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French evangelical group under fire

French evangelical group under fire

Iain Taylor
Iain Taylor
Date posted: 1 Oct 2023

Evangelical group Torrents de Vie has attracted the hostility of the media and the government in France after a journalist covertly recorded images and conversations at one of the organisation’s summer camps.

Torrents de Vie means ‘Streams Of Life’. Part of a larger international inter-denominational Christian ministry, it is active in ten French cities offering seminars, pastoral counselling and conferences. Its website says it ‘offers spiritual support, combining teaching, listening and prayer, to Christians of all denominations seeking help for their personal difficulties. Our values are based on Biblical love and grace’.

Ten Questions: Dad jokes and Spurgeon

Ten Questions: Dad jokes and Spurgeon

Ross Hendry

1. How did you become a Christian? 

Will there be a place for me in the Church of England?

Will there be a place for me in the Church of England?

John Dunnett
John Dunnett
Date posted: 1 Oct 2023

In August, the Church of England announced that a series of meetings were to be held in September ahead of the bishops presenting to November’s General Synod ‘proposals to enable same-sex couples to come to church following a civil marriage or civil partnership for prayers of dedication, thanksgiving and for God’s blessing’.

This was a stark signal that the bishops are still intending to ‘move the goalposts’ in the Church of England’s teaching and practice regarding sexual ethics and to introduce significant change. As such, this will be a more substantive change than other liberalising changes in recent times since it will formally enshrine in our liturgy a doctrinal change divergent to our ‘foundation deeds’.

Seniors’ champ

Seniors’ champ

Faith in Later Life
Date posted: 1 Oct 2023

Faith in Later Life has announced the appointment of a new Lead Officer, Alexandra Drew, to take forward its work to inspire and equip Christians to reach, serve and empower older people in every community, through the local church.

Alexandra (known as Alex) comes from the West of England Baptist Network and the Seventy-Two network, which describes itself as ‘a catalyst for missional movement, across England and Wales, through Baptist networks.’

Morocco: help comes

Morocco: help comes

Iain Taylor
Iain Taylor
Date posted: 1 Oct 2023

Christians from around the world are on the ground bringing urgent relief in Morocco, following the huge earthquake there. The epicentre of the quake was in the Atlas Mountains, about 40 miles southwest of the busy tourist city of Marrakech. Thousands are dead and injured.

A representative of the Bible Society in Morocco said: ‘Your prayers and concern mean a lot to us here in Morocco … I am in the affected area, working alongside teams from different churches. We are delivering food supplies to believers and their families, and we are also assessing the needs for the near future.’

news in brief

Central America – evangelical majority

Evangelicalism is now the majority faith in Central America, a new survey shows. 42% now identify as Protestants (mostly evangelical) while under 40% identify as Roman Catholics.

The research was carried out in Nicaragua, Guatemeala, Costa Rica, Panama, El Salvador and Honduras by M&R Consultores. In Nicaragua, for example, the Catholic Church has lost 60% of its adherents since 1950 and currently only one person in three claims to be Catholic. Non-Catholics represented only 4% then, but by 2023 that number has risen to 65%.

Haiti: rare piece of good news in dark situation

Haiti: rare piece of good news in dark situation

Iain Taylor
Iain Taylor
Date posted: 1 Oct 2023

A Christian nurse who was kidnapped in Haiti has been released, saying she ‘holds no grudges’ against her abductors and forgives them.

She added: ‘My clinic doors are always open to you or anyone in need when you’re sick or wounded, without any problem.’

Exposing the doors of deception

Exposing the doors of deception

Sharon James
Date posted: 1 Oct 2023

Book Review FIVE LIES OF OUR ANTI-CHRISTIAN AGE

Read review
Keswick: ‘My life is  now full of  colour and  meaning…’

Keswick: ‘My life is now full of colour and meaning…’

Hélder Favorin
Date posted: 1 Aug 2023

Keswick speaker Hélder Favorin writes: Amalia, from Eastern Europe, shared these words: ‘I turned 20 recently and I cannot stop appreciating how full of colour and meaning my life has become. I feel secure and confident about my future. I’ve had anxiety attacks and even a few severe panic attacks; I couldn’t handle it alone. But because of my faith in Jesus, I have found peace and protection. He is my rock and I know that I can rely on Him in any situation.’(1)

Amalia’s honest testimony may feel like an oasis in the desert-like spiritual landscape of European youth, the most secularised, atheistic and agnostic demographic in the world. At the same time there might be many more oases – and even rivers of God’s activity among youth in Europe – than we realise. The tide keeps turning.

