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OCTOBER 14 2011 THE CATHOLIC HERALD
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Bishop: marriage can’t be redefined
BY ED WEST
BLESSED John Henry Newman can help Catholics to better understand the “disease” of moral relativism, Bishop Mark Davies of Shrewsbury has said, in an attack on the Government’s gay marriage proposal.
During a homily at Mass at the Birmingham Oratory on Saturday the bishop paid tribute to Blessed John Henry’s ability to read the signs of the times and his courage in upholding and defending revealed truth.
Pope Benedict XVI had pointed to this “remarkable prophetic clarity” with which he had foreseen the challenges now facing British and western societies, he said.
The Mass was celebrated to mark the October 9 Feast Day of Blessed John Henry, who was beatified by Pope Benedict XVI in Cofton Park, Birmingham, last September, and to install his relics at a shrine in the main church where they will be venerated by pilgrims.
Bishop Davies said that Blessed John Henry had diagnosed the first symptoms of the ideology of moral relativism, which he described as “the disease that now ails our times”.
But although the Victorian cardinal had predicted that relativism would create “centuries of confusion to come”, he also offered the encouragement that the Church, by standing firm and faithful, would see “this present ordeal overcome”, Bishop Davies explained.
This, the bishop suggested, would be the witness of both his writings and his shrine at the Birmingham Oratory for future generations.
He said: “Cardinal Newman had spoken himself of this being the enduring message of his life and labours when becoming a cardinal in 1879 he declared: ‘for 30, 40, 50 years I have resisted to the best of my powers the spirit of liberalism in religion. Never did Holy Church need champions against it more sorely than now, when, alas! It is an effort overspreading as a snare, the whole earth...”
“As he had written in his Apologia, ‘my battle was with liberalism’, as an Anglican and from 1845 as a Catholic. He wished to contest what has rapidly become the dominant view of our own time as he put it in the Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine, “that truth and falsehood in religion are but a matter of opinion; that one doctrine is as good as another... that the
In his conference speech David Cameron said committed same-sex relationships should be valued PA photo
Governor of the world does not intend that we should gain the truth; that there is no truth.
“So we can reach the point when a Government proposes that marriage, the very foundation of the family, crucial to the wellbeing of society, can be redefined to mean whatever we wish it to mean. Newman foresaw the path which would lead to this confusion as revealed religion becomes regarded, he said, as but a sentiment, a taste, so that each individual makes it say just what he wishes it to say. He surely wanted us to see now that, ‘there never was a device of the Enemy, so cleverly framed, and with such a promise of success’.”
The success of that “liberalism” or “relativism”, the bishop said, “was as an ideology which appears enticingly generous and broadly tolerant in demanding one belief should be considered as true as another. Yet it becomes as the Holy Father described in Glasgow: ‘a dictatorship of relativism, threatening to obscure the unchanging truth about man’s nature, his destiny and his ultimate good.’ ”
Last week Prime Minister David Cameron expressed his support for gay marriage at a conference speech in which he said that “commitment” in relationships should be valued regardless of whether it involved “a man and a woman, a woman and a woman, or a man and another man”.
But Archbishop Peter Smith of Southwark said: “While we welcome the Prime Minister’s support of marriage, family life and especially the care of children, the proposed redefinition of marriage cannot be right.
“Marriage by its very nature is between a man and a woman and it is the essential foundation of family life. The state should uphold this common understanding of marriage rather than attempting to change its meaning.”
In his homily Bishop Davies also said: “Scholars will long ponder the prophetic writings of Cardinal Newman but he would surely wish his memory and shrine to declare in a way both kindly and insistent that the truth can, indeed, be truly known. The relics of Blessed John Henry Newman’s shrine will silently allow his heart to continue to speak such encouragement to so many hearts: assuring us of victory in this struggle which we are now engaged in.”
Bishops launch campaign against gay marriage
BY ED WEST
THE CHURCH in Scotland has launched a campaign against proposals to legalise samesex marriage.
Following the Scottish Government’s announcement of a consultation on whether gay marriage should be introduced, Archbishop Mario Conti of Glasgow wrote to every parish in the country, urging all Catholics to oppose the planned legislation.
He said the Scottish government did not have a mandate to “reconstruct society on ideological grounds”.
He said: “The Catholic Church, for one, will not accept it, and indeed will actively campaign against it. This cannot be seen to be in any way helpful in fulfilling the broader aim of social cohesion by which government is clearly motivated.”
