Towards understanding South Africa
Chris Sugden and Gavin Mitchell
Date posted: 1 Dec 2018
Cape Town South Africa is a bewildering mix of fabulously beautiful landscapes and vineyards which provide a resource for a booming tourist industry, within a few miles of vast stretches of shanty towns where people attracted by its stable economy come to seek well-being for themselves and their families.
The irony is that this ‘rainbow nation’ of many different languages, races and cultures did not start off as nation at all. Cape Town was only intended from the 16th to the 19th centuries to be a refuelling port for food and water for sailing ships of the merchant companies of Portugal, Holland, France and, finally, England en route to their trading empires in the East Indies and India.
EFAC reorganises & renews its mission
Chris Sugden
Date posted: 1 Feb 2018
At a meeting of Trustees in October, the
Evangelical Fellowship
in
the Anglican
Communion (EFAC) restated its vision and
appointed new leadership.
EFAC’s purpose remains to encourage and
develop biblically
faithful
fellowship and
mission throughout the Anglican world. It
is adjusting its goals and strategies to best
serve its constituency, which has seen tremendous change since John Stott founded
the Fellowship in 1961.
Christianity Explored’s growing global impact
Christianity Explored Ministries
Date posted: 1 Dec 2018
Many churches in the UK have been using the various evangelistic courses developed by Christianity Explored Ministries for several years. There are an increasing number of countries who now have access to them in their native languages.
Following the launch of Christianity Explored (CE) in Albania in May, the evangelistic course has had a major impact across the nation.
news in brief
Argentina: no to abortion
On 9 August, the Argentine Senate rejected a bill which would have legalised abortion in the first 14 weeks of pregnancy.
After a marathon debate, 38 senators voted against it and 31 in favour. Its defeat means lawmakers must wait until next year to resubmit legislation. Some pro-choice campaigners started fires and lobbed missiles at police in Buenos Aires after the vote. Demonstrators on both sides of the debate had rallied outside parliament as voting took place.
Iraq: believers survive and thrive
Paul Perkin
Date posted: 1 Nov 2018
‘You can say you are not a man or a woman, you can say you are not a Kurd, but you cannot say you are not a Muslim; it’s in your DNA.’
This is according to a Muslim-background believer in Jesus (MBB), who indeed told his family he was now a believer in Isa [Jesus]. He came to Christ through an atheist newspaper telling the accounts of people who had turned from Islam to Jesus (the paper held no candle for any religion but was vaguely interested in those who converted from one to another!)
India: ‘God is on the move’
Langham Partnership
Date posted: 1 Sep 2018
For a new believer in northern India, it’s not uncommon to be baptised at midnight, not because it’s more meaningful by moonlight, but because the cover of darkness offers more safety in a region where Christians increasingly face persecution.
For a new believer, gaining ultimate freedom in Christ often means losing other freedoms, like drawing water from the community well or walking down the street without fear of being beaten. Amazingly, churches are growing where many of the 400 million people are in desperate poverty and most have never heard of Jesus.
GOD’S CALL TO CARE
Keswick Ministries
Date posted: 1 Aug 2018
This year’s theme, SENT is at the heart of what the Keswick Convention has long been about: mission.
Mission overseas and mission ‘right where you are’, a going out into the world sharing the good news of the gospel through word and deed. This year, visitors to the Keswick Convention will have the opportunity to take a peek into the world of mission and experience some of the many opportunities we have, as Christians, to reach out to the lost and suffering. For the first time ever, the Global Village Experience will be available at the Convention and will be hosted on the pencil factory site right next to the missions exhibition tent, Base Camp.
USA: chaplain cleared
The Christian Institute
Date posted: 1 Oct 2018
A decorated US Army chaplain who faced a
court martial over accusations of discrimination against a lesbian couple was cleared of
all charges, it was reported on 25 August.
Major Scott Squires was investigated and
faced dereliction of duty charges after he
told a soldier he could not lead a marriage
retreat that included a same-sex couple. The
chaplain had to pull out of the event when he
learned of the same-sex couple and arranged
for an alternative chaplain to take over, but
his actions were deemed discriminatory.
France: outreach in Carcassonne
Brother Hicham
Date posted: 1 Oct 2018
‘Reaching Carcassonne’ 2018 took place from 21–28 August, in partnership with La Voix des Prophètes, United Beach Missions (UBM) and with the support of La Maison de la Bible.
