God’s Kaleidoscope…
THE colourful theme for Candidates Sunday this year got me thinking about what was for me, as I am sure for many, a favourite children’s toy – a kaleidoscope!
This creative invention enables the user to form all kinds of beautiful, seemingly random patterns simply by holding it to the light and turning. Of course, the kaleidoscope patterns are limited to the colours placed within it, yet the colours and patterns that God can create in our lives and in his world are endless. God’s world is colourful and vibrant, and we are each called to see them and bring them to the attention of others.
In this week’s issue we explore the ways in which God is calling people to spiritual ministry. How, in turning to the light, they have enabled God, through his Holy Spirit, to shine through them in their own unique colourful pattern so that they can be the light for him, where they are, and wherever he might send them.
The possibilities are endless. There is no standard pattern, just one source of resplendent light! How will he shine through you?
MAJOR JULIAN WATCHORN EDITOR
CRAFTED IN GOD’S TIME AND WAYS
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Issue No 1908
EDITOR Major Julian Watchorn
MANAGING EDITOR Ivan Radford
EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS Simon Hope, George Tanton, Lyn Woods, Major Margaret Bovey
ART DIRECTOR Hannah Holden
GRAPHIC DESIGNERS Mark Knight, Louise Phillips
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SCRIPTURE QUOTATIONS
From the New International Version (2011), unless otherwise stated
FOUNDER William Booth
GENERAL Brian Peddle
TERRITORIAL COMMANDER
Commissioner Anthony Cotterill
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Major Julian Watchorn
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The Salvation Army is a Christian church and registered charity. The charity number in England, Wales and Northern Ireland is 214779, in Scotland is SC009359 and in the Republic of Ireland is CHY6399. Published
Small acts, big difference
THIS Coronation weekend concludes on Monday 8 May with the Big Help Out, which encourages people across the country to sign up to volunteer in their communities. A recent Community Life Survey showed that, since 2014, there has been an 11 percentage point drop in the number of people volunteering on a regular (once per week) basis. With such a significant decrease in the number of people giving their time to regular volunteering roles, the Big Help Out is a timely opportunity to raise the profile of volunteering.
In 1 Peter 4:10 and 11, we are reminded: ‘God has given each of you a gift from his great variety of spiritual gifts. Use them well to serve one another. Do you have the gift of speaking? Then speak as though God himself were speaking through you. Do you have the gift of helping others? Do it with all the strength and energy that God supplies. Then everything you do will bring glory to God through Jesus Christ’ (New Living Translation).
By serving others and giving freely of our time and talents, we are doing our missional service to God, and we will reach out to help, often without the necessity of a formally described volunteering role.
The act of volunteering is not only important, but also key to the growth of The Salvation Army. By engaging people
with our community programmes, we are in a position to welcome them into other aspects of corps life. For example, young people today are socially active, but often sceptical of religion. By reaching people who are willing to engage with the Army’s charitable work, we can build and enhance our communities, adding richness to corps life. The Army has limited opportunities and resources to promote itself to others, which is why public focus on volunteering through high-profile events such as the Big Help Out is so welcome.
That said, we can’t ignore the notinsignificant challenges that volunteerinvolving organisations now face –competition from more than 180,000 other voluntary organisations, people demanding more from their time, the cost-of-living crisis forcing more people to spend more of their time working, to name but a few.
One of the many ideas coming from the Big Help Out is running taster sessions, so that people who are thinking about volunteering can find out more. Taster sessions provide a person with a valuable insight into volunteering without having to go through what can sometimes seem like a daunting process of checks before they even set foot in a role. It can also help them understand what a difference they can make.
Philippians 2:4 says: ‘Don’t be concerned only about your own
REFLECT AND RESPOND
When you help others, do you feel that you have been the one who is most blessed by serving?
Read Colossians 3:23 and 24. What verses motivate you in volunteering and serving those in your community?
Visit salvationarmy.org.uk/ volunteer to find out about opportunities to volunteer and support the Army’s work to transform communities in need.
interests, but also be concerned about the interests of others’ (God’s Word Translation). If we can help potential volunteers see that a small action can make a big difference, then we can succeed.
WENDY WASELS Volunteer Development Manager Community ServicesContinuing a series of topical reflections, Wendy Wasels encourages us to reach out through the Big Help Out
EXPLAINED
applicant
AN applicant is a soldier who is applying for Salvation Army officership or territorial envoyship. This involves an in-depth process of interest, application, development and assessment. Development plans are unique and specific to each individual.
candidate
ONCE an applicant for officership has passed the application stage, completed an assessment conference and been accepted for training by the Territorial Candidates Council, they become a candidate.
cadet /
UPON beginning formal officer training, a candidate becomes a cadet. Across the globe there are 941 people registered as Salvation Army cadets. In the UKI Territory, cadets study the Diploma of Higher Education in Salvation Army Officer Training, which is validated by the University of Gloucestershire. The majority of cadets study this at William Booth College in London in a two-year residential training course, but it is also possible for cadets to study this as distance learners.
come back to God’
Territorial Envoy Ali James (Great Yarmouth) shares how she followed her calling
IT’S all Paul O’Grady’s fault that I’m now a territorial envoy – although God had a part to play in it too, I’m sure! His 2016 series Paul O’Grady: The Sally Army and Me ran for six episodes and we were hooked. It affected me deeply.
I’d grown up in an Anglican vicarage and was part of Dad’s church until I was 13, but horses and science drew me away. Science, I felt, had all the answers and I stayed away from church until I was 29.
We were living on the stud farm where my hubby, Ray, worked and one day there was a fatal accident. My response was to take our two boys to church, not for myself – I didn’t need God – but for them. I spent the next six months in tears at the words of the songs. I’d come back to God.
We settled into a lovely, lively, caring independent church, and we thought it would be our forever home. Alongside
our pastor, I was very involved with setting up and running the town food bank. This I did for 11 years. It was my voluntary work while my main job was in academic publishing.
I love seeing the changes Jesus
makes in my life, the lives of others and the Church. I was an avid member of the local Churches Together group, and through this the Salvation Army officer and I decided to do a Bible study together.
One evening she asked me if I’d ever considered ministry. It felt as if a huge pebble plunged down inside me – fear and excitement in equal measure! I knew I was being called to be a minister in The Salvation Army. We talked for ages, and I came away with a biography of the Booths under my arm – reading it blew me away. Driving home I knew life would never be the same again, although I was dreading telling Ray.
