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  • 24 Feb | Be encouraging!

    Hide encouraging notes in unexpected places or send an encouraging message to a friend.

    Therefore encourage one another and build each other up, just as in fact you are doing.

    1 Thess 5 v 11

    Some of the most important benefits of encouragement include:

    1. Accomplishment. Words of encouragement work like energy pills. …

    2. Hope. When we are at our lowest, we tend to withdraw from other people because we fear their judgment. …

    3. Perspective. …

    4. Self-esteem. …

    5. Success.

    (Taken from Google search on: benefits of encouragement)

  • Day 7 – It’s Trolley Tuesday! Make a donation to the Godalming Community Store or Food Bank

    Day 7 – It’s Trolley Tuesday! Make a donation to the Godalming Community Store or Food Bank

    Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me” (Matthew 25:40, 45, NIV) – One of Mother Teresa’s favourite texts in the Bible, which she often quoted to support her ministry to the poor.

    It’s Trolley Tuesday! Drop a donation for the Godalming community store at one of the collection points between 9 and 11am. Check the web site HERE

    Not in Godalming? Make a donation to your local Food Bank.

    From the Community Store web site:

    PLEASE CAN YOU DONATE ANY OF THESE ITEMS?

    All in date, unopened tinned and packaged food items and domestic cleaning products are very much appreciated. With some items more in need than others, donations of the items listed below are particularly welcome:

    Donations needed:

    Cereal
    Conditioner
    Egg/Rice Noodles.
    Kitchen Towels
    Meat Meals
    Multi Pack Crisps
    Pesto
    Shampoo
    Stock Cubes
    Sweet Treats
    Tinned Salmon
    Tinned Veg
    Toilet Rolls
    UHT Milk
    Variety of Veg Based Soup (Not Tomato)
    Washing Up Liquid

    Thank you for your support for the Community Store, working with St Marks Food Bank we hope between us we are able to help as many people as possible in our community who find themselves in need of support.

    A huge thank you to those who have already donated and to those kind  people who regularly donate.

    HOW TO DONATE TO THE COMMUNITY STORE

    The Store takes in donations and makes them available free of charge to others.

    If you would like to support the Community Store, this can be done by taking donated goods directly to the Wilfrid Noyce Centre during the Store’s opening times, or you can donate on Tuesday mornings between 9.00am and 11.00am at the following locations:

    Compton Telephone Box (Sundays between 8am-5pm)
    Budgens Petrol Station & Convenience Store, Bramley
    Binscombe Church
    Long Gore
    St John’s Church
    Busbridge Church
    Godalming College
    The Borough Hall
    Godalming Library
    Milford Village Hall

    In addition to Trolley Tuesday location points, the Godalming & Farncombe Coronavirus Assistance Group have set up several additional drop off locations to help make it easy for you to continue to donate.  Please see map for the extra locations.

  • Day 6 – Spend 10 mins on the A Rocha UK web site

    Our mission partner for Easter is A Rocha UK (“the rock” in Portuguese). It is a Christian environmental charity.

    Visit the website https://arocha.org.uk/

    A Rocha UK (ARUK) is a Christian charity working for the protection and restoration of the natural world and committed to equipping Christians and churches in the UK to care for the environment

    Responding to the biblical mandate to care for the earth, and demonstrating the Christian hope for God’s world, we are working with:

    Churches through our Eco Church programme

    Christian environmental leaders through our interdenominational convening work

    Families and individuals through our Wild Christian scheme and community, supporting people to enjoy, nurture and defend nature in their own homes and communities, and by campaigning

    Christian land managers through our Partners in Action network. This network includes our own two nature reserves, Foxearth Meadows and Wolf Fields, which are also demonstration sites to inspire and enable others to manage small or larger areas of land for the benefit of people and nature

    A Rocha UK is part of the worldwide family of A Rocha organisations committed to nature conservation as an expression of Christian mission. We work collaboratively with others who share our passion for nature, a healthy environment and a just transition to a low carbon world, ever more critical in a time of climate and biodiversity crises.

