Nick Jowett of our local group in Sheffield recently shared this hymn with us.
Read more “A Church Action on Poverty hymn”
Download our guide, developed jointly with people with experience of poverty, the National Union of Journalists, the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, On Road Media and ATD Fourth World.
This practical guide is for journalists who want to report on UK poverty accurately, sensitively and powerfully.
We know the importance of powerful, respectful media coverage of UK poverty and we have worked with many journalists to tell stories of our work and the wider movement to end UK poverty.
We also know today’s newsrooms are more stretched than ever, that journalists are doing ever more work in less time, and that journalists themselves are in a difficult industry. This new guide aims to help.
It offers practical recommendations on how media reporting on poverty can better represent people’s experiences, reduce the risk of negative impacts on people in poverty, and build support for structural solutions.
When speaking to the media, people experiencing poverty want to draw attention to the challenges they face, call for action to improve things, highlight what would make a difference, and show solidarity with others.
Some stories about poverty focus on statistics. Others focus on individual people. Others focus on the systems. The guide shows that the very best coverage includes and balances all three, highlights some of the pitfalls in reporting poverty, and gives clear tips on how to avoid them.
This guide was co-produced by an advisory group, including journalists and media professionals and many people who have experience of poverty and who have shared their stories through the media. The project has been coordinated by ATD Fourth World, Church Action on Poverty, the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, the National Union of Journalists and On Road Media.
Gavin Aitchison, media unit coordinator at Church Action on Poverty, said: “We’re delighted to have played a part in the production of this important new guide. It is full of useful tips and insights, and is a great example of partnership working. The experiences and suggestions from people who we work with who have shared their stories with the media in the past, and from all the journalists involved, was immensely valuable. Responsible, in-depth journalism can challenge and change the systems that hold people in poverty back, and hopefully this guide will help to inspire further good, dignified coverage of the issues around poverty in the UK.”
Rediscovering the heart of the gospel
Just Church is a free programme for use by churches, Christian groups and ecumenical bodies. It’s designed to help you embed a concern for poverty and social justice issues in the life of your community.
What can we do to make concerns for tackling UK poverty centre-stage in our churches’ lives? How can we be more Just Churches in our worship, our work with children, our personal lifestyles, our local communities and our wider political engagement?
Concerns for tackling poverty and social justice are at the heart of the Gospel. There is a rich biblical tradition from the Old Testament prophets through the Gospels and New Testament. This has been carried forward in differing ways by all the major Christian traditions to the modern day.
Just Church draws on existing resources for promoting social justice, and links them with wider understandings of mission and ecclesiology across the denominational and theological spectrum: from Catholic social teaching, through the URC’s “five marks of mission” and the Anglican “mission-shaped church”, to the new evangelical emphasis on “integral mission”. There are also rich reflective and worship resources, including materials from the Iona Community and across the theological and liturgical spectrum.
By its nature, poverty in the UK is largely hidden. It does not mostly involve people sleeping rough, starving or in absolute poverty. Responding to poverty on our own doorstep – even in a society where inequalities between rich and poor continue to grow – is no less a challenge than promoting trade justice for people in poverty on the other side of the globe.
Just Church was published in 2008 but most of the content is still relevant and useful today.
The full programme includes 12 modules, each of which has enough material for a 90-minute session. But the first module features a process of analysis and reflection which will allow you to select the modules that are most valuable in your context. You could use six modules to run a Lent programme, for example.
Click on the images below to download the modules.
If you have any questions about the programme and how to use it, please contact our Supporter Relations Manager.
Just Church provides an excellent resource for challenging all of us to remember the biblical mandate to provide justice for the poor and the marginalised.
———— Dr Anthony G Reddie
I hope Just Church will enable many local churches to embed the gospel concern for justice more deeply into their lives.
———— Baroness Kathleen Richardson
We found Just Church rightly challenging and very helpful. I am recommending it as a valuable resource to all our parishes.
———— Right Revd John Hawsthorne, former Roman Catholic Bishop of Hallam