Archbishop of York to preach in a weekly online service for Trinity Sunday June 7th

Posted by R.Broad on June 5, 2020

The Archbishop of York is to be joined by representatives of charities he founded in the weekly online service this Sunday June 7th for the Church of England, marking his last day as Archbishop of York.

In the service, to be led by Revd Hannah Madin, of St Mary’s and Holy Apostles, Scarborough, Dr Sentamu will reflect on his lifetime of Christian faith.

The service can be watched on the Church of England’s websiteFacebook page or YouTube channel from 9am on Sunday 7th June.

Click through for a link to the Church of England on-line Church which can be found here (or from the front page or from the prayer resources page here)

 

Click this link to the Church of England on-line Church

 

The service will hear contributions from the Archbishop of York Youth Trust which nurtures leadership skills and character virtues in children and young people and Acts 435, an online giving charity providing small grants to people living in poverty. Both charities were founded more than a decade ago by the Archbishop.

Jenny Herrera, of Acts 435, will speak of how the charity has distributed £2 million in small grants to 22,000 people in need since it was founded.

“We are well placed for such a time as this to meet so many different needs, whether that be a mobile phone for an isolated person living alone, support for someone suddenly out of a job without savings and awaiting Universal Credit, or a tablet to enable a child to keep accessing school learning from home,” she will say.

“This is alongside the ongoing general needs that people in our country are facing.  We have been humbled to see our donors give even more generously at this time.”

Dan Finn, from the Archbishop of York Youth Trust, will speak of how its Young Leaders Award has reached more than 100,000 children and young people. Over the past two years, as the work of the Youth Trust has begun to spread across the whole country, more than 20,000 young people have completed over 100,000 hours of volunteering and social action in their communities, as part of the charity’s work.

Other contributors to the service include broadcaster and newsreader Huw Edwards who will read George Herbert’s poem Love Bade Me Welcome, with prayers read by Archbishop Sentamu’s wife, Revd Margaret Sentamu. Tariro Matsveru, who is studying at Cranmer Hall theological training college in Durham, will also contribute.

The service will start with an archive recording by BBC TV of the opening hymn at Archbishop Sentamu’s 2005 inauguration service at York Minster The God of Abraham Praise. It will conclude with a 2019 recording of Alle Alle Alle – a Jamaican melody adapted by the Archbishop in 1985 and verses based on the “I Am” sayings of Jesus of Nazareth. The song is performed by children from Heworth Church of England Primary School in York. The Archbishop joins in by playing congas.

The service will be interpreted into British Sign Language throughout and subtitles are also available. All the contributions were recorded separately in accordance with the rules on physical distancing.

An audio service of Night Prayer for Sunday led by Archbishop Sentamu will also feature in the Church of England’s Time to Pray podcast to be made available from 7pm on Sunday evening. The service includes a reading by Mrs Sentamu as well as music from the University of York Singers recorded in the chapel at Bishopthorpe Palace last year.

The service will be available online and on the Church of England’s smartspeaker apps. It will also feature on the free Daily Hope telephone service.

 

A PRAYER FOR ALL THOSE AFFECTED BY CORONAVIRUS

Keep us, good Lord,
under the shadow of your mercy.
Sustain and support the anxious,
be with those who care for the sick,
and lift up all who are brought low;
that we may find comfort
knowing that nothing can separate us from your love
in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Amen.