CW77: Rural Isolation: local and global

Each year, Mothers’ Union participates at the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women, in New York. In 2018 the focus will be on issues relating specifically to women in rural areas throughout the world; in preparation for this Mothers’ Union recently surveyed our membership to find out the views and experiences of those in rural contexts. Interestingly, members from a diverse range of countries, such as the UK, Australia, Papua New Guinea, Tanzania and South Africa, reported very similar experiences and concerns in addition to those unique to their own context.

CW77: Tackling Rural Isolation in the Parish of Pilling

In 2014, Pilling St John the Baptist, in Morecambe Bay, was invited to be one of two parishes working with Germinate: The Arthur Rank Centre on a project exploring rural isolation. Around twenty people from the local community, representing churches, charities, local business, and the parish council came together to highlight key issues facing the area and begin to identify potential solutions.

CW77: The Tent and the Tree

The seed for this ministry was sown in me as I sat listening to Liz Ogborne speak at the 2016 Germinate Conference.

Liz was talking about Prayer Spaces in Schools (prayerspacesinschools.com), where they encouraged pupils to write a prayer on a cut-out of their hand and hang it on a tree as a way of praying. As Liz was talking I was grabbed by the idea and began to think how it might come to life where I live and minister. Vyrnwy Mission Area is in Powys, mid-Wales, consists of seven rural communities, their churches, people and outlying properties, and stretches from the village of Llansantffraid-yn-Mechain, close to the border with England in the east, to the community of Llanwddyn and Lake Vyrnwy in the west.

CW77: Belonging becomes believing

More than 4,000 children contacted Childline in the past year because they were lonely. At the other end of the age spectrum, elderly people are also suffering from loneliness and isolation: there are 1.8 million people over 75 in the UK who are profoundly lonely, according to Linking Lives UK, which is working with churches and Christian agencies to set up befriending schemes to combat the issue.

CW77: Rural Isolation and Loneliness resources section

Each edition of Country Way magazine contains a pull-out resources section. Here are a selection of resources designed to help you combat isolation and loneliness in your rural community.

CW76 Sharing Faith resources section

Each edition of Country Way magazine contains a pull-out resources section. Here are a selection of resources designed to help you share faith in your rural community.

CW76: Bearing good news starts with being good news

Evangelism is simply the process of sharing good news. The term ‘pre-evangelism‘ suggests that before the good news about Jesus can be shared, something else needs to happen in order for the hearer to be receptive to the good news we’d like to share. While some prayerful thought and a sensitive approach is needed when sharing our faith, I find myself reflecting on the account of Jesus’ encounter with a Samaritan woman at a well in John 4, and wondering when the evangelism began in this story.

CW76: Borderlands Rural Chaplaincy

Borderlands Rural Chaplaincy (BRC) is an ecumenical partnership between the Diocese of Hereford and the Wolverhampton and Shrewsbury District of the Methodist Church set up to offer pastoral care and outreach to farmers, farming families and agricultural communities principally within Hereford and South Shropshire.

CW76: Can mission be comfortable?

The call to share in God’s mission has been a key challenge in churches across the denominations over recent years. National and regional initiatives have been promoted. People have been appointed and tasked with making churches more missional. However, for many small rural congregations this often feels uncomfortable, if not threatening. Given some appropriate support, it can become a joy.

CW76: Church – not just for Christmas!

Churches and church schools can be the hub of community life, especially at Christmas. But how do we make sure that Church is not just for Christmas?

HOPE is working with churches across the spectrum of denominations to make Jesus known in 2018. HOPE’s dream is a growing church, showing Jesus’ love and telling the Jesus story at the heart of every community. HOPE is committed to supporting and resourcing churches to make 2018 a year in which we see the Church grow throughout the UK.