Previous News Releases

A celebration of ecumenical partnership

News Release: 20th October 2024
 
On Sunday 20th October 2024, representatives of the denominations connected to the Northstowe Church Network, as well as from The Pathfinder CofE Primary School, joined those from Pathfinder Church, Little Explorers, and the Compline Community for a service of celebration and commitment.
 
The service started with a reaffirmation of the Shared Vision between the local church and the regional Baptists, Methodists, URC, CofE and Quakers, recognising that over 20 years of shared prayer and planning among those involved in  Churches Together in Cambridgeshire had led to this day.  And now, in recognition of the even deeper partnership between those of URC, CofE and Baptist heritage here on the ground, the Northstowe Church Network has been established as three-way Local Ecumenical Partnership.
 
Revd Mark Burleigh, County Ecumenical Officer, highlighted that this is one way this new church, in a new town, is putting down roots into the traditions and practices that have long shaped Christianity. A Local Ecumenical Partnership invites all those who are part of the church into full membership of all three denominations and brings the regional bodies alongside them in their mission and ministry. Northstowe is the newest of the 11 LEPs in Cambridgeshire. Working together in this way is such a positive expression of the gospel!
He then invite the representatives of the three partner denominations to come too formally commission the Revd Dr Beth Cope, as lead minister, to make full use of the rites and practices of all three denominations.
 
  • The Revd Dr Gale Richards (Regional Minister in the Eastern Baptist Association),
  • the Revd Lythan Nevard (Moderator of the Eastern Synod of the United Reformed Church),
  • the Rt Revd Dr Dagmar Winter (Acting Bishop of Ely, Church of England)
The Commissioning concluded with words of commitment being shared between Beth and those involved in the life of the Northstowe Church Network (below).

The service continued with intergenerational worship, as all those present were involved in "praying, exploring, and sharing". The theme was "Life in the Spirit", drawing on John 3:8. As the gathering came to an end, the light of the Pascal Candle was used to light a campfire outside, as the church sang "Build your kingdom here".

 

Minister:

Today I bring myself and the gifts I have,
and I covenant to serve and encourage this church-network and community:
to respect and care for you, to journey with you,
to take responsibility among you,
to seek God with you, to listen to God in you,
and to work with you to be Christ in this world.


Those involved in the Northstowe Church Network:

Today we bring ourselves and the gifts we have,
and we covenant to serve and encourage
this church-network  and community:
to respect and care for each other,
to take responsibility for the people we are
and the people we hope to be in Christ,
and to encourage you as our minister
as we make this journey together.

See pictures, and read more, at www.northstowe.church/partnershipcelebration

A Joint Statement for Peace

News Release: 8pm, 8th August 2024
 
To our fellow-residents in Northstowe & the Adjoining Villages
In view of the terrible violence across the UK in recent weeks, we wish to make a joint statement as leaders of faith groups in Northstowe, expressing our solidarity with those affected and our horror at recent events, even as we find hope in our local and national experiences of interfaith friendship and cooperation.

Specifically:
  1. We honour the many people, of all religious and non-religious beliefs, coming together in solidarity and supporting each other as they work for peace, despite feeling scared, angered and even unsafe.
  2. We condemn any violent protest, vandalism, rioting, and attacks on the police.
  3. We condemn any harassment or violence against individuals or communities because of their beliefs, ethnicity or country of origin.
  4. We are committed to the peaceful co-existence of people from different ethnicities, faiths, and worldviews in Northstowe.
The tendency to hate and blame those different to us is a widespread human problem, including at times in faith communities. But there is also good in every person. We have already seen many good examples of people in Northstowe, of all religious and non-religious beliefs, committing to welcome and getting to know those who are different to themselves. At this time, we encourage people to use the positive resources of their faith traditions to empower peace. Together, we will work for a strong and peaceful community for everyone in Northstowe and the adjoining villages.

Whatever your ethnicity, background, or skin colour, be assured that we value your role in Northstowe: you belong in our community


As faith groups, we can offer a listening ear and welcoming communities to those who might be struggling to know how to respond to the current news. Please get in touch with us.
 
