ETHING SEE SOM ING DO SOMETH
CONNECTIONS
AUTUMN/WINTER 2012
www.occ.org.uk
HING T E M O S E E S ING DO SOMETH
CONTENTS 02-05 Justice, God’s promise to the poor 04 HING SEE SOMET Welcome DO SOMETHING
06 Oaks of righteousness
08 Wantage and Grove Food bank 10 Oxfordshire In Numbers
11 Stepping Stones Foundation Unit 12 Child of Hope & Hope for Justice
Joel Edwards is married to Carol, they have two adult children. He was the director of The Evangelical Alliance for over 10 years. Joel is now the International Director of Micah Challenge - a global coalition of Christians holding governments to account for their promise to halve extreme poverty by 2015.
THE GOSPEL AND THE POOR
A gospel which ignores the shame of the Cross for political advantage has no power to redeem. But a gospel which ignores injustice is a fraudulent gospel. Thankfully the Christian church has made huge steps in recovering the grounds we lost and much of this is due to the prophetic Christian voices from across Asia and Latin America. My own experience of talking about transformation is that where there was once skepticism the Church is becoming conscious of its responsibilities in this regard.
03 JUSTICE, GOD’S PROMISE TO THE POOR Joel Edwards, Micah Challenge www.micahchallenge.org OUR GLOBAL IDENTITY
neighbour is the outsider who is not defined in religious or political terms but in relation to his desperate need. So when floods overwhelm Pakistan they are our neighbour.
FIRSTLY God’s love demands it and the most
FOURTHLY Jesus redefines family. “Who is my brother and sister?” he asked. Anyone who does what God asks of them. These people have become closer than genetic relationships because they share a worldview and relationship which is bound up in God’s purpose on the planet.
The church has no option than to plunge itself in the very centre of global events. And we do so for a number of reasons. basic understanding of the gospel and our history compels us to become involved in the sufferings of our world. And that is the point: it is our world.
SECONDLY God has always been a global
God – the God of all people. This was rooted in the Call to Abraham and carried through the work of the prophets, the promised Messiah. It was reflected in the work of the Church and the Great commission to go into the entire world.
THIRDLY the gospel re-defines neighbour in global context. The story of the Good Samaritan was a direct answer to a question about neighbourhood. In Jesus’ worldview my
FINALLY at a time when the world has shown unprecedented interest in poverty reduction it would be a sad indictment for the Church to become invisible or silent on the subject. Our advocacy and our silent actions should be lights on a hill. And more than anything else our response to the poor offers us an opportunity to become visible sign-posts of God at work in the world.
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PROMISE AND THE POOR
At the dawn of the Millennium a political miracle happened. World leaders met in New York for what was described as an “unprecedented gathering”. The United Millennium Summit gave birth to an idea in which our nations promised to half extreme poverty by 2015. This covenant with our extreme poor came to be known as the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). This was a historic and moral contract to “spare no effort…freeing the entire human race from want.” Not everyone believes that Christians have a responsibility to challenge governments beyond our responsibility to vote. We believe our responsibility is to provide care and support rather than expect anything from government. In any event we believe prayer and activism alone will bring change. Advocacy, we say is for specialist organisations and idealists.
HEADS OF STATE AT THE MILLENIUM SUMMIT ©2000 www.kremlin.ru
But the Bible leaves us in no doubt that prophetic advocacy is central to our gospel. It is the very essence of knowing God. Moses was called to appear before Pharaoh with God’s demand to let the people go free. But we are also called to remind everyone that God takes promises seriously – particularly when they are addressed to matters of injustice.
04 ETHING SEE SOM ING DO SOMETH
SEE SOMETHING DO SOMETHING Oxfordshire Community Churches www.occ.org.uk
Welcome to your new look connections magazine. This will be produced twice a year to keep you connected with what is happening across our family of churches. This issue is all about justice and responding to needs in society. We’ve all seen something in the world and thought “I have to do something!” In this magazine we’ll meet people who have done just that. From people working with refugees to crazy long cycle rides. From addressing inner-
city homelessness to supporting children in Uganda. Enjoy reading the stories of people who have seen something and done something. We’ve also asked those writing articles for you to give a few action points. Once you’ve read an article, you might be left thinking, “Now what what can I do?” Well check out the action points and see if there is perhaps something you can do to make a difference.