    Bible verse for the day: Matt 16:18

    Jesus came back, “God bless you, Simon, son of Jonah! You didn’t get that answer out of books or from teachers. My Father in heaven, God himself, let you in on this secret of who I really am. And now I’m going to tell you who you are, really are. You are Peter, a rock. This is the rock on which I will put together my church, a church so expansive with energy that not even the gates of hell will be able to keep it out.

  • A half-term ‘Hello from Prime Time’

    Dear Prime Time member,

    It has been half-term this week so I’ve been enjoying a more relaxed and leisurely pace over the last few days.  As many of you are probably aware, I generally don’t work through the school holidays in order that I can concentrate on being mum to Harry when the schools are off.

    Of course, for the past three months Harry has been at home all the time, but holiday time still feels a bit special as we don’t have to set the alarm and we’re not fixed to a set routine (although it’s not really possible to vary things much at the moment is it?!)  Harry has reached the age now where school work seems to occupy a great proportion of holiday time and so even this week he’s spent a lot of hours at his desk and in front of a computer screen.

    I’ve had some very supportive messages from Prime Time members during lock down; many particularly commenting on how hard home schooling must be.  I actually consider myself very fortunate, because as Harry is now seventeen, I don’t really have to ‘home school’ him.  Luckily in the main he’s quite a motivated chap and gets on with what he needs to do; so apart from the occasional nudge to keep him on task and the daily check to make sure he knows what’s in his diary for that day and seeing if he’s on track to meet homework deadlines, I’m not having to get too involved with school life.

    The housekeeping though is an entirely different matter…!  I may not feel as though I’m running a school at home, but running an open all hours café – most certainly yes!  Having a teenage boy at home all the time seems to necessitate an endless supply of food and every time I go into a room, I seem to find a used plate and half-drunk glass of water abandoned there.  It’s ‘brain food’ Harry tells me by way of justification; “it keeps my brain cells working!”  Our weekly shopping bill has risen exponentially since we went into lock down (but happily this is offset by the equally sharp drop in petrol costs from not having to do the twice daily school run!)

    I do consider myself very fortunate that I do not find myself in the position of having to home-school younger children.  A number of friends as well as colleagues are needing to, and I’m aware it can be quite a challenge.  Whereas for me, I can view the school closures as something of a blessing.  Not since Harry was little have we had the opportunity to day in, day out spend so much time together.  Just at the point in our lives when we as parents are having to contemplate the reality that in eighteen months Harry could well be living away from home; we find ourselves able to spend extended periods together as a family.  I’m sure that nobody will look back on the pandemic year with fondness, but there have been elements of the enforced change to our way of life that I will cherish, and the time spent with Harry will be one of them.  As the saying goes, ‘Mothers hold their children’s hands for just a little while but their hearts forever’. 

    Children growing up and moving towards independence is a challenge that most parents have to face at some point.  It can be a time of very mixed emotions; utter joy as you see your life’s work in this young adult as they prepare to take their place in the world, but sadness too as a chapter of your life (and theirs) firmly closes and you know there is no going back.  As a staff team we are very much facing that challenge at the moment as we prepare to say goodbye this weekend to our Curate Dave Preece.  (A former Curate at BHC used to describe himself as a ‘Vicar with ‘L’ Plates’ if that helps you place a Curate within the church staffing structure!)  Dave joined us in the summer of 2017, ostensibly for a period of three years (although Covid has extended his time with us – another unforeseen blessing of the pandemic, although Dave might view that differently!)

    It’s been wonderful to watch Dave develop his skills and grow into his potential.  He has become an extremely valued member of the staff team and a good friend to us all. We will miss him.  Dave has been a great supporter of Prime Time too and we’ve loved welcoming Dave, his wife Hannah and their two young daughters to our events.  They’ve been on trips with us, come to our bowls sessions and of course we made sure that Dave experienced the Prime Time Carol Service.  Personally, I’ve been very grateful for Dave’s technological know-how when setting up for Prime Time events.  Without Dave being on hand, there would have been several events when you would have had no sound and nothing appearing on the screen!  We had all better collectively start hoping that when Prime Time events can resume, that I find someone else around the Old Rectory who can support me with such challenges!

