Communications
Update – September 25th 2006
Monthly
news bulletin from the Communications Office, Church House,
London.
Feel free
to forward this to others, or to use in diocesan or parish
newsletters or magazines.
This news
bulletin is issued to members of General Synod, recipients
of the e-mailed daily briefing, within the National Church
Institutions’ All
Staff bulletin and to parish magazines via the http://www.parishpump.co.uk website. It is also available on the Church of England website
at http://www.cofe.anglican.org/info/cofegazette/
Please scroll
down to read items. Comments, please, to Peter Crumpler, Director
of Communications on peter.crumpler@c-of-e.org.uk
This month’s
contents:
Archbishop
speaks out on childhood
Archbishop and Chief Rabbis sign
an historic agreement
Bishop challenges supermarkets to lighten
up Halloween
Synod information updated on the web
A warm
welcome on Back to Church Sunday
Church questions proposals
for gambling advertisements
Archbishop's prayers for the
'ordinary people of God' as covenant plans progress
Archbishop’s
prayer for Darfur
Statistics show increased giving and ordinations
Bishops’ office and working costs published
Archbishop
features on Thought for the Day on September 11th
Back-a-Book
to help Lambeth Palace Library turn over some very old pages
World Mission Conference 2006
Dioceses, Youth, Children’s
and Schools workers challenged to ‘listen to the voice’
Building
Faith in Our Future – latest newsletter
Give your magazine
a makeover! – Communications Training
Archbishop
speaks out on childhood
The Archbishop
has spoken out of the difficulties children face in the 21st
Century, as patron of the Children's Society who have launched
The Good Childhood Inquiry. Dr Rowan Williams spoke about the
pressure children face at at school with excessive testing,
as well as the commercial pressures they face by being targeted
as consumers before they are ready. "I think we have a shared unwillingness in our
culture to let children be children for long enough".
Read
the full transcript of the Archbishop's interview on the Today
Programme: http://www.archbishopofcanterbury.org/
releases/060918.htm
Watch the
Archbishop on BBC Breakfast television: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/5354998.stm
Archbishop
and Chief Rabbis sign an historic agreement
On the 5th
September the Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams,
and the Chief Rabbis of Israel, Chief Rabbi Shlomo Amar and
Chief Rabbi Yonah Metzger, signed a joint Declaration which
sets out a framework for continuing dialogue between them.
Dr Williams described the agreement as historic: “This is a most significant
step in developing better mutual understanding and trust between
the Anglican Communion and the Chief Rabbinate and worldwide
Judaism.”
Read the
declaration in full at: http://www.archbishopofcanterbury.org/
releases/060905.htm
Bishop challenges
supermarkets to lighten up Halloween
The Bishop
of Bolton, the Rt Revd David Gillett, has sent a letter to
Britain’s
supermarket bosses urging them to rethink the way that their
stores promote Halloween and challenging them to ‘cross-merchandise’ traditional
Halloween toys and costumes with goods more suitable for those
worried about the darker side of the festival. The bishop also
commends Better than Halloween, a new book published by the Church
of England written specifically to help churches and schools
arrange events for children and young people that focus on the
positive messages of All Saints Day, the day following ‘All
Hallows’ Eve’.
Better
than Halloween is written by Nick Harding, Children’s Officer for the Diocese of Southwell
and Nottingham, and contains an overview of the traditions of
Halloween, and the reasons why many Christians chose not to celebrate
it. The colourful resource is packed with a wealth of ideas and
inspiration for running parties for children aged 5-11 that replace
the witches, monsters and ghosts with games and activities that
children will find even more fun, themed around light, laughter,
and the triumph of good over evil.
Read more
about the bishop’s
challenge to the retailers: http://www.cofe.anglican.org/news/pr9106.html
Find out more about, or order your copy of, Better than Halloween:
http://www.chpublishing/halloween
Synod information
updated on the web
In line with
the continuing project to provide more information about General
Synod on the Church of England website, a new section giving
details of Private Member's Motions has been launched. The
section joins the increasingly comprehensive General Synod
area on the website, that currently gives Synod agendas, papers,
reports and sound files of recent Synod debates.