GOD MAKES PROMISES NOT PRESS STATEMENTS
Promise is what God is all about. A promise was what God made when Adam fell. It was what he did after the great flood and when he rewarded Abraham’s faith. He promised the coming of the Spirit proclaiming freedom from prison and the Day of our Lord. If God is nothing else he is profoundly a God of promise. The sacredness of promise is one of the last remaining tokens of our likeness to God. His promise motivates us to act and to speak up in the face of adversity but it also allows us to bring an eternal perspective and an element of ‘angry hope’ to the deep problems of our age. As Dr Billy Graham said: “As long as there is one man who should be free, as long as slums and ghettos exist, as long as the color of a man’s skin is his prison, there must be divine discontent.”
ACTION: 1: Start by not shrug ging your shoulders - and get rid of guilt. It rea lly doesn’t help 2: Ask yourself : ‘Wha t do I feel passionate about? Is there an issue wh ich upsets me or mo tivates me to act?’ If there is, google it and pu t the word ’Charity’ next to the subject. You will find someone who can help you do someth ing about what you feel 3: Look around your own community an d try to spot something you want to do som ething about 4: We have an excell ent prayer and advo cacy guide: www.useby2 015.org
www.besom.com www.fairtrade.com www.measureup.org.uk www.micahchalenge.org.uk www.ijm.org
Have a break from facebook, twitter, and your favourite sites and check out some of these instead
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06 OAKS OF RIGHTEOUSNESS
Catherine Gladwell, Refugee Support Network www.refugeesupportnetwork.org Catherine Gladwell is the founder and director of Refugee Suport Network. Catherine was previously a member of Oxfordshire Community Churches where she and her husband Pete led the Area Youth Work. They are now part of Community Church, Harlesdon. Muhibullah, 19, has travelled several hours on dangerous roads to come and meet us in Kabul. He arrives wearing traditional Afghan clothes, looking tired. I hope he won’t be disappointed that we can’t mend his situation. I last saw Muhibullah several years ago in Oxford – he arrived as a 15 year old unaccompanied asylum seeking child, sent to the UK at just 13 by his family, who hoped he would be able to make a better future away from the conflict and poverty of Afghanistan. After his torturous eighteen month journey across land and sea, he arrived in the UK and spent three years in Oxford, learning English at Oxford Community School and Oxford and Cherwell Valley College. He made friends, and adapted to UK culture in many ways. Like the majority of unaccompanied minors who arrive in the UK, Muhibullah was
given special leave to stay until he reached the age of 18. At 18, he was told that he would not be granted further leave to remain, and would be forcibly returned to Afghanistan. As we sat in Kabul drinking sugary tea and eating cold chips, he shared with us his experiences since being returned to Afghanistan a year ago. Unable to trace his family, and rejected as an outsider by his community, Muhibullah, a proud, Pashtun young man, struggled to hold back his tears as he spoke of his fear and hopelessness. When we started Refugee Support Network (RSN) in Harlesden three years ago, I never imagined that we were starting a journey that would lead us to Kabul. We started RSN to provide hope and education support to young people affected by displacement or crisis. We were, and are, convinced that for young people who have been through trauma, persecution or exploitation, education speaks of hope for a future, a future that is worth investing in. Since then we have established educational mentoring schemes for unaccompanied minors
and girls who have been trafficked to the UK. We also provide support and advice, and run a programme helping these young people to access higher education. Alongside our work with individuals, we carry out research and engage with policy makers, helping the young people we work with to have a voice in the policy decisions that affect their lives. Over the last year, we have worked with more than 180 young people, and one common thread runs through all of their stories: injustice. Whether persecuted for their faith in Eritrea, trafficked for sexual exploitation from Nigeria, or fleeing conflict and poverty in Afghanistan, in each case power has been abused to take from these young people that which God had given them – their life, family, dignity, freedom or hope. The strong have preyed on the vulnerable, and used them to their own ends. In the Old Testament, the word for justice, ‘mishpat’, is used over 200 times, and is repeatedly linked to our treatment of widows, orphans, immigrants and the poor. The ‘mishpat’ of a society is evaluated by how it treats these groups: God defends those with least economic and social power, and so should we. As Muhibullah prepares to leave before the increasing darkness makes it too risky to travel, I find I’m now the one holding back tears. It seems to me that he has been the powerless one from start to finish – from his parent’s decision to send him to the West, the people smuggler’s decision to exploit and abuse him on his journey, the UK’s decision to send him back, and now his society’s decision to reject him as an outsider. Faces of other Afghan boys I know who have
been sent back to Kabul flick through my mind – one kidnapped and held for ransom because it was thought he must have money, others beaten violently because they had become too ‘westernised’, still more isolated , suffering severe depression and self-harming. As we return home from Kabul, we launch a new RSN programme, ‘Youth on the Move’, which will support young people like Muhibullah who spend formative years in the UK as children, but are then forcibly returned to their country of origin. We hope to engage holistically with the forced migration of children and young people, understanding why they had to leave, and what might help them if they are forced to return. We believe that there is hope for Afghanistan, and our prayer is that the young Afghans we work with would become ‘oaks of righteousness’ – strong young people, imbued with determination, integrity and hope – wherever they are. We can’t do any of this on our own, and would love to have you partner with us, both as we move forward with ‘Youth on the Move’, and as we continue our existing programmes for unaccompanied minors and trafficked girls.
