’s email address is moortown.baptist@btconnect.com and our phone number 0113 2693750.

Coronavirus latest: important updates re Sunday 15th March

CORONAVIRUS UPDATE RE SUNDAY 15th March

This coming Sunday (March 15th) our early service/breakfast is cancelled. However, between 9.30 and 10.15am the Music Room will be open for prayer.

Our 10.45 service will, with a number of adjustments go ahead as usual

Firstly, on arrival you will be invited to wash your hands. Bulletins and bibles will be available but will not be handed out. The rows in church will be set further apart to give safe distance and rather than bags being passed around there will be a retiring offerering. At Communion whilst we will be using individual glasses only pre-cut bread will be available; in other words no one will be able to break their piece of bread from a larger loaf.

The Church Meeting to which everyone is invited will still take place after the service.

One other thing you need to be aware of is that we will not be serving refreshments this Sunday, but that doesn’t mean to say you can’t bring your own.

Looking forward to seeing you on Sunday

Coronavirus: Covid-19 advice

Covid-19 advice

Clean hands, open hearts

We aim to support and care, as a community of people in Christ – keeping one another safe. As this situations develops we are carefully / regularly monitoring advice and the actions we are taking in church.

We seek to offer welcome in a sensitive way and we recognise that meeting together in a safe way is beneficial. We are disinfecting handles and toilets in church before and after meetings.

We are also considering how we can offer the best pastoral care and practical support to all at this time – we see this as an important opportunity.

In regard to this coming Sunday we’re sorry to say that our church breakfast is cancelled although the Music Room will be open between 9.30am and 10.15 for prayer. Communion and the Church Meeting will take place as announced.

Momentum is on this Sunday evening and Beacon Café, Oasis, Moortots and Lunch Club in the coming week. Home Groups should consider this advice as they plan meetings.

The leaders and teams will continue to receive guidance and support from the church.

Our advice for individuals is as follows:

If you have a high temperature or a continuous cough you should not come along to meetings and you should self-isolate for 7 days.

If you are anxious about coming to a meeting or have underlying health issues that make you vulnerable it may be wise to stay at home.

If you are staying away and/or are unwell please let someone in church know so we have stay connected with you and offer support.

 You should:

  • carry tissues, use them for coughs/sneezes, and bin them.
  • wash hands with soap and hot water  (for 20 seconds) or use sanitiser gel.
  • avoid touching your eyes, nose, and mouth with unwashed hands.
  • Clean/disinfect frequently touched objects/surfaces.
  • Avoid shaking hands or sharing hugs.
  • Seek to maintain a 1 metre (arms length) personal space from others.

Catching the Wave, the highlight of trypraying… a novel approach for both those that do and those that don’t

Here at MBC, Lent, that’s the 26th Feb to April 5th will be time when we will be focusing specifically on prayer. Throughout the whole of this time we will be using some material called Try Praying – a novel scheme designed for both those who aren’t religious and don’t go to church but also for those who do.

There’s more about the thinking behind this plan at www.trypraying.co.uk and to help it along there are also two books. One is actually more a booklet which is free of charge and designed to be given out anywhere and everywhere. The other is more a personal prayer guide which costs £3. Both are available from the MBC office.

There’s a chart below showing our Service plan for Lent 2020. Each of these is based on a particular section from the Try Praying guide and reading them in advance will be a great help when it comes to following our overarching theme.

Ten days into Lent, and running in conjunction with the Try Praying project MBC is holding its next Prayer Day. It’s  called Catching the Wave and is happening on March 7th between 10am and 10pm.As you can see above the event is promising: “A day full of prayer through imagery, music, art, quiet reflection and movement.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

Haddon Willmer tells how one particular hymn brings back one particular memory

We sang this hymn this morning at our early service and it brought back certain memories. It did not so much bring back memories, nostalgically, but rather gave me another chance to be thankful that I was early rooted in the good news of God and remain so, despite all the powers of darkness. 

When morning gilds the skies,
My heart awaking cries:
May Jesus Christ be praised!
Alike at work and prayer
To Jesus I repair:   May Jesus Christ be praised!

To Thee, my God above,
I cry with glowing love,
May Jesus Christ be praised!
The fairest graces spring
In hearts that ever sing,   May Jesus Christ be praised!

When evil thoughts molest,
With this I shield my breast,
May Jesus Christ be praised!
The powers of darkness fear,
When this sweet chant they hear,   May Jesus Christ be praised!

