Jewish ministry
name change
IMJP
Date posted: 1 Nov 2020
Christian Witness to Israel is changing its
name to International Ministry to Jewish
People.
CEO Joseph Steinberg explained that: ‘We
became increasingly aware that the name of
our mission, Christian Witness to Israel, has
become a hindrance to engage parts of the
church as we seek to expand our reach and
share the Good News of Jesus with as many
Jewish people as possible. This
is due to
the assumption many make that our name
means we are focused on politics or land
issues in the Middle East when in fact we, as
an evangelistic mission, are solely focused on
telling Jewish people about Jesus, wherever
they may be.’
‘12 Associates’ commissioned to help pastors and spouses
Living Leadership
Date posted: 1 Dec 2020
Living Leadership, which supports leaders across the UK and Ireland, writes:
These are strange times. The rapidly changing landscape for churches and Christian organisations has created immense pressures for leaders. Some are weary and fed up with the feeling that every time they get going with one set of restrictions, the goalposts shift. Others are growing fainthearted, close to collapse and chronically discouraged.
‘The Lord has
helped us’
en staff
Date posted: 1 Dec 2020
Founded in 1893 as the Foreign Missions
Club, the Highbury Centre is a Christian
guest house in North London which has
given shelter to missionaries, pastors, full-time Christian workers and their families
for over 100 years.
Now,
in the second English
lockdown,
unable to open unless people are travelling
on essential business, Sue Scalora of
the
Centre said: ‘The Lord has helped us through
the ups and downs, and we’ll try and keep
open even though we’re making a loss at the
moment serving the Lord’s people.’
Co-founder of MAF dies
Mission Aviation Fellowship (MAF)
Date posted: 1 Oct 2020
Mission Aviation Fellowsip (MAF) co-founder, former RAF Flight Lieutenant, and Normandy Landings veteran Stuart Sendall-King, has died aged 98. He was one of the early pioneers to take light aircraft to the remotest parts of Africa in the aftermath of World War II.
Serving as an aircraft engineer during the Second World War and ending his RAF career as Chief Technical Officer at RAF Duxford, Stuart nurtured a growing desire to use aircraft for good – helping to establish MAF in 1945.
Three new church plants go forward in Beckenham, Folkestone and Hull
EN
Date posted: 1 Oct 2020
Three evangelical church plants in differing networks have taken their first steps forward across the UK.
Grace Church Beckenham
Pastor of the new Grace Church Beckenham, Matt Dew-Jones, says people in this new congregation are passionate about both Beckenham itself, and God’s grace. ‘God is a giver (in so many ways), and ultimately at the cross. As we see a world marked by taking …we love that [God] gives forgiveness and the power to change.’ In statements on their website, the church is clear it wants to ‘become generous like Jesus. We want our lives, our time, energy and money to be used to serve Jesus and His world’ and they want to be a place where ‘people like me love people who are not like me in a committed church family’.
New ministry training scheme for athletes
Christians in Sport
Date posted: 1 Nov 2020
Christians in Sport, in partnership with other sports ministry organisations globally, is helping to pilot a new training journey specifically for young Christian leaders who are active in the world of competitive and elite sport.
As good as the many ministry training schemes in the UK are, they are often not best suited to the competitive and elite sports player. Mission and discipleship within this world is one of the most unique aspects of sport ministry. Working with athletes who compete at the highest levels, train intensively and often travel regularly, they are often on their own with few believers around them. Some of them are also in the public eye.
Olly’s lockdown ministry: ex drug addict goes online
London City Mission
Date posted: 1 Sep 2020
There’s a curious exchange between Jesus and the man who had the legion of demons driven out from him at the expense of a large herd of pigs. The man from whom the demons had gone out begged to go with Him, but Jesus sent him away, saying, ‘Return home and tell how much God has done for you’ (Luke 8:38).
There’s every indication that he is committed and sincere about following Jesus, and certainly his life has been transformed. Yet he is turned down and told to go back home. Why?
Co-Mission: declaring Jesus through carols and craft
Co-Mission
Date posted: 1 Feb 2020
Co-Mission is committed to planting and strengthening churches throughout London to reach the lost for the glory of God. We want to reach people who wouldn’t normally come to church to hear about Jesus. Here are two examples of Co-Mission churches using the opportunity of Christmas to present guests with their need for a Saviour.
