Monthly Archives: June 2018

Flower Festival: your invitation!

Fogo Parish Church

Please come and visit our Flower Festival this Saturday 16th. (10 a.m. until 4 p.m.) and this Sunday 17th. June (12 noon until 4 p.m. — there is a welcome waiting for you. There will also be a Songs of Praise on Sunday at 4 p.m.

A special leaflet has been prepared to assist you when you visit. It is printed here as well.

“Welcome to Fogo Parish Church for our Flower Festival reflecting on the history of the church and its current Christian life.

 This short leaflet has been prepared to help you get the most out of your visit.

We are blessed with having a most attractive little building nestled into a sheltered hollow in the centre of the village of Fogo. The name is derived from ‘Foghow’ which is the name that was used when the church and surrounding land was gifted to the monks at Kelso by King David 1 in the 12th century. I have read that the term ‘fogo’ means an area of rough tufted grass but the term is also associated to other word meaning ‘a place of fire’.

The Tironensan Order originating from Tiron Abbey in Perche, Normandy, (France) who built the Notre-Dame of Roxburgh at Kelso sent a monk to found a place of Christian worship here, the Chapel of St Nicholas, of which there are no visible signs today. There is a plaque, on the wall beside ‘the monk display’, showing the seal of the order. There are more details about this in the  display on the wall.

This makes Fogo Kirk a very early site of Christian worship.   Although the original cell may not have been where the current building is today it is wonderful to consider the ancient roots of this parish, which I am sure adds to the spirituality of the present building.

There is a map in the display showing where the original building may have been and it is hoped that this site may be investigated at some time in the hope of finding archaeological evidence.

The building, on the present site, would originally only have been very small and the vestry, as it is used now, is probably the oldest part. During the time of Henry VIII the monasteries in the     Borders were destroyed and there is a record of the destruction of ‘Fogoe Towne’ between the 14th-15th of September 1545. Any trace of a building present then, and there may have been two, would have been razed to the ground.

The church was substantially rebuilt in 1683. There are records of major repairs done in 1755 and1817 when the pulpit was installed along with the box pews.

The two lairds’ lofts each with its external staircase were built slightly later. The west loft is that of the Trotter family of  Charterhall and the east one the Harcarse (Hogg) family. The Trotter family originally had a box pew but in 1854 had the loft built at their own expense. There is still a close connection with the Trotter family to this day but the Harcarse (Hogg)  family sadly have died out due to a loss of the male line.

The box pews were family pews built to keep draughts out and dogs in. It was commonplace at this time for dogs to come to the church with their owners, usually farmhands, and of course the family would walk to church so the dogs came too! I am sure at times this made for a lively and noisy service. In September 2017 an animal service was held in the church and the box pews were used as originally intended. The dogs present were all very well behaved and seemed to know that they were welcome. My own 10 week puppy went sound asleep!

The communion table was gifted by Col. David Milne of  Wedderburn in 1898. The communion chalices dating from 1662 are purported to be the oldest communion plate still in current use in Scotland. They were gifted by Mr George Trotter of Charterhall and made in Edinburgh.

I have not mentioned any ministers but there is a list on the incumbents within the display.

In 2016 Fogo Church was put into guardianship by the Presbytery of Duns for a three year period. There have been structural repairs done to the building internally and externally, most notably the installation of a heat air exchange pump. The latter has dried out the fabric of the kirk preserving it and also, not least, made it a warm and hospitable place for Sunday worship. The final thing that needs doing is the repainting of the interior and this will   happen shortly.

The Reverend Dr Dane Sherrard is the interim moderator. Plans are advancing for the church building to be owned by a Trust and the current congregation to continue as a Church of Scotland   congregation. We are growing and lively and the wall display will, I hope, give you a taste of our activities.

Several of the displays are accompanied by art work done by individuals from our congregation which have been inspired by their spiritual life. We are very grateful to them for lending us their work.

We also have a display in recognition of 100 years of Women’s Suffrage. Also this year, 2018, marks 50 years since the Church of Scotland agreed to admit women to the ministry. This was   celebrated at The General Assembly of the Church of Scotland in Edinburgh in May

This weekend we are concluding the flower festival with a Songs of Praise at 4pm on Sunday: do come and join in.

I so hope you have enjoyed your visit here today. Don’t forget to enjoy a cup of tea or coffee and cake before you leave.

Thank you for coming and haste ye back!

