search

Find matching

Found 259 articles matching 'Mission'.

Bullying and exclusion: Why evangelicals need new C of E structures

Bullying and exclusion: Why evangelicals need new C of E structures

John Dunnett
John Dunnett
Date posted: 1 Apr 2024

It is still being assumed by those pursuing change in the Church of England that we can simply ‘agree to disagree’ over matters of same-sex marriage and blessings. In practice, this means that the permission not to use the Prayers of Love and Faith is a sufficient provision and that either no or minimum structural rearrangement is necessary.

This, however, remains a theological ostrich with its head in the sand. How can the Church of England simultaneously say that same-sex marriage and blessings are both sinful and holy? And as someone who holds to a globally acknowledged Biblical position on human sexuality, my conscience will not allow me to simply accept a Church of England that blesses sin as if it were holiness.

Evangelical hospital gets railway boost

Evangelical hospital gets railway boost

Milla Ling-Davies
Milla Ling-Davies
Date posted: 1 Apr 2024

As part of a historic change to the London railway network, an overground line between Stratford to Richmond has been named after an evangelical Christian hospital – which hopes the recognition will further its efforts to ‘do God’s work’. 

Transport for London (TFL) named The Mildmay line after the Mildmay Mission Hospital in Shoreditch, largely in acknowledgement of the help it provided during the 1980s during the HIV/AIDS crisis. The honour is a huge boost for the hospital who, just under a year ago, were facing closure due to NHS funding cuts – they now hope the spotlight will bring much-needed financial stability as they continue treating HIV patients and caring for the homeless.

Gospel opportunities in the land of Genghis Khan
letter from Mongolia

Gospel opportunities in the land of Genghis Khan

Mark & Gillian Newham
Date posted: 1 Apr 2024

We are privileged that God called us to live and minister amongst the Mongolians in Mongolia. We first moved to Ulaanbaatar in April 1993. Then, we were young naïve Christians with a heart to be involved in what God was doing, although we weren’t exactly sure what that was.

We arrived to find a country in transition. Seventy years of Soviet Socialism had ended in 1991 and people were hopeful that the nation would pass through the lean times and grow into a robust democracy. The church, which had been very small, was growing at an amazing rate as God brought gospel seed, planted years earlier, to fruition.

Lessons from ‘He Gets Us’
everyday evangelism

Lessons from ‘He Gets Us’

Glen Scrivener
Glen Scrivener
Date posted: 1 Apr 2024

‘He Gets Us’ is a US ad campaign spending hundreds of millions of dollars to prompt faith conversations in America.

It also seeks to lead interested enquirers to do Bible reading programmes and to connect with local Alpha groups. Their most prominent advertisement to date was their 60-second Superbowl commercial, ‘Foot Washing’, re-imagining John 13 with various representatives of polarised groups washing one another’s feet. It finished with the line ‘Jesus didn’t preach hate. Jesus washed feet.’

Letter

Island Revival

Date posted: 1 Feb 2024

Dear Editor,

I would like to thank you for publishing the balanced review by Tony Wilkinson of the book Island Aflame [en January]. I feel grieved, though, at the subtitle that Tom Lennie chose to give it. I am reminded of the words of our late Queen on the Prince Harry situation: ‘Recollections may differ’. That was after seven months, not 70 years.

Carl Knightly

Carl Knightly

Luke Randall
Luke Randall
Date posted: 1 Jan 2024

Carl Knightly has been appointed as the new leader of the City Mission Movement (CMM) UK and Ireland.

CMM was founded in 1991 and exists to support the 18 City Missions across the UK and Ireland. City Missions work to serve their cities and take the gospel to the people of their cities across the country.

Tony Baker: ‘Evangelical statesman’ 1938–2023

Tony Baker: ‘Evangelical statesman’ 1938–2023

James Dudley-Smith
Date posted: 1 Feb 2024

James Dudley-Smith writes: Tony was an evangelical statesman in the Church of England, a lifelong preacher and lecturer, pastor and servant of Christ.

After Oxford University and then Clifton Theological College, Bristol, he served curacies at St Ebbe’s in Oxford, and Welling near Bexleyheath. He was vicar of Redland in Bristol 1970–1979 during which time he was part of the lecturing staff at Tyndale Hall and then Trinity College Bristol, where he was Director of Ministry and Mission. He was vicar of Christ Church Beckenham 1979–93, and vicar of Bishop Hannington Hove 1994– 2003 before retirement to Eastbourne.

Inter-cultural commission marks ten years

Inter-cultural commission marks ten years

Milla Ling-Davies
Milla Ling-Davies
Date posted: 1 Feb 2024

More than 100 delegates have gathered at the London City Mission headquarters to celebrate ten years of the Evangelical Alliance’s ‘One People Commission’ (OPC).