He added: “It will act to create larger divisions in society and could lead in the future, as we have seen in some of the legislation to date, to gross allegations of discrimination.” The Catholic Parliamentary Office is to distribute 100,000 campaign postcards encouraging people to submit their declarations to the Government’s consultation.
The archbishop added: “There will be other consequences in law, and social policies stemming from it which need to be taken into account, for example housing provision, social security entitlements and the legitimate expectations of families for support in having and bringing up children on whom the future of society depends, and for which society should make provision.”
In response Scottish Liberal Democrat leader Willie Rennie accused the Catholic Church of trying to control opinion.
Tim Hopkins, director of Equality Network, a taxpayer-funded organisation which campaigns for “equality and human rights in Scotland”, claimed that same-sex marriage had majority support, a claim rejected by a Catholic Church spokesman.
The Presbyterian Free Church has also voiced its opposition, while Dundeebased Christian group Solas, led by former Scottish National Party leader Gordon Wilson, has delivered a submission to the Government.
Mr Wilson, along with Free Church minister the Rev David Robertson, the group’s director, said no government had the right to “redefine” marriage – and that any attempt to do so would destroy the institution. They also argued that “this attack on marriage” was a violation of the human rights of traditional married couples.
Mr Wilson has also called for a referendum on the issue.
Peter Kearney, spokesman for the Church in Scotland, said the issue was more important to Catholics than sectarianism. He said: “I can’t see how any Catholic, in good conscience, could support a party which would enact such a law. It’s impossible to imagine.
THE BIRMINGHAM ORATORY SHRINE OF BLESSED JOHN HENRY NEWMAN
THE CHAPEL OF BLESSED
JOHN HENRY NEWMAN THE NEWMAN MEMORIAL CHURCH
EXHIBITION OF NEWMAN’S LIFE
BOOKSHOP & REPOSITORY
REFRESHMENTS WEEKLY PILGRIM MASS Saturdays at 11am, followed by prayers in the shrine and blessing with a relic of Blessed John Henry Newman
SOLEMN MASS Sundays at 10.30am VESPERS & BENEDICTION Sundays at 6.30pm
FORTHCOMING EVENTS EXHIBITION: DRILLS AND HABITS JOHN HENRY NEWMAN AND THE SISTERS
OF MERCY IN VICTORIAN SCHOOLS
10TH OCTOBER TO 9TH NOVEMBER
For children aged 8 to 12 and anyone interested in education, Newman and the Sisters of Mercy To book a visit, please phone: 0121 454 0808 BLESSED JOHN HENRY NEWMAN
I stitute Liturgica Musi • SATURDAY 15TH OCTOBER
Study Morning 3: Singing the Ordinary of the Mass (9.30am to 1pm) • FRIDAY 21ST OCTOBER For the clergy: Singing the Mass in English (8pm to 9pm) For further information: please phone 0121 454 0808 or visit www.oratorymusic.org.uk
WEEKEND OPENING SATURDAY AND SUNDAY
10am to 5pm WEEKDAY VISITS BY APPOINTMENT SCHOOL AND PARISH GROUPS WELCOME Please Contact: The Director of Pilgrims, The Oratory
141, Hagley Road, Birmingham B16 8UE 0121 454 0808 pilgrim@theoratory.org.uk
Anglo-Saxon remains reburied in church garden Bishops’ agency lobbies coalition over welfare bill
BY ED WEST
AUXILIARY Bishop William Kenney of Birmingham has celebrated a Requiem Mass for 15 Anglo-Saxons whose remains were unearthed last year.
The 15 skeletons, which had been unearthed in Oxfordshire, were re-interred in a church memorial garden on Saturday after the Mass celebrated by Bishop Kenney. The ancient remains were buried in a wicker coffin at the Church of the Immaculate Conception in Bicester. Workers discovered the bodies during the construction of a new property development next to the church, part of a new eco-town development of low-energy Scandinavian-style homes.
The remains are thought to date from between 700 and 950 AD, when the area was first part of the Kingdom of Mercia and later Wessex, and were almost certainly part of a Christian burial ground. Mercia was converted to Christianity in the late seventh century under King Peada, and the bodies were buried facing east, according to Christian tradition.
The burial ground was probably associated with a former Saxon minster church thought to have been near Bicester’s St Edburgh’s church, and was found under a new John Paul II community centre.
The Saxon cemetery was originally thought to have been located to the west of the development area but excavations of the groundwork revealed the cemetery extending further east.