“Everyone is always welcome at Fogo Church.”

Have a look at our website; www.fogokirk.org

 

Thanks to:

Pete Gibbens for information,

Molly Hodges for photography

Ref: The Churches and Graveyards of Berwickshire by Alan Binnie”

 

 

Kirk Session Mission Report

At the June meeting of our Kirk Session and Congregational Board we considered this report on Mission. It is printed here in full to enable everyone to share in our discussions:

Towards a Mission Plan for Fogo Parish Church

Following the last meeting of the Kirk Session an open meeting to discuss our mission as a congregation was arranged and held in the home of Clare Fleming. This meeting was very well attended with more than half of our regular congregation present.

The meeting discussed our worship and witness through worship and then, following wonderful refreshments, considered the things which we might do as a congregation to reach out to other people. The meeting ended with a request that people present at the meeting think on the things which had been discussed and share thoughts with Dane, and with an agreement that once a mission plan had been drawn up there would be a second meeting which would look in more detail at our worship.

In the first part of the meeting there was a general agreement that we had nothing to fear from going it alone in the years ahead. Dane spelled out to the meeting that no matter how well we did as a little congregation there was no possibility of a stipendiary minister being appointed to serve us. It was possible that once our period of presbytery guardianship was over presbytery might incorporate us into another church grouping but in that circumstance it was very unlikely that there would continue to be a weekly service at Fogo and indeed in the future regular worship at Fogo might cease as the shortage of ministers and decreasing size of congregations continued.

Against that background the meeting was sure that the way forward for ourselves was to take control of our own destiny. There was nothing to be feared in planning to organise our own services. John spoke about his experience working abroad and sharing in leading worship because a Christian church was not permitted there. He and Kirsten would be delighted to share in this here. Chris echoed this thought and explained that for several years he had been a lay reader in the Church of Ireland. He was keen to play a full part in conducting worship. Dane also said that he, too, would hope to be allowed to continue at Fogo. He would be seventy-three by the time that our Guardianship came to an end in September, 2019 and would hope to be able to offer at least the following two years to the congregation – and longer if the congregation and health permitted.

A pattern began to emerge – services provided by ourselves in a building owned by our local Fogo Parish Church Community Trust – but with additional input from outwith the congregation. It was noted that one thing the Church of Scotland had in abundance was retired ministers. The idea was floated that we seek to have the use of a cottage to which we might invite ministers to come and spend six weeks, three months or whatever, enjoying a holiday in the Borders in exchange for conducting Sunday morning worship. If it is argued that the supply of retired ministers will inevitable eventually dry up as the number of ministers within the Church severely declines then there is the whole of the rest of the world from which to invite ministers to come. American ministers, in particular, are very keen on exchange visits, but what of those same ministers once they have retired and have nothing to offer by way of exchange? A base in the Borders in exchange for conducting services would be an attractive offer to many.

Against this background the meeting stated very firmly that in seeking to take control of its own destiny, the congregation wished to remain part of the Church of Scotland. This was not a seeking to declare independence from the Church of Scotland but a way of enabling a small historic congregation with a beautiful building and a small but growing number of members to remain an important part of the Kirk. The congregation will continue to pay its presbytery dues, and its ministry and mission allocations to the central offices of the Church of Scotland. It will also continue to be the Church of Scotland presence in the parish of Fogo.

In bringing this stage of the discussion to an end it was noted that we as a congregation are rich in resources: we have a committed regular attendance of around thirty-four folk with a further dozen or so who come from time to time. We don’t always see everyone in church but this is in large part because our congregation is so mobile. On one recent Sunday we had members in Australia, China, the West Indies, Budapest and the south of England – and yet we still mustered twenty-two in church! We have fabulous music which enables our services to be joyful and enthusiastic. We have a keen band of those who ensure that there are refreshments after the service and many are happy to read lessons or lead prayers during worship. We regularly have children in church and this enriches worship for adults as well as giving us the opportunity of remembering that church is for all ages. Anything we try to do is appreciated and supported and we have a great deal of good will from the parish and beyond. In  terms of finance we are fortunate to have no concerns. We ended last year with at least £10,000 more than we started with and now many, if not most, contribute by direct debit ensuring that our treasurer can face the future with equanimity.

Finally in this stage of the report, it may seem strange that a meeting called to discuss mission started by considering our worship; but congregational life centres around worship. It is what we do as a church – we worship God – and any mission which is about sharing the good news of our faith and the love which we experience and which underlies our faith has to be underpinned by our worship and our commitment to enable that worship to continue at the heart of our community.