I woke him as I went into the sitting room. ‘Ray, we need to talk. I think I’m being called to be a minister in The Salvation Army…’
Could Salvation Army leadership be right for you?
Speak
He sat up pointing at me and said: ‘I told you that when we watched those programmes all those years ago!’
programmes all those years ago!’
I am so glad we took that leap of faith. I am now in my first appointment as a
I of faith. I am now in my first as a territorial envoy, leading the corps in Great Yarmouth, and we’re loving it!
‘I’d
The university of humanity
George Tanton investigates the Army’s early days of officer training
OFFICIALLY opened on 8 July 1929 by His Royal Highness
Prince George, the William Booth Memorial Training College in Denmark Hill was the physical realisation of the Founder’s desire for a ‘world-helping university of humanity’.
The 1930 year book reported that the college was ‘constructed entirely in modern style’ and provided comfortable lodgings and included a library ‘every book-lover dreams of possessing’ and even ‘Russian and Turkish Baths’. As well as learning from Scripture, provision was made so that cadets received a wellrounded education with modules in theology, history, geography, languages and science.
However, the training of cadets was somewhat different from today’s training at William Booth College. In 1907’s The Romance of The Salvation Army, Hulda Friederichs wrote: ‘Sandhurst is but a playground where a pretty game is light-heartedly played, as compared to the discipline awaiting the young Salvation Army recruits when they go to Clapton.’
The training of officers began in 1880 with the opening of a home for 30 women at Hackney, followed by a similar home for men. One of the first training colleges was Clapton Congress Hall, which had been acquired in 1882. Early officer training initially took four to six months, much of which involved practical experience among those most destitute in society.
In 1888, the first commissioner of The Salvation Army, George Scott Railton, expressed in The Nottingham Daily Express that the Army would not survive if its officers were not ‘thoroughly conscious of the perfect sympathy and fellowship which makes all from the General to the cadet share each other’s difficulties and comforts’.
Indeed, training at the turn of the 20th century was not for the faint-hearted. General Bramwell Booth asserted that those considering officership should ‘leave the life of ease and moneymaking, and the struggle to get up in this world, which is bound to go down at last, and come for Jesus Christ’s sake’.
Cadets were thrust to the front line of the Army’s war against sin and injustice; the public houses, gambling dens, workhouses and slums of Victorian Britain’s industrial metropolises made for demanding training arenas.
‘They learn by experience,’ wrote Catherine Booth in 1884, ‘when smitten on one cheek, to turn the other, and how to respond to blasphemy, spitting, and often cruel buffetings by blessing those who curse them, and praying for those who despitefully use them.’
Before being taken into training, cadets pursued preliminary studies. Departure from the institution was followed by 12 months’ probationary service, during which the budding officers were required to undertake
a further series of lessons, which had to be successfully completed before they were fully commissioned.
What type of people were required to become officers of The Salvation Army? General Bramwell Booth wrote in the 1914 year book that he wanted people who were ‘educated and uneducated – gentle and refined as well as rough and untutored –those who have a bit of money and those who have none – the classes as well as the masses – all are called for this great enterprise of flooding the whole Earth with the Water of Life’.
Today, cadets continue to pledge themselves to a life of God-led service. To quote General Bramwell’s call to arms, the Army still needs people of ‘every kind of nature, every type of character [and] every sort of experience’.
TANTON Editorial Assistant SalvationistHear my voice
PSALM 119:145–160
OUR study passage is taken from the longest chapter in the whole Bible. Still, I would recommend starting this study by reading the entire psalm. Also, read it slowly. Notice what is on the heart of the psalmist. Hear his voice. Pause and think. Listen to your own heart and, as the psalm draws you in, recognise your own responses.
PAUSE AND REFLECT
To what extent does reading the Bible attract you?
How do you feed your soul from it?
The Psalms are poetic writings. They have rhymes of thought rather than of words. Psalm 119 is a special work of art, where the text is divided into sections, each starting with a letter of the Hebrew alphabet. These verses are songs of prayer and praise. They express the language of the soul, which is richer than words. Therefore, they have a timeless attraction for God’s people.
In my initial encounter with this text, I interpreted it as an expression of despair – ‘hear my voice’ (v149), ‘look on my suffering and deliver me’ (v153), ‘many are the foes who persecute me’ (v157). By reading the whole hymn, however, I understand its unknown author better. I realise that his theme is not hopelessness, but unwavering trust in the Lord.
By reminding himself about God’s protective law, his covenantal promises
and his faithful ways with his people, the psalmist sustains his faith. His way of approaching God is not escapism from the raw reality of life. His enemies are real, and their threats against God’s people are dreadful. Yet he is convinced that God has not forgotten to be God and states: ‘I have put my hope in your word’ (v147), ‘you are near, Lord’ (v151), ‘all your words are true; all your righteous laws are eternal’ (v160).
PAUSE AND REFLECT
How might you identify with these prayers?
What informs your prayers?
When praying for help, the psalmist presents himself as a true and faithful worshipper of God: ‘I have not forgotten your Law’ (v153). He promises to keep the Lord’s statutes (v146). He also has a word to say about those who don’t: ‘Salvation is far from the wicked, for they do not seek out your decrees’ (v155). This looks like bargaining with God. Is the psalmist praying only to achieve his selfprotective favours with the Lord? In fairness, don’t we all pray and worship with mixed motives? We all tend to use prayer as a means to an end. God must be hearing a lot of voices that are out of harmony with his own.
Also, the psalmist sees answers to prayers as conditional and selective. He believes that God will remain faithful to his word and act according to his laws and not to human premises. That view may clash with our understanding of God
as one who would embrace all humankind in his mercy. We have an expectation of our Father in Heaven to be compassionately attentive to all the voices that cry out their human desperation, don’t we?
We are not God, and he doesn’t need our advice presented as prayers. We can simply trust him to deal with the desperate cries from those who know him, and those who don’t, because there is salvation in calling on his name. In his letter to the Romans, Paul writes: ‘The same Lord is Lord of all and richly blesses all who call on him, for: “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved”’ (10:12 and 13). Can we think of a better condition for reaching God than this?
PAUSE AND REFLECT
How has God answered your anxious prayers?
What else might the Lord want to do for you?
Prayer to God is so much more than a means to an end. For the psalmist it is not about any better outcome than knowing God. His praying is relational. He knows his Lord, and the Lord knows him and so the communication between them can flow freely. God has more to do in the life of the psalmist, and the psalmist longs to worship the Lord for ever. Prayer is the catalyst.
