Seagoe Parish Magazine.
JUNE, 1930
RECTOR :
Rev. Canon Archer, B.D., The Rectory, Seagoe,
LAY READER (Bishop's Licence) :
Mr. Robt. Gracey, 69 Bridge Street, Portadown.
CHURCHWARDENS :
Rector's—Wm. H. England.
People's—Gilbert Price.
Whitsuntide.
This year Whitsunday falls on Sunday, June 8th,
arid it will be marked by special services in the
Parish Church. At 8 a.m. there will be a celebration
of Holy Communion, and also after Morning
Prayer. The offerings at all services will be on behalf
of the upkeep of the Parochial Schoolhouse.
Whitsuntide - is one of the great Festivals ot the
Christian Church.
It is the day when we commemorate the descent
of the Holy Spirit on the Day of Pentecost.
It marks the 50th day from Easter.
It was called Pentecost Or Fiftieth day by the Jews
in accordance with Lev. 15: " Ye shall count
from the morrow after the Sabbath; from that day
seven weeks shall be complete." These 50 days
between Easter and Whitsuntide or Pentecost were
always observed as a period of special Christian
rejoicing. It was on Whitsunday, June 9th, 1549, that
the Book of Cornmon Prayer in English was first
used instead of the former Latin Prayer Book.
Trinity Sunday.
The Sunday following Whitsunday is observed
the Church as Trinity Sunday. It is the day
which sums up in itself the teachings of the Christian
year since Advent. On that day our thoughts
dwell on the greatest of all subjects, the Nature and
Being of God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
A Memorial Service,
On Sunday, June 29th, Memorial Services will be
held in the Parish Church in memory of those,
especially from this Parish, who fell in the War.
At Morning Prayer the Seagoe C.L.B. will parade.
Wreaths will be laid at the Memorial Pillars and
during the Service the names of the fallen will be
read. The offerings will be given to the Co. Armagh
Protestant Orphan Society.
School Inspection.
The Rev. W Armstrong, Rector of Dromara and
Inspector of Religious Education in Public Elementary
Schools, will examine toe pupils attending
Seagoe P.E. School in Religious Knowledge on
Tuesday, June 10th. Certificates will be awarded
to those who answer best.
Sunday School Excursion
At a meeting of Superintendents and Teachers held
in Seagoe School on Monday, May 5th, at 8 p.m., it
was decided that the Annual Excursion this year
should be to Warrenpoint, and the date fixed is
Thursday, July 17th. Full particulars regarding the
price of tickets and the hours of trains will be
published in our next issue. July is the holiday month
and our experience last year of having the excursion
in July proved so successful that we are repeating
the arrangement this year. A great many friends of
Seagoe from all parts of the world visit the old
Parish in July week, and it is delightful experience
for them to join once again as they did years
ago in the Sunday School excursion. There is great
variety at Warrenpoint—climbing, boating, bathing
and driving. We expect a record attendance at our
excursion this year.
Mothers' Union Excursion,
The Seagoe Mothers are going to have an excursion
of their own on Thursday, June 19th, to Warrenpoint.
They will (D.V.) leave Portadown by
train at 10.45, and will leave Warrenpoint at 8 p.m.
The return ticket will be 1/9, and tickets can be had
from any member of the committee or from the
Hon. Sec., Mrs. J. Reid, 5 Tavanagh Avenue,
Portadown. The usual monthly meeting of the M.U. will
not be held this month.
Sunday School Conference.
A Conference for our Sunday School Superintendents
and Teachers has been arranged to be held in
Seagoe School on Thursday, June 26th. The Conference
will begin with a short service in the Parish
Church at 4.30. The members will then adjourn to
Seagoe School for the first session, at which a paper
will be read on " The Spiritual Equipment of the
Teacher." A discussion will follow, and at 6 tea
will be provided. The Conference will be resumed
at 7.30; when a paper will be read on " The Organisation
of the Modern Sunday School." At 8.30 a
third paper will be read on " The Giving of the
Lesson."- Tickets, admitting to the Conference, will
be issued through the Sunday Schools. We hope
all our teachers will endeavour to attend the Conference.
