Uganda: massive mission
AEUK
Date posted: 1 Oct 2014
It was reported in early September that in
Hoima, Uganda, during outreach work,
over 6,000 gave their lives to Christ. 622
received free dental services and treatment,
468 received free medical consultation and
treatment, and a new church was planted in
Kyesiga, a small town two miles outside
Hoima and more than 1000 metres above
sea level.
AEUK Ugandan Team
Leader
Paul
Ssembiro said: ‘The Hoima Mission included radio and TV ministry; evangelistic outreaches in schools, churches and the prison;
gospel rallies; door-to-door evangelism; dinners for the executive, business and security
fraternity; marketplace ministry; free medical
camps; and cleaning the town’s rubbish. The
impact of the mission shall remain in the
hearts of the people of Hoima for a long time to come.’
UBM: Oxbridge mission
UBM
Date posted: 1 Aug 2014
In the city centres of Oxford and Cambridge in June, people from Saudi Arabia, Iran, Libya, Turkey, China, Russia and atheists from the UK stopped to hear a presentation of the gospel as a United Beach Missions ‘Christian Answer’ team preached and witnessed for the Lord Jesus.
Many stopped, asked questions and listened to reasoned, interactive, Christian presentations: ‘How can God allow evil?’, ‘Who am I?’, ‘Reasons not to be an atheist’, ‘Did Jesus rise from the dead?’ And then there were the very many personal conversations as people willingly and eagerly discussed the claims of Jesus Christ.
Manchester mission conference
David Butler
Date posted: 1 May 2014
Supporters of the European Missionary Fellowship (EMF) in the north-west of England gathered at Chorlton Evangelical Church, Manchester on March 8 for an afternoon conference.
A report was given by EMF missionary Volodymyr Kostyshyn, who pastors a church in Ternopil, west Ukraine, both about his own ministry and also about recent political developments in Ukraine.
DRC: mission possible
African Enterprise
Date posted: 1 Jan 2014
Despite logistical and financial difficulties,
the organisers of a mission in Kinshasa in
October were full of praise for God.
The mission had three phases: a forum of
evangelists; a church
leaders’
training on
evangelism; and stratified evangelism in nine
venues. The size of the city and the mission
being organised with very little finance made
it a challenge, especially mobilising the local
church congregations. But still 22% of the
mission budget was raised locally.
GBM: real fruit
EN
Date posted: 1 Dec 2014
There was a glossy feel to the annual meetings of the Grace Baptist Mission on Saturday 27 October.
First of all, the venue, the Friends Meeting House in Euston, London had been refurbished – new seats, new stage, flashy data projector equipment and perhaps best of all new loos!
FIEC: moving forwards together
John Risbridger
Date posted: 1 Dec 2014
The first week of November saw over 460 delegates meeting on the Norfolk coast for what is fast-becoming a key gathering for gospel-focused leaders in the free churches. It was this year’s FIEC Leaders’ Conference. Julian Hardyman (Eden Baptist, Cambridge) described it as ‘unmissable’ and ‘one of the highlights of my year’!
By any standards it was an outstanding time with spiritually nourishing, expository preaching, excellent seminars, encouraging reports of developments within the FIEC family of churches, well-led corporate worship and many informal opportunities to encourage one another in ministry. In the final session, John Stevens (FIEC national director) said simply: ‘I think we met the Lord Jesus together’. It would be hard to find a better or truer description of the week.
EMF: return to HQ
David Butler
Date posted: 1 Dec 2014
‘Great are the works of the Lord; they are
pondered by all who delight in them’ (Psalm
111:2), were the words with which Martin
Leech, director of the European Missionary
Fellowship (EMF) opened one of the sessions
at the mission’s October Autumn Conference.
EMF missionaries
came
from Belarus,
Belgium, Czech Republic, Romania, Spain
and
the
UK
to
stay
at
Guessens,
Hertfordshire – the Mission’s HQ – for a long
weekend of Bible ministry, reports, prayer, discussion and fellowship. Public meetings were
held at Guessens on the Friday evening at
which Matt Hill, the new director of Spanish
Christian publishing house Editorial Peregrino and István Salánki from London’s Hungarian
Reformed Church spoke of their ministries.
