NEWS

Christian Aid Sale at St Andrews and St George’s Church 

The hugely popular Christian Aid sale at St Andrews and St George’s returns in the Spring (13-19 May 2023).

Items are requested in support of Christian Aid. These can range from Books, Antiques, Collectables, Pictures, Stamps and Postcards, Sheet Music, Toys, Games, Jigsaws. 

Donations of suitable items can be uplifted for delivery from 8th and 9th May.  

Contact Anne Currie (anneicurrie@yahoo.co.uk) for more information and/or assistance for uplift.

New ‘Toddle Tots’ Group – Up and Running

A new group for parents, grandparents, carers and Tots is up and running – come and join us.

We hold the group, ‘Craigsbank Toddle Tots’, in the main hall at Craigsbank church from 10.30am to 12 noon on Wednesdays. If you know of any parent, grandparent or carer that would benefit from joining a group like this please do pass the news on to them.

Ceri Ashton hosts the group. If any of our church members want to give a hand on a Wednesday morning, please contact Ceri at the church office.

Lots of toys, snacks, drinks, and tea & coffee (adults only) provided!!

Do you remember this post from November last year? Planting a smile for Spring

Well, the work was all worth it and now the daffodils are up and providing a gorgeous show for all who visit. Take a walk to see them before it is too late. They are with us all too briefly.

Bulb Planting – The ECO Group met at 2.00pm at Craigievar Park (just off Craigs Road) on Wednesday 23 November to plant Spring bulbs with the Park Ranger and staff from CEC.  We look forward to seeing the results when the soil warms up and the days get longer.

Contact Anne Currie for more info.

Is the ancient Christian FAITH actually still RELEVANT to our present day and age?

An invitation to a monthly book group

If you would like to consider this question then can we invite you to join any one or more of the BOOK DISCUSSIONS planned for this year?

During 2023 our minister, Alan Childs, invites anyone who would like to join in a monthly book discussion group with a PROGRESSIVE theological inclination.

If you would like to develop and refresh your understanding of God, the Bible, faith, the church and your life as a Christian, and be challenged in the process, then please consider joining the group for a monthly, in person, conversation about one book at a time.

Here are the books that form the reading list, divided into two parts for the year. The books are available through any of the online bookstores (including Bookshop.org which feeds profit back to independent bookshops), many high street bookshops, or from the authors themselves.

February to May (4pm on the last Sunday of the month at Craigsbank Church hall)

1 – What Is the Bible?: How an Ancient Library of Poems, Letters, and Stories Can Transform the Way You Think and Feel About Everything by Rob Bell (26 February) NOTE THIS ONE SESSION WILL START AT 5pm

2 – Freeing Jesus: Rediscovering Jesus as Friend, Teacher, Savior, Lord, Way, and Presence by Diana Butler-Bass (26 March)

3 – Searching for Sunday: Loving, Leaving, and Finding the Church by Rachel Held Evans (30 April)

4 – Accidental Saints: Finding God in All the Wrong People by Nadia Bolz-Weber (28 May)

August to November (4pm on the last Sunday of the month at East Craigs Community Centre)

1 – Inspired: Slaying Giants, Walking on Water, and Loving the Bible Again by Rachel Held Evans (27 August)

2 – Jesus Unexpected: Ending the End Times to Become the Second Coming by Keith Giles (24 September)

3 – Faith after Doubt: Why Your Beliefs Stopped Working and What to Do about It by Brian D. McLaren (29 October)

4 – The Irresistible Revolution by Shane Claiborne (26 November)

Each book’s discussion will be held late on a Sunday afternoon over a glass of wine or a mug of coffee (your choice). Send us a message if you would like to notify us of your interest … but you are also welcome to simply drop in on the day.

Choose Loose

The organisations, Everyday Plastics and City to Sea are calling for all UK supermarkets to remove plastic packaging from five top-selling fruit & veg products –– potatoes, apples, bananas, carrots and onions –– so we can fight the plastic problem, reduce food waste and save money.