The second part of this report grows out of the second part of our mission meeting. However, it also incorporates the proposals and suggestions which have been brought forward as a result of that discussion. Within these following paragraphs you will perhaps recognise the voices of Tom T, Liz and Pete and others as well.

It was agreed that mission isn’t about one-off activities although there will inevitably be a number of such activities. Rather mission is a mindset in which everything we do is based on mission. Our service has to be about welcoming new people and sharing with them – having new folk in church changes who we are, keeps us fresh, challenges our views and keeps us growing. Everything we do we have to weigh against the question, ‘How does this help us grow?’ How does it help us grow and develop our faith as individuals and as a congregation and how does it help us reach out to other people to share God’s love because that is the purpose of the church and that is why our church was built so many years ago and why it has been so constantly rebuilt and altered over the years. If we are not using it to grow God’s kingdom then we are letting down all those who have done so much in times past.

It was Pete who expressed the view that it was important that people knew that there was a goodly congregation in church because it was difficult to come along for your first visit if you felt that there might be only a handful of folk present and you feared you might stick out like a sore thumb. He explained that this was why he and Gill had decided to come for the first time on Palm Sunday when they felt sure there would be a good congregation. Incidentally this is also why our music is so important. We are fortunate to have music which leads worship – no matter what obscure hymn the minister chooses we know that the organ will lead and support singing and, as a result, worship takes off.

Building on Pete’s comments our first mission proposal is that we plan a special service for late summer, early autumn to be an ‘Everybody here Sunday’. On this Sunday each member will be asked to bring a friend – not a friend from another church but someone who doesn’t attend church. We will produce invitations to enable members to use them and also to send to other folk. We will produce an accompanying new members handbook or welcome pack to give to those who come. We will end the service with a picnic lunch using gazebos and maybe Pete’s famous bar-b-cue. We’ll distribute the invitations as wide as we can. We’ll seek press coverage and we’ll all get together and prepare something really special for the day. Then we will burst a gut in being welcoming and making folk who come wonder how on earth they could manage before they came into contact with Fogo Parish Church! We’ll go into it all absolutely convinced that it will bear fruits and we’ll throw off our inhibitions and shyness about speaking to people and inviting people and it will be hugely successful.

Our second mission proposal is based on the realisation that now we are living in a situation which is so different from any previous time. Our Scottish story is of a country at the heart of which has been Christian faith. In times past everyone has known the Christian stories. In the more recent past people have known bits of the Christian story but much of it has been garbled and not properly understood at all. Now we have at least one generation which doesn’t know even the most basic Bible stories so we have the opportunity of telling the story without so much of the impedimenta of the past; and we do it at a time when many have enjoyed the freedoms which changes in society have brought but which folk are already beginning to realise do not answer the important questions in life — and we do it at a time when there are so many resources unavailable to previous generations. We can visit the Holy Land by DVD and see the places where everything happened; we can watch dramatised accounts of the Bible story; we can buy cheaply books filled with pictures and written by experts in the faith. We are not on our own.

Against this background Liz noticed that it is hoped to set up a Duns Branch of the University of the Third Age. This group sets up courses of talks, reading groups and trips for its members who are, as the name suggests, now usually retired. Her suggestion is that she offers to host a group which would explore something like ‘Our Bible and how it came to us’. This might run weekly for a season or monthly for a session. Dane would be asked to lead the course and several of us would be encouraged to attend to befriend and encourage folk to take the step beyond learning about something which is deliberately historical to joining in a faith group – ours at Fogo. Obviously we have to wait until the University of the Third Age is set up here and then we would have to see if folk were interested in something along the lines suggested by Liz but it could provide a way in for us to those who are on the verges and for those people it could provide a way into a community of faith.

Our third mission proposal (can you hear Tom T’s voice in this?) takes seriously the responsibility of every congregation to reach out to young people, one of the generations which is missing from most congregations. We can claim to have every primary school-age child living in our parish present at worship but as that only amounts to two children we cannot be complacent, although caring for their Christian upbringing is very important and the opportunity of doing that is a privilege we appreciate and for which we thank their parents. Last year we made a small donation to the Berwickshire Christian Youth Trust. We have also over the past eighteen months welcomed several teenagers into our regular concerts where they have astounded us with their musical talents. Also we live in a glorious rural setting. This proposal seeks to take all of these opportunities and make of them something which might be quite special. It can only be a tentative proposal because it would require the permission, help and support of several people to make it happen but if it did it might create the start of a real youth ministry.

