St Valentine’s Day Gift from Carrigaline School to Cork Penny Dinners

To mark St Valentine’s Day recently, the children of St Mary’s Church of Ireland School Carrigaline, County Cork,  once again this year, brought in items for Cork Penny Dinners.

Gifts of food and supplies collected and delivered to the school

Gifts of food and supplies collected and delivered to the school

Cork Penny Dinners was founded during Famine times as a soup kitchen. These amazing people currently serve well over 1000 meals per week, compared to around 150 a week two years ago. Their aim is a simple one –  to give everyone who calls to their centre a hot nourishing midday meal. In addition, their clients get sandwiches and fruit to take away as an evening meal.There’s an open door and a warm welcome.  Their volunteers come from all walks of life; nurses, truck drivers, scientists, general operatives, musicians, teachers, students, solicitors, unemployed people, retired people, clergy and so on. The volunteers are from many nationalities and have many different religions or none; but what they all have is empathy for their fellow human beings, a willingness to offer a hand in support .

Gifts packed

Gifts packed

‘Love your neighbour for St Valentine’s Day’ is an annual event for St Mary’s National School in Carrigaline.  A packed van full of dry goods and kitchen supplies were much appreciated by the hard working staff in the venerable and highly-respected Cork institution.

Van filled and delivery made

Van filled and delivery made

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Funeral of former Governor of The Falkland Islands held in Bantry, County Cork

The funeral has taken place in the Church of Saint Brendan the Navigator, Bantry, County Cork of Sir Cosmo Dugal Patrick Thomas Haskard, KCMG, MBE, who died recently  at his home at Tragariff on the shores of Bantry Bay, an ocean away from the Falkland Islands where he served as Governor from 1964 to 1970.

Sir Cosmo Haskard, arriving as Governor of the Falkland Islands in 1964.

Sir Cosmo Haskard, arriving as Governor of the Falkland Islands in 1964.

Sir Cosmo died three months after reaching his 100th birthday last November. His health has been very frail for some time during which time he was cared for at his home by his dedicated wife, Lady Haskard, and a team of wonderful carers.

Sir Cosmo Haskard was born in  Dublin in November 1916 and was baptised at St. Patrick’s Cathedral. This was more by accident than design. His mother spent her ‘confinement’ in a Dublin nursing home as his father was serving  with the army in France at that time.

Following a childhood and early education which was spent mainly in England, he graduated from Sandhurst and then moved to Pembroke College, Cambridge where he studied modern languages. Following this he served in Africa during the Second World War. By this time his father had built a new family home at Tragariff and it was here that he spent his vacation time.

After the War he joined the Colonial Service and served in Africa where he met his wife Phyllida. He retired from the Colonial Service following his final posting as Governor of the Falkland Islands where he served from 1964 to 1970. He then moved with his wife, and son Julian, back to Bantry to begin a new phase of his life.

Sir Cosmo and Lady Haskard pictured in their garden at Tragariff, Bantry, County Cork.

Sir Cosmo and Lady Haskard pictured in their garden at Tragariff, Bantry, County Cork.

He will be remembered locally in Bantry parish for those 37 latter years. He became a dedicated parishioner of Snave Church, a member of the Select Vestry and served on the Cork, Cloyne and Ross Diocesan Synod as well as on the Diocesan Council. He loved the traditional language Book of Common Prayer and it was through him, and a small group of other faithful parishioners, that the parish were able to start an ‘early’ Sunday celebration of the Holy Communion. He was a beautiful reader of Holy Scripture. He will always be remembered for his reading at the annual Community Carol Service.

The local rector, Canon Paul Willoughby, said of Sir Cosmo:

We have very many reasons to give thanks for his life. He will be remembered by all in this parish, and indeed in the local community,  as a kind, gracious and ‘gentle’ man. He was a devout communicant and faithful parishioner who showed a genuine, caring interest in everyone he met. It was this care about others that prompted a spontaneous response in many acts of kindness and generosity from the local community during the time of his frail health.  We extend our sympathy to Lady Haskard and to her  Julian, Michelle and their sons Cosmo, Piers and Hugo. May he rest in peace.

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Diocese of Cork, Cloyne and Ross to be represented at Service of Thanksgiving for Bishop Samuel Poyntz

It has been announced that a Service of Thanksgiving for the life and ministry of a former Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross, the Right Reverend Dr Samuel Poyntz, is to be held in Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin at 11.30 a.m. on Saturday next, 25th February 2017.  Dr Poyntz was Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross from 1978 to 1987.

The Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross, the Right Reverend Dr Paul Colton, will be represented at the Service by his predecessor (Bishop Poyntz’s successor), the Right Reverend Roy Warke, who was Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross from 1988 to 1999. Bishop Warke also served on the House of Bishops with Bishop Poyntz who was translated to the Diocese of Connor to serve as Bishop there in 1987.

The clergy of Cork, Cloyne and Ross will be formally represented on Saturday by the Archdeacon of Cork, Cloyne and Ross, the Venerable Adrian Wilkinson. Formally representing the laity of the Diocese will be two people who worked closely with Bishop Poyntz during his time in Cork, Cloyne and Ross: Mr Wilfred Baker and Mr David Bird.

Wilfred Baker was Diocesan Secretary and worked with Bishop Poyntz in support of so many facets of the work of the Diocese, its parishes, schools and many charities.  Mr David Bird, who is one of the Diocesan Trustees, was on Diocesan Council and Diocesan Synod during the episcopate of Bishop Poyntz, and served also on General Synod, Standing Committee, and most notably, on the Role of the Church Committee which was such an important aspect of the late Bishop’s work.  Bishop Poyntz and Mr Bird were also two participants in the New Ireland Forum which met from 1983 to 1984.

On Sunday, 26th February Bishop Poyntz will be remembered at Church Services throughout Cork, Cloyne and Ross.  A minute’s silence will be kept and prayers of remembrance and thanksgiving offered.

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Death of a former Bishop of Cork, Bishop Samuel Poyntz ~ Statement by Bishop Paul Colton

Church of Ireland – Diocese of Cork, Cloyne and Ross

Statement by The Right Rev Dr Paul Colton,

Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross

in response to the death of

a former Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross,

The Right Reverend Dr Samuel G. Poyntz

The Right Reverend Dr Paul Colton, Church of Ireland Bishop of Cork has made the following statement in response to the news of the death of a former Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross, the Right Reverend Dr Samuel Poyntz. Bishop Poyntz, who died on Saturday last (18th February) was Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross for nine years, from September 1978 to 1987, when he was translated to the Diocese of Connor.

Bishop Colton’s statement:

‘Although it is 30 years since Bishop Sam Poyntz left Cork, Cloyne and Ross to become Bishop of Connor, within the small community that is the Church of Ireland, contact with him and his wife Noreen has been regular and deep friendship has endured between them and many in this Diocese.  In recent years, they both returned to visit the Diocese for a number of significant occasions including the 250th anniversary of Kingston College, the official opening of the new Ashton School, and the retirement of our long serving Diocesan Secretary, Wilfred Baker.

Mrs Noreen Poyntz and Bishop Samuel Poyntz on a visit to Cork, Cloyne and Ross in March 2015 . Photograph: Neil Danton.

Mrs Noreen Poyntz and Bishop Samuel Poyntz on a visit to Cork, Cloyne and Ross in March 2015 . Photograph: Neil Danton.

More than that, even though his episcopate in this Diocese was reasonably short – just under 9 years – Bishop Poyntz’s influence has endured, and his legacy is still felt and appreciated by many.  Even today, many of the characteristic phrases he used are referred to and repeated affectionately.

My wife and I were teenagers when he became our bishop and our story of knowing him is not untypical.  Sam Poyntz influenced those formative years greatly, and encouraged us, not only in the life of the Church of Ireland, but also in supporting our education and chosen careers.  Like other clergy from the Diocese (including my own contemporaries, Canon Robert Howard and Canon Nigel Baylor) he sponsored me for ordination training.  He made great efforts to nurture vocations in the Diocese, and to keep in touch over the years with those who responded.

Many have deeply personal memories and we are no exception.  When Susan and I married in Cork in 1986 he presided at the celebration of the Eucharist, and he and Noreen invited us to the gardens of the Bishop’s Palace to have the photographs taken.  By the time he arrived in Connor Diocese I was working at Belfast Cathedral and also as a domestic chaplain to his predecessor.  He continued that appointment and involved me in the arrangement of, and support for, a number of reconciliation and peace-making initiatives in those difficult days in Northern Ireland.

