Hope and Anchor turns up in all kinds of places, sometimes online and sometimes onsite. We're thrilled that this year it's at Solas Festival once again, hosted by the Methodist Church.
Hope and Anchor is an inclusive space for conversations that change things, a place where faith talk meets real talk, where the bar is dry but the chat never is.
Solas Festival may be over for another year, but the conversation is still flowing - so, pull up a chair at the pub table and join us.
1. Listen to Hope and Anchor the podcast
Kind of a virtual pub, the podcast is an inclusive and spiritual space for real conversations that change things, hosted by yappy yank, Trey Hall and positive disruptor, Jaz Ampaw-Farr. Click here to find out more.
2. Buy Conversations Against Mundanity
In the Hope and Anchor we play a card game called Conversations Against Mundanity - a game to defeat mundane small talk and get the real conversations flowing. Buy it here.
Conversations Against Mundanity cracked us all open. It sparked a kind of deep-and-meaningful chat that I didn’t even realise we needed.
3. Encounter God with us
Hope and Anchor is brought to you by the Methodist Church, an , inclusive and justice-seeking church. Every week, all over the world, Methodists meet together in chapels, village halls, forests, pubs and cafés, city centres, online – wherever they find community. Why not come along, and encounter God with us?
To find your local Methodist community email Holly, who you might have met at Solas, and she can connect you up. Or, Find out more about the incredible recovery church in Glasgow, who joined in with the Solas team this year.
We're looking forward to continuing the conversation with you.