Somerset’s spiritual milk
Andrew Paterson
Date posted: 1 Nov 2014
On September 27, Edington Chapel in Somerset held a welcome and commissioning service for Matthew Edwards, as a pastoral church worker on a part-time basis.
Matthew worked for ten years with the Open Air Mission. The chapel is rejoicing that God has guided them to this new venture of employing Matthew to help in outreach to the community, re-starting children’s work and building up and encouraging the church fellowship. Matthew and his wife, Sandra, have been living in central Cardiff and have now relocated to a small village in Somerset and are living in a converted milking parlour.
Hands on in Cambridge
Chris Akhurst
Date posted: 1 Nov 2014
September 7 saw friends and family of Steve and Lynsey Auld gather with the congregation of Eden Baptist Church, Cambridge, for Steve’s ordination to pastoral ministry and induction as assistant pastor at Eden.
Steve and Lynsey have two young sons, Hudson and Elliot, and are from Northern Ireland. Steve played rugby for Ireland in the Under 19 Rugby World Cup in 2003. After graduating from Queen’s, Belfast, Steve served as youth pastor at Elmwood Presbyterian Church, Lisburn, from 2005 to 2009, before going to Madagascar with Africa Inland Mission as part of a church-planting team. From there he went to Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, Illinois, where Don Carson was his academic advisor.
London: Antioch Plan gets underway
Richard Perkins
Date posted: 1 Sep 2014
The number of people even within the Co-Mission Senior Staff who thought that God would provide the full complement for our first cohort of Antioch Planters could probably be counted on the fingers of one hand.
But remarkably and very wonderfully God has not only sent 14 men who have joined the Co-Mission pioneering church planting initiative, the Antioch Plan, applicants have even had to be turned away. This experience has been both a rebuke and a thrill because of God’s goodness.
Liberia: battling with Ebola
Suzanne Green
Date posted: 1 Sep 2014
‘Unless immediate action is taken in Liberia – including isolating patients, a quarantine programme and protective gear – the death toll will likely reach into the thousands,’ says Dr Frank Glover, a medical missionary who partners with SIM International (known in the UK as Serving in Mission).
Glover was testifying before a US congressional subcommittee on August 7 about combatting the Ebola threat in Liberia.
Glasgow games outreach
Paul Brenan
Date posted: 1 Sep 2014
‘Let Glasgow Flourish’ reads the city motto. And flourish it did at the Commonwealth Games from July 23 – Aug 3.
The city blossomed with many thousands of visitors and a successful 11 days of sporting excellence, with England topping the medal charts. However, what the current motto fails to reveal is that there was once a bit more to it. The original motto read like this: ‘Let Glasgow flourish by the preaching of your Word and the praising of your name’. It was shortened to its current, secular format, back in the 17th century.
Strangle the leadership and choke the churches!
This was a core element in the Communist strategy to suppress and destroy the evangelical churches in the Iron Curtain era.
It was a plan which had deeply damaging consequences for the cause of the gospel, resulting in thousands of leaderless churches and countless communities throughout Eastern Europe without a glimmer of gospel light. Moldova was one such country. Patrick Johnstone recorded, in his 1993 edition of Operation World, : ‘Training for pastors is the greatest need. There are 185 Baptist pastors – none of whom have received any formal training. Pray for the founding of a Bible school. Slavic Gospel Association (SGA) is seeking to help in this.’
Poland: European Leadership Forum
John Stevens
Date posted: 1 Sep 2014
Back in May, at the same time that UK voters were expressing their increasing Euroscepticism in the European elections, I was privileged to attend the European Leadership Forum in Poland.
This is an annual ‘by invitation’ conference that seeks to serve and equip national Christian leaders to renew the biblical church and re-evangelise Europe. There were over 750 delegates.
Jerusalem: forced out
Morning Star News
Date posted: 1 Oct 2014
After seven years of harassment by hard-line
Muslims, a Palestinian church
in East
Jerusalem has been
forced out of
their
building, church leaders said in late August.
The
congregation of Calvary Baptist
Church, under Holy Land Missions, moved
out of their building in the Shofat area of
Jerusalem in July after Islamists threatened
their landlord. They are looking for a safer,
more permanent place to meet.
Pakistan: leaflet drop
World Watch Monitor
Date posted: 1 Oct 2014
In what looks like a bid to extend its influence in the South Asian region, so-called Islamic State (IS) militants have allegedly distributed 12-page pamphlets in the north-west of Pakistan, in Peshawar and in Afghan refugee camps based near its outskirts, it was reported in early September.
