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ReSource News & Events:

Welcome to ReSource News and Events: this frequently updated section holds information on upcoming happenings nationwide that ReSource has a hand in. We also cover recent items of news, so do check back for updates on what we're up to!

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ReSource News:




Spring 2010

Wallington mission

Roger Morgan led a mission to Wallington in South London, with the Revds Steve Coe and Martin Breadmore. Roger took with him a ReSource team, a group which he later described as “the best team I have ever led in mission”. Those praying for the mission were encouraged to pray for “at least 100 converts to Christ” – and it became clear at the end that 101 had either responded directly to Christ or made a commitment to take things further. We have a God who pours out His generosity, pressed down and flowing over.

These are just a few of the stories of people who responded (names have been changed):


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Executive retreats


Martin Cavender has been working with Canon Chris Hancock in developing thinking about Executive Retreats, intended to provide space and teaching for executives, directors and others at a high level in the business and professional worlds as a means of bringing encouragement and refreshment to a community which can often feel itself surrounded by practical atheism. We are moving towards our first such work, but building it on the experience we have found in other areas, particularly the Christian Leadership Forums led by Chris and involving young Christian leaders from China, India, the UK, the US and other parts of the world. The intention is to provide real excellence and value added input for those who come, we have been assembling a stellar group of speakers and leaders. We should welcome your prayers for this work, and your comments and guidance.

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NEW! Sharing our faith


‘Beauty of life causes strangers to join our ranks. We do not talk about great things; we live them’ – Marcus Minucius Felix, 160-240 AD.

Roger Morgan's group course Beautiful Lives - sharing our faith with friends and neighbours has been successfully piloted in Pontesbury, and will be available as a new ReSource publication from July. 1 Peter 3.1-2 speaks of ‘the beauty and reverence’ which should characterise our lives as Christians, and Roger believes that it is beautiful lives, lived in the power of the Holy Spirit, which lead others to faith. The course is designed to help church members develop the confidence to share their faith naturally and effectively with others.

Roger's other publications, Stay Evangelism: how to reach the people next door, and Decision, an explanation of what is involved in becoming a Christian, are also proving popular, and we have given out hundreds of copies of Decision in the two missions ReSource has led recently. Many people say that it is now the best resource available for potential or new Christians. It's available on our Publications page, but if you would like to place a bulk order please do get in touch with us. It makes a great resource for Alpha.

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The healing ministry


We place a high emphasis on prayer and prayer ministry, and a number of the team are involved with the ministry of healing. Cesca Cavender is a member of the prayer team at Harnhill Centre of Christian Healing, where Barry Smith is also one of the trustees; and Alison was delighted to be invited to give the annual Arthur Dodds lecture there in April. 130 people came to hear her speak on 'Healing in Word and Spirit - from intensive care to rural Africa'. One person commented "It was faith building - the idea that healing is the essence of God is exciting! Could have listened a lot longer"; and many said how encouraging and inspiring they had found it to listen to Alison's story - from the remarkable healing of her husband after a road accident 14 years ago to her experience of seeing the Lord at work through the Rooted in Jesus course and conferences which she heads up in Africa. If you would liketo hear Alison's talk please drop her an email (alisonmorgan@resource-arm.net), and she will be delighted to post you a CD - cost £4 inc p&p.

We have continued to support the ReSource healing course In His Name. Alison led a day on healing for the Diocese of Hereford in November and one for the Diocese of Chichester in February, and John Woolmer is due to lead one for the Diocese of Worcester in May. Both Alison and John were invited to speak to the On Fire conference 'Beauty from Ashes' in April; On Fire is a sister organisation devoted to renewal for mission through word and sacrament, and we are delighted to be working ever more closely with them.We have been encouraged to see the level of faith and the commitment to starting healing teams in churches where this has not previously been a feature of the church’s ministry. Again we were encouraged by the feedback from the days; comments included "Thank you for the day. I thought your talks were spot on and your style of delivery absolutely the best for making this ministry accessible and real”;“inspirational”; and "definitely the best diocesan healing day I’ve attended". Meanwhile we continue to support individual churches as they take people through the course – please do get in touch with us at the office if you think we can help.

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Rooted in Jesus


Rooted in Jesus, the discipleship course for Africa first written in Leicester and edited and directed by Alison Morgan, is now run as a project of ReSource. It continues to have an ever widening impact. Following its introduction to the Diocese of St Mark’s, South Africa by a team from Holy Trinity Leicester last year, we have received the following comment from Bishop Martin Breytenbach: "I have no doubt that God has commissioned and anointed this course for Africa in much the same way as he is using Alpha in more urban and ‘western’ settings. We are already starting to see remarkable things in this Diocese as people and congregations are set on fire with the love of Jesus" . Invitations are now coming in from other South African dioceses as they hear about what is happening in St Mark’s. In the meantime a team led by Amanda Johnson has been to Narok in Kenya to continue working with the Masai pastors of the Covenant Church International, and another led by Martin Cavender has introduced Rooted in Jesus to the Diocese of Lusaka, Zambia. Another team led by Bishop John Hayden has just returned from Angola. Over the next few months teams are due to go out to Uganda, Tanzania, Zambia and South Africa, some to support what is already happening, some to introduce Rooted in Jesus or the new Rooted in Jesus Junior for the first time. For more details click here or visit www.rootedinjesus.net.

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A new commissioning


To cope with the rapid expansion of Rooted in Jesus, a generous donation to ReSource enabled us to appoint a part time RinJ administrator, Richard Thomas, for an initial period of one year. We have also been delighted to welcome Clemency Fox as our Intercessions Coordinator, working with the team who have offered to pray for the teams and the receiving dioceses. In March Richard and Clemency were both commissioned in the Bishop's Chapel in Wells by Bishop John Hayden, under whose leadership RinJ was first pioneered in Tanzania. John presided over a eucharist and we were able to pray for Richard and Clemency as he laid hands on them. Richard and Clemency have been doing a stunning job, as have all the intercessors.

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East Bristol partnership


As part of the mentoring and coaching work carried on by ReSource in a number of parts of the country there is also a clear strand of consultancy going on. Most of that work is led by Roger Morgan for ReSource, and he has spent the last year or so working with a partnership of churches in East Bristol, with the support and encouragement of Archdeacon Alan Hawker. This disparate group of churches, flung together into a partnership or coalition (!) has required painstaking support and navigation to help them towards their goal – but it does seem to be in sight, as leaders and members of the churches recognise and respect one another’s needs, gifts and resources and work together to find a creative way forward. The story continues.

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Church renewal weekends


The rhythm of the year is always reflected in the church weekends which are going on week by week and all around the country. This last period has seen us, among many others, working with the Revd Tim Jones in Taunton St James, where Roger Morgan led a teaching weekend as part of a strategic work for the church on growing into evangelism and mission; with the Revd Ray Adams in Haydenwick, Swindon for a fourth visit by ReSource to help carry the church forward in its strategic thinking about growth and mission in their area of Swindon and the Bristol diocese; and a February weekend with St Martin’s in Basildon under the Revd Esther McCafferty, where the prayers of the church included:


Esther wrote recently: “The Spirit is at work amongst us so much more evidently since the weekend you led for us in February.” If you would like to explore the possibility of a ReSource team member coming to lead a weekend for your church please contact the office.

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Renewal weekend for St Paul's Warwick


Don Brewin led a small ReSource team on this weekend at the end of April and the title “Come to the threshold – then go out”. Don and the team offered four plenary sessions of teaching and three simultaneous workshops. There was a strong intercessory support for the weekend. Don wrote afterwards, “Although it is early days, and much work needs to be done, there was a real sense that the spiritual atmosphere changed on the Saturday evening, so that ‘going out’ through the thresholds was now possible. Jonathan (the vicar) was encouraged to take the lead in this, going out ahead of the congregation and inviting them to choose whether or not they wish to follow – but he was going out anyway!” This was the latest in a number of connections between St Paul’s and ReSource, all as part of travelling together into renewal and evangelism.

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Holy week in Gildersome


Cesca & Martin spent Holy week travelling with Canon Felicity Lawson and the parish of Gildersome towards Easter day and the resurrection of Jesus. It was a wonderful time of looking at the journey together, and considering the people encountered on the way – from Judas Iscariot to Peter, Mary and the other disciples and Jesus Himself. Responses afterwards ranged from “everything was a blessing” to “the clarity of the message denoting the sacrificial love of Jesus and culminating in a challenge to look afresh at the call to service and a deepening of faith in our Lord.” The Easter story touched everyone afresh and there was a real sense of a common journey being made. One testimony stands out - Felicity wrote afterwards about “the recovering alcoholic who testified on Easter morning that on Good Friday she had ‘chosen life’ and knew a peace she had never known in her life before. She had started drinking when she was thirteen and described very honestly and graphically to the congregation the depths to which her drinking had taken her until she joined AA two years ago. Without exception she had been dry since then and had certainly committed her life to Christ. She was not aware that she had not yet taken the third step, but in responding to your invitation she discovered what it was to surrender completely to God. The impact on the congregation was amazing, as you can imagine.”

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New ReSource administrator - Paula Smit

We are delighted to announce the appointment of Mrs Paula Smit as the new ReSource administrator. Paula will join the team at the beginning of February. Paula was born in Zambia and then lived in Zimbabwe and latterly South Africa. She moved to England in 2008 with her husband Johan. Paula and Johan have two grown up sons, Terence & Jason. Paula worked for many years as an administrator with Mercedes Benz in South Africa. She was also involved in mission in her local church for approximately 10 years, of which the last 6 years were in a full time capacity together with Johan. Paula is thrilled at the prospect of working for ReSource and looks forward to joining the team at the beginning of February 2010.

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Autumn 09

The ReSource team


Thanks to Roger Morgan’s hard work and travelling in the last year ReSource now has some 80 leaders who are committed to working with us as a team – the fulfilment of a dream we have nurtured since the beginning. We have started a series of regional team meetings around the country with a day’s gathering in Taunton St James on 27 August, where we concentrated on Roger’s paper on seeking fruitful leaders and fruitful churches – and had a fine day of story, theology and profound discussion. The next such meeting is in Reading on 1 October; and then Chelmsford (probably 12 November); Halifax on 10 December; Loughborough on 7 January; and Carlisle on 22 April. It is great to be working with such a dedicated and creative bunch of people – and we should welcome your prayers for them all. MC

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Looking ahead

We have been busy respond-ing to invitations to talk with dioceses and diocesan officers about how we can support the mission and ministry of the church in their patch. Martin and Alison had an excellent evening talking about mission with the bishops, archdeacons, area deans and lay chairs of Gloucester diocese, and a couple of days at the invitation of diocesan missioner Dave Elkington, meeting with the bishop and area deans of Newcastle diocese. Martin and John Benson are talking with Birmingham diocese, and Roger and John have been asked to provide some input on mission in Deaneries in the dioceses of Hereford and Gloucester. We are also preparing for a number of parish missions and mission weekends. All these will lead to mission training and mission support. Our work is expanding, and our team growing.

