Grace Baptist joy
JEB
Date posted: 1 Nov 2018
An Association AGM is usually a duty that
must be done and no more. But that of the
Association of Grace Baptists in the South
East on 6 October, at St Giles’ Mission,
North London, turned into a real joy.
Four new churches
joined
the group,
from Chelmsford, Hythe, Streatham and
Ebbsfleet. The new book Pure Church, show-ing the biblical basis for the Association’s
ecclesiology,
was
launched.
Graham
Nicholls, the director of Affinity, to which
the Association belongs, articulated the aims
of his work for wider fellowship.
EMA 2017: fruit amid the battle
JEB
Date posted: 1 Aug 2017
It wasn’t easy to find the Barbican Centre
for
this
year’s
Evangelical Ministry
Assembly (EMA) amid London’s burgeoning road and building works. But it was
worth the tricky navigation for Tuesday –
Thursday, 27–29 June.
The conference theme was ‘Bearing Fruit
and Growing’, with the morning Bible readings coming
from Ephesians. These were
given by Andy Gemmill of
the Cornhill
Training Course in Scotland and reminded
those there that, amid the spiritual battle,
‘your church is what Christ’s rule looks like
now.’ We need to ‘do church’ (I’m not sure I
like
that phrase) by
faith, not by
sight,
because for all its present flaws the church
displays God’s wisdom to the astonishment
of the heavenly powers.
Banner conference starts new life
JEB
Date posted: 1 Jun 2017
A new page has been turned. For over 50
years the Banner of Truth ministers’ conference met at Leicester University. This year
(24-27 April) the venue changed.
Around 300 men gathered for the first
time at Yarnfield Park in Staffordshire. It is a
purpose-built conference centre and proved
to be rather a pleasant upgrade.
Carey: Roman takeover?
JEB
Date posted: 1 Feb 2017
Understandably, Luther and the great matters of the Reformation took pole position at the annual Carey Conference for pastors and wives and Christian workers this year.
Held at the Hayes Swanick, 3-5 January, there was quite a raft of different speakers. Paul Gibson, pastor at Wheelock Heath, roared away from the start with an excellent biography of Martin Luther that focussed helpfully on the great Reformer’s weaknesses. Anfechtungen became the buzz word! There were superb Bible readings from Rupert Bentley-Taylor on the power of the Word (Isaiah 55) and the power of the gospel (1 Corinthians 1) – very much Reformation concerns. John Benton spoke on lessons for leaders from the psychology of Samson. Linda Alcock did a brilliant job with the women’s track, leading the sisters through Titus, and Ian Fry gave a sparkling and yet very disturbing talk on the needs of children and the work among young people in today’s church.
GBM: who will go?
JEB
Date posted: 1 Dec 2016
Overseas missionaries are still very much
needed. The title of this year’s conference of
the Grace Baptist Mission was ‘Here Am I,
Send Me’. No punches pulled there!
The meetings took place this year at the
Friends Meeting House next
to Euston
Station in London on Saturday 29 October.
It is a convenient place to travel to and
people came from all over the country in
their hundreds to this challenging and very
uplifting day. There was a plethora of seminars
given by serving missionaries from Brazil,
the Philippines, Poland, France and central
Asia, as well as reports concerning radio
work and outreach to Asian communities in various cities in Britain.
Healthy church evangelism
JEB
Date posted: 1 Oct 2016
Duke Street, Richmond was the venue for
the second Healthy Churches Conference
which took place on 5 September and is
from the ‘9Marks’ background.
Last year the speaker was Mark Dever of
Capitol Hill Baptist, Washington. This year,
with the focus on evangelism, it was Mack
Styles of Redeemer Church, Dubai.
GBM: a light in every city
JEB
Date posted: 1 Dec 2015
These days, the annual get-together of supporters of Grace Baptist Mission alternates between venues in London and the Midlands. On Saturday 24 October it was the turn of the Renewal Centre in Solihull.
