Volunteers Needed – Ship Visiting at Shoreham Port
Webmaster • July 18, 2026
Stella Maris, the Catholic charity supporting seafarers, is seeking volunteers to join our Ship Visiting team at Shoreham Port.
As a volunteer ship visitor, you will accompany the Port Chaplain or experienced volunteers in visiting merchant ships, offering a warm welcome, practical support, and a listening ear to seafarers from around the world. This is a rewarding opportunity to live out the Church's mission to people of the sea and make a real difference to those who are often far from home.
No previous experience is necessary, and full training will be provided by the Port Chaplain. For more information, please contact Luke Phillips at
luke.phillips@stellamarismail.org.

Now that the Bill will be voted on again on 11 September it is essential to contact your MP to urge that they vote against the Bill, even if you contacted them last year. Dr Dominic Whitehouse (consultant in End of Life Care) will explain what the current position is on 5 August from 7 to 8.45pm in the Hall at St Michael’s Catholic Church, 19 Hayling Rise, Worthing, BN13 3AL. All welcome.

Our thoughts and prayers are with all the people of Venezuela after two devastating earthquakes near Caracas. Many people have been killed or injured, and buildings, including churches, seminaries and Caracas Cathedral, have been damaged. CAFOD’s trusted Church partners in Venezuela are already helping the survivors of this crisis with emergency water, food and shelter. Thank you for your support. You can also donate online here: www.cafod.org.uk/Venezuela .

In this week’s first reading we hear that God is “sovereign in strength but you judge with mildness, and with great forbearance you govern us; for you have power to act whenever you choose.” Unfortunately, too many world leaders have ‘power to act’ whenever they choose, and seem to have forgotten that power should be balanced with great forbearance and mild judgement. And when two groups, that have power to act, confront each other the result is deadlock. Russia – Ukraine; USA – Iran; the Sudan civil war; the Somalian conflict with Al-Shabaab; have all reached a point where the protagonists are locked in strategic stalemates, characterized by deeply entrenched frontlines, wars of attrition, or tense, unresolved ceasefires. The same situation can affect our personal lives. Individuals, families and ethnic groups can also get locked into a standoff, neither willing to resolve the conflict between them. Each conflict is complicated and unique and so will require a unique and complicated solution but, as our first reading points out, that solution will need three ingredients, kindness, hope and repentance. Blessings and with my prayers for peace in our families. Deacon Simon

We still have a little time to wait for our new Bishop to arrive in the Autumn, Like the whole of creation we have been "groaning inwardly" for the revealing of our new apostle and shepherd who will lead us in the way of the Good Shepherd. Fr Stephen has a heart for sharing the gospel of Jesus. In today's Gospel Jesus speaks of sowing seed: "A sower went out to sow". That is what a sower does. The Church spreads the news about Jesus, like a sower. This is what the Church does, it is who we are. The sowing of seed doesn't seem efficient or even planned. There seems to be a lot of waste and disappointment. But the seed that does grow bears fruit abundantly. Bishop-Elect Stephen seems to recognise this. In an interview recently he said, "As a Church, we need to have a big heart and open doors, and a flexibility. This might not be tidy. We have to take seriously the questions people are asking and be prepared to enter into those questions and offer them the wisdom of the Church and of the scriptures." We try to do this but as a parish we need to remind ourselves constantly why we are here. We do not exist for ourselves but for Him who has given us new life. We cannot keep Him to ourselves. We must continue to sow the seeds of the gospel in old and new ways that others might receive eternal life. It is not tidy. May God bless you. With my prayer for you everyday. Fr Graham

Bishop-elect Stephen shared this message for diocesan parishes on 2 July 2026: Dear friends in the Diocese of Arundel & Brighton, dear brothers and sisters, I’m so happy to be appointed as your new bishop, and I am really looking forward to meeting you and getting to know the Diocese – the priests and deacons, those in consecrated life, all the lay faithful, and so many others. I’m really looking forward to visiting our parishes and schools, and all the other communities that make up our Diocese. I’m just sorry that I can’t get back to be with you at this time because we have our diaconal ordination in Rome this weekend. As you can imagine, the news came as a complete surprise to me. The first thing I did after being told on Tuesday morning was to visit St Peter’s Basilica. I prayed at the tombs of St Peter and St John Paul II for you all and offered Mass for the Diocese. There are many challenges ahead, but I am full of hope. I’ve seen so many times what God can do when people pray and work together, and when they put their trust in him. If we listen to one another, and to the Lord, then he will show us the way forward. You have been very blessed to have Archbishop Richard with you over these years. I keep being told what a wonderful diocese it is and how lucky I am to be going there! Which I certainly am. I want to thank Canon Jonathan Martin as well, for looking after things so well in this interim period. Let’s pray for each other, and for our Diocese. Please pray for me and for my intentions. I put all my trust in the Sacred Heart of Jesus, in his Church, and in his mother Mary. His love is so powerful. There is so much to be grateful for, and so much to do. I pray that we can grow in holiness together, be of service to those around us, and help all people to know the love and mercy of Jesus Christ and the message of the Gospel. With every blessing, Fr Stephen Fr Stephen’s Biography Fr Stephen Wang was born in London in 1966 and grew up in Harpenden, Hertfordshire. He read Theology and Religious Studies at Cambridge University from 1986 to 1989, before undertaking priestly formation at the Venerable English College in Rome from 1992 to 1997. Ordained on 3 January 1998, he worked in parish ministry in Dollis Hill, London, from 1997 to 2001. From 2001 to 2005 he studied for a PhD on the subject of human happiness at Cambridge University, assisting at Fisher House Chaplaincy, based at the University, for two years. He lectured in Philosophy and Theology at Allen Hall seminary in Chelsea from 2005 to 2013 and was Dean of Studies from 2009 to 2013. During this time, he was also a visiting priest at Wormwood Scrubs Prison, White City, and a confessor at Notting Hill Carmel, a cloistered convent of Carmelite nuns located in St Charles Square. From 2013 to 2021, Fr Stephen served as Senior University Chaplain in the Diocese of Westminster and was Catholic Chaplain at The London School of Economics. In 2014, a group of young people led by Fr Stephen developed ‘Sycamore’, a video-based Catholic faith formation programme that explores the Christian faith through short films and guided discussion. Designed to make Christianity more accessible, Sycamore is now used by Catholic parishes, schools, and university chaplaincies across the world. Following three years as Vocations Director for Westminster Diocese, Fr Stephen was appointed Rector of the Venerable English College in 2021, where he served for five years.

