Mission of God
Joseph Boot
Date posted: 1 Aug 2019
Dear Sir
In July’s en, a full-page piece appeared
about my published work,
theology and
associations,
with
particular
attention
given to The Mission of God 2016 (MoG).
Misleadingly deploying partial truths, ana-baptist social activist James Paul Lusk – a
retired career bureaucrat determined to save
Britain from a so-called ‘Christian Right’ –
sadly fails to engage the thesis of the book:
the meaning of the Lordship of Christ and
Kingdom of God in light of God’s total law-word. More balanced reviews of MoG were
published in the UK by Prophecy Today and
Affinity.
GBM: running with the ball
Dave Rushbrook
Date posted: 1 Dec 2019
Our day started with a 5.30am alarm and a bleary-eyed drive into London. By 8.45 we had our seats within eight feet of a TV in the ‘Signal Box’ at Euston Station to witness one of the greatest displays of English rugby ever! Could this day get any better?
The Grace Baptist Mission Annual Delegates’ Meeting was not an immediately obvious progression! GBM exists to ‘help churches support their missionaries worldwide’ and it is funded by, directed and answerable to the churches that it supports. The church delegates’ meeting, the church business part of GBM’s Annual Mission Day, began with a focus on the Great Commission and Matthew 16:18. We have seen progress through mission – because Jesus is building his church. There have been hard times – because the gates of hell are arrayed against us. But we press on – because we know Jesus is in charge and Satan will not prevail!
Churches uniting in prayer for London
London Gospel Partnership
Date posted: 1 Dec 2019
Wednesday 6 November saw the inaugur-al ‘Pray for London’ event hosted by the London Gospel Partnership.
Over 100 church leaders and church workers, along with many other believers, gathered together at East London Tabernacle for a time of dedicated prayer for God’s saving grace to be seen powerfully throughout London.
Chile: hospital mission
OM International
Date posted: 1 Mar 2019
Logos Hope volunteers connected with
people in front of Antofagasta’s hospital, to
tell them the gospel and pray with those who
are unwell and their visitors.
The crew members approached people and
relatives waiting for treatment outside the
hospital. After introducing themselves, they
asked if there was anything they could pray for. When people accepted prayer, they spoke
with them more personally, prayed for their
requests and told them about their faith.
news in brief
New pastor in the Cwm
5 October saw
the
induction of Pastor
Steve Dyer to the pastorate of the Mission
Cwmtwrch, a village 15 miles north of
Swansea in the South Wales valleys.
Pastor Dyer’s
relationship with
the
Mission has grown steadily for several years.
In Spring 2019, he felt led to accept a call
from the Mission – a church that has its
origins in the 1904 Welsh Revival. Pastor
Dyer continues to work with Oasis Church,
now based in Gorseinon, which he planted
in early 2008.
London Church Planting Academy
Co-Mission
Date posted: 1 Nov 2019
Co-Mission churches have long used the metaphor of a lifeboat to remind ourselves that we need to be rescuing the perishing.
Richard Coekin (Co-Mission) has drawn on lessons from the Titanic disaster and Neil Powell (City to City) has written of the need for ‘a Dunkirk spirit, where a huge number of lifeboats were mobilised to realise a vision far too big for any group to achieve alone’.
A new home
Graham Miller
Date posted: 1 Dec 2019
The Christmas holidays tend to be a great time for kids. The average family in the UK will spend an additional £2,000 over the Christmas period on gifts, food and trips.
It is not the same picture for everyone, though. 700,000 kids in London are living below the poverty line, after you’ve taken housing costs into account. For these homes the additional financial stress of Christmas can often be the cause of family arguments, stress, and domestic abuse. It is not surprising that, despite the cold weather, winter is a time when many kids run away for the first time.
Bahamas: dealing with Dorian
Gary Clayton
Date posted: 1 Dec 2019
On 1 September 2019, Hurricane Dorian struck the Bahamas. The Category 5 storm, with 185mph winds and storm surges of up to 23 feet, is one of the most powerful Atlantic hurricanes to make landfall.
Regarded as the worst natural disaster in the country’s history, the storm caused widespread flooding and destruction. It killed at least 50 people and left more than 70,000 people homeless.
Maria Millis: the definition of an unsung saint
Brian Maiden
Date posted: 1 Oct 2019
In a new series, Brian Maiden gives a short biography of some believers you may not have heard of...
Have you ever heard of Maria Millis? Probably not. But before I tell you about her, let me tell you about Lord Shaftesbury.
Wycliffe in Wales
Wycliffe
Date posted: 1 Nov 2019
Wycliffe Bible Translators opened its new
Wales office in Bridgend on 14 September.
Carwyn Graves, Wycliffe’s Wales Team
Leader,
spoke about
the
long history of
Welsh mission workers, who often pushed
for mother-tongue Bibles
and
literacy
programmes where others
ignored
them.
Yet, he also focused on the future, and how
churches in Wales can still be meaningfully
involved
in world mission today through
praying, giving and going.