Psalm 119 lifts prayer and praises to a level where deep satisfaction in God becomes a reality. Rather than turning
Major Liv Raegevik-Slinn encourages us to have unwavering trust in the Lord
away from God’s statutes, the psalmist testifies to the fact that he is being drawn towards them. He bursts into praises over them. He discovers the blessing of obedient response. His faith matures by it, so he can hold on to God’s promises.
The psalmist might teach us a lesson here that would be about seeking to go deeper into God’s word. A Bible verse on an app might be fine on a good day, but not sufficient to sustain us in the long run. Like the psalmist, we too need to be assured of our salvation in the Lord. It is only those who live by God’s word who can give glad and confident witness about their Lord and Saviour.
If the psalmist faced enemies in his days, God’s people today will certainly also face their tribulations. The psalmist shows us that our best hopes are in God himself. To know the Lord means to love and obey his commandments and be confident in his care. So, the ‘hear my voice’ prayer is God’s cry to us as much as it is our cry to him.
PAUSE AND REFLECT
What have you heard from God through this study?
What will your response to him be?
Prayer Matters contains daily devotions covering specific areas in the territory, current worldwide situations and personal reflection and relationship with God. A PDF of the unedited booklet is available to download from salvationist.org.uk/resources
LIFE TOGETHER FOCUS
by Major Peter Mylechreest (THQ Chaplain)SATURDAY 6 MAY
Lord, please give a sense of identity and dignity to those who feel that they have neither and those with low self-esteem. Provide a refuge to those who feel threatened by the anonymity of urban living. Help us to create places of belonging where people know they are welcome, remembered by name and valued as individuals. Amen.
SUNDAY 7 MAY
Lord, we pray for those throughout our territory in so many different positions of leadership, whether it be in corps, centres or headquarters. Strengthen them today in their faith. Give them wisdom for the decisions they have to make. We also ask that people of all ages be sensitive to the Holy Spirit’s leading to offer themselves as officers, envoys, pioneers and as local leaders. Hear our prayer, Lord. Amen.
HUMILITY FOCUS
by Major Jill Miller (Prayer Network)MONDAY 8 MAY – 1 PETER 5:6 AND 7
Father God, I bow in worship at your feet, acknowledging your glory and power. I lay my burdens down, trusting in your unfailing love and mercy. Amen.
TUESDAY 9 MAY – COLOSSIANS 3:12
Loving Saviour, I want to be like you, and I pray you would clothe me with your compassionate heart, gentleness of spirit and selfless humility. Amen.
WEDNESDAY 10 MAY – 2 CHRONICLES 7:14
O Lord, we plead your forgiveness for the things we have done that are not pleasing to you. Hear our cries of repentance and heal our troubled minds and hearts. Amen.
THURSDAY 11 MAY – MATTHEW 23:12
Jesus, after you went to the cross for our sins and humbled yourself to the indignity of crucifixion, you were exalted to the highest place and are now in your glorious Kingdom. Give us grace not to think of ourselves above others but to serve humbly as you did. Amen.
FRIDAY 12 MAY – MICAH 6:8
Dear God, bless me with the desire to be just and merciful to all people and then to walk humbly in a loving and faithful relationship with you. Amen.
PRAYER REQUESTS
Do you have something or someone you’d like us to pray for? Email salvationist@salvationarmy.org.uk with ‘prayer request’ in the subject line and the Territorial Prayer Network will uphold them in prayer.
God’s way with me
Three delegates from the 253rd session at the International College for Officers and Centre for Spiritual Life Development share their testimonies
MAJOR CLAYFORD MATEPETA EXTENSION TRAINING AND PUBLIC RELATIONS OFFICER Zambia TerritoryI WAS born into a family of seven, growing up in a village in a rural part of Zambia. As a young boy, I was sent to stay with my grandfather to help him look after cattle. It was not easy balancing school and work. Above all, I never knew anything to do with church.
When life became too hard for me, I ran away and returned home, where I told my parents about my time in the village. I was able to continue with schooling there. I attended church but did not know Christ at that time.
I eventually returned to my parents’ church, The Salvation Army. In 1994, I attended youth councils. That is where I met my Jesus. The following year I was enrolled as a soldier in Njomona Corps.
When I left school, I worked as a local radio presenter, as well as producer of a programme entitled My Life Changing Testimony. It was at this time I felt I wanted to become a Salvation Army officer. I became a cadet in 2002, in the Bridge Builders session.
I served as a single officer for two years
before getting married. I served with my wife for 12 years and we had two kids together. Life was OK with my family.
In 2017 my wife went to a territorial women’s rally. When she came back, she felt unwell. After a trip to the hospital, we thought that she was recovering. However, when we returned two days later my wife asked for prayer; as she sat and held my hand, she looked at me, smiled and was promoted to Glory.
I was left with two children. My daughter was five and my son was nine. Life has not been easy.
Despite all the challenges I have gone through, I have seen the hand of God on my children and on me. My daughter is turning 12 in June. My son is 16. God has seen them through. He has led me through the mountains and valleys and storms of life. However, here I am today. He has done great things before; he is working wonders today. I know he is yet to do more for my family and me.
Joshua 1:9 says: ‘Have I not commanded you? Do not be afraid.’ No matter what happens in life, I will fear not.
1 Samuel 7:12 says: ‘Thus far the Lord has helped us.’ He has led me in the past and I know he will still make a way for me. To God be the glory!
MAJOR MICHAEL PAUL SECRETARY FOR BUSINESS Pakistan TerritoryMY name is Michael Paul – I am serving as secretary for business administration in the Pakistan Territory. My wife is Major Samina Michael – she is personnel secretary. My parents served as Salvation Army officers.
In 1980 I attended a youth seminar. The territorial youth secretary delivered a message on the pardoned son. On hearing it, I realised that the pardoned son recognised and accepted his mistakes, and he returned to his father’s house. At that moment I went to the mercy seat, and I decided to serve God.
In 1994 I married Samina. We entered the training college in 1997 in the Faithful Intercessors session. We have been blessed with two sons. My elder son’s name is Wilfred Michael and my younger son’s name is Anthony Michael. My elder son is doing pastor training at Lahore College of Theology and is in his final year. In June he will be ordained and will receive his appointment.
I have served in many different appointments. God has been with me. He protects me and uses me in different
WHAT IS THE ICO?
