Zambesi Mission: enabling not patronising
Mike Beresford Mission Director – Zambesi Mission
Date posted: 1 Dec 2017
Zambesi Mission (ZM) celebrated its 125th anniversary in 2017.
It was established in 1892 as a self-supporting, self-propagating mission in Malawi (formerly Nyasaland), a place then described as ‘beyond the habitation of white men’.
Canada: new confessing Anglicanism
Andrew Symes
Date posted: 1 Dec 2017
The Anglican Network in Canada (ANiC)
consists of over 70 congregations, which
over the past ten years have seceded from
the Anglican Church of Canada (ACoC), or
have begun as new plants.
The movement
began with
biblical-ly orthodox groups coming
together as
‘Anglican Essentials’ in the 1990s, to re-state
the basics of apostolic faith in a context of
increasing influence of secularist and liberal
thinking among the leadership of Anglican
and other mainline churches.
Just who is raising objections?
Chris Sugden
Date posted: 1 Oct 2017
Five bishops in the Anglican Church of Australia have asked their church lawyers whether bishops can take part in consecrating another bishop of a church which is not formally part of the Anglican Communion.
They raised objections to the consecration in May of the Rt Revd Andrew Lines of the Anglican Church in North America by the Archbishop of Sydney and bishops of Tasmania and Northwest Australia. These proceedings were set to dominate the meetings of the Church’s General Synod in September.
news in brief
Africa: Study Bible
Earlier this year, Oasis International launched the Africa Study Bible, with notes by more than 300 African pastors and scholars.
The Study Bible uses the New Living Translation and contains more than 2,600 features casting light on Scripture from an African perspective. Christian ministry African Christian Textbooks is a ‘cornerstone partner for the distribution’, according to Oasis.
Argentina: dictionary
Church Mission Society
Date posted: 1 Oct 2017
In August, a team led by Bob Lunt completed
and published a Wichí–Spanish language dictionary to complement the Wichí Bible translation, which was first published in 2002.
The Wichí
language, spoken by up
to
50,000 people
in parts of Argentina and
Bolivia, is the most common language of the
Mataco-Mataguayan language family.
Sudan: eight arrests
Christian Solidarity Worldwide
Date posted: 1 Oct 2017
The Sudanese Church of Christ (SCOC)
challenged a government decision in late
August to impose an unelected leadership
committee on the church, which only came
to light when church leaders were arrested.
The Ministry of Guidance and Religious
Endowments, which oversees religious affairs
in Sudan, appointed an alternative Executive
Committee of the SCOC, led by Mr Angelo
Alzaki, to manage church affairs. Eight senior SCOC leaders were arrested and charged
with trespassing on the church headquarters
and refusing to hand over control of the
church to Mr Alzaki. They were released on
bail later that day.
North Korea: ‘Lord! Help!’
World Watch Monitor
Date posted: 1 Oct 2017
Hannah Cho* tells her story of faith in God despite horrendous persecution.
After the Korean war, public religion was discouraged. The local church was turned into a school and Hannah remembers that her Christian mother prayed at home while the family kept watch for informants.
China: a personal report
Source protected for security reasons
Date posted: 1 Aug 2017
A question to start: Is our God still working in China?
The short answer is Yes! It is however important to fully understand the current attitude and freedom permitted by the Chinese authorities regarding religious practice. China’s policy on religion states that ‘the Chinese people are free to choose and express their religious beliefs as well as demonstrate their religious status’.
Australia: Catholic Church in the dock
Peter Riddell
Date posted: 1 Sep 2017
The relationship between church and society in Australia has always been ambiguous.
In the earliest years of European settlement
following the establishment of Sydney in 1788,
a fundamental divide existed between the free
settlers and colonial officials on the one hand,
who tended to be Anglican, and the large numbers of convicts, often Irish Catholics, who were
predictably anti-authority and resentful.
Bishops rebooted
Charles Raven
Date posted: 1 Jul 2017
Anglicans claim to be part of the Reformed Western catholic tradition and one of the most visible ways that continuity over the centuries is maintained is through episcopacy, which the English evangelical reformers of the 16th century quite deliberately retained in contrast to their continental counterparts.
