CW75: Hospitality away from home: Reflections on the Jungle

For eighteen months I made weekly visits to the Calais jungle. Home to ten thousand people on the move, the camp covered a couple of acres of wind-blasted wasteland at the back of the cement works by Calais’ harbour.

The camp was not an official response to the so-called migrant crisis. Rather it grew over many months as people who had been moved on from other parts of the city arrived and settled. It started as a collection of tents and became a community of wooden huts with cafes, shops and other businesses springing up to meet the needs of the residents that couldn’t be satisfied by the humanitarian efforts of a ragbag army of mainly British volunteers. I went because I sensed God calling me to go and offer the welcome of the gospel to people displaced by war and persecution. Yet on arrival I found welcome from some of the poorest, least settled people on the planet and I found myself asking God afresh, ‘what are you saying to me?’

CW75: Mystery Worshippers and a Ministry of Welcome

The Ship of Fools website (ship-of-fools.com) has an interesting section entitled ‘Mystery Worshipper’. The premise: a brave soul ventures into a service at a church they have never visited before and reports on what it is like. The anonymous mystery worshippers have to answer questions about if and how they were welcomed to the service as a newcomer, what the experience of attending church was like, what happened afterwards and, crucially, whether they would consider going back again! All kinds of churches are reviewed from many different denominations with a huge range of styles of worship and size of congregation.

CW75: When I was in prison…

Chaz was on the run from prison and went to visit his ex-girlfriend who told him she had become a Christian. He writes:

‘She told me that God loved me and could change my life if I would ask him in to my heart. She told me that God wanted to forgive my past and this is why Jesus died on the cross. That night I thought about what she had said. I was sick of my life and wanted to change, but knew I couldn’t do it on my own. The next day I handed myself in at the police station and they took me to Lincoln prison. When I arrived, I put my name down for chapel. The next day I went to chapel and gave my life to Jesus.

CW75: Rural foodbanks: hospitality, help and hope

Fosse Foodbank, part of the Trussell Trust’s UK-wide network, is administered by St Peter’s Church in Kineton, a village in south-east Warwickshire. The headquarters of the local foodbank is based here, along with the warehouse and a distribution centre. It works with a network of rural churches to provide support for people in need from Wellesbourne in the west to Bishops Itchington and Southam in the north. Most, but not all, of our volunteers are from local churches and we work ecumenically with the Anglican, Methodist, Congregational, Community and Roman Catholic churches in our area.

CW75: Rural Roundup

Rural churches across the UK are developing creative and innovative ways of engaging with their communities. Here are a few stories we’ve heard over the last few months…

CW75: Whatever you do…

One snowy February morning I was picking up a group of children from our local special needs school. While I was wondering what I was going to find for them to do on the farm the head-teacher began to tell me that he had observed the profound effect of farm animals on the development of children at another school, how they would love to have such a facility, but how they lacked the space. So began an idea.

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CW76: Tis the season… to make connections

How can a handful of people from a little ‘shabby chic’ chapel in a small village on the edge of the Cotswolds Way even think of mission? Well I suppose the answer is… we don’t! Call it mission that is. What we do is try to make connections; connections with each other, our communities and with God.

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