Located at Sunbury Court, the ICO exists to further officers’ personal and leadership development. It provides an environment for them to flourish spiritually through teaching, prayer, worship and fellowship.
appointments. God is always with me. I have served in social institutes, corps, projects, districts, divisions, at training college and now THQ.
The key verse of my life is 1 Thessalonians 5:16–18: ‘Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, in everything give thanks; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you’ (New King James Version). I always put these verses in my life. These verses always encourage me and give me comfort.
I pray that God will use me for his glory and for his Kingdom. God is always with me wherever I serve. I always count his blessings although challenges are a part of life. I thank God for the beautiful family he gave me – my children are faithful to God and to us.
It is a great privilege for me that I am part of the ICO. I am grateful to the principal and staff. I have met many officers from different countries. I share fellowship with them and listen to their testimonies. I am grateful for the opportunity to spend more time with God, which can be difficult in our appointments. Mentally, physically, emotionally and spiritually we will use this experience when we go back to our appointments.
May God bless you.
MAJOR STEPHANIE SENN DIVISIONAL SECRETARY FOR PROGRAMME Metropolitan Division, USA Central TerritoryMY story began with a Salvation Army officer who took an interest in a teenage boy and girl who were invited to attend The Salvation Army by a friend. Without Salvation Army officers intervening in both of my parents’ lives, my story would have been very different. God is faithful.
At a very young age, I felt in tune with God’s love for me – that he saw me; that he knew me and that he had a purpose for my life. I do not know exactly when I accepted Jesus into my life, I just always remember God being with me.
At the age of 15, I was sitting in the audience at youth councils. There was a call to officership during one of the meetings. I used this as an opportunity to tune out, since I already knew that I was going to be a teacher. As I closed my eyes, I had a very clear vision of my mum teaching Sunday school at the corps. I began to daydream about all the interesting and exciting things that my parents were able to do in their ministry, and I realised in that moment that God was calling me to be a teacher and a
preacher and a social worker and so much more. I could do all of it as a Salvation Army officer.
My husband and I were married in 2002 and entered the college for officer training in 2003. God has been faithful in every appointment we have served.
When we received the call saying that we were being appointed to Oakbrook Terrace Corps in Chicago, I was overwhelmed with the way that God ordains our path.
This was the corps that my father began to attend when an officer took an interest in him, and the corps that my parents went into training from. The corps had a devastating fire. When I told my dad that I had been appointed there, he shared a story with me that the officer at the time had found a new building to replace the one that had burned. He brought my father there and they prayed for wisdom and guidance. I would like to believe that God had in mind that my father’s daughter would serve him within those walls.
Through sorrow and through joy, God has been faithful. He will be, again and again and again. Psalm 119:90 says: ‘Your faithfulness continues through all generations.’
‘God is definitely still ca
Lyn Woods talks with Territorial Candidates Director Major Mark Sawyer about spiritual leadership in the UKI Territory today
What methods are most effective in enabling people to respond to a call to spiritual leadership?
I think the most effective way is for people who are in spiritual leadership to role model the joy of ministry and be intentional about investing in others. As an officer, I want to be mentoring, encouraging, discipling and supporting people on their faith journeys. Sometimes gently encouraging them to think about leadership or challenging them strongly about a calling. The one-to-one conversations are so important. Probably more so than events or specific programmes!
Exploring Leadership Day is very popular. We held one recently at the William Booth College and we had a ‘calling conversation café’, where people could talk about vocation and what God is calling them to do and to be. We had a prayer room for people to explore different ways of praying, coming before the Lord and seeking his will. We shared in all-age worship, which was a new experience at this event. I believe passionately that children are called, and we wanted to let the children know how loved, valued and cherished they are by the God who put the stars in space and to remember always that he has a plan for their lives.
Some divisions are running the Growing Leaders course, which has proved very helpful. This involves teaching, Bible study and hands-on experience of leadership, with great fellowship giving opportunities to share stories and ideas.
The Terrain Youth programme, run by the Children and Youth Department, is a really good tool for young people to experience all kinds of teaching and learning from the Bible, bringing out faith and life lessons for today. These opportunities help ground our young people in a journey of faith that naturally causes them to think about leadership and life choices.
Addlestone Corps offers gap year opportunities and St Ives Corps is now rolling that out too. You can access more information from their corps websites.
AT A GLANCE
OFFICERSHIP
Length of service A lifelong commitment, undertaken after deep thought and prayer.
Location Anywhere the Army chooses (personal circumstances are taken into consideration).
Training 2 years at William Booth College or 3 to 5 years distance learning.
Some of these initiatives take a lot of planning, but I know of some divisions who have simply held evenings at their DHQ called ‘the calling conversation’. They have gathered people who are interested in talking about calling, vocation, ministry, officership, territorial envoyship and pioneering, simply to talk and see where it leads. These events look like the early Church, when the first believers met together, sharing food and conversation about life, faith and Jesus.
If you’re thinking about ministry and vocation, then talk to someone and start the conversation. If it’s right, then doors will open. But if you never test it, you’ll never know.
Could Design for Life be more effective if it was held divisionally?
The Design for Life course (DFL) is a great experience for anyone over 18. Many people say they love coming to William Booth College, maybe having a tour, going up the tower or seeing the museum. DFL has taken place in Ireland and Scotland, and we’re looking at different ways of putting it out there. There’s even a children’s DFL now – which is exciting!
Is there a shift in the way leadership is perceived and practised now?
These are challenging – yet potentially exciting – days in the Church and in The Salvation Army. There are lots more opportunities for lay ministry and vocation than there were in previous years. The whole concept of leadership for a season is an interesting one, which we introduced years ago through territorial envoyship. You can make a commitment to serve for three years as a territorial envoy and that is often based within the division that you applied from. The interesting thing is that, when people have tested leadership for a season, they often go on to commit to more time in spiritual ministry. Some become officers, while others continue as territorial envoys.
TERRITORIAL ENVOYSHIP
Length of service A minimum of 3 years.
Location Often based in the division in which they applied, but occasionally elsewhere in the territory (personal circumstances are taken into consideration).
Training 2 weeks at William Booth College (1st year), 1 week (subsequent years), plus correspondence work.
lling people’
God is definitely still calling people in the Army to that lifetime commitment as officers. We are exploring the possibility of other routes and ways, building on all that’s happened in the past, but adjusting for this day and generation.
We must also remember that we believe in the priesthood of all believers. People of all ages, who are not officers but are ministering on their front line, are leaders too, they’re part of this priesthood.
