Category: Pew Sheet

  • News for 15th May

    St. Dunstan

    What could have been.

    St. Dunstan was a renowned and well loved Archbishop of Canterbury (which is why we remember his feast day here at St. Anselm). 

    He was so loved that for the better part of two centuries he was easily England’s favourite Saint. It was a close run thing between him and St. Edmund as to who would be the patron saint of England.

    In the end of course, England chose St. George, which makes St. David the only native of the country for which he is the Patron Saint in the British Isles. Patrick was Welsh, Andrew was from Judea  and George was Greek/Palestinian.

    Dunstan was a monk (in Glastonbury), a writer and artist (he was particularly known for this), he was behind major reforms at Glastonbury and is often credited with the restoration of monastic life towards the end of the 10th Century when it had started to wane. 

    From Glastonbury he went on to be Bishop of Worcester and then London before being made Archbishop of Canterbury in 960AD.

    As we prepare to celebrate the Platinum Jubilee it’s worth remembering that it was the coronation service that he wrote for King Edgar in 973 that formed the basis of the coronation of Her Majesty in 1953. 

    He was also known for his amazing generosity. At one point on a journey to Rome his generosity was so great that nothing was left for him or his followers and retainers. There were many complaints among his retinue! 

    He has many examples for us to follow. Patience, love, a dedication to learning and to sharing that knowledge – but perhaps most importantly his excessive generosity. 

    St. Dunstan pray for us…

    Fr. Matthew 

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    Our APCM will be on Sunday 22nd May immediately after Mass. If you would like to stand for the PCC please speak to Fr. Matthew or one of the Church Wardens. 

    We are lucky enough that five people have volunteered to be leaders for our summer holiday club. We’re now looking for people who can commit to a few hours to help with things like making tea & coffee, tidying up at the end of each day and other assisting tasks. Please speak to Fr. Matthew or Julie Estep (Sunday School Leader). 

    Quite a lot of changes to the weekly schedule coming up. As meetings return to in-person there is an inevitable degree of catch-up and I find myself in London everyday next week. There’s a mass everyday except Thursday. 

    I’m still looking for volunteers for the 12th July to meet with  Priests applying for our new Mission Priest job (interviews with +Jonathan on the 13th July). If you’d like to meet the applicants or help with showing them around the parish please be in touch. 

  • News for 8th May

    How to recruit a Mission Priest.

    Saint Matthias is not mentioned in the synoptic gospels in the list of the Apostles. 

    He does appear in Acts however and it’s clear that he was with Jesus from the time of his baptism.

    In the days following the Ascension Peter suggested that one of the 120 followers of Jesus nominate two men to replace Judas amongst the group of Apostles. 

    How they went about choosing these men is really interesting – they started immediately by praying.

    And they prayed and said, “You, Lord, who know the hearts of all, show which one of these two you have chosen to take the place in this ministry and apostleship from which Judas turned aside to go to his own place. 

    Acts 1:24-25

    Given we’ve just launched our own campaign to appoint a new Priest (in addition to me) to St. Anselm I see the work of the Holy Spirit in the timing of the feast. 

    Next Saturday (the Feast of St. Matthias) the advert will have been out in the world for about a week. 

    Many people will have seen it and many people will have thought about it – but I want us to pray about it. 

    Just as the followers of Jesus did all that time ago, I want us to pray ‘You lord, who know the hearts of all, show which one of these you have chosen to come to St. Anselm’

    Please make next Saturday a special day of prayer that we find the right person to come and serve as Mission Priest in Hayes.

    Fr. Matthew

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    Thank you to Susan and Julie for the flowers this week – I think they’re looking absolutely great!

    A thank you also to the anonymous donor who has also given £250 to the foodbank – this is not the first time – so a huge thank you for the generosity. 

    We’re looking to run a summer club for children (10am-4pm) for a week in the Summer Holidays. We have two great volunteers already, but we’ll need more – even if you can only offer a few hours. Please speak to Fr. Matthew. 

