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2024-12-31-accounts

Terence Davey Interim Management and Business Consultancy 53 Sandown Lodge Avenue Road Epsom Surrey Kn8 7QU ST KATHERINE'S CHURCH FINANCIAL STATEMENTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31.122024 Auditorfs Report to the Members of St Katherine's churc￿ Westway, London I have reviewed the Financi￿ Statements and workings supporting them. In common with similar organisatiorLs, the Church's systems of control depend upon the close involvement of the PCC and its elected office of Treasurer. There being no fornial Treasurer in pLice for this year, where additional inforniation to that presented was required, I accepted the assurances of the Lay Minister who had close involvement in the accounts that all the transactiorns were reflected in the recor(ts. Together we made some recommendatioTLS for tighter controls golng ahead. That said, the Financi￿ Statements ￿ attached in niy opinion give a true and fair account of the Church's affairs as at 31 Decern￿r 2024 and the receipts and payments made in that year. Terence Davey Date 21•t August 2025 M0blletelepkn￿ Irifj8Z14TrJ

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BANK ACCOUNTS G•n￿￿ F￿d PCC ST Kala Clmweh Fund 571W.84 119787.18 105W29 65 rJ0958 59 .1250￿ 94 316436 54 1W4)7.10 t￿lj Bthc•31 D•c 191407. 12281126 Pwmen -150.(KI -179.50 B4•nc• 1 B￿nc4 311)•c 798 7J7.IX 487 46 equ•L Rac•k PayTh•nts •J$5.6J 1417.9• 10973.62 Bthnc• 1 J ethc• 31 D St.Kath•rin• Hal {EntrJATrn￿) CBF London ObJo••an Fund112J- 2 Roc•P o.( o. o( o. o.ty) toGwwd FuThJ o.fy) 8thc• 1 Jan 8the• 31 1)•c R•uN• F￿￿O•S￿n•t•d BF St K•ts PPC V23-7fAMF) 11883 Ch•na•in m¥k•l d1ry4•rM 8thnc• 1 J•n 31 D•c 310.37 $18&$1 Sl.KathodM's Youth & C•nlf• FuThl ch￿￿h Wawd•M A(¥) 49.19 Ptyments 18.91 185970 Im.61 1 Jthn 1878.81 1907 C8F S¢ K*• Y4xlh & Com ￿￿-￿FI Rqcepts Pwnentsitt) & PCCI ofy) 120.61 2161.X+ 228111 nc•1J nc8 31 DOB 23S1.01 42•J31 41•0.72 VALUE 31M2fth24 1x24423 7W025 21>J14.18 20.S.IS

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APCM Annual Building Report –April 2024-May 2025.

Barbara Coulson, Church Administrator

This year St Kat’s have undertaken many improvements to St Kat’s Church building and grounds. These improvements have enabled our church services to run much more smoothly, improved and developed our church and community engagement environment and have made an overall improvement to the Health & Safety of life at St Kat’s.

Building and Fabric works include:

St Kat’s Westway Annual Parochial Church Meeting Minister’s Report 18[th] May 2025

Readings Isaiah 43:14-21 John 15

WE HAVE A FUTURE!

I’m thrilled to share that things are looking bright for the days ahead — and I’ll tell you why in just a moment!

For those who might need a bit of background: after a period of significant decline, I was appointed two and a half years ago to lead St Kat’s through a three-year interim season of discernment. During this time, our church family has been prayerfully exploring what kind of future God might have for us, with the ultimate goal of providing a recommended way forward to +Bishop Emma, for her consideration.

In December, the PCC met with Revd Jonathan Rust, who is the Kensington Area Director of Mission, to reflect on our Mission Action Plan and SMART goals. Together we prayed, discussed, and celebrated the new signs of life and outreach growing from St Kat’s — most notably the launch of Families Church , which has become a wonderful expression of our mission in action.

As many of you know, conversations have also been developing around a possible collaboration with St Michael and St George, White City — and perhaps even with HTB Dalgarno Way.

The PCC’s recommendation has now been submitted to Bishop Emma, who has received it with great warmth and encouragement.

I was delighted to receive an email from Bishop Emma following her visit on Resurrection Sunday. She wrote:

“I loved being with you on Easter Day and experiencing the lovely, warm, and welcoming atmosphere at St Kat’s.” +Emma

Soon after, Revd Jonathan Rust also shared a note about Bishop Emma’s response to her visit and the PCC’s recommendation:

“+Emma now has the paper and, although I have yet to discuss it with her, I think we can be confident that she wants to take this forward. I should say that she was very much encouraged by her recent visit to St Kat’s and left with a strong sense that your church is one we do need to find the right way of supporting into the future.” Jonathan Rust

So, what has been happening to make all this possible? GOD HAS BEEN HAPPENING.