Let my people know
a Jewish Christian perspective

Let my people know

Joseph Steinberg
Joseph Steinberg
Date posted: 1 Aug 2023

When the Israelites were held as slaves in Egypt, God commanded Pharaoh, via Moses, to ‘Let my people go’ (Ex. 5:1). You may remember that the Israelites had not yet discovered God’s purpose for them as a people. All they knew was slavery and the desire to be set free.

What they later discovered at Sinai and in the giving of the law, was that they were a nation created by God with a purpose – to be lights to the other nations – so that the whole world will know God and be filled with His glory. Israel was born as a nation on the slopes of Mount Sinai at that first Shavuot (Pentecost) and they were commissioned to be a light to the nations.

When a ‘naming day’ replaces a Christian prayer

When a ‘naming day’ replaces a Christian prayer

Kevin Bettany
Date posted: 1 Sep 2023

A few weeks ago, on a Saturday afternoon in the beautiful countryside setting of Devon, an event involving about 50 friends and family gathered to mark our latest grandson’s birth. Called a ‘naming day’, it represented a kind of non-Christian christening.

Partly, perhaps because paganism pre-dates Christianity, my son and his partner hoped, like themselves, that everyone would be touched by a deeper and more meaningful experience of creation. Obviously, as infants, we would have been present when our parents had us either christened with names or prayed over with thanks to God. This event was markedly different and more interactively engaging than a traditional Christian service. As the ceremony began all those present were recognised as having different religious or non-religious backgrounds. This implied, for me at least, that some unspecified acceptance of religious diversity was expected.

Long-running  camps cut

Long-running camps cut

Nicola Laver
Nicola Laver
Date posted: 1 Sep 2023

The curtain has come down for good on Urban Saints national summer camps, which have been running across several sites across the UK and Ireland for many decades – though local and regional ones will continue.

Previously more widely known as Crusaders, Urban Saints summer camps for children and young people up to 18 have been run by volunteers since the early 1900s. This year’s camps ran through summer from the very first summer weekend. Interim CEO Richard Giles said : ‘We’re grateful for their servant heart and passion.’

news in brief

Uganda: wife killed for becoming a Christian

40-year-old Abudullah Waiswa, a Muslim in Bugiri, eastern Uganda has killed his wife for converting to Christianity. Amina Nanfuka, 31, had returned from a medical check-up in Kampala, where she also attended a worship service at a church.

A relative said ‘We went inside the bedroom and found Amina unconscious with blood coming out of her mouth. She was rushed to a nearby clinic, but the doctor pronounced her dead upon arrival. She had been strangled and hit with an object around her mouth’. The couple had three children, aged 3, 6 and 9.

Very different… but all one

Very different… but all one

Emma Harrison
Date posted: 1 Sep 2023

Record numbers of children and young people attended this year’s Keswick Convention, the organisers say.

Keswick Ministries has revealed that of the 10,000 attendees this summer, 2,500 were youngsters and teenagers.

Niger: plea  for prayer

Niger: plea for prayer

en staff
Date posted: 1 Sep 2023

Niger Christians are asking for prayer as the country continues to face turbulence.

Mission organisation Open Doors UK says people should pray for the safety of the churches, and especially believers who have converted from Islam.

A missed opportunity ?

A missed opportunity ?

Tom Clarke
Tom Clarke
Date posted: 1 Sep 2023

Statistical evidence would suggest that the commitment of the church in the UK to overseas mission has been on a downward path for some time, whether measured in terms of personnel volunteering to go and serve or in terms of financial support.

Anecdotally, I was asked recently if it was still the case that some Christians offer to leave home to serve the Lord in cross-cultural situations. This was a genuine question from a godly pastor who just had no experience of this happening either in his own church or others which he knew of.

Keswick role

Keswick role

Emma Harrison
Date posted: 1 Sep 2023

Keswick Ministries has announced the appointment of Mark Ellis as its new Ministry Director, effective from September 2023. He follows James Robson, incoming Principal of Oak Hill Theological College.

Mark has wide experience in Christian leadership, including overseas mission work with OMF, leading UCCF’s team in Scotland and as Director of Christian Unions Ireland, pastoring a flourishing church plant in Dundee, and most recently as part of the leadership team at Christ Church Newcastle.