    There will be a parish open day on the 12th July for Priests applying for our new Mission Priest job (interviews with +Jonathan on the 13th July). If you’d like to meet the applicants or help with showing them around the parish please be in touch. 

    Our APCM will be on Sunday 22nd May immediately after Mass. If you would like to stand for the PCC please speak to Fr. Matthew or one of the Church Wardens. 

    There will be safeguarding training at 10:30am on Friday 13th May – both C0 and C1. Please contact Fr. Matthew if you’d like to receive this valuable training. All are welcome. 

  • News for 1st May

    Family and children.

    As you all know we were planning on starting a Sunday School here at St. Anselm in September later this year (after our new Mission Priest starts). 

    We’d planned on running a summer school for a week to test the waters and take tentative steps towards offering a home for families in Hayes who wanted to reconnect with – or discover for the first time – what being a Christian family was about.

    But, as I stood at the altar last week I saw the smiling faces of the families who have come to us over the last few months and I felt a powerful push from the Holy Spirt to get going now!

    Why wait? One of the things that people say about St. Anselm is that we are a family – and that is so evident on Sunday mornings.

    I looked at Julie and just knew that she’d been keen as mustard to get going and so without even speaking to her, announced the launch of our Sunday School from this week! 

    I could see (thank goodness) that she was smiling from ear to ear – as were many of you! 

    So, doing what we do best in Hayes – responding to the prompting of the Holy Spirit – we kick off our Sunday School much earlier than planned. 

    Julie has arranged a great activity for the children and I know you’ll be praying for her – and our new families – as they explore what being a Christian is all about.

    If you’d like to help – either in prayer or practically do speak to Julie on Sunday. 

    Fr. Matthew

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    We’re launching our Sunday School this week! Julie has set up some great activities for the children as they learn about Jesus in the Church Hall during our own scripture and sermon in church. Do pray for her and all those taking part as they start out on this exciting adventure. 

    We’re looking to run a summer club for children (10am-4pm) for a week in the Summer Holidays. We have two great volunteers already, but we’ll need more – even if you can only offer a few hours. Please speak to Fr. Matthew. 

    The job advert for our new Mission Priest goes out on Friday (6th May). Do look out for it and share it with anyone who may be interested. 

    There will be a parish open day on the 12th July for Priests applying for our new Mission Priest job (interviews with +Jonathan on the 13th July). If you’d like to meet the applicants or help with showing them around the parish please be in touch. 

    The flowers from Easter are still looking great but now need a little attention. If you could spare some time to give them a bit of love we’d really appreciate it. Please be in touch with either Fr. Matthew or Susan to arrange a time to come in. 

  • News for 24th April

    Divine Mercy

    Finding peace through mercy.

    In the 1930’s a Polish nun called Sr. Faustina (now St. Faustina) experienced a series of visions of Jesus. Amongst her visions Jesus asked her to paint this very special image – an image of the Divine Mercy of God flowing from his Sacred Heart. 

    Her visions were centred around Jesus bringing her to a place where she could see the mercy of God at work in the world around her. 

    She wrote of her pain at her neighbours being badly treated, about their sufferings and how it physically hurt her. She prayed that their sufferings would fall on her, that she may in some way lessen their suffering in order to help them find a path to grace and peace. 

    It is far from easy to love with a love so deep that it causes you physical pain when you see that person hurting. 

    Some of us are lucky enough to have experienced a tiny portion of this love – the love we have for our sons, daughters, fathers, mothers – our husbands and wives. 

    But what St. Faustina showed us is that Jesus wants us to love everyone with that much love. 

    It is that love which must inspire us to try harder. To try harder to defend the weak, to feed the poor, to cloth the naked, to visit the prisoner, to lift up the wretched and say, ‘I love you!’ and to really mean it. 

    St. Faustina gave us a gift,  a gift to see the power and depth of Jesus love for all of us. What do we do with that gift?

