What's New?

Prayers for Sierra Leone Trip

We would welcome your prayers for Janet O’Shea, from Zion Community Church in St Ives, Cornwall, who will be making a trip to Sierra Leone from 17 June to 2 July.

Janet is a valuable contributor to the work carried out by the The Connexion's Sierra Leone Mission for schools and local communities in Sierra Leone. She last travelled to the area in November 2018, accompanied by Bethany and Esther Green from Rosedale Church in Cheshunt

For this trip Janet will be taking two young and enthusiastic helpers. Her granddaughter, Nina, who is nearly 14 and Tino, aged 19. Tino, who is from St. Albans, worked at Zion Community Church from September to December last year as an apprentice to the Minister, Tim Dennick. And by all reports, she did an amazing job during her time there – particularly working with the children and teenagers.

The purpose of their visit is to provide help for the schools and community. They will be based mainly at Brama School and staying at Bethesda Orphanage. Bethesda is a centre that supports the many children who live on the streets of Sierra Leone and is home to a number of orphans whose family cannot be traced.

Please pray for Janet, Nina and Tino, that they have a safe journey to and from Sierra Leone and for their work and wellbeing during their stay.

Donating to Sierra Leone

If you would like to contribute towards the important work of The Connexion’s Sierra Leone Mission, please click on the Donate button at the top of the Homepage. All donations, no matter how small, are of huge value.

The mission supports the work of our churches in Sierra Leone, contributing to ministers’ wages, providing funding for ministerial training, and building and maintaining churches. It also supports care and education through the Bethesda Orphanage and The Connexion’s schools, helping with teachers’ salaries and teacher training. When necessary the mission can also help in times of emergency or urgent need.

Gilgal Bible College

Turners Hill Free Church began supporting Gilgal Theological Seminary in 2012 after a chance meeting between its Director, Robinson Valsalam, and Geoff Chapman, Pastor at Turners Hill. 

It was an answer to prayer.

Prior to this meeting Geoff had been considering ways to work with overseas missions that could combine financial support with greater personal contact – seeing the difference giving can make to real people known personally to the church.

The Bible College provides free undergraduate level education for up to 30 young men and women from all over India – and occasionally beyond. They benefit from free accommodation, food and teaching for up to three years, graduating with a BA Degree in Theology, with some students continuing to study for an MA.

Many of the students’ families would never be able to afford to pay for this education and a number come from areas where Christians are few and far between – plus those that do practise Christianity are often persecuted. This means that when the Bible College graduates return home, they are taking their knowledge to largely unreached regions with the intention of starting new churches and preaching the Gospel to people who have never heard it.

The work is entirely funded by Turners Hill Free Church, who also make provisions for ministers and Christians in need that are connected with Gilgal Mission India and its churches.

Achievements from missionary support of the Bible College

  • Celebration of five graduation services
  • Commission of 80 pastors and national missionaries to preach the Gospel in India
  • Building of a new kitchen and dining room, plus a flat for the cook
  • New equipment for the original library
  • Building a new library
  • Purchase of a computer, printer, lecture chairs and CCTV
  • Purchase of mattresses, a freezer, gas stove, washing machine and a cow

Turners Hill are currently fundraising to equip the new library. They are hoping to raise approximately £6,000 to cover the costs of books and other necessary equipment. 

Donations can be made through the church’s website http://thfchurch.org/gilgal/or via Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/donate/384014128995773/10157108451247246/

 

Fogbo home rebuild for Hawa

We are very glad to report that work to rebuild Hawa’s home in Fogbo, Sierra Leone, has now been completed, following a devastating fire, which resulted from an accident in the house next door.

It has been important for the community to complete the rebuilding work as quickly as possible, due to the imminent threat of seasonal heavy rains.

Repairs have been made to the roof and walls, plus new windows and doors are installed. The final steps included plastering, paving, bracing and finishing the roof with corrugated iron sheeting, to enable Hawa and her children to move back into their home and ensure the building is completely watertight.

Hawa has expressed her gratitude and happiness for the help she has received from the local church at Fogbo and the wider Connexion Community.

The Sierra Leone Mission (SLM) extended particular thanks at the Connexion Conference for the generosity of church members at Mortimer West End Chapel, who successfully managed to raise £1000 through donations and fundraising activities.

