Our daily bread : from Argos to the altar - a priest's story /
by Frost, Alex; Kemp, Cathryn.
Material type: BookPublisher: Manchester : HarperNorth, 2022Description: xiv, 238 pages ; 23 cm.ISBN: 9780008556525 (hbk.) :; 0008556520 (hbk.) :.Classification number: 253.0942 FROSubject(s): Frost, Alex | Pastoral theology -- England -- Burnley | Religion | Religion | North West England | Biography: religious & spiritual | Memoirs | Religion & beliefs | Christian life & practice | Burnley (England) -- Social conditions -- 21st centurySummary: A warmly funny, intensely moving and startlingly personal account of the lives of an urban parish priest and his parishioners. Father Alex Frost was not always a man of the cloth. He found his calling while running an Argos store in his native Burnley, moonlighting as a stand-up comedian and die-hard fan of The Clarets and Depeche Mode. But having achieved his profession, Fr Alex quickly recognised the 17,000 inhabitants of his new parish were in dire need of help. Burnley is typical of many towns across Britain: a place of run-down council estates, severe poverty litter, crime and drugs, but also a place where the sacred sits alongside the secular in an intimate and personal way. And so it was that he found himself running a food bank from a car park, helping the desperate amid his flock as the pandemic raged.Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Book - Adult Hardback | Crosby Library | Adult Non-Fiction | 253.0942 FRO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 003109817X |
A warmly funny, intensely moving and startlingly personal account of the lives of an urban parish priest and his parishioners. Father Alex Frost was not always a man of the cloth. He found his calling while running an Argos store in his native Burnley, moonlighting as a stand-up comedian and die-hard fan of The Clarets and Depeche Mode. But having achieved his profession, Fr Alex quickly recognised the 17,000 inhabitants of his new parish were in dire need of help. Burnley is typical of many towns across Britain: a place of run-down council estates, severe poverty litter, crime and drugs, but also a place where the sacred sits alongside the secular in an intimate and personal way. And so it was that he found himself running a food bank from a car park, helping the desperate amid his flock as the pandemic raged.
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