Visit the
new section: http://www.cofe.anglican.org/about/gensynod/pmm/
A warm welcome
on Back to Church Sunday
September
24th was marked across the country as Back to Church Sunday,
when hundreds of people invited friends and family to join
them in church. Returnees received a a goody bag with brochures
featuring different aspects of church life – and a free bar of Traidcraft fair trade
chocolate.
Hundreds
of churches across the Dioceses of Derby, Ripon and Leeds,
Manchester, Wakefield, Oxford, Guildford, Hereford, Blackburn,
Sheffield and individual churches around the country all benefited
from using the material inside their ‘Back
to Church Box’. Resources in the box included invitations,
posters and banners bearing the love-heart logo and the message ‘wish
you were here’.
Find out
more about Back to Church Sunday: http://www.cofe.anglican.org/news/pr9206.html
Find out
more about how you can get involved next year: http://www.backtochurch.co.uk
Church questions
proposals for gambling advertisements
The Church
of England has called for all advertisements promoting gambling
to carry health warnings about the danger of gambling addiction.
In a submission to the Committee of Advertising Practice, the
Church states that the potential benefits of enforcing such
warnings this “should outweigh the disadvantage of extra financial
costs for advertisers.” The Church also calls on the Gambling
Commission to make compliance with advertising rules a condition
of gambling operators’ licences.
In the submission,
the Church restates its long-held concern for the potential
damage to individuals and families if more people become problem
gamblers.
Read the
full submission at: http://www.cofe.anglican.org/news/pr9306.html
Archbishop's
prayers for the 'ordinary people of God' as covenant plans
progress
The Archbishop
of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, has spoken of his prayers
for ordinary churchgoers who are ‘puzzled,
wearied, or disoriented’ by the present controversies within
the Anglican Communion. In a Pastoral Letter to the Anglican
Communion’s Primates and Presiding Bishops, Dr Williams
said that the 'ordinary people of God' do not want to see division
as the consequence of the Anglican Communion’s difficulties.
Read the
full text of the Pastoral Letter at: http://www.archbishopofcanterbury.org/
releases/060915a.htm
Archbishop’s prayer for Darfur
The Archbishop
of Canterbury joined other faith leaders in expressing renewed
concern for Darfur and published a prayer for Sunday 17th September,
designated as an international Day of Prayer for the region.
Dr Rowan Williams reflected on his visit to Sudan earlier this
year saying: “In
my visit to Sudan in March I saw people who had endured so much
hatred and harm, and yet with the end of war in the south sought
to return home, to rebuild quickly and work again for the future
of their families and communities. It was their faith that sustained
them, and the concerted efforts of faith communities, aid agencies
and governments together that enabled truce first and then peace
to be agreed.”
Read the
full text of the prayer at: http://www.archbishopofcanterbury.org/
releases/060915.htm
Statistics
show increased giving and ordinations
Statistics
released last month show that direct giving to parish churches
averaged exactly £5.00
per electoral roll member per week and tax-efficient giving
increased to an average of £8.00 per subscriber
per week. Official Church Statistics, published on the Church
of England website last month, also show increases in the number
of clergy being trained and ordained. The Church ordained 505
new clergy in 2005 (267 men and 238 women), the highest number
since 2002.
Attendance
figures for 2004 show a mixed picture for trends in church
attendance: regular Sunday church attendance fell by one per
cent – largely offsetting a similar increase
the previous year, but weekly and monthly churchgoing held steady
and the number of children and young people at services rose
by two per cent.
The new statistics
confirm that more than 1.7 million people attend Church of
England church and cathedral worship each month while around
1.2 million attend each week – on
Sunday or during the week - and just over one million each Sunday.
Discover
more of the latest statistics: http://www.cofe.anglican.org/news/pr9006.html
Bishops’ office and working costs published
The 2005
office and working costs of bishops in the Church of England
were published last month. The Church Commissioners funded
the ministry of Church of England bishops by some £15.2 million, the figures from
the House of Bishops show.
