Resources
Resources
On this page you can view and download some of the free resources we've provided. Choose from the six kinds of resource below:
Small FieldSmall Field
Created in 2021
The solicitor told me that I was being unreasonable. He sounded at the end of his tether whilst I felt like I was at the beginning of an adventure without knowing what the adventure was. He had spoken to me after I had taken a call from his office which went something like this: © Copyright Peter Wrigley 2021
The SceptreThe Sceptre
Created in 2015
A novella (short novel) for teens and adults.
Matt is in year 10 at school. With his mother on heroin and a father he has never known, he largely has to sort out his own life. He is used to being rejected and his social worker says he is close to being permanently excluded from school.
Then Matt discovers a dirty black bit of metal and, as he cleans it up, he finds that things begin to change. A new voice in his life brings supernatural power; he is rescued by angels, his enemy at school is raised from the dead; his life and the lives of those around him change as they discover who is behind the voice.
© Copyright Peter Wrigley 2015
Timothy Hitchin
Created in 2024
Poem about a wildlife artist whose obsessive interest in drawing in his local park leads to world-wide recognition. (c) Copyright Peter Wrigley 2014
Set Your Sights Higher
Created in 2023
Setting our sights higher in terms of how we perceive God and relate to him; how we perceive ourselves, to get to the place where we see ourselves as God sees us; setting our hopes and expectations higher, being led by the Holy Spirit.
© Copyright Peter Wrigley 2021 and 2023
Brother of the son
Created in 2023
Jesus includes Peter as his brother and son of the same Father when paying both their temple taxes. © Copyright Peter Wrigley 2023
The Wall
Created in 2023
This poem was inspired by an email that I received from a Prison Chaplain. A mutual friend had suggested that I send a booklet of my testimonies to God's goodness in my life to the chaplain, who in turn wrote to me to say she had passed the booklet to a prisoner whose cell window looked out onto a wall. I sent the chaplain a copy of this poem and again she passed it to the prisoner.
No man should have to look out at a wall;
My window is barred, no sunlight at all.
I know every brick, every crack in the mortar... © Copyright Peter Wrigley 2023
God of the Mountains
Created in 2022
In 1 Kings chapter 19 [in the Bible] I read about God's quiet voice to Elijah and I carried on reading into 1 Kings chapter 20 ... the Israelites defeating the Arameans who were led by Ben Hadad... © Copyright Peter Wrigley 2022
How much more
Created in 2022
Shake off mediocrity: Three times Paul uses the phrase 'how much more' in Romans chapter 5. © Copyright Peter Wrigley 2022
My Bike
Created in 2020
During the pandemic of Covid-19 I acquired a bike. I have only ever had two bikes in my previous 72 years. The first was a second-hand Hercules County with 3-speed Sturmey Archer gears which cost my Mum and Dad 10s 6d. The second was an old bike without markings on the frame which my wife bought me about 30 years later for a tenner. © Copyright Peter Wrigley 2020
Heaven's throne cardHeaven's throne card
Created in 2020
Empty cross and grave, full throne. © Copyright Peter Wrigley 2020
Creation Do you not know
Created in 2019
The Angel Gabriel so powerfully explains how the virgin birth could be possible. Not surprisingly, Mary asked Gabriel, "How could ... © Copyright Peter Wrigley 2019
It's not how you start: it's how you finish
Created in 2019
In 1973 I was one of a team of publishing designers working in London on a large book of country walks. The book included a section on long distance footpaths, or trails as they are now called. The Pennine Way had been fully opened in 1965 but I only found out about it through working on the book. My imagination was captured and I planned to take three weeks holiday that September to walk the 270 miles from Edale in Derbyshire to Kirk Yeholm just in Scotland. I was 25 but not particularly fit... © Copyright Peter Wrigley 2019