Devon’s ‘Cream of the Crop’ Honoured in St Boniface Awards at Exeter Cathedral
This year’s St Boniface Awards, which honour the unsung heroes of Devon’s Anglican churches, took place during a service at Exeter Cathedral on Saturday 24 June.
Sixteen people from churches across Devon were admitted into the Company of St Boniface,
The thirteen who attended the service were presented with a medal by the Bishop of Exeter.
They included a mother-of-three who trains church volunteers to run antenatal classes, a former engineer who created a bell-ringing simulator to train new bellringers and a woman who helped save her church from closure, growing the congregation from 9 to 40 people.
The youngest recipient, 16-year-old Ukrainian refugee Danyil Taktamyshev, from Torquay, was not present to receive his award because he has recently returned to Ukraine.
The awards are named after Devon’s patron saint, Boniface, who was born in Crediton.
They aim to honour church volunteers who go above and beyond “to serve the people of Devon with joy.”
This is the fourth year the awards have taken place.
The Bishop of Plymouth, the Rt. Rev’d James Grier, said in his sermon: “These people are exceptional examples of what should be everyday life for Christians, they are the cream of the crop.
“We want to be people whose faith results in action, it doesn’t matter if we are ‘successful’ or not, we just keep plodding-on, keep going back to where we are called, keep serving.”
Naomi Shaw, from Barnstaple, who won an award for her work with Begin Well, an antenatal course run by a number of churches in Devon, said “I think that being pregnant is such a special time in people’s lives and it’s a shame that there isn’t more support out there.
“Begin Well is somewhere where families can be held and supported and loved by the church and given the right antenatal information.”
Jeanne Jones, from Washfield in the Exe Valley Mission Community, is in her 90s and still leads church services, volunteers at a children’s holiday club and runs a lunch club she began in the 1970s.
She said: “I’m very honoured by the award and was inspired by the service which reminded us that people in the community need help and we must do things as well as talking about it.”
Terry Bleakman, from Chagford, who won an award for using technology to “bring the church into the 21st century,” said “We have to remember that this generation has been brought up on technology and if they can’t see what they are used to, then they don’t believe the church is for them. We have to give them the sort of things they experience every day of their lives.”
“I just really enjoy meeting people and helping them to express their feelings, it is just a joy every day.”