    Dave has been appointed Priest in Charge of Saxmundham with Kelsale cum Carlton; a combined benefice (so similar to Busbridge and Hambledon in that regard) in Suffolk, about midway between Ipswich and Lowestoft.  Dave’s last working day with us is this coming Sunday (Feb 21st).  We’re making sure that he works hard on his last day with us as he’ll be putting in an appearance at both the 9am and 10.15 services.  Both will be available to watch on our YouTube channel as due to the current restrictions we are unable to gather in person.  If you remember Dave form some of the Prime Time events he has attended, why not tune in on Sunday morning and see him for one last time?  The 9am Classic service, follows the format of the more traditional Classic service that usually would take place in Busbridge Church on a Sunday morning; while the 10.15 Conversations from the Couch has a rather more contemporary feel.  Don’t be put off by this though; I am usually much more at home in the Classic congregation, but I am really enjoying Conversations on the Couch.  To me it feels as though I’m listening in to a conversation between two friends as they discuss a passage from the Bible.  On Sunday the discussion will be between our Rector Simon Taylor and of course, Dave.  Dave’s wife Hannah will also be putting an appearance; as will their two daughters.  Do consider tuning in as we wish them well in the next chapter of their lives.  Our YouTube channel can be accessed via our website: www.bhcgodalming.org  Scroll down to about halfway down our homepage and you will see a big red rectangle that says ‘YouTube BHC Godalming’; click on that and you will be taken to our You Tube channel where you can click on the service you wish to watch.  (And if you oversleep on Sunday morning, both services will be recorded so you can watch them later in the day!)

    When a Curate is placed with us, we are always aware that we only have them for a limited period of time.  As a church, we have a long history of being a ‘sending’ church; which means that we have a tradition of raising people up and sending them out either for ordination or mission of other kinds.  As a church community we do feel like proud parents on such occasions; full of joy for what the future might hold for these individuals but sadness too that our part in their lives is drawing to a close and that from now on, our contact with them may be of the long-distance variety.

    On such occasions I am reminded of a line from Proverbs ‘Let your father and mother be glad; let her who bore you rejoice’ (Proverbs: chapter 23, verse 25)  And rejoice we do for Dave, Hannah and their girls and also the benefice of Saxmundham with Kelsale cum Carlton as they have a very fine Priest in Charge heading their way.  As he prepares to leave us, we pray for Dave as he sets out on the next stage of his journey with God and as he journeys on taking our prayers with him, maybe at some point Dave will reflect as Abraham Lincoln once did;  ‘I remember my mother’s prayers and they have always followed me.  They have clung to me all my life’.  Hopefully a little bit of BHC will cling to Dave throughout his life too (in the nicest possible way!)

    And before I sign off for this evening; a little reminder that next Thursday afternoon (Feb 25th) we are opening up the BHC Zoom Room for the first of our Coffee, Catch Up and Chat sessions.  The virtual doors will be open between 3.30 and 4pm – do drop in and say hello. 

    The direct link is: https://zoom.us/j/9463914833

    Or the Personal Meeting ID (PMI) if you prefer to type it directly into the Zoom ‘Join a Meeting’ box is 946-391-4833

    Password:  in both instances you will also need to enter the following password: 2021

    Maybe see you on Thursday on Zoom…?

    Until then, with every good wish,

    Penny x

     

    Penny Naylor

    Primetime Befriending Co-ordinator

  • Weekly Notices for Sunday 21 February

    Please print and deliver a copy to anyone you know who is not online or on our distribution list.

    This Sunday

    Lent Sermon series: The Challenges of … following the gospel of Luke.

