Churches do £12.4 Billion Work in Their Locality

The Church of England reports that its 16,000 churches were running or supporting 35,000 projects before the Covid-19 pandemic, including 8,000 food banks, 4,000 parent-toddler groups, 5,000 lunch clubs or coffee mornings, 2,700 community cafes, 2,400 night shelters and 2,300 breakfast or holiday clubs for children.

The church has played a vital role in setting up and running food banks.
The church has played a vital role in setting up and running food banks. Photograph: Gary Calton/The Observer

Now, for the first time, the financial value of the services and support that church buildings provide, and the health and wellbeing they create, has been calculated at £12.4bn a year. The figure comes from an independent study published today, commissioned by the National Churches Trust and carried out by State of Life, an organisation which measures social value.

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Creation Care is Mission

4th February 2021 – A one-day virtual conference to explore the theology and practice of caring for creation

For mission agencies and churches supporting missions

Morning speakers (10-12am)

Rev. Dr. Chris Wright, International Director, Langham Partnership International
Dr. Rosalee V Ewell, Director of Church Relations for the United Bible Societies
Seth Appiah-Kubi, Director, A Rocha Ghana
Sumayya Sajjad, Project Director for Tearfund, Pakistan

Afternoon (2-4pm): case studies, workshops & discussions on topics including

An in-depth look at eco-theology
Practical advice on greening your mission agency
Embedding creation care in policy and practice
Carbon footprints and what to do about them
Engaging with the next generation
Creation care IS mission!
The EcoChurch toolkit around the world
Supporting environmental missions – a UK church perspective

Important information:

This event costs £10 per person

Find out more here

Prayer for Eastbourne January 23rd 2021

Churches Together for Eastbourne are planning to hold a ‘Prayer for Eastbourne’ Zoom online prayer event on Saturday 23rd January 2021. It will start at 9am and finish at 1pm. Four Churches will help host the event and contributors will come from several others across the town, with each host church facilitating prayer around the topics shown below.

You can register for the morning of prayer here – this will also  enable you to receive Zoom information if you are not already on our email list and help us plan the overall event.

The  plan for the morning is as follows:

9-10am                      Church and Agencies; hosted by St Johns/St Michaels
10-11am                    Young People and schools; hosted by The Well Community Church
11am-12 midday       Local Government and Agencies; hosted by St Marys Church, Old Town
12-1pm                      Families and the Elderly; hosted by Gateway Church

Kings Church are helping with the technical hosting.

Please reserve the date and promote the event. You can download the artwork above here.  You can register for the morning of prayer here

Dave Roberts
On behalf of the Churches Together Eastbourne Team

Eastbourne Prayer Day 23rd January 2021 via Zoom

Churches Together for Eastbourne are planning to hold a ‘Prayer for Eastbourne’ Zoom online prayer event on Saturday 23rd January 2021. It will start at 9am and finish at 1pm.

Four Churches will help host the event and contributors will come from several others across the town, with each host church facilitating prayer around the topics shown below.

The  plan for the morning is as follows:

9-10am           Church and Agencies; hosted by St Johns/St Michaels
10-11am         Young People and schools; hosted by The Well Community Church
11am-12         Local Government and Agencies; hosted by St Marys Church
12-1pm           Families and the Elderly; hosted by Kings Church

Please reserve the date and promote the event. You can download the artwork above here.  You can register for the morning of prayer here – this will also  enable people to receive Zoom information if they are not on our email list and help us plan the overall event.

Basic Foundations for ‘Remote’ Church

Imagine a scenario where physical distancing is relaxed a little, in maybe 6-8 weeks, but ‘normal business’ is not resumed for some months after that. The flurry of livestreaming, WhatsApp and Zoom meetings that are part of our current response will stand us in good stead. But soon we will want to take a deep breath and think through how we can make sure that all of our congregation can experience various types of connection.

The phone is a part of that . Many churches will also have email lists or Faceboook pages. Updating those and ‘filling in the gaps’ re phone numbers might be a good use of time for key church admin staff. To help you do that and understand what media might work for your congregation you might want to create a form that people can complete. Some can be emailed it. There will be others you can call and complete the form for them during the conversation. You could put it on the church website for downloading and emailing.