Bishop Poyntz was an innovator with a strong view of the role of the Church of Ireland.  He had clear ideas of how the Church should keep pace with change, especially with international developments, social issues, and he was clear that it should take its place both in ecumenical dialogue and the concerns of the wider Anglican Communion. From a strongly Church of Ireland perspective, he himself engaged with all of those matters locally, nationally and internationally. He created opportunities in Cork for encounter with those issues, including hosting a meeting of the British Council of Churches (as it then was) and a visit to the Diocese by the Archbishop of York of the day, the Most Reverend Stuart Blanch.  Bishop Poyntz was energetic and pragmatic. He was decisive and forthright in his views.  He was a strong supporter of Church music, and particularly of the development of the Cathedral Choir at St Fin Barre’s Cathedral, Cork.

Many did not realise how down to earth he was.  I recall well when I was a student at the Church of Ireland Theological College how he arrived to visit us announced.  On one such occasion,  I saw his car pulling up and went down to meet him: wrong thing to do!  ‘Should you not be in your study writing an essay?’ he said.  But then he came to the room, sat on the bed among us; ‘Put on the kettle.  Have you any biscuits?  Now!  How are things going?’  he asked.  When he departed he also left a cheque behind for practical support.  On other occasions there were gifts of books and core academic texts, or a cheque to buy a decent suit for ordination.

In Cork, Cloyne and Ross, in the late 1970s and 1980s he arrived with a flurry of enthusiasm after the long, steady, and pastoral episcopate of Bishop Gordon Perdue, a tenure which was no less innovative in its own ways.  Notably, Bishop Poyntz presided over the complete refurbishment of the Diocesan Office buildings at Cove Street, the relocation and construction of the first phases of Lapp’s Court (a sheltered housing complex), the consecration of the Chapel of Christ the Healer at the Regional Hospital (now Cork University Hospital), and major remedial works at Kingston College (another housing charity within the Diocese).  Two, among many, ecumenical initiatives are worthy of note.  First, as President of ICICYMA (the Incorporated Church of Ireland Cork Young Men’s Association) at Garryduff Sports Centre, he led the club to open its membership to people of all religious outlooks enabling it to become the club that it is today.  Second, before he left for Connor he was involved in the dialogue which led to the amalgamation of two religious-run voluntary hospitals, the Victoria Hospital and the South Infirmary, now the South Infirmary Victoria University Hospital, Cork.  In its time this was a pioneering ecumenical step.

He was ahead of his time in many ways.  I remember well how, in his retiring remarks at his last meeting of the Standing Committee of the General Synod he said that one of his big regrets was that he had not managed to persuade the Church of Ireland of the value of and importance of periodic sabbatical leave for clergy for study and refreshment in ministry.

We remember our former Bishop, Samuel, with immense affection and thanksgiving to God and, on behalf of us all in Cork, Cloyne and Ross, I extend our sincere sympathy to all his family, especially to his wife Noreen, and his children Jennifer, Tim and Stephanie and their families.  May he rest in God’s peace and rise in glory.’

Bishop Paul Colton chatting with Bishop Samuel Poyntz.

Bishop Paul Colton chatting with Bishop Samuel Poyntz.

– Ends –

Further information from:

Sam Wynn Church of Ireland Diocesan Communications Officer

Telephone:   +353 (0)86 813 7659

E mail media@corkchurchofireland.com

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Come and Sing – Vivaldi ‘Gloria’ at St Fin Barre’s Cathedral, Cork

St Fin Barre’s Cathedral, Cork, and its Director of Music, Peter Stobart, teamed up with the the Cork International Choral Festival on Saturday, 11th February for a very special day-long Come and Sing event; rehearsing and performing one of our history’s most magnificent choral works – Vivaldi’s Gloria.

St Fin Barre's Cathedral, Director of Music, rehearses with some of those who took part in 'Come and Sing'

St Fin Barre’s Cathedral, Director of Music, rehearses with some of those who took part in ‘Come and Sing’

2017 was the first time for such a collaboration and get-together. Sixty-three singers from all backgrounds came along for the rehearsal and to learn the piece which was then performed that same evening, under the direction of Peter Stobart, and with Trevor Selby from Limerick on the organ.

Peter Stobart (Director of Music, St Fin Barre's Cathedral) with John Fitzpatrick (Cork International Choral Festival)

Peter Stobart (Director of Music, St Fin Barre’s Cathedral) with John Fitzpatrick (Cork International Choral Festival)

Trevor Selby, organist

Trevor Selby, organist

 

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