Anchored by Titilola Babarinde, the co-ordinator of the OPC, the celebration began with a time of collective worship.

The gospel was preached – then a bomb exploded:  this is what happened afterwards in Ukraine

The gospel was preached – then a bomb exploded: this is what happened afterwards in Ukraine

Milla Ling-Davies
Milla Ling-Davies
Date posted: 1 Feb 2024

A Russian bomb exploded near a Christian mission worker sharing the gospel in Kherson, causing him to dive for cover, en has been told.

Daniel Rus is a Romanian working with the Global Network of Evangelists (part of the Luis Palau Association), who has organised and led 24 humanitarian trips to Ukraine. In December 2023, on day two of his most recent visit, he and his team visited five villages surrounding Kherson. While distributing food parcels at the third, a mortar bomb exploded 40 metres away, in the garden of the house they were in front of, and the team were forced to run to their cars.

Javier Milei: Do cry for me, Argentina?

Javier Milei: Do cry for me, Argentina?

Iain Taylor
Iain Taylor
Date posted: 1 Jan 2024

The Church Mission Society (CMS), which absorbed the South American Mission Society (SAMS) in 2009, has responded to the election of far-right populist outsider Javier Milei as the new President of Argentina.

Speaking exclusively to Evangelicals Now, CMS spokesperson Naomi Steinberg commented: ‘From a mission point of view, we can see that the political, economic and environmental situation in Argentina is precarious and needs much prayer. Our people in mission in the region are praying that the new President will be surrounded by a leadership team that is wise, compassionate and full of integrity’.

Two new ministers for two new churches

Two new ministers for two new churches

Tom Hutton
Date posted: 1 Mar 2024

Two new AMiE churches have two newly ordained ministers.

One of the congregations is in Wolverhampton, and began in summer 2020, while the other is on the Isle of Wight, and started in 2023.

‘Patient, gracious’ Roger Forster dies

‘Patient, gracious’ Roger Forster dies

Luke Randall
Luke Randall
Date posted: 1 Mar 2024

Roger Forster, the founder of Ichthus Christian Fellowship, has died aged 90.

A husband to Faith and father to three children, he was a well-respected theologian, best known for founding the neo-charismatic Ichthus Christian Fellowship in 1974.

Fred Drummond

Fred Drummond

en staff
en staff
Date posted: 1 Mar 2024

Fred Drummond, the director of the Evangelical Alliance in Scotland, is leaving his role this summer, it has been announced.

Gavin Calver, CEO of EAUK, said: ‘Fred has been instrumental in leading the team in Scotland and has played an invaluable role on the leadership team; providing support for the leadership and wider team, engaging with our members, and inspiring us with his prayerfulness, wisdom and prophetic insight during his 17 and a half years on the staff team.’

Orthodox Jew wants Gazans to ‘get a little Jesus’

Orthodox Jew wants Gazans to ‘get a little Jesus’

Iain Taylor
Iain Taylor
Date posted: 1 Mar 2024

An Orthodox Jewish writer Jonathan Feldstein is currently ‘praying for Gazans to get a little Jesus in 2024’.

Feldstein is president of the Genesis 123 Foundation, whose declared mission is to ‘build bridges between Jews and Christians with Israel in ways that are new, unique, and meaningful’. He made the call as he believes ‘the best and safest way to change the situation and bring peace [in Gaza] is for the masses of Gazans, and Palestinian Arabs in general, to convert to Christianity’.

Contagious holiness in contentious  settings? Making holy the unholy

Contagious holiness in contentious settings? Making holy the unholy

Craig Blomberg
Date posted: 1 Mar 2024

In the ancient Middle East, people took hospitality more seriously than most of us, and were more guarded with whom they ate. Most cultures had dietary restrictions and taboos. In some instances, eating the wrong food could render a person ritually unclean.

But whereas the Pharisees avoided contact with ‘sinners’ so that they would not become ritually unclean, Jesus befriended sinners – because He believed that His holiness was contagious.

The church is an apologetic!
defending our faith

The church is an apologetic!

Chris Sinkinson
Chris Sinkinson
Date posted: 1 Mar 2024

I have been writing this column in Evangelicals Now for many years. The general theme is apologetics – the defence of our faith – using reliable evidence and being aware of contemporary questions.

I have done so as a lecturer at one of our nation’s Bible colleges. Archaeology, Biblical texts, ethical dilemmas and philosophical questions are all familiar territory for anyone studying academic theology.

The answer to an 11-year prayer: new church opens

The answer to an 11-year prayer: new church opens

Milla Ling-Davies
Milla Ling-Davies
Date posted: 1 Mar 2024

On Saturday 6 January 2024, Dan James had an encouraging answer to the prayer he’d been praying for 11 years: a church was planted on his council estate in South Leicester.