After archeologists finished exhuming the remains and took them away for detailed analysis the skeletons were returned to the Church of the Immaculate Conception. Scientists discovered that the skeletons were largely female and over 35, with just one male discovered, while isotope analysis revealed that they came from Britain and ate a lot of fish.
But there was a disagreement between the Church and archaeologists who wanted the bones put in a museum.
James Lewis of Thames Valley Archaeological Services said: “As archaeologists we’d much rather they had gone into a museum and be available for future analysis. There are other ways of showing respect than reburying.”
The case went to the Ministry of Justice but it was ruled that the bones were not of national significance and so could be buried.
Speaking after the ceremony last week Bishop Kenney said of the deceased: “These are the remains they have left on earth and they should be treated with dignity.”
BY MADELEINE TEAHAN
AN AGENCY of the Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales is pushing for changes to welfare reform to stop benefit claimants from being punished for the mistakes of civil servants.
Caritas Social Action Network is backing a Catholic peer, Baroness Hollins, who has tabled amendments to the Welfare Reform Bill which seek to protect benefit claimants from financial penalisation.
The agency claims that the Welfare Reform Bill in its current form would allow the Government to reclaim overpayments in benefits which have occurred through administrative or computer errors. The agency expresses fears that this change would unjustly punish claimants and their families for mistakes made in Government departments or local authorities.
It says it is particularly concerned that the Government’s withdrawal of overpayment protections will force struggling families to hand over large amounts of money that have accumulated over time, despite having no prior knowledge of the overpayment.
Baroness Hollins’s amendment to the Bill would maintain current protection against such re-claims which has been enshrined in law since 1975.
Helen O’Brien, chief executive of the bishops’ agency, said: “The removal of existing safeguards will ultimately mean that each case is based on the discretion of different officials, which provides no guarantee that the decisions will protect the vulnerable.”
On Monday the Cardinal Hume Centre, which helps many individuals who are benefit recipients, expressed support for Baroness Hollins’s proposed amendment.
Clive Chapman, the Cardinal Hume Centre’s policy officer, said: “The Government’s emphasis should be on preventing payment errors, not shifting the burden on to claimants by forcing them to pay back unsustainable amounts and risking forcing them further into poverty.”
One client of the Cardinal Hume Centre, a single parent of three who receives benefits and lives in privately rented accommodation, said: “If they did this to me, I would be really angry – especially if this was their own mistake. I would not pay, this is like stealing. My kids and I would suffer and I would struggle to buy anything apart from food.”
The Zacchaeus 2000 Trust, a charity led by the Rev Paul Nicholson, has also backed the amendment. It is particularly concerned about the impact on the diet and nutrition of women and children due to a suddenly reduced income.
NEWSBULLETIN Rosary crusade across London draws 2,000 faithful MGR KEITH NEWTON, the leader of the Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham, led 2,000 people in a Rosary Crusade across London on Saturday.
The procession began at Westminster Cathedral and made its way west to the London Oratory in South Kensington, where Mgr Newton gave a homily to a packed congregation, reflecting on Blessed John Henry Newman’s devotion to Mary. Pilgrims sung hymns to Our Lady, prayed three decades of the rosary and, on arrival at the Oratory, consecrated themselves to the Immaculate Heart of Mary. Those who took part included Knights of the Order of Malta and the Little Brothers of the Oratory.
Archbishop has tea with Mugabe THE ZIMBABWEAN president Robert Mugabe told the Archbishop of Canterbury this week that the Church of England was a mere “breakaway group” from the Catholic Church.
During a meeting over tea, scones and jam at the presidential state house in Harare Mr Mugabe talked about his religious upbringing and his “continuing occasional Catholic practice”, Dr Rowan Williams said.
The Anglican leader presented Mr Mugabe with a dossier of alleged abuses perpetrated against churchgoers over the past few years. Anglicans are reported to have been arrested, beaten and locked out of churches by supporters of Nolbert Kunonga, a renegade bishop loyal to Mr Mugabe.
The meeting marked the end of Dr Williams’s twoday visit to Zimbabwe. In a sermon on Sunday he condemned lawlessness and violence in the country.
Fawley Court case dismissed A PROPERTY developer who claimed he was owed £5 million for the sale of Fawley Court has been told by a High Court judge that he lives in a “parallel universe”.
