Paul and Janey Hames join Alison Marchant at The Pleasaunce for a week of fellowship and Bible teaching.
A report by Paul and Janey:
We’d been to Alison Marchant’s Feast and Festivals teaching in 2018 and had such a blessed time learning new insights from her and sharing about CMJ’s work that when the opportunity to do it again came up we grabbed it with both hands! The majority of the group hadn’t experienced any Hebrew roots teaching before, so making the prophetic connections for them as Christians came as a revelation. Alison skillfully led us through each feast. No sitting around for the group either - Alison planned the course to be interactive and fun! For Tabernacles everyone had a hand in creating the Succah; from gathering branches outside and making the structure, to cutting out and colouring fruit to decorate it.
For Purim we reenacted in hilarious pantomime style the story with our baddy, Haman eventually being hung from a convenient hat stand!
Passover was, (and always is) such a revelation as we clearly see our not so hidden Messiah Jesus in this amazing story of redemption. There’s so much more we could tell you about the course but we think the best idea would be get it first hand and sign up for the next course which is:
- 13 to 18 June 2022 at Beechwood Court, Conwy. Visit the Beechwoord Court website
- 13 to 18 November 2022 at The Pleasaunce, Norfolk. Visit The Pleasaunce website
Paul and Janey Hames join Alison Marchant at The Pleasaunce for a week of fellowship and Bible teaching.
Listen to Janey and one of the attendees chat about the Feasts and Festivals teaching at The Pleasaunce.
Plaque dedicated to Bishop Solomon Alexander at St. Peter and St. Paul's in Cromer
During our ‘CMJ slot’ we mentioned the name Bishop Michael Solomon Alexander and a woman in the group said she thought there was a plaque bearing that name at her church, St. Peter and St. Pauls in Cromer. So, on our last day we went with Alison to see if such a plaque existed - and sure enough there it was! The Bishop’s daughter Deborah Rebeka Marsh had married a local man and had attended St. Peters - the plaque was a memorial to her and her husband! On chatting with one of the ladies at the church about this we discovered that she too had a strong CMJ connection her family - her mother had taught at the CMJ school in Cairo!