When sleep her balm denies,
My silent spirit sighs,
May Jesus Christ be praised!
The night becomes as day,
When from the heart we say,   May Jesus Christ be praised!

Be this, while life is mine,
My canticle divine,
May Jesus Christ be praised!
Be this th’ eternal song
Through all the ages long,   May Jesus Christ be praised!

This hymn I heard first at primary school, East Howe in Bournemouth, when I was 10 and in Miss Dibden’s class. We had no religious education that I remember, although this was in 1947-8, after the 1944 Education Act had mandated non-denominational religious instruction in state schools. Miss Dibden was a spinster in her fifties probably, maybe left single because so many men had been killed in WWI, a good Anglican, not at all religiously soppy, and a very effective teacher of a class of about 50. She had us singing – British folk songs, John Peel and Trelawny and Over the seas to Skye, with no historical explanations offered, and we also sang this hymn quite often, so I got to know it by heart.   I was exhilarated by its repeated outburst, ‘May Jesus Christ be praised!’ And I was instructed and formed by its prodding me to awareness of the phalanx of human evils and sufferings, the powers of darkness coming close, and its confident determined opposition to them, by praising Jesus Christ. And the last verse invites the singer to life-long commitment, ‘my canticle divine’ joining with the song of ‘all the ages long’.

I am grateful to her for giving me this hymn, and also the prayer, which she had us stand for at the end of each day, as she said, without comment:

Lighten our darkness, we beseech Thee, O Lord

And by thy great mercy, deliver us from all the perils and dangers of this night,

For the love of thy only Son, our Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen

I don’t think it meant much to me then, though it was a dignified and orderly way to ending.   But, when later, I went to Anglican services more often, especially in Emmanuel College Chapel, it did not come to me as something unknown, and over the years, it has come to mean more and more to me. How much it means depends on how one interprets it, of course. I do not think cornily about bogeys and things that go bump in the night, but about all the serious troubles which beset human beings in our lives.

Both the hymn and the prayer have an unfussy, succinct but profound realism about the world and God in Christ.

 

Fairtrade Fortnight, 24th February to 8th March

For two weeks each year thousands of individuals, companies and groups across the UK come together to share the stories of the people who grow our food and drinks and who grow the cotton in our clothes, people who are often exploited and underpaid.

What happened for Fairtrade Fortnight 2019?

Fairtrade Fortnight in 2019 focused on the people – in particular the women – who grow the cocoa in our chocolate. £1.86* is the amount a cocoa farmer in West Africa needs to earn each day in order to achieve a living income. Currently, a typical cocoa farmer in Cote d’Ivoire lives on around 74p** a day. Almost all cocoa farmers in West Africa live in poverty.  

For the women the situation is even worse. They may plant and harvest on the farm, look after children, carry water, collect wood, cook and clean for the family, and transport the cocoa beans to market but often with fewer rights than men.

This is why we at Fairtrade are campaigning for a living income to become a reality for cocoa farmers in West Africa. If we can work together with governments, chocolate companies and retailers to make the commitments and policies necessary, then we can make it happen. 

We made a huge noise in 2019 with 4000 campaigner events reaching 1 million people, 10,000 new supporters joining us on our journey, and businesses and MPs making their voices heard on the issues of living incomes. On 7 August 2019, Ivorian Independence Day, Fairtrade campaigners joined Fairtrade Foundation staff at 10 Downing Street to hand in a petition with more than 50,000 signatures calling for Boris Johnson to back cocoa farmers fighting for a fairer deal through UK-funded aid projects, business and human rights legislation, and joining international efforts that unite governments, chocolate companies and civil society to achieve living incomes.

*WIP estimation based on the Living Income Community of Practice

**This is the estimated daily income per household member based on a typical cocoa farming household

There’s a link here to Fairtrade Fortnight’s website  https://www.fairtrade.org.uk/en/get-involved/current-campaigns/Fairtrade-Fortnight

Night Shelter

We are hosting a Night Shelter for homeless people here at MBC from Monday April 27th to Monday May 4th. We are looking for volunteers in a variety of roles from across the whole church. Our team will be coordinated by Hilary Darling, Hilary Brockway and Ben Powell.

To find out more or to volunteer please speak to one of the above or ask Graham or Shona for their contact details.

Coffee morning and Table Top Sale

There will be a coffee morning and table top sale in support of MBC’s Romania Fund between 10am and 1pm on Saturday 21st of March. Please see Karen Ross if you would like to book a table; tables cost £10.

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