Around 650 people gathered and the theme highlighted the needs of Europe under the banner ‘A Light in Every City.’ Graham Field, chairman of the Mission’s Council, began the day emphasising that our mission is determined by our master, the Lord Jesus Christ. Daryl Jones, mission coordinator, used a cricket analogy to emphasise the need for partnership in mission, especially between the churches and GBM.
IS THERE REVIVAL IN ETHIOPIA?
JEB
Date posted: 1 Feb 2016
In the last 20 years something like 70,000 people have come to Christ in Ethiopia.
This is a story untold by the secular media, but it is a vibrant movement of God’s Spirit in this land presently facing food shortages. Most of the people whose lives have been touched are from an Orthodox Church background, but many Muslims have found Christ too. Those who have seen what the Lord has been doing have been astonished.
9Marks in Richmond
JEB
Date posted: 1 Oct 2015
Christian conferences are often strong on the great matters of the gospel but offer little guidance as to the nuts and bolts of church life.
9Marks Ministries, headed up by Mark Dever, pastor of Capitol Hill Baptist Church, Washington, D.C., majors on local church related issues and Tuesday 1 September saw the first 9Marks conference in this country. With around 100 church leaders in attendance, it was hosted at Duke Street Church in Richmond where the pastor is John Samuel. The main mover behind the day was Jonathan Worsley of Kew Baptist Church, himself a former intern at Capitol Hill.
Japan: Hiroshima and humanity
JEB
Date posted: 1 Aug 2015
In July I found myself in the city of Hiroshima in Japan.
This August sees the 70th anniversary of the dropping of the atomic bomb on this city from the US bomber named Enola Gay. There is now a Peace Park at the site under where the weapon was detonated 600m above the city. The museum has a scale model where the bomb is represented as a small ‘sun’ – which in some respects it was – exploding in the air at 8.15am on the morning of 6 August 1945. There will no doubt be ceremonies to mark the anniversary of this ghastly event, which in many ways sadly marks the advent of ‘the nuclear age.’
Carey: too comfortable?
JEB
Date posted: 1 Feb 2015
‘Afflicting the comfortable’ could be taken as
the keynote of this year’s Carey Conference
held at the Hayes, Swanick, 6-8 January.
The main
speaker was Professor Greg
Beale of Westminster Theological Seminary,
Philadelphia. He is the author of a landmark
and voluminous commentary on the Greek
text of the book of Revelation and he treated
the participants to a magisterial introduction
to John’s apocalypse. The book is meant to
be understood symbolically, according to its
opening verse. The dramatic word pictures of
the apostle will sedate the nominal Christian
but shock God’s true people
into action.
There are seven churches addressed in the
opening chapters of which only
two are
faithful. The others must change or be
judged with the world. Hence John’s writing
is addressed
first
to
the whole professed
church, but only the faithful remnant will
ultimately benefit.
EMA: Barbican block-buster
JEB
Date posted: 1 Aug 2014
July 8-10 saw the second year of the experiment to relocate the Evangelical Ministers’ Conference to London’s Barbican Centre.
It is a venue with lots of space and dignity about it, and though many people loved the buzz of the old days the acres of room at the Barbican makes it a much better experience than playing sardines at St Helen’s. However, going for a well-used secular venue does have it’s difficulties. The Barbican had double-booked (with Sir Simon Rattle I was told) and so EMA had to be deferred two weeks from its original place in the calendar. This was reflected in the slightly fewer numbers who attended. That was a shame because these were great conference days.
London churches growing
JEB
Date posted: 1 Aug 2013
At the instigation of London City Mission
(LCM) a comprehensive study of churches
in London was carried out last year. The
results have now been published and there
is much which is encouraging.
The research was carried out by the Brierley
Consultancy and LCM were particularly
interested to see what information could be
gathered which related
to
the extent and
effectiveness of church planting in the capital.