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Bishops

Congratulations and prayerful best wishes for Spirit-filled ministries to a number of ReSource supporters who have recently taken up the mitre in different places – notably Alistair Magowan in Ledbury (Hereford), Mark Rylands in Shrewsbury (Lichfield), Graham Kings in Sherborne (Salisbury) and +Alan Smith to be Diocesan of St Albans. It is great to see such fine appointments. Please pray for them and all in leadership in the Church of God. Isaiah 45:2,3 seems to be a good text. MC

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Getting involved in mission

We continue to look for opportunities not just to talk about evangelism but to actually do it. In May I was invited to share my story with 40 women over breakfast in Keynsham, which led to a rather pleasant combination of croissants and questions! In June we worked alongside the chaplain at the Blue School in Wells, where Roger has become a governor. The Blue is a comprehensive of 1500 pupils only a handful of whom identify themselves as Christians – it’s been a funny thing for Katy and Bethy to move from multi-faith Leicester where it’s normal to talk about God, to a cathedral city where it’s definitely not cool to be Christian. We put on an evening event called ‘The Big Debate – has science made God unnecessary?’, and welcomed 70 students to pizza, fruit salad and a chocolate fountain. I spoke for 30 minutes, after which we opened it up for discussion. What followed was I think the most animated, engaging and searching debate I can remember, as 70 teenagers, most of whom had no church background, bombarded us with questions. In the end we had to ask them to stop – but some signed up for Alpha and others asked for more events of the same kind. Partly due to the success of this event I was invited in September to launch the Wells Cathedral School Christian Union programme for the new academic year. I spoke with about 20 students, some Christian, some not, on 'The meaning of life - does Christianity work?'. It was great to be all crowded together in an upper room at the end of the oldest continously inhabited street in Europe - and to be bombarded once again with an astonishingly wide range of good humoured yet searching questions. Afterwards the teacher wrote: ‘It made such an impact on some of them that even later that evening whilst I resumed my boarding house duty I was aware of this. One girl just lay on the sofa in the common room for the whole evening with the 'birthday feeling' saying 'Mrs Bennett, now I know!'. She has now started to go along to the Vineyard church, comes to CU - all from nothing. The attendance is growing - 17 last week.' The two schools are hoping to work together on similar events in the future. Not the end of the story! AM

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Holt mission

Roger led the ReSource team for this 10 days/2 Sundays mission at the beginning of September, working with the Vicar Andrew Evans. We shall be putting a full report of this on the website, setting out the numbers of people who came to faith, the transformation of the churches in the Benefice, the house meetings and coffee mornings and all the rest. Suffice it to say here that it was an excellent experience for everyone involved, and very much based around the ReSource book-let, "Stay Evangelism" and its clear mantra – "The people who will come to faith in Jesus Christ are the people you already know". MC

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Confidence in the Gospel



We have continued to work with groups of clergy and lay leaders on the topic of confidence in the gospel. We led a Saturday for lay leaders in Ashby de la Zouch as part of our ongoing support for the Leicester diocesan programme ‘Shaped by God’, a workshop at the Bath and Wells 1100 anniversary celebration day in Glastonbury (alongside another on mission), and a series of days and half days for clergy in the Stoke archdeaconry in the diocese of Lichfield. We are struck by the diversity of experience and approach in different parts of the country – but also by the consensus in all these places about the need to focus the gospel meaningfully into a confused and changing world. Martin Luther once said that if you preach the gospel in all its aspects with the exception of those which relate specifically to your time, you are not preaching it at all, and history shows that it’s when the church rises effectively to the challenge of a changing world view that it grows, and when it gets submerged uncritically in a new cultural story that it declines. We live at a pivotal point in point in history – some theologians have suggested that we face the greatest challenge to our way of thinking and being since the Reformation. We need to spend time thinking together about what that means and what difference it makes to the way we think and do things. AM

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Wholeness and healing


Salisbury diocese is wanting to raise awareness of the healing ministry, and following the publication of our healing course In His Name, Alison Morgan was invited to lead a couple of what turned out to be quite dynamic workshops at their diocesan conference, on Wholeness and Healing and on the Gifts of the Spirit. She has also been invited to teach on Healing and Mission at St Paul’s Theological Centre in London next year. John Woolmer led a well attended evening on the healing ministry in Shrewsbury, and we are working with several local churches in various parts of the country to support the introduction of In His Name. We have been delighted by the rapid takeup of the course – we have already had to reprint it. Meanwhile The Wild Gospel is on its third reprint, and our Lent course Season of Renewal sold out this year too. AM

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Promoting the whole mission of the church


ReSource is increasingly asked to run training evenings on mission for gatherings of all the PCCs in a particular deanery, usually alongside daytime days of theological reflection for the clergy. We have done this recently in Somerset, Oxfordshire and for half of the deaneries of the Stoke archdeaconry in the diocese of Lichfield. Some 400 people have attended these events over the last few weeks. It’s easy for a PCC to get bogged down in the practicalities of parish administration – and yet the PCC (Powers) Measure 1956, section 2 subsection 2a, clearly states that ‘the functions of a PCC shall include co-operation with the minister in promoting in the parish the whole mission of the church; pastoral, social, evangelistic and ecumenical’. Many clergy have said to us how helpful it has been to encourage a PCC to think through the implications of this missionary responsibility – and how good it is to laugh together as they do so… AM

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Hereford


Thanks to encouragement from Sarah Cawdell, the Diocesan CME officer, we are seeing some very good contacts with this lovely, rural Diocese – notably in Bromyard and Pontesbury Deaneries. The work is shaping, and Michael Whittock, Rural Dean of Pontesbury said after one planning meeting with Roger Morgan, John Benson and Fr David Picken of ReSource that he thought it had been "the best such meeting I‟ve experienced in 30 years of ministry". Onwards and upwards! MC

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Stewards' Trust in Yorkshire


“Parcevall Hall” always sounds like something out of Narnia – but it’s actually the most beautiful country house, set high in stunning gardens in Wharfedale above Skipton. Cesca and I were there in lovely weather at the beginning of September for a week of teaching, worship and prayer with 25 guests of the Stewards’ Trust . Well, someone’s got to do it .. One man said, “I’ve been coming on these weeks for years, but this has been by far the best and most important for me”. Another said, “I came on this week with apprehension, but have found a new depth and fulfilment in God and the power of His Spirit that I never knew existed”. There’s no doubt about it – He rescues us because He delights in us, as Psalm 18:19 puts it. MC

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Lee Abbey


I seem to be getting into a rhythm of weekends at Lee Abbey in Devon, and that is a delight. The community there is in very good heart under its new Warden David Rowe and his wife Pixie, and everything seems to be flourishing – with lots of old friends like Dave Hopwood, and Hannah, in tremendous form. This time I was there as a weekend speaker at the original behest of Oldbury Benefice near Calne but with lots of other churches represented as well, pursuing the theme of “Going Deeper with God” and looking again at Ezekiel 47. It was a very good time, with lots of happy evaluations and follow-up – and the sun shone in all its splendour (as it always does, of course, at Lee Abbey). MC

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Playing at Home and Away


Rooted in Jesus, our discipleship course for Africa, continues to grow and develop. This summer teams went for the first time to the diocese of Muhuraba in Uganda, the dioceses of Masasi and Newala in Tanzania, and the diocese of St Mark the Evangelist in South Africa, and for the second time to S Rwenzori in Ugandan and Nord Kivu in DR Congo. Meanwhile news from Kenya is encouraging – the prison chaplain at Narok prison writes that the impact has been so great that he has been invited to introduce Rooted in Jesus to the other Rift Valley prisons, including Naivasha, one of the centres of the recent post election violence and a high security prison. Reports from Northern Zambia where Jon Witt of Dignity International is using Rooted in Jesus to plant new churches in rural areas are encouraging too. Jon writes: It seems to me that in this world, people can broadly take two approaches. Firstly, one group may attempt to change the world through using technology, possessions and material items that we would call ‘things’. The second group are concerned with people. They recognise that to truly effect change in any community means to see change in the hearts, minds and situations of its people.I’m firmly in the second camp. I believe in people and their God-given capacity for great things. The pastors now write: ‘The impact of consistent discipleship using the Rooted in Jesus course has been tremendous - we have been empowered economically, socially and spiritually to do the work of God’.

Meanwhile we have invitations from the dioceses of Eastern Zambia, Lusaka and Angola for 2010, as well as one to train the students at the National Prison Warders training college outside Nairobi in conjunction with a return visit to the Covenant Chruch International in Narok. We were delighted recently to hear that Spring Harvest has given us a grant of £1000 towards the development of a ‘Rooted in Jesus Junior’ course for Sunday school children. Nicky Plumbley has already begun work on this, and it will be piloted in Uganda next year. Funding Rooted in Jesus conferences and printing is an increasing challenge as the work expands, but God continues to provide just enough for us to cover our costs.


At home, Alison spoke at the annual SOMA conference on the theology of mission, alongside Jane Grayshon on prayer. It was a privilege to meet up with some of the intercessors who pray faithfully for the SOMA mission teams, and to celebrate our longstanding and fruitful relationship as sister organisations. AM

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Christine Treanor


- ReSource’s administrator and PA, well known to many of you from happy telephone conversations and emails, fell and broke her ankle in July, and then had to spend 6 weeks out of action getting better. I’m very glad to say that all is now well with the ankle, apart from aches and pains which are gradually receding. Christine has now decided, though, to resign from her post with ReSource and move on to pastures new at some stage before December. This is a sad happening for all concerned, but we wish Christine very well for the future and are doing all we can to support her onwards in her journey. MC

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Spring 09

For such a time as this…


The first paragraph in The Wells Journal on 31 December was interesting “ReSource, an evangelical Anglican organisation, has officially opened its national office in Wells with a launch in new premises above the Romna Restaurant in Sadler Street”. It was great to have the coverage in the local newspaper together with the photograph of the Bishop cutting the tape and surrounded by a crowd of local people – but it is interesting how often that word “evangelical” is used when what is meant is “evangelistic”. At least it prompted one of our catholic clergy brethren to write to confirm that he was delighted to be involved with an “evangelical” organisation! He knows that in fact we work with all traditions and denominations.

In his welcome Bishop Peter Price, of Bath and Wells said “it is good to be here to welcome ReSource with all its imagination and vision. It has true potential for the future”. We took the opportunity at the launch party, which was all mulled wine and mince pies and managed to cram some 70 people into the two rooms of the new office, to explain how ReSource works and to talk about local churches, renewal weekends and parish missions, speakers, quiet days and retreats and all the other elements of our work whilst surrounded by books, booklets and ReSource materials. It was a good and happy party and a confirmation in the Spirit that however strange it may seem in terms of the national travelling times we have been brought to this right place for such a time as this. As we said on the evening, we look forward to serving the Church and the City, as a part of our national and international brief.


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The Church Army


Alison Morgan was delighted to be invited by Mark Russell to lead a Quiet Morning at the Church Army’s annual AGM in London. About 100 Church Army Evangelists young and old were present, many of whom work in challenging, cutting edge situations. Alison spoke on knowing God’s love, and everyone then spent an extended period of quiet time in prayer and reflection. One of those present wrote to us afterwards:

“I just wanted you to know that since your visit to Church Army’s Quiet Day recently God has pulled me through some of those downs that I have mentioned, and this has been a direct result of what you had to say to us all that particular day. I know beyond all doubt that God loves me now! I know that should be something that is obvious to an experienced Church Army officer but it was truly revolutionary for me on that day ; so much so that I was given a vision of Jesus reinstating me and asking me to tell those people on the street about His love for them, and that there is a better way than the seeking of financial gain, greed, rage, anger, (the list goes on). Since then there have been two possible job opportunities both with an aim to reach the marginalised in our society.”

