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Found 33 articles matching 'Mission'.

Reasons not to plan mission  events (and reasons to do so)
everyday evangelism

Reasons not to plan mission events (and reasons to do so)

Glen Scrivener
Glen Scrivener
Date posted: 1 Oct 2021

In the last decade I’ve been involved with scores of week-long or weekend missions put on by churches and Christian Unions.

Such outreaches – like those planned for the Passion for Life initiative next year – are big investments. We need some solid reasons to give of our time, money, talents and energy. Often though our reasons are poor.

Mission 2022: churches prepare to  reach out afresh

Mission 2022: churches prepare to reach out afresh

John MacKinnon
Date posted: 1 Sep 2021

We have all heard the phrase ‘build back better’ many times in recent days as everyone seeks to establish what a new normal will look like.

For the church of our Lord Jesus Christ the pandemic has given all of us an opportunity to review much of our activity and to ask serious questions, as we emerge from the various restrictions, as to how we can recalibrate and refocus on the centrality of the good news of the gospel.

Josep Rossello: what’s next?

Josep Rossello: what’s next?

Nicola Laver interviews the South American bishop who came to the UK on a mission which has unfolded in unexpected ways

An exodus of evangelicals from the Free Church of England (FCE) continues against the backdrop of serious fraud allegations and a culture of secrecy against its senior leadership. Both the police and the charity regulator are investigating a range of allegations against Bishop Primus John Fenwick, who is resisting calls to resign.

Three questions on  evangelism and the three  wrong right answers!
everyday evangelism

Three questions on evangelism and the three wrong right answers!

Glen Scrivener
Glen Scrivener
Date posted: 1 Dec 2021

When I train people in personal evangelism there are three questions I ask which always elicit the right wrong answers.

They are the right wrong answers because they are the ones I expect people to give. But they’re also the right wrong answers because, in their own way, they are correct. It’s just that you can be correct and wrong at the same time. Let me share the three questions and the answers they usually provoke:

Unholy Halloween: what’s the history?

Unholy Halloween: what’s the history?

Gary Clayton
Date posted: 1 Nov 2021

The road to hell, in a quote generally attributed to Samuel Johnson or St Bernard of Clairvaux, is paved with good intentions.

Whether you’re a UK believer organising a ‘Light Party’, an evangelical Christian running a ‘hell house’1 in America, an avid trick-or-treater pounding the streets, or one of the 11,766 people in England and Wales identifying as Wiccans in the 2011 Census, Halloween is an issue that’s hard to avoid.

Tibet: what challenges under Chinese rule face the few believers?

Tibet: what challenges under Chinese rule face the few believers?

As a precocious youngster I devoured Seven Years in Tibet by Heinrich Harrer, the Austrian climber who after World War II became tutor to the young Dalai Lama in Tibet.

I still have the newspaper clippings of the thrilling escape of the Dalai Lama into India from Chinese troops in 1959. I then had no idea that over 50 years later I would myself see the golden roofs of the gigantic Potala Palace in Lhasa and cross the vast plateau with its nomads and herds of yaks.

Is there an undiscovered Dragon in your church?

Is there an undiscovered Dragon in your church?

Karen Todd
Date posted: 1 Dec 2021

Church is not a business, right?

In recent months many of us have come to question the businesslike approaches of many megachurches and church plants, particularly as scandals have revealed the thin ice on which some have been built. But, before we overreact and discredit this businesslike approach, we should not lose the valuable insights that those with a good business head have brought to our churches.

Who will be the next Pope?
evangelicals & catholics

Who will be the next Pope?

Leonardo De Chirico
Leonardo De Chirico
Date posted: 1 Oct 2021

There is a general perception that Pope Francis’s pontificate has entered an irreversibly declining phase.

It is not just a question of age: yes, Pope Francis is elderly and in poor health. But aging aside, the pontificate finds itself navigating a descending parabola. It started with the language of ‘mission’ and ‘reform’. Francis’ reign, now nearly ten years old, was immediately engulfed in difficulties, particularly within the Catholic Church.

A Passion For Life 2022 – how is it designed to work?

