Chance to find out all about Good Work
Good Work is a Norwich and Yarmouth-based mission that supports everyone from a janitor, grass cutter and dinner lady to a seafarer, mayor and chief executive. And you can find out all about it on March 12.
What do a seafarer, an educational support worker, a food packer, a wheelie bin collector, a dinner lady, a shop worker, a town hall receptionist, a laundry worker, and grass cutter, a hospital worker, a sugar producer, a mayor, a janitor and a chief executive officer all have in common?
They all have a chaplain who visits them where they work – on board ship, at their desk, or over lunch in county hall, in their food processing plant in Thetford, on their rounds in the Borough of Great Yarmouth, in their school kitchen, in their shop, at their reception desk or where they are working on a pressing or drying machine, in fact wherever they work.
 This is the ministry that many work place chaplains perform and one body that co-ordinates a lot of this activity is Good Work (Norfolk & Waveney Industrial Mission).
Industrial Mission has been about for a long time but in Norfolk & Waveney it now has the badge of Good Work to try and reflect the breadth of work place activity, the quality of the ministry and the hopes that we have of what people do and how they are supported in doing it.
Rev Chris Warner, who heads up the Good Work team, says: “Being there for people in the cut and thrust of their working lives is very important to us. The whole team is really committed to serving people in this way. People are people whether they are working or resting, at home or at the office, shop or factory.
“If people are struggling at home they take that struggle into the workplace, and if their job is stressing them out then the family will feel it. We can no longer expect people to compartmentalize their feelings; switch themselves on and off to suit family or employer.
 “Of course it’s very important for people to have a good work/life balance and that is what everyone should aim for because then it is easier to switch off and enjoy where you are, who you are with and what you are doing. But the start is being there for people: laughing with those who laugh, mourning with those who mourn, listening, learning, supporting and praying the hurt or the happiness.”
Now the Good Work Team want people to come along to their annual meetings on March 12 to hear more about the work that is being done and to listen, learn, support and pray for this ministry as well as helping shape its future.
The annual meetings on March 12th will be held in Great Yarmouth and Norwich so you can go to whichever place and time suits you.
12.00 – 14.00 Great Yarmouth: Town Hall Assembly Rooms (with buffet lunch) 19.00 – 21.00 Norwich: The Edwards Room in County Hall (with coffee and biscuits)
Please try to make one of these meetings a diary date. This is the one time in the year when the team can share what they are doing face-to-face with those who support them or receive their services. They need your support if you can offer it.
Chris says: “Each meeting will be roughly the same in content and include time to hear about the work that is being done, explore a particular theme and share insights and ideas together. An Annual Report will be presented and a video shown about the ministry. These meetings are always enjoyed and they really give the team a lift as they prepare for another year of service.”
If you want more information you can contact:
Peter Paine: portchaplain@keme.co.uk 01493 442371 (M) 07788 111 823
Pictured above, Good Work reaches British Sugar, Asda and Great Yarmouth Borough Council. |