Features

What are AI 'deathbots' and how should we respond?

What are AI 'deathbots' and how should we respond?

Andrew Drury
Andrew Drury
Date posted: 6 Feb 2026

It is natural for people to grieve for loved ones who have died. One of the ways that people have tried to cope is through artificial intelligence (AI), with the creation of "deathbots" (also known as "griefbots").

The process of developing deathbots includes inputting all the words that the deceased person would use into the computer programme by using personal material such as e-mails, texts, voice notes, and social media posts. One limitation is the inability to portray the nuances made in communication (such as stress or tone), so the resultant speech can be monotone. Nevertheless, while the interaction may lack authenticity, the emotion for the bereaved person will be undoubtedly real for there will be a psychological buy-in.

Colleges: 'I've never been as encouraged as I am now'
scattering seeds of hope

Colleges: 'I've never been as encouraged as I am now'

Claire Povey
Claire Povey
Date posted: 5 Feb 2026

I have had the tremendous privilege of seeing God at work in colleges and sixth forms up and down the UK for the last 17 years.

The organisation I work for, Festive, supports 16-18 year olds in further education as they seek to live for Jesus and share Him where they study. In all my time with Festive, I have never been as encouraged as I am now.


Place matters: Today's church-hopping problem

Place matters: Today's church-hopping problem

Jonny Pollock
Jonny Pollock
Date posted: 5 Feb 2026

There was a time when evangelical Christianity carried a value for place. Churches belonged somewhere. Not just in terms of a building in a location, but emotionally and relationally.

Pastors knew the weight of local stories from local people. Congregations carried shared memories – both the joy and pain of an area’s history.

Jesus & the end of shame
faith and life

Jesus & the end of shame

Nathan Weston
Nathan Weston
Date posted: 5 Feb 2026

Have you ever been made to feel ashamed for being a Christian?

Perhaps you’ve been frozen out of friendship groups because you expressed an opinion that some in the group found offensive. Perhaps you’ve been overlooked at work because you wouldn’t go along with a sinful workplace culture. Or perhaps – hardest of all – you’ve been shunned or sidelined by your own family, because your Christian lifestyle is a rebuke to the religion or morality of your own flesh and blood.

Valentines and martyrdom
history

Valentines and martyrdom

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin
Date posted: 4 Feb 2026

In February many will celebrate St Valentine’s Day with gifts of flowers and maybe chocolates to their loved ones.

The association of romantic love with St Valentine’s Day dates back to Geoffrey Chaucer in the High Middle Ages, but the actual figure after which this saint’s day is named comes from the early centuries of the Church. Details of his life are shrouded in the mists of history. Indeed, it may well be that there are actually two different Christian figures by the name of Valentine. Whether one or two, there is good evidence that the church remembered one of them as an early Christian martyr. Our Saint Valentine was an Italian bishop who was martyred on 14 February, 269, after a trial before the Roman emperor Claudius Gothicus (reign 268–270).

Death and money
the Bible in action

Death and money

Martin Horton
Martin Horton
Date posted: 1 Feb 2026

“When he’d died, I didn’t like people saying ‘Oh, he’s passed’. Or ‘You’ve lost your dad,’ as though I’d let go of his hand in the supermarket.”

That was Simon Armitage, the Poet Laureate, speaking on Radio 4 about the sudden death of his father.

Cybersecurity: Loving your (digital) neighbour

Cybersecurity: Loving your (digital) neighbour

Tristram Ridley-Jones
Tristram Ridley-Jones
Date posted: 30 Jan 2026

It is a Tuesday morning in the church office. The administrator sits down, coffee in hand, to process the weekly DBS checks for the new Sunday School volunteers. It is a mundane, administrative task, a "Martha" moment in a world that often prizes "Mary" spirituality. But in today's day and age, this simple act of administration has become a frontline of spiritual stewardship.

