the role of sidespeople 2011

1
Canon (Church) Law E 2 Of sidesmen or assistants to the churchwardens 1. The sidesmen of the parish shall be appointed by the annual parochial church meeting or, if need arises between annual parochial church meetings, by the parochial church council. 2. No person whose name is not on the church electoral roll is eligible as a sidesman, but all persons whose names are on the roll are so eligible. 3. It shall be the duty of the sidesmen to promote the cause of true religion in the parish and to assist the churchwardens in the discharge of their duties in maintaining order and decency in the church and churchyard, especially during the time of divine service. www.cofe.anglican.org/about/churchlawlegis/canons/complete.pdf The role of sidespeople at St James’ Sidespeople are often the first people you meet as you come through the door. Although part of their role is to welcome people to the service their main function seems to be to give out the right books and papers! With such a variety of services that isn’t always as easy as it sounds. Along with the ‘books’ you should receive a Pew Sheet which contains the readings for the Sunday and includes notices for the week ahead. Fortunately part of the design of the new pews is to have room for the hymn books to be left in them, but the other papers and service sheets still have to be handed out correctly. In practice sidespeople do much more than give out books. They are responsible under the direction of the Churchwardens for making sure that all the practical jobs in preparation for worship are done (everything from putting out the brass collection plate to lighting altar candles, from finding people to take up the bread and wine for communion to making sure the ‘Band Box’ is available for Family Service) and that everything in the body of the church goes smoothly during the service, including finding seats for latecomers, offering ‘Happy Bags’ to small children and directing people up for Communion. They take the collection and deal with it after the service, recording the different colour envelopes and counting the loose cash. They also count carefully so that we know exactly how many people under and over 16 are in church. The Church of England loves statistics and so do we. It is very helpful to look back in the service register where numbers of those attending and receiving communion (when it is a communion service) are recorded and see how many people we might expect on any given Sunday. This is especially important at festival times, not only the major times of the church’s year such as Easter and Christmas but at times when we have our own major events and services. Sidespeople are the smiling, helpful and welcoming face of St James’. They are among the first to arrive for a service so that they can prepare the church to greet you and they are generally among the last to leave, after making sure that everything is correctly put away and the church is left tidily and safely for the next people to come in. Although they may have their own favourite service, we rather hope that they’ll be willing to take a turn at any of our services from time to time as needed. CarolynFox

Upload: stjfinch

Post on 24-Mar-2015

129 views

Category:

Documents


3 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Role of Sidespeople 2011

Canon (Church) Law E 2 Of sidesmen or assistants to the churchwardens 1. The sidesmen of the parish shall be appointed by the annual parochial church meeting or, if need arises between annual parochial church meetings, by the parochial church council. 2. No person whose name is not on the church electoral roll is eligible as a sidesman, but all persons whose names are on the roll are so eligible. 3. It shall be the duty of the sidesmen to promote the cause of true religion in the parish and to assist the churchwardens in the discharge of their duties in maintaining order and decency in the church and churchyard, especially during the time of divine service.

www.cofe.anglican.org/about/churchlawlegis/canons/complete.pdf

The role of sidespeople at St James’ Sidespeople are often the first people you meet as you come through the door. Although part of their role is to welcome people to the service their main function seems to be to give out the right books and papers! With such a variety of services that isn’t always as easy as it sounds. Along with the ‘books’ you should receive a Pew Sheet which contains the readings for the Sunday and includes notices for the week ahead. Fortunately part of the design of the new pews is to have room for the hymn books to be left in them, but the other papers and service sheets still have to be handed out correctly. In practice sidespeople do much more than give out books. They are responsible under the direction of the Churchwardens for making sure that all the practical jobs in preparation for worship are done (everything from putting out the brass collection plate to lighting altar candles, from finding people to take up the bread and wine for communion to making sure the ‘Band Box’ is available for Family Service) and that everything in the body of the church goes smoothly during the service, including finding seats for latecomers, offering ‘Happy Bags’ to small children and directing people up for Communion. They take the collection and deal with it after the service, recording the different colour envelopes and counting the loose cash. They also count carefully so that we know exactly how many people under and over 16 are in church. The Church of England loves statistics and so do we. It is very helpful to look back in the service register where numbers of those attending and receiving communion (when it is a communion service) are recorded and see how many people we might expect on any given Sunday. This is especially important at festival times, not only the major times of the church’s year such as Easter and Christmas but at times when we have our own major events and services. Sidespeople are the smiling, helpful and welcoming face of St James’. They are among the first to arrive for a service so that they can prepare the church to greet you and they are generally among the last to leave, after making sure that everything is correctly put away and the church is left tidily and safely for the next people to come in. Although they may have their own favourite service, we rather hope that they’ll be willing to take a turn at any of our services from time to time as needed. CarolynFox