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Communities – Worthing.UKviews.co.uk http://worthing.ukviews.co.uk Your local Community Website for Worthing Mon, 16 May 2011 17:29:28 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.4 Pram and Toddler Group http://worthing.ukviews.co.uk/2011/05/16/pram-and-toddler-group-worthing/ Mon, 16 May 2011 17:18:12 +0000 http://ukviews.co.uk/worthing/?p=1432 [continue reading...]]]>

If you have a pre-school child, pram and toddler groups can be great fun.

During the session you can enjoy various different activities with your child.

All parents, grandparents and childminders are welcome to bring their children and babies.

For 70p per family you can get out the house and meet lots of other people (mums, grannies, dads, etc) who are in exactly the same position as you – trying to entertain one or more young children.

Before very long your child will have formed friendships with the other children and babies and they will be happy playing together whilst you enjoy a sit down and making your own new friends!

Please remember the children are to be supervised at all times and they remain your responsibility throughout the session.

All these sessions will be open during term times (except for Holy Week).

We meet in St Symphorian’s Church Hall, Durrington Hill, Worthing, West Sussex BN13 2PU on:Tuesdays and Fridays (10 – 11.30).

During each session we offer a varied range of activities for you and your children to share. We hope you will both enjoy discovering new skills and learning together. Try out new activities whilst sharing this time and helping your child develop physically, mentally and socially.

Please come and join us on one or more sessions a week. This is a great time to meet people and make new friends. We are waiting to meet YOU!


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Communities http://worthing.ukviews.co.uk/2011/01/24/communities/ Mon, 24 Jan 2011 18:26:20 +0000 http://ukviews.co.uk/worthing/?p=489 [continue reading...]]]> Communities in Worthing

The borough of Worthing has about 50 active Christian places of worship. There is also a mosque, which follows the Sunni tradition. There are also 16 former church buildings which are either disused or in secular use.

Worthing’s first Anglican church, St Paul’s, was built in 1812; previously, worshippers had to travel to the ancient parish church of Broadwater. John Rebecca‘s classical-style building became structurally unsound and closed in 1995. The austere design was well regarded at first, but architectural writers have since criticised it. Its importance derives from its status as “the spiritual and social centre around which the town developed”. Residential growth in the 19th century growth led to several other Anglican churches opening in the town centre: Christ Church was started in 1840 and survived a closure threat in 2006; Arthur Blomfield‘s St Andrew’s Church brought the controversial High Church form of worship to the town in the 1880s—its “Worthing Madonna” icon was particularly notorious; and Holy Trinity church opened at the same time but with less dispute. Other Anglican churches were built in the 20th century to serve new residential areas such as High Salvington and Maybridge; and the ancient villages which were absorbed into Worthing Borough between 1890 and 1929 each had their own church: Broadwater’s had Saxon origins, St Mary’s at Goring-by-Sea was Norman (although it was rebuilt in 1837)  St Andrew’s at West Tarring was 13th century, and St Botolph‘s at Heene and St Symphorian’s at Durrington were rebuilt from medieval ruins. All of the borough’s churches are in the Rural Deanery of Worthing and the Diocese of Chichester.

The first Roman Catholic church in Worthing opened in 1864; the centrally located St Mary of the Angels Church has since been joined by others at East Worthing, Goring-by-Sea and High Salvington. All are in Worthing Deanery in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Arundel and Brighton. Protestant Nonconformism has a long history in Worthing: the town’s first place of worship was an Independent chapel. Methodists, Baptists, the United Reformed Church and Evangelical Christian groups each have several churches in the borough, and other denominations represented include Christadelphians, Christian Scientists, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Mormons and Plymouth Brethren. The Salvation Army have been established for more than a century, but their arrival in Worthing prompted large-scale riots involving a group called the Skeleton Army. These continued intermittently for several years in the 1880s.

Worthing’s Churches Together organisation, currently chaired by Nigel O’Dwyer,  encourages ecumenical work and links between the town’s churches. Church leaders meet regularly to pray for the town and to organise events together through PrayerNet. A townwide youth service, CrossRoads, brings together young people from all denominations. New Song Cafe performs a similar function for the town’s church musicians. Other Christian organisations include Worthing Churches Homeless Projects and Street Pastors. In October 2009, a Mission Festival Weekend was held to celebrate the range of mission agencies based in Worthing; the centrepiece was a parade from Worthing Pier to St Paul’s Church.

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