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Back from the dead
editorial

Back from the dead

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Dec 2008

Back from the dead

The little Grace Baptist church in Watford, North West of London, had closed some time ago. However, driven by concern for God’s glory a Christian worker was stirred to seek to reopen it.

There was a promising initial meeting in the old chapel on Easter Sunday this year, with 22 people, including many well-wishers, present. But the following Sunday showed the cold reality of the situation. The preacher was the only one there for the morning service.

Don’t take this on the train!

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Apr 2008

Book Review THE WORKS OF ANDREW FULLER

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Ten for God

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Apr 2008

Until 1989, Poland was a Communist state ruled from Marxist Russia. Religiously, traditional Catholicism was the dominant force. But, during the years 1975 to 1990, God used a music group Deo Decyma (Ten for God) to spread the good news of Jesus Christ in Poland. This is something of their story.

The Krol family, headed up by the father Wilhelm Krol, a professor of civil engineering in Gliwice and a lay preacher, were evangelical Christians. Though their surroundings were quite hostile to the gospel, nevertheless the children, Nina, Henio and Adas, knew the Lord and felt very secure and free in Christ.

Why join a small church?

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Dec 2007

A Christian married couple I know of had to move out of London and leave their church to go north with the husband’s job.

Much to the surprise of some of their long-term Christian pals they began attending the little and very local Anglican church in the village to which they had moved. The friends of the couple had concerns. The church was small, the teaching was not heretical but it was not great, and there was nothing there for their four children.

Sarah

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Oct 2007

Music Review Beating Time SARAH: Amazing Grace (CD)

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Divide & multiply

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Mar 2007

At a time when churches are reported to be in decline, the theme of growing churches is obviously of major importance for Christians.

‘Growing churches: reach, build, send’ was the title of a conference sponsored by the South East Gospel Partnership (in affiliation with Affinity) at St. Helen’s, Bishopsgate, London, on February 3.

Remote control?

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Mar 2007

Book Review FACING THE CHALLENGE OF TELEVISION

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Taking a stand for truth

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Jan 2006

In October, a South African bishop ordained three staff members of the Co-Mission Initiative churches, based in South West London, whose senior pastor is Richard Coekin. The Bishop of Southwark has since revoked Richard’s licence as a Church of England minister (see front page article).

Since the ordinations, there have been media interviews, in which Richard Coekin has clarified that his main concern is about the authority of the Bible in the modern Church of England. From right across the country, evangelical churches and individuals have inundated Richard’s church office with emails and letters of unqualified support. There have been messages from abroad, not just from South Africa, but from Australia, America, Brazil and more, simply saying that they agree wholeheartedly with what Richard is seeking to do.

Key people you should know about

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Aug 2005

Book Review DEFENCE OF THE TRUTH Contending for the Faith yesterday and today

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Battling Baptist

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Jul 2005

Book Review A PASTOR IN NEW YORK The Life and Times of Spencer Cone

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The big picture for small churches

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Jul 2005

If you are part of a small church you have a choice. You can choose to see the small size of the congregation as a reason to be discouraged and downhearted. Or you can choose to see the church’s smallness as a reason why you might be just the church God can use.

Where am I coming from with that last statement? Is it just foolish optimism? I don’t think it is. Here is my reasoning.

Shrek 2

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Sep 2004

None Review It's cool to be ugly? SHREK 2 Cert. U Dreamworks When the original Shrek animation came out three years ago it broke new ground. Not only was the animation terrific, the story turned the normal fairytale on its head. Here the ogre Shrek (who was not too bad a guy) got the girl Princess Fiona (who turned out to be somewhat ogre-ish herself).

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To Affinity and beyond

John Benton
Date posted: 1 May 2004

The British Evangelical Council (BEC) has a new name - 'Affinity', with a subtitle, 'Church-centred Partnership for Bible-centred Christianity'.

