Category: Faith Matters

  • Comment: Why carry a ten foot cross for 12 miles?

    Comment: Why carry a ten foot cross for 12 miles?

    Through rain, sunshine and 35,000 steps, over 100 supporters of London City Mission took to the streets of central London to take part in The Big London Walk. A 12-mile sponsored walk to raise much needed funds and awareness for the one in two people in London who don’t know a Christian. One of those eager walkers was Doug, an LCM Missionary who had more plans for his walk.

    Doug said: “I wanted to do something very different for LCM’s Big London Walk. It came across to me once when I was travelling on the public transport that people were staring at me when I was reading the Bible. I realised (subconsciously) I was feeling ashamed in some ways of the gospel and of Jesus and that really challenged me to consider, why should I be ashamed?” Doug decided to carry a ten foot cross along the journey with him. He added: “I’ve realised in society people are made to feel ashamed of their faith in Jesus and I wanted to make a bold statement. Amazingly people have been so positive.

    “I’ve had people come up to me and give me high fives and say ‘Praise the Lord!’. I’ve had Muslims stop to say ‘Hi’. I’ve had two people come up to me and ask me, why I was doing this and they ask me what’s your favourite scripture from the Bible, and they started talking to me about the Bible. It was the opposite of what I thought would actually happen.

    “I’ve learned that people want to see you being bold about your faith and that’s the message that I want to tell anyone who hears this story. Please do not be ashamed of the cross. Be bold out there with this amazing message of the gospel that we have.”

    Initially working as a missionary, helping to plant churches throughout southeast Asia, Doug returned to London to work with Christian charities as a fundraising manager until he realised God wanted him back on the mission field, this time in urban London. Doug now reaches many diaspora communities in the borough of Southwark where he serves LCM as a Team Leader. He is working alongside church leaders in the borough teaching church members to engage in community based outreach.

    To stay connected with London City Mission events like the Big London Walk, hear inspiring stories about how God is on the move in London through missionary, sign up to their regular email newsletter here.

    Main Photo Credit: Alicia Quan via Unsplash

  • From the archive: How my Dad guided me…

    From the archive: How my Dad guided me…

    Dave Hopwood reflects on being a father and a son

    There is a great moment in the movie Cinderella Man when boxer Jim Braddock tells his son Jay not to steal, while assuring him that he is totally loved by his parents. I really like that scene because it seems to say so much about being a dad, loving your children and guiding them. When I look back on my own dad, I have many great memories of his love and guidance. When I confided in him about having a crafty smoke to calm my nerves before performing in a school play, he came straight back with the advice that it wasn’t a good idea to make it a regular thing. I remember him being moved to tears when he read a letter about folk in another country being so hungry they had to eat rats to survive. And I remember many happy times watching old cowboy movies and war films together. We talked, laughed and bantered about so much over the years, and I hope his faith, gentleness, compassion and sense of justice have leaked into me a little bit.

    I now have two gorgeous daughters and am muddling along doing my best to be a good father to them. I became a dad at 39, and then again at 50. There are no rules about timing really, are there? Mind you, bouncing around on a trampoline at my age is no mean feat! When our first child was born, I was so ecstatic, I ran out of the hospital, banged on a stranger’s car window and announced, ‘I’ve just had a daughter!’ I was so overjoyed I didn’t care what people thought of me.

    However, you don’t have to go far into dadland to discover its challenges. I’ve found myself stretched and shaped in so many ways. I’ve felt clumsy, proud, amazed, frustrated, lost, found, bewildered and chuffed. Every day’s a learning curve. One of the things I try to stick to is this – when things go wrong and the rhubarb hits the fan again, let’s do our best to sort it out and move on. No moods left bubbling away for extended periods. Our faith in Jesus is vital to us, and we do our best to pass that on to our girls, but we’re realists, and want to earth that faith in the muddling and bumbling of normal life. I love the way that young children have no separation between God and Scooby Doo. We created a poster in lockdown with this title in the middle – God is… It features the phrases …bigger and stronger than anything else…helpful and kind…cake and ice cream…joy not religion…Barbie in the Dreamhouse…a walk on the wild side. That sums us up really. Dadland continues to be a country littered with the mundane, the wondrous, the emotional and the unexpected. And I’d say one of life’s finest things is dancing with your five-year-old daughter to old tunes in the kitchen.