It was interesting to be back in London, the city of my birth, a few months after moving to Somerset. I was struck by the frenetic pace of life, as I wandered, at a speed that reflects both my new life in Somerset and the fact that God loves me, through the Tube and along the streets of Euston. People rushed past glued to their mobiles, dodging one another in their haste, and one unfortunate man went flying over my case of booklets about Jesus. Jesus was unharmed. The man, I’m not so sure.

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A trip to Jersey


David Morgan runs a men’s group in the island of Jersey and invited Martin to come to speak on an evening in December, on what is now the familiar subject of “Science and Faith—Is Dawkins right?”. We had a great evening in a pub on the seafront in St Hellier, with men coming from widely different churches in all parts of the island. Once again, there was a huge spread of opinions on the subject, and lots of animated debate around the tables afterwards, with no one wanting to leave until after 10 p.m. It was good, also to be able to refer to the ReSource book on the truth in the power of the Holy Spirit, namely “The Wild Gospel” by Alison Morgan—which one person had found to be “spine tingling, a very exciting read”. So it should be, when one is dealing with a Creator God who loves you and calls you into truth.



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ReSource publications


The ReSource healing course In His Name, by Alison Morgan and John Woolmer, was published in November. We have been encouraged by some early responses, including this one from Revd Paul Springate, Director of the Harnhill Centre for Christian Healing: “Just a note to thank you for the copies of In His Name. I have had a look through them and they are very good indeed. With your permission I shall suggest them to churches that I go to that are looking for a healing course. It covers so much and makes participants think along the way.” We are hoping that this course will make a real difference to the ministry of those who use it, and are very happy to offer support and training in its use – do get in touch with us if you would like us to help with the teaching of the course or with a healing weekend in your church.

Lent is coming up, and we are reprinting our Lent course Season of Renewal. Again, feedback has been very positive since the course was launched 2 years ago. Canon John Gunstone wrote: “It was unanimously agreed that it had been the most inspiring and helpful Lent course we had ever shared in,” and a delighted parish priest wrote “it is a huge encouragement and a great blessing as 4 years ago no one had even been in a small group or a Lent group, and only a handful of people had heard of the Holy Spirit!“


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A Methodist Anniversary


Martin and Cesca were invited back to Highworth Methodist church for their anniversary weekend in November, which they had chosen to call “Wading Deeper”, based around Ezekiel 47: 1 – 12. This was our fourth visit to the Highworth area of Wiltshire and we approached the weekend in a new way, beginning with a men’s breakfast on the Saturday and then moving through a series of four teaching sessions on the Saturday, followed by preaching on the Sunday. It seemed right, with the approval of the Superintendent Minister, John Wiltshire to include a session on evolution and creation entitled “Water in the Wilderness – Is Dawkins Right?”, and based around Isaiah 43: 18 – 21 and 1 Peter 3: 15. This proved to be controversial and it became clear quite rapidly that there was a spread of opinion in the church, from “six day creationism” to a scientist who was involved with carbon 14 dating and was himself clear that the earth was billions of years old. What certainly came out of the evaluations, for us to pass on to the Minister was the comment that “more teaching on evolution and creation, human sexuality and the occult would be helpful for the church” and we suspect that would be true for lots of churches around the country of different traditions and denominations. We had a good time with our old friends from Highworth and we thank God for their faithful ministry alongside all the other local churches in this part of Wiltshire.

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Where God commands his blessing


It was very good for Roger and Martin to travel across country to work with a Rural Dean and a local incumbent to see if there are ways in which ReSource can support and resource the work of the deanery and its churches. Like many deaneries this one has a spread of church traditions within its boundaries, as well as a great variety of understanding of mission and evangelism. In situations like this the teachings of Jesus are clear, with all the words about unity running through scripture in lucid terms, such as Psalm 133 and the prayer of Jesus in John 17. Nevertheless, helping it to happen is not always straightforward. With Satan’s dabbling, there are two principal enemies in the process towards unity and these are pride – even from small churches; and control or politics, with people playing games. We believe that as we said in this case there are also some cardinal principles in unity, and these include friendship – which is always the beginning of working at unity among a group of churches, and needs to engage the leaders and not just representatives, with a commitment to regular meetings, and a willingness to listen, to understand and to be vulnerable. The whole thing is marked by kindness and courtesy, grace and commitment which brings trust.


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Advent


Advent is a time of year which offers us the opportunity to reflect on our faith in Jesus. It’s a season of waiting, and of learning how to wait. As one rabbi has put it, "The wait for Messiah is not a passive waiting, as if we were simply passing time at the bus stop, waiting for the bus to arrive. It is a passionate waiting. A deep, heartfelt longing. It is an ache for His coming, for His appearing. To properly await Messiah, our hearts need to break with the anticipation ... At the same time, it is our hope of being united with Him that gives us meaning and hope every day." For many churches, Advent offers a helpful way to focus our spiritual lives on Jesus in the midst of the many demands made on our practical lives, and we were delighted that Alison was invited to preach on Advent for the Bath and Wells diocesan renewal service, held this year in Clevedon parish church.

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Autumn 08


A vision of Holiness and Renewal


The vision of ReSource has been clear to us from the outset. It has been from the beginning one of those ‘stand on the hilltop and breathe the air’ or perhaps ‘wake up and smell the coffee’ sorts of vision. It has inspired us all along, even in those times when things have been difficult and the going tough. It’s a vision of holiness and renewal, stepping out in mission. It has been tremendous to see the injection of encouragement and enthusiasm which has come both from our move to Wells and from the creation of the new staff team. For the first time we can meet to eat and laugh together, study the Bible, think and pray. That means we can develop and drive forward the vision we’ve been given, and you will find our latest thinking on that on our ‘What do we do’ page and in our magazine, the latest issue of which is on Holiness.

Christine Treanor wrote her story in the last issue of ReSource. The other new member is Canon Roger Morgan, who, like Christine, has made a major impact from the start. He led the Milford on Sea mission in September, where we saw some 30 people come to faith in Christ and the church transformed; and even on holiday found himself preaching in tiny Hawkridge church on Exmoor, where four of the 18 in the congregation also professed faith in Jesus Christ. Roger is an evangelist, but is also in the van as we increase the number and use of ReSource Associates and Missioners across the country, especially through regional teams days.

Roger says, ‘The person who has contributed most to developing our vision is Alison, but what we all want to do is to offer the Church optimism and power. We do not have personal experience of God raising the dead, but we do know from our own experience that God is real and powerful and able to bring new life to individuals, churches and communities. We also know that He does this in all manner of ways, in all age groups and in the context of many denominations and church styles. Our mission in ReSource is to tell the Church again about this God and, by listening carefully to them help church leaders and their congregations to try new things and trust God to breathe new life into them’. Please join us in this as we say together, ‘yes, Lord, take us and use us’.

Martin Cavender


A variety of approaches in High Wycombe

“Inspiring – new ideas, made me think about transformation through Word and Spirit” was what one person thought most helpful about an evening in Loudwater for lay leaders in the churches of the Wycombe Deanery, addressing “Transformation in the Gospel”. Another said she was impressed with “How small the steps need to be to start with. Little people doing little things can make a difference”. One man was caught by “thinking about church differently”, in “very well presented and stimulating presentations, pitched at the right level”. As ever there was a desire to go on longer, to have more time, to spend “more than an evening”.

The evening was part of two days of teaching, training and consultation in Wycombe Deanery for the clergy, the PCCs and the other lay leaders. This is one of the biggest Deaneries in this country, and covers the whole gamut of Church traditions. The Rural Dean, Fr David Picken, had seen in Wakefield Diocese what this model of working could do in bringing refreshment and challenge to a group of churches in an area. The result was terrific, with a fine response on the second day from the Deanery clergy and the PCC members. One member of the clergy spoke about “a different way of looking at things” as being most helpful – and we see that wherever we go. These Deanery happenings can be hugely fruitful for ministry and mission, and it’s clear that coming at the questions from a new point of view can be a big part of that.


Among the Maasai


“My father was the village witch doctor and had five wives” is a great start to anyone’s story of faith – and so it proved when David Ole Kereto came into our Wells office to meet us to plan “Rooted in Jesus” work among 300 churches in 3 Dioceses of the Covenant Church International in Kenyan Maasailand, scheduled for next March. “I was his first-born, and therefore the one to be apprenticed by him as the next witch doctor in the village”. David, or Tiway as he was then named, carefully learned from his father all the spells and curses, and was doing a fine job in his apprenticeship – but then it all went wrong (or right).

His best friend from primary school, Daniel, became a Christian. David/Tiway could see the difference. When Daniel invited him to a Christian meeting he took a bit of persuading because “Christianity and witchcraft can’t mix”, but eventually agreed to go on condition that he could hide away at the back. But God wasn’t having that. It was the first time David/Tiway had ever experienced the inside of a church, or seen Christian worship; but it was the speaker who did for him, under God. When he invited a response David/Tiway found himself propelled by the Spirit to the front, to kneel in front of him - to the shock of the assembly. From that moment everything changed. Nothing would ever be the same again.

David described to us how he “was attacked by demons on the way home” but Daniel was with him, and he knew he was safe. Not so safe at home, though, when the village elders encouraged his father to kill him. David ran away to save his life, was sheltered by Christians, trained at Bible College and 8 years later returned to his village proclaiming the good news of Jesus Christ, to “save his family from the lake of fire”. He started his first church, and saw many come to the Lord. The Church grew rapidly, spreading across the Maasai area – and now he believes it needs the systematic teaching brought by a SOMA team comprising Alison Morgan, Andy Sachs, our old Tanzanian friend Stanley Hotay, and Martin Cavender, using ReSource’s tried and tested “Rooted in Jesus” material. Please pray for us as we seek to support this brave man and his growing number of ministers in bringing the truth of Christ to this part of Kenya.



A new healing course from ReSource


We are pleased to announce the publication of the new ReSource healing course, In His Name – a training course for healing prayer teams. Written by Alison Morgan and John Woolmer, it’s a deliberately hands-on course. Although the authors are careful to build a proper foundation in terms of both theology and good practice, the emphasis is on equipping the participants to engage in an active ministry of healing.

Why a new healing course?

With the rise in spiritual experimentation in our society, we see an increasing determination on the part of churches to offer a safe, effective and powerful ministry of healing in the name of Jesus. ReSource is increasingly receiving invitations to run healing weekends or to help train healing prayer teams. This Taking account of the increased spiritual openness both within the church and among those still outside it, Alison and John offer a powerful and contemporary navigational aid for churches and Christian groups wishing to offer healing prayer to those suffering physical ill health, emotional disease and spiritual oppression.

The authors

John and Alison are both experienced in the healing ministry in the UK and abroad. They combine a characteristically no-nonsense approach with a firm expectation, based on experience, that physical, emotional and spiritual healing is meant to be part of the living reality of every Christian life.