Jumble Sale.
A Jumble Sale is being arranged to be held in
the Parochial Hall, Edenderry, on Friday, July 4th,
at 7.30 p.m. The proceeds are on behalf of our Sunday
School Parochial Fund. Please gather together
anything which you have and which you do not
want. Everything will help. Gifts of money and
farm produce will thankfully acknowledged.
Remember the date, July 4thy at 730, in Edenderry
Parochial Hall.
SEAGOE PARISH MAGAZINE
Mr. W. J. Connor.
The Rev. W. J. Connor is at present on a visit to
his native Parish of Seagoe. It is 40 years since Mr.
Connor left Seagoe for Canada, where he was ordained.
He has served all these years in various
parishes in the Diocese of Huron. Mr. Connor has
many friends in Seagoe, where he did good work
under the late Dean Dawson. He has a good memory
and has no difficulty in calling to mind the
names of those who lived in the Parish half a century
ago. Of course many of those whom he knew
have passed away. Mr. Connor preached at two
services in the Parochial Hall last month. He has
many interesting stories to tell of his Canadian
experiences. He has served as Rector of Dresden,
Durham, Adelaide and Colchester, all in the Diocese of
Huron.
The Grove Field.
Subscriptions towards the purchase of the Grove
Field are coming in steadily and already a sum of
£57 6s 2d has been lodged to the credit of the fund,
but the balance is still considerable and in Order to
cover the cost of purchase (£160) a further sum of
£102 13s 10d will require to be raised. We ask that
who have not yet subscribed to kindly send in their
subscriptions to the Hon. Treas., Mr Hugh Stoops,
Killicomaine Road, Portadown, as soon as possible.
Building at Seagoe.
The foundations of several new villas have been
laid last week on the Upper Seagoe road. It seems as
if before long all available building sites will have
been taken. A notable addition to the new buildings.
in this neigbourhood is the handsome factory
erected by Cumo Ltd., near Seagoe Villa. The
design and structure are of fine proportions and the
office portions of the building are fitted up in an
exceptionally attractive and complete manner. Light
and power are provided by a finely housed electric
installation. We congratulate the Directors of Curno
Ltd. and Mr. Forsythe on a building which is an
ornament to the locality.
Visit of Miss Dawson
Miss Cherrie Dawson spoke at several parochial
gatherings during the past month on behalf of the
South American Missionary Society. Owing to
missing a train in England she was unable to speak at
the Mothers' Union meeting on Tuesday, May 13th,
but very kindly spoke to a meeting of the members
on the Friday following. Mrs Bulloch, of Portadown,
very kindly addressed the members on the
Tuesday evening. Miss Dawson visited the country
Sunday Schools, Seagoe, Drumgor, Hacknahay and
Levaghery on Sunday, May 11th. In each School
much interest was shown in Miss Dawson's work and
collectors were appointed to arrange for a monthly
collection in support of an Indian child. Colonel
Dawson and Mrs. Dawson have gone to reside in
Bath, England.
St. Mark's Tower
The War Memorial Tower which is in course of
erection at St. Mark's Church, Portadown, will soon
have reached its full height. It is a magnificent
monument and dominates the whole town. it can
now be seen from long distances and forms quite a
landmark to the surrounding country. Lurgan and
Portadown are fortunate in possessing as their
central buildings such .splendid Parish Churches. The
spire of Lurgan and the Tower of Portadown gave
character to their respective towns. The presence
of such a fine architectural monument in Portadown
is certain to have a great effect on the future of the
town. The Tower is modelled on the famous
Magdalen Tower in Oxford, but there are some
differences, perhaps the most notable is that St. Mark's
has octagonal piers while those in Magdalen tower
are square.
Parish Register for May.
Baptisms
The following were Baptized in the Parish Church
on May '3rd, 1930:—
Magee—Samuel Lester, son of Joseph William and Emma Magee, of Kernan.
Sponsors—Anne Jane Patton, Emma Elizabeth Magee.
Liggett—Hugh and Henry John, sons of John Joseph and Julia Liggett, of Edenderry.
