Tuesday, 13 October 2009

Follow Up Meeting Results

At the meeting, we looked back at the week of “Believing in Devizes” in June. The week had been packed with different events and we watched Pauline Hawkins’ film, recording those seven days, with great delight.

We discussed how working and sharing with our friends, form different Churches, had been such an uplifting and inspiring experience. How we had felt encouraged and enabled to reach out together to the people of our Town. We thought about how we might take some of those ideas forward.

We decided that our aim would be:-
- To establish a regular Prayer Station in Town; ideally a weekly presence, always on the same day, at the same time and place.
- Inter-Action with folk on the canalside: We are aiming to join in the celebrations in 2010 to mark the 200th Anniversary of the Kennet & Avon Canal.
- Carer’s Lunch: The group who lead the Services for Healing, Wholeness and Peace, intend to continue to reach out to carers, offering them love and support over a simple lunch and with a short Service, during the year.
- We also felt the need to meet together for prayer and worship, within our Partnership of Churches, in order to learn more of each other and work more closely together as we reach out to our Town.

Therefore we will: Hold Prayer Breakfasts – possibly quarterly, meeting in each church in turn, and praying together in that Church’s tradition.

There was a call to Worship Together more often, and also to experience worship in different traditions by moving around the Churches on a regular basis.

We do hope and pray that you will support us and join with us as we form a closer bond within our Partnership of Churches and reach out together to the people of our Town.

Juliet Bennett

Wednesday, 23 September 2009

What's Next?

Believing in Devizes
Tuesday 6 October 7.30 pm
Sheep Street Baptist Church
OPEN MEETING
WHAT NEXT?
Do come along and join our discussion on how to reach out to our town
A regular presence?
Prayer station?
What do you think?

Saturday, 20 June 2009

Prayer, Pies, Praise and Disguise







Friday morning dawns, and the team gathers in St Peter’s Church for prayer, according to the Book of Common Prayer, and many good conversations over breakfast. Then Bishop Stephen, Becky [Childrens and Families Worker] John and I went to St Peter’s school next door for collective worship. The theme – Staying Healthy – was well demonstrated by the team being asked by the Bishop to take exercises in sprinting, egg and spoon racing, and careful use of dieting – especially avoiding sugary foods. The children were engaging and we spent a happy time there – especially when they showed us some of their X-Factor acts, as part of their Wake and Shake activity.
Afterwards we headed out to Hayden’s Bakery where we had been invited to tour the factory, and see how millions of pies, tarts and cakes were produced, and most importantly meet the staff and managers. We could blog this even for weeks to come – with photos, and text about the amazing facts and products we were confronted with. Facts such as 19 nationalities are represented on the workforce; 1.5 million mince pies will be made there before Christmas; when we visited the “high risk” dairy product department, we wore two layers of protective clothing, and washed our hand four times before we could enter the inner sanctum, where cream and other delicious desserts were assembled. It was very impressive!!
As the photos showed, my beard was considered a risk, and the hospitality extended by all we met was just wonderful, and we listened to a vision for developing the workplace into a healthy and happy environment, where the football team analogy, was well understood, and every member of the team strives to be “match fit”. +Stephen’s interest in doughnuts and jam seemed to be matched by Justin Bradbury’s weakness for custard tarts!

A-Mazing Grace


One of the on-going events at the Believing in Devizes week, has been the Labyrinth at Southbroom House. A maze has been carefully mown into the lawns, and a number of reflections have been placed within the route. It has been great to see people just spend some time exploring the journey of their lives, and many have written comments in the visitors book, such as "a wonderful time to pause and reflect on the day", "a spiritual oasis in a busy week - thank you".
The idea is an easy one to copy, and it could well be used inside a church, hall, as well as any garden. The route is about a third of a mile, and people say they can spend an hour working around the labyrinth. Contact the Ramsbury office to get details.