  • Northstowe Muslims: contact@northstowemuslims.org (POC: Dr. Mohammad Waris Abdullah)
  • Northstowe Church Network: contact@northstowe.church (POC: Rev.Dr.Beth Cope)
  • Emmanuel Church Northstowe: contact@emmanuelchurchnorthstowe.org (POC: Staff Elder Josh Monteiro)
  • Hindu Samaj Northstowe: : hindusamajnorthstowe@gmail.com (POC: Neal Patel)

The following online resources (not an exhaustive list) might also be helpful:
  1. https://www.youngminds.org.uk/young-person/find-help
  2. https://haycambridge.co.uk/support/cambridge-ethnic-community-forum/
  3. Hate crime | Cambridgeshire Constabulary (cambs.police.uk)

Why the Northstowe Church Network signed up to be Voter Registration Champions

News Release: 30th May 2024
 

The new town of Northstowe is being built on former RAF land near Cambridge. Just 1,500 of the planned 11,000 homes (upward of 26,000 residents by 2042) have been built. But, already, this new town is characterised by people of all religious and non religious beliefs working together to make a difference. 

However, in a new town, everyone's recently moved house. It would be easy to forget to register to vote... and suddenly find it's too late to join in. So we've become Voter Registration Champions to help encourage all new residents to use their democratic rights.


Northstowe's demographic is much younger and more diverse than surrounding villages, with many people working from home, juggling long hours, or perhaps caring for a family. In the busyness of settling into newbuild life, it can be hard to form connections. So people can easily feel disempowered, or isolated. Like many other community networkers, however, we're working to change this: to find ways to connect people and help them too step up and make a  difference.
 
We started small, theologically, and democratically. Our reading of Scripture has convinced us that God cares about giving a voice to the voiceless, and empowering those who might otherwise be overlooked. At our Church Meeting, people shared stories and encouragement about why voting mattered to them - and some of the challenges faced locally. So we voted: and committed to encourage all of our eligible members  to get registered to vote in time for May's mayoral elections, and to start to spread the word about the new need for photographic ID at the polling stations.
Within a day of the Church Meeting, 100% of eligible members were registered to vote, and had checked their photo ID.  On polling day, members shared photos of themselves outside the polling station on the church WhatsApp, celebrating our new temporary community centre ("The Cabin") being used as a polling station for the first time. Being able to physically vote IN our own new town was encouraging: previously, lack of community spaces meant we had to vote in the neighbouring village.

When the General Election was announced, we started looking for resources to help us equip people not just to register, but to participate critically and constructively in the democratic process. The Joint Public Issues Team (JPIT) a partnership between the Baptist Union of Great Britain, the Methodist Church, and the United Reformed Church in the United Kingdom, have put out helpful resources encouraging everyone to LOVE, PRAY, VOTE. Their purpose is to help the Churches work together for peace and justice through listening, learning, praying, speaking, and acting on public policy issues.  We're using their resources within our Sunday and midweek gatherings, and sharing them on social media. Our thriving baby group ("Little Explorers") is also becoming a place where honest conversations about politics are being encouraged, as we share opportunities and resources with the carers, mums, and dads who join us week by week. 

We'd love to have been able to host a hustings. But, in these early stages of a new town, we don't yet have a church building - in fact, there are very few public spaces, or groups with the experience and resources to host such an event. However,  as a church, we're preparing to write to our local candidates and ask them some key questions. We look forward to sharing their responses locally.

We know we won't all agree on what's best for our new town, let alone the wider area. But our prayer (inspired by JPIT!)  is that the political debates will be characterised by listening, kindness and truthfulness; and that  voters will listen actively and demonstrate love-filled curiosity towards those they may disagree with or do not understand.

Read more about what we're sharing locally on our website: www.northstowe.church/vote

 

The Methodist East Anglia District show support for Northstowe by signing a Shared Vision Statement

News Release: 1st May 2024
Today the Revd Dr Julian Pursehouse visited Northstowe in order to make a commitment, on behalf of the Methodist East Anglia District, to share in prayer for Northstowe and help deepen the relationship with the ecumenical community forming here (Christian traditions working together). He was accompanied by the Revd Colin Watkins, Ecumenical Officer for the Methodist East Anglia District, and the Revd Nick Witham (St Ives Methodist Church). As they enjoyed a coffee  with Northstowe's Revd Beth Cope in the Northstowe Hub Cafe at The Cabin, the group shared stories, dreamed dreams, and discussed practical ways to deepen the relationship.
The Shared Commitment, which has also been agreed by the Diocese of Ely (Church of England), the Eastern Synod of the United Reformed Church,  the Eastern Baptist Association (BUGB), and  the Cambridgeshire Area Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), as well as the local Northstowe Church Network, reads:

Together, we have committed to share in prayer for Northstowe, and provide practical support in setting up the right structures for the next stages:
  • We commit ourselves to sharing together in the ministry of Christ to the world, and within this context to explore together the meaning and possibilities of unity for worship, evangelism, mission and service.
  • We commit ourselves to assessing the resources of church and community in terms of people, money and buildings, and to deploying them in the best way in relation to the aspirations and needs of local people
  • We commit ourselves to maintaining and developing relationships with our parent bodies and with Churches Together in Cambridgeshire (previously Cambridgeshire Ecumenical Council).