Opening up in Coventry
Paul Watts
Date posted: 1 Dec 2014
A service of thanksgiving for the new building of Lower Ford Street Baptist Church (LFSBC) in Coventry was held on 11 October.
The official opening had already taken place on 14 September when the Lord Mayor of Coventry, the local MP, and those involved in the construction attended. The previous building, strategically located on the edge of the city centre near to Coventry University and opened in 1857, was no longer fit for purpose. Rebuilding started in 2013. Hillfields Evangelical Baptist Church and Durbar Avenue Evangelical Church kindly shared their services/buildings while LFSBC were ‘homeless’.
LCM: planting in Samaria
London City Mission
Date posted: 1 Nov 2014
London City Mission (LCM) held its annual Thanksgiving Service on September 17 with guest speaker Andy Paterson, Mission Director with FIEC, inspiring and motivating LCM staff and supporters alike as he called on them not to lose their nerve or to give up on sharing the gospel verbally.
He also challenged LCM to: ‘Help plant and support indigenous gospel-hearted churches with some of the brilliant evangelists that you have. You need to work with those churches so that they effectively welcome and grow people who are coming to faith in Christ. Please use your expertise to develop a generation of working-class church leaders’. Thirdly, he impressed upon the LCM the role it has to play in helping to train and equip churches in London to cross cultural boundaries and create truly multiracial, multi-ethnic churches in London.
Directed conversations?
Reform / Christian Today
Date posted: 1 Nov 2014
On October
1,
the Reform Council
expressed its dismay that the objectives of
the
‘Shared Conversations on Scripture,
Sexuality and Mission’ had been changed.
As a result orthodox Anglicans had been, in
effect, excluded.
It has called on its members not to participate under these conditions.
Portugal: a strategic work for the gospel
Stephen West
Date posted: 1 Nov 2014
It is 30 years since the Communist regime forced Fabiano to leave his home country of Mozambique with nothing. He was already serving the church there and was recognised by the African Inland Mission as a potential leader. They were his only contact on his arrival in Britain, knowing no English.
He immediately entered Moorlands College in Hampshire – learning Greek and English. Subsequently he obtained a degree at London Bible College and in 1988 married Suzana, who had emigrated from Mozambique to Portugal.
USA: Driscoll’s ministry suspended
Religion Today
Date posted: 1 Oct 2014
Megachurch pastor Mark Driscoll announced to his Seattle-based congregation, via a pre-recorded message in late August, that he is taking a six-week leave of absence from his position as lead pastor of Mars Hill Church while various charges against him were formally investigated. Driscoll said he would take the time to seek council about the next season of his life.
Driscoll, along with Mike Gunn and Leif Moi, planted the church in 1996. Mars Hill grew to more than 13,000 people and stretched across 15 locations in five states: Washington, Oregon, California, New Mexico and Arizona. Attendance has slumped over recent weeks to between 8-9000, and the church has announced the closure of at least three of its locations, and staff cuts of 30-40%. This leave of absence has come after a series of events which found Driscoll being confronted with significant questions about his character and leadership.
On the beach for Jesus
Alan Pibworth
Date posted: 1 Sep 2014
‘He made the stars to shine, He made the rolling sea, He made the mountains high and He made me’ has been sung this summer by thousands of children who have never heard about the death and resurrection of Jesus and whose families never attend a church.
United Beach Missions teams have been sharing the good news of Jesus for a total of 60 weeks at beach resorts in England, Wales, Ireland, as well as in Spain and Portugal. With members as young as 15 but with some in their sixties and older, they have been motivated by a love for the Lord, a love for each other and a love for the lost.
To train young Africans
Andrew & Julie Carter
Date posted: 1 Oct 2014
Isaac, James and Peace (left to right) are all graduates of the African Bible University (ABU) in Kampala, Uganda.
James’s father was the village witchdoctor and James was raised to follow in his footsteps. Miraculously, he was called out of darkness and into the light of the gospel. The Lord opened the way for him to study at ABU. James now works as an evangelist amongst young people in villages across Uganda, a nation where three quarters of the population are under 25.
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.
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.
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.
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.