    Fr. Matthew

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    I can’t begin to thank everyone enough for such a wonderful Holy Week and Triduum. But I want to especially thank Susan, John, Mary and Shirley who worked so hard on Maundy Thursday to clean the church and for the flowers on the altar of repose (that we’re still enjoying this week).

    Remember we are still in Eastertide and continue to celebrate the Good News of Jesus’ resurrection. This is a special time when He is still with us and we have much to learn. A time to focus on scripture on prayer as we head for Pentecost. 

    We’re looking to run a summer club for children for a week in the Summer Holidays. We hope this will be the precursor for a Sunday School that will launch in September. We have two great volunteers already, but we’ll need more – even if you can only offer a day. Please speak to Fr. Matthew.

    There will be a parish open day on the 12th July for Priests applying for our new Mission Priest job. If you’d like to meet them or help with showing them around the parish please be in touch. 

  • News for Easter 2022

    He is not here; He has risen!  

    The empty tomb stands as a symbol of the greatest Hope and the greatest story ever told. 

    Of a man who came to earth, was crucified, died, buried, descended into hell, and on the third day rose again!

    He came to take away our sin, to bring us into a new life in God.

    So as we start this journey together on Thursday evening, as darkness descends and altars are stripped. We must remember that darkness will never win, that it will always be cast out by the light.

    The light will always win.

    Fr. Matthew

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    An enormous thank you must go out to everyone who has cleaned and scrubbed the church over the last two weeks and to all those who donated and helped to build our beautiful altar of repose – with so many wonderful flowers.

    It’s a very quiet week after Easter Sunday as you can see.
    Fr. Matthew will be saying daily offices from the vicarage and encourages you to do the same at home. He will be contactable throughout the week as he takes some time to read and study.

    What an huge treat is will be to have Anthony back with us for Easter Sunday! Make sure you come along at 10am on Sunday morning to once again hear our organ play out loud with some wonderful hymns!

  • News for Holy Week

    Holy habits, daily prayer & scripture.  

    As we enter Holy Week our Lent Course – Holy Habits – focuses on daily prayer and scripture. Perhaps the most difficult habit we have discussed to date.

    Each habit we’ve talked about so far has an external prompt that helps us to focus on God. Our physical posture in the liturgy is driven by the liturgy itself and the action of others around us. The practice of Pilgrimage contains an element of adventure that helps us along and gratitude is the reaction of God’s work around us. 

    But the daily reading of scripture and our daily prayers require something far harder to prompt us into doing them.

    Discipline. 

    There are very few external prompts to open our bible or say our prayers. 

    As Priests I think we’re fortunate to be required to say our offices each day – and are often prompted to do so by the public services we offer and the calling of the church bell at various times of day.

    But if you’re not publicly accountable to carry out these tasks what keeps you focused on them?

    Discipline. 

    The only way to start to read more scripture and to pray with regularity is to simply do it – and the more you do it – the more it will become a habit. 

    The more of a habit it becomes the easier it will get and the easier it gets the more scripture and the Holy Spirit will be able to work within you. 

    As we end Lent and move into Holy Week dig out your bibles and place them next to your bed. Pray when you wake, read scripture before you sleep. 

    Wake with God on your lips and sleep with Him in your heart.

    Fr. Matthew

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    As we start Holy Week together there are lots of changes to the usual schedule. Please do have a read and make sure you make time to come to the various important elements of Holy Week (not least Confession!)

    Edmund will be the boat boy at the Chrism Mass with +Jonathan on Tuesday. You’re all warmly invited to attend this special service. 

    Flowers – we really need some volunteers to make the altar of repose for the watch on Thursday night in the Lady Chapel and to dress the nave altar for the Vigil Mass on Saturday evening. I’d really appreciate any offers of help for this – or goodness knows what you’ll get if I do it! 

    There is a Walk of Witness on Good Friday with our brothers and sisters in neighbouring parishes – we meet at 11am outside the Roman Catholic church in Botwell. 

