The Costa Blanca
Anglican Chaplaincy is an important part of my life. So I have read, re-read,
thought about and prayed almost every night about Fr. Peter’s treatise.
The problem.
The number of people attending our services
has decreased and there is an increasing percentage of old and/or infirm souls.
With the Spanish economy in recession new arrivals of young working people with
families have declined. The financial crisis in Europe is having a material affect
on many peoples’ incomes and a psychological affect on people who fear for
their future financial security and are as a result tightening their purse
strings “just in case”.
The consequences. A decrease in the Chaplaincy’s regular income
and a lesser number of able bodied people to run all the Chaplaincy’s lay activities.
This means that the faithful few who are
undertaking the lay operations of the Chaplaincy are working at full stretch
almost on a weekly basis
Mission. One of Fr. Peter’s key words is Mission
– or rather, the lack of success in that field in the Chaplaincy. I looked for a definition of Mission, since it was an oft used word
in the armed forces – and found “To strive to proclaim the good news
of the Church through worship, ministry and outreach”. Maybe its incomplete or incorrect in the
context of Fr. Peter’s treatise, but it
has served to focus my mind on Mission.
Then, I have interpreted Strategy
as the means by which we go
about achieving the Church’s mission.
There are two very
distinct strategies which the Chaplaincy could consider.
- We cut our cloth according to
our size.
- - We reach out to the 80,000 British
citizens registered on the Costa Blanca and to the hundreds of thousands of British
holidaymakers who visit Benidorm every year.
Last summer at
Paul’s house we had a discussion on the Harvest
Deficit campaign and I suggested the need to economize on the number of
full time chaplains, church services, cars and general expenses. Stu and Paul
were not comfortable with my ideas. Some time later I heard that it had been
decided, “we would carry on as before”.
I would like to
expand along the lines of (1) above:-
Staff. One chaplain, any retired and already pensioned clergy in the
chaplaincy and lay readers or suitably qualified persons.
Organization. 1 house for the chaplain, 1
Chaplaincy car, Chaplaincy fixed phone with internet broadband connection and a
Chaplaincy mobile. With stipend, social
security and all justified expenses. Retired clergy and lay readers. A fee for each
service taken, plus a mileage allowance based on the Spanish Tax authorities
calculation for business use of cars, and justified expenses.
Church Services. Holy Communion once a month
in each active Chaplaincy church conducted by a priest or by a lay reader with ready
consecrated bread and wine, as a minimum, more Communion services when possible.
On other Sundays Matins with a short sermon.
These changes to
be accompanied by a more relaxed
approach to the whole routine of church set-up, lesson reading, sales of books,
cards etc, coffee and cake serving, committee meetings, church council and sub
committees. With the object of creating a feeling of “we are all in this
together lets all muck in and get the jobs done” on a friendly collaborative
basis.
Point (2) above
would require the participation of the Diocese with specialist clergy and staff
with experience in undertaking a crusade* and an investment by the Diocese in the
expense of such a crusade. The result of
a well conducted campaign would be a very significant increase in the size of the
Chaplaincy church congregations and consequentially an healthy increase in
income.
Fr. Peter
mentions the possibility of a breakaway or the setting up of independant
churches. If push were to come to shove
and Campello Church was forced to close, I would strongly recommend a dialogue
with the Spanish Episcopal Churchin Alicante.
I have attended services there and found myself to be comfortable with
the priest, the services and members of the congregation. It might be good to talk to them anyway to
see if there are ways we could collaborate and economise.
One final
thought. The Chaplaincy is entirely
self-financed. People need to be made fully
aware of that and to think that the money contributed by them is being spent on
the total budgeted expenditureof the Chaplaincy and they should therefore be thinking
in terms of actively participating in the decisions on how it is spent.
I was brought up in the “brainstorming”
tradition: to throw all the ideas and
suggestions into the ring, however crazy they may seem, and then thrash out the
best policy amongst those sitting around the table. I regard Fr. Peter’s treatise rather in the
same light. Difficult to digest, but there
are an awful lot of important questions and ideas there which do need
“brainstorming” by representative cross section of Chaplaincy members.
I hope that what
I have expressed above will contribute to a new approach Chaplaincy affairs.
*This word may
imply the issue a fatwah in my name by the Imam of Muchamiel
No comments:
Post a Comment
In order to relate and reply to the various comments which are made on the blog, it would be very helpful if you would sign your comment with a pseudonym. Anything will do, just so that we can refer back to specific comments at a later date. The drop-down box method keeps giving us problems, so just sign your entry at the bottom with the name of your choice(do keep them decent please!) and leave the setting at "anonymous"