Pathfinder Church Northstowe launches the Northstowe Church Network in celebration of ecumenical and community partnership 

News Release: 25th January 2024, during the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity

The new town of Northstowe is being built on former RAF land near Cambridge. Just 1,500 of the planned 10,000 homes (upward of 25,000 residents) have been built. But, already, this new town is characterised by people working together to make a difference. Pathfinder Church has brought together those from across the Christian traditions and those new to faith. As they have put down roots in Northstowe, their commitment to “praying, exploring, and sharing” has inspired partnerships with schools, councils, and developers. To allow more fresh expressions of church to form, and to facilitate new community partnerships and a potential new community centre, a new legal framework has been set up. The Northstowe Church Network is a local ecumenical partnership of the Church of England, United Reformed Church, and Baptist Union of Great Britain.  What unites those involved in this new charity is much more than denominational background. It is rooted, growing, and transforming faith based on an encounter with the eternal God who still changes lives today.

Long before the first brick was laid in Northstowe, Christians from across the traditions involved in Churches Together in Cambridgeshire were praying for the new town.  In 2018, the Church of England funded a Pioneer Minister, the Rev'd Dr Beth Cope, to partner with local residents and key stakeholders to build community encompassing those of all religious and non-religious beliefs. Part of this work would see the development of new missional and worshipping communities with and for those moving into the new town. These make space for people to ask questions and explore connections between everyday life and Christian spirituality centring on “The Pathfinder”, Jesus Christ.  

 

Soon, a small group of new residents came together to form Pathfinder Church Northstowe.  This community meets in, and has become part of the family, at The Pathfinder CofE Primary School: sharing in the life of the school family; supporting RE, Collective Worship, and wellbeing; and partnering to develop the school’s outside spaces. Like the school, the church takes their name both from Christian tradition and as a reflection on the local history of the Pathfinder Squadron who flew from the original airbase.  

 

Pathfinder Church have been working with the Diocese of Ely (Church of England), the Eastern Synod of the United Reformed Church, the Eastern Baptist Association, and the Cambridgeshire Area Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) to develop a shared ecumenical vision. This involves exploring together the meaning and possibilities of unity for worship, evangelism, mission and service. 

Today, in response to what God is doing, and the great opportunity in Northstowe, a framework is needed for the growing network of inclusive and diverse ecumenical worshipping and missional communities. Already, Pathfinder Church is being joined by Little Explorers (“time for you, your child, and God”), and the emerging Compline Community, who celebrate encounters with God through silence and poetic liturgies.  

 

The new charity, the Northstowe Church Network, will allow organic development of additional Christian communities for the people of Northstowe, making disciples of Jesus and serving the local community. Locally led, they will be part of a visible and sustainable network, not just sharing ecumenical governance but periodically coming together for joint prayer, worship, and to do things that could not be done alone.  

 

The Northstowe Church Network will also provide a robust governance structure for a potential new community centre, run in collaboration with residents, local authorities, voluntary and other organisations. The proposal is for a sensitively designed, open-hearted, lakeside venue, featuring adjoining internal and external worship and community spaces, allowing for private devotion, corporate prayer, worship services and the celebration of life events. It will be the main home for one or more missional and worshipping communities. A series of flexible spaces will allow not just the local church, but other community organisations, community services and faith groups to hire appropriate facilities. The entire site will be used for worship when the whole church gathers, such as at festivals and seasonal gatherings, complementing the ongoing use of other hired spaces across Northstowe. Thus the Northstowe Church Network aims to offer a peaceful, prayerful presence, having the confidence to hold the ministry of hospitality and loving service alongside acts of Christian worship. 

 

Mark Burleigh, of Churches Together in Cambridgeshire says, “I am excited by this fantastic example of how Christians are working together to serve the local residents, sharing the light and love of Christ in Northstowe.  It is great to see Christians working together at grass roots to help nurture life and hope in this developing community.” 

 

For more information, contact the church office for Pathfinder Church and the Northstowe Church Network: contact@northstowe.church

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Northstowe Church Network

The Northstowe Church Network is committed to the safeguarding of children, young people and adults. We follow the House of Bishops guidance and policies and have our own Safeguarding Officer. The Diocese of Ely’s safeguarding pages contain vital links and information including contacts for the Diocesan Safeguarding Advisor (DSA) who advise our SO. If you are concerned that a child or adult has been harmed or may be at risk of harm please contact the DSA. If you have immediate concerns about the safety of someone, please contact the police and your local authority Children or Adults Services."