The course will be published in early November and will be available in packs of 1 Leader’s Manual and 10 participants’ coursebooks for £30. Both the Manual and the Coursebook are available separately.

A commendation

'Far and away the most balanced, informed, practical guide for church healing teams. The authors have seen much healing - physical, psychological and spiritual, and have the theological and biblical underpinning to ground it. The course is interactive, beautifully written and has been tested over ten years. Simply invaluable'.  - Canon Dr Michael Green



Mission in Milford


“It’s only 72 days to go until Christmas – and I can’t wait!” Those words were recently spoken by a young man, who along with his wife and many others came into a glorious living faith in Christ during our Big Event mission. We were greatly blessed by a wonderful team from ReSource, who were with us for around ten days and who in that time at various events, from house to house and in private conversation, told their Christian story and the Good News of Jesus.

It is still too soon fully to assess the impact that the mission has had upon church and community alike but from comments received there have been some profound changes in people’s lives. Church members went out way beyond their “comfort zones” and found that God had gone before them. One woman, an experienced and mature believer, said that she had never trusted God so much since her days of service in Africa, whilst others invited friends and neighbours into their homes to meet team members and whether two or twenty two (literally) turned up, found that these were exactly the right people for that particular occasion. Others within our congregation have been deeply challenged about the need to be committed to Christ and not simply to believe in Him.

It’s been a time of lights going on for people. One young couple, on the fringes of the congregation, said that it was only in that week that they had realised that being a Christian was not about going to church and obeying certain laws but was about a relationship. During the week the wife prayed a prayer of commitment and the husband is well on the way. We are also encouraged that around fifty people turned up for the introductory Alpha supper some few days after the Mission.

"Having been involved in about twenty missions myself I can honestly say that I have never come across such a grounded, mature and spiritual team as the ones who came to us from ReSource. They became not simply a Mission Team but our brothers and sisters in Christ and our friends.” 
- Dominic Furness, Vicar, All Saints’ Milford on Sea


Bringing the good news to Stoke on Trent


The knock-on effect of our work is a constant, which is very encouraging – and also keeps us on our toes, because we try never to offer the same thing twice. We are always looking for God’s new way of working in this place with this group of people.

Last year we spent a week with the whole of Wakefield Diocese, clergy and PCC members. The response was excellent, and has spawned a number of other happenings in Wakefield Diocese; but the final event was a Bible teaching day for the clergy of the Diocese. The ReSource Missioner was Bishop Gordon Mursell of Stafford. It was an inspiring day. At the end of it Bishop Gordon asked about what had been happening in the Diocese – and whether ReSource might come and offer something similar in his patch, in the Stoke Archdeaconry of Lichfield Diocese.

There followed a series of meetings, and then Martin spent two days in October visiting all the eleven Stoke Rural Deans individually, fitting together the varied shapes in the area to make a mosaic of different works and approaches which echoes the spread of church traditions and needs, across post-industrial towns and deep moorland country. As one Rural Dean put it, “This is a place for the long haul, a vocational place. You come to this area because God has called you here. Spiritual renewal rests in embracing that, and all it entails for you and your family”. He also spoke movingly about “being treasured by the community” as their local Parish Priest, and the deep sustenance of prayer – especially through the 2C7 Prayer group which serves the whole area. One of his congregation had said to him the week before, “Have you noticed? Since we’ve been praying we’ve had no problems with money in this Deanery. We’ve stopped worrying about money and talking about it all the time”.

Stoke is an area which calls for a very particular offering, and new shape of work. It’s too early to say what that will be, but we covet your prayers as we work it through together with the Church leaders and their congregations.

Church renewal weekends


with Shirehampton, Bromley, Yeovil Holy Trinity, Basel ACB, Colchester and two Gloucester churches, with Marlow in Bucks and St Matthew’s in Wookey.

Church weekends continue to be a staple of ReSource’s offering, and the last few months have seen some corkers, all around the country as well as in Basel, Switzerland (where Keith Powell and Matthew Frankum had a fine time). We believe in supporting “the little, the local and the ordinary”, as these churches are proud to be known, and it is a joy to see them come alive in God’s Spirit, with signs and wonders following.

The Revd Liz Kitching said she was “walking on air, six feet off the ground” after Keith Powell had led a church renewal weekend at Wydale for the Cloughton group of Yorkshire churches in June.


The move from Abingdon to Wells, and the new team


The move from Abingdon to Wells which took place in the summer has not just been a relocation. There has been a real sense of God’s blessing on it all – and while we are very grateful for our starting years at Abingdon (where our growing book distribution element will stay, led by Sharon Grossmann), we are very clear that we are called to Wells. We still operate all round the country – nothing of our itinerant nature has changed – but it is wonderful to have the whole core team based together in a place where we can pray and study the Bible together, get to know each other as people – and also save some costs! It has been a great move, and exactly right for the growth of this next stage in the life of ReSource.



Prayer and muscle – Michael and Jennifer with John and
3 Eds (are better than one), moving from Abingdon




A sea of boxes, Wells


ReSource and the offerings at New Wine


Alison Morgan and Martin Cavender had a fine time at the New Wine, Central and Southwest Conference in August, speaking on subjects such as the Word of God, Transformation and “Is Dawkins Right?” This last one proved so popular that numbers of people couldn’t get into the venue and had to be turned away—which meant it had to be repeated later in the week!


Teams Days in the Midlands and South-West


The vision of ReSource is for people, churches and communities brought to life by the power and grace of the Holy Spirit. As you will see from our new vision statement in the website and “ReSource” Magazine, we have learned a lot in the last four years – and we are looking to make a difference, grow confidence, enable change and create community in the pursuit of our strapline of “renewal for mission in the power of the Holy Spirit”. We are seeing results all over the country, thanks to the encouragement of our faithful supporters and the doors which are opening to the offering. As I have said elsewhere, this really is a watershed moment for this fragile initiative.

But how do we deliver the goods? Well, if you’ve been praying for us you will know from the Diary that it has largely been down to a few people who have been able and willing to act as Associates or Missioners for ReSource, often working sacrificially and over long hours. The returns have been extraordinary, out of all proportion to numbers. Now, though, we are able to expand the team around the country – and have been running teams days to help do that.


The first trustees’ meeting in the new office

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Two new mission booklets from ReSource


We are finding increasingly that we are being invited to work both with mission partnerships and groupings and with individual churches to provide support and training for mission. To help meet this need we have just published two new ReSource booklets by Roger Morgan. Roger has for years been involved in mission and evangelism, working amongst university students, for a time with Daniel Cozens and Through Faith Missions, and latterly in his own parishes of St Columba’s Corby and then Holy Trinity Leicester. Roger has now joined the ReSource team as a strategist and specialist missioner.


The first booklet, Stay Evangelism, is written to encourage ordinary Christians to develop a transparent and friendly lifestyle which makes it possible to share their faith unthreateningly and in a servant-hearted way with others. The second, Decision, is for those who are thinking of making a step of commitment, and is ideal for use with Alpha or in the context of parish missions and outreach events.

Stay Evangelism costs £3; Decision is £2 or £10 for a pack of 10. Both are available on the publications page.

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ReSource is on the move!


This summer sees some important changes in the life of ReSource. We are grateful for your prayers, never more needed. This is a team moment for us, in which we move from the foundations to the building, and outwards. The team is gently growing to cope with the response to our work, with Sharon staying in Abingdon to handle the increasing demand for book and magazine distribution; while the rest of the staff team moves to Wells in Somerset, based around our new office at 13 Sadler Street (BA5 2RR). We welcome Christine Treanor as the new Administrator and PA, and Roger Morgan as strategist and planner to work alongside Alison and me. All very exciting, bringing new calls and fresh opportunities.

This is a team moment, too, in the wider working of Associates and Missioners all around the country and beyond. We had a wonderful meeting of 24 at Market Harborough a few days ago, and look forward to similar gatherings north and south in the autumn. We have about 50 people, laity, clergy and bishops working in different ways for ReSource; all motivated and caught up in the vision of renewal for mission in the power of the Spirit. We thank God for those faithful people grafting away in the politics of the Church at Lambeth and GAFCON and elsewhere, an essential work; but we want to stick to our primary calling, the direct engagement with people and churches for renewal and mission.

I have more than once said this is a watershed, with change both painful and transforming. One geographer among the team said recently, “Usually you come to a watershed after walking uphill, and arrive at a great view. A watershed means a fundamental change of expectation and vision”. That’s just what it feels like. Please pray for us and journey with us as we travel into this new territory.

Martin Cavender


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Spring 2008



It’s been a busy few months, with a good variety of work local, regional and national, and some exciting things in the pipeline. Here’s a selection of what we’ve been up to.

Men’s breakfasts

The formula of gathering men together, usually on a Saturday morning, for a good breakfast and a stimulating talk and discussion, is a very powerful one. These last couple of months have seen us working with churches in Stanford in the Vale, Warwick and Poole, and the response has been very animated. Intriguingly these recent ones have all asked us to concentrate on the debate between reason and faith, science and theology, with titles like “Is Richard Dawkins right?”.



That seems to be a major question for men – and one man in Poole certainly nailed his colours to the mast by saying, “I’m really grateful to Richard Dawkins and what he says. I find it comforting, because it means I don’t have to go to church any more”. I must say I find that odd. Dawkins may have important questions which need to be addressed, but most of his argument is unscientific, illogical and ranting – and hardly “comforting”. One US Professor has said “Dawkins makes me ashamed to be an atheist”, and I have had similar comments from others. The balance in Poole was struck for me by another man who said, “The more I follow Jesus Christ, the more I am overwhelmed by the sheer awesome beauty of him and of the Christian faith. My life is constantly being changed by the size of it all, emotionally and intellectually, and my soul is fed”. The Vicar, Andy Perry, wrote afterwards, “I was struck by your encouragement, in the face of Dawkins and Co, to hold firmly to our confidence in the Gospel. It was healthy to be reminded about the seductiveness of the “I did it my way” soteriology of Frank Sinatra, and the challenge to rediscover and release joy in our churches”.

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Deanery Retreats

“Your prayerful love, affirmation and wisdom for which I offer my profound thanks” and “Reminder of the big story” were typical of the comments received in answer to “What was most helpful?” in the 30 hour Deanery retreats with clergy which have been happening on a regular basis across the country in the last few months, often bolted together with an evening for PCCs.

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Looking ahead – to Missions?

ReSource has been building its work with care, determined to get the foundations right without quenching the Spirit in his work. We have sought to follow the Spirit’s leading at every turn while making sure that the theological basis is clear. If “renewal for mission in the power of the Holy Spirit” is our strapline then we have wanted to “have a reason for the vision that is in us”, to paraphrase 1 Peter 3:15. We have concentrated on what it means to be renewed in Christ as a Church and as people.