It is estimated that selling these five items loose (unpackaged) would:

  • Prevent an estimated 1.7 billion pieces of plastic packaging from being thrown away.
  • Avoid more than 77,000 tonnes of food waste by allowing people to buy what they need.
  • Save shoppers a combined total of over £85m per year in uneaten food.

The organisation have joined forces to launch a petition and our Eco group are encouraging as many people as possible to sign it.

You can find the petition right here.

Holocaust Remembrance Day – We Remember

On 27 January 1945, the Red Army arrived at the gates of Auschwitz-Birkenau to liberate the camp. Since 2005, this date has been remembered as International Holocaust Remembrance Day and every year, ceremonies mark the anniversary across Europe and the wider world.

Throughout these seventy-eight years survivors of the camp have spoken out about their experience and the need for remembrance. They have retold and recreated the most painful of memories and have done so with great dignity. They have taken school children by the hand and looked world leaders in the eye and they have pricked the conscience of the world again and again as they spoke of the unspeakable. They have done so in the name of those who did not survive.

Many of these survivors are now elderly and a high percentage have died since the last major anniversary. It is now up to others to tell the stories of those who died and those who survived but who are no longer here to speak for themselves.

This then is a fitting date on which to remember the life of Jane Haining, a remarkable Scots woman who died in Auschwitz just a few months before the liberation of the camp. Recognised in 1997 as Righteous Amongst the Nations for her part in protecting Jewish school children and their families, Jane Haining was born and raised a country girl in Dunscore, Dumfriesshire. She trained as a Church of Scotland missionary and was posted to Budapest as matron to the Church of Scotland School there. Against all advice, she refused to leave when the war drew closer to the city. She knew that the children needed her ‘in their darkest hour’ and she fought to keep them out of the camps. She made the ultimate sacrifice. She herself was eventually charged with working amongst Jews and was taken to Auschwitz where she died aged 47.

Burns Supper – A Grand Night Had By All!

Our annual Burns Supper took place on 21 January 2023 in Craigsbank Church Hall. It was a superb occasion. All who attended were rewarded with a relaxed evening of great cheer with an outstanding meal, readings, traditional addresses, highland dancing, music and song. Grateful thanks go out to all involved, in particular those on the Hospitality Team who prepared and served the meal.

Don’t throw out your STAMPS

Used stamps are still being collected throughout the year – boxes at both church centres – but especially just now. Do bring them with you next time you come.

Wee request – Please ensure that you leave a visible surround of the paper from which the stamp has been cut all round the stamp.  Last year some had to be discarded as the edge of the stamp had been cut rendering it invalid.  This year money raised is hoping to fund a Pastor for a year to support projects in Lebanon.

Toastie Thursdays

Craigsbank Parish Church and the Old Parish Church are partnering on a project with our local Craigmount High School and Christian youth workers from Young Life International to offer a very affordable lunch option in a welcoming environment to the pupils. We are now offering this on Thursday afternoons over the school’s lunch break.
 
A similar project has developed over a few years as the ‘Liberton Northfield Toastie Tuesday’ lunch club, which serves toasties, a cookie and a drinks can to schoolchildren for £1 every Tuesday of term time. They have served more than 100,000 toasties since they started a few years ago. An outcome from the project is a well-established youth ministry amongst the local churches.
 
We will be running a similar project on Thursdays from this week, 27 October. The price of the lunch is £1.50, with free fruit if we can. The main aim is to offer Christian hospitality to the children in the parish high school. The catchphrase for the Toastie Tuesdays at present is ‘The best welcome of the week’.
 
We need your prayers and a few volunteers to help in the kitchen and ‘front of house’ – welcoming, chatting and serving the food. We plan to use the Craigsbank kitchen and large hall, recognising that it will be tweaked and improved as the weeks progress. There was a very successful training and first public session held on Thursday 13 October, when we served some 30 pupils.
 
Craigmount has two 40 minute-long lunchtimes, juniors at 12:20 and seniors at 13:10. If we offer it for both lunchtimes it will practically mean starting preparation around 11.00am and closing up at around 2.00pm. The pilot scheme will run through the autumn school term and then we will review it for 2023.
 
If you are interested or would like to volunteer (even if just once or twice a month) then please contact Alan Childs or the church office.