In Depth:  Josh Hooker

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After 17 years away, the UK looks like this...

After 17 years away, the UK looks like this...

Josh Hooker

It’s been 17 years since I last lived in the UK.

My wife and I have been serving as mission partners in Southern Africa, first in Lesotho and then in Namibia. Cathy and I left the UK in January 2005 with an eight-month-old son. We arrived back at the end of 2021 with three teenage children. I was in my 30s when we left – I’m now in my 50s. I left local church ministry here for theological education in Africa. When we set off, Tony Blair was the Prime Minister, our mobile phone (we only had one) looked like a small black brick and dial-up internet connection was all the rage. It was a pre-Brexit, pre-Covid-19 world. The UK has changed a lot whilst we’ve been away and so have we.

Help! I'm an evangelical. Get me out of here!

Josh Hooker

I love the church, but something is happening to the church that I don't like. Over the past year I have visited a number of independent evangelical churches in the area where I live and my visits have left me feeling uneasy.

This is not because the Christians that I have met are ungodly people, or because the Bible is not being taught week by week, or because major heresy has crept unnoticed into church life. No, I feel uneasy because of the 'church culture' that seems to pervade many of these conservative evangelical churches - a culture that hinders Christian growth and denies outsiders the opportunity of hearing the gospel.