The team of 29, aged between 17 and 67, included students, professionals, civil servants and retired people from different countries in Europe. It was an encouragement to see several recent converts from the local church participating in the outreach.
Scottish Anglican Network: contending & learning
The Revd David McCarthy
Date posted: 1 Oct 2018
St. Thomas’ Church, Edinburgh, has a long history as an evangelical congregation.
It was founded in 1844 as an Independent Anglican Church, following the introduction of the Oxford Movement to the Scottish Episcopal Church (SEC). It gradually grew closer to SEC from the 1940s onward. Rectors have included George Duncan, Gordon Bridger (later of Oak Hill College), John Wesson (later of Trinity College, Bristol) and Philip Hacking (later of Christ Church Fulwood, Sheffield).
Ethiopia: graduation
Church Mission Society
Date posted: 1 Oct 2018
The first students graduated from groundbreaking St Frumentius’ Anglican College, in Gambella, western Ethiopia in the summer.
For these students, the road to graduation has been especially challenging: two of the seven graduates are refugees and the others are from two different ethnic groups that have a history of conflict.
USA: walk out on Pence
EN
Date posted: 1 Aug 2018
In contrast to the UK prayer breakfast in
Parliament where the leaders of the nation
were called to listen to someone speak from
the Bible, the Southern Baptists took up the
request from Vice-President Mike Pence to
speak at their convention in mid-June.
In a piece
for The Gospel Coalition,
Jonathan Leeman wrote: ‘… having a political leader address our churches or associations of churches tempts us to misconstrue
our mission. Our mission is not the mission
of the Republican, Democratic or any other
party. Our mission, when gathered,
is to
work toward Great Commission ends. To
bring
in a politician risks subverting our gospel purposes to the purposes of that politician’s party. … it undermines our evangelistic and prophetic witness … it hurts the
unity of Christ’s body’. There would inevitably be divided political opinions in a church
over any individual or party.
Why GAFCON?
Chris Sugden and Vinay Samuel
Date posted: 1 Aug 2018
‘Success has many fathers, but failure is an orphan.’
The successful conclusion of GAFCON 2018, ten years after its formal beginnings as a global Anglican movement that had its roots in, among others, the Lambeth Conference of 1988 of which Archbishop Manasses Kuria of Kenya said: ‘This was our Lambeth’ and (then Bishop) David Gitari of Kenya said: ‘Anyone who wants a resolution passed in 1998 will have to come to terms with the African bishops.’
Standing on the authority of God’s Word
Charles Raven
Date posted: 1 Sep 2018
In this column last month, Chris Sugden and Vinay Samuel helpfully answered the question ‘Why GAFCON ?’. This month, as the full significance of the third GAFCON conference held in June becomes clearer, I want to offer a personal reflection on the question of where GAFCON is going.
The short answer is nowhere! The appeal in GAFCON’s Letter to the Churches to the Archbishop of Canterbury to restore godly leadership has been ignored and there can be no doubt now that it is through GAFCON that the faithful Anglican tradition will be continued. The powers-that-be seem determined that the Communion should embrace the optional orthodoxy of ‘good disagreement’.
Connecting the isolated
SAT-7
Date posted: 1 Sep 2018
A viewer survey in July by Christian satellite TV channel SAT-7 produced hundreds of viewer testimonies, showing that SAT-7 is changing perceptions towards Christianity and is providing valuable support for believers across the Middle East and North Africa.
Over 5,000 people responded to the survey, which was promoted on social media. Viewers rated SAT-7 highly on almost all criteria including image, sound, and content quality. SAT-7 says that the viewer testimonies are ‘compelling evidence that SAT-7 is succeeding in its mission of making God’s love visible in the Middle East and North Africa’.
DELAYED BLOSSOM
Dr Martin Seccombe
Date posted: 1 Jul 2018
The eyes of the world were on Japan in 2011.
This was when it was left reeling from the triple disaster of a powerful earthquake, a devastating tsunami and a catastrophic nuclear accident. Seven years later, Japan is gearing itself up for a happier return to global attention – the Rugby World Cup in 2019 and the Olympics in 2020. Sporting occasions can be a fantastic opportunity to bring a nation together in unity and celebration.