During and coming out of the Covid-19 pandemic, people have asked themselves questions like: Where am I going? What am I doing with my life? What’s really important for me in the days ahead? I think those two years helped us all to adjust and align priorities, gaining more of a sense about what’s important. Deeper faith choices have been made, including the desire to explore officership. I’m excited about the future and what I’m sensing and seeing in our territory. When people ask me how many cadets I’m getting into the college, I have to smile and tell them that it’s not up to me or the Candidates Unit, it’s up to the Lord! But it’s also about what we are doing. It’s for each one of us to invest in others and speak into their lives, helping them discern and discover God’s will for themselves. Having a small number of cadets in the training college is not just a UKI Territory challenge, it’s a western world challenge. Some developing countries are seeing a big response to leadership, which is beautiful, but God is wanting his will and purpose to be lived out in all parts of the globe. So, we continue to listen to what he is specifically saying to us for this season.
I want to challenge everyone to be sensitively and sensibly asking people: ‘Are you encouraging, inspiring and challenging others to think about leadership?’ We shouldn’t just leave it to Candidates Sunday or to someone else!
WANT TO KNOW MORE?
Contact the Candidates Unit at vocation@salvationarmy.org.uk
Read and download resources online at salvationist.org.uk/resources/candidates-sunday-2023
they gain experience through learning and doing. They also adopt a project, based on something that the Lord is stirring in their hearts. They may work in a residential centre or Lifehouse, or in a different cultural experience. Every corps and centre expression is different, and this is good.
The reality is that, when you leave the college, you’ll have to adapt some of your learning and teaching. Into Officership training continues for another five years and, just like in every area of life, there is always more to learn. The reality is that nothing can prepare you totally for when you leave the college.
This year’s Candidates Sunday video shows different people of different ages painting a word picture that spells the phrase ‘be the light’, taken from Matthew 5:14-16 (The Message).
I simply and sincerely pray that in these days God will show us all how we can be the best God colours in the world today so that we can make a difference in this world and be the change!
How
do the ideals of spiritual leadership compare to the realities?
The WBC programme seeks to equip cadets with all kinds of ministry tools, skills and gifts to help them in various aspects of ministry. It’s very innovative and creative. There are opportunities to go into placements and learn from corps, and
“
God is wanting his will and purpose to be lived out in all parts of the globe.”
HOW TO BECOME AN OFFICER OR TERRITORIAL ENVOY
The length of time an application takes varies for each person, but follows these broad stages:
1. Find out more
Talk to your corps officer, who notifies the divisional personnel officer (DPO). The Officer Review Board and Divisional Candidates Board (DCB) determine whether to proceed. You then fill in an Application and Commitment Form, followed by an interview with a DHQ representative (or member of staff) at your home.
2. Sponsoring officer (SO)
You are assigned an officer to support, guide and challenge you. A family or household interview takes place, references are checked and a medical and psychological assessment is undertaken. Your SO and DPO create a development plan with you.
3. Assessment Conference
A residential weekend conference at William Booth College, where you are interviewed and assessed for a clear calling from God and potential to fulfil the role of an officer/territorial envoy. This includes a ‘This Is Me’ presentation, a pastoral scenario and a sermon.
4. Recommendation
Recommendations are presented to the Territorial Candidates Council and a decision is made about who to accept for training. If you are unsuccessful, you may be able to appeal.
5. Training
Residential training follows a two-year course divided into four areas of study: spiritual growth and leadership development, biblical studies, ministry and mission, and faith and practice. Non-residential training for distance learner cadets typically takes three to five years.
For more information, contact vocation@salvationarmy.org.uk.
In theory and in practice
WHAT’S YOUR BACKGROUND?
I was a school teacher for 28 years. I loved teaching. I did a degree 30-odd years ago now and the two options really were either going into ministry or into teaching. I felt at the time that God was calling me into teaching.
WHAT CHANGED?
The Covid-19 pandemic really started to change the way that I was thinking. My head teacher was very generous in allowing me time during the day to work with my wife, the community support worker at Pentre Corps. One moment when I met a woman, handing two bags of groceries over and a bag of toiletries, she just said, ‘You’re like a saint.’ I started to feel that perhaps being in full-time education wasn’t really where the Lord wanted me.
WHEN WERE YOU CALLED TO OFFICERSHIP?
There was one particularly difficult night’s sleep. At about 2am I went downstairs and eventually prayed the prayer that Jesus prayed in Gethsemane: ‘Your will, Lord, not mine be done.’ A couple of days later, one of our divisional mission enablers candidly turned around and said to me: ‘Paul, the Lord’s calling you to officership, just accept it.’
HOW DID YOU BECOME A DISTANCE LEARNER CADET?
When I had the opportunity to share the news with my family, my wife and my two daughters, the question was, ‘Well, Dad, we’re at university, you know. Where’s our home going to be? Where are we going to be based?’ So that was a challenge that we had to work through. I applied for cadetship through the distance learner route. The Salvation Army has been really supportive in looking at where I was, looking at what my situation was, and then working the application journey through together.
WHAT DOES TRAINING LOOK LIKE FOR YOU?
I’m expected to come up to William Booth College perhaps once or twice a month and do the rest of my studies remotely. Being a corps leader out there in the field at the moment is a real privilege. I’m living out the theory that I’m learning about. So it’s the practical work alongside the theory.
WHAT ARE YOUR HOPES FOR THE FUTURE?
If I’m looking back in 15, 20, 25 years’ time, I hope that it will be that I will have acted justly, and loved mercy by coming alongside others and showing them compassion as Jesus did. But perhaps most importantly is that I’ve tried to walk humbly, and followed the calling that God has given me.
Based on a video available to watch at salvationist.org.uk/resources/candidates-sunday-2023
Cadet Paul Sass explains how he became a distance learner cadet while leading Merthyr Tydfil Corps
SPOTLIGHT ON…
Whittlesey Caring through creativity at The Studio
FAST FACTS
DIVISION: East of England
CORPS OFFICER: Major Lorraine Chaundy
FIND US
ONLINE: salvationarmy. org.uk/whittlesey
CRAFTED IN GOD’S TIME AND WAYS
It’s by God’s design that I was appointed to The Studio in Whittlesey. My background as a graphic designer and lecturer, and my own personal post-pandemic plight, left me perfectly positioned in December 2022 to take on the re-opening of the Army’s mission here in a new way . It was his plan for this place.
COMMUNITY MINISTRY THROUGH ART
When I arrived, I really was starting with a blank canvas. Only three congregation members remained and through poor health they could no longer physically attend. My priority was to get to know the local community and find out what was needed.
