
I went to a bookstore and asked the saleswoman, "Where's the self-help section?" She said if she told me, it would defeat the purpose.
Family friendly christian church located in Knowle Park Bristol England with kids, teen, family, prayer and worship groups. Great music, fun pastor and friendly congregation, we welcome you anytime! Pastor Christian Ache
What a great children's story and what an awesome cast! Thank you to the cast of the Panto and our church robber, ahh, I mean treasurer for helping out! Don't click the picture unless you want to see Chris going beyond the call of duty with his method acting!
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| From Church of the Nazarene Broadwalk Knowle Park Bristol BS4 2RD |
When my father and my mother forsake me, then the Lord will take care of me.

The offices of the Christian Party were vandalised following the launch of a new bus advertising campaign proclaiming that there is a God.
The adverts were launched by the party last Thursday in response to the British Humanist Association’s bus adverts, which state, “There probably is no God. Now stop worrying and enjoy your life.”
The Christian Party’s adverts are displayed on 50 London buses and carry the slogan: “There definitely is a God. So join the Christian Party and enjoy your life.”
Police have launched an investigation after the front windows of the party’s London headquarters were found smashed in on Saturday morning. The police suspect the incident to be a religious hate crime.
Leader of the Christian Party, the Rev George Hargreaves, said the incident was a “sign of the times” but vowed to continue on with the campaign.
“I’m disappointed more than shocked,” he said, describing how in Scotland the Christian Party had experienced similar acts of violence when protesters tore down their campaign posters.
“It’s just a shame that people who are intolerant of Christianity feel that they need to destroy property and to be violent,” he continued.
“We are not phased by it. What was intended for evil will be used for good. If they break our windows, we will just put in new windows.
“We don’t have to get violent or angry about it. We just have to love the Lord, keep a good witness and the Lord will do the rest.”
The party is due to launch the same advert in a six-week campaign in Scotland, beginning February 24.The recession could be the trigger that British society needs to fix its selfish ways, says the head of the Roman Catholic Church in England and Wales.
Speaking to The Times, Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor said the economic downturn was an opportunity for the country to think about its values.
“It's the end of a certain kind of selfish capitalism,” he said. “This particular recession is a moment - a kairos - when we have to reflect as a country on what are the things that nourish the values, the virtues, we want to have ... Capitalism needs to be underpinned with regulation and a moral purpose.”
He hit out at the “me, me” attitude of modern Britain, saying people had come to regard their wealth as indicator of their worth.
“One feels very sorry for those losing their jobs but in times of recession people have to rely on friends and neighbours and families and things that really matter to them,” he said.
“That may be a good thing. I think people did lose their way a bit. It has been difficult to bring up children with the kind of values we want. Let's face it, we now have a ‘me, me' society, a more consumerist society, a utilitarian society, and our values and virtues have become diminished.
“Some of it has got to do with having too much. If your worth just depends on your wealth, that is not healthy. Your worth should depend on who you are.”
The Archbishop, who is soon to retire, also criticised the bonus culture of the big banks.
The finance industry, he said, was “so focused on money” and needed to be “underpinned by a moral sense and regulation that makes it clear money is only a tool for living”.
“I hope people have come to their senses. I don't know why they got such big bonuses. I would cut them out altogether.”LONDON (Reuters) - Scientists say they may have found out why the great British chip smells so irresistible: a complex blend of scents that includes butterscotch, cocoa, cheese and flowers.
The aroma has been unpicked by food scientists at Leeds University.
"Whether oven-cooked or fried, the humble chip doesn't smell of just chips -- the aroma is much more complex and probably explains why chips are everyone's favorite," said Dr. Graham Clayton, who led the research for National Chip Week that started Monday.
"Aromas including butterscotch, cocoa, onion, cheese and would you believe ...ironing boards, all combine to help make chips one of Britain's iconic dishes," he said.
The Leeds scientists collected the aroma from cooked chips, then separated the different compounds for analysis by an "aroma-meter" machine.
Those that could be detected by the human nose were sniffed, and the type and strength of smell recorded.
The findings showed that chips that are cooked twice have more complex aromas, comprising bitter cocoa, butterscotch, cheese, earthy potatoes, onions, and flowers.
"Perhaps these findings will see chips treated like wine in the future -- with chip fans turning into buffs as they impress their friends with eloquent descriptions of their favorite fries," Clayton said.

| From Table Top Sales |
The report suggests that children’s happiness is most threatened by adults who aggressively pursue their own success; family breakdown; not being allowed to explore outside unsupervised; being pushed towards sex at an early age; too much television, video games, and advertising; not enough exercise; less belief in values such as generosity and fairness; too much emphasis on school league tables. As a result, there was evidence of increasing levels of mental illness among children, for which at least another 1000 therapists were needed.
Be grateful for children says report
A MIXTURE of “sentimentalism and panic” prevents a sensible discussion of childhood, the Archbishop of Canterbury says in an afterword to A Good Childhood, writes Bill Bowder.
Dr Williams commends the report, which, he says, asks “for a coherent vision of how human beings grow and become capable of giving and deserving trust, for unremitting advocacy on behalf of those who are growing up in poverty, for a systematic willingness to pay attention to how children and young people actually talk about themselves, and perhaps, above all, for a realistic and grateful appreciation of who and what our young people really are.”
In nine chapters, the contributors to the report consider what children want from their childhood, what is best for their happiness, and what happy children might do for English society as they grow up. Its main conclusion is that excessive individualism among adults damages children.