Letter

Islam in the UK

Date posted: 1 Sep 2023

Dear Editor,

Just a quick note to thank you for Andrew Marsay’s piece ‘How can we think deeply about Islam?’ in the July issue of en. I thought this was an excellent article and Andrew did a great job packing so much into a short space.

Church plants spurred on by Irish mission initiative

Church plants spurred on by Irish mission initiative

Mark Loughridge
Date posted: 1 Jan 2023

At least two new churches have been planted in Ireland in tandem with the recent ‘What’s the Story?’ (WTS) outreach initiative in Ireland.

Christ City Church in central Dublin (some members pictured) had been looking to plant a church in the more residential area in the south of the city to reach the people there.

From poles apart to magnetic points

From poles apart to magnetic points

John Woods
John Woods
Date posted: 1 Jul 2023

en reviews editor John Woods interviews Dr Dan Strange, Director of the Crosslands Forum.

Before joining Crosslands full time, Dan was College Director for Oak Hill Theological College. A former UCCF worker with a PhD in Theology and Religious Studies, Dan lives in Gateshead with his wife Elly and most of their seven children, where they are part of Hope Community Church. He is a trustee of Tyndale House and author of several books including Making Faith Magnetic.

Innovative outreach to Jerusalem holocaust survivors

Innovative outreach to Jerusalem holocaust survivors

Iain Taylor
Iain Taylor
Date posted: 1 Jul 2023

An innovative gospel outreach in Jerusalem has sparked great interest among hundreds of Jewish people wanting to know more about the claims of Jesus.

The brainchild of the International Mission to Jewish People (IMJP), the five-day initiative was specifically designed for those who had lived through the Holocaust. It comprised four tours of Biblical sites in Galilee, ending with a concert featuring performances by local musicians (all Jewish believers in Jesus), and a gospel presentation by IMJP missionary, Aviel Sela. It formed part of a strategic plan, developed over a number of years, to reach Jewish people with the good news about Jesus. More than 200 people joined the site tours, to places such as the Mount of Beatitudes where Jesus preached the Sermon on the Mount, and 185 Jewish people attended the concert, 156 of whom gave their contact details and took away Christian literature.

Fifty years of a family’s faithful witness in PNG

Fifty years of a family’s faithful witness in PNG

In 2019, website devpolicy.org told the story of Sally’s life and background. Cleo Fleming wrote:

Sally’s family has lived and worked with the Bedamuni people of PNG since the late 1960s, when her parents, Tom and Salome Hoey, went to Western Province to establish a Christian mission there. Raised in farming families from Queensland, they were both immensely practical people who had a range of life skills to add to the training they received at Tahlee Bible College before leaving Australia.

Anglicanism? Yes, but not as you know it...

Anglicanism? Yes, but not as you know it...

Andy Lines
Andy Lines
Date posted: 1 Jul 2023

When the first GAFCON gathering was held in 2008 in Jerusalem, the delegates agreed that this historic conference, bringing together Bible -believing Anglicans from around the world, should not just be a moment, but a movement, wonderfully diverse, with a vision to bring together the faithful from this historic denomination to proclaim Christ to the nations.

And so the Global Anglican Future Conference, GAFCON, has been held every five years, most recently in Kigali, Rwanda, where I was privileged to attend along with around 140 others from Britain, Ireland and mainland Europe in a total gathering of 1,300. The GAFCON movement has been growing and developing since its inception. What are some of its chief characteristics which distinguish it from several of our familiar UK-based evangelical networks and mission organisations?

The adventure of discipleship in a risk-locked society

The adventure of discipleship in a risk-locked society

Karen Soole
Karen Soole
Date posted: 1 Jul 2023

When was the last time you heard the hymn ‘To be a Pilgrim’ by John Bunyan, or how about ‘Onward, Christian Soldiers, marching as to war, with the cross of Jesus going on before!’?

Perhaps you don’t know them at all. These hymns, once classic school assembly songs for generations, haven’t made it into the 21st century. Their language is dated, but the sentiment shouldn’t be. They were a call for us to love Christ and to serve Him unashamedly, written as a call to discipleship and to ‘share in suffering as a good soldier of Christ Jesus’. I’m not sure we sing many hymns now which encourage risk-taking with such reckless abandonment.

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