Was that wise? In the present-day Anglican Provinces of the West, the claim to Reformed catholicity is looking ever more dubious as apostolic substance ebbs away. Moreover, disunity and doctrinal incoherence in the Anglican Communion has been an episcopally led phenomenon.
Rwanda: revival, genocide & recovery
Paul Perkin
Date posted: 1 Jun 2017
Rwanda is a land of contradictions. Arriving at Kigale one is immediately aware that this is quintessential Africa, and yet, ‘This is not Africa as I know it!’
One of the first hints is the airport inspection for plastic bags, banned in the country for environmental reasons. This beautiful, hilly, and in parts mountainous land is spotlessly clean – almost manicured.
Algeria: God has raised up his church
OM
Date posted: 1 Jun 2017
When OM Field Leader Youssef and his wife Hie-Tee moved to his native Algeria in 1988 to establish an OM ministry, a revival among the Kabyle people was already sweeping the northern region. ‘Before 1981, there were very few believers,’ Youssef said. Today, he knows of believers in every one of the 2,400 Kabyle cities, villages and towns.
In July 1981, the early Kabyle church, 40 to 50 believers, started a two-year process of praying and fasting, memorising 365 verses about fear. A new Kabyle radio ministry broadcast sermons and teaching across the region, and a church in Ouadiha, led by an Algerian-Swiss couple, began a wide literature distribution campaign in villages and showed the Jesus film in local cafés.
Iraq: Kurdish Bible done
Church Mission Society
Date posted: 1 Jun 2017
A team of Bible translators in Kurdistan,
northern Iraq, working against the backdrop
of civil unrest and religious persecution, have
completed the first-ever translation of the
whole Bible into the Central Kurdish Sorani
language and launched it in April.
For eight years, mission partners have
worked alongside
indigenous Kurds and
other foreign nationals drafting text, checking names, terminology and style, and finally
checking
both
the Old
and New
Testaments so that they could be published together for the first time as the complete
Bible.
9 YEARS OF EXPLOSIVE GROWTH
Craig Dyer
Date posted: 1 May 2017
Did you hear about the Scotsman, the Englishman and the three Irishmen?
Well, no one is more amazed than them that, over the past nine years, around a million people in Uganda, Burundi, Rwanda, Kenya, South Sudan and now Congo have looked at Jesus in Mark’s Gospel using Christianity Explored (CE ). As with all gospel growth, it is the story of God at work in and through his people.
news in brief
Australia: life upheld
The Australian state of Tasmania rejected a Bill to legalise euthanasia in May.
The legislation was defeated by 16 votes to eight in the lower house of the Tasmanian Parliament. It marks the third time in ten years that a euthanasia Bill has been defeated in the state.
New Zealand: Middle-earth at crossroads
Peter Riddell
Date posted: 1 May 2017
Some things will never change in New Zealand. The spectacular scenery in the South Island, so graphically captured in the Lord of the Rings trilogy of films, will remain for the benefit of future generations, as will the more subtle but equally appealing beauty of the country’s North Island.
Similarly, but less desirable, the country’s location on the Pacific Ring of Fire, prone to earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, will remain for posterity.
Awakening Latin America
Nathan Schmutz
Date posted: 1 Apr 2017
For the first half of the 20th century, Latin America was an almost exclusively Catholic continent. Though the gospel had been preached in Latin countries for decades, the local evangelical church hadn’t grown significantly. In 1970, only 4% of the population identified as evangelical and the continent was still considered a mission field. But this was about to change.
Operation Mobilisation started with an outreach of a few young students in Mexico, but the focus soon shifted towards Europe, the Muslim World and India. MV Logos, OM’s first ship, was already in service in those parts of the world when the prospect of a second ship opened the possibility for OM to return to Latin America in an impactful way.
France: camp fire
World Watch Monitor
Date posted: 1 May 2017
Local churches in Dunkirk helped to evacuate terrified migrants on 10 April as a devastating fire spread through their camp in northern France.