The more people I spoke to, the more it was re-affirmed that ministry and wellbeing through art, for all ages, was essential to the heart of this place.
JOURNALING FOR JESUS
On Sundays I prepare a Scripture passage or song lyrics. We read and study them, chat about them, apply them and then journal about it. As we learn and craft, we are challenging ourselves and we have something visual to show for it.
ART FOR EVERYONE
I openly invite folk to come in and find out about the Bible and church. In the
school holidays I’ve started Christianthemed art activities for children and creative learning sessions for adults, which aim to help people understand the good news of the gospel in an artistic way. Even those who feel they aren’t good at art can produce some amazing results.
MOSAIC TO MACRAMÉ IN MISSION
We use a lot of traditional craft methods, such as origami, macramé, quilting and sewing. We’ve had crochet and watercolour painting classes. They are things you can do and concentrate on that take your mind off the stressful things in life. We also do funky art journaling, and we use lots of recycled items. Our building has its own unique mosaic crafted on the front for all to see.
CREATING IN HIS IMAGE
Our creator God made us in his image and likeness, and we’re supposed to create. People shouldn’t write off the paintbrush and the art on a page, because it’s a wonderful way to learn about yourself and to de-stress. There’s
a lot of scientific research around art, which is a reason why the use of art therapy is rising in the care and counselling professions.
PRAYING FOR PROSPERITY
Although The Studio is growing, ongoing prayer is needed for its mission. I have a couple of volunteers now and another one who is interested. I’d like to recruit some more and have a bit of a team. We also pray for continued wisdom in conversations because it can get very deep quite quickly with some things. We talk about grief, autism, domestic violence, drinking and other addictions, diets and the cost of living. We could be doing absolutely any art or craft activity – watercolours, quilling, sewing or painting – and we have these great conversations that show genuine care for each other.
The Studio is a place of refuge, a place to create, to take your mind off the stresses of life, a place to learn a new skill, a place to meet friends, a place to be listened to and accepted, a place where you discover the light that Jesus can bring to life.
Salvationists join stand for climate justice
LONDON
ON Friday 21 April, 1,400 Christians from across denominations united for a No Faith in Fossil Fuels service and march.
A variety of speakers addressed the congregation at St John’s Church, Waterloo, including Patricia Pagulayan from the Philippines, who gave a moving account of the impact of climate change, former Archbishop of York Lord Sentamu, who gave a rallying call for justice, and Cadet Lizzy Kitchenside.
Lizzy said: ‘We cannot claim to love God and love others and ignore this crisis. Climate change affects the very people that God tells us we are to serve.’
Two children led prayers, including Rosa, the daughter of Territorial Youth Specialist Jo Taylor.
The congregation processed with banners and placards to parliament, led by an Army band. The route passed the headquarters of Shell before crossing Westminster Bridge, with participants singing ‘Amazing Grace’.
At Parliament Square, Territorial Commander Commissioner Anthony Cotterill prayed through a megaphone:
‘Loving Creator God, we pray for you to continue to raise up a generation of leaders in this and other nations with the courage to take responsibility for our rapidly changing climate and the part we have played in it. We intercede for all our politicians and leaders, especially here in Westminster. Cause them to act in the best interests of all nations today and all peoples in the future, in order to avoid further catastrophic changes.’
As the TC prayed, thousands of protesters gathered nearby for an Extinction Rebellion rally, listening on.
One bystander reflected: ‘This is your moment, Salvation Army. You are made for this. You’re organised, you’re mobile, you have the band, the songs and the message for our times. Thank you for leading us.’
The pilgrimage was a statement of enacted hope in a fragmented world, and challenged all those present to do more to care for God’s creation. – NC
Read a full report and see more photos from the pilgrimage online at salvationist.org.uk/ nofaithinfossilfuels
WOKINGHAM The weekly A Place to Meet group gives opportunities to share in board games and crafts with a godly focus. Guests are invited to give talks or learn new skills.
Horticultural guild member Pauline McBride gave a flowerarranging demonstration before everyone present made their own display. It was great fun and lovely to do over a cup of tea and cake. – JH
FUNDRAISING
EMERGENCY AID
SUFFOLK Volunteers are celebrating 45 years of supporting emergency services in the county with a dedicated emergency vehicle. Across the country, the Army provides refreshments and emotional support to fire and rescue staff and local communities. In Suffolk, this began in 1978 when co-ordinator Mike Baker set up a group of volunteers. The relationship between Suffolk Fire and Rescue Service and The Salvation Army continues to grow and plans for the redevelopment of Stowmarket Fire Station included a dedicated bay for the emergency vehicle. – AR
OUTREACH
BRIDGWATER After only six months of being back up and running, the Babysong group is growing under the leadership of Cradle Roll Sergeant Dawn Hutter. Six children were added to the cradle roll and welcomed by corps officer Lieutenant Heather Culshaw. – HC
OUTREACH
FUNDRAISING
DUNSTABLE Almost 100 people attended a charity dinner and auction at Central Bedfordshire College, organised by corps Debt Advice Co-ordinator Fiona Simpson. The event raised £3,400 for the Debt Advice Service. Auction lots included a dinner at Marco Pierre White’s London Steakhouse and a boxing glove signed by Frank Bruno. A former service user shared their gratitude to the service for helping them turn their life around. – JB
MUSIC
BATH CITADEL Spring was in the air during the visit of the South Western Fellowship Band. After the opening march ‘Temple 85’, the band presented such classics as ‘The Call of the Righteous’ and ‘Guardian of My Soul’. Absent band members who were unwell were prayerfully remembered. Instrumental items were interspersed with vocal solos from Naomi Blowers, including ‘It Is Well with My Soul’. Reg Wiles presented the euphonium solo ‘The Better World’ and Major Pamela Wood delivered a message. It was a programme of enjoyment, inspiration and blessing. – KT
ANNIVERSARY
ANNIVERSARY
HAVERHILL The corps celebrated its 130th anniversary with a visit from Waterbeach Band and Songsters. The worship hall filled to capacity for the afternoon’s Songs of Praise. Waterbeach gifted an anniversary cake, which was cut by number one on the roll Lynn Bond. A shared roast lunch and tours of the new community project, The Link, were also popular. – AD
BLACKPOOL CITADEL The parentand-toddler group has grown, with many families appreciating the warm and friendly space to play. Parents and carers are regularly attending meetings and a couple of families have also begun attending Messy Church. – NC
FUNDRAISING
SALISBURY Volunteer bike technician Stephen Vokuhl, who helped establish the corps Recycles project, has prepared 300 bikes for sale in 15 months, raising £22,500 for the corps. Employment Plus Development Co-ordinator Cara Upham has mentored Stephen through this process. ‘We are hoping to place him in paid employment soon at a bike shop or repair centre,’ she said. – MD
RUTHERGLEN Celebrations commenced for the 134th corps anniversary on Saturday with a visit from Govan Songsters. The capacity congregation included many attending for the first time. Songster Lauren Hay brought ‘I’m Not That Girl’ from Wicked and Major Tracy Bearcroft (Govan) presented ‘Queen of the Night’ from The Magic Flute. Corps officer Major Catherine Wyles led Sunday worship and dedicated a child who had initially attended the parent-andtoddler group and then commenced worshipping at the corps. – DM
COST OF LIVING
THIRSK North Yorkshire pioneer leaders Majors Paula and Ian Haylett have established a community wardrobe at Thirsk Methodist Church, offering good quality new and second-hand clothing for as little as 50p to help struggling families. – AR
LIVERPOOL STONEYCROFT
FIROUZ
Shrifi was welcomed as an adherent by corps officer Captain Sam Tomlin. Firouz spoke movingly about his deep faith in Jesus and the welcome he has had since attending the corps. They are pictured with Corps Secretary Joan Petrie.