Most of us will leave church today and go safely home. We will sit at a table, speak to the people we love, and sleep in our own beds. For many seafarers, that simply isn’t possible. They can spend months at sea, often unable to step ashore, with limited contact with home. When something goes wrong, they are far from everything and everyone familiar. And today, many seafarers are working in even more difficult circumstances. In recent weeks and months, the world has watched events in and around the Strait of Hormuz, one of the most important shipping routes in the world. We hear news reports about trade, petrol prices and security. But behind every headline, there are real people on board these ships. People who are wondering when they will get home, whether their ship will be safe, and when they will see the people they love again. At the start of the crisis, around 20,000 seafarers were trapped in the Strait, caught up in a conflict that was completely outside of their control. Some ships and crews have now been able to evacuate. But for Stella Maris, this is often when the work really begins. We know this from our support for seafarers affected by the war in Ukraine. The impact of a crisis does not always appear straight away. Fear, stress, separation from family and financial uncertainty can affect people weeks or even months after the immediate danger has passed. This is why Stella Maris exists. Our chaplains and volunteers visit ships, they listen to crews, help them contact home, support them in hospital, pray with them, and stand alongside them when life at sea becomes frightening or lonely. In today’s Gospel, Jesus speaks of seed being sown generously. The work of Stella Maris is like that sowing. Each visit, each conversation, each quiet act of care is a seed planted in a life that is often hard, isolated and unseen. You may never meet the people who benefit, but your support helps that seed take root. Today is Sea Sunday. A chance to remember the seafarers who bring us so much of what we rely on every day. It is also a chance to help Stella Maris be there for them, offering practical, pastoral and spiritual support when they need it most: during the crisis, and long after the headlines have moved on.

Congratulations to our young adult parishioners, Aiden, Aleya, Amelia, Daniel and Senna, who are to receive the Sacrament of Confirmation at Arundel on Sunday. Please pray for them. May they have the faith and the courage of Saint Maria Goretti, a young girl, when she was martyred. Her relics are embedded in the altar at St Peter's in Shoreham. Her photograph is just outside the confessional door. Her feast day is on Monday.

The last part of today's Gospel is often read during the celebration of the Sacrament of the Sick and even when a person is dying and receiving the Last Sacraments. I must admit I feel uncomfortable when I read the words of Jesus saying that "my yoke is easy and my burden is light" when the person receiving the anointing is struggling, in pain or facing a terminal illness. That burden doesn't seem easy or light. Jesus does not make mistakes, so what does He mean? Firstly, the yoke of the Law and the Commandments was very heavy. It prescribed in minute detail how to live a life pleasing to God by obeying certain laws. Breaking even one was displeasing to God and had consequences. How could anyone be perfect or free? Jesus comes as the perfect human being as He is God and freely chooses to obey the Father by offering His life as the perfect offering on the cross. His death sets us free to love as He loves. The law of love fulfils the Law and the Prophets. Secondly, Jesus asks us to share His yoke. He invites us to come to Him and rest when we are tired and our burden is heavy. Jesus wants us to swap burdens and yokes. He takes our heavy burden for His yoke of love. There is nothing that we cannot bring to God in prayer. Jesus shares our humanity and He gives us a share in His divinity and the love of the Father with His Spirit living in us. May God bless every one of you. With my prayer. Fr Graham

In addition to the First Friday mass, celebrated for our collective Parish Prayer intentions, we now have two prayer groups on the First Friday of the month: 10.00am-11.00am Mothers Prayers, in the Parish Room at SP 4.00pm-5.00pm: Prayers for Peace, in the Divine Mercy Chapel at SP Thank you to the organisers. All are welcome.