The suggestion is that we seek the use of a field and arrange a one day (afternoon, bar-b-cue, and evening) Youth Christian Music Festival. We would ask Heather and Harris to take a leading part in the music side of the event. They could bring many youngsters from Berwickshire High School – but we would cast the net wider. Harris could also bring many of his musical contacts and, as we have seen from recent concerts, he has many of huge quality. The Berwickshire Christian Youth Trust might help with the preparations and be able to bring in some good Christian communicators, as well as working with us to help us create something through which we might reach out to young people. We would staff bar-b-cues (there you are again, Pete), look after the logistics and be the responsible body behind the event. The idea would be to plan the event at least a year ahead because much of the value would be in the planning stages which would bring youngsters together with us and during which we might hope to engage some of them with us in our worshipping family, always recognising that in so doing we may have to make changes to what we do to be relevant to them. It could be quite a thing and who knows where it might lead!

Mission is also about developing ourselves and developing our own faith so that we may become better missionaries. Another suggestion, our fourth mission proposal, originating with a word from Tom T is that we plan a congregational pilgrimage to the Holy Land for those who might like to take part. Dane has led such pilgrimages before so we have the knowledge, skills and ability to do this. The proposal would be to discover if enough people wanted to come on such a pilgrimage and, if so, when would be the most convenient time. (We are sure that people from other congregations might wish to join us.) Having planned a time at least a year ahead we would then meet once a month as a group to learn about the places we would visit so that when we went we would really get the most out of our journey. Everyone would have the opportunity of leading, or sharing in the leading of a short service at one of the special pilgrimage places and would come back refreshed and enthused by the experience. Dane has the programmes of previous pilgrimages and a great deal of extra information such as the daily Newspapers he used on the tours he led. If we wanted to take this forward, the first step would be to arrange a meeting and invite those interested to attend.

Our fifth mission proposal is that we take a look at our church setting and see how we can make it speak more of our welcome to those who pass by. This proposal might include the creation of a more attractive and welcoming notice board, or maybe even more than one; it might include arranging ourselves to cut the grass in the church yard (at least on either side of the path) now that the council has said that grass cutting will be much less frequent due to financial constraints. It might include the preparation of attractive information leaflets in the church encouraging people who visit to learn not only about the building but about the welcome which would await them as worshipping members. It might also include seeing that the church is signposted from the different road end approaches. Making people feel at home is very important. That is why we print a full Order of Service each week – so that everyone knows exactly what to expect and printing the Lord’s prayer each week so that no stranger feels awkward. It’s why we produce large-print versions for those who have difficulty seeing and full scripts for anyone who might have difficulty hearing. All of these things matter because they help us show that everyone really matters.

Our sixth proposal is something which is beyond our control. It is certainly true that there are communities adjacent to our parish who have not felt a Christian presence for quite a while. In these days of ever increasing parish size, perhaps we should be offering to serve a slightly bigger area – Polworth, perhaps, or Ladyflat – always being careful to avoid any home which attends another church (although we have been unable to discover attending Church of Scotland members from many of such areas). As we have the energy to visit folk and make contact with people in their homes possibly we could consider asking if this is a way in which we might help the wider church?

Our seventh proposal is a bit of fun. We could ask all of our members to take one of our post cards (made by Molly) and take it with them when they go away and when they are far from Fogo ask them to have their picture taken holding the postcard. We could make a great display of such pictures which would truly record all the places our folk get to. It would certainly create a picture of church folk which would be a bit different and if it made others think that these are folk who sound quite fun and I’d really like to get to know them, then who knows, someone might just come along and visit us!

Our eighth proposal is another small proposal and it is about creating identity. It’s very simple. Let’s have some Fogo Kirk mugs made. We can give them to special visitors such as our musicians, and they will remember us. We can sell them to ourselves and if we use them when friends come for coffee it can open the door easily to a conversation about our fabulous congregation and our beautiful church. Sometimes it’s hard to find ways of talking to folk we know well about our church and our faith and a simple little mug could be a real missionary aid.