A Passion For Life 2022 – how is it designed to work?

John MacKinnon
Date posted: 1 Oct 2021

One of life’s most enjoyable experiences and one that spans the globe in its cultural relevance is the joy of sharing a meal amongst family, friends or even on occasions with complete strangers.

In the journey of life, I’ve known the simplicity of an apple given at great sacrifice in a poverty-stricken African village, the elaborate feasts of civil gatherings, the splendour of wedding celebrations, the countless choices of restaurant menus and, my favourite, the gathering round the family table for home-cooked fayre where the main ingredient is love.

John Stott’s ‘new’ book: a heartfelt environmental plea

John Stott’s ‘new’ book: a heartfelt environmental plea

Thomas Creedy
Date posted: 1 Nov 2021

In 2011 IVP published what was intended by the author to be his final book – summing up decades of prayer, study and ministry. John Stott’s The Radical Disciple, ten years on, continues to provoke, encourage and inspire.

Stott’s own purpose in that book was ‘to consider eight characteristics of Christian discipleship which are often neglected and yet deserve to be taken seriously’. One of these was ‘creation care’, an issue which is increasingly coming to our attention and the focus of the world. With the Stott centenary running from April 2021 to April 2022, IVP took the decision to publish John Stott on Creation Care, a definitive collection of Stott’s writings on the topic, carefully compiled from throughout his ministry. Sam Berry and Laura Yoder, in their own way, have carefully curated tens of thousands of Stott’s own words, adding interpretation and context, to produce a vital new book.

Fifty years on: from the Festival of Light to CARE and the future…

Fifty years on: from the Festival of Light to CARE and the future…

It was Saturday, 25 September 1971. Tens of thousands of people, young and old, met together on London’s Trafalgar Square for the largest ever open-air gathering of Christians in British history.

People carried placards showing a map of the UK or showing messages like ‘Jesus loves you’. Some wore Nationwide Festival of Light (NFoL) T-shirts and there was a general atmosphere of sheer excitement and expectation.

everyday evangelism

God’s plan to reach the world: it might surprise you

Glen Scrivener
Glen Scrivener
Date posted: 1 Aug 2021

‘If I became a Christian, I would have to spend every waking moment trying to save others.’

The words came from an extremely intelligent student considering the call of Christ – let’s call him Phil. It was the last night of a university mission and Phil told me he was terrified of the gospel being true because if it was he couldn’t imagine how he could justify anything other than a life of unceasing evangelism from that day on.

Are we missing the point of the Bible?

Are we missing the point of the Bible?

James Cary
James Cary
Date posted: 1 Aug 2021

We all thought there were four but actually there are five. Not Gospels, but tastes. There’s sweetness, sourness, saltiness and bitterness. And the fifth is umami, the Pete Best* of the culinary world that was there from the beginning. Umami is a meaty, broth-like, or savoury taste.

What’s your favourite taste? For me, there’s nothing better than a juicy ripe sliced tomato with olive oil, salt, red onion and basil, accompanying a medium-rare T-bone steak with some twice-cooked chips. And mustard mayo. There’s a restaurant in Stellenbosch in South Africa which did that to perfection. One day, I hope to return there for that transcendent experience.

Reaching the unreached on the roof of the world

Reaching the unreached on the roof of the world

Slavic Gospel Association
Date posted: 1 Jul 2021

Geographically and physically, the region of Pamir in Tajikistan is an area of outstanding beauty.

The Pamir mountains are lofty and lonely, one of the last ‘undiscovered’ regions on earth, and one of the ‘world’s best kept secrets’ according to a former British ambassador to the country. The average height of the mountains in the eastern Pamir region is over 20,000 feet above sea level.

Is evangelism to blame?
 A Buddhist critiques our 
 lack of godliness
everyday evangelism

Is evangelism to blame? A Buddhist critiques our lack of godliness

Glen Scrivener
Glen Scrivener
Date posted: 1 Jun 2021

On the Speak Life Podcast, Paul Feesey and I have been discussing the various scandals rocking the evangelical world — particularly those of Ravi Zacharias and Jonathan Fletcher.