Richard Butler-Creagh had hoped to make millions from the sale of the Buckinghamshire house by Polish Marian Fathers, saying he acted as an intermediary. But Justice Eady threw out the case.
Passport form is changed PASSPORT application forms are to feature options for “Parent 1” and “Parent 2” instead of just mother and father, it emerged last week.
The change, due to take place within weeks, was made after claims that the original form discriminated against same-sex couples. Norman Wells of the Family Education Trust said the move “denigrates” the place of mothers and fathers.
Competition winners announced The winners of the Tyburn Convent: Gloria Deo competition are Elizabeth Hastings, Natalie Madden, Sister Maria Jacinta, Fr Richard Meyer and Anna Pilley.
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Falsely accused priest returns to standing ovation at parish
BY ED WEST
A GALWAY priest who was wrongly accused on national television of fathering a child through rape has returned to his parish after five “awful” months under investigation.
his ministry as parish priest in the village of Ahascragh, Co Galway, pending an investigation.
Lawyers for the priest began high court defamation proceedings and paternity tests proved that Fr Reynolds was not the father of the child in question.
Fr Kevin Reynolds was accused on RTÉ’s Prime Time Investigates programme in May of committing the crime while serving as a missionary in Kenya nearly 30 years ago.
Fr Reynolds, a parish priest of the Diocese of Elphin, denied the allegations but stepped aside from
RTÉ apologised this week and accepted that all of the allegations which it broadcast against the priest were without any foundation.
Fr Kevin Reynolds returned to St Cuan’s church for Mass on Sunday, where he was greeted by bunting, ‘welcome home’ banners and several hundred handshakes in the
Campaign groups hail plan to block pornography village church. He received three standing ovations from a congregation of about 600 people. Among them were Bishop Christopher Jones of Elphin, Mill Hill Missionaries general superior Fr Anthony Chantry and regional representative Fr Michael Corcoran. Fr Chantry had travelled from Maidenhead county.
Dr Jones and Fr Chantry praised Fr Reynolds’s courage and dignity over the past five months, during which he was suspended and unable to practise his ministry, while parish council chairwoman Máire Hughes said parishioners were delighted at his return. Dr Jones told the congregation: “RTÉ has now accepted that all of the allegations which it broadcast against Fr Kevin are baseless and without any foundation whatever and that Fr Kevin is entirely innocent.”
Dr Jones said that everyone was shocked at the time, not only by the allegations that were made against Fr Kevin but also by the manner in which they were made.
Fr Kevin had “carried his cross with great dignity”, Dr Jones said.
“He willingly stepped aside from ministry and never expressed anger or impatience of any kind... I
believe that his own deep faith and spirituality have been his greatest source of courage and consolation through this most dreadful experience of his life.”
Dr Jones added that false allegations such as this were a disservice to the “validated experiences of so many” of child sexual abuse.
“I reiterate the commitment of our diocese to the safeguarding of children,” he said, and the diocese of Elphin was “committed in its focus and responsibility to protect and value children wherever they are in our Church”.
Fr Chantry said he welcomed
RTÉ’s apology issued late last week and said that his public reinstatement was the “beginning of a long journey of healing and reconciliation”.
The false claims had been a “source of profound distress to Fr Kevin, his family, friends, parishioners and fellow Mill Hill Missionaries”, he added.
Fr Reynolds said last week that although he was a “little battleweary and wounded and the scars will remain”, the apology had “freed” him from “lies, false allegations and baseless accusations”.
He paid tribute to the Irish Association of Catholic Priests for helping him to establish his innocence through two paternity tests.
Fr Reynolds told the Herald: “I returned to my parish on Sunday, and I was out of my ministry for five months. It was an awful experience, quite honestly. Bit by bit we made breakthroughs. I never even knew those people [who made the accusation].
“I do not return with anger, resentment or bitterness or any ill will. A terrible cross was laid at my shoulders, which I managed to survive. I thank God and my parishioners and my family.”
Londoner meets Pope after walking 1,350 miles to Rome for charity
BY ED WEST
FAMILY campaigners have welcomed David Cameron’s plans to encourage internet service providers to block pornography.
As part of new measures to protect children from sexual content, new subscribers to four of Britain’s biggest providers will have to “opt in” if they want to view sexually explicit websites.
The measures were announced during a Downing Street meeting with the Mothers’ Union, which recently suggested a series of proposals to protect children from over-sexualisation.
Among the other proposals are a ban on sexually aggressive advertising campaigns and certain types of explicit images on billboards, and a ban on even more “moderate” adverts if they are within walking distance of a school.