Our ninth proposal is that we hold a summer fayre. Maybe not this year, although that is not excluded, but possibly planning this for next year which would give us time to make or purchase some stalls and develop a full programme of events for the day. We could hold it on the ground in front of the churchyard, or possibly even in a garden. If we set it a year ahead we could each bring something back from our holidays for a holiday stall and we could have a colour stall, where each of us would bring something in the colour of the year, perhaps yellow with yellow scarves, yellow ornaments, yellow covered books and all of the things we will each notice are yellow over the course of the year. We could explore our attics for things we no longer have room for but which would be special to someone else. We could set about making some fun fayre games, organise a tea tent and perhaps it wouldn’t even need to be summer and could be Christmas instead.

Our meeting and its ensuing conversations has been extremely worthwhile. Here are nine proposals, more may be in the pipeline. Whether we adopt them all or abandon them all, we can be sure that mission is now firmly on our agenda.

From the May/June Newsletter:

Beautiful Music in an Idyllic Rural Setting

Music has become a very important part of all that goes on at Fogo Parish Church. It’s important on a Sunday morning when we enjoy a service which is full of music, which is always joyful and which enables us all to sing enthusiastically as well. We also have been delighted to welcome several local (and not so local) musicians to play in our church and in so doing have been able to share our building with many more people than would otherwise come to visit.

We are very grateful to Heather Cattanach and Harris   Playfair who live just next to the church and who have arranged all of our special concerts over the last eighteen months. Usually these concerts have involved pupils from the Berwickshire High School (where Harris teaches), or the pupils have been supporting other artists; sometimes they have performed on their own supported by Harris and Heather.

On the last Sunday evening of May we welcomed Jenna Reid, a celebrated Shetland fiddler. To support her, Harris brought the Berwickshire High School Folk Band, six fiddlers and a bass player, who provided some spectacular music and who are pictured at the top of this page.

All of us who were present — and the church was very well filled for the occasion — were simply blown away by the music. Jenna took us from Dundee to Newcastle and Perthshire but most of the music came from Shetland, some of it old and traditional, others contemporary, some slow and melancholy, others   gloriously exuberant and played so fast that we  wondered how Jenna’s fingers were able to cope.

At the interval folk from the congregation had provided a finger buffet and although there were more in our audience than we had anticipated there was still food left at the end — and what a superb buffet it was! The money raised by donations — there was no charge for admission but folk donated extremely generously — was given for music projects at the school and we hope its musicians, and Jenna, will return to us again quite soon.

Some of our audience — not a lot of room!

Jenna with members of the Folk BandJenna Reid — celebrated Shetland fiddler

John and Kirsten take charge!

John and Kirsten welcoming Clare and Bridget to church

We had a particularly special service on Sunday 3rd. June. It was conducted by two of our own members, John and Kirsten Arthur.

It wasn’t the first time that they had led worship as they explained to us during the service, but it was the first time they had conducted a service in a church in Scotland.

Kirsten explained that a number of years ago they had lived in Saudi Arabia where Christian churches were not permitted. As a result members of the British community would meet in the Embassy on a Friday and conduct their own service. Occasionally there would be a visiting minister who would come and administer a communion service but on other Fridays it was down to the community itself to make its own arrangements using its own resources.

Later on when John was in Afghanistan with the army where he served as a doctor, he would stand in for the chaplain because the chaplain had such a large number of units to cover. Kirsten worked in education and became accustomed to leading assemblies, so together John and Kirsten brought a great deal of   experience to this Sunday in Fogo.

We all enjoyed the service enormously — really good hymns, a great talk from Kirsten with the children during which she explained that we were all members of several families: our own personal one, the larger family of Fogo Church and the huge family of the Church world-wide. All of this she did using a large collection of family bibles and little figures to  represent the folk in the family.

Kirsten talking with Alice and Eck during the service

John spoke about prayer and particularly about the way that prayer can be used to help healing which is something which all of us need. Prayer is what the Church does.

It was a good service, very well attended, and  afterwards all of us were invited to Kirsten and John’s home for a wonderful lunch. There were tables in the garden and in the house and an abundance of good food and great company, itself a picture of what Church is all about.

Our church plan for the future is based on the premise that some of our services will be conducted by members of our congregation. John and Kirsten have given us a grand start and reminded us of the  considerable talents we have within our congregation. We are looking forward to their next service.

One of several tables filled with happy lunchers after a very happy service!