Copies of
Bishops’ office and
working costs are available from Bishoprics and Cathedrals Dept,
The Church Commissioners, 1 Millbank, London SW1P 3JZ, tel 020
7898 1058, or by visiting: http://www.cofe.anglican.org/info/bishopscosts2005.pdf
Back-a-Book
to help Lambeth Palace Library turn over some very old pages
Lambeth Palace
Library, the historic library of the Archbishops of Canterbury
and the principal reference point for the history of the Church
of England, has launched a project to help safeguard the future
of thousands of priceless books – while
offering a unique gift idea at the same time.
The Back-a-Book
initiative invites members of the public to mark a special event
or anniversary by donating money to help repair one of the Library’s
volumes and, in return, dedicate an acid-free bookplate as a
lasting memorial inside the cover of the book that they help
to save. As the bookplates are created with a choice of words
agreed with the sponsor, the scheme could even help in the search
for an ideal gift for a friend or family member.
Library staff
will select the exact volume to be restored, based on those most
in need within the subject range specified by the sponsor.
Find
out more about Back-a-Book: http://www.cofe.anglican.org/news/pr8806.html
Archbishop
features on Thought for the Day on September 11th
On September
11th the Archbishop of Canterbury featured on BBC Radio 4’s Thought for the Day, saying: “Desperate
tragedy, trauma and shock bring us close to strangers. That doesn’t
make what happens good or explainable, it doesn’t take
away the responsibility of those who did the damage or heal the
grief of the bereaved. But for the rest of us, the connection
is made, with our own humanity and the humanity of others.”
Read
the full transcript at: http://www.archbishopofcanterbury.org/
releases/060911.htm
World Mission
Conference 2006
The World
Mission Conference will take place between October 30-November
2 at Hayes Conference Centre, Swanwick, and will explore how
our understanding of hospitality helps us understand God's
Mission better. There will be a significant number of overseas
participants at the conference, invited by English dioceses
from their link dioceses.
Limited places
are still available – please contact Stephen Lyon at Partnership
for World Mission at stephen.lyon@c-of-e.org.uk or find more
details at: http://www.pwm-web.org.uk/features/latest.shtml
Dioceses,
Youth, Children’s and Schools workers challenged to ‘listen
to the voice’
The Archbishop
of York, Dr John Sentamu, and Lord Puttnam will feature amongst
speakers at a pioneering youth and children’s work convention next summer. The Church
of England and Church in Wales will be hosting the first national
event of its kind for diocesan staff working with children and
young people, whether in schools, churches or the wider community.
Listen
to the Voice, taking place between 11-13 June 2007 at Center Parcs’ Sherwood Forest site, will bring together
more than 200 professionals to consider the Church’s mission
among children and young people. Convention organisers promise
opportunities for delegates to hear the voices of young people,
church leaders, Government and non-governmental organisations
at the event, which has the twin themes of ‘Encounter with
God’ and ‘Encounter with young people and children’.
People working
within dioceses interested in finding out more or booking a
place should contact Pat Barton at the Education Division of
the Archbishops’ Council, Telephone 020 7898
1501 or email pat.barton@c-of-e.org.uk.
Building
Faith in Our Future – latest newsletter
The latest
newsletter from the ‘Building
Faith in Our Future’ campaign has been published, including
news of the latest research and funding opportunities for church
buildings, as well as an update on liaison with government departments
and other partners.
‘Building Faith in Our Future’ is
the campaign that aims to secure better funding for church buildings
and to strengthen the Church’s capacity to develop the
use of its buildings for worship and mission to the wider community.
Read the
full newsletter: http://www.cofe.anglican.org/about/
builtheritage/buildingfaith/newsletter.html
Give your
magazine a makeover!
Do you want
to make sure your magazine or newsletter grabs your readers'
attention? The Communications Office at Church House, London
has arranged a one day training course for magazine and newsletter
editors, helping you to incorporate the elements of dynamic
design into your publication. This interactive course will
be held at Diocesan Church House, Manchester and Rachel Farmer,
the editor of the Diocese of Southwell and Nottingham's award
winning C Magazine, will be the tutor for the day.
For more
information contact Suzanne Gray on 020 7898 1465 or visit:
http://www.commstraining.cofe.anglican.org/
2006/dem.php |