SUNDERLAND MILLFIELD
ARMÁDA SPÁSY CHATHAM
NORA Dorward was welcomed as an adherent by corps officer Major Linda Billard. Nora started attending activities in the weekly community programme and found friendship.
Encouraged by her Auntie Ann, a soldier at the corps, Nora started to come to worship on Sundays and wanted to express her faith by becoming an adherent. – LB
ARMÁDA SPÁSY MARGATE
ARMÁDA SPÁSY GRAVESEND
– JK
JEREMIAS, Lia, Laura, Melissa, Sara, Elisabeth, Kathrin, Karolina and Ivan were enrolled as junior soldiers by Pioneer Leader Patrik Bado. All nine read the Junior Soldier’s Promise together. – JK
MAJOR ELIZABETH ROSS
ELIZABETH was born in Belfast and was the third of six children, all of whom attended Salvation Army Sunday school. Elizabeth grew up with a mother who sat her children at her feet and taught them about the love of the Lord. Elizabeth developed a very strong faith and as a child she would line up her teddy bears to hold open-air meetings with them.
As a young woman, Elizabeth transferred from the Ballymacarrett Dee Street Corps to the smaller Ballynafeigh Corps. She talked of feeling she could be more useful to the Lord in this setting, helping the young people who needed her most. While conducting an open-air meeting, Elizabeth met Victor, who later became her husband.
After their marriage in 1965, Elizabeth and Victor had their first son, Stephen. Soon after this, they felt the calling to become officers and left Belfast to enter the International Training College in 1969, joining as members of the Victorious session.
Their first official appointment was in Ballymena in 1971, then Newry with Bessbrook Outpost. Their marching orders took them to Enniskillen in 1973, where their son, Phillip, was born. They moved to Buckhaven in Scotland in 1976 and their daughter, Joy, was born soon after. They remained in Scotland for the rest of their ministry, serving at Maddiston, Leith with Portobello, Musselburgh, Peterhead and finally Port Glasgow, where they retired as majors.
Elizabeth’s incredible faith inspired many people throughout her life and she never wavered in her dedication to God. She lived her life with love, devotion and compassion, never forgetting her promise to love and care for others. Elizabeth will be deeply missed by all who knew and loved her, particularly her husband Victor, her children, Stephen, Phillip and Joy, her grandchildren, Hope, David and Matthew, and her siblings, Albert, Robina and William. – JC
MAJOR JEAN HARRY
JEAN Hedges was born in Addlestone in 1940. Her parents served in the corps where her grandfather was corps sergeant-major and, in time, Jean became an active bandswoman and songster. After working in childcare in local boarding schools, in 1959 Jean entered the International Training College in the Greathearts session and was commissioned in 1960 to the Salvation Army children’s home in Southport.
She married Captain Ken Harry in 1961 and they served together in 16 corps over the next 33 years, including Bargoed, Heckmondwike, Camborne, Tunstall, Bedlington and Portsmouth Citadel, retiring from Dudley in 1993 after Ken suffered a stroke.
Moving in retirement back to Portsmouth, Jean took her place in the songsters alongside her children, Marc and Ruth, and became Cameo leader. She then moved to Lincoln in 2010 to be nearer her other daughter, Eira, again becoming Cameo leader and serving on the pastoral care council.
Jean was well known for her handicrafts, including embroidery, macramé, plastic canvas and painting, and she often demonstrated these at divisional events around the country. Although her health deteriorated in recent years, Jean was still active in the corps until the last year or so and is much missed by family and friends. – MH
Please note members’ tributes submitted for publication should be no longer than 150 words. Good quality pictures will be included. Copy should be sent to salvationist@salvationarmy.org.uk
JIM spent his entire life at Tunbridge Wells Corps, the last few years as number one on the roll.
During his three and a half decades as songster leader, from 1953 to 1988, the brigade took part in numerous activities at home and abroad. These included engagements up and down the country, including large-scale events at the Royal Albert Hall, Clapton Congress Hall, Westminster Central Hall, the Commonwealth Institute, Wembley Arena, an extended weekend in Rotterdam and the recording of two albums.
Over this period, Jim came to know most of the great Salvation Army musicians and composers of the day, some of whom he developed lasting friendships with. Noted for his dependability, in all areas of life Jim was a quiet, unassuming gentleman, loved and respected throughout the Army world and beyond. He is survived by his wife, three children and four grandchildren. – IR
RAY HUCKER ABERTILLERY
RAY was in his 92nd year when he was promoted to Glory, having attended a corps meeting just over a week previously. He grew up in the corps at Abertillery and became a bandsman. National service for Ray was spent in the Life Guards. He returned to Abertillery to marry June and they had a daughter, Carolyn, who completed the family.
Local employment ended when Ray was transferred to Stafford and lost touch with The Salvation Army. Upon retirement, the family moved back to the Abertillery area, and Ray resumed contact with his roots in the Army. Unfortunately, he was unable to play in the band owing to breathing difficulties, but he sang in the singing group and the male voice party.