Last year, the data breach involving the Access Personal Checking Services (APCS) (a third-party supplier used by many dioceses and Christian organisations) served as a stark wake-up call. It reminded us that the church is not invisible to the digital threats that prowl the modern world. For many church leaders, terms like "phishing," "ransomware," and "two-factor authentication" feel like a distraction from the Great Commission. They would rather talk about grace than firewalls.

How the gospel is going viral with LEGO

How the gospel is going viral with LEGO

Jake Owen
Jake Owen
Date posted: 29 Jan 2026

In a former church building overshadowed by a shopping centre, a small media organisation is producing Christian content which is going viral across social media.

Go Chatter Studios is animating Biblical stories - from the prophet Jonah’s reluctant journey to Nineveh to Christ’s raising of his friend Lazarus from the dead - using the much-loved construction toy, LEGO.

Did you know that anxiety is contagious?

Did you know that anxiety is contagious?

Matt Waldock
Matt Waldock
Date posted: 28 Jan 2026

At least once a year a member of the staff team will drag themselves into the office with their nose running, full of cold and with a hacking cough; then everyone else will roll their eyes in the knowing frustration that unless their immune system is like an athlete, it’s only a matter of time before the whole team gets sick.

But what if there is a far more dangerous contagion that stalks among our congregations? That contagion is anxiety.

At a distance: Are we only willing to follow Jesus up to a point?

At a distance: Are we only willing to follow Jesus up to a point?

Wallace Benn
Wallace Benn
Date posted: 27 Jan 2026

“And Peter had followed him at a distance right into the courtyard of the high priest” (Mark 14v54).

This describes the worst moment in dear Peter’s life, of which he was later so ashamed, and about which he needed the Lord’s forgiveness and reinstatement, which he graciously received (John 21). It was not that Peter had given up following Jesus, it was that at a crucial moment when he was under pressure he denied his master and Lord. Peter wanted to follow Jesus, but he did not at this time want the hassle and danger of doing so – it was all too much for him to cope with. Later Peter thankfully showed that he was more than willing to take up his cross and follow Jesus wherever that led.

Learning from Martyn Lloyd-Jones: a Biblical synthesis of Reformed and Charismatic faith for today?

Learning from Martyn Lloyd-Jones: a Biblical synthesis of Reformed and Charismatic faith for today?

Adam Ramsey
Adam Ramsey
Date posted: 26 Jan 2026

Over the next few months, en will be running a series of articles written by Adam Ramsey, of Liberti Church, Gold Coast, Australia, exploring what we can learn from Martyn Lloyd-Jones today about the questions set out in the headline. The essays, of which there are five in total, need to be taken together. They are taken from original, yet-to-be published research undertaken by Ramsey for his Doctor of Philosophy thesis. They also, we hope, represent something of the generous-hearted, thoughtful, Biblical approach that en was founded 40 years ago in 1986 to embody.

Introduction

During the 20th century, it was no secret that Calvinists and Charismatics frequently viewed one another with mutual suspicion. Rarely would those who affirmed a high view of God’s sovereignty in salvation in the Reformed tradition, and those with a high experiential expectation of the Holy Spirit’s direct and supernatural activity, find themselves worshipping in the same church. Or, for that matter, even cooperating outside of their respective churches.

Evangelicals after John Smyth: Andrew Graystone interviewed

Evangelicals after John Smyth: Andrew Graystone interviewed

Rebecca Chapman
Rebecca Chapman
Date posted: 23 Jan 2026

Rebecca Chapman speaks to Andrew Graystone, who has been instrumental in exposing the scandal around abuser John Smyth.

Graystone is the author of Bleeding for Jesus, detailing the story of what went on, and was also involved in Channel 4’s exposés of what happened. A review of the book’s second edition, which has just been published, can be read on en's website here.

Sharing my faith with friendship, patience, and coffee
scattering seeds of hope

Sharing my faith with friendship, patience, and coffee

Marcia McLean
Marcia McLean
Date posted: 20 Jan 2026

Mocha. Black coffee. Milky coffee. Latte. Latte with oat milk. While my coffee preferences have changed over the years, one thing that has not changed is my love for coffee! And while my love for sharing the good news of Jesus Christ has not changed either, I have definitely changed in how I share my faith.