Kirk Session Report on the Way Forward: our Mission Plan for 2018/19

Our Kirk Session and Congregational Board met on Wednesday 6th. June for its regular meeting. Our numbers have increased dramatically over the last year and the complement of our combined Board and  Session is now seventeen — surely a healthy sign for the future!

We heard that our finances continue to be sound and our income has exceeded our budgeted target. We heard too that exterior work on the building has been almost completed and we agreed to proceed with a  complete redecoration of the church during these   summer months.

Most of our meeting, however, was given over to discussing mission — one of the fundamental purposes of the Church. In preparation for this meeting an open-to-everyone meeting had been held in the home of one of our elders; a meeting which was attended by more than half of our congregation.

After talking about the way forward, a way forward which will demand real commitment from us all, we moved on to talk about what mission really means. It’s not, of course, something that we engage in from time to time — ‘Oh, let’s do mission this week!’ — but rather something which has to be at the heart of     everything we do. When we seek to involve new folk in our worship, that’s mission. When we talk with our friends and tell them how much our church and our faith means to us, that’s mission.

But there does need to be a framework of events to help us to keep mission right at the forefront of our consciousness and at our Session we discussed nine different ideas which had grown out of that initial meeting.

With limited space this article can only outline the proposals but each will be more fully fleshed out in coming editions of this Newsletter.

First of all we are going to have a special service on the third Sunday of September. It will be a Harvest service but it will be even more than that. Our working title is an ‘Everybody Here’ service. There will be special invitations and we will end the service with a picnic lunch and maybe even a late season bar-b-cue.

Our second proposal is to offer to run a course, not aimed at Church members, but at folk who don’t come to church at all. We’ll base it on the story of how our Bible came to us — it’s a really fascinating story and one which might be of real interest to folk who have not considered it before. We’ll use one of our member’s homes as a venue and we’ll see what happens!

Music, especially with young folk, is hugely important. We live in a gloriously rural setting, we have great musicians in our community, so we are going to plan a small afternoon and evening open-air family music festival to which we invite some of the folk who have already entertained us in church and share in a bar-b-cue.

Mission is also about developing ourselves. We are making plans to conduct a pilgrimage to the Holy Land and spend a year preparing for it with a monthly meeting learning about all we will see. We are possibly looking at January or February in 2020 and we hope other folk from the area will want to join us.

Many come to visit our church — making it more accessible and ensuring that visits can be really  informative is our fifth proposal. We are also conscious that our presbytery is struggling with lack of staff and extra large parishes so our sixth idea is to offer to help by taking on some of the load of visiting a larger area than we do at present.

Our seventh proposal is just a bit of fun. Our small congregation seems to have folk in it who travel the world. Next time folk set off we are going to ask them to take one of our Church postcards and have a picture taken holding it in an exotic location and then give us the picture. We’ll make up a board which shows just how widely we reach into our world.

Another idea about creating identity is to produce some church mugs. They will make splendid conversation starters when folks come to our homes for coffee.

Our final proposal is to start now to prepare for a summer fayre next year. We’ll be planning holiday stalls, a stall where everything on sale is of one colour, and we’ll be making up some funfair games and organising a tea tent.

Now these are just the sketchiest outlines of what exists as a five-page report but the important thing is that a discussion has now begun and we hope to begin to be seen by our community as a church which is really active, which has good things to say and exciting ways of saying them, and, of course, everything will centre around our Sunday morning worship every Sunday at 10.30 a.m. to which everyone is and always will be welcome. We would really love to know what you think of our plans.

Flower FestivalA display from last year’s Festival

Please Come to Our Flower Festival

After the success of our first Flower Festival last year, we are having our second festival this year. It will be held on Saturday 16th. and Sunday 17th. June and will run from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday and from 12 noon to 4 p.m. on Sunday.

Clare Fleming who is organising the Festival tells us that she is gathering historic facts about the role of Fogo Kirk in Christian worship and this information will be linked with the decorations throughout the church.

Refreshments will be served during the time that the Festival is on and everything will come to a climax with a Songs of Praise service on Sunday 17th. June at 4 p.m. to which, of course, everyone is invited.

If you have only heard of the changes which have been made to our beautiful church over the last year or so, and haven’t had an opportunity to see these for yourself, then why not plan to look in at our Flower Festival and see all that has been going on? We can promise that you will be made very welcome.