They were written in Pashto and Dari, and titled Fatah (Victory) The editor’s name, however, appears fake and their place of publication obscure. For a long time, Afghan resistance groups, including the Haqqani Network, Hizb-e-Islami Afghanistan and the Tora Bora group have published similar pamphlets, magazines and propaganda literature in Peshawar’s black markets. However this latest spread has raised fears of a possible link between IS and such militants, threatening all non-Muslims.
Seeing ahead 2020
With plans to facilitate the planting of 20 new churches across Birmingham by 2020, June’s annual Birmingham conference, with around 100 in attendance, noted that almost half of that target has been reached within four years.
A range of churches from different denominations and networks, including New Frontiers, Birmingham City Mission, Church of England and FIEC came together, committed to seeing people come to Christ.
To the open air of France
Open Air Campaigners
Date posted: 1 Sep 2014
It was reported in July that Peter Kennelly of OAC Ministries (Open Air Campaigners) is resigning as National Director to work with OAC in France. His change of direction is based on timely guidance that characterises his journey of faith.
Over the years, Peter has taken part in missions and outreach activities, in Britain and abroad. ‘I always had a heart for France and the French-speaking people,’ he explains. ‘I’ve been learning the language and going over to France regularly to join others in evangelism.
Australia: home-grown jihadis
Peter Riddell
Date posted: 1 Sep 2014
The capital cities of Australia’s states experienced their first Muslim Global Dawah Day on July 5, with teams of young mission-minded Muslim activists distributing leaflets and engaging in street evangelism for Islam. They took their lead from a wealth of online resources, with well-known British activist Abdur Raheem Green being a key spokesman for the worldwide campaign.
Although Global Dawah Day had little profile in the mainstream Australian media, it came at a time of considerable public anxiety and government activity over reports of home-jihadis grown leaving to fight for radical Islamist groups in Syria and Iraq. In early July, the Australian Attorney General warned that at least 60 Australians are actively involved in fighting with extremist groups, such as the newly declared Islamic caliphate, with a further 150 providing various forms of support.
EMA: Barbican block-buster
JEB
Date posted: 1 Aug 2014
July 8-10 saw the second year of the experiment to relocate the Evangelical Ministers’ Conference to London’s Barbican Centre.
It is a venue with lots of space and dignity about it, and though many people loved the buzz of the old days the acres of room at the Barbican makes it a much better experience than playing sardines at St Helen’s. However, going for a well-used secular venue does have it’s difficulties. The Barbican had double-booked (with Sir Simon Rattle I was told) and so EMA had to be deferred two weeks from its original place in the calendar. This was reflected in the slightly fewer numbers who attended. That was a shame because these were great conference days.
CE for prisons worldwide
Christianity Explored Ministries
Date posted: 1 Aug 2014
Christianity Explored Ministries (CEM) announced in June a major new link up with Prison Fellowship International (PFI) where the Christianity Explored course will form a key part of PFI’s strategy of taking the gospel to prisoners throughout the world, with two pilot projects launched in Nigeria and South Africa.
PFI was founded in 1979. Its network of 45,000 volunteers currently undertakes monthly prison ministry with 2million inmates in 3,700 prisons in 127 countries. There are an estimated 10 million inmates in 22,000 jails across the world. The Prisoner’s Journey, PFI’s new, three-strand evangelism programme (of which Christianity Explored is the core part) aims to reach 1 million of these prisoners with the gospel by 2020.
NEW CAPITAL INVESTMENT!
Richard Perkins
Date posted: 1 May 2014
The Antioch Plan is a new church planting initiative for London.
It’s been launched by Co-Mission, the cross-denominational church planting network run by Richard Coekin. This exciting development is an attempt to gather and plant ‘house church’-sized congregations across the wide variety of Greater London’s geography. Their objective is to recruit, train and deploy a cohort of ten to 15 pioneer church planters and fund them over a three-year period. And they’ve been given £1 million to finance it.
UBM wins through
en staff
Date posted: 1 Jun 2014
After 40 years of beach mission work at Lyme Regis, United Beach Mission (UBM) are happy that in the Spring of this year they were granted a further three years to run the children’s summer club after a challenge by a local councillor, over the past two years, put the work under threat.