ACTION: 1: The first way you can get involved is by praying for our work, and the young people whose lives we are privileged to sha re. 2: Those of you with time on your hands and the ability to travel to Lo ndon may want to volunteer. 3: Others of you ma y be in a position to partner with us financially – at the moment we are asking people to give just a few pounds a mo nth to help us get ‘Youth on the Mo ve’ off the ground. 4: More details abou t how to volunteer or give can be found at www.r efugeesupportnetw ork.org or email cgladwell@ref ugeesupportnetwork .org
About 21/2 years ago Didcot Foodbank contacted Wantage Community Church to ask if they could put together a food parcel for a man in Wantage as it was a bit outside their area. They duly did so, and began to think about a foodbank in Wantage. I offered to help, and a group of us started to discuss how we might go about it. We had several meetings, sent out letters to schools, social services, and anyone we thought might be remotely interested. We only received two replies to our letters and would probably still be procrastinating if it wasn’t for the local Children’s Centre phoning us up about a client in need of food.
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WANTAGE & GROVE FOODBANK Helen Margetts, Wantage
660 tins of beans
EQUIP: A JOURNEY
Lauren Horswell, Lifehouse Community Church www.equipoxford.org In 2008 Stuart Waddington and I took part in a workshop focussed on creative solutions for problems in our community. Stuart’s group dreamt up an employment agency for those on the margins of society. This initial idea became the seed of Equip. In March 2011 we started working towards setting up small businesses to provide the long term unemployed with real experience of work. When they start each business will have a team of workers who’ll receive on-the-job mentoring, life skills training and the opportunity to explore Christianity. We ACTION: aim to prepare people for work in the open market, further 1: Pray: receive email updates training or even starting their 2: Buy a share in Eq own business. Our plan is to uip: Equip is a registe red Community Interest Company (CIC). Share launch our first business in the s will be affordable an d work in a similar wa new year and to grow more y to cooperative shares businesses over time. 3:Scan the QR code or visit
www.equipoxford.
org
That was two years ago, we have now delivered 211 food parcels and 43 Christmas parcels. We are not as busy as Didcot or Swindon, but there is obviously a need. Most requests come from people who are waiting for benefits (because of job loss, ill health, etc.), or have had a change in circumstances – both of which can mean waiting up to 8 weeks to get any money. The Foodbank is run entirely by volunteers from several different churches and collect food from churches, school harvest festivals and collections at supermarkets. We have also had donations of
money – very useful when you run out of food! All the food is logged in, dated and shelved in our store at Wantage Civic Hall. We get referrals from various agencies – the Independent Advice Centre in Wantage, the Children’s Centre, Churches, Social Services, Health professionals, etc., and our helpers put together a parcel and deliver it. Before we began I wondered how we would get enough food, but God has gone before us all the way, and whenever we seem to be accumulating a lot , there’s a need just round the corner. I have to remember it’s God’s Foodbank, not mine!
ACTION:
0 887 211 tins of soup
1: Pray that we reach the people who ne ed help, and for more storag e 2: Donate food to yo ur local foodbank 3: Ask if your local foo dbank needs volun teers. If you don’t have on e – start one!
deliveries made
EDGE HOUSING
Lauren Horswell www.occ.org.uk/edge-missional-community Edge is a Missional Community within the Oxford Church which connects with vulnerable and homeless people. For the past few years we have run City Lunch, a monthly Sunday meal with a focus on building relationships. More recently Edge has taken on the two houses which were used to accommodate King’s Theological College students. The houses are now home for individuals coming out of prison and who have been homeless. The project, Edge Housing, is being run in partnership with St Aldates’ Prison Ministry and ACT! mentoring scheme. It’s been exciting to see the houses get up and running so quickly and we are looking forward to Equip providing tenants with potential employment opportunities.