    Lent 1: The Challenge to be inclusive – Reading Luke 4:14-30

    With farewell to the Preece family

    Children & Youth

    online services

    9AM Heritage (Live from Hambledon!)
    Speaker: Simon Willetts

    9AM Classic (live)
    Speaker: Dave Preece

    10.15AM Contemporary Conversations from the Couch
    On the couch: Simon Taylor and Dave Preece (and family)

    Half-term! But you can be getting on with Lent in a Bag…

    We will be saying goodbye to our curate and his family this Sunday before their move to Saxmundham, Suffolk. Do tune in to listen to Dave preach at Busbridge&Hambledon for the last time, and to say goodbye during the services, and at virtual coffee on Zoom from 11AM.

      Click here to find all Sunday services on the BHC Godalming YouTube channel.
    Click here to find all Sunday services on the BHC Godalming YouTube channel.

    Then all welcome at any of the following virtual coffee and catch-up sessions. Drop in for 5, 10, or 15 mins…

      BHC Public Zoom Room    946-391-4833 |  PW 2021  CLICK HERE to get together on Zoom after each service for a virtual coffee, and mid-week Morning Prayer.
    BHC Public Zoom Room 946-391-4833 | PW 2021 CLICK HERE to get together on Zoom after each service for a virtual coffee, and mid-week Morning Prayer.

    The next virtual catch up for the Busbridge evening congregation will be on Sunday 7 March at 6.30PM.

    Next Sunday 28 February

    Lent Sermon series: The Challenges of … following the gospel of Luke.

    Lent 1: The Challenge to recognise God in Jesus

    Reading Luke 5: 17-26

    Children & Youth

    Sunday School groups resume

    Online Services

    9AM Heritage (Live from Hambledon!)

    9AM Classic (live)

    10.15AM Contemporary Conversations from the Couch

    6PM Unplugged Youth Service (on Zoom)

    the notices

    Keep an eye on What’s On / Lent and Easter for full details of all services, events and activities.

    Over the coming weeks of Lent and Easter, we’ll be thinking about what “A Long Awaited Ending” means to us – as both individuals and global citizens in 2021, and as Christians looking towards the trials, death and resurrection of Jesus. The latest Rector’s Reflection for the Hambledon Parish and Bridge magazines explains the theme (see below).

    We had nearly 90 people watching the Ash Wednesday service, and the first live stream from Hambledon Church this week. Well done and thanks to the team that made it happen. Click here to watch the service. This means that the Heritage service will now be broadcast live at 9AM on Sundays too.

    Penny’s weekly Prime Time blog has been re-shared this week, so it’s going rather wider than Penny first imagined! Debbie Thrower (remember Pebble Mill, and her days of presenting Songs of Praise?) has seen it and posted about it on her own blog! https://www.annachaplaincy.org.uk/post/prime-time-in-surrey

    3 things for Lent

    1) Lent Reflections – Monday to Friday on YouTube. A reading, a thought and a prayer building on the Lent Sermon series in which we explore some of the prevailing challenges to us as Christians, with reference to the challenges of Jesus in the gospel of Luke. Bookmark the Lent Reflections page to check for the latest reflection every week day in Lent. Dave and Hannah have followed Andy Spencer this week, in one of their last appearances at Busbridge&Hambledon:

    Thanks to everyone who has volunteered to lead a reflection provided by Andy Spencer. There are still a few days to cover, so please contact Andy if you are able to film yourself.

    2) Refresh by text – sign up NOW to receive a text every week day. Let’s Go! >>> For this one we’ve decided to drop “challenge” in favour of “Refresh” and the daily suggestions will aim to boost mind, body and soul; spur us onto positive action locally, and encourage us to consider lifestyle changes that might positively support the environment. We are linking it to our mission partner and the Easter Appeal for A Rocha UK. (And on that note, please also see the info below about the Godalming Climate Forum this Saturday).

    Some of the challenges will be just for fun, as an antidote to lockdown, and to remind us of the joy we get from being part of a wonderful church family. The Woody Wicks warm up for day 2 is one example, but some days will be a little harder and thought provoking! Let’s Go! >>>

    3) For Ark and Explorers – Lent in a Bag! Collect your bag from either Busbridge or Hambledon Church porch by Ash Wednesday to create the prayer paper chain during Lent.


