Fr. Peter Farrington transfers to mission ministry under Pope Tawadros

For some time Father Peter has been conducting an energetic missionary ministry to support those seeking to learn more about Orthodoxy, especially centred on missions in Stoke-on-Trent, Swindon and Windsor. He has also served in Egypt and the Diocese of Milan. Having expressed the conviction that his future ministry should now be within the wider Coptic Church, he has requested to be released into the direct jurisdiction and care of His Holiness Pope Tawadros and to be obedient to His Holiness in regard to his future service. Accordingly Abba Seraphim signed a canonical release dated 3 July and commended Father Peter to the oversight of H.H. The Pope.   


Bishop Angaelos awarded the O.B.E.

The news that His Grace Bishop Angaelos, General Bishop of the Coptic Orthodox Church, has been awarded the O.B.E. in the Queen’s Birthday Honours, has been widely welcomed by those working for reconciliation between faith groups.  In a recent letter, Abba Seraphim wrote, “It is with great pleasure that I congratulate Your Grace on your recent nomination by the Prime Minister for the honour of an OBE in recognition of your services to International Religious Freedom. Your efforts over several years, which have increased in their impact as the situation for Christians in the Middle East and elsewhere has deteriorated so dramatically, are a very necessary witness to our Christian belief in love, forgiveness and reconciliation in the face of such terrible destructive cruelty. In addition to your public testimony, the practical application of our concern, through such bodies as the Asylum Advocacy Committee, with which I have been honoured to be associated since its inception, addresses the reality of human distress and offers compassion and justice to those in need. The widening of our remit to include other religions suffering persecution, rightly demonstrates our belief that God “so loved the world” and that all humanity is precious because of being created in His image. Your example, your vision and your commitment are all worthy of the well-deserved commendation made.”


A Reader ordained for the BOC Stoke Mission

IMG_0771

On 13 June, during the Divine Liturgy at St. George-in-the-East at Shadwell, Abba Seraphim ordained Philip Turner of Burslem as a Reader to serve the BOC Mission at Stoke-on-Trent. Philip, who has a B.Sc in Environmental Science is employed as a Community Support Worker in his home town and was in the first group of converts to join the Orthodox Mission. He will now lead the community in prayer in the absence of a priest. In his homily, Abba Seraphim spoke about the ministries of the church as part of the Ascension gifts of Christ. He noted that it was clear from  his writings that the Apostle St. Paul saw these ministries as protecting the church from error, because if we are built up as the body of Christ we will no longer be children, “tossed to and fro and carried about with every wind of doctrine, by the cunning of men by their craftiness in deceitful wiles,” but rather, speaking the truth in love, we are to grow up in every way to him who is the head, into Christ “from whom the whole body, joined and knit together by every joint with which it is supplied, when each party is working properly, makes bodily growth and upbuilds itself in love.” This image of the joints of the body is organic, just as the church is intended to be. We need to discard the image of an organisation – like some modern international corporation – with its tiered hierarchical structure and its levels of managers reaching to the top. Abba Seraphim noted that although the church possesses an hierarchy, it is one of interdependance not subordination.

He also reminded the congregation that church history from apostolic times speaks of two Philips: Philip, one of the twelve apostles, who was martyred alongside St. Bartholomew; and Philip the Deacon and Evangelist, one of the seven chosen alongside St. Stephen, who converted the Ethiopian eunach by  expounding the Scriptures to him. He prayed that Philip the Evangelist  would be the new Reader’s patron, so that rather than merely being a lover of horses – as the name originally meant – he would be characterised as a lover of mankind – phil-anthropos –  and may be faithful in his ministry, bearing Christ to all whom he meets, so that he might receive God’s mercy along with all those who have pleased God from the beginning.      

IMG_0789

Among the clergy assisting at the Liturgy was Father Shenouda Haile, Priest of the free Eritrean Orthodox Church in London, who brought with him some members of his community. There have been warm fraternal relations between the British and Eritrean Orthodox communities dating back to Abba Seraphim’s ordination as a Metropolitan in Cairo in 1994 at the same service in which the late Pope Shenouda ordained the future Patriarch Antonios to the episcopate.   


Memorial Prayers for the late Lord Leicester

On 7 June Memorial Prayers for the repose of the late Earl of Leicester were held following the Divine Liturgy at Babingley in the presence of the present Earl, his mother (Valeria, Viscountess Coke), and other members of the Coke family, who also attended the Divine Liturgy, which Abba Seraphim celebrated. The 7th Earl, who died at the end of April, was a leading figure in Norfolk life and had devoted many years to the restoration and modernisation of his ancestral estates at Holkham. Lady Coke has long been a good friend of the Orthodox community at Babingley and values the Orthodox tradition of forty days of mourning and prayers for the departed.  


Portsmouth Baptisms

portsbap1

During the celebration of the Divine Liturgy in the Church of Saint Mary the Mother of God and Saint Moses the Black, Portsmouth, on Saturday 6, June, five new members of the faithful were received by baptism and chrismation; one adult, two children and two infants.  Rebecca Cole who has been gently, thoughtfully and prayerfully working her way towards Orthodoxy for the past eighteen months and was recently received into the catechumenate was sponsored by Annamarie Ewing who had earlier followed a similar gentle path into Orthodoxy.  As Annamarie could not be present yesterday she was represented by Tasony Sheila Smyth who assisted with Rebecca’s robing in white after her baptism.  Sisters Senyit and Rachel Kebede were resplendently robed in traditional Ethiopian “Sunday best” following their baptisms and likewise both babies, Charlene Nina Lupu and Gebriela Merhawi, were in festal dress appropriate for this wonderful event.  The baptisms were witnessed by a congregation of over eighty.

portsbap2

Father Simon Smyth was assisted by Deacons Antony Holland and Daniel (who, together with his wife Janice, had travelled from London for the occasion) and Subdeacon Nicola Popa (who, together with his wife Diana, had travelled from Poole).