    Thank you to everyone (especially our online congregation) for the very generous donation of food and money to buy food for the foodbank over the last week. We’re back up to full strength and stand ready to help where we can. 

  • News for April 3rd

    Holy habits, gratitude.  

    It is very easy to fall into the habit of being cross with the world. Of being cynical. Of not seeing what God puts in front of you each and every day.

    The Christian practice of gratitude is something that has existed in our relationship with God right back to our earliest covenants. 

    Our offering of thanksgiving and praise has been at the heart of our relationship with God right the way back to Abraham and the earliest Israelites. 

    We still see it today in our liturgy – our Eucharist always starts with a greeting ‘the Lord be with you’ and with a declaration of praise and thanks:

    ‘Let us give thanks to the Lord’.

    The Priest continues,

    ‘It is right to give thanks and praise always and everywhere’.

    This is not something that is reserved to the altar – it is something that we all do ‘always and everywhere’. 

    Or rather – should do. It’s one of the easiest things to forget however and very quickly we fall into the trap of the world around us by being cynical and closed to the gifts of God.

    To start practicing gratitude is to be open to those gifts and opportunities in front of you. To be able to discern those gifts enables you to make best use of them.

    Start your day by crossing yourself and saying the Our Father, then thank God for the gift of another day here on earth, another day to share His love in the world, another day to care for those in need, another day to love your friends and family.

    Thank you God for our family at St. Anselm, the friendships, the support and the love.

    Fr. Matthew

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    Our Lent Course – Holy Habits – continues on Thursday (7th). This week you’ll be hearing about the Holy Habit of Daily Prayer & Scripture from Fr. Sam. You can take part in person on Thursday mornings after mass or online on Thursday evenings at 7:30pm. More details on the website – stanselm.matthewcashmore.com/lent

    Lent is a very good time to make your first confession. If you’ve not come to confession before, or if you’re worried about how it works please speak to Fr. Matthew. 

    Please note there are several changes to the office and mass times this week to reflect the start of the Easter holidays. 

    We are very short of tinned meat, soup & tinned vegetables for the foodbank and I’d really appreciate any donations you can bring this Sunday. 

    It’s Palm Sunday next week, the start of Holy Week and our journey towards Easter Sunday. Please make an extra effort to be in church and receive your palm cross. 

  • News for 27th March

    Holy habits, pilgrimage.  

    It may seem odd to think of pilgrimage as a Holy Habit. It’s very unlike the things we talked about last week – small, gentle, prods that encourage us to think about Jesus in our day to day lives.

    But… over the years I’ve found regular pilgrimage to be a life giving source of understanding and questioning on my journey with Christ.

    I tend to go on pilgrimage with my dear brother Fr. Sam Cross – who we heard from in this week’s lent course (which you can watch again on our website if you missed it). 

    We have been all over the world together and in those travels have been consistently surprised at how the holy spirit seeks us out and shows us something new in our relationship with Christ.

    The act of pilgrimage is one of body, mind, and soul. It is a deliberate act – to take yourself out of your current surrounds and life and to open your ears to what God may be saying to you.

    Pilgrimage is as much an act of mental travel as it is physical, and so if you’re unable to travel you can still go on pilgrimage – in your mind. 

    Take your soul out of the every day. Take your mind away from the worries of the day, of the week, of the year; and let them hear afresh the voice of God in your life. 

    We’ll be travelling to Walsingham on pilgrimage later this year, if you’re interested in helping organise it do let me know.

    Fr. Matthew

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    This Sunday is Mothering Sunday. A day where we traditionally travel home to our families and visit our Mother Church, the church in which we were baptised. We can’t all do that and so we celebrate our homes – and at the heart of our homes are our mothers. So come this Sunday and celebrate, pray for, give thanks and perhaps even lament our Mothers and the women of our lives who make us who we are.

