Christmas Cracker of a Quiz

Mark your calendars for what promises to be a festive evening to remember: the Christmas Tree Festival Quiz!

Saturday 9th December – 7.00pm for a 7.30pm start at St. Mary’s Church.

Rumour has it that our resident Quizmaster Elf, Patrick Derham will be wearing his best North Pole attire.  If true, that sight alone would be worth the price of admission.

Speaking of which, Tickets will £12.00 per head and Teams will be made up of 6 people.  Festive snacks will be served and Beer and wine will be available to purchase.

Please contact Dine Glasgow dglasgow@theridgegroup.com for tickets or details.

Ignite service – December 10th at 6pm

A friendly and informal monthly service in Charlbury
Vibrant, contemporary songs of worship and thanks to God in a relaxed and informal style, with space to reflect and meet with God.

Absolutely everyone is welcome, so come along out of curiosity, to sing, to find a little bit more about God, or just to be in God’s presence with us.

Refreshments from 5.45pm

Christmas Tree Festival: LAST 10 DAYS TO SPONSOR & DECORATE A TREE!

Sign up now to sponsor and decorate a tree. There are still a few left, so please enjoy the fun with your club, society or family. Everyone loves this event, but we need the trees to be decorated! 

This will be held from early evening Friday 8th December until 28th December.

It’s a great way to come together as a community, be part of the events planned, enjoy Christmas and have lots of fun.

Any queries about the festival please get in touch with Hilli Waller or the Parish Office. Sign up now by clicking on the attached booking form and return as soon as possible. Trees are running out!

charlburyctf@gmail.com

parishoffice@charlburychurch.uk

Appeal for prayer by Bishops

Appeals by the Bishops of the Church of England

“We pledge ourselves to pray for and take public actions in support of our fellow citizens of Jewish or Islamic faith. We recognise that within the church, too, we must acknowledge our own differences on this matter with care and generosity. The way individuals and communities act here and now could shape and influence what happens next. So, while we must condemn utterly those who foster fear and hatred in our communities, we must also galvanise and support those who are modelling something different and seeking the way of peace.

“Recognising the troubled history, we nevertheless cling to the longstanding vision of a peaceful region where the peoples of Israel and Palestine can live in security, justice, peace and harmony in their own lands, we therefore appeal:

  • For Hamas to release all hostages unconditionally and unharmed.
  • For immediate humanitarian pauses that will enable the wounded and the most vulnerable to be evacuated under ICRC or UN supervision, holding out hope for a ceasefire in the longer term.
  • For safe areas to be established across Gaza with communications, food, water and medical support, under international supervision.
  • For the Israeli Government to protect the population of the Occupied Territories and arrest anyone threatening them, without fear or favour.
  • For all parties to this conflict to adhere to international humanitarian law and to take all necessary steps to minimise harm to civilians and civilian infrastructure.

Read the House of Bishops statement in full.

The Apocrypha — Israel, Gaza and “just war”

John Partington writes:

On Sunday 19th November (at 6.00 pm in St Mary’s) we’re having our last session studying the Apocrypha, and will be looking at 1 & 2 Maccabees.

An excerpt: “In those days, Simon Maccabeus camped against Gaza and besieged it round about.”  A few years earlier, according to the historian Josephus, Simon’s brother Jonathan had “set a part of his army round about Gaza and overrun their land, and spoiled it, and burnt what was in it.”  Those were just two episodes in a decades-long war of attrition in the second century BCE.

We shall be exploring the theological and moral issues raised by Jewish nationalism in the Hasmonean period, with little expectation of “solving” the millennia-long dilemmas inherent in the story .. but some hope of being a little better informed.

All are welcome, and to whet your appetite why not look at how the Maccabees narrative is still used today to explore the idea of “just war” in the Kyiv Post of December 2022 and the Jerusalem Post of December 2014.

From 1996 to 1999 the writer of the Jerusalem Post article that I refer to, Michael Freund, was deputy director of communications under then-and-now prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu .. and so the “Maccabean solution” that he proposes for Gaza is perhaps a useful insight into current Israeli policy.