USA: more than ten minutes
Christianheadlines.com
Date posted: 1 Nov 2019
A 134-page report released in September,
shows that some 35 million youths raised in
Christian families in the USA will give up
on Christianity by the year 2050.
Greg Stier – founder of the youth ministry
Dare 2 Share – says the report, called The
Great Opportunity, is a chance for Christians
to
‘flip the switch’.
‘How about not
just
slowing down the bleeding, what if there
was a revival that flipped those stats? That
is what we are praying for. How do we flip
the switch?’
Eisteddfod outreach
Evangelical Movement of Wales
Date posted: 1 Oct 2019
News from the Eisteddfod Mission during August always shows that an eclectic group of people are reached by the missioners who speak to Welsh and English-speaking festival goers.
This year was no exception. The first day included a couple who had belonged to a sect. On the second day, a person said that after death she would return as a cat or dog. As with most times of mission, there can be the feeling that one is trying to sell umbrellas to people who are living in a dry desert. Most people just don’t see their need of Christ. In fact many people answering the question ‘describe your life in three words’, used happy and contented in their responses.
Oracle chickens out
en / The Christian Institute
Date posted: 1 Dec 2019
A Reading shopping centre, part-owned
by an investment company based in Abu
Dhabi, caved in to LGBT demands to drop
a US
fast-food restaurant
from renting
premises, it was reported in October.
Owners of the Oracle centre in Reading
will not renew Chic-fil-A’s six-month lease,
claiming it is the ‘right thing to do’. In 2012
the
restaurant’s CEO, Dan Cathy,
stated
that
the company supported
the
‘biblical
definition of the
family unit’. It donated
money to Christian charities that support traditional marriage.
politics & policy
Dark side of the Internet
James Mildred
Date posted: 1 Dec 2019
Without a doubt, one of the most important responsibilities God gives to anyone is the one He gives to parents. Charged with raising their children in the fear of the Lord, theirs is a serious and difficult task. Joy and sorrow often go hand in hand in the mission and task of raising young people.
The challenge of raising children is all the more difficult today because of the Internet. First invented in 1990, it has grown enormously, in ways few predicted when it arrived on the scene. Like most things, there is plenty to enjoy about it. The Internet allows for greater connectivity and for the easier spread of information.
Who was at Bethlehem?
John Peet
Date posted: 1 Dec 2019
John Peet sheds light on the central characters in the nativity scene and explains their significance of their presence.
Last Christmas my wife and I were talking about those who were at Bethlehem. We found it most instructive to think on who and why.
INVESTING IN THE FUTURE
Daniel Blanche
Date posted: 1 Dec 2019
In November, the Riviera International Centre, Torquay, hosted The FIEC Leaders’ Conference. This year’s theme, Leadership at Every Level, was perfectly timed; as attendance reached 1,000 and the FIEC continues to grow numerically, now is the time to carefully consider how to raise up leaders to ensure growth is lasting, sustainable, and deeply rooted in biblical truth.
John Stevens, FIEC President, opened proceedings by reminding the gathered pastors, elders, women’s workers, and other leaders of the biblical vision for leadership from Ephesians 4. Godly leadership, he instructed, proceeds from an identity rooted in the gospel; to lose sight of that is to build ministry on oneself. And the danger? A ministry that finds its worth in oneself will be slow to delegate, loathe showing humility or weakness, and will find pride in concentrating power. Only the gospel sets one free to serve.
When Google becomes God
John Benton
Date posted: 1 Dec 2019
Book Review
THE AGE OF SURVEILLANCE CAPITALISM:
The fight for a human future at the new frontier of power
Read review
50 years ago: 4 Christmases, 2 bishops, 1 gospel
Christopher Idle
Date posted: 1 Dec 2019
Christopher Idle reflects on two memorable Christmas Carol Services where two bishops shared their story of coming to Christ.
When David Sheppard came to live just across the road from us in Peckham, it seemed providential.
Slavic Gospel Association: 70 years young…
Mark Foster
Date posted: 1 Oct 2019
Next year, Slavic Gospel Association [UK] will celebrate its 70th birthday. In 1950, Peter Deyneka, the founder of the mission in the USA some 13 years earlier, visited churches in the south of England. Believers caught the vision for reaching Slavic peoples for Christ and the UK branch of SGA was formed in that year.
The initially small efforts to bring encouragement and help to Eastern European people displaced by the Second World War and living in camps in England, Germany and Austria, quickly blossomed. It then burgeoned into a ministry which took Christians through the Iron Curtain, and into situations where the churches were severely persecuted for their faithfulness to Christ and the gospel.
A tale of two cities: ten years on
Richard Hagan and Matthew Roberts
Date posted: 1 Oct 2019
en interviews Richard Hagan and Matthew Roberts who moved to Canterbury and York respectively to plant new churches
Ten years ago this month, Matthew Roberts and Richard Hagan moved with their young families to York and Canterbury them to plant new churches. en asked about the story of Trinity Church York and Emmanuel Church Canterbury.