While some have questioned our focus on these topics (when we’re meant to be inspiring evangelism), one listener had the opposite observation. Writing as a Buddhist he had some blistering criticisms of the evangelical church – a critique which I think is very worth considering.

David Zeisberger’s zest for  spreading the gospel
history

David Zeisberger’s zest for spreading the gospel

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin
Date posted: 1 May 2021

When William Carey drew up his paradigm-changing book An Enquiry into the Obligations of Christians to Use Means for the Conversion of the Heathens in 1792, he included a mini-history of missions.

He cited examples of missionaries passionate for the expansion of the rule of Christ. In this mini-history, he referenced a remarkable missions-minded community, the Moravians. Carey’s words about this 18th-century body of believers are tantalisingly brief, but indicative of their influence upon him. ‘When I came to evangelism and missions,’ Carey noted, ‘none of the moderns have equalled the Moravian Brethren in this good work’.

John Stott: Abrahamic and apostolic?

John Stott: Abrahamic and apostolic?

Chris Wright
Date posted: 1 Apr 2021

Chris Wright suggests the scale and scope of Stott’s ministry were epic

‘I am a great believer,’ John Stott would often say, ‘in the importance of B.B.C. Not the British Broadcasting Company, nor Bethelehem Bible College, nor even Beautiful British Columbia. But “Balanced Biblical Christianity”.’ In my own assessment of John’s life and ministry I suggest a Biblical balance of Old and New Testaments by saying that the scale and scope of John Stott’s significance within the global church has been both Abrahamic and apostolic.

When God says ‘go!’ and you say ‘no!’

When God says ‘go!’ and you say ‘no!’

David Nixon
Date posted: 1 May 2021

Has there ever been a time when God has called you to ‘GO!’ and you’ve replied ‘NO!’? If you’re anything like me, then the honest answer will be: yes.

But not because you were wanting to be disobedient, but rather because you were feeling disabled by inadequacy. In those moments the soundtrack playing inside your head is like Robbie Williams’ hit track ‘I love my life’ played backwards. You don’t hear the words: ‘I am wonderful, I am magical, I am free’; instead you rehearse the lyrics: ‘I am weak, I am sinful, I am unable’.

Are we all ‘Children of  Abraham’?
evangelicals & catholics

Are we all ‘Children of Abraham’?

Leonardo De Chirico
Leonardo De Chirico
Date posted: 1 Jun 2021

Whenever we talk about lands tormented by decades of wars and violence, sometimes perpetrated in the name of religions, we must do so with sobriety.

This is to say that commenting on Pope Francis’ recent trip to Iraq (5-8 March 2021) can become a pretext for easy criticism if one does not try to enter the complexity of the situation. Therefore, it must be acknowledged that the Roman pope’s call to religious freedom, his appeal to respect for minorities, and his invitation to national conciliation were commendable.

Assisted dying: opening  Pandora’s box
politics & policy

Assisted dying: opening Pandora’s box

James Mildred
James Mildred
Date posted: 1 Jun 2021

The starting pistol has been fired in the race to legalise assisted suicide.

After appearing before the End of Choice All Party Parliamentary Group, the Health Secretary Matt Hancock then wrote to the national statistician, Ian Diamond, requesting information on the number of terminally-ill patients who had killed themselves because of their diagnosis. Mr Hancock wants a new debate on the issue and there are plenty other MPs who want the same.

Waking up to the dystopian world of deepfakes

Waking up to the dystopian world of deepfakes

By Andy du Feu

Want to see Tom Cruise perform a magic trick, joke about ex-presidents, or tee-off?

John Stott - what you should know

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.

The training is over, the iceberg is here

The training is over, the iceberg is here

Graham Miller
Date posted: 1 Apr 2021

After 100’s of hours of hearing the gospel preached, will Bible-believing Christians now apply what they have heard, and be a conduit for God’s blessing to the poor?

The tip of the iceberg has been horrendous. The number of deaths is impossible to even reconcile. And they tell little of the pain and suffering that each death has left behind.

ten questions:

ten questions:

Alex Jacob

1. How did you become a Christian?

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