Download a sample form below. It is based on material from a Surrey church (Open Door). You can insert your church details and edit it as you see fit.

Sample Internet connectivity questionnaire

More building blocks next week

Churches online – Virtual Toddler Groups

Several Eastbourne churches have services and resources online. Loneliness is not just an issue for older people but sometimes a major challenge for young mums and families. Conversation and connection help bring hope and perspective.

For example: Holy Trinity Church have a YouTube page ‘Holy Trinity Media’ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCsC7_Dl4CdK3q4AwK5z1a0Q with HT Club for toddlers livestreaming as well as their Sunday services.

Could your church young mums do something similar? The video app zoom.us would be ideal for this and can be password protected so that you can send the invite to existing members at first, before letting them invite other friends.

Connecting Eastbourne Churches – You Can Participate

These news updates are currently connecting around 1,000 local Christians including 70 with church leadership responsibilities and a similar number who lead local ministries. We are keen to serve the whole church across the spectrum of denominations. If you have a contribution to make, please email us with news of how your church is responding to Covid-19 and any Good Samaritan stories you may have to help encourage others.

Visiting the Sick in the Midst of A Pandemic

Visiting the sick – Martyn Relf

Christians have a long record of sacrificially visiting the sick during times of epidemics.

In particular, most church traditions would seek to minister with prayer, laying on of hands and anointing with oil. In the Catholic tradition it is one of the sacraments.

It would seem to me, especially as we might increasingly have members of our churches becoming very sick, that to withhold this sacrament/grace is to deny someone the most important service they could receive in their time of need.

I’m sure most of us would want to stand in the example of our forebears but Covid 19 raises certain questions. Not only would we be taking personal risk visiting the sick but with our current knowledge about transmission, we could be putting the lives of others at risk.

I think it would be good to open a conversation about what is possible in the present circumstances.

Fr Raglan from Our Lady of Ransom says:

‘We are going to people with Sacraments. For their sake as much as ours, when visiting those who are sick we wear a mask and gloves, and do not touch people but use cotton wool/buds (ed: ie for anointing). If it is in hospital, a gown as well.

 

It is different for the Communion Ministers who take Communion on a regular basis. For now they have to hold off. So it’s emergency cases, and priests only responding to them.

Chichester Diocese guidance on home visits is:

  • Communion should not be taken to people at home, nor should there be home visits for general pastoral reason.
  • In circumstances where people are self-isolating because they are symptomatic or have been in contact with someone who has been symptomatic, no pastoral visits should be undertaken until their isolation ends. However, do offer phone support.
  • In circumstances where someone is self-isolating for their protection and a pastoral visit is thought to be necessary, please make sure you follow rigorous health and hygiene practices and maintain social distancing.

So it would seem that the current guidance from the Catholic and Anglican Churches is that emergency visiting only should take place and then with rigorous precautions. No doubt safe disposal/sanitising afterwards of all possible infected items is essential. Acquisition of safe protective clothing (eg effective masks) would seem to be vital.

We have also received this guidance about hospital visiting from the Conquest Hospital Chaplain:

At the moment there is no general visiting by Chaplaincy at all either here at the Conquest or in Eastbourne and all Volunteers have been laid off at both sites.

I am sure everyone is also aware that only one relative/friend visitor per patient is allowed at the moment on any Ward.My Chaplain colleagues here and in Eastbourne will visit patients but only in the following circumstances:

  •  If it is actually an end of life situation and the family or ward staff have requested a visit from us
  • If the visit has been authorised by a Ward Sister or more senior person
  • If all necessary protective clothing is available.

I suspect visits from outside clergy to Covid patients may not be permitted at the moment or will be restricted soon. I am not sure but if that is the case then a call or email to me can be made and I should be able to attend. I will certainly try!

With any visit the visitor should report to the Ward Staff before any visit to anyone is made. Advice can then be taken about protective clothing etc.

Our out of hours call out capability is severely restricted but we will do what we can to cover as many call-outs as possible.

I thought that the above might be useful for local clergy. I’m happy to speak to anyone if there are queries. It would be good to continue this conversation before things get worse and maintain it when does get worse.

Please contact Martyn at martyn@livingstoneschurch.co.uk if you have further insights that might be helpful.