From the Minister’s DeskDane Sherrard

This is a joint edition for May and June. There wasn’t a great deal of special news to share in May and it may be that there is going to be too much news for June but I didn’t want to put out an edition which just seemed to be saying the same things over and again. It is true that things are going well for us and it is true that we are moving forward month by month but by now I expect that all of our readers know that.

In particular I wanted to be able to include the plans made at the Kirk Session on June 6th. These are  exciting times. We now have the Trustees in place for our Fogo Parish Church Community Trust. These are the people who we hope will eventually take  ownership of the Church on behalf of the community. It is an excellent team, eleven strong with one outside expert, Bob Kay, who has been Property Convener of the Presbytery of Duns for many years and is currently an assessor elder in our Kirk Session, and ten local trustees, six of whom live within the parish of Fogo and four very close by. Five are men and five are women and all are members of the congregation.

The complete list of Trustees is John Arthur, Liz Casey, Heather Cattanach, Clare Fleming, Olive     Gardiner, Gill Gibbens, Bob Kay, Chris Scott, Tom Thorburn, Fergus Torrance and Alexander Trotter.

Alexander Trotter will be the first chairman of the Trust, Olive Gardiner the secretary and Liz Casey the treasurer. At present the Trust is being registered as a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation with the Scottish Charity Regulator.

I should also tell you that we are trying to share the information in our Newsletter more widely than before — and with it the invitation to join us at worship any Sunday at 10.30 a.m. There is always a good crowd in church so you can count on being made welcome.

Plans are afoot for our next concert which will be in September. The date is not yet finalised, and will     include the flute quartet who played at our very first concert and whose return has been long anticipated. Our plans for next year include a Family Festival of Music building on what Heather and Harris have begun with their regular programme of concerts.

We now have our own church website. It can be found at www.fogokirk.org and information can be accessed there in between the times when our newsletter is published.

This next year is going to be an important one for us as we move from trying to establish a congregation and stabilise our building to setting out detailed plans about our worship, mission and education programmes for the future — our preliminary thoughts are included in our Kirk Session report on page three.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Glorious Music in an Idylic, Rural Setting!

Jenna with members of the Berwickshire High School Folk Band

We are getting used to superb musical concerts arranged for us by Heather and Harris — how fortunate we are to have them as our next door neighbours! On Sunday evening (27th. May) Harris brought his friend, Jenna Reid, to play for us. Jenna is a celebrated Shetland fiddler — and how we were entertained, both by Jenna herself and by members of the Berwickshire High School Folk Band led by Harris on his electric piano.

We listened to music from Perthshire, Dundee and from Newcastle but, of course, most of the music came from Shetland and it was all absolutely wonderful.

The church was extremely well-filled with many local folk and also many who had travelled a distance especially to hear Jenna. Refreshments were served at the interval by members of the congregation who had really gone to town. We ate and drank extremely well.

It was a splendid evening and already we are looking forward to the next in the series which is planned for September.

Sunday 3rd. June, 2018

Pentecost Pulpit Fall

Our service this Sunday will be conducted by two of our members, Kirsten and John Arthur, who have previously led worship when they lived overseas and the community didn’t have the services of a minister.

Our congregation is looking forward enormously to this special service — and it is being made even more special because after our worship everyone is invited back to Kirsten and John’s home for lunch!

There is always something happening at Fogo Parish Church and everyone is always welcome.

Our services are always at 10.30 a.m. on Sunday mornings and you are warmly invited to join us!

Flower Festival 16th. and 17th. June, 2018

“All things bright and beautiful” from our 2017 festival

Clare Fleming writes:

“We are hoping that this will be a joyful festival of glorious flowers decorating our historic church. Many hands make light work and so please contact me if you are able to help in any way.

We will be serving teas and coffees with cake so baker please prepare.

Flower arrangers and those who can put flowers in vases are invited to prepare the church on Friday15th. Please let me know if you have a favourite place in the Kirk which you would like to decorate and I will reserve it for you.

I am gathering some historic facts about the role of Fogo Kirk in Christian worship and will link these with our decorations.

Together we can do this and culminate with a Songs of Praise at 4pm on Sunday 17th at 4pm.”

Whitsunday Celebrations

Our Whitsunday window decoration

We had a wonderful Whitsunday celebration: lots of folk in church, joyful music and a challenging and enthusing Bible message based on the events of the Pentecost immediately following the first Easter. Of course, we shared in the sacrament of Holy Communion and then, because Whitsunday marks the birthday of the Christian Church, we had a huge chocolate cake which everyone enjoyed.