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Found 2794 articles matching 'Mission'.

Third Degree

Charlotte Petra
Date posted: 1 Mar 2010

Christian Unions are made up of students, led by students and exist to reach students. Who is in a better position to reach students with the gospel of Jesus than those they live with, go to lectures with, spend time with and share lives with. Students are best placed to reach students and that is why Christian Unions exist and why they are led by students.

Student leadership is not only beneficial for the mission of CUs, but it can have a lasting effect on the student leaders themselves. CU leadership is more than standing at the front during the weekly main meeting; it involves service, servant-heartedness, time, planning, organisation, co-ordinating and working with others, sharing responsibility, knowing the goal and being passionate about working for it.

Fasting at the crossroads
editorial

Fasting at the crossroads

John Benton
Date posted: 1 Apr 2010

A Passion for Life is a great evangelistic project and there is much excitement in our own congregation as we have seen many outsiders attending events as part of the build up to the main mission during Easter week. I am sure it is the same in other churches nationwide and we thank God for this.

If we long to see A Passion for Life being effective then we need to give ourselves to prayer, perhaps even prayer with fasting.

Scandalous

Apparently Jesus had been flogged earlier, as part of his interrogation. Immediately after sentence of crucifixion was passed, Jesus was flogged again (v.26).

This was standard procedure; it was customary to flog prisoners before taking them out to be crucified. But what takes place in verses 27 to 31 is not standard procedure. It is more like barracks-room humour.

Memorabilia

Joy Horn
Date posted: 1 Jan 2010

Famous books

John Knox’s book, God’s Eternal Predestination, was published in Geneva in 1560.

The Geneva Bible was published late in 1560 by a group of English people who had been exiles there during the persecution of Queen Mary I and led by William Whittingham. A handsome quarto volume, convenient for personal and family use, it had illustrations and marginal explanatory notes. It became the most widely used Bible of the English Protestants.

Jesus: where East meets West

Tim McMahon
Date posted: 1 Feb 2010

God loves to use the weak and despised of this world to show his power and glory.

He particularly loves to have the glorious treasure of his gospel shine out of broken clay pots. There is a region of the world where God has been doing this in the most remarkable way over the last ten years.

Beards and burqas?

Amanda Pilz
Date posted: 1 Feb 2010

Martin Goldsmith was born in 1934 in England to a German Jewish family.

He attended public school and, through a miraculous answer to prayer, became a Christian at age 15. He qualified as a Russian interpreter in the Navy then studied Modern Languages and Russian Political Thought at Oxford. There he felt called to mission and, after training in theology in Bristol, worked as a missionary with OMF in SE Asia for ten years. He lectured at All Nations Christian College for 24 years and now engages in a full-time international speaking ministry. He has authored many books, the latest being Beyond Beards and Burqas (IVP, £7.99), in which he introduces the reader to a wide variety of Muslims, relaying conversations about Islam and Christianity he has had with them during his many years of Christian service.

A hole in the fuel tank?

Marcus Honeysett
Date posted: 1 Feb 2010

Several months ago I was on a train which came to an abrupt and terminal stop. We waited for half an hour before the announcement: ‘Ladies and gentlemen please disembark as there is a large hole in the fuel tank’.

This became obvious from the overpowering smell of diesel that hit us as soon as we were outside. I liked being on the train. It was comfortable and they served refreshments. But it wasn’t going anywhere and from inside it was impossible to see why.

Family Bible time

Barbara Sherwood
Date posted: 1 Mar 2010

Book Review SUPER SAVIOUR

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Sheena Gillies, 1948-2009

A thanksgiving service was held on November 2 to celebrate the life of Sheena Gillies, who died suddenly on October 16.

Sheena’s interest in mission began in her early family and church life and led her to study at All Nation’s Christian College and then to UCCF in Scotland as a full-time staff worker. She went on to serve as a teacher and trainer at Capernwray Bible School in Lancashire, at London Bible College (now London School of Theology) as Director of Training, and at All Souls Church, Langham Place, where she worked as a Senior Associate Minister for 11 years. She also taught at events and conferences.

A new day for FIEC

Richard Underwood
Date posted: 1 Jan 2010

Churches up and down the country are shrinking or closing at an alarming rate and, amid the erosion of our country’s spiritual heritage, Christianity is being systematically driven from the public square.

However, alongside the negatives there are many positives. Churches are being planted, people are being saved and men and women are being trained for gospel ministry. In addition, there seems to be a new spirit of partnership among gospel-minded people. An example of this is the number of churches which have committed themselves to the forthcoming A Passion for Life mission.

More people than Bible

Mary Stolarski
Date posted: 1 Jan 2010

Book Review TIME

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Small woman with a big faith

Colin Nevin
Date posted: 1 Jan 2010

Gladys Aylward was born on February 24 1902 to a working class family in Edmonton in north London.

Her parents both worked for the Post Office, and she worked as a humble parlourmaid. It was when Gladys attended a church service one evening and heard about mission in foreign lands that she embraced the concept of people working in far-flung destinations for the Kingdom of God. Subsequently she became aware of the vast country of China which had hardly even heard of Christianity. These thoughts challenged the young Gladys who had given her life over to God’s service, but she was still not sure what that might be.

