Churchwarden steps down after 24 years


    Category
    General
    Date
    18 April 2013
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    IT’S thought she is the longest-serving churchwarden in our diocese.


    Sue Kanavan, retiring churchwarden at Church of the Holy Spirit, Southsea

    Sue Kanavan, 66, will step down after this Sunday (April 21) after 24 years as churchwarden of Church of the Holy Spirit, in Fawcett Road, Southsea.

    She has overseen two interregnums - when the parish has been between vicars - and a huge £750,000 rebuilding project to bring the worship space and parish halls together under one roof. Her faith has been a big source of strength and comfort throughout her lengthy stint. But she has finally decided to hand over the baton to someone else.

    “I feel very blessed to have been able to do the role of churchwarden and very privileged to be a member of such a lovely church and the universal Anglican Church,” Sue said. “I just wonder how people manage if they haven’t got a faith because I don’t think I could.”

    Sue grew up in a Christian household, and attended St Bartholomew’s Church, which used to stand at the junction of Outram Road and Campbell Road in Southsea. Her father was the churchwarden there and her mother was in charge of enrolling new members for the Mothers’ Union.

    When the Church of the Holy Spirit was built in the 1950s on the site of the former St Matthew’s Church, which had been destroyed in the Blitz, the family began worshipping there and Sue has been there ever since. Her faith became more real after a pilgrimage to Walsingham in Norfolk when she was 11 or 12.

    In her early 20s she became secretary of the deanery synod – the Anglican body covering the city of Portsmouth - and joined the Parochial Church Council of her own church. And then in 1989, the then vicar, the Rev Richard Evans, asked her to serve as churchwarden. When she agreed, she never imagined she would still be in the role more than 20 years later!

    “I do believe that one should change these roles regularly to bring fresh people in, but it just never seems to have happened,” Sue said. “Over the years we have had two interregnums and each time people said to me ‘you can’t go now’. We had the rebuilding work, which was a journey that lasted another five or six years, and I couldn’t leave in the middle of that.

    “When we appointed Phillip Amey as our new priest-in-charge at the beginning of last year, he asked me to stay while he settled in. I agreed but said to him that this year I really must retire. The time seems right. It is early in his priest-in-charge time and, God willing, we will have him for a good few years to come.”

    Anglican churches appoint two churchwardens at their annual meetings. They are volunteers who are accountable to the bishop and vicar, and their role is to take care of the church building and its property on behalf of the parish. When a parish is between vicars, the churchwardens are responsible for making sure services continue.

    Despite Sue’s change of role, she won’t be putting her feet up yet. She will continue to organise the church’s annual pilgrimage to Walsingham and head up the events planning committee. She will also continue to help design the Easter garden as well as preparing the church for major festivals and key events.

    Sue has been a member of the choir for more than 20 years and she plans to carry on singing. She’s even taken on a new role as training officer for the deanery Mothers’ Union group. But the former headteacher is looking forward to spending more time with her husband of 42 years, Phillip.

    Throughout her life, her faith has been a constant source of strength and hope, not least when her eldest son Sean, now 41, was born eight weeks prematurely. He wasn’t expected to live, but he pulled through against the odds and Sue truly believes that it was down to God’s intervention.

    “When Sean was born he couldn’t breathe and he was put in an incubator in intensive care,” she said. “I was sent home and the following day, our vicar visited him in hospital. The doctors told him, ‘there’s nothing we can do for this baby. It’s the mother that needs you.’

    “On the Sunday the vicar led mass and at the beginning of the service the whole church prayed for Sean and apparently there was this fabulous feeling in the church. People have told me that it was almost tenable.

    “After the service the vicar went straight to the hospital expecting the baby not to be still alive, but the doctors told him that they didn’t know how it had happened but Sean had turned a corner and was expected to live! The vicar was able to come back and tell me that. To me that was a real seal on my faith.”

    When her husband, Phillip, underwent major heart surgery six years ago, Sue again relied upon her faith to see her through.

    “I don’t think I would have coped without my faith, my family and the people at Holy Spirit,” she said.“I have a holding cross and I find that a great comfort, just being able to slip my fingers around that. It gives me a real sense of peace.”