But what about the mission bit? We have always been clear that mission is not just something the Church does but the heart of what the Church is. It is in the nature of the Church to be missionary. For the last few years it has been popular to see part of that mission expressed in process evangelism, with work such as “Alpha”, Emmaus”, the “Y Course”, “Start!” and “Essence”. That has been hugely effective, and we thank God for it all constantly. But now we are receiving requests which have a new edge – “We’ve been using “Alpha” (or whatever), and it’s been very powerful, but now we would like to have a mission to the area – will ReSource please help us?” The answer is “Yes, with pleasure”; and that’s one of the reasons we are delighted that the Revd Roger Morgan is joining the team, with effect from August. Roger has wide-ranging experience as a mission leader, both in many years of parish ministry and before that with Dan Cozens and Through Faith Missions; and is also himself called to be an evangelist. He is already working on a ReSource mission to Milford on Sea for the autumn – and we expect other invitations as we get into our stride, afresh.



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Mike Carson Associates

One interesting element of the shifts that are taking place in the world is a reappraisal of the sacred and the secular and how they sit together – indeed, if there is any separation between them. Despite all the alarums and excursions of Richard Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens and others, we find that there is a quieter seeking after spiritual answers to the questions of life. Some of that surfaces through the work of MCA, with which Martin has become associated, which acts to bring Christian principles into the world of business. It helps business leaders to look at such questions as risk-averseness, forgiveness, the principles which sit behind the company or firm, and at matters like spiritual intelligence and personal meaning. It is wonderful to be involved with such a work, not least because it appeals to me as an evangelist! I love the sense of nurturing proper human flourishing and constant renewal, and the knowledge that God is at work everywhere and always. MCA and ReSource are vitally connected. Please pray for Mike Carson and everyone concerned in this fine and Godly offering.

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Words, Works and Wonders at the Baptist Mainstream Conference


Alison Morgan has been fascinated by words for as long as she can remember, and this January she was delighted to be invited to pursue these thoughts by speaking at the Baptist Mainstream Conference at Swanwick, the theme of which was Grasping the Gospel - Words, works, wonders. Her brief was to speak on Words (yes, that’s words in the plural) alongside Malcolm Duncan of Faithworks on Works and Ian Andrews of the International Association of Healing Ministries on Wonders. Alison was asked to stimulate discussion by reflecting on questions such as
How is the truth of the word revealed in our culture?
In a church culture shifting towards community involvement, what is the role of proclamation?
How can our words be heard and understood among the cultural clamour?
How do our words reflect the Word of God - is a holy book now a major obstacle to mission, or can the Living Word still be found in and through scripture?
What does it mean to base our understanding of gospel on the Word of God?

Each input from the main speakers was followed by a time of reflection and discussion, with people posting questions and comments on flipcharts around the auditorium. It was a great privilege to be invited to be part of such a dynamic gathering, to be able to spend time thinking through an exciting and important topic, and last but not least to benefit from the challenging ministry of Malcolm and Ian.


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Working with ARM Wales in Wrexham

Thanks to the hard work of Mary Newsom, Martin and Alison had a good day in Wrexham in April with great worship (thank you, Garry and Jan Harney; and, later, the River Dee Community Church), thinking and praying together about what it means to be Made New in the Countryside. These were the faithful in renewal, looking to see what the Lord was doing now in renewing his people for mission, and there was a fine response from the day, with one person glad about the “prayer ministry, and that the Welsh language was included and respected” and another about “the sense of encouragement, and reassurance that things are still happening, and that renewal has a future”.


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Fresh expressions in Newcastle Upon Tyne


I had never come across the like – a large Anglican church in a run-down part of a big city, closed by the Bishop because its congregation had dwindled almost to nothing ; and then, a year later, handed over to an energetic Priest in charge with instructions to set up from scratch a network church, a fresh expression. Here we were with Robert Ward in Newcastle St Luke in a vibrant Anglican church with fine worship, deep prayer and a real sense of community – and, after just four years of life, some 70 mostly young people worshipping God and hearing the Gospel with delight. It was brilliant to spend the weekend with Robert and Alice and to see what the Lord is doing in and through them by his Spirit, and then to go on to a Church leaders’ meeting in Jesmond. It’s worth remembering that “the fire fell and the dead were raised” in Monkwearmouth under the ministry of Smith Wigglesworth, and it’s wonderful to see the Spirit at work again in all his power and grace in that part of the country.


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Lent Course


The ReSource Lent course Season of Renewal has been widely used again this year, and we have received some very positive feedback. Pat White wrote from Sheffield as follows:

“I am writing to thank you for the Lent Course for Season of renewal. It has been a Spirit-led change in my group of Mothers’ Union ladies. Last year my vicar suggested it for our Lent study when I asked for suggestions. Because there was so much in it, we repeated it again this year with some changes, etc. Because I felt it was so good for the ladies, I found other groups in the church asking me what I thought about it. We ended up with four groups in the Church doing the course over Lent this year. I think most people from teenagers to the elderly felt there was something in it for them. Today we had a Renewal of Baptism vows in the morning Service and had 18 people rededicating their lives to the Lord. So I felt (never done before) that you must know about it and it will encourage you as well as us here at St Saviours Church, High Green, Sheffield.”

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A weekend at home


Occasionally churches decide to have a weekend “at home” before setting out on something residential and away. There are all sorts of reasons for this, among them the fact that it can be a very good way of introducing the concept of a church weekend to an uncertain congregation. A couple of years ago it was St Germain’s in Edgbaston, and there have been others since. St Mary’s Shirehampton, Bristol, decided to do it this way in February (as a taster for their residential weekend at Lee Abbey this September) – and a good time was apparently had by all! One man wrote afterwards, “It’s no exaggeration to say something very important and powerful happened to our congregation this weekend and I can testify personally to the effect of the prayers you inspired. I am sitting next to a wife who is positively buzzing to do God’s work. Thank you for such an exciting message of renewal and refreshment – may God give us all the grace to make it real. Lee Abbey, here we come!”.

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Supporting the healing ministry in Middleton, Manchester

Roger Vaughan had visited this Parish in Spring 2007 and had worked with them in a day on the Healing Ministry, using his brilliant ReSource workbooks on “Saints Alive – Healing in the Church”. Roger’s offering had been beautifully timed for Middleton, and well received. Martin was then asked to follow this up with a Quiet Day on a Saturday, followed by some work with the Healing Ministry team and a Praise evening in the church; and then preaching on the Sunday at the two, very different, morning services. It was a fine experience, and a great insight into how a church like Middleton, under Canon Nick Feist’s leadership over many years, lives and works in this strong community which has seen so much change.

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SPECIAL OFFERS!




We are currently the sole stockists of the well-regarded ARM publications Life in the Spirit (by John Finney and Felicity Lawson) and Healing in the Church (by Roger Vaughan). Both these courses have sold thousands of copies over the last few years. We often get surprised looks from people who have been told they are out of print - so the good news is that we have good stocks of both courses!

Both courses are updated editions. ‘Life in the Spirit’ is a course written with the aim of helping to bring renewal into the life of the Church. It has proved useful for people enquiring about the Christian faith, seeking deeper commitment, exploring the work of the Holy Spirit and for baptism and confirmation preparation. It would make a good next step for new groups who have benefited from the ReSource Lent course Season of Renewal. ‘Healing in the Church’ makes a practical and informative course for groups of Christians wanting basic introductory training in the healing ministry. It is suitable for churches of all traditions, and has 9 sessions covering all the main issues in the healing ministry. Both courses consist of a leader's manual and a link workbook for each participant. Leader's manuals now available at only £5; Link workbooks £4. To order click here.

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The ReSource website

Our website is maintained by Ed Morgan, and its use continues to grow steadily. Over the last year we have had about 50,000 visits from nearly 17,000 different people, at a rate of 133 people or 1,325 hits each day. Most of these are from the UK and US - although we are delighted to be visited by small but steady numbers of people from Islamic countries such as the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, Pakistan, and Iran. Over 3,000 people have visited our Lent prayer and poetry pages, which have been the most popular over the last month. And do visit the newly updated Vision page!

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Stop Press: New publications



We continue to produce written resources in response to the needs expressed to us as we travel. ReSource is now a registered publisher, and in January 2008 we are producing two brand new booklets. The first, by Alison Morgan, is entitled ‘The Word of God – what does it mean?’ Alison takes a careful look what we mean by words and how we use them, and then asks whether our human understanding of words limits the way in which we think about the Word and words of God. Alison has long been fascinated by both words and Word, and she is speaking at the Baptist Mainstream Conference in January on this topic.



The second new booklet is by Keith Powell, a ReSource Associate and Renewal Adviser for the diocese of Bath and Wells. Keith writes with passion and experience about the neglected discipline of Fasting. He says: 'As a minister I have found fasting to be an essential part of the Christian's toolbox. For me it is a natural part of my Christian journey, part of the way we are called to walk in, to find rest for our souls. May this book encourage you on the ancient path of prayer and fasting, one that will bless you and bring you closer to your Father in Heaven.'

Both booklets may be ordered from our office or via our publications page.

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Winter 07


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Variety

The work in the last few months has been massively varied, with a whole Diocese (Wakefield) crammed into one week; another Diocese (Leicester) following a more piecemeal approach; a wild bunch of Parish evangelists in Rochester and a more sober group of Local Ministry leaders at a consultation in Swanwick; meetings and discussions in parishes and Deaneries all over the country, lots of renewal weekends led by different ReSource Missioners and Associates, a fine trip for a week of teaching in France; people coming to faith in Jesus Christ, being healed and in some cases delivered and always set free; Quiet Days and retreats, meetings with Bishops and Archdeacons, preachments and all the rest – and that’s not to mention a house-move for the Cavenders somewhere in the midst of it all! It’s been a terrific time, when ReSource seems to have moved into a new gear, and the invitations and responses have been coming thick and fast. We do praise God for what we have been witnessing.

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Wakefield Diocese

One of the great surprises of the last couple of years has been the eagerness with which Dioceses have grasped the vision of ReSource, and invited us to involve ourselves with helping support and encourage their work. Surprising? Well, we make no bones about the fact that we are about renewal for mission in the power of the Holy Spirit and I suppose we expected the less “culturally charismatic” parts of the Church to be a bit wary. Leicester was first out of the blocks, though, with an invitation from Bishop Tim for ReSource to help deliver the “Shaped by God” initiative over the next two years, and a number of other Dioceses are in the offing – and then, thanks to the hard work of Archdeacon Robert Freeman and his wife Chris, came Wakefield.

Martin spent some time in March working with the Rural Deans to shape the work, part of the Diocesan “Transforming Lives” initiative – and then filled a week there in mid-October with a team (pictured right) comprising Alison, Fr David Picken of Anglo-Catholic Renewal and Stephen Dinsmore, the new National Director of SOMA. We worked around the whole Diocese, spending the days with a total of 160 clergy and the evenings with some 800 PCC members, and always offering the concepts of transformation, confidence and renewal for mission.

Again, fitting the offering to the expectations of everyone proved a Herculean task, but the responses and evaluations were massively positive, especially from the PCC evenings which were a buzz of noise and engagement. The opportunity to reflect with others was felt to be vitally helpful, and lots gave great thanks for the serious theological input from Alison, as well as for the practical outworkings offered by David and Stephen. For many of the PCC members it was a brand-new experience, and in many cases here was high excitement and real enthusiasm – and a strong possibility that some of the practical decisions made will be put into action. We had shaped the PCC material in particular to allow for a personal response to Jesus Christ at the end of the evening – and I shall remember for a long time the long queues waiting to be anointed in the name of Jesus, perhaps especially in the Quire of Wakefield Cathedral on the Tuesday. It was a good time. One clergyman said this was “Great content – to the heart of our life as followers of Christ”. A number wanted more time to “ponder and discuss”, and we have noted that – but many agreed with the one who wrote that most helpful was “the time to reflect and focus on my calling as a minister of the Gospel of truth”.