Christ Church Balham held its annual ‘carols in a pub’ service with a unique twist – mashing up traditional carols with pop music! This has become CCB’s biggest outreach event of the year. The theatre at the Bedford Pub in Balham was packed with friends and family of churchgoers, as well as those in the pub curious at the merriment. All enjoyed belting out carols with the ten-piece band, to a mix of merry renditions of Take On Me by Aha (or Angels from the Realms of Glory), Giant by Rag’n’Bone Man (or See Amid the Winter’s Snow) and All the Small Things by Blink 182 (or O Come All Ye Faithful).
New ministry refreshment network launched online
Paul Coulter
Date posted: 1 Sep 2020
We’re tired. Zoom fatigue, confinement, and heightened awareness of death, on top of personal needs, have wearied us.
Christian leaders have faced additional challenges. Lockdown forced an urgent development of new forms of church gatherings and pastoral connections. Emerging from lockdown with social distancing means another rethink, while no one knows yet what the ‘new normal’ for church will be. This is a time of rebuilding.
New online prayer gathering for London in November
A prayer gathering for London, which started last year, is going online this November. It is one of several exciting initiatives now being developed by the relatively new London Gospel Partnership (LGP). Richard Bray, incoming LGP Chair, reports:
One of the great encouragements of the past 20 years in the UK has been the growth in churches working together across denominational lines in regional Gospel Partnerships. These partnerships have provided training, organised missions, and seen the fruit of church planting.
Christians start to bring hope in post-blast Beirut
Exclusive photos and report from Phil Good in Beirut, Lebanon. Phil and his wife Sylvie work with the Church Mission Society (CMS) and the evangelical Resurrection Church there.
‘Resurrection Church Beirut (RCB) has raised funds and undertaken to repair 100 homes that have been damaged. Counselling support is ongoing and will be needed for many months to come; the repercussions of this event will reach a long way into the future and the church is preparing for the long haul. After the news fades, so many people will need to rebuild their lives, and rebuilding lives is what the church knows about.
Evangelical leads couple to faith in chance Rome meeting
EN
Date posted: 1 Oct 2020
An English evangelical led a German man
and his Bolivian wife to Christ after he met
them by seeming chance in the very highest
point of St Peter’s Roman Catholic basilica
in the Vatican.
Greg Downes, Director of Ministerial
Training, and Dean of The Wesley Centre
for Missional Engagement at the evangelical
training college, Wycliffe Hall, Oxford, says:
New Christian student resources for pandemic
Kate Duncan
Date posted: 1 Oct 2020
Student Christian umbrella group UCCF is launching new resources to enable students to engage with the gospel and keep making Jesus known.
The Universities and Colleges Christian Fellowship (UCCF) has planned resources for Christian Unions (CUs) which cover all eventualities in the current pandemic. ‘More than ever we will need to encourage our CUs to maintain and sharpen the tools used for the kind of evangelism that has been bearing fruit, albeit with a somewhat different expression from what has gone before,’ says Peter Dray, UCCF Head of Creative Evangelism.
AMiE: gospel growth North and South
AMiE
Date posted: 1 Aug 2020
The Anglican Mission in England (AMiE) is a fellowship of faithful Anglican churches committed to gospel mission.
They are passionate about planting and strengthening churches for the salvation of many and the glory of God. They have a gospel ambition to see 25 AMiE churches by 2025 and 250 by 2050.
Saudis tell UN that Muslim
prejudice is ‘racism’
Barnabas Fund
Date posted: 1 Sep 2020
Saudi Arabia has called the United Nations
to focus on ‘eliminating Islamophobia’ as
an outworking of tackling online racism
and xenophobia.
Meshaal Bin Ali Al Balawi, Saudi’s Head of
Human Rights at the United Nations Mission
in Geneva, addressed
the Human Rights
Council, flagging the internet as a ‘space for
practicing racism’ as he called for the UN to
work towards finding a ‘solution’. The Saudi
leader stated that the world needs to ‘prohibit
racial discrimination in all its forms’.
LCM: God’s work goes on
Graham Miller
Date posted: 1 Jul 2020
May 2020 marked 185 years since three
Victorian visionaries – horrified at
the
huge numbers of people in London living
in appalling conditions and without the
hope of Christ – formed the London City
Mission. They quickly assembled a group of
missionaries to go to the slums to proclaim
the gospel.