Myanmar: plight of Christians ignored by world media
World Watch Monitor
Date posted: 1 Jul 2018
Almost 7,000 people belonging to the largely Christian minority group in Kachin, northern Myanmar, have fled their houses since fighting between the army and a rebel group flared up in early April, according to recent figures from the Red Cross.
‘It’s a war where civilians are being systematically targeted by members of Burma Army … [yet] the international community chooses to overlook it,’ political analyst and writer Stella Naw told the Guardian newspaper, with international attention on Myanmar focused on the humanitarian crisis facing the country’s Rohingya Muslims.
India: hostel closed
World Watch Monitor
Date posted: 1 Jul 2018
Seventy-four children had to
leave their
Christian-run hostel in Rajasthan in early
May, after
the High Court dismissed a
petition challenging the child welfare committee’s seizure of
the central office of
Emmanuel Mission India.
Emmanuel Mission International (EMI),
founded in 1960 by Archbishop M.A. Thomas,
is well-known for providing quality education to students from under-resourced backgrounds, regardless of caste or religion. EMI
now runs five societies. One, Emmanuel
Education Society, runs over 40 schools in
Rajasthan state.
news in brief
Algeria: appeal denied
A case that began with police in Algeria stopping a Christian suspected of carrying Bibles in his car ended on 16 May with a large fine for the church leader.
A judge denied Pastor Nouredine Belabed’s appeal against a sentence of a 100,000-dinar (£643) fine and payment of court fees under a controversial law that forbids ‘undermining the faith of a Muslim’. Belabed had received the sentence on 8 March, including a three-month suspended prison term.
Turkey: still being held
World Watch Monitor / CNN
Date posted: 1 Aug 2018
The American Charge d’Affaires in Ankara
said in late June that Turkey’s continued
detention of Pastor Andrew Brunson on
spying and terrorism-related charges was
impeding US-Turkish relations.
Philip Kosnett said there is a ‘strong sense
of unity in Congress between Republicans
and Democrats’ on the need for Brunson
to be released. He continued that there is:
‘A similar sense of unity between Congress
and the administration that, in order for the
relationship between Turkey and the US
to progress, we need to resolve that status
not only
for Brunson but also
for other
American citizens and local Turkish employees of US missions who we feel are detained
unjustly under the state of emergency’.
news in brief
Egypt: naked aggression
Coptic houses were attacked in a village on 4 June, after Copts objected to a group of young Muslim men swimming naked in a canal in front of their homes as Coptic women sat outside.
A Muslim mob gathered around the homes of Christians across the canal and began pelting them with bricks and stones, while shouting ‘Allah is the greatest’ and chanting slogans against Copts. They broke the windows and doors of houses, and looted and destroyed some properties. Six people were injured, requiring stitches.
Returning to North Korea
Andrew Dudgeon
Date posted: 1 Jul 2018
The strangest thing happened the other day: I got stuck in a traffic-jam in Pyongyang!
After eight years, it was time to return to North Korea along with a team of wonderful Christian medics from around the world.
France: praising God together in Paris
Deborah Prisk
Date posted: 1 Jun 2018
More than 220 French-speaking women gathered together on 14 April for the annual ‘Chrétiennes Engagées’ Conference.
The keynote speaker, Sarah Richelle, spoke from Psalms 1 and 2; ‘Happy – Finding your joy in the Word and in the King’. The participants, representing over 59 churches in the Paris region and wider, braved train strikes and Easter holiday traffic to get to the American Church in Paris, on the Quai d’Orsay, close to Les Invalides. They were built up by excellent Bible teaching and the opportunity to praise God and enjoy fellowship together.
USA: number 50 saved
The Daily Wire
Date posted: 1 Jun 2018
A
survivor
from
the devastating
terror
attack in Orlando, Florida at gay nightclub,
Pulse, posted on Facebook on 27 April that
he found Jesus as his personal saviour and
is no longer identifying as gay.
The attack happened in June 2016 and left
49 people dead. ‘I should have been number 50!,’ wrote survivor Luis Javier. ‘Going
through old pictures of the night of Pulse, I
remember my struggles of perversion, heavy
drinking to drown out everything, and having promiscuous sex that led to HIV. My
struggles were real!’ he recalled. ‘The enemy
had its grip, and now God has taken me from
that moment and has given me Christ Jesus.’