    Actor, writer and Artistic Director of Searchlight Theatre Company, David Robinson reflects on his father, Ken

    As late spring turns to summer, I can begin to reflect on my Dad’s favourite time of the year. The painful recollections of yet another disappointing season supporting Bolton Wanderers Football Club can be thankfully forgotten again for a few months, and thoughts can turn to a day he always eagerly anticipated, the commencement of the cricket season. As a lad in the suburbs of Manchester he had successful trials for Lancashire County Cricket Club. Alas, back then young hopefuls didn’t get paid in the winter, so he pursued a career with Her Majesty’s Inspector of Taxes instead, and there he remained for over forty years. The bragging rights for me in the playground talking about a county cricket player would have been considerable, a little less so for a renowned tax inspector from the Inland Revenue. He was able to carve out many years as a keen and very accomplished club cricketer, and I enjoyed watching and eventually playing alongside him.

    I also followed in his footsteps when it came to his enthusiasm for amateur theatre. He trod the boards in many a local drama company spectacular as a young man, and then, many years, later we acted together in a few creaking Agatha Christie favourites and other similar masterpieces. Thankfully, no reviews have been made available for this article.

    In later years he became a keen and regular member of the audience, whenever and wherever I was performing. Alongside my Mum, they would be selling merchandise and promoting my company for me in the interval. And then there would come his preferred time in the evening, the post show party: he would greet everyone and ensure that all glasses were filled with a chilled chardonnay or similar libation. Hospitality and the gift of welcoming came naturally to him, and many of my friends benefited from it.* No one was left out on the sidelines: he always took a genuine interest in everyone.

    I observed and learnt the strength of teamwork from him, and how no team member is less important than another, essential for any successful cricket eleven, or the rising stars of the Royal Shakespeare Company. It was being there and feeling part of a team which was key for him, whether it was the Lord’s Cricket Ground or the local village green. As long as we could retire to the the Bull public house afterwards and discuss where it all went wrong, it all didn’t really matter, and we could all try again next week.

    His hospitality was matched by his encouragement and I miss hearing his mobility scooter manoeuvring into position at Palmerston Place Church in Edinburgh for our first night at the Fringe; a week and indeed a city he always loved. My first year at the Fringe without him was 2016, and I had written and performed a comedy piece on Laurel and Hardy, something he would have without any doubt enjoyed and insisted on seeing countless times. But this was ‘Another fine mess’ he didn’t get to see.

    His funeral was in the summer of that year, we played Smile by Nat King Cole in the crematorium, and then everyone gathered in a country hotel where the chardonnay flowed, and the smiles of reflection and appreciation continued. Many spoke of his optimistic spirit, but as he often observed, ‘You can’t support Bolton Wanderers for over 50 years and not be an optimist.’ Outside the large patio windows to the hotel, we could see the village green, where they were preparing with great care the cricket square for the forthcoming game at the weekend. He would have certainly approved.

    He had declared after an innings well played.

    Gethin Russell-Jones is a writer and church leader. In order to understand his father better, he wrote a book about him…

    I wrote a book about a man I love. He’s been dead for 10 years but my affection for him is very alive. I think of him every day; his face drifts in and out of my consciousness and occasionally my dreams. I can’t tell you how many times and in how many situations I’ve asked the question, “what would he do now?”

    My father wasn’t the touchy feely type, neither was my mother really, so I must have inherited this blasted quality from another part of the gene pool. But he remains the biggest male influence on my life by a country mile. Not that I agree with him on everything. You’ll have noted that I’m writing in the present tense. Even though he’s resting in peace ahead of rising in glory, he’s alive in my memories. I would never admit to speaking to him but there is a strange conversation that goes on. And in many ways, it’s a more equal relationship now. Less deferential and more human, which strikes me as strange even as I’m writing it.