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ACTION: 1: Pray: receive email
updates 2: Apply to become an Edge Housing Me ntor: mentors meet & kee p in touch weekly wi th tenants. We’re lookin g for male mentors 3: Donate clothing or Cook for City Lunc h: Edge is supported by oth er groups & individ uals who occasionally co ok lunch. We’re in ne ed of clothing, especially menswear. Donatio ns can be brought to the ne xt area celebration. 4: To register intere st in any of the abov e scan the QR code or visit www.oxford.occ.or g.uk/ edge-missional-com munity
15 years
E RE SID HIR RDS
CHILDREN LIVING IN POVERTY IN OXFORDSHIRE B
ENT S
PEOPLE LIVE IN OXFORDSHIRE HALF LIVE IN COMMUNITIES OF LESS THAN 10,000 B
OF O XFO
14,500 12%
10
THE DIFFERENCE IN LIFE EXPECTANCY BETWEEN THE POOREST AND WEALTHIEST PARTS OF OXFORDSHIRE B
PROJECTED POPULATION INCREASE 2006-2026 60% INCREASE IN NUMBER OF RESIDENTS AGED 75+ C
OXFORDSHIRE IN NUMBERS
The statistics on this page will help you get a feel for our county. As you pray about the people that these numbers represent take some time to consider the areas of need in your community? What do you see? What could you do?
NUMBER OF PEOPLE REGISTERING FOR A NATIONAL INSURANCE NUMBER 20022010 (THE SIZE OF THE WORD REPRESENT THE NUMBER OF PEOPLE) A A = OXFORDSHIRE DATA OBSERVATORY BRIEFING NOTE 2011, REVISED 2012 B = WWW. AUDIT-COMMISSION.GOV.UK C = WWW.OXFORDSHIREPARTNERSHIP.ORG.UK D = CREDIT ACTION - NATIONAL STATISTIACS
RES
IDE N
TS
BORN OUTSIDE UK A
EVERY 10 MINUTES A PROPERTY IS REPOSSESSED IN THE UK D
£165,000,000 INTEREST PAID ON PERSONAL DEBT IN THE UK EVERY MONTH D
STEPPING STONES
A LAUNCH PAD FOR LIFE 20 YEARS!!!
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What started out as one parents search for suitable provision for her pre-school children fuelled a vision for the establishment of a Christ centred setting which was open to both church and non church children. It is from this pioneering heart that we have the Stepping Stones Foundation Unit which we know and love today.
Stepping Stones opened with 11 children from across the county in November 1992 . The initial teachers were Anne Brooks & Jackie Pizzey with Pauline Mason as treasurer. The setting was a single room (plus storage) with very limited outdoor playing area for the children – it was the path to the backdoor! In 2009, Stepping Stones grew to include provision for the whole Foundation stage (including the first school year formerly known as Reception) with Anne Brooks returning to the staff as Manager and now benefits from purpose built premises which are appreciated by staff and pupils alike and which has received praise other providers who visit the setting. Since 2009, the West Regional Team has been responsible for overseeing Stepping Stones and we look forward to seeing this rich tradition continue and hope many people within the Region will get involved too!
+ 3000
UM ASYL IN ERS SEEK SHIRE ORD ROM OXF F 0 ND 5 U O R A ONS NATI RE: 6A TOP N THE ANISTA H G A IR Q AF IRAN GO CON D.R. MALIA A SO AN D U S
Stepping Stones is truly a “Launch Pad for Life” providing children with the best possible start. With its key three aims of helping the children Getting to know God, Loving Other People & Growing up in God’s World, the staff at Stepping Stones provide the environment to see each young person develop at their own pace.