We followed up the week with a happy day at Lepton in late November, where Bishop Gordon Mursell of Stafford, a ReSource supporter,and missioner for the day, brought a wonderful Biblical exposition on the books of Genesis and Exodus to some 55 clergy, and reflection/feedback on the nature of the Church and her ministry at this moment in her life. “Brilliant”, said one participant; and so it was.

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Chelmsford Curates

Alison and Martin had a good time in November with 50 plus Curates in Chelmsford Diocese as part of their CME course, and the responses were excellent – though demonstrating how complex it can be to get things right for everyone. One person said, “Completely focussed, with a very positive and clear programme. Should be in every Diocesan CME and at regular intervals. Sessions could have been a little shorter”. Others said that most helpful were, “Reminder of personal renewal and prayer”, and, “Time for personal Bible study and reflection”. This continuing ministerial education series in which ReSource has been involved in a number of Dioceses over the last 3 years is clearly one of its most effective offerings, right at the heart of ministry and new leadership. One curate said, “One of the most useful CME sessions we’ve had”, while one wrote, “The silent meditation time was BRILLIANT – I need that space!”. Another was more pithy – “It scratched where I itched”. That’s the role of ReSource, to scratch where the Church itches, and bring the challenge to renewal for mission.


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Peterborough Praise 11 November

A hundred people gathered on a cold evening to praise God and open themselves to his work in their lives, through the Holy Spirit. It’s always good in this itinerant ministry to walk into a group who really want to worship and pray together, and among whom there is no need for complicated explanations about the third person of the Trinity – it just felt like a family coming together in mutual affirmation and encouragement. The response was terrific – “excellent, encouraging, inspiring” said one - and the prayer ministry time went happily on and on. I think my favourite evaluation, though, was one which said, “The teaching was theologically almost correct”.  I wonder what it was that I got wrong?

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Rochester Evangelists

“Encountering Jesus, the wild Gospel bringer” was the title of the weekend, and 52 licensed Parish evangelists from at a Retreat House in West Wickham to worship, pray, talk together and learn from God, all under the redoubtable leadership of Canon Jean Kerr and with input from ReSource. We had a great time looking together at the unexpected Jesus and what it meant to be in relationship with him and with one another - and the Prophecy workshop just refused to finish, even reconvening after the weekend had closed!


It was a great time, and the Holy Spirit was at work among his people, from all traditions and shapes and sizes of church, in all his power and grace. One person wrote afterwards that most helpful in the weekend was, “The time to step outside ministry – to draw away to look at the Word and see the new things that God is revealing to me about himself, his character, his mission, his Kingdom and the part he wants me to play in his story”.

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St Jacut

Mid-September saw Martin and Cesca in France, at this beautiful Abbey near Dinard/Dinan in Brittany with some 50 members of the Stewards’ Trust – and the Holy Spirit was there, too. We praise God for the work he was doing among his people during this lovely week, when the sun shone and we walked the lanes and the beaches, among the mussels and the oyster-beds with views forever. Well, someone’s got to do it...



The responses to the ministry were humbling and wonderful. The leader said “Your presence and message was a blessing in so many ways. In your faithfulness to the Lord in word and deed you conveyed the freshness and reality of the Gospel to us all, and I believe none was untouched by the Spirit in some way and at some level". One man wrote, “We have both been challenged and renewed, relished in fellowship and fired up to go out”. Another person said, “Excellent, some new insights, practical, refreshing, fed my spiritual hunger; and emphasis on Jesus as the Word v helpful – deep desire to be reckless” (this a response to Eugene Peterson’s description of faith as “a reckless, adventurous life commitment”).

The Lord was wonderfully at work – bringing some to conversion, others to renewal and freedoms in healing and deliverance from oppressions and more. The worship during the week was led by David Hunt with grace and a sure touch, taking the gathering into wonder, love and praise. It was a good week – summed up neatly by one person who just said that the high point for him had been, “Meeting God afresh, and meeting such lovely people”. Another spoke of, “So many memories – so much laughter”. Thank you, Lord of grace and mercy, and laughter.

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Parish Renewal Weekends

These have rolled happily onwards through the autumn, with the ReSource missioners like Richard Zair, Fred & Ellen Brodie, Alison Morgan and Martin and Cesca Cavender working with diverse churches such as Stanford le Hope St Margaret, Didcot churchplant, Islington St Mary, Flackwell Heath, Dartford St Edmund, Congresbury near Bristol, Walderslade near Chatham and Middleton in Manchester to encourage and support renewal for mission. We have seen the Holy Spirit working in wonderful ways, and unexpectedly.

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Rooted in Jesus: a discipleship course for Africa

In the first week of November Alison Morgan led a SOMA team to Tanzania to meet with the 156 group leaders who have now led their groups through the complete Rooted in Jesus course. It was deeply encouraging to listen to their experiences and observe how they have grown in faith and confidence. An evangelist named Japhet told how a Muslim had come into the church during the group meeting saying that his feet had begun to burn as he walked past, and he didn’t know what they were doing but he wanted to do it too. In one Masai village the elders now pray together over their decisions. Most leaders said people were now reading their Bibles, have stopped worshipping the wrong god, and have developed strong personal prayer lives. Drinking, wife beating, the use of ‘medicines’ on crops, visits to witchdoctors have all stopped – one woman bitten by a snake came to the group for prayer instead (and was healed). Group members pray for the sick (and see healings), and witness to others (who become Christians). One leader said his whole village had changed dramatically; many said that their church is now full. A new generation of leaders has been appointed – including, for the first time, women from both the Gogo and Masai peoples – and the number of groups will now double.



Rooted in Jesus is printed by ReSource – for more details order a sample pack from the Publications page, or visit www.alisonmorgan.co.uk. Written especially for Africa, Rooted in Jesus is introduced at the invitation of the host bishop by a team from SOMA. It’s now in use in 7 countries and has been translated into 13 languages. If your diocesan link is looking for a programme to train ordinary Christians in discipleship, please get in touch!

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Summer 07

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Stop Press!

ReSource Booklet no. 7, 'Who do you say that I am?', is now available. How well do you know Jesus? Is your Jesus a familiar, settled figure, or is he the unpredictable, unexpected Jesus of the Gospels? In this booklet Alison Morgan offers some challenges to our preconceptions, using image, poetry and testimony as well as the gospel stories to get behind some of the assumptions which so often tone down our picture of Jesus. Written to accompany her recent seminar at New Wine, the booklet invites you to renew your relationship with the unexpected Jesus. Buy one for an enquiring friend!

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Thank you!

The response to my Pentecost letter has been magnificent, and the sense of encouragement and affirmation from all around the country has been wonderful. Thank you so much for your part in that. The pile of encouraging letters and donations has been extraordinary, with the total of financial giving so far exceeding £30,000 – way beyond what we had hoped for or dreamed. The Lord truly provides. Thank you. 



The prayer and personal support for ReSource is a solid foundation which is growing and deepening, and the financial and other practical gifts and offerings build on that and allow the ministry to flourish and develop. 

I would love to be able to move on from financial questions, and instead apply all our energies to the work of the Kingdom to which we believe ReSource is called. All the signs are that we are doing that, bit by bit. With your help we have come a very long way in the four years since ReSource was brought to life, and have seen a remarkable engagement with the vision to which we are called. People and churches are coming afresh to faith and life. Alison Morgan and I will be saying a lot more about all this in the Partners’ and Friends’ Days and Evenings which we shall be leading around the country in the next 12 months, which began in Warwick at St Paul’s Parish Church on Saturday 7th July. 

It feels, in fact, as if we have come a long way in just the last three months. The original ReSource picture of the Viking ship with its different crew members remains a good one. The water has been very choppy in the recent bits of the voyage, as if God has been causing or allowing that, so that we get ourselves straight with Him and with one another in a fresh way. The Trustees have done a fine job in keeping their nerve. The team has been wonderful, and most have now chosen to take huge cuts in the way they are paid for their work, often down to nothing. They are giving their time and energy as a gift. All are willing to do this because of our commitment to the vision of ReSource. The ship feels lean and taut for the next stage in its journeying, and is moving eagerly to the wind of the Spirit. 

I don’t go in much for corporate plans, preferring to look to the Spirit for his direction and vision – working then “not with wise and eloquent words, but with a demonstration of the Spirit’s power” (1 Cor 2:4). I do, though, have a dream over the next three years or so of seeing ReSource becoming self-sufficient, and of much more than that – I want to see ReSource working in renewal with every Diocese and Church in the UK, and beyond ; I look forward to a growing network of Beacon churches carrying the principles of renewal for mission in the power of the Spirit ; I can see a bigger team answering the increasing demand with efficiency and grace; ReSource publishing its own resources with proper ISBN numbers; and I can envisage an increased input into national thinking, where we have already had an impact way beyond our tiny size. These are amazing days, and this is a fine adventure – thank you for all your help in making it happen, and thank you for coming so sacrificially and faithfully with us. May God bless and keep you in all your life and ministry.
Martin Cavender


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Rooted in Jesus in Mozambique and Malawi

Alison Morgan led a SOMA team to Mozambique and Malawi in May, to provide further training in the use of ReSource's Rooted in Jesus evangelism and discipleship course. It was our first trip to Malawi; in Mozambique Rooted in Jesus is already used for confirmation preparation and church planting. We were encouraged to hear that in one Yao village an evangelist has helped 22 Muslims to find faith in Christ through Rooted in Jesus (highly unusual in a tribe which converted to Islam en masse when Livingstone began to oppose the slave trade, on which their economy depended).

Rooted in Jesus is now in use in dioceses in 8 countries, and with increasing demand it has been decided that it will become part of the core ministry of SOMA UK, which will enable us to make it available more widely. Please do pray for those using the course, and especially for the diocese of Nord-Kivu in D R Congo, where Simon Brignall will taking a team to introduce it in November. 

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Continuing Ministerial Development in Salisbury diocese

Martin and Alison had a good time with the clergy of Salisbury diocese, leading a day on renewal for mission as part of the diocesan CMD programme by Revd Jane Charman. Seventy people came, and we spent a happy day thinking and praying together. Feedback was very positive: one person wrote afterwards that it was ‘the best CMD day I have ever attended’, another ‘it has opened my eyes and heart’, another ‘so uplifting, inspiring and encouraging!’. We were uplifted, inspired and encouraged too, by a group of people who are so clearly determined to make a difference; and we look forward to engaging with them again in the future.

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Working within the structures

One of the things which differentiates ReSource from most renewal organisations in this country is that we are committed to working within the structures of the Church. We were therefore delighted that in May Alison Morgan was invited both to become a member of the Archbishops’ College of Evangelists, and to take part in the ‘Hard Questions’ series of lectures organised by Fresh Expressions at venues all over the country. Alison spoke on ‘The gift of the Spirit and the shape of the church’. The series will be published as a collection of essays by CHP in time for Lambeth 2008. We are excited by the constant flow of news of fresh expressions of church springing up all over the country, and Steven Croft and his team are much in our prayers.

