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Found 62 articles matching 'Mission'.

4 loads of trouble!

As I now think of my life since 1948, I realise that it has followed a clear pattern.

Reading John Benton’s The Big Picture for Small Churches prompted some reflections. It seems that the Lord’s purpose for me was to be, what the business world would call, a ‘trouble shooter’. I should have been prepared for this because every morning at breakfast at Bible Institute I read: ‘Thinkest thou great things for thyself, think them not!’ It is only now, as I look back, that I understand.

'Anything, anywhere'

Simon Guillebaud is a young man with a mission in one of the most dangerous parts of Africa.

EN: Could you tell us something about your background, (so the readers find out who you are and where you are coming from), your family and how you came to Christ?

Doomed romance

Sharon James
Date posted: 1 Oct 2006

Book Review LETTERS TO LYDIA ‘Beloved Persis’

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Anglicans on the brink

Chris Sugden
Date posted: 1 Aug 2006

Post the General Convention of Anglicanism in the USA, Chris Sugden sees power struggles and reversion to tribal religion.

The General Convention of The Episcopal Church (TEC, formerly known as ECUSA), which met recently, did not meet the requirements of the Windsor Report to place a moratorium on blessing same-sex unions or electing and consecrating bishops in same-sex relationships.

Leon Morris, 1914-2006

Leon Lamb Morris, who died on July 24, was perhaps Australia’s most prolific biblical and theological author. He wrote over 50 books of theology and biblical commentary which have sold nearly two million copies worldwide and been translated into many languages.

This is an astonishing output for an Australian writing technical or academic books. He was well known throughout the Christian world as a careful, conservative biblical scholar. Extraordinarily, Morris received no formal theological education, apart from two years of supervision for his doctorate in Cambridge. He was a self-taught theologian who brought his rigorous and disciplined training in scientific enquiry to his study of the Bible and theology.

Imagine (DVD)

Peter Hitchcock
Date posted: 1 Jul 2006

None Review ‘How can we reach the UK? The new Imagine DVD is an exciting, innovative resource from the London Institute for Contemporary Christianity, for Christians who want to address the challenge of living well as fruitful, missionary disciples in today’s rapidly changing culture.’

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The tragedy of Bart Ehrman

Anthony McRoy
Date posted: 1 Jul 2006

Book Review MISQUOTING JESUS:

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Everyone in the world... in the Word

Alicia Felce
Date posted: 1 Aug 2006

Recently I went to my normal weekly church Bible study meeting (we are studying Romans) and had an enjoyable time of fellowship and study.

The next day I was due to sit in on a Bible study run by Community Bible Study International, and I have to admit to wondering what it would offer that would be distinct from my normal group. Of course, the fundamentals were similar — such as prayer and a focus on studying the Bible to understand it and apply it to one’s own life. There were however, differences about this ministry, and I found myself firmly convinced of the high value it has as a way of reaching people and strengthening their faith by grounding them ever more in the Bible.

Worship Wars

Tim Keller
Date posted: 1 Aug 2006

One of the basic features of church life in the US today is the proliferation of worship and music forms.

This, in turn, has caused many severe conflicts both within individual congregations and whole denominations.

Changing lives

Thomas Seidler
Date posted: 1 Aug 2006

Book Review TOUGH TALK UK (DVD)

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Taking the long view

Peter Culver
Date posted: 1 Aug 2006

Book Review THE BIBLE PANORAMA

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Letter from America

God's glory and national pride

Josh Moody
Josh Moody
Date posted: 1 Jun 2006

It is an interesting experience having lived for so long as a foreigner. Before coming to America, I lived for a year in the former Soviet Union, and before that for a year in Canada, but by and large most of my life was spent in England (a good ten years of it in Cambridge).

Having now lived for seven or so years in America, it’s becoming increasingly true that I feel the sense of being without home that, for the Christian, underlines the spiritual reality of this world not being our home but that we are ‘just a-passing through’.

Called to the classroom?

Steve King
Date posted: 1 Jun 2006

More and more the 21st-century church is striving to reach into the local community. Scan the job pages in the Christian press and you will find advertisements for youth workers and community workers abounding. Look carefully at the job descriptions and you will uncover a real desire among Christians to get out to where people are on a day-to-day basis: shopping centres, hospitals, schools, youth centres, sports clubs…

Pastoral workers and lay people alike are being encouraged to join the visiting teams of local hospitals and hospices, to set up after school clubs, to get involved in crèches in large shopping centres. This is all about the local church reaching out.

The shaping of modern China (2 vols)

Tony Lambert
Date posted: 1 Jun 2006

Book Review THE SHAPING OF MODERN CHINA (2 volumes) Hudson Taylor’s life and legacy

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Nigel Lee: loving the lost, passionate for Christ, 1946-2006

Marcus Honeysett
Date posted: 1 May 2006

When Nigel Lee first discovered he had life-threatening cancer he said to a friend ‘this is when people get to see if I really believe all I’ve been preaching about all these years.’