The Government will also launch a website, Parentport, which parents can use to complain about television programmes, advertisements, products or services which they believe are overly sexual.
Under the internet plans new customers of BT, Sky, TalkTalk and Virgin who do not opt in to adult material will be unable to access pornographic websites.
Norman Wells, of the Family Education Trust, said: “Any measure aimed at limiting children’s exposure to sexualised images in the course of their daily lives is to be welcomed. Children and adults alike ought to be free to use the internet without having to worry about inadvertently stumbling across pornography, and we should all be able to walk down the road without having sexually explicit advertisements paraded before our eyes on billboards. It is to be hoped that the Prime Minister will be equally firm when it comes to protecting children from the highly sexualised materials that they are increasingly being exposed to from their earliest years in the name of sex education.”
Mr Cameron signalled his support for the Mothers’ Union proposals in the summer after he commissioned a six-month review by the charity’s chief executive, Reg Bailey.
Among the other proposals are age restrictions on music videos . He called for Government and business to end the sale of “sexy” clothing.
In a letter sent to Mr Bailey in June the Prime Minister said: “I very much agree with the central approach you set out. As you say, we should not try and wrap children up in cotton wool or simply throw our hands up and accept the world as it is. Instead, we should look to put ‘the brakes on an unthinking drift towards evergreater commercialisation and sexualisation’.”
Church leaders have expressed concern about the speed of internet pornography. Bishop Paul Loverde of Arlington, Virginia, in what is described as the first pastoral letter on the subject, said pornography was a “plague [that] stalks the souls of men, women and children, ravages the bonds of marriage and victimises the most innocent among us”.
He said: “It obscures and destroys people’s ability to see one another as unique and beaut iful expressions of God’s creation... causing them to view others as objects to be used.” ........................................................ Feature: Page 9
Andrew Bruce met Pope Benedict XVI in St Peter’s Square after walking from London to Rome
BY NICK PISA
A LONDON butler is nursing very sore and blistered feet after walking 1,350 miles from London to Rome to raise money for Help for Heroes.
Andrew Bruce, 50, took three months to walk along the ancient pilgrims way winds its way to Rome through France, Switzerland and Italy and at the end of his marathon effort he even had a meeting with an impressed Pope Benedict XVI.
Traditionally the route starts in Canterbury but Mr Bruce added a few extra miles by beginning his epic slog at St Paul’s in London before ending up in St Peter’s on his birthday. During the walk he was knocked down by a car in Italy and also had to return to Britain in August after his father died, meaning he took two weeks off before resuming from where he had left off in the Alps.
The aim of the walk was to raise money for injured servicemen’s charity Help for Heroes, whose backers include Prince William and Prince Harry.
Along the way he spent the night at monasteries and abbeys – as did ancient pilgrims who would follow the route centuries ago – getting his “pilgrim passport” stamped which earned him a certificate from the Vatican.
This week, as he nursed his sore feet and a well-earned glass of beer in St Peter’s Square, he said: “It was bloody hard work but well worth it. I’ve got through three pairs of socks but still have the same pair of boots on.
“It’s been three very long and tiring months with lots of highs and lows, a few days after I crossed into Italy from France I lost my father and had to go back for his funeral and was away for about two weeks but when I returned I got straight back into it.
“The most dangerous part was walking through Italy, the drivers are crazy, they are jabbering on the mobile phone, driving bumper to bumper, arguing with their partners all at the same time as trying to drive. I got hit in Lucca [Tuscany] by a man who pulled out in front of me and I went over the bonnet. I had a word with him through his window and he just crossed himself three times and sped off.’’
On his arrival in Rome he had an audience with Pope Benedict during which he handed over a letter from the Bishop of London, Dr Richard Chartres.
Mr Bruce said: “We exchanged a few words on a platform just outside St Peter’s and that was a wonderful, splendid and very surreal moment for me.
“It lasted about a minute and was over before it started, I was jabbering away and telling him all
Photo: L’Osservatore Romano about my walk and he just kept nodding and saying: ‘Splendid, splendid.’ I suppose it makes a change from asking: ‘Have you come far?’
“The walk was an amazing experience and I met so many wonderful people along the way. I stayed in monasteries and abbeys but also people put me up out of the kindness of their hearts which was very nice.