    More equal because I can ask questions and disagree with him in a way that I found difficult in the days of his flesh. The biggest sign of this shift in our relationship came in the form of the book I referred to in my opening line. Conchie, what my father didn’t do in the war, is my critique of one of the biggest periods in my dad’s life. In 1939, at the age of 21, he took a decision that made him different to many other men. He became part of a minority; a tradition of dissent that has a long, and often vilified, history. He refused to register for military service and instead became a conscientious objector. This choice sprang directly from his Christian faith. In fact, I don’t think he would even have used that kind of language. For him it was a matter of obedience to the Bible’s general command against taking another human life and to Jesus’ call to love and not hate. No exceptions and no wriggle room.

    And for much of my life I have asked two questions about this choice. What were the precise reasons for his refusal to fight, and would I behave differently in the same circumstances? That’s why I wrote the book, five years after he passed away. I wanted to interrogate him, cross examine his motives and beliefs. More than anything else, I wanted to understand the young man who bravely swam against current of the time. I went in search of answers, but life (and indeed death), is not so binary. I found the I man knew, but also the one I didn’t.

    I’m not sure how he feels about my questions or indeed the book. But I do know that I was loved. And he showed me that character, faithful living and dissent make very good companions.

    This article was first published in the May/June 2021 issue of Sorted magazine.

    Main Photo Credit: Mari Lezhava via Unsplash

  • Film: Jesus Revolution movie is a box office hit

    Film: Jesus Revolution movie is a box office hit

    The faith film Jesus Revolution, distributed by Kova International in 157 cinemas across the UK and Ireland, has reached over £100,000 in its first week. Making £56,243 on opening weekend (23rd-25th June), this film has nearly doubled its revenue since then, with church groups selling out cinema screens at weekday showings.

    While headlines often tell us that the Church in the UK and Ireland is in decline, this clearly tells a different story. The Church is engaged and interested in good faith content and there is a demand for it in mainstream cinema. The KOVA team have been inundated with requests for new locations, group bookings and permission to share and publicise local screenings. 

    All Photos: Courtesy of the Jesus Revolution Movie
  • Integrity Music Reaches One Million YouTube Subscribers

    Integrity Music Reaches One Million YouTube Subscribers

    Integrity Music recently celebrated surpassing one million subscribers on the label’s YouTube channel – putting it in the top one percent of all channels on the platform. Integrity Music’s writers and artists produce some of the most familiar worship songs sung in churches around the world today, including Way Maker and 10,000 Reasons.

    Integrity Music is part of David C Cook, a nonprofit global resource provider serving the Church with life-transforming materials. Integrity Music’s President, Jonathan Brown, said: “When you look in Scriptures, milestones are always marked so we can look back in wonder at what God did. Here at Integrity Music, milestones like this are not about building our reputation or getting glory for ourselves. It’s about the fact that over 300 million worshippers have viewed the videos on this channel to worship with us, representing 237 countries around the world. That’s a huge milestone for which God gets all the glory.”

    Integrity Music’s YouTube channel features engaging music videos that showcase the authentic, groundbreaking worship projects and songs written and sung by the likes of Matt Redman, Leeland, Darlene Zschech, Mitch Wong, and Citizens. Being active on YouTube is a part of Integrity’s larger desire to help people world-wide experience the manifest presence of God and resource the church with songs of substance. The Integrity Music team celebrated the milestone accomplishment by giving glory and credit to God and recorded a special video that includes several messages of thanks to their subscribers, including from Integrity artists Paul Baloche and Leeland. Watch it here.

    Main Photo Credit: Courtesy of Integrity Music

  • Faith: The Return of the Prodigal

    Faith: The Return of the Prodigal

    What do you associate with the word home? A person or a place perhaps? Somewhere in which there is a strong sense of welcome and belonging? What then when life goes pear shaped, or we make a choice which leads us down a road to lostness and loneliness? Don’t we just long to be home? it’s almost as if we are programmed with a need to head back to the familiar, to what represents security, no matter what the reason for our leaving in the first place.

    Sadly, there is a generation of young people growing up who have left home because it wasn’t a good place to be. Their feeling of lostness must be greatly amplified.

