The faith of Pol Pot's chief executioner
Julia Cameron
Date posted: 13 Apr 2025
Next week sees the 50th anniversary of the fall of its capital Phnom Penh on 17th April 1975, setting the stage for one of the most barbaric regimes in modern history.
By mid-afternoon on that fateful day the whole population of this elegant city was being forced into the countryside by Cambodian rebel leader Pol Pot and his Khmer Rouge army. Sidney Schanberg of the New York Times captured the brutality of those hours as patients in hospital, some still with saline drips attached to their arms, were pulled from their beds and thrust into the melée. There was no mercy.
Timothy Dudley-Smith: A life in three scenes
Julia Cameron
Date posted: 15 Aug 2024
RT REVD TIMOTHY DUDLEY-SMITH OBE: 1926-2024
Timothy Dudley-Smith will be remembered best for his rich contribution to hymnody. He is widely-regarded as the greatest modern hymnwriter of the 20th and early 21st centuries. At his 90th birthday celebration, Pam Rhodes, presenter of BBC Songs of Praise, described his popularity as springing out of ‘his understanding of the human condition’.
Tom Houston: Gifted leader with huge global influence
Julia Cameron
Date posted: 1 Jul 2024
Tom Houston was one of the most highly-gifted leaders of his generation. He led three movements of global reach, bringing a fine mind to analysis and strategy, and an unusual gift in preaching.
Tom grew up in Dumbarton, on the Clyde, and read Classics at Glasgow University. From teenage years he was a keen member of Glasgow Youth for Christ, and through YFC he met his future wife, Hazel Findlay. At the age of 23 he was appointed pastor of Johnstone Baptist Church, while completing a BD, and teaching Greek to undergraduates. From there he became Chaplain of Quarriers Homes in Bridge of Weir, ministering to 500 deprived children, as well as 150 epileptic patients, and 250 staff.
Frank Entwistle 1937 – 2022
Julia Cameron
Date posted: 1 Nov 2022
Frank Entwistle will best be remembered for his leadership of Inter-Varsity Press (IVP) for 25 years, retiring in 2002.
Set up in 1936 as the Publishing House of the Inter-Varsity Fellowship (later UCCF), IVP was the strongest and most widely-known independent evangelical publisher of its day. Frank Roland Entwistle grew up in Lancashire, imbibing a love of books and of reading from his father. Following his conversion aged 14, he set his heart on ordination, and later studied theology at St John’s College, Durham, choosing a special option on Luther and Calvin. He was prepared for ordination at Cranmer Hall. The fairly conservative faculty, and the strong inter-collegiate Christian Union (DICCU), gave Frank a thorough Biblical grounding. While at Durham he met his wife, Beryl, and they married during his curacy at St John’s Harborne in Birmingham. In 1965 Frank joined the home staff of what is now Crosslinks, editing the Society’s magazine and books.
John Stott - what you should know
Julia Cameron
Date posted: 1 Apr 2021
The centenary of John Stott’s birth falls on 27 April 2021. As he died ten years ago, his name won’t be well-known to younger readers. This is one reason why we are holding centenary events, to introduce his name and his legacy to a new generation.
The breadth of John Stott’s influence is remarkable. Aged 29, he was appointed Rector of All Souls Langham Place, next door to the BBC. He wrote years later of how ‘dissatisfaction’ is a mark of a leader, and he showed it himself from early days. Decades before the term ‘fresh expressions’ was coined, he opened the All Souls Clubhouse, a church for the unchurched, in the poorer part of his parish. He started guest services, then unheard-of, beginners’ groups, and training courses for lay leaders. And he was a seer. So international students became a focus in the post-colonial 1960s as newly-established governments began sending their most able to the UK. The list goes on.
Mary Gladstone 1926 – 2020
Julia Cameron
Date posted: 1 Oct 2020
While Mary Gladstone’s name may not be
widely known, the fruit of her labours is
clearly evident.