Sponsors—Susanna Liggett. Julia Liggett.
Lester—Ruby Elizabeth, daughter of Joseph and Elizabeth Lester, of Lower Seagoe.
Sponsors—Elizabeth Woodside Lester, Elizabeth Lester.
Forster--Thornas Victor Hetherington, son of Cecil Reginald Bertram and Jane Forster,
of Dunmurry, Parish of Drumbeg.
Sponsors—Agnes Shanks, Jane M'Kinstry.
Privately Baptized.
Kearns—May 16th, 1930, David, son of David and
Ellen Kearns, of Killicomaine.
Received into the Congregation.
Magee—May 3rd, 1930, Elizabeth and May, twin daughters of Joseph William and Emma
Magee, of Kernan.
Sponsors—Anne Jane Patton, Emma Elizabeth Magee.
Old Seage Notes
A SEAGOE SERMON OF 1858.
In our issue of October, 1929, we published portion
of a sermon preached in Seagoe Church by Archdeacon
Saurin. In our present issue we print portion of another
sermon which the Archdeacon
preached in Seagoe Church on September 12th, 1858.
The Archdeacon was most diligent and painstaking
in the preparation of his sermons. They are written
on large sized paper and in a bold clear hand. They
are carefully punctuated and each sentence has
evidently been constructed with much thought. The
Archdeacon came of a clever and eloquent family,
and although it has been said that his actual delivery
of a sermon was somewhat halting, yet the
SEAGOE PARISH MAGAZINE.
sermon was always worthy of its place in the Service
of the Church. As a proof of the care with which
the Archdeacon used to prepare his sermons, the late
Mrs. Jack of Seagoe Villa, used to tell how
she could hear the Archdeacon every Saturday reading
aloud his sermon as he walked up and down in
front of the Rectory. The Archdeacon's sermons,
compiled with so much care, and delivered after
such diligent practice were not as one might naturally
expect, readily laid aside. The Archdeacon
was particular in entering on the front of each sermon
the place and date of preaching it. He did not
hesitate to preach the same sermon at fairly frequent
intervals. The sermon of which we here give
an extract has on its front page the dates and places
of preaching. The sermon was written by the Archdeacon
during his stay at Malaga, in Southern
Spain, where he lived with Mrs. Saurin and his two
daughters from 1855 to 1858. The following the
1858—Malaga, May, 1858, Sunday before we went
to Granada. Seagoe, 12th Sept., 1858.
Seagoe, Sunday evening, 13th May, 1810. Balteagh
and Seagoe, 11th .Januarv, 1863. Seagoe, 25th June,
1865. Seagoe, Sunday evening, 20th January, 1867;
very bad storm or frost and snow. Seagoe, 4th April,
1869.
" The Victory of Faith," a Sermon preached in
Seagoe Church by Archdeacon Saurin on September
2th, 1858.
Heb. xi., 13—" These all died in faith, not having
received the promises, but having seen them afar
off, and were persuaded of them, and embraced
them, and confessed that they were strangers and
pilgrims on the earth."
Among the various pleas which have from time
to time been urged against the necessity of believing
in the doctrines of Christianity, is that of the
difference of opinion which has existed upon them
from its first promulgation—many men of the most
eminent learning have looked upon some of the most
important doctrines of the Gospel as points of controversy.
Why, then, it has been argued, why
should the unlearned be expected to entertain a
faith respecting these things, which those who ought
to understand them better do not appear to exercise.
Alas! my friends, the fact is true, but the inference
is not so. God is made known to us, not through
worldly wisdom, but by His own revelation. Canst
thou by searching find out God? was the pious truth
that Zophar spake to Job, and experience has proved
to us, that there is as much knowledge of the human
heart in the remark, as of God's mysterious dealings.