If you would like to contribute towards the important work of The Connexion’s Sierra Leone Mission, please click on the Donate button at the top of the Homepage. All donations, no matter how small, are of huge value.

The mission supports the work of our churches in Sierra Leone, contributing to ministers’ wages, providing funding for ministerial training, and building and maintaining churches. It also supports education through The Connexion’s schools, helping with teachers’ salaries and teacher training. When necessary the mission can also help in times of emergency or urgent need.

We thank you for your prayers and generosity in helping Hawa’s family and the Fogbo community as a whole.

Magnus Bendu - Consecration of Bishop

Rev Magnus Bendu was consecrated as the Bishop of The Countess of Huntingdon’s Connexion Sierra Leone on Sunday 7 April at St Mark’s Cathedral, Waterloo, Sierra Leone.

Born in Moyain Village in the Western rural district of Sierra Leone, Magnus was educated at Manallo village and Newton before studying at the Government Trade Centre in Magburak for a City and Guilds Certificate in construction.

Magnus followed his ministerial call in 2000, commencing on a course in Theology at The Evangelical College of Theology (TECT), supported by the Chesunt Fund through the Sierra Leone Mission. He graduated as best student in the class of 2004, with a Bachelor of Theology Honours degree in Christian Education, before going on to serve The Countess of Huntingdon’s Connexion Sierra Leone in a wide variety of valuable roles.

Pursuing his interest in promoting justice and morality, Magnus has also worked as Public Education and Communications Officer at the Anti-Corruption Commission in Sierra Leone. 

Magnus is a well-respected Motivational Speaker and he inspires both young and old through a series of Piksens Radio Talk Shows, supported by the Sierra Leone Mission. 

In addition, he supervises the Bethesda Children’s Centre, which was established to identify, accommodate, rehabilitate and help to reunify street children with their parents.

We send Magnus our warm congratulations from the whole Connexion Community!

Prayers for Fogbo

Your thoughts and prayers are appreciated for those who were affected by a fire in Fogbo, Sierra Leone.

Fogbo is a coastal fishing village in Western rural Sierra Leone, close to the town of Tombo. Its population of approximately 2000 inhabitants is largely made up of fishermen, small-scale farmers and traders.

The fire, which resulted from an accident, spread quickly due to the construction of the houses, having thatched or corrugated iron roofing set on mud blocks, which are subject to irreparable cracking.

Living next door to where the fire started, one of our Connexion Church members, Hawa, has been badly affected, losing her home and possessions. Sierra Leone friends and neighbours have rallied round to offer help and support to Hawa and her three children.

All prayers will be welcome for Hawa’s family and the Fogbo community as a whole.

If you would like to contribute towards The Connexion’s Sierra Leone Mission, please click on the Donations button at the top of the Homepage. All donations, no matter how small, are of huge value. 

The mission supports the work of our churches in Sierra Leone, contributing to ministers’ wages, providing funding for ministerial training, and building and maintaining churches. It also supports education through The Connexion’s schools, helping with teachers’ salaries and teacher training. When necessary the mission can also help in times of emergency or urgent need.

New Café at Bolney Village Chapel

At the end of 2018 we opened a new café at Bolney Village Chapel.

The aim is to provide a welcoming space at our end of the village where people can gather during the day. We currently only open on Tuesdays so as not to compete with the café in the Village Hall down the road.

We are very blessed that the café is run by the wonderful Kerrie, who attends BVC, and also runs her own business ‘Kerrie’s Vintage Teas’ which brings bespoke vintage tea parties to your home or special event. 

We open the café from 10am - 4pm and at 11am we stop for a few minutes to ‘Pause for Thought’.

We also have a selection of Bible verses, which scroll throughout the day on our large screen, plus free tracts and resources for people to take away. 

The café is proving very popular, not least with some of the ramblers who regularly walk past our door, and also with our WAGs group (Women About God) who all recently dropped by for a cream tea!

 Simon Allaby, Bolney Village Chapel

Sierra Leone Mission Trip

Sierra Leone visit update from Bethany Green.