We have. He did. And now he is with the Lord in the glory of eternity and the famous Lee smile is broader than ever.

Music

Music student follow-up

Richard Simpkin
Date posted: 1 Jul 2006

I’m very pleased to announce the arrival of Oliver George Simpkin on May 27. 8 lbs. and rising. Why give The Times all my money when I can announce his birth for free in Evangelicals Now?! I’d also like to announce that Oliver has already been given his first tambourine. Philly and I are hoping that it will be his last. No kazoos either, please.

At the start of the academic year, I asked for prayer for students at the various music colleges. This is a mission field in which we’ve seen three or four new births this year. We’re full of praise because Jesus has proved himself powerful to save young men and women as they’ve heard and believed the gospel. With all the pressures they face, we have had to rely on the power of the Word of God to be brought home to their hearts by the Holy Spirit. We’ve been humbled by our own weaknesses in proclaiming that gospel, but Jesus has shown his strength through our weaknesses time after time. He is faithful to his promises to save.

From Crusaders to Urban Saints

This year sees the centenary of the start of the Crusaders’ Union, which has been very influential in the lives of many lads and girls for Christ.

The story actually begins in the spring of 1900 when a missionary named Albert Kestin was walking through North London on a Sunday afternoon. As he walked he prayed for the young people he saw. They looked at a loose end and bored, and he felt that there was a great need for a new initiative to reach such youngsters for Christ.

They made the right move

Elisa Beynon
Date posted: 1 Jul 2006

Relocating? As we saw last month, it’s a complicated business for Christians on the move. While issues like closeness to family or schools loom large and programmes like Escape to the Country push the line of finding the perfect house, Christians are faced with the challenge: how to move in a way that keeps the gospel central?

Whatever the presenting reason for moving — a need for more space, a new job, the need to care for family members, Christians only thrive when they are being fed by God’s Word and are part of a church family where they can use their gifts to serve and encourage others. This means that, for those of us who are thinking of moving house, the aim should be to put finding a church like this at the top of our list of priorities. In other words, to put those glossy house brochures to one side until it is clear which church it is right to settle in: one where the Bible is preached clearly and faithfully and where there will be opportunities to serve and encourage others. This month EN talks to four people, Jennifer, Bill, Richard and Jane (not their real names) who have sought to do that. They tell us how they went about it, what issues they faced and how they feel now about their decision to put church first.

Into the Big Tent

Peter Shirtcliffe
Date posted: 1 Jul 2006

Book Review THE GLORY OF THE GOSPEL Keswick Year Book 2005

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John Clayton Doggett, 1917-2006

Clifford Pond
Date posted: 1 Jul 2006

We are rightly warned of worldly ambition that blights spiritual growth. But when one of God’s children reaches a high place in society and at the same time walks humbly with the Lord, the angels learn something more, to their amazement, of the power of God’s grace.

This is the best explanation of the life of John Doggett, who died at the age of 89 on Sunday May 7. No surprise then that the funeral service at St. Peter’s Church, Ugley, Essex, on May 15 ended with ‘Amazing grace! How sweet the sound’.

To be widely used and considered…

David Smith
Date posted: 1 Jun 2006

Book Review LESSLIE NEWBIGIN, MISSIONARY THEOLOGIAN

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Why Christian education?

Rosemary Saunders
Date posted: 1 Jun 2006

Seven children from two Christian families, two Christian teachers and a chapel schoolroom were the foundation of Wyclif Independent Christian School in 1982.

The parents were convinced that the Lord was leading them to provide an education for their children which was God-centred, Bible-based and free of the secular humanism that was beginning to pervade the state education system.

The Third Degree

Engaging with culture - bethinking.org

Pod Bhogal
Date posted: 1 Apr 2006

Charlie is a typical student. His mop of unkempt hair hides an enquiring mind.

When he isn’t watching daytime TV, or attending one of his twice-weekly lectures, he likes nothing better than partying with his pals in the Students Union, where the beer flows freely. Dancing together, ankle deep in spilt drinks with the sweaty hordes might not be your idea of a good night out, but for Charlie it’s probably the best wash he’s had in weeks. And don’t let his image scare you off; Charlie wants to talk. He wants to know how he can help his friend Anna, who has an eating disorder. And how he can deal with the suffering his family is going through as a result of his mother being diagnosed with bowel cancer. So, he wants to meet you for coffee, to talk about how Christian hope might be able to give him some hope.

Rich missionaries?

Brian Ellis
Date posted: 1 May 2006

Book Review COMPANION TO THE POOR Christ in the urban slums

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