La Linière camp in Grande-Synthe, just outside Dunkirk, housed an estimated 1,500 migrants, including a handful of Christian converts, but was reduced to ‘a heap of ashes’, a local official said. Afghan migrants reportedly began to set fire to the chipboard cabins in which the migrants lived and the fires quickly spread. Riot police intervened.
Niger: no news on kidnap
World Watch Monitor
Date posted: 1 Apr 2017
It’s been over five months since a pioneering US missionary was kidnapped in Niger.
Jeff Woodke, who worked for Jeunesse en Mission Entraide et Developpement, a branch of the US-based Youth With a Mission, was abducted by unknown assailants in October, from the town of Abalak in northern Niger.
Looking outwards with the gospel
Chris Sugden
Date posted: 1 Apr 2017
In February, the Secretary General of the
Anglican
Communion,
a
Nigerian
Archbishop, Josiah Idowu-Fearon, addressed
the General Synod of the Church of England;
and Growth and Decline in the Anglican
Communion – 1980 to the Present, edited by
David Goodhew of Cranmer Hall, Durham,
was launched at a conference.
Archbishop Fearon clarified that the term
‘Anglican Communion’ referred to churches
which find their common roots through the
CofE and its tradition to the witness and mission of the apostolic church. ‘The very word
anglicana implies a living tradition of faith in
the gospel as this church has received it …
from Augustine of Canterbury … to renewal
in
the English Reformation and beyond.’
‘They feel they owe so much of their faith, in
human
terms,
to
the
faithful giving of
Christians in the CofE over the centuries.’
Mary Sumner’s leaky umbrella
Charles Raven
Date posted: 1 May 2017
The Mothers Union (MU) is one of the great success stories of the Anglican Communion.
Beginning in 1876 with Mary Sumner’s vision for Christian marriage and family life, the movement now numbers some 4 million members worldwide, with the largest concentration being in Africa.
Nigeria: fighting Boko Haram with books
The Revd Dr Sid Garland
Date posted: 1 Mar 2017
The story of the Chibok girls has gone around the world to make many people aware of the brutal activities of Boko Haram in Nigeria.
The very name conjures fear and conveys their conviction that Western (or Christian) education is wicked. Education standards in the area had been in decline because of the low priority given to schools. The outbreak of the Boko Haram insurgency in 2009 gave a further deadly blow to the little that was left of education in the region. Most schools in Borno State have remained closed since 2013 with many of the children in stop-gap camps or in the homes of relatives across different parts of the country as internally displaced persons.
Anglican renewal in Brazil
Charles Raven
Date posted: 1 Mar 2017
Most Christians in the UK probably have
only the haziest idea of what Anglicanism
looks
like
in
South
America.
The
Edinburgh Missionary Conference of 1910
inhibited Protestant and Anglican missionary work in the continent, while the English
language has always been marginal, unlike
most
other
areas
of
the
Anglican
Communion where British influence was
much stronger.
This is a pity, because out of the continuing
crisis
in
the world-wide Anglican
Communion a reinvigorated and missionary
church is emerging in South America, in
spite of official persecution and rejection. In
fact the pattern of North America is being
repeated. Just as a new GAFCON-recognised
Province,
the Anglican Church
in North
America (ACNA), arose out of the aggressive
and assertive revisionism of the American
Episcopal Church (TEC) and the Anglican
Church of Canada, so in South America a
new orthodox Province is coming into being
as the Anglican Episcopal Church of Brazil
(IEAB) and various TEC satellite provinces
in central and northern South America
follow the
lead of their North American
counterparts.
news in brief
Egypt: false imprisonment
A 15-year-old Coptic Christian boy was sentenced to 15 years in an Egyptian prison for sexual assault, even though forensic reports showed no evidence of a crime.
His mother says her son, Fadi, is innocent and was targeted only because her Muslim neighbours, whose eight-year-old son was the alleged victim, ‘don’t like Christians’. The Muslim boy’s grandfather is imam at the local mosque. The family were forced to move home, which itself is a crime against the Egyptian Constitution where Article 63 prohibits arbitrary forced displacement of citizens.