Esther and I couldn’t stop grinning at each other with excitement. It was the first time my 15year old daughter had been on a plane and the view out the window was mesmerising. The English Channel, France and Spain, and then the desert and highlands of North Africa. We couldn’t quite believe that the year of planning, saving up and prayer was over and we were actually going to be in Sierra Leone.

Janet O’Shea was our team leader, having been out to Sierra Leone five times already and we were so thrilled to have her guidance. Although we had met her at the Connexions Conference and salvaging sleeping bags at Reading Festival, we didn’t know each other well. However, the three of us quickly became good friends and worked very well together.

We arrived late on the Tuesday evening and after the car breaking down, finally reached Bethesda Orphanage. The welcome from the children was as warm as the weather, and we were shown to the lovely guest rooms, with a flushing toilet.
The programme Magnus handed us for our stay was impressive and exhausting. We had expected the containers to be at Bethesda and that we would be involved in the distribution of aid. But since they were under restrictions in the docks, we spent the first three days visiting 18 schools and/or churches. This was a completely new experience for Esther and I and we had no idea what to expect. But with Janet’s expertise and Magnus’ wonderful care, we swiftly got into a rhythm.

The Head Teacher, Pastor and children would greet us with songs and speeches. Then Janet would present greetings from the SLM. I would share a brief word from scripture, followed by Esther and I showing the children how to do a “loud” Amen (you wind your arm like a crank on the “Aaaaa” part and then shoot your arm in the air with a yell on “men!” Needs to be witnessed!), and then I would pray a blessing. A Bible quiz would follow where the children won prizes and we would finish by presenting the Head Teacher with a box of books and a football for the school.

For Esther and I, it was our first experience of such extreme poverty. The mud brick houses and non-existent roads, water drawn from a well or pump, the ‘hole’ toilets, are memories that will never leave us. But neither will the wonderful people we met. And what a privilege that was! Aminata, Sallay and the children of Bethesda are wonderful and looked after us so well. Each evening we joined them for their devotions and saw their deep and loving relationship with the Lord. Ambrose, the pastor of  Fabaina Church, newly built with a roof but no windows or doors, excitedly told us of his plans to reach out to neighbouring villages. Samuel took us on a medicine walk through the bush and then treated us to fresh coconuts in his home.

On the Saturday we joined the children to their annual trip to the beach. 34 of us fit into that 15 seater minibus! The Sunday was a special day. We crossed the river on the ferry to visit the Anne Pink School and church. Anne is a member of Rosedale and we gifted Pastor Michael with a photo of our church. Magnus then took us to his church in Mabang for the morning service, where he asked me to preach for the first Sunday of Advent. I’m pretty sure I was the most blessed that morning! Of course, it came as a terrible shock when we heard just two weeks later that the ferry had sunk. 

Several people lost their lives, including two children from Mabang school and church and a friend of Bethesda. Our hearts and prayers went out to Magnus and the families.

Since the containers never arrived, our plan to distribute the aid never materialised. This was hugely disappointing, especially for Janet who had worked the whole year on the project. But as we prayed and talked, we felt that perhaps this was according to God’s plan. Had we gone with all the gifts, it would have re-enforced the view that we are rich white people with largess. Instead we listened, talked, observed school lessons, prayed and did what we could to hear and understand the need. We also had the opportunity to provide funds for several very sick people to receive medical care, including a young boy who had broken his arm in two places a few weeks before.

We were deeply touched by the commitment and hard work of all the teachers and pastors and congregations that we met. In situations that are so difficult and deprived, many give sacrificially of themselves for the benefit of others. And that is especially true of Magnus. A man of God, Magnus’ heart, vision, abilities and integrity humbled and inspired us. He is a rare man and we would commend him to all the Connexions Churches as an example of a Holy Spirit filled servant of Christ.

Esther and I returned from the trip a new understanding of the challenges and blessings of life and ministry in Sierra Leone. We are so grateful to the Lord for the opportunity and are praying about how and when He might lead us back there. If you ever have the opportunity to visit, we would encourage you to go. You will never be the same again.

Janet O'Shea, Bethany and Esther Green from Rosedale Community Church in Cheshunt visited Sierra Leone for 13 days in November and December 2018, staying at the Bethesda Orphanage and visiting a number of churches and schools in the local area.