The pride of intellect has, from age to age,
stood in the way of the humble, childlike spirit of
faith—and the words of inspiration are as applicable
now as when they were uttered three thousand
years ago, vain man would be wise, tho' man be
born like a wild ass's colt. The learned Pharisee
and the deep read Scribe could not, with all their
knowledge of the prophecies, perceive the identity of
Jesus of Nazareth with their promised Messiah, the
mighty works which were done before their eyes
served only to harden them in unbelief, and to drive
them to seek for an explanation in the supposed
agency of witchcraft, whilst the common people
heard Him gladly. And Christ magnified the wisdom
of that decree, by which the gracious designs of the
Almighty were hidden from the wise and prudent,
but were revealed unto babes. In every age there
has been a tendency amongst the learned to be wise
above that which is written, forgetting the Apostle's
counsel.
If any man among you seemeth to be wise,
in this world, let him become a fool that he may be
wise, for the wisdom of this world is foolishness with
God—for it is written, he taketh the wise
in their own craftiness, and again, the Lord knoweth
the thoughts of the wise that they are vain.
O, no, my friends, the doubts and controversies of
the learned and worldly wise should be no stumbling
block to him who is content to walk by faith and not
by sight.
It is written. says St. Paul, I will destroy
the wisdom of the wise, and will bring to nothing
the understanding of the proud.
It was in the spirit of prophecy that the Apostle wrote, knowing
that worldly knowledge untempered by Christian
humility, so far from creating within us a spirit of
pious faith, has in general quite a contrary effect.
It suggests difficulties and speculations upon the
simple records of the Scriptures; it loves to start new
theories, to put commonly received opinions into new
lights, without first ascertaining from the only sure
authority, whether the old interpretation be not the
best. And so, the human mind will too Often wander
on in the pursuit of something new, until, bewildered
with the results of its own experiments it
is led to fall back upon itself—and with regard to
any startling fact of Scripture, they seem to oppose
the received systems of human science, it will ask,
How can these things be? Whilst the less learned,
but more humble Christian, will remember that His
Saviour's declaration to His doubting disciples was,
With God all things are possible. However, my
friends, I sincerely trust that amongst us, is no evil
heart of unbelief, but that even now, whilst in
pronouncing the creed of our Church, you with your
lips professed to believe all the Articles of our Christian
faith, so with heart and mind you were agreeable to the same.
When the hope of the coming Saviour was exchanged
for the enjoyment of the Saviour come, we
find, as we might have expected, that the promises of
God manifest fin the flesh, the hope of justification,
and redemption through him, wrought as powerful
an inworking spirit of faith in them upon whom the
ends of the world had come, as ever did the promises
revealed by the Spirit in the patriarchs, and
worthies, and prophets of old time. It was this that
bore up Apostles, Saints, confessors, martyrs, above
all the temptations that ,surrounded them. It was
this spirit of faith, wrought in them by the power of
the Holy Ghost, that made the once timid finishermen
of Galilee confront the heathen ruler on his judgement
seat, and brabe the league of Sadducee, Scribe, and
SEAGOE PARISH MAGAZINE.
Pharisee, this that made the Intrepid Apostle Peter
declare, as spokesman for the rest, We ought to obey
God rather than men. It was this that made them,
one and all, depart from the presence of the council,
not dismayed at persecution past, or perils yet to
come, but according to, their divine Master's prophetic
admonition, rejoicing that they were counted
worthy to suffer shame for His name. It was this
that supporeed the holy Paul through shipwreck,
stoning, scourging—What were to him, save as so
litany proofs of God's sustaining grace, what were
to him his frequent trials, his perils of waters, Of
robbers, of his own countrymen, of the heathen, in
the city, in the wilderness, in the sea, amongst false
brethren? What heeded he of his weariness and
painfulness, his frequent watchings, his hunger, and
thirst, his fastings, his cold, his nakedness? The
unaided spirit of the natural man would have quailed
before these accumulated trials. It must needs have
cowered down in dismay before the very prospect,
much more under the reality of these appalling illc.