ONE IN THIRTY THREE PEOPLE CURRENTLY IN WORK IN THE UK ARE ESTIMATED TO BECOME UNEMPLOYED THIS YEAR D
Why not arrange a visit and come and see for yourself and join in with the adventure over the next 20 years. If you would like visit the Foundation Unit or find out more please contact Anna Biddlecombe at steppingstones@occ.org.uk
12 A LITTLE GIVEN GOES A LONG WAY
Charlotte Sellers, Leys Community Church www.childofhopeuganda.org
I have been personally challenged in the area of justice over the last few years. The Lord requires of us to act justly, to love mercy and to walk humbly with our God. (Micah 6:8) In Amos, we are also reminded of the importance of justice and righteousness, along with our worship. I believe that our relationship with God and our faith in Him requires and compels us to take action in a practical way in our lives to promote justice. The extreme poverty and perverse injustice that we see in the world around us today is overwhelming and it can be difficult to engage with – the size of the problem is mindblowing! I feel totally inadequate in this area and definitely do not have all the answers! However, I know that these issues break God’s heart and I pray that we would also have our hearts broken, to love as God has first loved us
and that we would stand up for those who do not have a voice. My passion for justice has led me to support two different organisations working in two areas very close to my heart. According to UNICEF, 22,000 children die each day due to poverty and during my elective in Uganda I met some of the poorest children in the world. Namatala district in Mbale is the biggest slum in one of the poorer regions in one of the poorest countries on earth. 30% of the people in Namatala have less than one meal a day and 63% earn less than 2000 Ugandan Shillings per day (about 70 pence).
CHILD OF HOPE
offers safety, hope, love, education, protection and inner healing to children in Namatala who have lost their homes, been sexually abused, orphaned due to AIDS/HIV and those living in
abject poverty. They provide free education, healthcare, food, clothing, social care and counselling to 280 pupils from the poorest and most vulnerable families in the slum. They also carry out regular home visits on all the children and provide business training to their parents, provide business start-up grants and mentoring and run a savings scheme. They also provide the children at the school with formal spiritual nourishment. In short, they completely change the current and future life of a child. It is an organization ran by Moses and Bex Okotel, who are passionate and committed Christians and have God’s heart for these children. Sponsoring children through Child of Hope is one of the most rewarding and humbling things I have ever done. I know that their lives are truly different and they have hope for their future that they would otherwise not have had. The 7-11 year old Sunday School group from OCC have also ran cake sales to raise money to sponsor a girl called Agnes. Myself and my husband had the incredible privilege of going back to Uganda to meet Agnes and spend some time with her.
ACTION: 1: For more information visit out www.childofhopeuganda.org and find an about how you can provide a child with a month. opportunity for life for only 10 pounds
HOPE FOR JUSTICE
an investigation into the exploitation of 24 girls aged between 11 and 16. They were arrested on suspicion of prostitution of females under the age of 18, trafficking, grooming and rape. This is a very real problem that goes on in our own country and in our own town. 99% of trafficked victims are never rescued. Hope for Justice is an anti human trafficking organization working to uncover and abolish the hidden crime of modern-slavery. It was created to be a God-inspired, practical solution to human trafficking by: • investigating and bringing about the rescue of victims from the abuse of human trafficking • assisting in the protection and rehabilitation of victims • ensuring perpetrators are held responsible for their crimes via prosecution • campaigning to ensure the laws on human trafficking work effectively to combat the problem It was created when a small group of people decided to turn their passion against injustice into action. Last year they were able to free 78 people ranging from the ages of 4 months to 59 years. The CEO Ben Cooley along with Emmerdale actor, Tom Lister, are planning the Zoe Challenge next year – cycling from Latvia to Southampton, the route that one of the first girls they rescued was trafficked through. Why not find out more, support those standing on the front line, lift them up in prayer and let the Holy Spirit prompt and provoke us all into action. “I tell you the truth, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me.” Matthew 25:40.
Another charity I support is Hope for Justice, who are making a real difference in human trafficking in the UK and beyond. 1.2 million children are trafficked every year (2 every minute). The average age of a trafficking victim is just 14 years. The UN estimate that 80% of the people trafficked are taken for sexual exploitation. ACTION: In March 2012, thirteen men were arrested in Oxford by police following
1: There are many ideas of how to support their work and get involved at www.hopeforjustice.org.uk.
RADICAL DISCIPLES GOING DEEPER BREAKING THROUGH Our theme for 2013 is: Radical Disciples ... Breaking Through. As we consider our progress towards 2020vision we have realised as a team that we need to transform our culture to be radical missional disciples who are used to and expectant for revival culture – we’re not just talking about revival as in the meeting being good – our hope is to see the re-evangelisation of the UK. For that to happen we need God to impact us and transform us to see breakthrough: Breakthrough in the supernatural, in society, in our communities, in our families.
