You can give to Home Mission now via my Just Giving page:
Home Mission pics
Monday, 23 July 2012
Cycling to Calne
The day after Bradley Wiggins arrived in Paris, the Home Mission video of me arriving in Calne by bicycle is finally released! This is the first in a cycling tour of WEBA films we're making to promote Home Mission over the next two years. (Read more about that here)
You can give to Home Mission now via my Just Giving page:
You can give to Home Mission now via my Just Giving page:
Labels:
Bradley Wiggins,
Calne,
cycling,
Home Mission,
Ruth Whiter
Friday, 13 July 2012
Go for Gold!
We've had this report from Grange Baptist Church in Tuffley, Gloucester, about their Olympic achievement:
With hardly time to catch our breath and
take down the bunting from our recent May Jubilee party, we were in full sprint
for our June fun day called GO FOR GOLD!
After a week of torrential rain in
Gloucester, no-one outside the church expected the event to go ahead. A number
of craft stall holders cancelled at the last minute. Tony Minter, minister of
Grange, said "Driving back from Swindon
on Friday (the day before the party) the rain was non-stop. What should have been
an hour’s journey home took twice as long due to the incredibly heavy rain.
Even Saturday morning one member of the church asked if we were still going
ahead.” So it was nothing short of a miracle that at 10 am the sun was
brightly shining and as we set up it was actually very hot!
GO FOR GOLD provided anyone the opportunity
to have their photo taken holding one of the official Olympic torches with
either the Olympic flag or any country of your choice projected behind. The
digital pictures were immediately wired to an email address and were offered
free of charge.
There was also a large bouncy castle,
Olympic style races and games, and medals were awarded to all participants. We
also had our own personal trainer and fitness class instructor Matt Coopey on
hand giving nutrition advice and training tips. For those less energetic there
were lots of tables to browse over with books, bric-a-brac, candles, plants,
honey, etc.
Younger children could have their faces
painted with Olympic rings or anything of their choice. They could also make
their very own Olympic torch candle by rolling beeswax into a cone.
There was also a bar-b-que and ice creams,
tea, coffees, and juice. GO FOR GOLD a great success and so encouraging on many
levels as Grange continues to develop relationships and friendships with its
neighbours and wider community.
Another new venture for Grange is the launch of Grange Coffee House. Every Monday morning the church now runs a coffee shop where anyone can drop in for a 'cuppa and a chat'. There is fresh filter coffee, as well as instant for those who prefer, and a wide variety of teas including fruit and herbal. There are cookies and biscuits to enjoy and daily newspapers to read.
This is a modest beginning but it is hoped that once everyone has passed their food hygiene course at the end of the summer, a menu will be developed to include, among other things, soups, paninis, and jacket potatoes. As soon as security softward has been installed there will also be free wi-fi (which is already in the church) available to coffee house customers.
So, if you are in Gloucester on a Monday morning why not pay us a visit for a great cuppa and warm welcoming people.
Another new venture for Grange is the launch of Grange Coffee House. Every Monday morning the church now runs a coffee shop where anyone can drop in for a 'cuppa and a chat'. There is fresh filter coffee, as well as instant for those who prefer, and a wide variety of teas including fruit and herbal. There are cookies and biscuits to enjoy and daily newspapers to read.
This is a modest beginning but it is hoped that once everyone has passed their food hygiene course at the end of the summer, a menu will be developed to include, among other things, soups, paninis, and jacket potatoes. As soon as security softward has been installed there will also be free wi-fi (which is already in the church) available to coffee house customers.
So, if you are in Gloucester on a Monday morning why not pay us a visit for a great cuppa and warm welcoming people.
Labels:
Gloucester,
Go for Gold,
Grange Baptist Church,
London 2012,
Olympics,
Tuffley
Friday, 6 July 2012
Getting on my bike
Since the beginning of 2012, in addition to
my role in the WEBA office, I’ve been part of a pilot project to raise
awareness of Home Mission within WEBA.
WEBA churches have given faithfully and
generously to Home Mission over recent years, but my suspicion is that
awareness of what the fund is for
might be limited to an older generation who remember a time when Home Mission
Sundays and collecting boxes were more commonplace.
These days, churches tend to give to Home
Mission from within their general budget, and the amount is set by the
leadership team and church meeting. This has worked really well, but what might
happen when those now in their 20s and 30s take over as treasurers and deacons?
My suggestion to overcome this relies on
storytelling – and on exploring ways to actually get stories to people. Why is there is a Home
Mission fund? What it has achieved in the past? How is it helping churches now
as they seek to be authentic disciples of Jesus Christ?
I suggested making a series of films
highlighting some of our churches who have benefited from Home Mission support,
either in the past or at present. It was Amanda Allchorn, Head of
Communications at National Resource, who suggested a cycling tour of WEBA,
focusing on place, history, and what’s happening in our churches now. The first
of these films will be released shortly and features Calne Baptist Church in
Wiltshire. It gets a mention in this July’s edition of Baptist Life magazine, which is delivered to churches so that every
member can have a copy.
Calne Baptist Church is a lovely fellowship.
From Sam King, the minister, with his startlingly original creative thinking,
to Cynthia Williams whose enthusiasm for the gospel hasn’t waned during ninety
years, to the gentleman who admired my 1960s Carlton Mixtie bicycle, it was a
delight to meet them all.
It was also a hot and exhausting day for us
(BUGB’s film crew Ian Britton and Alex Baker, and myself) and for those church
members who took part. Thanks especially to Sam who choreographed a service, an
open church meeting, and all the interviewees for the film all at the same
time. And thanks to those who prepared the most amazing and welcome church
lunch I’ve ever tasted.
Talking to Sam |
Several members commented that Sam, whose
ministry is enabled by a grant from Home Mission, has brought the church
together, and acted as a catalyst to get things going that were already latent
in the congregation. Sam has also developed connections with townsfolk,
beginning with the Estate Agents who sold him his house, which have led in all
kinds of directions, from live lambs in a service to singing the Hallelujah
chorus in Sainsburys – most importantly, they have led individuals to seek God
for themselves. Hallelujah.
Cynthia Williams, who took part in the film |
At this point I need to come clean – I’m
afraid I’m not going to cycle around the entire Association, from one church to
another. But for each church I visit, I have been looking up cycle routes on
Sustrans’ brilliant website, and working out a way to get to each church with
help from a train or two. It’s surprising how many of our churches are near to
these routes, and they give you an entirely different way to approach a place. Cycling
into Calne on a beautiful Sunday morning, along the route of the old branch
line, I could imagine a time before even the branch line existed, when Calne’s
first minister, who came from Broadmead Baptist Church, commuted each week from
Bristol on horseback. WEBA churches were working together nearly 200 years
before WEBA existed!
Ross Mills talking in the supermarket car park where the church works with local young people |
Home Mission in its modern expression is
100 years old – as Baptist Life
points out, it was inaugurated as the Sustentation
Fund a few weeks after Titanic went down. Its earliest roots, however, go
back to fundraising for itinerant preachers who would travel the countryside on
horseback, preaching in villages. Its roots are not in the preservation of
existing churches, but in going…to make
disciples, as Jesus commanded.
From 2014, Home Mission Grants will be
administered regionally rather than nationally. Hopefully this will be part of
a move to a more engaged, local mission strategy that we can all see and become
engaged with.
Watch the Calne film here
Watch the Calne film here
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