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Season of Renewal – the ReSource Lent course : ‘a gentle way into the whole concept of renewal’

Although the ReSource Lent course was finally printed rather later than we would have liked, take-up was very good, with orders coming in up to the last minute. Comments included:

Our five Lent Fellowship Groups have all responded enthusiastically to “Season of Renewal”. The music and ‘arty bits’ were movingly effective. It is wonderful to have a course which is “Into God” rather than “About God”.

It went really well. There was something for everyone because of the different teaching styles. It was easy for me to use as well. We are all going to do the spiritual exercises as our ‘doing something for Lent’.

Your Lent course is underway here: four groups meeting. We’re praying that not only will it renew people, but that we’ll see more small groups starting up at the end of it.

The course will be available again through ReSource for next year, and Lion Hudson are hoping to publish it and advertise it more widely for 2009. The course is deliberately designed not only for spiritual depth for renewed churches but also as a thought-provoking work for churches who would not see themselves as “culturally charismatic”. It is also intended to make the crucial linkage between Easter resurrection and Pentecost mission.

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Guildford Prayer Day

“What a blessed day we had at Guildford Cathedral. Your insight/openness to the Holy Spirit was indeed profound ; Keith, John and I had never met but we clicked immediately when we met to prepare and I believe we offered a day of blessing to those who came. The written responses are extremely positive, and anecdotal evidence agrees with those. Personally I was enriched beyond measure by knowing these two ministers of the Gospel ; their ministry on the day was such an encouragement”, wrote Richard King, Diocesan Spirituality Adviser, after this great day which was led for ReSource by the Revd Keith Powell from Exford on Exmoor and Canon John Holbrook from Wimborne Minster. It was a day of plenary input and workshops, prayer and worship, and combination of Keith’s prophetic gift and John’s contemplative pastoralia was wonderfully anointed by the Holy Spirit. More than two hundred were there, and the response was terrific. The Lord was much at work among his people.

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Swiss Cheese

Well, in the words of a friend, “someone’s got to do it”. In June Martin & Cesca travelled to Langenbruck in Switzerland to lead a renewal weekend for the Anglican Church in Basel, led by their Chaplain, Geoff Read. It was intriguing to see the way in which the Lord is working in a congregation which looks across the Dreilander of Switzerland, Germany and France, with people living in scattered communities in all three countries – and themselves drawn both from local roots and from a wide spread of English-speaking others. The title for the weekend was “Food for the Journey”, and we had a fine time!

In the evaluations, we asked about what was best about the weekend. One person said, “It restored relationships, to God, to myself and to the church; and helped to put things into the right priorities”. Another said, “The balance between the Bible and life”, while another suggested it was, “That God moved, and binds us together in love through the Holy Spirit”. One of the marks of our time together was a series of optional gatherings over a cup of coffee or a glass of wine, called ”Going Deeper” – and we did. Loads of people came. There was real vulnerability, and a sense of covenant relationship, sharing at a profound level – and on Saturday evening we moved to an invitation to the Holy Spirit to come and minister to us all corporately. In the words of one evaluation afterwards, “Everything was AWESOME!” - as it should be when people are open to the working of the living God.

Swiss cheese? Well, it seemed to come in a zillion different varieties and with every meal, along with ham – very tasty, and real food for the journey! 

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Regional days

We have had a season of Regional Days on Saturdays scattered through the last few months – in Newcastle in March, Taunton, Bootle and St Matthew’s Walsall in May, Lincoln in June and then Warwick in July. We do wonder whether it might be better occasionally to move from a Saturday to a weekday evening, or a Sunday afternoon. What do you think? Please do let us know, and perhaps suggest venues which you believe might be good, and popular.

The idea has been to worship and pray together, share some of what we are finding on the road, and do some thinking and theology in a group – led variously by Fr Peter Denton, John Woolmer, Alison Morgan and Martin Cavender. The numbers attending have varied between 12 and 50 and the days have each had a different emphasis – from Spiritual warfare and the Healing ministry to the reformation in the Church and Confidence in the Gospel. One evaluation suggested we need to offer some more work on and ministry in the Gifts of the Spirit, and we shall be doing that – but all have been overwhelmingly positive – from Warwick, for example, most helpful was found to be “The sense of worship from the very outset of the day. The small group feel. The space to reflect”; and “ excellent input, clear and inspiring”. We always try to use the local church for these days, and we are very grateful to the local clergy and congregation for that chance.

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Church renewal weekends

The last few months has seen a number of these in various parts of the country – on the Isle of Wight with Sheet St Mary, in Scarborough with Filey, near Sizewell Power Station in Suffolk with Wickham Market, in Trowbridge as a follow-up to some earlier work with Trowbridge St James, and involving various ReSource leaders including Keith Powell, Mark Brown and Martin & Cesca Cavender. It is always a great privilege to be asked to engage with the local church because every local church is always different from every other, and some are more different than others!

What we are finding are constant marks of openness to the Holy Spirit, gracious and humble leadership, great desire to worship God and lift up the name of Jesus and to explore the Bible as God’s Word, real willingness to be vulnerable to one another and to learn together as a family. We always try to include an opportunity to invite the Holy Spirit to come and move upon his people corporately as well as individually, and are always surprised by joy at what he does and what he brings – in one case a moving outbreak of reconciliation among estranged members of the congregation, with tears and laughter.

The invitations for these weekends are regular in our calendar, and we always welcome more. Ask us! We have a particular heart for “the little, the local and the ordinary”, and we believe that that is where God is very obviously at work in building disciples and growing his Church both numerically and spiritually.

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Looking Ahead

ReSource will be joining with New Wine in Shepton Mallet this August, with Martin giving a seminar on ‘The Holy Spirit and mission’ and Alison speaking on ‘A Wild Gospel – encountering Jesus today’. Alison’s new booklet ‘Who do you say that I am? The Unexpected Jesus’ is at the printers, and Martin is working on a Grove booklet on “Growing Healthy Churches”, in the Renewal series. We are looking forward to working with the dioceses of Wakefield and Leicester in the autumn, in each case supporting their core diocesan programme, and we have a number of regional days and parish renewal weekends in the diary, led by our expanding team of Associates and Missioners (for details please see our website). If you think we can help you with your mission and ministry, or just encourage you with stories and concepts we’ve acquired on our travels, please do get in touch!

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Spring 2007

Thinking the Future

One of the things we are trying to do in ReSource is to serve church leaders in their task of discerning how to offer the gospel in a way which is both creative and faithful in the context of a rapidly changing culture. Recently we have had the opportunity to do this in a number of ways. Alison Morgan was invited by Christian Research to speak at their annual Strategic Thinkers Forum on ‘Confidence in the gospel as public truth – contending for faith today’. Her presentation, alongside that of Baptist pastor Steven Hembery, led to a lively and challenging discussion with key leaders from Tear Fund, the Evangelical Alliance, Global Connections, the Bible Society and the new thinktank Theos (if you haven’t yet come across this exciting new initiative, do visit www.theosthinktank.co.uk). This issue of confidence in the gospel is one which we will be looking to develop more in response to the conversations we are having both with local churches and with dioceses.


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Psychic Piglets and Speaking Trees

The new year saw Martin and Alison in Glastonbury, where we had been asked to lead a retreat for the clergy of the Bristol West Deanery. As so often, we came away deeply encouraged by the commitment and determination of this diverse bunch of people working in different ways in different – and not easy - situations. We find in each place that in addition to anything we are able to offer to those we are working with, we ourselves come away refreshed and challenged by the sharing of experience - things which in turn we are able to pass on to others. Comments included ‘a sympathetic challenge, and teaching content which gives us much to work on in the future. Pointing us in the direction of good resources was extremely helpful. The sharing of stories was inspiring!'


But perhaps the thing that most struck me, on this my first visit to Glastonbury, was the visible illustration of G K Chesterton’s comment that ‘when people stop believing in God, they don’t believe in nothing, they believe in anything’. The high street is full of shops with names like ‘The Pyschic Piglet’ and ‘The Speaking Tree’. A faded sign points to the ‘Miracles Room’ hidden at the back of an alley full of buddhas and crystals. Everyone seems to be wearing the same vaguely gothic-cum-rustic clothing - and yet they all look unwell. Middle aged witches coughed and limped their way up the street, travellers sold spiritual-looking bunches of dusty herbs on the pavement, and a solitary busker spluttered down a recorder. A few yards away stood the majestic ruins of one of England’s foremost abbeys. I wonder what God makes of it all?

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Healing in Bideford

Last November John Woolmer, Alison Morgan and Heather Carver set off to Devon, where we had been invited by the Ven Mike Edson to lead a weekend of teaching on the healing ministry for the Bideford group of churches. The weekend was carefully planned by our hosts to include a variety of different events. John spoke at an evangelistic breakfast in a local hotel (with glittering Christmas trees and magnificent food…). We shared our experience of both praying for physical healing and working through prayer ministry for inner healing, and were able to pray with a significant number of people individually as well as offer training for future teams of prayer ministers. One woman testified on the Sunday to immediate healing of a shoulder problem – which as she is a professional flower arranger she was grateful to the Lord for! Others have written to us since. For ourselves, Frances Edson treated us to a most magnificent blow on the beach on the Saturday afternoon, and we left with the pounding of surf echoing in our heads and hearts.

Always we come away from such weekends feeling there was more we didn’t do than stuff we did – but aware also that we are just a small and momentary part of the ongoing ministry of those we serve. We are very grateful to those of you who join with us in continuing to uphold in prayer those with whom we have had the privilege to work, however briefly.

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Mary, "Little Voice" and the coming of the New Year




A good time was had by all at the New Year Celebrations in the Harnhill Christian Healing Centre near Cirencester, where a full house of some 20 people enjoyed a mixed programme of teaching, worship, prayer and space to think and breathe in beautiful surroundings and supported by great hospitality from the in-house team, led by Paul and Bryony Springate. We even had a (very cold) trip to the Cotswold Wildlife Park on New Year’s Day where we enjoyed the penguins blasting around their pool chasing fish (from a bucket), admired the albino rattlesnake and the rhinos, and got shouted at by a hungry bunch of otters. It all happens on a ReSource weekend.  

The spoken input was provided by Martin and Cesca Cavender, and based around Mary and the annunciation. New Year is an odd celebration for Christian believers, coming as it does between Christmas and Epiphany in the calendar; but there was food for thought in Mary’s dealings with the messenger-angel which helped us prepare ourselves for the arrival of 2007. “Do not be afraid”, said the angel; and then, “Nothing is impossible with God”. Mary’s wonderful response, “May it be unto me according to your word” is one for each of us as we step into whatever the new year unfolds for us ; and may we say, with her, “My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my Saviour”.  