As a new Christian at Cambridge, she
and her friends befriended an unconverted
fresher, Helen Roseveare,
later to become
one of the foremost missionaries of the 20th
century.
Margaret Weston 1929–2019
Julia Cameron
Date posted: 1 Oct 2019
Generations of Christian Union members
will remember Margaret Weston with affec-tion and gratitude. Her husband, Canon
Keith Weston, was a widely-loved speaker
in CUs and Margaret often travelled with
him, making herself available to talk with
students.
From 1964 to 1985, Keith was Rector of St
Ebbe’s Church, Oxford. Margaret exercised a
pastoral ministry among
its
students, as
among members of the parish. The rectory
was then amid some of the most deprived
housing in the county.
Remembering Frances Whitehead
Julia Cameron
Date posted: 1 Aug 2019
Frances Whitehead brought unusual energy and passion to her role as John Stott’s secretary – ‘a most understated job title’, as Hugh Palmer made clear in his opening remarks at her thanksgiving service in All Souls, Langham Place.
It is widely agreed that the reach and extent of John Stott’s ministry was doubled by Frances. Days were long and full. She handled an enormous correspondence, typed Stott’s books from longhand, and oversaw the infrastructure of each of his endeavours until it could be handed on. Their partnership was unequalled; and they would become known around the world as ‘Uncle John’ and ‘Auntie Frances’.
Keith Small 1959–2018
Julia Cameron
Date posted: 1 Feb 2019
Keith Small was one of the foremost Qur’an scholars of our time. His work on early manuscripts was to provoke new questions among secular and Islamic scholars alike.
While at Dallas Theological Seminary, Keith read of Henry Martyn, and resolved to give his life to work among Muslims. He married Celeste Gardner in 1985, equally committed to the Muslim world, and they moved to the UK in 1989, settling in Dewsbury.
Michael Rees 1937 – 2018
Julia Cameron
Date posted: 1 May 2018
Michael Rees, with his welcoming smile,
will be
remembered by generations of
Cambridge students as the vicar of Holy
Trinity Church (1972 –1984).
Michael stayed close to the CICCU, and
after the Sunday evening service dispersed,
the CICCU would
take over
the building for its weekly evangelistic
address.
Professor R. J. (Sam) Berry 1934 – 2018
Julia Cameron
Date posted: 1 Jun 2018
Sam Berry came to faith in Christ through Iwerne camps, while at Shrewsbury School. From his Cambridge days as an undergraduate in natural sciences, he took a clear stand as a Christian, arguing that a model of evolution should not hinder a belief in a Creator.
In 1975 he published his first book, Adam and the Ape. From here he became known as a leading apologist for theistic evolution. In 1974, he had been appointed as Professor of Genetics at University College London, a chair he would hold until 2000. The tribute from UCL described him as ‘a massive figure in evolutionary and ecological genetics, biodiversity and conservation biology’ and noted his Christian faith. Sam was a man of immense output. His books included academic titles in biological science and Christian apologetics. He was generous with his time, accepting many speaking engagements, and lending his name and presence to a range of initiatives in the area of ecology. While eminent in his field, he wore his achievement lightly.
Helen Roseveare 1925–2016
Julia Cameron
Date posted: 1 Feb 2017
Julia Cameron reflects on the remarkable life and ministry of Dr Helen Roseveare, who died on 7 December 2016 aged 91
Helen Roseveare is widely-recognised as one of the most courageous and influential missionaries of the 20th century.
Audrey Osei-Mensah 1936 –2016
Julia Cameron
Date posted: 1 Oct 2016
Audrey Laura Osei-Mensah was born
in
East Ham and professed faith in Christ aged
14,
through her confirmation class
in
Wanstead.
In
1955
she went up
to
Birmingham University to read geography.
As she wrote in her memoirs: ‘It was during
my first year that Bible study replaced geography as my first
love, which
it has
remained ever since!’