Breathing was becoming difficult in the latter years, although he still attended meetings when he could. Ray was a big man, not only in stature, but in spirit as well. – AB
ARMY PEOPLE ENGAGEMENTS
International appointments
The following appointment, decided upon by the General, have been announced by the Chief of the Staff
Effective 1 May
COMMISSIONERS JOASH AND FLORENCE MALABI (retired) are to assume pro-tem leadership of Kenya West Territory
Redesignation of divisional leadership appointments
Effective 20 April
MAJOR GILLIAN BURNS, Divisional Leader and Divisional Personnel Officer, North East Division
MAJOR STEVE DUTFIELD, Divisional Leader and Divisional Personnel Officer, North Scotland Division
LIEUT-COLONEL KARIN RAMOS, Divisional Leader and Divisional Personnel Officer, West Midlands Division
MAJOR LINDY ROSE , Divisional Leader and Divisional Personnel Officer, East Midlands Division
COLONEL CHRIS WEBB, Divisional Leader and Divisional Personnel Officer, Ireland Division
MAJOR GILLIAN BILLARD, Divisional Leader and Assistant Divisional Commander, South West Division
MAJOR LINDA HERBERT, Divisional Leader and Assistant Divisional Commander, South East Division
MAJOR LISA LLOYD-JONES, Divisional Leader and Assistant Divisional Commander, Central, Southern and Channel Islands Division
MAJOR KATHRYN TAYLOR , Divisional Mission Officer, North West and Isle of Man Division
Effective 1 July
MAJOR AMANDA WHITE , Divisional Leader and Assistant Divisional Commander, London Division
Local officers appointed
SCL TEGAN BUTCHER , Stapleford
Dedicated to God
ISOBEL EVA YATES, daughter of Amy and Andy Yates, at Bromley Temple by Major Alison Hudson
JAMES DANIEL FINCH , son of Dan Finch and Lydia Finch, at Bromley Temple by Major Alison Hudson
BETHANY ROSA SMITH , daughter of Kate and Bandsman Warwick Smith, at Reading Central by Lieutenant Matthew Stone
Retired officers’
birthdays
COLONEL DEREK ELVIN, 85 on 15 May
MAJOR RUTH ROBERTS, 80 on 18 May
MAJOR EILEEN COOK , 80 on 19 May
Promoted to Glory
MAJOR ALBERT PELL from Basildon University Hospital on 22 April
MAJOR COLIN CAMPBELL , Prison Ministries Officer, from St James’s University Hospital on 22 April
MAJOR MARIE BATE from her home on 23 April
Bereaved
DAVID SNOWLING , Ipswich Citadel, of his sister Margaret Jay
MAJOR JACQUILINE PELL of her husband Major Albert Pell, Major Catherine Pell of her brother, Clifton Pell, Hadleigh Temple, Nicholas Pell, Major Annette Rieder-Pell, Greece, and Major David Pell, Walthamstow, of their father
MAJOR RIA CAMPBELL , Prison Ministries Officer, of her husband Major Colin Campbell
MAJOR ALLEN BATE of his wife Major Marie Bate, Richard Bate, Alistair Bate, Portsmouth Citadel, Anthony Bate and Russell Bate of their mother
Chief of the Staff Commissioner Lyndon Buckingham and Commissioner Bronwyn Buckingham
Thu 18 May – Date TBC High Council
Territorial Commander Commissioner Anthony Cotterill and Commissioner Gillian Cotterill
Thu 11 May William Booth College (Teaching Sessions)
Thu 18 May – Date TBC High Council
Chief Secretary Colonel Paul Main and Colonel Jenine Main
Sat 13 May – Sun 14 May Kettering Citadel
NOTICES
Dying Matters Week
Without communication and understanding, death and terminal illness can be a lonely and stressful experience. Dying Matters Week (8 to 14 May) can help to encourage all communities to talk together about death, dying and grief. For missional, practical and pastorally focused support, download the Journeying Home resource on salvationist.org.uk
Local elections
Many areas of England and Northern Ireland have local elections in May. If you’re keen to engage with local candidates, or they’re looking to engage with you, the Public Affairs Unit can provide guidance and support. Email public.affairs@salvationarmy.org.uk or call 07825 265105.
National Sports Sunday
Use the power of sport to unlock new possibilities for mission with the millions of people who regularly take part in sport each week, including parents, trainers, fans and volunteers. National Sports Sunday (14 May) offers resources and ideas to pray for and engage with people in your community. For more information, email Rob Moye at rob.moye@salvationarmy.org.uk
Pentecost resources
A range of resources are available to help celebrate the birth of the Church and the coming of the Holy Spirit this Pentecost (Sunday 28 May), including resources for ministry with families and schools, and ideas to support corporate worship. Download them on salvationist.org.uk
SOUNDS
Sunday Worship podcast
Can’t join us at 11am on Sundays on Salvationist Radio? Catch up with our weekly podcast of Sunday Worship highlights, including music, prayer and a Bible message from a guest speaker. Each week’s broadcast is also repeated in full on Mondays at 12am and Thursdays at 9am. Listen at salvationist.org.uk/radio
COEDPOETH, PARK ROAD LL11 3SE
Saturday 20 and Sunday 21 May
CENTENARY
Coedpoeth Corps in the Wales Division will be celebrating 100 years of ministry in the local area.
We would love to hear any stories that readers, their friends or relatives may have of their involvement with the corps at any point in our history.
Please contact Corps Sergeant-Major Vernon Smallwood at vernon.smallwood@sky.com with any information, or alternatively call the corps office on 01978 757509
WELLINGBOROUGH, SALEM LANE NN8 4JT SAVE THE DATE
Saturday 18 and Sunday 19 November
INTERNATIONAL STAFF SONGSTERS
Further details from songsterleader@gmail.com
SELF-CATERING HOLIDAY OPTIONS in the UK and overseas holyhols.co.uk
‘by Christians for Christians’
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BECCLES CORPS, 68–72 BLYBURGATE NR34 9TQ
140TH ANNIVERSARY A WEEKEND OF CELEBRATION
Friday 16 June, 7.30pm
Anglia Fellowship Band concert with guest soloist ISS Juliet Parker St Michael’s Parish Church
Saturday 17 June, 12pm
March and open-air meeting with Norwich Citadel Band Beccles town centre
Sunday 18 June 10.30am
Service of celebration
Tickets are available via BecclesCorps140years.eventbrite.co.uk or contact corps for Friday. Each ticket costs £14.25 and includes buffet and drink