    Alpha Online – is it for you? / Who will you invite?
    The latest online Alpha course got underway on Tuesday 9 Feb. Please pray for all those involved. The course is running on Tuesdays, the next 10 weeks. To find out more, and to register your interest, please go to the Alpha page and complete the form, or send the link to a friend.

    Hope in Depression Course – 6 sessions starting Tuesday 23 Feb
    We are pleased to have scheduled a new start date for a group of delegates, and would continue to encourage anyone struggling to please take heart and sign up too. Find all the details, and register in confidence on the Hope in Depression page, and please do share the details with anyone suffering with stress, anxiety or depression, and those supporting them.

    NEW DATE for the NEXUS talk: Walking the Camino Way, Thursday 4 March
    Ceri’s talk was postponed in January so Nexus is delighted to arrange a new date. Ceri Apark will share with us the challenges and highpoints of her five weeks walking the Camino de Santiago de Compostela, in Spain.  It will be wonderful to see her photos of sunny Spain and learn of her experiences.  Will you be inspired to follow in her footsteps?  Something to plan for after Covid-19, maybe??  This will be a Zoom event, so you’ll need to bring your own wine and nibbles!   We’ll start at 8.00pm but please join from 7.45pm for a chance to chat with others. BHC PUBLIC Personal Meeting Room:  946 391 4833   Password: 2021. We look forward to seeing you.  All are welcome, including men! 

    We have been saddened to hear that Barbara Hubble died on 12 February, in Milford Hospital, aged 90.  She and Julian are known to many of us from the years when they worshipped here, and they have remained faithful members of Prime Time.  A celebration of Barbara’s life will be held on Thursday 25 March at 12 noon.  The service will be live-streamed from Clandon Wood Natural Burial Ground and there will be a link nearer the time, for anyone who wishes to join the service online.  Please hold Julian in your prayers.

    Elsewhere

    Godalming Climate Forum
    Hello to all who want to take action about climate change and feel frustrated during lockdown that so little is happening. There is nothing like taking personal action to feel part of a collective movement to create change for the better. Godalming Town Council is promoting an online Climate Forum event on Saturday 20th February.  You will be able to explore what more you might do. 

    This is free of charge, all you have to do is book and choose which sessions you want to attend. https://godalming-tc.gov.uk/godalming-climate-forum/ I’m sure you will enjoy taking part.

    Vacancy with Waverley Abbey College for the post of College Manager & Academic Registrar. For details see: https://www.waverleyabbeyresources.org/vacancies/

    World Day of Prayer – 5 March 2021. You are invited to join in a service from St Peter’s Church Wrecklesham via YouTube to pray with Vanautu. More details.

    Coming Up NEXT:

    See the list below or look up dates further ahead in the full calendar. Select the event to join the meetings on Zoom, or sign up.

    LENT EVENTS

    REGULARS

    Please Pray for

    • Braemer Close and its road stewards David and Lizzie Burndred

    • Lane End

    • The Bridge and Hambledon Parish magazines

    Busbridge Church and Hambledon Church are both open daily for private prayer.

    The Old Rectory is closed for the time being and clergy and staff are working from home. The answerphone is checked regularly, but the best way to reach people is by email.

    PRAYER MINISTRY TEAM AVAILABLE

    To contact the EMERGENCY prayer chain, email prayer@bhcgodalming.org  or call Lisa Olsworth-Peter on 01483 421267.
    Listening prayer is available mid-week.

    Catch up on News from other areas

    Catch Up on RefreshbyText

    Rector’s Reflections

    Prime Time Lockdown Blog

  • Long Awaited Ending

    Long Awaited Ending

    “Multitudes who sleep in the dust of the earth will awake: some to everlasting life…” Daniel 12:2

    My marking of time has a new memory. We’re used to marking time. We do this with birthdays, anniversaries, facebook memory settings and so much more.