Among its recommendations are:
• both parents should attend parenting classes and consider the effect of a child on their relationship;
• parents should be prepared to be authoritative and set boundaries;
• parents and children should establish a good moral vocabulary;
• parental leave should be available for longer periods;
• parents and teachers should help children develop “the spiritual qualities of wonder and inner peace”;
• discipline in schools needs to be stronger and based on mutual respect;
• physical and psychological violence should be out of order at home and at school;
• sex education should be taught not as biology but as part of emotional development;
• a civil birth ceremony should be introduced as an alternative to baptism;
• free welfare support should be available to parents;
• child mental-health services need to be radically improved;
• the salaries of teachers in deprived areas should be increased;
• SATS and league tables should be abolished;
• alcohol and snack foods should not be advertised before 9 p.m.;
• no open spaces where children play should be built upon;
• a drive for apprenticeships should be begun.
The report suggests that children need freedom to explore, but instead they have less space to do this than in the past. The age when they are first let out on their own is now much greater than in previous generations.
There are fewer open spaces for them to go to, the roads are more dangerous, and 11,000 youth clubs can provide only 1.2 million places for the 4.5 million children between the ages of 11 to 16 that might need them. Proposals to impose curfews on children, ban them from parts of town, or expose them to ultrasonic deterrents are “out of order”.
The panel of researchers heard from children that “Some adults behave as if children and young people don’t matter, or seem to be cross with seeing groups of young children and young people in public.”
“That kind of attitude is unfair,” the panel agrees, but it also tells children: “When you are sharing space with adults, on a bus or in the street, make sure you don’t give adults reason to be upset or cross with you.” It also urges them to keep their friends, to enjoy seven hours of exercise a week, and to praise teachers when they are good.
One study in the report found that the more a child is exposed to the television and internet, “the more materialistic she becomes; the worse she relates to her parents; and the worse her mental health”.
A Good Childhood by Richard Layard and Judy Dunn (Penguin/ Children’s Society, £9.99 (Church Times Bookshop £9); 978-0-141-03943-5.
A group of young Muslims are backing a Church in Wales appeal for humanitarian aid in Gaza.
They have raised more than £1,000 for a mobile dental clinic delivering frontline medical aid around the bombed out streets of Gaza. The clinic, which has been funded totally by the Church in Wales since 2000, is part of the work of family health centres in Gaza run by the Near East Council of Churches.
Members of the Young Muslim Community Organisation in Newport, South Wales, held a bazaar to raise money following an appeal by the Archbishop of Wales, Dr Barry Morgan, for urgent aid for the work of the NECC clinics. The appeal was intensified after a direct missile attack destroyed one of the family centres in Shij’ia two weeks ago.
Ifthir Ahmed, chair of the YMCO, said the group was pleased to support a Welsh appeal for humanitarian aid.
He said, “We read about the destruction of the family clinic and the invaluable service the mobile dental clinic provides for so many people in the Strip. We felt that some of the money we raised had to go to this very noble cause.
“The response and support we’ve had from the people of Newport has been strong. They felt the call for funds was going out to everyone in Wales, not just the parishioners of the Church in Wales, and as Welsh citizens we felt a duty to support a Welsh appeal.
“It's important that the people in Wales work together when we are trying to help the victims of man-made or natural disasters so that the recipients of the aid realise it’s from the people of one nation to another, not just from charities, even though charities are the front end of providing the relief.”
More than 300 people attended the bazaar last month. Activities included an auction, stalls, hot food and children’s games. Members of the YMCO will present the cheque to the Assistant Bishop of Llandaff, Dr David Yeoman on Tuesday.
More than £14,000 has been raised in the past month for the Church in Wales appeal. A large number of donations have come from parishes across Wales who have held collections, coffee mornings and concerts to raise money.
The Archbishop of Wales Dr Morgan said, “We are very grateful to everyone, from many faiths and backgrounds, in Wales who are pulling together to do what they can to respond to our appeal for immediate medical supplies for the people in Gaza who are in desperate need at this time. We hope people will continue to donate to the appeal and keep the region in their prayers.”
More than a funny flick (which it is) and an action-packed CGI masterpiece (which it is), “Bolt” is a movie that reaches into the very heart of its audience. And it’s this ability to do so that will stick moviegoers to their seats and have them coming back for more. The script is superb.
We’ve all seen the trailers. Superdog Bolt is a genetically altered mutt with special powers, including incredible strength, laser vision, and a “super bark” that can lay waste an entire army. Or at least that’s what he thinks he is and how his TV show portrays him. Unknown to him, Bolt is just a regular dog (a cross between a white German shepherd and a number of other dogs, according to Disney) who has been raised all his life on a TV set, made to think everything happening to him is real (much like Jim Carrey’s “The Truman Show”).
"If the dog believes it's real, the audience believes it," the director of Bolt’s TV show says, pointing out the “depth of emotion never captured before" in Bolt's performance.
Bolt (voiced by John Travolta) believes with every bone in his body that he has to save his “person”, Penny (voiced by Miley Cyrus), and defend her from the evil schemes of the cat-loving “green-eyed man”, Dr Calico (voiced by Malcolm McDowell). So when Penny is “captured” in one cliffhanger episode, Bolt manages to break free from his Hollywood confines to attempt to rescue her – only to find himself boxed up and shipped off by mistake to the other side of the US – New York City.