    I first read Henri Nouwen’s book The Return of the Prodigal in the mid nineties. With a subtitle of A Story of Homecoming I immediately connected with the theme. The book is centred around the story of the Prodigal Son which Jesus told. Nouwen discovers much about himself as he sits and looks at the original Rembrandt painting based on that story. Little did he know what a journey of discovery would take place in his own heart.

    As Nouwen examines the three principal characters in the story, he can identify with the younger son in his desire to leave behind safety and security, strike out on his own, and subsequently squander the inheritance his father gives him. He can also identify with the elder son’s anger and self-righteousness at seeing what he regards as his faithfulness overlooked by the father, whilst his younger brother’s waywardness is seemingly celebrated.

    But he also draws out the nature of the compassionate father, who loves both sons equally. Nouwen realises that he needs to go beyond identifying with either of the sons, and to move away from adolescent desire for independence and sibling rivalries, and to become a welcoming father himself to others.

    Neuwen is very honest about his own inner struggles and failings as he looks at the two sons. About his own journey Neuwen writes: The farther I run away from the place where God dwells, the less I am able to hear the voice that calls me Beloved, and the less I hear that voice, the more entangled I become in the manipulations and power games of the world.

    Speaking of the younger son Neuwen writes: Once he had come again in touch with the truth of his sonship, he could hear, although faintly, the voice calling him the Beloved and feel, although distantly, the touch of blessing. This awareness of, and confidence in, his father’s love, misty as it may have been, gave him the strength to claim for himself his sonship, even though that claim could not be based on any merit.

    It’s all too easy for us to wander off to distant lands, squander our inheritance and then feel a sense of disconnection and disappointment. This book is a reminder that our heavenly father still looks out every day, hoping his kids will come back home.

    The Return of The Prodigal by Henri Nouwen is published by Dartman, Longman and Todd.

    Main Photo Credit: Alejandro Luenjo via Unsplash

  • Faith: Liverpool to host Gospel Music Festival

    Faith: Liverpool to host Gospel Music Festival

    Liverpool is set to host a Gospel Music Festival featuring The Kingdom Choir and Called Out Music. The festival, which will take place in Stanley Park, has been organised by Liverpool Lighthouse.

    Anu Omideyi, Liverpool Gospel Music Festival Director and Music Director at Liverpool Lighthouse said: “As part of the wider vision to spread the power and joy of gospel music alongside the positive impact of black culture, the festival will be accompanied by a programme taking gospel music into schools. In partnership with music education hub Resonate, the schools programme will initially pilot the work with two secondary schools in June and will roll out to more schools in the next academic year, with the eventual aim of curriculum change that will see young people nationwide learning about the music genre.”

    Gospel Music is an inclusive, joyful, music genre that, in addition to relating to the Christian faith, celebrates the stories, histories, cultures and achievements of black communities. Much modern mainstream music, as well as many genres of music of black origin, owe their origins and inspirations to gospel music. However, these roots often go unacknowledged and unrecognised. This will be the first ever mainstream UK gospel festival.

    Liverpool is a city with a strong music and cultural heritage, well known for being the home of The Beatles, the European Capital of Culture, 2008 and recent host to The Eurovision Song Contest. It also has deep links to black history through its role as a slave trading port in the 19thcentury and the location of the International Museum of Slavery. Liverpool is also home to Liverpool Lighthouse, which is currently working to develop the National Gospel Music Centre, a hub for supporting and developing gospel music and gospel music artists in the North West.

    Rebecca Ross-Williams, Creative Director of Liverpool Lighthouse said: “It is beyond exciting to announce Liverpool Gospel Music Festival this September, as it responds to a national need, as there isn’t an equivalent. It’s the right time for the festival, with a drive to make September Gospel Music Heritage Month, with Liverpool as UNESCO City of Music, having such a strong music heritage and because of Liverpool’s contribution to black history. Liverpool Lighthouse is committed to supporting the protection and development of Gospel Music and we aim to provide a much needed platform for Gospel Music artists, showcasing some of the best internationally, and bringing joy to our audiences.”