    This time last year I came down with an illness that hit me so powerfully that I labelled it ‘the beast’. It briefly gave me insights into my own mortality and just how precious, fleeting and fragile the beauty of a God given life is.

    I can pinpoint the moment I knew the darkness meant all was not well but here I am, one year on and able to look back. I am waiting, like all of us, for the ending. It may be a long awaited ending of mixed emotions of restlessness; waiting in hope and longing; but also waiting in loss and pain. Some of us will be waiting with memories of loss of family, friends, loved ones, time or energy. For some the end will be gradual and there will be ongoing smaller endings of learning to cope in new ways or steps into recovery. Some will already be in endings of changed lives or livelihoods and uncertain futures.

    In my waiting I have watched far more tv than ever before. One film was ‘The Never Ending Story’ (1984, remade in the 1990s). It’s the story of a dark force called The Nothing which seeks to engulf the World. Something in the theme resonated for me and this is why we’ve taken ‘Long Awaited Ending’ as our church theme for Easter.

    We’re waiting for the end to restrictions, distance relationships and lack of community and the end of this phase of the amazing vaccine effort but as a Christian I know that there is another ending. It is the ending longed for in Scripture across generations and it is the defeat of the darkness of evil. The ending which arrives at Easter is the resurrection of Jesus and by placing my trust in Him I know that my mortality is only fleeting because eternity beckons.

    This Easter, please join us on Palm Sunday by collecting a Palm Cross from the box in the church porch in the days beforehand. You don’t need to be particularly religious to take one.

    I’m inviting you to put your palm cross in a window or on a gate post in our lovely neighbourhood as a sign of the end coming and hope returning. It’s an invitation to help all who see it be assured that the end has come and is coming.

    There is hope for tomorrow and in it I invite you to remember that yours is a precious God given life. Easter means the waiting is over and we have a new life to live which takes us to the end of time (Daniel 12:4).

  • Day 3 – Shop for a Foodbank near you

    If you are local to Godalming, please check the list for the Godalming and Villages Community Store TODAY and stock up for Trolley Tuesday next week.

    See the list on the Community Store web site or follow the Godalming Coronavirus Assistance Facebook page.

    Isaiah 58:7

    Is it not to share your food with the hungry
        and to provide the poor wanderer with shelter—
    when you see the naked, to clothe them,
        and not to turn away from your own flesh and blood?

  • Day 2 – Get moving with “Woody Wicks”

    YOU WERE BOUGHT FOR A PRICE. SO BRING GLORY TO GOD IN THE WAY YOU USE YOUR BODY

    1 COR 6:20

    Get moving with our Explorers’ fitness guru “Woody Wicks” in this fun 5 minute foot loose session. It’s not over challenging, but is sure to put a smile on your face!

    Today’s challenge is to boost wellbeing, and it’s as much about the smile as getting your heart pumping! (This is how Explorers for years 3-6 start their Sunday sessions on Zoom while they can’t enjoy a game of stick in mud together.)

    Warning and Disclaimer

    Woody is really an accountant, and one of our brilliant and faithful children’s leaders, but not professionally qualified fitness instructor!

    Make sure there is enough space around you, and if you have any injuries or health conditions, don’t attempt moves without medical advice.

    Once you’ve done the workout you can like or comment below!

  • Day 1 Ash Wednesday

    Welcome to Day 1 of Refresh by Text!

    Lent starts today. Gather a small amount of ash and join us on YouTube at 8PM for the online Ash Wednesday service from Hambledon Church.

    Today’s bible verse: Matt 4: 1
    Then Jesus was led by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil.

  • It’s the Prime Time weekly email! (12 Feb)

    Dear Prime Time member,

    As I sit at my desk and write this, I’m looking across the churchyard towards the church.  There’s blue sky and the sun is shining.  From the warmth of the Old Rectory, it looks almost spring-like outside; but I know that if I opened the front door, I would be greeted by a blast of arctic air that would make it feel anything but spring-like!  It has been a little chilly this week to say the least hasn’t it?  I for one have been pleased to not be living in Scotland this week when temperatures of -22.9 degrees Celsius were recorded in some areas!  It makes our -6  or -7 seem positively balmy!

