The Parish Prayer Programme - Introduction

July 4th, 2007

“For where two or three come together in my name, there am I with them” Matt. 18:20

You may remember that, at the Annual Parochial Church Meeting, Roy referred to the need to refocus our parish on the importance and power of prayer, and that there would be a new initiative on prayer this year. Well, that new initiative is going to be called the Parish Prayer Programme (already shortened to PPP in much of the documentation surrounding it).

“..if two of you on earth agree about anything that you ask for, it will be done for you by my Father in heaven.” Matt. 18:19

The Mission and Discipleship Committee formed a ‘PPP Working Group’ in April, which will be presenting its proposals to the PCC meeting on 18th June. During our deliberations we have aimed to ensure that this initiative is relevant and accessible to all, and is sustainable in the future, but most of all that it meets its main objectives of tapping into the power of corporate prayer and building our relationships with God. 

Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, in everything give thanks; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you. 1 Thess. 5:16-18

The PPP Working Group is proposing a varied ‘menu’ of prayer styles and support in which we hope everyone will find something to their taste. A pilot scheme of the key aspects will be run within the PCC over the next three months, prior to launching the PPP to the whole parish. Several of these offerings, such as the Tuesday morning Prayer Group, Taizé services, and the Prayer Boards already exist within the parish and have supported God’s work in this place for a long time, so they will primarily benefit from an organised circulation of prayer needs. Other offerings have happened on an ad hoc basis, such as small prayer groups, and these will be included in a new coordinated approach. And finally there will be some new types of corporate prayer established that will form the backbone of this prayer initiative. 

“Whatever things you ask in prayer, believing, you will receive.” Matt. 21:22

Further information will appear in future issues of the Parish Magazine and, don’t worry, you certainly won’t miss the launch of this exciting programme!

Robert Smith

Chair of the PPP Working Group

Online Safety

June 27th, 2007

This advice on Online Safety is from the BBC Messageboards site to which I give full credit
http://www.bbc.co.uk/messageboards/newguide/popup_online_safety.html

If you are reading this you may also be interested in the BBCs Religion & Ethics Message Boards http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/mbreligion/
.

Online Safety

People you meet online

Remember that posting a message on a message board is like making a public announcement. Everyone can see that information, not just the person you have been talking to.

Be wary

People you meet online may not be who they seem. They can post information about themselves which may not be true and encourage you to build up a picture of them which is misleading.

Never give out your contact details

This includes things like:

  • Your real name.
  • Postal address and postcode.
  • Telephone number (including mobile).
  • Email address (including Hotmail or webmail addresses).

Messages which contain contact details will be edited. If you see contact details in a message, mailto:Webmaster@parishoffleet.org.uk to let us know.

Don’t give too much detail

Take care when giving out information that could help someone to locate you. This could be details of your school, home town or clubs you belong to.

Tell us if you are worried

If another user is abusive to you or makes you feel uncomfortable, you should contact us mailto:Webmaster@parishoffleet.org.uk. Please explain the situation as clearly as you can, so that we can investigate.

For more information on keeping safe online visit BBCs ChatGuide website

Spreading our Parish message online

May 29th, 2007

As I write this at Pentecost it seems an appropriate time to consider the new ways we can communicate our Parish message in this day and age. Two thousand years ago the disciples must have been having a bit of an anticlimax after the Ascension. What do they do now? Leaderless, the disciples were gathered - may be the very same room where only a few weeks before they had been been for the Last Supper. The tremenduous happening is very well described in Acts 2:1-4:

And when the day of Pentecost was fully come, they were all with one accord in one place.
And suddenly there came a sound from heaven as of a rushing mighty wind, and it filled all the house where they were sitting.
And there appeared unto them cloven tongues like as of fire, and it sat upon each of them.
And they were all filled with the Holy Ghost, and began to speak with other tongues, as the Spirit gave them utterance.