Yet most of our missionaries were forced
to mark the anniversary by staying at home.
Despite a massive increase in people raising
serious questions about life, death and the
meaning of it all, we are having to enforce
social distancing
and
stop our physical
meetings – initially it was so frustrating.
Taking the High Road
Association of Grace Baptist Churches (SE)
Date posted: 1 Aug 2020
Would you accept a call to pastor a church
of six or seven people?
That
is what David Wilson did back
in 2015. High Road Baptist Church
in
Finchley had reached a low ebb and, when
David was inducted in February 2016, his
mission was to ‘re-establish’ the church.
CiS: thousands hear the gospel online
Christians in Sport
Date posted: 1 Aug 2020
Over 75,000 people took part in online sports quizzes run by Christians in Sport from April to June as most competitive and elite level sport stopped.
Teams would take part in four rounds of creative sports questions and then hear a short gospel talk from either Graham Daniels or Ian Lancaster, with Christian team-mates given follow-up questions to work through with their teams.
Brazil: deadly
outreach?
The Christian Post
Date posted: 1 Jul 2020
In May, a judge blocked the appointment
of a former Christian missionary and pastor
to head the country’s federal Indigenous
Affairs Agency after concerns were raised
by advocacy groups that oppose evangelical
outreaches to tribes in the Amazon.
Ricardo Lopes Dias had worked with
New Tribes Mission, now called Ethnos260,
for ten years. The group’s missionaries have
engaged
in efforts
to contact unreached
people
groups
and
tribes deep
in
the
Amazonian rainforest.
. . . but God meant it for good
A round-up of encouraging news stories during the coronavirus pandemic
Uganda: was I dreaming?
For three days in Uganda, blind Anna and her granddaughter lived on nothing but water and a daily cup of milk, given by a neighbour, which the pair shared between them.
Where now for the Anglican Communion?
Vinay Samuel and Chris Sugden
Date posted: 1 Jul 2020
Covid-19 has prompted many thoughts about what life could look like now that we have been forced to abandon, for a while, uninterrupted global travel, foreign holidays, and despite the foreshortened lives and devastated economies, enjoyed with the earth and its airspace a sabbath of sabbaths.
Lambeth 2020 and GAFCON in 2020 postponed gatherings that would have signalled the continuing tear in the fabric of the Anglican Communion. Does this postponement and the pandemic crisis signal a possibility of different opposing groups in the Anglican Communion finding a way of remaining in one Communion both seeking and showing the unity Christ prayed for the church? Seeking the unity of the Church has always been a key commitment of the Anglican tradition. Might there be space for thoughts about what the Global Anglican Communion might look like?
Nigeria: militants exploiting lockdown
Morning Star News / Barnabas Fund
Date posted: 1 Jul 2020
Fulani militants were seen to be exploiting lockdown as they launched a series of murderous attacks throughout May.
Militants killed at least eight Christians and injured scores of others on 12 May in one of a series of murderous attacks on villages in Nigeria’s Middle Belt. Large numbers of gunmen stormed the villages of Bakin-Kogi, Idanu and Makyali, in the Kajura Local Government Area of Kaduna State, causing families to flee into the bush and to neighbouring communities.
Mission in Lancashire
The Pais Project
Date posted: 1 Jun 2018
The national Christian organisation Pais
GB brought teams and some of the young
people they work with to Lancashire for a
weekend of mission over the first May bank
holiday weekend.
They organised multiple
fun days and
mission projects, using the opportunity to
train their young people in evangelism and
mission and to advance the Kingdom in the
Northwest.
CiS: ‘stay committed’
Christians in Sport
Date posted: 1 May 2020
As the world gets to grips with the impact of the coronavirus outbreak, sportspeople all over the world are also seeing their lives change – particularly those in top-level sport, as their careers are on indefinite hold with serious financial implications.
In April, Christians in Sport (CiS) launched a new campaign calling on Christian sportspeople all over the world to reach out and keep investing in the lives of their sports friends even though sport has been cancelled. In the midst of all the uncertainty, the call to Christian sportspersons remains the same: reach the world of sport for Christ.