    I hope that you have managed to keep warm and snug in your homes and hopefully no Prime Timer was tempted out into the snow and put themselves at increased risk of falling over.  I was relieved to be able to stay inside and just look at the snowy views from inside my warm house!  I must admit, there haven’t been many advantages of the restricted lifestyle that’s been imposed on us because of the pandemic, but not having to worry about driving in the snow has definitely been a plus point for me.  Usually when snow is forecast, I’m tossing and turning at night wondering whether I’ll be able to get Harry to school in the morning, “will I even be able to get the car down the hill?” (And back up again!) and “what happens if we get stuck?”.  I have been able to sleep easy over the last couple of snowy weeks, safe in the knowledge that come what may, I won’t need to get in the car and drive about.  Every (snow) cloud has a silver lining…!

    On the subject of sleeping easy (or not as the case may be…) are you one of the many people reporting greater trouble in sleeping since the start of the pandemic?  So many people are struggling to sleep at this worrying and unsettling time and sleep researchers are now calling this ‘Covid-somnia’!  Apparently, older adults seem to be disproportionately affected by this phenomenon; so in response, the Daily Hope telephone line that I’ve mentioned in my emails a couple of times previously has recently commenced a new service: ‘Sleep Well With Daily Hope’.  This option on the existing free phone service comprises of a series of gentle and relaxing reflections using wonderful Bible verses for callers to listen to on the phone while they’re in bed.  Just dial 0800 804 8044 in the usual way and follow the instructions on the menu.  For ‘Sleep Well With Daily Hope’ you’ll be asked to press ‘#’. It is well documented how beneficial sleep is to improving mental, emotional and physical health, but research has also shown a strong correlation between a good night’s sleep and effective vaccination.  It would appear that while you are resting, your body is still hard at work producing anti-Covid antibodies in response to the vaccination you have received.  What greater incentive is needed at the present time to pick up the phone and listen to ‘Sleep Well With Daily Hope’?!

    I know one of the things that impacts on my sleep is if I’ve been in front of a computer screen too late into the evening – my brain just seems to be buzzing when I do finally get to bed.  I seem to have spent a lot of time on Zoom again this week; as the expression goes, ‘like buses’, invitations to join Zoom meetings seem to have all come up at once in the last few days.  No need to feel too sorry for me though, many of these sessions on Zoom have been very enjoyable!  One such ‘virtual’ meeting that took place this week was a get-together of the Prime Time Team.  It was lovely to see Jane, Di and Olwen again, (if only on a screen) and as always there was plenty of laughter alongside the serious business of planning some Prime Time activities for you to enjoy.  So, open your diaries, grab a pen and make note of the following:

    Tuesday 23rd March at 2.30pm – Prime Time Quiz (on Zoom).  I have handed back the Quiz Master’s baton to Di  after she briefly relinquished it to me for the Christmas Quiz.  Don’t worry, I won’t make a habit of picking up the baton – apparently I made it too hard…!) Zoom joining details to follow nearer the time.

    New to Prime Time, commencing on Thursday 25th February – Coffee & Chat.  A regular weekly drop-in session for Prime Time members to catch up with the team and each other.  Members of the Prime Time Team will be on Zoom between 3.30 and 4pm each Thursday afternoon between 25th February and 1st April.  If there is ongoing demand, we will consider extending this beyond Easter too.  So pour yourself a cuppa, bring a biscuit or cake along to the Zoom room too (to make it really feel like a Prime Time event!) and chat away with old friends (and maybe make some new ones…)  The Zoom joining details will remain the same each week:

    The direct link is: https://zoom.us/j/9463914833

    Or the Personal Meeting ID (PMI) if you prefer to type it directly into the Zoom ‘Join a Meeting’ box is 946-391-4833

    Password:  in both instances you will also need to enter the following password: 2021

    We have an idea for a project that we could all jointly collaborate on, a project to ensure that our memories of the past year do not get forgotten.  These Coffee & Catch Up sessions will give us the ideal opportunity to discuss this project and to share ideas. So if you have been writing poetry in lock down, taking photographs or tried out a new recipe that you’d like to share, bring it along and tell us about it.  But if you would prefer to join the session and just chat about day to day life, or just sit and listen – that’s absolutely fine too.