Some say the miracle was just that they spoke Greek, the lingua franca of the western Mediterranean, which would have been understood by all the visitors in Jerusalem for the feast. But what ever it was, the big step was that they were driven to get out and communicate, and they had something to say.The “wonderweb” is providing an increasing number of ways that everyone can broadcast to the world, or to anyone who wants to listen. First there was email,  corresponding with your friends for free, then the website, everyone can have a shop window to the world. In the last few years the pace has quickened and evolved (perhaps intelligent design?) and so many new internet features have appeared together that some call it WEB two-point-zero - the next release of the web.Going beyond emails :

  • Instant messaging (communicate with your teenagers for free!)
  • phone over the internet
  • videoconference over the internet (last month I chatted with my nephew who showed me the spare room in his flat in Buenos Aires - no wardrobes yet!)

but the exciting areas are new broadcasting and collaboration methods:

  • Blogs - web logs or diaries (like this) where you can share your thoughts with the world, and others can discuss and reply (below)
  • chatrooms - where you can chat with like minded people
  • Online communities - somehow unpopulated and unintelligable to anyone over the age of 25: like Myspace and Bebo 
  • and the connected file sharing like YouTube where you can load up video to play to the world.
  • Wikis - like wikipedia ; an encylopedia just built by voluntry contributions with a bit of peer editing. I quickly found all you ever need to know on Pentecost at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pentecost
  • the search engines - including Google : the mother of all - have gone beyond just finding text to providing maps, pictures, tailored news, best shopping prices, free email, even free software.
  • Newsfeeds (Real Simple Syndication or RSS) where you can build up your own news agency by taking feeds from your choice of providers to get the information you want. (see http://www.parishoffleet.org.uk/newsfeeds.html for an example) You can even receive feeds from Blogs of your choice or the discussion and comments (see the foot of this page)
  • Podcasts where you can download recordings -  audio and video - to play when you want, not just on your computer but on the ubiquitous iPod (hence the name)
  • cartoon from www.weblogcartoons.comCartoon by Dave Walker. Find more cartoons you can freely re-use on your blog at We Blog Cartoons.

All these take the web beyond static websites, centrally controlled, into an interactive forum. Not just broadcasting but a cyber-soap box where others can heckle back or discuss and add to the thoughts. And the big plus for non-commercial users is that all of web 2.0 is largely free. In a few minutes you can broadcast a video to the world (the puppies that arrived in our house this week were on Youtube in 24 hours http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yB2Z-9Ms1_c ). Some of this is paid for by advertising, others run by internet media giants like Google and Yahoo as part of thier global communities, or you can get them at no extra cost as part of a webhosting package.And if you feel that the central websites might have some hidden agenda, or you just want a more specialised site, then the technology is relatively cheap and accessible. Find the the peer group review in Wikipedia is too liberal and anti-christian biased? Then set up http://www.conservapedia.com/Main_Page. Are some of the videos on YouTube a bit “off message”? then there is http://www.godtube.com/With this explosion of communications where does this leave the poor Parish website?Should we try to keep up with Web 2.0 ?Should we stick to doing the website as well as we can?If we struggle to fill the website, why look for more ways to communicate?If we have an interactive forum or chat facilities how do we moderate the discussion to make sure it doenst get hijacked by others?Should we podcast the sermon? BBC NEWS | UK | England | Suffolk | Vicar stunned by sermon surfers http://www.feedforall.com/podcasting-sermons.htm www.preachtheword.co.uk/Should the vicar blog his sermon - and we can then discuss the points raised in a way that you never can, even if you stay for coffee after the service?If we podcast and blog who will listen? By the time we have recorded or typed out the sermon will it be worth the effort? (Someone once calculated that so few people listened to the epilogue on Radio 3 that it would be cheaper to turn off the transmitters and send the announcer round to the listeners house by taxi!)Will we have enough to say in a blog that would draw people back to read the next one?Should we just be aiming at people in the geographic confines of our parish boundaries or going for the global audience?Do we risk having a divided seperate online community, inaccessible to the “bricks and mortar” church-goers, perhaps struggling to even turn a PC on? Do we begin to speak with other tongues, as the Spirit gives us utterance?   cartoon from www.weblogcartoons.comCartoon by Dave Walker. Find more cartoons you can freely re-use on your blog at We Blog Cartoons.

About

May 29th, 2007

The Parish of Fleet, Hampshire UK, with its two churches, All Saints and Saints Philip & James is in the Anglican Diocese of Guildford.  

For more information about parish life in the Parish of Fleet visit our website at http://www.parishoffleet.org.uk/ or contact us http://www.parishoffleet.org.uk/contacts.html

The views expressed on this weblog are purely those of the individual contributors and are not necessarily shared or endorsed by the Parochial Church Council or Clergy of the Parish.