Councillor Mark Gage, who in his profile on the Lyme Regis Town Council website puts a priority area for development as ‘youth facilities’, expressed concerns about UBM’s work with children on the beach. In the local paper, Tim Howlett, UBM’s executive officer, was clear that families are made aware of the Christian nature of the work of UBM and its aim to share the good news of Jesus, encouraging families to be involved and that no children are encouraged to attend without the permission of their parents.
Future servants meet up
Ryan Burton King
Date posted: 1 Jun 2014
From April 4–6 a group of around 70
young people met for a weekend on the site
of All Nations Christian College
in
Hertfordshire to consider ways of getting
involved in evangelism and mission.
This annual event of the Grace Baptist
Churches
in
South East England
for
Christians aged 15-25, celebrated its tenth
anniversary with moving times of worship,
helpful workshops, excellent Bible teaching,
and lots of opportunities for fellowship.
Keswick – ‘Really?’
Keswick has announced a more detailed programme for this year’s Convention, as new chief executive Jonathan Lamb settles into the role.
The Convention, which runs from July 12 – August 1 in the Lake District town, is exploring some of the deep questions of life, and has invited apologists Ravi Zacharias, Chris Sinkinson and Roger Carswell, and Bible teachers Vaughan Roberts, Ian Coffey and many others to preach. The Convention also aims to make its programme helpful to Christians who bring non-believing friends and relatives with them in its third week.
Zambia: full speed ahead
Daniel Bullock
Date posted: 1 Jul 2014
As we move into a Jubilee year celebrating 50 years of independence we are seeing wonderful things happening here in Zambia.
In November 2013 the Lord provided all of the funds to finish the OM training centre. The training centre will continue to grow the work of training future African missionaries. Construction is now at full speed with over 70 workers each day. We are building lots of accommodation, an office block, classrooms and a main hall as well as the skills training centre and bookshop which have already been completed.
EMF: 50 years
Jörg Muller
Date posted: 1 Jun 2014
Over the last 50 years the European Missionary Fellowship [EMF] has been investing in training Christians for the work of gospel ministry in Europe and subsequently many other parts of the world too.
The anniversary was marked at the Open Day of EMF’s School of Biblical Studies on May 10 at Welwyn Evangelical Church, Hertfordshire. Around 150 attended specially arranged meetings.
Europe: home school law
Morning Star News
Date posted: 1 Jun 2014
Opponents of a European initiative paving the way for governments to rule on the legitimacy of religious groups and reduce home schooling rights won a battle in mid April in the Council of Europe.
In Europe, where public education often includes teachings on morality at odds with churches and officially unrecognised religious groups are labelled sects, the stakes were high at the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE).
Multicultural Australia
Peter Riddell
Date posted: 1 Apr 2014
At face value, Australia and Malaysia share a number of common features. Both are medium-sized nations, with Australia having a population of 22 million and Malaysia 28 million.
Both are multifaith societies. Australia’s 61% Christian majority sits alongside a non-religious minority of 22% as well as smaller numbers of Buddhists (2.5%), Muslims (2.2%), Hindus (1.3%) and others. Malaysia’s 60% Muslim majority shares the country with Buddhists (19%), Christians (9%), Hindus (6%) and others. In effect, both societies are highly pluralistic in terms of both faith and ethnicity.
Casting The Net in Enfield
Alan Pibworth
Date posted: 1 Apr 2014
On Saturday, March 1, over 90 people came
to The Net, a training day in evangelism and
evangelistic
preaching,
at
Enfield
Evangelical Free Church, organised by
United Beach Missions and Roger Carswell
and sponsored by 10ofthose.com .
Johnny Prime, pastor of the church, set the
scene for the day as he showed from Luke 5
that the Lord Jesus
is the
loving people-catcher who catches sinful people for the
purpose of catching others. As we preach the
Word of God we throw out the net to others
even when conditions may not look ideal.
Philippines: the day the earth moved
Debbie Meroff
Date posted: 1 May 2014
‘I grabbed my six-year-old and we were all screaming and praying for God’s grace. I saw our walls falling down, then we ran out.’ Dalia’s tears began to slip down her cheeks as she re-lived the terrifying morning of 15 October 2013. The 7.2 magnitude earthquake that struck the Philippines island of Bohol.
‘We stayed in an evacuation centre for two, almost three weeks, then in a tent. When we went back to check the church we found it destroyed. We still sleep in the tent but we’ve put it inside a small bamboo hut that we built during the rains. When people ask me, ‘how can you smile?’ I say I smile because I am alive! That’s something to thank God for.’