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ALMA Reps Email Circular: 5 July 2006

From Sheenagh Burrell ALMA Communications Officer
sb@burrell1980.freeserve.co.uk T: 020 8567 7400

CIRCULAR FROM BISHOP MICHAEL

(sent to all Clergy in the Diocese in advance of ALMA Sunday on 9th July)

Dear Friends

I am writing to remind you that Sunday next, 9 July, is ALMA Sunday: the day on which we ask all parishes to hold in your prayers our sister churches in Angola and Mozambique.  Some London parishes are twinned with parishes in Mozambique and Angola and are finding these relationships very enriching and rewarding.  If you want such a link please contact me.

Peter Southwood, our ALMA Link Officer in London, my wife Cynthia and I have recently returned from an amazing visit to Angola - which has certainly put flesh onto our prayers for the Church there.  At the end of this email I have pasted a day from the diary I kept while we were in Angola in the hope that it helps you and the people of your congregations to picture the life of the Church in that land. Do please pray for them - as they will be praying for us in Mozambique and Angola - on Sunday.

With greetings and all good wishes.

Yours in Christ,

+ Michael

Saturday 17 June

There was extra excitement in the room this morning when the fan came on at 6.45am. That means the electric is on and we can shave and bathe in the light – clearly a Saturday treat!

Confirmation details – 82 candidates from the churches at St Barnabe, St Monica, Bon Samaritano, St Maria and St Martha, St Philip, Sancta Cruz and St Pedro.

The drive from Uige to Songo was lively with The Reverend Nunes Pedro putting his foot down and managing to keep up an average of 100 kilometres on very rough roads.  There was only one near miss!  St Barnabe Church – quite a large building – was packed with a congregation when we arrived and the 82 candidates were all at the front of the church.  Given the number I suggested to the Bishop that we both confirm but he was adamant that I should confirm them all - which was, of course, a privilege when the Diocesan Bishop was present.  As well as good singing from various choirs there were greetings from the local Government official and from a representative of the parish.  I presented the youth of the parish with a football and a pump – which caused great excitement!  (I brought a suitcase of ten footballs from England and they are proving to be very popular among the young people of the churches.)

After the service we had lunch in the Archdeacon’s home and then drove into the bush to Maiengo, the village were Bishop Andre was born.  Here (was it anything to do with being the home village of the Bishop?) we received the most exotic welcome to date.  As we arrived at the outskirts of the village members of the Mothers’ Union were there with palm branches intertwined with beautiful red bougainvillea.  They sang and danced round our Chelsea Chariot and led us to the church.  And there was more to come: the women of the parish had made a pathway of their shawls from the road to the door of the church.  People stood either side of this path: singing and waving palms and bougainvillea.  The church door was garlanded with the same. 

The church was beautifully cared for and had a corrugated iron roof that MANNA paid for some years ago.  We were welcomed by the catechist and worship leader who led the people in very vigorous and hearty singing.  It was in this church that I discovered that, if you say, “Viva!” you get a great chorus of response, repeating the words, “Viva Anglicana!”.  This relatively new Church of the Communion is really proud of its Anglican roots and membership. 

Maiengo was a smaller village than others we’d visited and it seemed that almost every member of the community was there – but it was also clear that they all knew the hymns and worship songs.  They do not have a priest at present so, apart from the Archdeacon’s visit for a monthly Sunday Eucharist, the Church is led by the catechist and worship leader.  The Mothers’ Union choir sang a song and that was followed by one of the most youthful male choirs we have seen to date – I would think boys from 7 – 17.  This is the parish of the Confession of St Peter – which helped the preacher with yet another sermon! 

This service was not Eucharistic but there was, again, a great emphasis on the time of offertory.  And gifts were also brought forward for their guests: another branch of bananas, much cassava and many groundnuts, yams and sweet potatoes, money put in a large plastic washing bowl and, probably the largest gift so far, a live goat – who was tethered but made us very much aware of his presence. 

The warmth that we experienced inside the church continued as we made our way over the garment path (now changed in direction to take us straight to the cars) where everyone wanted to greet us and wanted their children to be blessed.  Not a Eucharist and not a confirmation but the whole event, full of simple praise and much communication between villagers and guests, took two hours.

On the way home we gave a lift to a young woman with her baby son, Fernando.  They had travelled earlier by taxi from her home village to St Barnabe for the confirmation.  I think having baby Fernando on board made our driver a little more cautious and sensible – the journey back was at  a far better pace for timid Londoners! 

Our journeyings today took us through the most stunning countryside: rolling hills, open land and rich areas of forest.  We returned to war battered Uige which is now a very unattractive city.  The red brick houses of the local people that have grown up round old town remind you of the villages and look warm and inviting  – the old town itself  is a sad testimony to the violence and destruction of  the past conflicts that were centred on this area.