- Jan 1, 2025
- 602
- 472
- Country
- United Kingdom
- Gender
- Female
- Faith
- Anglican
- Marital Status
- Married
- Politics
- UK-Liberal-Democrats
Around here, recognition of Jesus and our faith as a source of hope for the broken would help, Sunday or other days in community. At my church people do visit families, and we are very community involved. I have a work colleague who is not religious at all but has great respect for the CofE because of help from a local church during a time of struggle for his family. There are others I have met over the years, and our current PM has said the same.Do you think that to some extent our lack of community and wrap around love disqualifies us from being a primary care giver for wounded souls so the state wants to step in to take over the role because our track record is less than the best ?
Maybe we should rethink our priorities -foster community more - visit families - shift the focus to support - make sure the Sunday service is not the only avenue of hope for the broken?
Also in parts of this country where there is a lot of poverty, I have heard of priests checking that their graveyard is out of use, having the ground deconsecrated, and then starting a community vegetable garden around their church. They had plenty of volunteers to help with the gardening in exchange for free food from it when it grew, and from conversations while working on it, gardening volunteers ended up going to church. So certainly meeting needs in your community can get people to the Bible.
I think a huge strength of Anglicanism is in the flexibilty, so we might not all need to do the same thing.
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