It was a great time, with lots of laughter and a real coming together of the group, forming ourselves into a little cell of ministry to one another. One person was healed of a long-standing bondage, and others set free in other ways. One man found it helpful to have “time to be still and think without distraction – to learn again how to concentrate and think conclusively”. Another spoke of “meeting people from different backgrounds, circumstances and life experiences – and learning more about what the Lord is doing among his Church” ; and a clergyman said, “The teaching was excellent, very interesting and helpful. I learned a lot. I thought you were very kind to us in many ways – and am so pleased you gave us a paper resume of your teaching”. One lady said, “I really enjoyed the fellowship, and all the input – even the terrible jokes and the leg-pulling!”

“Little Voice”? Well, one of the most profound parts of the whole time together was the period we spent sharing, with great vulnerability, some of the things which were important to us – perhaps from a painting, or a piece of poetry, or a photograph. One brought a clip from a video of the film “Little Voice”, that extraordinary picture of a reclusive girl who has wonderful talent and learns how to use it for the delight of others, through her own pain and loss. The language is sometimes choice and the redemption hard reached, but it spoke to a number of people about the reality of the world and its needs. Of the whole weekend and the work of the Holy Spirit, one person said, “It has for me been a mystery opening up”. That will do nicely. Thank you, Harnhill.

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Interesting Quote

In one single day in 2005, there was as much trade as during the whole of the year of 1949, as much scientific research as during the whole of 1960, as many telephone calls as during the whole of 1983 and as many emails as during the whole of 1990 (Family Care Charity).

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“A different reality – mission in Word and Spirit”

“Inspiring stories and scriptural insights” were the things one person found most helpful on this day away at Offa House near Leamington Spa for the Greater Chapter of clergy and lay leaders from Buckingham Deanery, led by their Rural Dean, Kevin Ashby, with Martin Cavender of ReSource. Others thought it was “The chance to meet and share ideas and thoughts in an open and non-judgmental way”, which made the sessions “fun and stimulating”. This was a day for exploring the theme of what it means to be involved in mission in Word and Spirit, built around the prayer, “Lord, transform your world; renew your Church; and start with me”. We engaged with the different reality of working in the power of the Holy Spirit, and what that meant to Jesus, beginning with his baptism in the River Jordan. One person found most important the fact that the day “made us focus on ourselves, our own motivations and adequacies”, and especially in the ReSource renewal exercise which is designed to do just that, as we grasp what it means to be members of a missionary church in a needy world. In the end it was a day of “hope, vision, encouragement”, as one person put it, “with good, clear Biblical teaching”. It was also a day filled with lots of laughter, sharp questions and good humour, and a marker for the way in which a Deanery can engage with Gospel mission and the relationship between the individual, the local church and the community.


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ReSource gets a patron!

events !!




Not often do we blow our own trumpet, but here goes: "TAN-TARAA" - we are honoured and delighted to have as our patron The Most Revd & Rt Hon the Lord Archbishop of York - a great moment in our history to be endorsed by John Sentamu; a man who requires no introduction.

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Intrigued? Click here.

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Summer 2006




From A Spark To A Flame (Heinz Beans...)

57 varieties

The last few months may not have had fully 57 varieties, but it has felt like it! "From a Spark to a Flame" was the On Fire Anglo-Catholic Renewal Conference at High Leigh, led by ReSource, with input leading us from blowing on the embers of our faith to the all-consuming fire of mission. It was a great Conference, with lots of Eucharists and Solemn Benedictions, incense and blessings, signs and wonders, and a huge sense of the presence of the Holy Spirit in all his healing power.

It was a shock to move from that to the Proclamation Trust's Men's Conference on the Holy Spirit, with 5000 men worshipping together in the Albert Hall and Dick Lucas one of the speakers - a fascinating shift, and again with a strong and proper emphasis on the authority of scripture. In June we were working with the Methodist Church in Andover, teaching on renewal for mission. Pentecost saw us up in Fortrose, Scotland, preaching on that great Sunday in both the Episcopal Church and the Church of Scotland, and seeing the Holy Spirit come in power upon his people. Then came a retreat at Launde Abbey with Repton Deanery Chapter, led by Alison Morgan and MC. Again, the Spirit made his presence known, this time in unifying a group of clergy and in healing. A work later in the month with Repton Parish showed once more how important in door-opening is the mission audit material, "Growing Healthy Churches", which ReSource has recently reprinted. We do find that it makes the way for longer and deeper work on renewal, and mission in the power of the Spirit.

The Ruth Fazal Conference shared by SOMA and ReSource at Swanwick in June was reported in the last ReSource Magazine. Reverberations from that continue to be felt - only last Sunday I was in a church where the preacher began her sermon on the Book of Jonah by referring to that amazing Prayer Gathering with Ruth. We then went on to the Diocesan Missioners' Conference, which is reported in the next Magazine: and shortly afterwards to run a Lunch for General Synod members at York University, which brought some incisive questioning both about the theology of renewal and about ReSource's work. Interestingly, one of the questions was about confidence in the Gospel and confidence in ministry, which we have also picked up from other parts of the Church. We came away from that lunch with a real sense of encouragement and support from General Synod members.
Preparation works in York, Dringhouses, and in Filey out on the coast were followed by a day in Ulverston with the Diocesan Renewal Group in Cumbria, working together on renewal for a mission-shaped church. David Munby led a Parish Renewal weekend with St Paul's church in Morley, Leeds, and Mark Tanner and MC a similar weekend with our old friends from St Germain's, Edgbaston at Hothorpe Hall.
Meanwhile the fine work begun by John Woolmer with the Prayer Team in Christ the King, Kettering has carried over into fresh invitations for ReSource, with Alison Morgan leading an evening teaching there on "Wounds", and Cesca Cavender planning for a November evening on "Bondages".

The Diocesan Missioners' Conference has given rise to lots of ideas and invitations, including time with Peter Massey and Howard Male in Hereford planning the 2007 Lent Course on renewal for mission, and organising for ReSource to provide support and resources for that. Recently we have had a four-day Parish Renewal weekend with Newbury St Nicolas which was very fruitful - and leaves us feeling that all weekends ought to last for four days! Looking ahead, the diary is filling with work for all the members of the ReSource team - in Parishes and Deaneries, across traditions and denominations, in areas and Dioceses. One new element is the building of a portfolio of work led by different ReSource Associates and Missioners in regional meetings on such things as "Healing and Wholeness", "Leadership in Renewal", "Prayer with Creation", "Confidence in the Gospel", "Renewal for a mission-shaped church" and others.

Please do contact the office for details.

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Experience of an end-user

We work in many different ways in many different contexts, always trying to shape our offering to the local need and expectation. Sometimes, happily, this involves sticking with a church or group for the long haul. Here is one response to that kind of work:

Client confidentiality is generally regarded as a Good Thing, and ReSource is very good at Good Things - but that does mean that we don't often read or hear about the work that ReSource does at parish level, with the "little, local and ordinary" to use that wonderful phrase. Yes, there's no questioning the value of what the team does at an institutional level with dioceses and deaneries, and that must be encouraged, supported and affirmed. Descriptions of this more local area of its work tend however to be missing from the news, or are only included in very general terms. As one of the many "little, local and ordinary" who have benefited enormously from the work of ReSource over the last couple of years I'd like to help fill that gap. I write from the perspective of one who was a lay leader for part of the relevant period, and a very interested observer for the remainder.

Teaching cell leaders

I belong to an evangelical Anglican church in a North London suburb. The last couple of years is a story of the induction of a new vicar who brought with him a new vision and style and new ideas, with the inevitable accompaniment of new tensions and challenges. It is a case study in how ReSource can help a bemused, defensive and (in parts) hurting congregation move forward towards a shared vision and ultimately into renewal. Our situation is unique to us, but the key features of ReSource's involvement are fully transferable into other parish contexts.

It all started when Martin was invited to speak at our Pentecost celebration service in May 2004. In what I now know to be his characteristically gracious but no-messing style he used vocabulary, and threw out challenges based on the Revelation 3 letter to the Laodicean church that were new to many of us, and touched nerves. Renewal for mission in the power of the Holy Spirit - yes, a great idea ; but as a congregation we were suffering from relationship problems, differences in understandings of leadership, and a lack of vision which were causing paralysis. Survival rather than spiritual renewal felt like the priority for most of us.

All of those features began to emerge when Martin came again, a fortnight later, to facilitate the PCC and other leaders in the first stage of a Healthy Churches audit, and became clearer when, a few weeks later, he returned to help us go deeper into some of them. That process continued with his subsequent involvement in a small group meeting of core leaders, where certain specific problems were discussed further and a way forward agreed in principle. More recently he's contributed to a strategy session on spiritual renewal, helping our Vision Group think through what it means in practice to have identified spiritual renewal as our top priority. Throughout this period he's been very generous (and patient!) in making himself available to our Vicar and lay leaders, being variously a shoulder to cry on, a sounding board, a go-between with Archdeacon and Area Bishop and a wise and trusted counsellor.

Two years later it feels as if we have bottomed out. We have still have our difficulties, but we also have an agreed vision, with spiritual renewal as its top priority and a commitment by the PCC to an action plan that will help us in our journey. The Lord has been very good to us, and one of the ways he's shown his goodness is by introducing us to ReSource at a time when we were struggling, disorientated, and in need of a reminder of his love and of the power of the Holy Spirit to overcome every obstacle we were throwing in his way.

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The Commissioning of ReSource at Burford Priory by Archbishop Rowan Williams

18th November 2004

"I welcome ReSource as a refreshing addition to the support for the Church as she moves into growth and renewal. Among other things I am glad to see the emphasis on Scripture and prayer, on proper theology and the prophetic - and the breadth of the approach of this initiative. I believe that the combination of renewal and mission, Word and Spirit are key to the communication of the Christian Gospel in this generation. I see ReSource as one of the many streams of development which are beginning, by God's grace, to flow together at this important time in the life of the Church."

Archbishop Rowan Williams, October 2004

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Felicity Lawson and Martin Cavender with Revd Richard Coombs, Archbishop Rowan Williams, and Abbot Stuart Burns


renewal
Felicity Lawson with Bishop John Finney and Bishop Stephen Cotterill


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A Celebration Eucharist to launch the ministry of ReSource, York Minster. November 30th 2004




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ReSource Events

In addition to the work we do with churches, deaneries and dioceses, we offer various open events to which everyone is welcome. These are organised regionally, and led by experienced facilitators on key topics to do with renewal for mission in the power of the Holy Spirit (do let us know what topics you would like to see covered). We are also planning to hold Partner days for those who support us financially and spiritually - more details soon!


ReSource events 2010

Most of our work is in response to invitations from particular churches or groupings, but some are open to all. These are some of our upcoming engagements. If you would like to pray for these and others, please do contact the office for a copy of our prayer diary. And if you would like to invite us to work with you we would be delighted to hear from you!


We will continue in 2010 with our rolling programme of regional Supporters' evenings and Team days. The Team days are for those who work with ReSource in different parts of the country. Our aim for the Supporters' evenings, which are open to all, is to say a big 'thank you' for your support over the year, and to welcome you and your friends to an evening of news, stories, theological input and worship. Please do contact us by email or phone for more details.


Tuesday June 15th, 7.30 pm - Supporters' evening at Emmanual Church Centre, Loughborough, LE11 3NW

We are planning a one day Rooted in Jesus day conference in December 2010 for all those involved with Rooted in Jesus as team leaders, members, intercessors and supporters. To register or find out more please click here.



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