But the spirit of the Apostle had a power within
which his persecutors knew not of. It enabled him to
look with confidence for that grace, which was
pronounced sufficient for him, in answer to the prayer
or faith. It Could soar beyond the grave—like that
Moses, it could look to the recompense of the reward
reserved for God's perfected saints, when trials,
persecutions, sufferings, and temptations, as Compared
with their eternal heritage of glory, will be
remembered only as so many proofs that God's mysterious
mercy and love, are connected with every dispensation,
whether permitted or ordained. We too, if we rightly
appreciate those means of
grace which God has so abundantly given us for the
restoration of our souls, are heirs 'of the same spirit
faith. To us of these latter days God says, as He
did to the chosen ones of old, Open thy mouth wide
I will fill it. And thus it is the Christian's privi-
lege as well, to repose in such pious confidence on
his God, that he Oan say of all His dispensations,
whether for weal tor woe, Behold, here am I, let Him
do to me as seemeth good unto Him.
But, my friends, let me remind you that it is not
enough if we only make to God the offering of the
very dregs of our existence, whilst we spend the
choice part of our lives in forgetfulness of Him. It is
not seemly to pass the morning of our days in
following after our own devices, and, when the shades
of night are deepening around us, then, for the first
time to come to Him with the mocking submission,
I am now here—though He is always eventually
found of them that seek Him, and though the end
of that search is assuredly eternal life, yet, we can
scarcely be so unreasonable as to expect, that, if we
have never sought Him in the days of our prosperity,
the very first pleadings of our Sorrow will be heard,
and answered on the instant. No, there may be
exceptions, but as a general rule there must be a long
growth in grace before we can arrive unto the measure
of the stature of the fulness of Christian. I
would therefore, my beloved, urge each of you to take
no rest until you have individually secured an interest
in Him who died to redeem us from all iniquity,
remembering with thankfulness ,that He who
hath begun a good work in you, will perform it
until the day of Jesus Christ..
THE ROYAL IRISH FUSILIERS AT THE BATTLE
OF BARROSSA.—The close connection which has
always existed between the Royal Irish Fusiliers and
the Parish of Seagoe and which was so greatly
intensified during the Great War by the courage and
self sacrifice of our noble 9th Battalion demands that
here in our Parish Magazine we should record the
doings of our famous Regiment at the Battle of
Barrossa, when through its surpassing bravery it won
for itself its special title first of " Princess Victoria's
Own." At the time that the Battle of Barrossa was
fought the Regiment was known in the British Army
as the " 87th Regiment of Foot." Barrossa is situated
in the far South of Spain. In March, 1811, the British
General Graham determined to take the French in
the rear so as to raise the siege of Cadiz. He embarked
his troops, including the 87th Regiment, and
landed them near Tarifa. The Spaniards, our allies,
were so apathetic that General Graham said of them
that the only reason why they wished to drive the
French out of Cadiz was that they might be free to
enjoy the wild strawberries of Chicklana." On the
morning of March 5th, 1811, the British and Spanish
reached the heights of Barrossa, four miles from the
sea coast. Barrossa is a ridge 1 ½ miles long,
stretching inland with a pinewood in front and the Forest
of Chiclana on the left. The French were in Chiclana
keenly watching the British. Through the carelessness
of the Spaniards the French gained possession
of the commanding ridge of Barrossa, thus driving
a wedge between the British and the Spaniards.
Major Brown saw the danger and asked Graham
what he should do. Graham's reply was short and to
the point, " Fight." A fierce fight ensued and the
British were being overwhelmed when the 87 th
Regiment was called on to help. They charged the
French with such fierce energy that they drove the
French first line in on top of the second and with
such violence that the whole enemy force retreated
from the ridge in a confused and defeated mass,
Such was the Battle of Barrossa. It had only lasted
1 ½ hours, but was one of the most bloody battles ever
fought. Fifty officers, sixty sergeants, and eleven
hundred British soldiers were killed and Wounded,
More than 2,000 French were killed or wounded,
including two generals, while six guns, an eagle
standard and 400 prisoners were captured. The. Fusiliers
still keep their " Barrossa Day" each year in
memory of the great Battle, and .they still bear the
our able title of " Princess Victoria's Own,"
conferred upon them in memory of their great
achievement. The Regiment was also entitled to bear as
their standard " An eagle with a wreath of laurel
above the Harp," in addition to the arms of the
Prince of Wales in Commemoration of their
distinguished services at the Battle of Barrossa.
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