The PCC has had a growing sense that God has been speaking to us about the future.

Barb C shared that she felt God saying, “I will not be stopped!”

Frank brought a word from Isaiah 43:14-21, which was our first reading. Frank highlighted v19, do you not perceive it?

The Lord’s Promise of Victory

‘Forget the former things;

do not dwell on the past. 19 See, I am doing a new thing! Now it springs up; do you not perceive it?

The PCC felt God was commanding us to draw a line under the past decline and the disappointment of a failed building project. He is doing a new thing, and he wants us to see it, to recognise it, to welcome it and walk in it. God wants St Kat’s to move forward — to embrace new beginnings by letting go of what’s behind and focusing instead on what God is doing now . It’s a promise that even in difficult circumstances, God is carving a new path and bringing life to places that once felt dry and barren.

Discerning and discovering what this new thing looks like has been the heart of the PCC’s and the church’s journey over the past two and a half years.

How do we navigate the new thing God is doing and the inevitable changes that come with this.

The recommendation document to Bishop Emma has made the changes we are facing all the more real.

THIS IS A TIME OF SEISMIC CHANGE

Like an earthquake, the ground is shifting from under our feet. And it means change for us all.

Jim and I will be leaving.

This is unsettling for us all. It’s a time of letting go.

There’s a sense of grieving and loss.

It is a time of uncertainty.

And yet, this experience is necessary. This uncomfortable season of change and transition is not without purpose—it is heralding, ushering in, the new thing God is doing among us. God is preparing the ground, making a way for a new beginning.

We may feel unsettled right now—perhaps even a little disoriented—but even in the midst of that, we can begin to glimpse the potential. We are starting to perceive what God is doing. And as we do, hope begins to stir within us. There’s even a quiet sense of excitement as we look toward what’s ahead.

So as we move forward together, let’s be kind to ourselves—and to one another. Let’s give ourselves permission to feel what we are feeling. To acknowledge the sadness and the challenge that come with change. But let’s also make room for the hope that is rising—for the promise of new life, fresh energy, and a renewed shape to the life of St Kat’s.

Because even here, in the midst of transition, God is at work—breathing new life, writing a new chapter, and calling us to trust Him for what comes next.

Our second reading today has really been like a soundtrack for this whole season we’ve been walking through together. It reminds us that if our serving and our work are not rooted in the vine—if we , the workers, are not remaining connected to Jesus—then it all amounts to nothing. As Jesus himself said, “Apart from me, you can do nothing.”

This truth has been at the very heart of our life together as a church throughout this threeyear interim period. John 15 reminds us that real life—true, abundant life—is found only in Jesus. It’s as we remain in his love, as we spend time with him, as we grow in our understanding of his word, that we find the confidence to live for him and to walk in his ways.

Jesus has chosen and appointed us to bear fruit—fruit that will last. And his command remains the same today: “Love one another as I have loved you.”

The fruit that lasts comes from love. When we love one another well—when we choose to love as Jesus loves—the world notices. Our families, our neighbours, our colleagues, our community—they begin to see something different. They catch a glimpse of Christ himself. Because the love of Jesus is countercultural. It’s not self-serving. It reaches out beyond the walls of the church. It exists for those who are not yet part of the Body of Christ.

We have about four more months together before what we hope will be a short interregnum, as we prepare for the appointment of the next vicar. These next months are a time for us to end well —to finish this season faithfully and to prepare our hearts and our community for the in-between time that lies ahead for St Kat’s.

And through it all, we remain in the vine. We stay rooted in his love. Because apart from him, we can do nothing—but in him, we will bear much fruit.

Jim and I are currently seeking somewhere to live. We’re praying that the right place will come up in or near Princes Risborough, close to Jo, David, and Seth. We’re trusting the Lord to open the right door — the one he has planned and purposed for us. At times, it can feel

as though uncertainty is all around us, but we’re holding fast to this truth: Jesus has it all in his hands. His plans and purposes are always good.

And that’s true for all of you as well. Jesus has plans for the flourishing of his body here in East Acton — plans to prosper you, not to harm you; plans to give you hope and a future.

For Jim and me, and for all of us together here at St. Kat’s, the call is the same: to remain in Jesus. To stay rooted in him, so that we might bear fruit for him and love one another deeply. We need to stay close to Jesus, abiding in his love, so that we can discern the new thing he is doing among us — to see it spring up and recognise it for what it is.

Barb C once shared that she believed God was saying, “I will not be stopped.” And in Isaiah 43:13, God himself declares, “When I act, who can reverse it?”

So let’s go forward together with confidence in this God — our God — whose purposes can never be thwarted. His plans will not fail, they will not disappoint, and they will not be stopped!

Revd Lesley Tate