 

Gifts and Supplies for Sierra Leone

Last year, the Lord enabled two 20 foot containers to be bought, filled, shipped and delivered to our partners in Sierra Leone. The goods will be distributed to those who need them and the containers used at the Bethesda orphanage.

The containers

The purpose of purchasing and sending two containers is so that once emptied, the containers themselves can be transformed into living accommodation, or workshops or a kitchen - however our partners see fit to use them. We are seeking to extend the capacity of the Bethesda orphanage so that it can serve more people.

Delayed delivery

The containers actually arrived in Sierra Leone on the 7th November, but due to a recently installed new government it took two and a half months to get the relevant clearances to enable them to be delivered. The Lord has been very gracious in that we have not had to pay any delay costs for the time the containers were at the port. All our delivery partners worked tirelessly to get them through.

The goods

The containers carried a variety of goods including over 300 shoe bags filled with stationary, clothing, and personal hygiene items for distribution to children. There were also sleeping bags, sleeping mats, tents, clothes & water carriers. Sierra Leone is the one of the poorest countries in the world and so these goods will be much appreciated.

Schools

Many of the boxes in the containers were filled with school uniforms. A local shop in Truro (Trevails) has donated about £40k worth of new uniforms and sports kits, much of which was included in this shipment. The Sierra Leone Mission supports 23 schools and so this donation was very gratefully received.

Books

We were asked to ship out boxes of books to equip Pastors in their work. The Sierra Leone Mission supports 21 churches and the training of the Pastors, and so the sending of books was a very worthwhile compliment to the work, which we were grateful to be a part of.

Visit to Sierra Leone

Janet made her annual trip to Sierra Leone in November/December last year, with the goal of strengthening our partnership and to support our brothers and sisters there. This year she was joined by Bethany and Esther Green from Rosedale Church in Cheshunt.

The Hope

Our hope is that the goods with be of practical use to some of the poorest people in the world and be a demonstration of the love of Jesus for them. We also hope that these goods will equip teachers, pastors and the orphanage that we work with.

Plans for 2019

The SLM committee and ourselves in West Cornwall are currently thinking and praying about what to put our energy into this year. There are numerous important needs and we need wisdom from the Lord to decide. As we look back we are very grateful to the Lord for his miraculous provision and for the privilege of working with our brothers and sisters in West Africa.

With love,  Zion Community Church, St Ives

Louise's Journey of Faith

Louise is a member of The Countess Free Church in Ely, led by Minister, Karl Relton.

She was born in Thatcham, Berkshire in 1974 and her earliest faith-related memories are of Sunday school – sitting in a freezing room on tiny wooden chairs and doing lots of colouring.

Louise kept going to church when her family stopped, and as a teenager she helped to lead the Sunday school. By then, she knew that she wanted to be a teacher and it was working with the children that drew her to church. Although she didn’t have any kind of relationship with God at that stage, Louise now recognises that God used the children to plant her first seeds of faith. She says: “Looking back, I internalised all the stories and the important things from the bible, because I was teaching it to these small children”.

When Louise moved to Cambridge for University, she stopped going to church, but God kept bringing people into her life that would lead her closer to Him. She started rowing and in her fourth year she was put in a boat with six other Christians, who invited her to an invitation service. Louise says: “I felt so welcomed and that particular service felt like it was exactly for me”.

Louise then went travelling around Australia and America for four months and saw God in the beauty of everything she experienced. On returning home, she gave her life to God during an Alpha course and her faith had a domino effect on those around her – she encouraged the girls that she lived with to go to church and they eventually became Christians too.

Louise reflected on how her journey to faith has gone full-circle. “A lot of how I came to faith was learning through the children. Now, as a teacher, I just hope that I can bring a little bit of God’s love to the children and show them what it means to have Him in your life.”

Hailsham Care and Community

Hailsham Gospel Mission, East Sussex, are making plans to hold monthly services in 2019 for the residents at Marshview Care Home, in addition to the services they already provide for Hailsham House Nursing Home.

Other activities currently running at Hailsham Gospel include a Coffee Morning on the first Saturday of each month to encourage the community to get together for hot drinks, some cake and a chat, and ‘Time Together’ which provides a monthly opportunity for fun and fellowship on Monday afternoon.

  • 13
  • 14
  • 15
  • 16
  • 17