“I was worried that with the economic climate I wouldn’t get many donations but Brits have a generous heart.” Mr Bruce has raised £85,000 so far but hopes to top the £100,000 mark. Donations can be made online at Bmy charity.com/andrewbruce2000.
Brother of Jimmy Mizen makes Olympic peace plea
BY MADELEINE TEAHAN AND MATTHEW WALL
ALMOST 500 Catholic schools have joined the “100 Days of Peace” initiative in memory of a Catholic teenager who was murdered in south London to coincide with next year’s Olympic Games.
George Mizen, aged 12, is commemorating the death of his older brother Jimmy, along with Catholic schools across London, Essex, Kent and Hertfordshire.
A Mass was concelebrated by Archbishop Vincent Nichols at Westminster Cathedral last Friday to inaugurate “100 Days of Peace”. It was attended by 1,400 students.
During his homily Archbishop Nichols said: “Let the Olympic Games be for everybody a lesson in peace. Instead of violence on the streets, which happens all too often, this might be a time in which together we build peace.”
Jimmy Mizen’s parents, Barry and Margaret from Our Lady of Lourdes parish in Lee, attended the Mass along with their son.
Speaking to the Tablet Mr Mizen said: “We remain determined that some good will come from our son’s death.”
Remembering his brother
George Mizen presents a gift to Archbishop Nichols at the Mass to launch 100 Days of Peace Adrian White
Jimmy, George said that he believed it was important “for people to try and become friends with each other, and I hope the 100 Days of Peace will do that.
“I also hope that the 2012 Olympics will be remembered for peace as well as sport,” he said.
In a statement announcing 100 Days of Peace Archbishop Nichols described his immense pride in “the character and leadership of so many young people in our schools as they work for peace and safety on our streets.
“This is a story that deserves to be widely known as it will give hope and encouragement to many.” Jimmy Mizen was murdered in May 2008 in Lee, south east London, on the day after his 16th birthday.
Jimmy had gone out with his older brother to celebrate and buy a lottery ticket when they stopped at Three Cook’s Bakery for something to eat. Jimmy bled to death in his brother’s arms following a confrontation with a young man who threw a glass dish at Jimmy’s neck.
Jake Fahri, aged 19, from Lee, was convicted in March 2009 of Jimmy’s murder. He was sentenced to life in prison and told he would serve at least 14 years.
St Francis Xavier Sixth Form College 10 Malwood Road | LONDON | SW12 8EN
Tel 020 8772 6072 | Fax 020 8772 6099 | enquiries@sfx.ac.uk | www.sfx.ac.uk
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A highly successful sixth form college, we welcome applications from students who wish to continue their education in a Christian environment. We offer prospective students:
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A highly successful sixth form college, we welcome applications from students who wish to continue their education in a Christian environment. We offer prospective students:
A wide range of AS/A Levels, BTEC Extended Diplomas and the International Baccalaureate An outstanding record of student progression to top universities Consistently good examination results (99% pass rate at A Level in June 2011) Teaching by subject specialists at sixth form level Resources and support systems focused on the needs of students at sixth form level
A wide range of AS/A Levels, BTEC Extended Diplomas and the International Baccalaureate An outstanding record of student progression to top universities Consistently good examination results (99% pass rate at A Level in June 2011) Teaching by subject specialists at sixth form level Resources and support systems focused on the needs of students at sixth form level
A highly successful sixth form college, we welcome applica ons from students who wish to con nue their educa on in a Chris an environment. We offer prospec ve students: • A wide range of AS/A Levels, BTEC Extended Diplomas and the Interna onal Baccalaureate • An outstanding record of student progression to top universi es • Consistently good examina on results (99% pass rate at A Level in June 2011) • Teaching by subject specialists at sixth form level • Resources and support systems focused on the needs of students at sixth form level
Open Day Saturday 12th November 2011
Consistently good examination results (99% pass rate at A Level in June 2011) Teaching by subject specialists at sixth form level Resources and support systems focused on the needs of students at sixth form level
Open Day Saturday 12th November 2011
10.00am—2.30pm Buses: G1, 50, 155, 249, 355 Underground: Clapham South (Northern Line)
Open Day Saturday 12th November 2011
National Rail: Balham Students must be accompanied by a parent.
No parking available on site.
10.00am—2.30pm Buses: G1, 50, 155, 249, 355 Underground: Clapham South (Northern Line)
National Rail: Balham Students must be accompanied by a parent.
Educating through a Christian community
No parking available on site.
Educating through a Christian community Educating through a Christian community