    Our Lent Course – Holy Habits – continues on Thursday (31st). This week you’ll be hearing about the Holy Habit of Gratitude. You can take part in person on Thursday mornings after mass (with a lent lunch served afterwards) or online on Thursday evenings at 7:30pm. More details on the website – stanselm.matthewcashmore.com/lent

    Lent is a very good time to make your first confession. If you’ve not come to confession before, or if you’re worried about how it works and what it is for – please speak to
    Fr. Matthew. 

    Please note changes to the office and mass times on Monday and Tuesday.

  • News for 20th March

    Holy habits, crossing ourselves.  

    This week in our Lent Course – Holy Habits – we discussed those small things that point us in the direction of God as we come into church.

    One of those things was crossing ourselves. Why do we do it? Why is it important?

    It’s actually one of the very oldest physical actions we have any record of within the christian church. It first appears in writings around 200AD but was clearly in use long before. 

    The action recorded at that time is much as we see at the reading of the Gospel when we cross our forehead, our mouths and our hearts.

    In the earliest days it was a simple cross on the forehead before any task that you were seeking God’s blessing on. That developed into a cross over your mouth and heart, and over time that became one large cross – starting at your head and ending over your heart.

    We do this to ask God to bless us or the task ahead of us. 

    Think about how you use it in church – when you enter (bless me), when we start the service (bless us), when you are sent out into the world by the Priest and he makes the sign of the cross over you (bless you all for the work of the Gospel in the world). 

    So be a blessing in the world and cross yourself often, and explain to people why you do it. 

    Cross yourself when you walk past the church, when you start work, when you wake and when you fall asleep. Give it a try this Lent and see how blessed you feel!

    Fr. Matthew

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    This Sunday we welcome a new family into our fold. We met them last week when they first joined us and on Sunday we will be baptising their beautiful baby girl Maya. Please do come and offer your support and love as we gather them into the love of Jesus’ family. 

    Our Lent Course – Holy Habits – continues on Thursday (24th). This week you’ll be hearing about Pilgrimage from Fr. Sam Cross. You can take part in person on Thursday mornings after mass (with a lent lunch served afterwards, this week it’s vegetable soup) or online on Thursday evenings at 7:30pm. More details on the website – stanselm.matthewcashmore.com/lent

    Lent is a very good time to make your first confession. If you’ve not come to confession before, or if you’re worried about how it works and what it is for – please speak to Fr. Matthew. 

    Please note changes to office times on Wednesday and Thursday.

  • News for 13th March

    Hearing God as we rest.  

    There is a statue and a devotion of
    St. Joseph that is said to be one of Pope Francis’ favourites. It’s one of mine as well. 

    It’s the sleeping form of St. Joseph.

    When I was growing up I was used to seeing St. Joseph working hard in his carpentry shop, lifting, cutting and shaping wood. This hard working man was the good family man who did the right thing when asked by God.

    What I had missed in my youth was that each time God comes to St. Jospeh he does so in his sleep. 

    No great announcement from an angel like Mary or the Shepard’s, no burning bush as for Moses – no great fanfare – just a very simple and quiet instruction in those calm moments of sleep.  

    He comes to St. Joseph four times – all in Matthew. 

    First God instructs him to stay with Mary, then to leave Bethlehem and flee to Egypt, then to come home when it is safe and finally to head to Galilee rather than Judea on his return. 

    St. Jospeh listen each time with a quiet resolve to do what God has instructed him.

    Do we listen to God in our times of rest? Do we hear that small voice in those small hours?  

    Fr. Matthew

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    A big thank you to the foodbank volunteers who rolled up their sleeves and gave the church a good clean this week.

    Thank you also to Fr. Angus and to Susan for their sterling work and prayers this week. 

    Our Lent Course – Holy Habits – will start this Thursday (17th). You can take part in person on Thursday mornings after mass (with a lent lunch served afterwards) or online on Thursday evenings at 7:30pm. More details on the website – stanselm.matthewcashmore.com/lent

    Lent is a very good time to make your first confession. If you’ve not come to confession before, or if you’re worried about how it works and what it is for – please speak to Fr. Matthew.