As an extrovert, I love to meet new people. Not to build on the stereotype, but I am also an American living in the UK. I love getting to know people and building friendships, and in God’s kindness sometimes these overlap with my love for coffee.

Peter's counter-cultural words to slaves

Peter's counter-cultural words to slaves

Tim Vasby-Burnie
Tim Vasby-Burnie
Date posted: 15 Jan 2026

Who is a "model Christian"? A pastor-evangelist who can both disciple a congregation and reach the lost effectively? A nurse putting in long hours, working with compassion and praying silently for her patients?

Peter says: think of a slave. A slave - with no power, suffering for doing good - is a model Christian.

Have you noticed the endings of these Psalms?

Have you noticed the endings of these Psalms?

Mitch Chase
Mitch Chase
Date posted: 15 Jan 2026

The book of Psalms has five smaller books. They’re not equal in length, but the ending of each book is marked by various climactic statements.

Book I is from Psalms one to 41, Book II is from Psalms 42 to 72, Book III is from Psalms 73 to 89, Book IV is from Psalms 90 to 106, and Book V is from Psalms 107 to 150.

A message to those who are doubting

A message to those who are doubting

Alistair Chalmers
Alistair Chalmers
Date posted: 14 Jan 2026

There are moments in the Christian life when faith feels sturdy and sure, and others when it feels as thin as glass. Prayers seem to fall flat. Scripture feels dry. Christian music maybe doesn’t lift your heart as it once did.

For many Christians these seasons can be unsettling, even frightening. We can wonder whether something has gone wrong with our faith, or worse, with us.

Retirement: What should our approach be?

Retirement: What should our approach be?

Graham Nicholls
Graham Nicholls
Date posted: 13 Jan 2026

As we entered 2026, I was watching Jools Holland’s Hootenanny. It’s a show welcoming in the new year with musicians performing songs, mostly with the backing of the vast and hugely talented band Jools has pulled together.

Along with the younger performers like Olivia Dean (26) and Jessie J (37), there were quite a few near or beyond what you might call "normal retirement" age. There was Ronnie Wood putting in a reasonable shift at 78 and there was Lulu bringing the house down with an energetic performance at 77. Even the host, Jools, and his regular singer Ruby Turner, are both 67. They could be claiming their state pensions, but they were showing no signs of retirement.

Review: 'Blue Letter Bible' versus 'Logos'

Review: 'Blue Letter Bible' versus 'Logos'

Paul Jackson
Paul Jackson
Date posted: 12 Jan 2026

I was inspired by Jordan Brown’s round-up of Bible apps (see en article here) and wanted to make a further, more specific, contribution to the debate in terms of Logos and Blue Letter Bible.

As a middle-aged Christian, I have been using Bible software since the days of CD-ROMs! Bible software has helped me craft numerous Bible studies and sermons.

The 'broken' are God's most useful instruments

The 'broken' are God's most useful instruments

Dan Steel
Dan Steel
Date posted: 12 Jan 2026

I know we’ve only just celebrated Christmas and the Incarnation, but as Arsene Wenger famously (allegedly) said: “Christmas is important but Easter is decisive.” And the thing about the Easter story for pastors and ministry leaders is it’s not merely a doctrine we proclaim but a pattern we embody.

We follow Jesus who moved through betrayal, abandonment, agony, and the darkness of death before the stone was rolled away on the third day. He told his disciples plainly: "Unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit."

Why theology and psychology need to be friends

Why theology and psychology need to be friends

Dave Burke
Dave Burke
Date posted: 11 Jan 2026

Please note: This article contains reference to attempted suicide and mental distress. For help and support, see the bottom of this page.

I ran downstairs to answer the doorbell and found a paramedic waiting, his ambulance on the road behind him with its engine still running.