The British Evangelical Council (BEC) has re-invented itself. Its re-launch took place on March 25 at a smart London hotel, with a swish DVD presentation and reporters from national daily newspapers present.

Paul Brand: joy beyond riches

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Dec 2003

Dr. Paul Brand was best known for his medical labours among lepers in India. His work was immortalised in the popular book 'Ten Fingers for God' by Dorothy Clarke Wilson. He died in July, though his obituary did not appear in The Daily Telegraph until September.

He was the son of missionary parents in India. When I saw the notice of Dr. Brand's passing I took a special interest because his father, Jesse Brand, was sent out to India as a missionary from our own congregation way back in 1907. In fact, his grandfather, Henry, besides being an alderman of Guildford, was also a deacon of our church. Jesse was noted for his evangelistic zeal. With others he had begun a tract society in the town and it is interesting to read some of its records. The members distributed Christian tracts to houses, on public transport and in the public parks. During 1905-6, nearly 19,000 tracts were given out. One entry in the records reads: 'Dogs were a menace. But two women went to a house with a tract in one hand and a bone for the dog in the other!'

Excellent

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Oct 2003

Book Review THE BLURB 36 pages. £1.75 Published by UCCFThis month sees the launch of an excellent new magazine from UCCF who usually write this column for EN. For obvious reasons we couldn't let them review their own mag, so...

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Brief lives

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Oct 2003

Book Review THE BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF EVANGELICALS

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Now let the weak say 'I am strong'

John Benton
Date posted: 1 May 2003

Book Review THE NEXT CHRISTENDOM

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At the heart of the controversy

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Dec 2002

William Taylor is the Minister of St. Helen's Bishopsgate in the City of London, where Dick Lucas preached before his retirement. William has been outspoken in his opposition to the appointment of Rowan Williams as Archbishop of Canterbury. In this frank interview with EN, he explains why...

EN: What are the problems with Rowan Williams becoming the next Archbishop of Canterbury?

A Mission for the 21st Century

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Jun 2001

'How should old mission agencies adapt to the challenges of reaching the world in the 21st century?'

That is a question with which Andy Lines is having to wrestle. Last year Andy became the new General Secretary of Crosslinks, formerly known as the Bible Churchmen's Missionary Society, and EN interviewed him recently to see, among other things, what his thoughts were.

Lord of Every Heart

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Nov 2002

Music Review Great talent LORD OF EVERY HEART

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Not too hard for God

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Oct 2002

Book Review WHEN GOD WALKED ON CAMPUS

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Reasons for a night of prayer

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Sep 2002

Surely we must stand amazed at the comparative lack of prayer in the British churches.

Think about our nation at present. Family breakdown is rife. Street crime is at record levels. Our media is awash with pornography. There is abortion on demand. Drugs are easily available. The churches are dwindling. Islamic extremism is on the rise. I can imagine the Lord Jesus standing at the door of many a church prayer meeting and thinking to himself: 'What has to happen to this country before my people will come and take prayer seriously?'

Jazz for Jesus

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Apr 2002

Bill Edgar is both a professor of apologetics at Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia, and an extremely talented jazz musician who has spent a lot of his life in France. He is not only very intelligent and cosmopolitan, but uses his gifts to share the gospel in various ways. EN took the opportunity to interview him while he was in Britain earlier this year.

EN: Bill, tell us about your background?

BE: My parents met in North Carolina during the war, while Dad was in the army. That is where I was born. Shortly after, we moved to Paris, France, and I grew up there. Then we spent seven years in New York. But after that, the rest of Dad's professional career until he retired in 1983, was in Geneva. It was not a Christian home, but it was a wonderful home.

Heaven in a nightclub

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Mar 2002

How can you mix church and jazz? What do God and jazz have in common? Well, the answer is 'a great deal' according to Professor William Edgar of Westminster Theological Seminary, Philadelphia.

Not only is Bill Edgar a professor of apologetics at perhaps the foremost Reformed seminary in the USA, but he is also an extremely gifted jazz pianist.

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