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Welcome to LCM!

 


The London City Mission (LCM) was founded in 1835 at a time when London was growing rapidly and was the largest city and port in the world. A number of Christian leaders recognised that the churches were failing to attract the new urban masses into their services and that therefore the churches must go to the people with the Gospel.

LCM was established as a joint venture by members of different Protestant denominations.
• Its aim was to “go to the people of London, especially the poor, to bring them to an acquaintance with Jesus Christ as Saviour, and to do them good by every means in their power.”
• Its method was to recruit and pay full-time workers (all men at that time), assigning to each a “district” that he was to visit frequently, going from door to door.
• Its goal was to draw people into local churches.
LCM was a pioneering organisation, in:
• inter-denominational evangelism;
• employing full-time salaried lay-workers;
• socially-caring activity in Dickensian London.
LCM and its staff were innovative, being instrumental in the founding of many other Christian and social organisations and in developing a wide range of ministry methods.

London saw enormous social, economic and religious changes through the Victorian era – changes in which the LCM played a small but not insignificant role. By the beginning of the twentieth century LCM had a work-force of 467 missionaries serving 343 district ministries and 123 ministries to ethnic groups (such as the Jews, Asians, Italians and Germans) and to workers in such settings as the docks, railways, coal-yards, factories, public houses, taxi-cabs, markets, and the hotels and mews of the West End.

In the century since 1900, there have been further dramatic changes in London:
• Old industries, such as the docks, have been replaced by new housing and business developments. Large council estates have replaced many inner-city slum areas;
• The population rose to 8.2 million in 1931, and then shrank to below 6.8 million in the 1980s, before beginning to increase again. In 2001 it stood at 7.2 million.
• Church-going has declined dramatically, especially since 1960, so that whereas estimated church attendance in 1903 was 20%, a 1998 survey produced a figure of 8.6% for all churches (3.6% attending evangelical churches).
• Other major religions are now strongly represented, with 17.2% of the population claiming a religious commitment other than Christianity in the 2001 census.
• New immigrant groups have arrived in the footsteps of Jewish and European refugees. Almost 2 million (27%) of today’s Londoners were born outside the UK and there are more than 37 different immigrant communities of over 10,000 people.
• Ethnic minorities now make up over a third of London’s population. The largest non-white ethnic groups are Indians (6.1%), Black Africans (5.2%), and Black Caribbeans (4.8%).
• Increased opportunities for education and new levels of wealth and home-ownership have transformed the old rigid boundaries between middle-class and working-class communities.
• The cultural and moral certainties of the “modern age” have been replaced by the swirling varieties and disturbing fashions of “post-modernism” and the multi-cultural society.

Today, LCM faces a changed and changing city, with its population predicted to reach 8.5 million within 25 years.

It has maintained its original commitment to the historic Christian faith.

It has continued to recruit and train a considerable body of evangelists (now including women as well as men), drawn from a wide variety of ethnic, social and religious backgrounds.

The challenge that now faces it is to maintain and develop that ministry, with all the vision and innovativeness that marked its early progress, so that London’s urban masses of today and tomorrow will continue to be confronted with the claims and invitations of Jesus Christ and drawn into his Church.

To learn more about the work of LCM go to: http://www.lcm.org.uk

 

 

Hello
Hello and welcome to our church. If you are a new visitor, we have a page for you to get to know us and learn more about planning a visit.
Click here to see more.

Planning your Visit

Welcome to Christ Church Purley 

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The following information is aimed initially at those planning a visit but is useful for anyone visiting Christ Church Purley for the first time on a Sunday.


Where and When
We meet at Christ Church Purley (click here for directions). For our Sunday Services starting at 8:45am and 10:15am, for your first visit, we recommend arriving 15 minutes early to help you get a parking space and find somewhere to sit before the service begins. When you arrive, you should be greeted by someone on our Welcome Team who will be wearing a Welcome lanyard and will be happy to help.

We serve tea and coffee between the first and second services from 9:45am and then after the service at 11:30am. It is a great way to meet people, or simply take time to find your bearings. All refreshments are free.

Accessibility: There is wheelchair access and a sound loop for anyone who needs it. There are disabled toilets off of the Foyer.

Our Services 
Our 8:45am Service is traditional in style with Holy Communion, liturgy and hymns on an organ. You will be lead through the service throughout by the leader. 

The 10:15am service is relaxed in style and led by a band. It is broadcast online and past services can be watched here. It begins with a warm welcome from one of our team and opening prayer. We typically have two or three songs and notices lasting approximately 15 minutes.

At 10:30am the children and young people leave for their groups. A speaker will give a talk that is bible based and that we can apply to our everyday lives after which there is usually a song and a led-prayers. One of our leaders will share news and notices, usually about what is going on in the life of the church and we then finish with a final worship song and blessing.

Every second Sunday of the month we share Holy Communion and the children and young people return to join as a whole church family otherwise parents will pick up their children at 11:30am.

On the first Sunday of the month at 10:15am we all worship together in a Worship for Everyone service, with round tables and activities.

Third service:  This is a extended worship and word service led by a band and happens at 11.45am on the first and second Sundays of the month.

Gospel Service: On the last Sunday of each month at 6:30pm, an informal service of worship and word in the Foyer space.

Children and teenagers
We have a great programme lined up for children of all ages:

Stay & Play (Pre-school years). Parents/carers remain and join in with the fun
Kids 1 (5-7 years)
Kids 2 (8-11 years)
Youth (11-18 years)

Parents register their children aged 5-11 years prior to the start of the service from 10am and stay with their parent or grown-up for the start of the service for the welcome, songs and notices.

The children’s group activities vary depending on the age but usually there are topic-themed activities, games, craft, bible story, music and ministry. Youth fill up on doughnuts whilst discussing how God is relevant to their every-day and those under five, stay and play with their adult whilst enjoying coffee, tea and chatting with other parents. Free-play and themed activities precede an interactive story and song time learning about Scruffy the puppet dog’s latest dilemma and Mr Bible’s always-great advice.


Getting Connected:

Discipleship Groups

While Sundays are a great way to meet new people, it is often in smaller gatherings that you can really get to know someone. Being part of one of our discipleship groups allows you to make new friends, share together and support each other through biblical study. We have a variety of groups that meet throughout the week, some morning and some evenings. If you would like to join one we can put you in touch with a discipleship group leader who will be more than happy to invite you along to their group.

Serving and Volunteering
If you want to get involved in the life of the church and community throughout the week, you can sign up to serve on a team.

Why not complete our Newcomer form and sign up for the Newsletter?