Can we manage God?

Stephen Ridgeway
Date posted: 1 Jan 2010

So, what’s your personal vision statement for this coming year? You don’t have one yet? But we’re on the brink of 2010!

OK, what about your ministry aims? Can you outline them to me in the space of three seconds without breaking into a sweat? No?! Alright then, let me loosen the noose a bit: can you present the projected outcomes of your personal discipleship programme (preferably using bullet points) for the next three years? What do you mean, you can’t even see beyond the coming week you PowerPointless wonder? Take me to your seminar leader — on the double!

All over the world

Ray Porter
Ray Porter
Date posted: 1 Jan 2010

Book Review GLOBALIZING THEOLOGY Belief and practice in an era of World Christianity

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Have Bible, will travel

For many years Peter Anderson has been used by God as an evangelist. Here he tells us of his conversion while on national service in the British Army.

On arrival in Singapore I found myself in an office looking after the pay of Gurkha soldiers. Also in the office was a soldier I recognised from basic training in Devizes. I knew that he was a Christian, but as he slept in a different barrack room from me I could ‘escape’ from him out of office hours.

Letter from America

Finances, the economy and the church

Josh Moody
Josh Moody
Date posted: 1 Feb 2010

Whether or not — and to what extent, and at what speed — the international market economy is recovering is beyond the scope of this paper, and certainly beyond my expertise as a writer.

But from the ground up it still looks like, to say the least, we are in ‘interesting’ financial times, and some list it as ongoing through 2010 at least (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Financial_crisis_of_2007%E2%80%932010). What does this mean for the church?

Claiming the truth in a world of relativism

Mark Chan
Date posted: 1 Feb 2010

The world has always been home to many religious faiths and ideologies.

This religious pluralism has become more pronounced for people in the West, due to globalisation and migration between countries. A shrinking world brings adherents of different religions closer to each other. We meet people of other races and learn of their cultures and beliefs through television and the internet. Mosques, temples and non-Western restaurants reflect the increasingly diverse nature of many Western societies.

The gospel takes precedence

Vaughan Roberts
Date posted: 1 Feb 2010

Book Review EVANGELICAL MISSION AND ANGLICAN CHURCH ORDER Charles Simeon Reconsidered

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Avatar

John Dray
Date posted: 1 Feb 2010

None Review Pocahontas in space AVATAR Director: James Cameron Cert. 12A James Cameron’s Avatar is set in the future. A corporation from a dying earth is seeking to exploit the mineral resources of the beautiful planet Pandora, occupied by the indigenous Na’vi people whose major city lies above a huge mineral deposit.

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The Third Degree

Charlotte Petra
Date posted: 1 Feb 2010

It is a rare occurrence that on a cold evening students would decide that what they really want to do is leave the warmth and comfort of their rooms and venture out into the cold to a church of all places, sing songs about Jesus and then listen to someone talk about him.

Strangely enough, this seems to be quite appealing to people around Christmas time, for many people this is the one time of the year that they enter a church.

The Rev. Dr. Colin Peckham, 1936-2009

John Brand
John Brand
Date posted: 1 Dec 2009

On November 9, the Rev. Dr. Colin Peckham, Principal Emeritus of the Faith Mission Bible College, Edinburgh, was suddenly called home.

Colin was born, and also born again, in South Africa. He grew up with a farming background but, after studying agriculture, felt the call of God to Christian ministry and studied for a degree in theology at the University of South Africa. He earned a Master’s degree from Edinburgh University and successfully gained his doctorate.

Missionary funding

Ray Porter
Ray Porter
Date posted: 1 Nov 2009

The most exciting thing about teaching at a theological college is seeing students go out into ministry.

Some have obtained a curacy and can look forward to a further three or four years of training on the job. Others have obtained similar posts as assistants in Free churches. All of them can now look forward to an assured salary and housing. Their future financing will be the responsibility of their church.

After the Wall

Jonathan Lamb
Date posted: 1 Nov 2009

20 years ago I was driving through Germany one November evening when, on the car radio, I picked up some news which was to shake the continent: East Germans were pouring through a breach in the Berlin Wall.

I had been visiting Christians in Poland and Hungary and knew that they would find this almost unbelievable. According to Vaclav Havel, ‘The fall of the Communist empire is an event on the same scale of historical importance as the fall of the Roman empire’. Oxford scholar Timothy Garton Ash has suggested that there is not a corner of the world that has not in some sense been touched by the consequences of 1989.

Sizing up the Square Mile

Neil McKenzie
Date posted: 1 Nov 2009

NM: Could you sum up the purposes of The Square Mile project and how you would like to see them expressed in action?

KK: Our hope is that The Square Mile resource equips and encourages churches to better demonstrate and proclaim the gospel. I long to see churches with a clearer vision for their role in the community and helping Christians connect their everyday lives with God’s work in the world — through mercy (demonstrating God's compassion to the poor), influence (being salt and light in the public life of the community), life-discipleship (equipping Christians for missional living as workers and neighbours) and evangelism (faithful and relevant communication of the gospel).

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