    Main Photo Credit: Courtesy of Liverpool Lighthouse

  • Beyond the Banter: The jigsaw puzzle of my life

    Beyond the Banter: The jigsaw puzzle of my life

    Jigsaw puzzles were very popular when I was a youngster. That interest was re-kindled when my own children came along. Some adults still enjoy the therapeutic pastime and considerable challenge of completing a one thousand piece jigsaw puzzle. I’m not a jigsaw puzzle enthusiast, but I do know that there are a couple of things which should happen before any attempt to assemble all the pieces:

    1. Carefully study the picture on the box so you know where you’re heading with it.

    2. If possible, check that there are no pieces missing.

    Sometimes life is like a jigsaw puzzle. We can’t see the picture which is emerging. It appears random and confusing. When I was 16, I’d only really just got going on assembling the jigsaw puzzle of my life when my dad died. It was like someone had kicked over the table which I was doing the jigsaw puzzle on, and all the pieces went everywhere. Not only that, it was like the box had been thrown away too. So I had no picture to follow, no clue how things fitted together, and no idea what to do with my life. I wasn’t doing well at school, I was beginning to go down a wrong road. It was a defining moment in my life.

    Into that void, into that chaos, into that sense of abandonment, isolation and hopelessness came the gospel message, challenging me to give my life to God. The only way was to place all the pieces of my life before God and trust Him to complete the jigsaw puzzle. He filled in the missing pieces to bring wholeness, and gradually make the picture complete.

    Psalm 18:20-24 (MSG) says: God made my life complete when I placed all the pieces before him. When I got my act together, he gave me a fresh start. Now I’m alert to God’s ways; I don’t take God for granted. Every day I review the ways he works; I try not to miss a trick. I feel put back together, and I’m watching my step. God rewrote the text of my life when I opened the book of my heart to his eyes.

    Main Photo Credit: Ross Sneddon via Unsplash

  • Comment: Making memories at the Big Church Festival

    Comment: Making memories at the Big Church Festival

    Matt McChlery writes: On the recent Bank Holiday Monday, our car pulled up onto our driveway after completing a five hour journey from the depths of Wiston Estate buried deep in the Sussex countryside. I had just been to Big Church Festival with my two daughters, eight-year-old Katrina and six-year-old Lara. We had a fabulous time, although we were all in need of a good bath! Big Church Festival happens every Bank Holiday weekend over the May half term and sees 30,000 people coming together to celebrate all that is good.

    The last time I went to Big Church Festival was ten years ago – before my children were born. People are encouraged to bring a group along, which I did ten years ago. Although this time I knew that bringing my two young daughters would require more planning and energy than a group would demand, and I was right.

    Arriving on the Friday evening, with the help of my daughters, we managed to pitch our tent and blow up their camping mattresses so they could get to sleep just after sundown. This was a very late night for them, so I knew the next day would be interesting.

    On Saturday, we set off at midday towards the Field of Fun and the Kids Tent. We caught a bit of the Superbook show and then had a go at the climbing wall, scaled the huge haystack, jumped on the numerous inflatables, and enjoyed the various fairground rides.

    I was hoping to attend the Bethel Music session in the nearby Worship Tent. However, while we were having fun, a queue of a couple of thousand people had formed and by the time the girls had finished their various rides there seemed little point in joining the queue. Bethel Worship was due to headline on the Main Stage later that evening. With the girls to look after on my own, I accepted that I was going to miss out on all the excellent late night After Hours programme the festival offered.

    We did manage to catch a Cheeky Pandas gig in the Kid’s Tent and Leeland’s set on the Main Stage before we headed back to the tent for an early night.

    We did manage to listen to more music on the Sunday, including The Goudies, Matt Mayher, Tim & The Glory Boys and Israel Houghton. One of the highlights for the girls was hunting for wooden elephants that were hidden around the expo tent so they could win a packet of sweets. Oh yes, not to forget my daughter’s favourite artist, Philippa Hannah, whom we saw perform twice and they also got to meet after the second show. That was a definite highlight for them.

    I knew that bringing my daughters along to a music festival would be hard work, and it was. But for me, the price I paid both financially and sacrificing the bands and things I really wanted to do for the sake of spending time with them, was worth it. I need to make happy memories with my children and I can’t wait to do it again!

