Work-Life Balance
This Monday we celebrate the Feast Day of St Simon and St Jude. These are two apostles that we know very little about apart from their names being among those listed in the New Testament. What information we do have of their work and subsequent martyrdom is from tradition, which tells us that they were martyred together in Persia.
Simon was a Zealot, so part of a national resistance movement involved with the Jewish revolt against the Romans. It is possible that it was his zeal for God’s righteousness that led him to join the apostles as a response to Jesus call to proclaim the kingdom of God. It is Jude who in John’s Gospel account of the Last Supper asks Jesus why he is to reveal to himself to them and not the world, that leads Jesus to comment on the coming of the Spirit.
This week on Monday we also celebrate Labour Day. It is the commemoration of workers efforts to standardize the eight-hour working day. Although the 8-hour working day is not set in legislation, it is implicit in the Minimum Wage Act 1983, which sets out a maximum 40-hour, five-day work week as the norm for employment agreements.
Achieving 'work-life balance' is still often an elusive goal. But one day a year is enshrined in New Zealand law as a time to relax and to reflect on the efforts made by trade unions to get this balance.
From the Vicar
In the Middle Ages Mary's Song inspired the Feast of Fools celebrated after Christmas usually around New year. This feast was a literal acting out of the Magnificat as a rather strange way of witnessing to God’s kingdom that inverts human power structures and raises up the oppressed to places of honour.
We are to give up our insatiable desire to consume and replace it with the expectation of the coming of Jesus.
Advent is a time of reflection and preparation for when time will end and Jesus will come in power and glory bringing our waiting to completion.
Parish Officers
Parish Governance
The executive team of Vicar, churchwardens and treasurer meet constantly on parish business.
Parish Groups
Worship leaders, lay readers, servers, ushers, greeters, flower arrangers, cleaners, counters, intercessors and cup bearers all join together to support the service.
Beginning the year, with an excerpt of a letter from Corraine Haines, from the City Mission, in regards to the Back To School programme
In the Middle Ages Mary's Song inspired the Feast of Fools celebrated after Christmas usually around New year. This feast was a literal acting out of the Magnificat as a rather strange way of witnessing to God’s kingdom that inverts human power structures and raises up the oppressed to places of honour.
Regular Summer Sunday Services
We are to give up our insatiable desire to consume and replace it with the expectation of the coming of Jesus.
Community Fair bringing affordable toys, books, china, vintage clothes and more from the Opawa - St Martins Parish.