Tea and cake - a get together for healthcare chaplains - Fridays @ 4!

Revd Meg Burton, the Free Churches Secretary for Healthcare, invites you to bring a cuppa and have a get-together each Friday at 4pm through Zoom. Healthcare chaplains welcome!

Meg says, “I will be there between 4pm and 5pm if anyone would like to join me for an informal chat about anything.”

Often things come up in our working week we want to share or we might just appreciate a friendly face and a cuppa on a Friday… so here’s the link. Join us if you can!

Zoom Meeting ID: 819 1769 4407  Password: 585847

(image courtesy of Reyhaneh Mehrnejad at Unsplash)


Online prayer gathering for those involved in schools & colleges on 10th July @ 10am

Chaplaincy Central in partnership with Pray for Schools have set up an online prayer gathering on 10th July at 10am

For all those who want to pray for schools and colleges… whether you work or volunteer in a school or college, are involved in educational chaplaincy, lead school assemblies or run youth and children’s groups in your churches… do join us.

Please do share the link with those you know who work in schools and colleges.

To Help, Hope and Hear

An online prayer gathering for chaplains and others working in schools and colleges.
In partnership with Pray for Schools, July 10th at 10:00am

The link to register for the prayer meeting is HERE.

The Free Church Education Committee has a long an productive working history with both Pray for Schools and Chaplaincy Central who are co-hosting this time of prayer.

(photo courtesy of Vladimir Fedotov at Unsplash)

To show Christ’s love to prisoners...

“To show Christ’s love to prisoners by coming alongside them and supporting them” - that is the mission of Prison Fellowship and for the last 40 years they have been working with, supporting and praying with and for prisoners across England and Wales.

The Free Churches Group and our work in prison chaplaincy have worked with The Prison Fellowship (PF) for many years.

Find out more about their work HERE. And great news! Prison Fellowship’s prayer diary for July is out now!

You can read and pray through their July Prayer Diary HERE.

To get our praying hearts off to a flying start this month, here is their prayer for today:

Loving God, help us even in these hard times, to trust that You are who You say You are, and that You are living and active in our lives, and the lives of everyone in prison. Amen

(photo courtesy of Lina Trochez at Unsplash)

Education Sunday is coming up on 13th September!

For well over one hundred years there has been an annual recognition of Education Sunday in England and Wales. It is a national day of prayer and celebration for everyone in the world of education. The theme is devised by an ecumenical steering group representing different Christian denominations and organisations.
The resources are intended to be used as a springboard for a variety of events on or around Education Sunday.

Education Sunday 2020: 13th September

Resources will be available nearer the time.

The theme for 2020 will be "A learning people in a time of change".


The Bible passages are:

  • Exodus 14.19-31

  • Psalm 114

  • Romans 14.1-12

  • Matthew 18.21-35

Please join us as we pray for the work of the steering group and for Sarah Lane Cawte, FCG Education Officer, as she gathers and develops this year’s resources.

(photo courtesy of Chris Lawton at Unsplash)

God's golden joinery... full of hope

We are delighted to share with you a poignant and inspiring reflection by Rev Gail Miller, who serves as a prison chaplain at HMP Preston. This has been offered as a reflection alongside the vital work of Prison Fellowship.

Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure,

whatever is lovely, whatever is commendable, if there is any excellence, i

f there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things.” (Philippians 4:8, ESV)

Paul’s words call us to be true and honourable, pure and just. But what does that mean when we live in a world where facts are based on evidence, but truth becomes increasingly subjective and insubstantial?
As Christians we are called to stay true to God, holding tightly to our faith and our honesty. We are called to be a people of integrity, with beliefs and values that are based on biblical standards and the truth of the Gospel. When we live out these beliefs and values in how we speak and act, then we become a powerful model of faith, hope and of integrity in the world.

Another way of thinking about integrity is to think of being ‘whole’. When we are whole there is only ever one version of us (our true selves) in all our actions and interactions. To be whole means to have the various parts of ourselves integrated into one complete person. It means that we don’t leave anything of ourselves behind, including the parts of us that have been broken or damaged. We all have fractures or breaks somewhere in our past. I love that Matt Redman sings of being ‘Gracefully Broken’, encouraging us to pour out everything to God who is a God of grace and mercy. The only way we can hope to “live a life worthy of the calling we have received” (Eph 4.1) is to know that God’s grace brings strength to our weakness; his grace is enough (2 Cor 12.9).

As Prison Fellowship, we work with and pray for people in prison whose experiences may well include abuse, lies, grief, disappointment, distortion and disillusionment – people who are often broken and may have lost hope. Who better then to live out and model the Gospel message than those in whom God is at work to bring us towards full healing and wholeness?

In the Kintsugi tradition broken pottery is repaired using a lacquer dusted or mixed with powdered gold, silver, or platinum. The break is enhanced, and the experience honoured as the pottery is put back together in an even more beautiful form; and God’s grace heals our fractures in a similar way.

God can use us, and our fractures, to show those we serve that nobody is ever beyond repair and redemption, because God can heal in a way that makes you even more beautiful than before.

So, as people who pray for and work with those in prison, may our breaks be healed by the shining light of the resurrection and the mercy of God’s grace, so that all will see that we are indeed a people of faith, truth, honour and integrity.

And may “God’s golden joinery” make us shine with the hope of the Gospel as we continue to respond to the calling we have received.

Rev Gail Miller
Anglican Chaplain at HMP Preston (pictured below)

(cover photo from Prison Fellowship Australia of kintsugi bowl)

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