    Matt McChlery is a church leader, author and host of the Christian Book Blurb podcast. Find out more about him and his ministry at mattmcchlery.com

    Main Photo Credit: Courtesy of Matt McChlery

  • Faith: Young Christians invited to Race Across Europe

    Faith: Young Christians invited to Race Across Europe

    Operation Mobilisation (OM) UK, one of the world’s largest missional organisations, are calling together young Christians looking to live out God’s love to join their Race Across Europe. The unique interrailing trip invites Christians over the age of 18, to travel across Europe and share their faith.

    After years of travel being limited or challenged due to Brexit and the global pandemic, Race Across Europe will provide a new way for participants to build confidence in both conversational and practical gospel sharing overseas. Race Across Europe kicks off on June 26th with registrations due to close on June 11th.

    The interrailing experience will last two months, with participants to return to the UK on August 18th. Race Across Europe team members will get involved in OM’s projects in major cities across 15 countries, engaging in new cultural contexts to support different communities and share the good news of Jesus. This will include integrating themselves into the Christian community, attending new churches, participating in outreach activities and working with refugees, children and sports ministries.

    Lara Jenkins, Relations Manager, OM UK, said: “OM in the UK organised this initiative to give young people the opportunity to gain confidence and be bold in the mission field and think about how to share the gospel in different and new ways. Race Across Europe aims to help young people be encouraged by their interactions with a diverse collection of people and be enriched in their faith.”

    “Upon their return in August, these younger generations will have had opportunities to grow and see God working in cultures and contexts they did not know or understand much about beforehand. So, this summer, we invite young Christians to travel, share your faith, experience how God is moving in different cultures and see God grow you.”

    OM’s founder, the late George Verwer, said in a 2020 interview: “Behind the whole concept was my passion for revival and seeing lives changed. Not just new Christians, but believers, too: many were lukewarm. It was on my heart for young people to grow and become mature as a result of volunteering with OM, and that’s still taking place.” OM in the UK has the same heart for young people as their founder did, and they are eager to see them grow and mature through this Race Across Europe experience.

    To sign up to take part in this trip before the deadline on June 11th please visit: uk.om.org/race-across-europe

    Main Photo Credit: Michal Parzuchowski via Unsplash

  • Faith: David Suchet narrates audio bibles to comfort those with sight loss

    Faith: David Suchet narrates audio bibles to comfort those with sight loss

    At the end of 2021, Torch took a leap of faith and ordered 1,000 Pathway audio Bible players containing the New Testament and Psalms read by the well known British actor, David Suchet. Knowing the power of Scripture to change lives, they planned to give these Bibles for free to anyone in the UK losing their sight. 16 months later, all of these Bible players have been sent out and the stories coming back are so amazing that Torch has ordered 1,000 more.

    Gayle-Ann said: “It is my friend … with me wherever, it is just so convenient and I have read the New Testament many times but the way this is read brings across the characters it is just easily understood”. Kenneth came across Torch by chance at a Sight Village open day, he wasn’t sure when he first heard about the Pathway as he wouldn’t have called himself a Christian and hasn’t enjoyed audio books in the past but he told us “I like listening to the Pathway … I’m really listening to the New Testament now … not just odd verses … I’m realising what it all means.”

    For many people, losing their sight is confusing and life altering with one of the biggest losses being the ability to read. For those who have regularly read the Bible, this can feel like being cut off from their greatest source of encouragement, strength and comfort. Imagine the joy of so many in receiving a simple to use Pathway audio Bible when they can once again connect with Scripture?

    Losing sight can be a time of real questioning and searching, so what better gift can they receive than the Word of God? Torch is encouraging anyone who knows someone who is living with sight loss, to get them to contact Torch and receive a free audio Bible at www.torchtrust.org/pathway or by calling 01858 438260.

    Most of the first 1,000 players were sponsored by individuals, churches or trusts. Torch is also seeking people to donate £20 to cover the cost of sending out one of the new audio Bibles.

    Main Photo Credit: Courtesy of David Suchet on Twitter