    You may have noticed that when I mentioned the Prime Time Team, there was a name missing from the usual line-up; my colleague Karen Franks.  Karen decided at the start of lock down last March that she would like the time to concentrate on her family and therefore she hasn’t been working alongside me for nearly a year now.  However, we have kept in regular contact and it was her hope that she would return once there was a greater need again for the administrative support she was able to provide.  However, over the past year, Karen’s parents have both had periods of ill health and she needs to have much more flexibility in her week in order to support them to the extent that she would wish to.  With no timescale available as to when we might be able to get face-to-face activities up and running again for Prime Time, we’ve mutually agreed that now seems a good time for Karen to be able to say that she is permanently available to support her Mum & Dad whenever they need it and so Karen will not be returning to her role with us.

    This is absolutely the right decision for Karen.  Like myself, she has a very strong focus on family and I am not at all surprised that she feels her role now is to be there for her Mum & Dad.  Karen’s departure is a big loss for us but Karen leaves us having  gained a lot of knowledge and understanding regarding the challenges associated with advancing age and that will be of enormous benefit to both Karen and her parents as they face this new stage of their lives together.

    Karen has been with us for about 5 years now.  Karen has definitely been my wing-woman and her help and presence has enabled us to grow Prime Time and the wider BHC Older Person’s Ministry into what it is today.  Karen has taken on so much more than what she originally thought she would be doing and she risen to every challenge.  It was Karen who has been the one producing all the beautiful invitations and flyers that you receive from Prime Time; until lock down she was the one sending out all the emails, she answered phone calls, wrote letters, prepared articles for both parish magazines and logged everything that we were doing so that we could keep track of our activities and report back on what had been achieved.  We even persuaded her to come out from behind her desk on occasions and come to some of the events she helped to organise – so I know that a number of you will have met her.

    We would like to thank Karen for all that she has given to us and to let her leave with a gift that she can remember her time with us by.  There is a collection open here at the Old Rectory if anyone would like to contribute.  Cash or cheques (made payable to Busbridge PCC) can be left at the Old Rectory and it is also possible to use the ‘Giving’ page on our website:  https://www.bhcgodalming.org/giving  referencing your donation ‘Karen Franks’.

    Saying goodbye is never easy and the inevitable changes that come with personnel movement take a while to get used to.  But I am reminded that ‘For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven’ (Ecclesiastes Chap 3, verse 1).  The season for Karen’s time with us has passed and there is a new season ahead for both Prime Time and Karen.  Further encouragement can be found in Isaiah Chapter 43, verses 18-19: ‘Remember not the former things, nor consider the things of old. Behold, I am doing a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it? I will make a way in the wilderness and rivers in the desert’.  Perhaps you feel that you are being called to help ‘make a way in the wilderness’ or be ‘the river in the desert’ – if not you, then maybe someone you know?  We encourage all volunteers, not just people who are members of our church community who step forward.  So if you are someone, or know of someone who has a heart for supporting older people and they have a little spare time, whether they are church goers or not, please do feel free to give them my phone number or email address so that I can chat to them about the opportunities we can offer.

    It is a time of continued uncertainty and change for us all. ‘The Times They Are A-Changin’ as Bob Dylan famously sang.  But may we all find comfort in the knowledge that ‘Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever’. (Hebrews: Chap 13, verse 8)  That’s a thought that certainly helps me to sleep at night.

    And to send you off with a smile on your face, a funny quote regarding the Covid-era that popped up on my radar this week:  ‘The world has turned upside down.  Old folk are sneaking out of the house and their kids are yelling at them to stay indoors!’

    Until next Friday (by which time hopefully we’ll be needing a few less layers!)

    Penny x