YOU SAVEKIFBY 26 BOO NDAY MO EMBER NOV
MONSTER TURKEY 7.30 22 DECEMBER NEW THIS YEAR BUCKING REINDEER
www.occ.org.uk/youth
SATURDAY 27 - WEDNESDAY 31 JULY LENCHWOOD, EVESHAM WWW.SALTLIGHT.ORG/TRANSFORM13 Jackie Pullinger is confirmed as a speaker at Transform 2013. We are excited to hear from this fantastic missional woman of God! Jackie moved to Hong Kong in 1966 with no missionary support or plan for what she should do! Her work took her to the darkest place in Hong Kong where she began a work among the youth and children. Today the St Stephen’s Society is the new name for the work and it continues to express God’s family amonst the least, the last and the lost.
15 EVENTS
what’s on www.occ.org.uk/events
SOUTH REGION
ABINGDON COMMUNITY CHURCH Ed & Kate Evans 01235 521622 ede@occ.org.uk THE KING’S CHURCH DIDCOT Robin & Lisa Howard 01235 848422 robinh@occ.org.uk HENLEY BAPTIST CHURCH Roger & Di Cole 01491 576883 rogerc@dtwo.co.uk SWINDON COMMUNITY CHURCH John & Gail reeve 01793 870916 johnreeveuk@hotmail.com WANTAGE COMMUNITY CHURCH Neil & Denise Townsend 01235 771152 neilt@occ.org.uk
CENTRE REGION
PATHWAYS CHURCH, BANBURY Barrie & Mary Wood 01295 279268 barriew@occ.org.uk BICESTER COMMUNITY CHURCH Steve & Tammi Beegoo 01869 240651 steveb@occ.org.uk THE LEYS COMMUNITY CHURCH Chipper & Anna Betts 07985 982804 chipperb@occ.org.uk LIFEHOUSE COMMUNITY CHURCH, KIDDLINGTON Mark & Katherine Eley 01865 848659 markeley84@gmail.com OXFORD COMMUNITY CHURCH Steve & Beverley Jones 01865 402141 stevej@occ.org.uk OXFORD CHURCH OFFICE 01865 297420 oxford@occ.org.uk
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COMMUNITY CHURCH, THAME Kevin & Debbie Bowers 01844 260319 kevinb@occ.org.uk CENTRE REGION ADMINISTRATOR Andrew Clark 01865 297400 andrewc@occ.org.uk WEST REGION
CARTERTON COMMUNITY CHURCH Matt & Anna Biddlecombe 01993 846510 mattb@occ.org.uk CHIPPING NORTON COMMUNITY CHURCH Paul & Lottie Meathrel 01608 646127 paulm@occ.org.uk COTE BAPTIST CHURCH Richard & Rachel Bloomfield 01993 850134 richb@occ.org.uk COMMUNITY CHURCH, MORETON-IN-MARSH Dan & Kirsten Campsell 01608 812445 danc@occ.org.uk NORTH WITNEY COMMUNITY CHURCH Gary & Jackie Pizzey 01993 702615 garyp@occ.org.uk WEST WITNEY COMMUNITY CHURCH Jason & Jennifer Huffadine 01993 702979 jasonh@occ.org.uk WYCHWOOD HOUSE CHURCHES Tony and Charlotte Osborn 01993 878169 tony_osborn99@yahoo.co.uk WEST REGION ADMINISTRATOR John Gridley 01865 297400 johng@occ.org.uk
APOSTOLIC MINISTRY TEAM
DETAILS OCC.ORG.UK
Steve & Lorraine Thomas 01993 850990 stevet@occ.org.uk Mike & Liz Beaumont mikeb@occ.org.uk Roger & Di Cole 01491 576883 rogerc@dtwo.co.uk Bryn & Dorothy Franklin brynf@occ.org.uk David & Rosie Freeman davidf@occ.org.uk Cedric & Audrey Hobbs cedrich@occ.org.uk Geoff & Mary Norridge 01993 772375 geoffn@occ.org.uk
OTHERS
CONTACT
THE KING’S CENTRE Osney Mead, Oxford, OX2 0ES 01865 297400 office@occ.org.uk THE KING’S SCHOOL, WITNEY 01993 778463 www.occ.org.uk/tks STEPPING STONES FOUNDATION UNIT www.occ.org.uk/steppingstones THE KING’S PRESCHOOL, BICESTER www.occ.org.uk/bicester