She served on the Birmingham CU Exec
alongside a thoughtful student from Ghana:
Gottfried Osei-Mensah, with whom she maintained
a
friendship while
teaching
at
Clarendon School
from 1959 to 1962. In
1962 she applied for a position with SIM in
Nigeria, whereupon Gottfried, by now with
Mobil Oil in Accra, proposed to her. At her
father’s suggestion, she first went to Ghana for
three months to get to know Gottfried’s family
and context. They married the following year.
YOUNG LEADERS TAKE BATON
Julia Cameron
Date posted: 1 Oct 2016
Six years after the Third Lausanne Congress came the Third Lausanne Younger Leaders’ Gathering (YLG2016) in Jakarta.
YLG2016, held in August, was probably the most connected gathering of leaders ever. Its planning was chaired by a Brazilian, Sarah Breuel who, with her young family, is serving in Italy with IFES. In the previous year, an online platform was launched.
Five years after Cape Town
Julia Cameron
Date posted: 1 Feb 2016
Julia Cameron brings us up-to-date with the Lausanne Movement
It is five years this month since the Cape Town Commitment was published. In that time it has spread out widely, and down deeply, across the continents, in major and ‘minor’ languages.
Nigel Sylvester 1929 –2015
Julia Cameron
Date posted: 1 Feb 2016
Ghana’s First Lady, Ernestina Mills, described Nigel Sylvester as ‘Ghana’s Wesley’. His influence was to spread across English-speaking Africa and then across the world.
Nigel Sylvester professed faith in Christ as a fresher in the Cambridge 1949 Barnhouse mission; shortly afterwards he lost both his parents in an aircrash. As a very young Christian, Nigel followed Mike Griffiths as CICCU President. With a First in Maths, he entered Ridley Hall with Mike Griffiths (later General Director of OMF) and Michael Allison (later PPS to Margaret Thatcher). Breaking with precedent, none was ordained.
OMF: ‘staying aligned’
Julia Cameron
Date posted: 1 Dec 2015
Julia Cameron on the 150th anniversary of the foundation of the Overseas Missionary Fellowship
A spoof of the Bee Gees song ‘Staying Alive’, was sung by senior leaders at OMF’s 150th anniversary, as a gathering in July celebrated its beliefs, vision, mission and values.
IVP / SPCK
Julia Cameron
Date posted: 1 Dec 2015
Dear en,
Like many, I was very grieved at the sudden and somewhat shocking news that IVP
had become a wholly-owned subsidiary of
SPCK. I write now only to reassure en read-ers on a question raised by your editorial
comment in the November news piece.
A building project?
Julia Cameron
Date posted: 1 Aug 2015
Dear en,
I plan to update my 2007 book Building for the Gospel: A handbook for the visionary and the terrified. It is written for churches which are exploring the possibility of a building project.
Ken Wycherley 1943 –2014
Julia Cameron
Date posted: 1 Feb 2015
Ken Wycherley served with UCCF
from
1975 to 1989, first as a Travelling Secretary,
then on the senior staff team.
In the early 1980s he played a strategic role
in restructuring the student department to
meet the needs of rapid growth in the tertiary
sector. Ken’s clarity of thought was appreciated by staff and student leaders alike, as policies and guidance were formulated on a range
of campus issues. He always retained a strong
commitment to evangelism and mission.
Were U an OICC?!
Julia Cameron
Date posted: 1 Sep 2014
Dear Sir,
The Oxford
Inter-Collegiate Christian
Union (OICCU) is once more gathering
former members
for
an
afternoon of
renewed fellowship, news and stories. The
speakers will
be
Andrew
Atherstone
(Wycliffe Hall, who is preparing a history
of
the OICCU),
and Lindsay Brown
(IFES/Lausanne Movement,
a
former
OICCU president). Current student leaders will tell of plans for the 2015 Oxford
University mission with Tim Keller.