Thursday, 18 June 2009

Time to Chat

Today’s post sleep-out activity has been mostly around spending time and listening and talking to Devizes folk. The other team members will tell you what they’ve been up to, and I’d like to share where my time has been spent.
It was pure bliss to get into the shower and shave off the surplus stubble this morning! Then on to St John’s for morning prayer [Common Worship] and some really good reflective prayer following yesterday’s work. The t-shirts are really making an impact on the town, and as I walk down the streets I can see people reading the “Believing in Devizes” logo, with the blog address, and some people saying, “There is another Believing in Devizes t-shirt!” The prayer gave thanks for this impression, and I trust that the shirts will be used [after a good wash of course] well into the future.
Breakfast at St John’s included the bacon butty, alongside toast and cereals, and was so appreciated. There is a great ministry in extending hospitality to all people, for in doing so, we entertain angels! That ministry of hospitality extended further for me, as I joined the St Andrew’s Foodbank Coffee morning, and met up with Sue and the staff of the Foodbank, and a bevy of people from Devizes and beyond who wanted Market day coffee before heading back home – so people as far as Swindon.
The feeding frenzy continued as the team gathered at the Crown Centre [a former coaching inn called the Crown] now converted into a cafĂ©, dining rooms and assorted meeting and office spaces. They offer a really nice two course lunch for around 50 people, for a reasonable £3.50, and anyone over 18 can ask to join the club, although most people were from the post-employment era. Afterwards we were treated to a tour of the premises and a good chance to listen to the staff and their perceptions about the facility and the Town. With a supper at the Hour Glass pub tonight before Bishop’s Question time, I’m going to have to watch those scales at the end of the week!
More later …

Bedtime Stories




As Rachel left us last night we were indeed settling down for who knows what! The bedding consisted of a polythene sheet on the pavement, and then a layer of cardboard, and we used our own roll mats, sleeping bags and other assorted clothing. It had rained heavily about an hour before, but now the clouds had lightened and we looked forward to a warm and cosy sleep.

The first thing that we felt, was that we were very exposed to the passing traffic, both vehicles and pedestrians. We were opposite a busy hotel, where a free concert was being given by a funk group, and we expected "passing trade". I was assigned first watch, and all the others made a good impression of sleeping. I was immediately struck by the interest we were attracting from all those in the Market Place. Soon people wandered across and chatted to me - who were we, what were we doing, and why? I answered then all, and was really struck by the generosity of spirit and kind. Good for you! Can we make a donation to the Alabaré charity? Here, I've brought you some cake. Can I take a photo? You might like this soup in the early hours. People holding glasses of wine, people on their way home from events, people just whiling away some time.

The local Police car drifts pass, and the officers ask if all is OK, and assure us they will come and check from time to time. Local young people, proudly displaying their old but beautifully cared for small cars, drive into the car park and chat to each other through open car windows.

The night draws on, each quarter hour marked by the striking of the church clock, and we notice dew or condensation forming on the sleeping bags of the sleeping figures surrounding the Market Cross. It is midnight now, and the concert goers, and the evening staff are all making their way home, and the night belongs to the young drivers, and a few cyclists who seem to ride up to the hole-in-the-wall cash points and then cycle off - one cyclist appearing three times during the evening. What is this all about?

Between midnight and 0200, there are a steady flow of young people who break the silence with their chatter, which cannons off the elegant architecture, echoing into the blackness of the night sky. It is actually very bright in the Market Place - shop window lights flooding the pavements; street lights helping the CCTV identify the citizens [we wave at the cameras - but who knows if anyone is actually watching?] Cars pass, and toot their horns and people shout unhelpful choruses, creating not anxiety, but restlessness.

My colleagues sleep on, gently snoring in an orchestrated lullaby, pierced by an elegant descant. At 0200 I gently wake John, who has been assigned the 0200 - 0400 watch. As he sits up, and opens his reading material, I pull off my trainers, put on a second pair of socks, and climb into a dew covered sleeping bag, pull my hat over my eyes, and close my eyes.

Seconds later in my mind's eye, it is 0400, and the market traders' white vans are corralling in the Market Place, and voices shout as stalls are snapped into position and the day's fruit and veg are assembled to feed the citizens of Devizes. A barrow-lady comes across to us, and saying that we are doing something special, gifts us two large punnets of strawberries for breakfast. We roll up our mats, stow our sleeping bags, fold the cardboard and swig a welcome mug of butternut squash and sweet potato soup, which has kept piping hot in the donated thermos flasks, and we head off for a shower, brush our teeth, and coffee before our day begins.

What must it be like to do this day after day? Street homeless need washing facilities, somewhere sheltered and safe to rest, without being disrupted, some company to break the isolation, but above all, to know that people care about them, and that as God's children, the church cares and will provide for them too.

Night-time Comforts

It is now 2230hrs on Wednesday night, I am warm and comfortably set up for the night but I have left the three men of the team with Jenny, Paul and David in the Market Place preparing to sleep out tonight in order to highlight the needs of the homeless. Are they warm and comfortable? They say that they are, there are sleeping bags, cardboard and various other things to help keep the warm in and the elements out and a supper of fish and chips eaten. The fashion style is for comfort rather than elegance (I expect photos will abound in the days to come). My hope is that some sleep is gained in the Market Place tonight.

I will next see them in St John’s church for breakfast, although I have a suspicion that food will have been eaten earlier with the market traders – and so day five will begin.
The days have been filled with so many contrasts that it is no surprise that tomorrow is no different.