In 2013, primary school teacher Dan and his wife Jamie moved into Eyres Monsell council estate and their hearts were gripped by both its physical and spiritual needs – there was no gospel church there. ‘Convinced that God’s primary mission strategy is a healthy local church, we started praying for one to begin,’ Dan shared with en. Just over a decade on from those first prayers, after plans, bold initiatives and setbacks, 100 people gathered on the estate this January to commission Eyres Monsell Community Church and Dan as its pastor.

‘We ruined good people’ – Dawson

‘We ruined good people’ – Dawson

Nicola Laver
Nicola Laver
Date posted: 1 Mar 2024

A former staff member at the Universities of Colleges Christian Fellowship (UCCF) has apologised for the part she played in an ‘unhealthy and damaging’ UCCF culture, saying she has kept quiet for 20 years out of fear.

Nay Dawson worked for UCCF for 18 years, becoming a team leader in 2006. Writing in Premier Christianity, she reflected: ‘The urgency of our mission and the significance of our role led to an arrogance in my heart. I’d lost my humility… So when I started to notice that things weren’t quite right, I was in so deep. I felt I couldn’t – and so didn’t – ask questions.’

Gospel beauty parlour offers inner transformation

Gospel beauty parlour offers inner transformation

Agnes Wilson
Date posted: 1 Mar 2024

It’s not often you hear of churches being taken over by beauty salons. But that’s exactly what happened at one East London church recently, all to reach those on the margins of society.

On a rainy day, London City Missionaries Marlen and Amanda-Lee, alongside volunteers from LCM Church Partner, The Liberty Church, came early in the morning to transform a modest church space into somewhere that women could get their hair cut, enjoy beauty treatments for their hands and feet, and hear the good news of Jesus Christ.

Dating apps in decline: What’s our better alternative?

Dating apps in decline: What’s our better alternative?

Emma Sowden
Emma Sowden
Date posted: 1 Mar 2024

The sun appears to be setting on the dating app era, and culture is on a mission to re-codify love, but what will we find in the aftermath?

Amidst our hyper-digital age, the tide appears to be turning on the reign of online dating. Despite radically changing the art of modern romance after exploding onto the scene in the early 2010s, today apps like Tinder, Hinge and Bumble are all reporting a steady decline in users. What was branded as an efficient way to connect people sold a promise of dating minus the mess. However, ten years on, people have cottoned onto the reality that online dating carries its own set of messes and mishaps. Those leaving the apps are citing the ways in which these platforms prey on insecurity and cause ‘swipe fatigue’ by overwhelming users with choice.

Faithful brothers and sisters abroad need support

Faithful brothers and sisters abroad need support

Andy Lines
Andy Lines
Date posted: 1 Mar 2024

‘Ven. Ifeanyi Akunna asks for prayer as students travel back to the Abuja Diocesan Training College (Nigeria) for the beginning of term. The roads can be very dangerous, with armed robbers and kidnappers. Pray for divine protection.’

This was the featured prayer request on the GAFCON website for 8 January 2024. This section of the site– found at gafcon.org/ prayer – is a particularly helpful resource, especially for many Anglicans living in the UK. It opens our eyes and hearts to needs in different parts of the world, and provides a challenge to us by illustrating problems faced by fellow Christians which most of us in the affluent and comfortable West would find intolerable.

Are you ‘two-kingdoms’ or ‘transformationist’?

Are you ‘two-kingdoms’ or ‘transformationist’?

Al Gibbs
Date posted: 1 Jan 2024

One of the perennial questions that Christians ask is how the church should engage with society.

The Bible is clear that individual Christians should share God’s love with everyone in the contexts that God has placed them, but to what extent should the church, as the church, seek to influence society? There are several ways of addressing this question, but in recent years many evangelicals have gravitated to one of two paradigms – either a two-kingdoms model, or a transformationist model. These models or views can get complicated, but it’s useful for Christians to have a basic sense of the strengths and weaknesses of each, as well as being aware of the history.

OMF welcomes new General Director

OMF welcomes new General Director

OMF UK
Date posted: 1 Jan 2024

At a special gathering in Thailand on 27 November, Dr Patrick Fung handed over the role of General Director of OMF International to Dr Joseph Chang.

Joseph is OMF International’s 11th General Director in the organisation’s almost 160-year history. Originally from Taiwan, Joseph and his wife Lori have relocated to OMF’s International Centre in Singapore for the role.

First pastor for 50-year-old church

First pastor for 50-year-old church

Milla Ling-Davies
Milla Ling-Davies
Date posted: 1 Jan 2024

Ferniehill Evangelical Church in Edinburgh finished the year praising God for two big encouragements in 2023 – they moved back into their renovated building and employed their first pastor, Alistair Chalmers.

For over 50 years, Ferniehill Evangelical Church has been faithfully witnessing to the local community in Gilmerton, Edinburgh.

Filter

By year

By category

By author