Hope for Croatia
From a source in Croatia;
As you may learn from media, Croatia just has been hit by the major migrant's crisis, as well as many other European countries. The attached photo of the Croatian policeman holding the refugee child was taken the first day and illustrated the warm welcome of the nation to the people that are fleeing from war, or looking for better life in Europe. However, the situation that the politicians convinced us would be easy to manage, the very next day turned into the crisis with no solution on the horizon. In only 10 days, 73,500 immigrants ran over our country on their way to Germany. And as long as Germany would be willing and capable to keep on receiving them, it may probably work to some degree. But, once they reach their limit, it is very likely that hundred's of thousands will be trapped in Croatia. Their desperation could then easy turn into anger and destruction, so please pray for our future as it might become uncertain, perhaps even chaotic.
And though my country has experience with refugees from our war in 90-ties, this is very different. The whole situation is extremely complex. It has it's human trauma at the first place, but it also has a very strange side as the most of those people are traveling with the good amount of money which let us suspect that there might be some hidden agenda behind, perhaps even intentionally to destabilize Europe and bring to the high islamisation of the continent. The problem is yet on the way as the number of incoming people is permanently increasing, they are coming all the way from west Africa to central Asia. Some said that at this moment there are up to 50 millions, mostly Muslims, on their way to Europe.
Facing that situation make me feel bit like the prophet Habakkuk. If we were told only months ago that anything like this would happen, we wouldn't believe. And as the prophet was sad watching the moral corruption of Israel, I also feel sad watching the moral corruption of the "Christian" Europe. And as the Lord was sovereign in dealing with Israel then, I'm afraid that we might be facing similar judgment today as well. It may not be only bad, as it may strengthen the believers and give us the new mission opportunities, but in the social sense, our future might likely become rather dark.
So, please pray for us. I'll do my best to keep on informing you how the situation will be developing. Please pray also for our Hope for Croatia conference that begins tomorrow, especially as the attendance is already affected by the migrant's crisis. As soon as I return back home, I'll be happy to write you how the Lord was working in the hearts of the attendants as well as many other ministries I've been involved in this passing Summer.
National Prayer Retreat
We want to encourage you to register and book as an individual, a member of a local church, as an intercessor, as part of a network, group, leadership team or minister for the National Prayer Retreat.
This gathering is purely for those who are longing to see more prayer and manifestations of the Kingdom flood the British Isles. The Lord told us to open this to the nation and He will draw those He has nudged or spoken to there. Are You one of those?
The National Prayer Retreat will be at (NOTE CHANGE OF ADDRESS):
The Selsdon Park Hotel & Golf Club,
126 Addington Road, South Croydon,
Surrey,
CR2 8YA,
England,
Bookings are already coming in from across the nation and I want to make sure your town, city or region is represented.
Starting with supper at 6.30pm Thursday 12th November and departing at 4pm Saturday 14th November 2015. Please book your place today.
The Conference is FREE but each person is required to cover their accommodation and feeding costs,
There are various ways to attend:
1.Full Conference
Please book bedrooms by quoting 'FOUR121115'. The cost is (Double Occupancy @ £140.00 per person) (Single Person Occupancy @ £170.00 per person) for the whole conference.
To Book Please Click Here
2. Day Rate (With no accomodation)
To book as a day visitor We are now pleased to be able to offer a Day Rate, (with No overnight accomodation included) for those who wish to attend the Prayer Conference 2015, but are either unable to stay overnight, or would prefer to travel in on a daily basis.
Friday 13th November 2015 9.30am - 9.00pm £37.00 per person including VAT (to include Lunch, Dinner & Teas/Coffee)
Saturday 14th November 2015. 9.30am - 4.00pm £23.00 per person including VAT (to include Lunch & Teas/Coffee)
Friday & Saturday 13th & 14th November 2015 £60.00 per person including VAT (to include Lunch & Teas/Coffee)
To book please click here
3. Two Day Rate (With one nights accomodation)
To book as a day visitor We are now pleased to be able to offer a Day Rate, (with overnight accomodation included)
The cost is (Double Person Occupancy @ £84.00 per person)
(Single Person Occupancy @ £99.00 per person)
The cost includes Lunch, Dinner and Overnight Accomodation on Friday, Breakfast and Lunch on Saturday, unlimited tea, coffee, biscuits and access to Wi-Fi
We are particularly interested in young people joining us so consider sponsoring a promising younger person to represent your church or network or group. The coming Move of God is going to combine the younger and older generations running together! Start mentoring, raising disciples and protégés as well as Sons and Daughters in the Lord. This is a Word from the Lord.....Malachi 4:6
Jonathan Oloyede
Convener of the National Day of Prayer & Worship
Praying for the M1 Corridor
Acts of Prayer
Praying for the M1 Corridor
Saturday 14th November 2015 – dawn 'til dusk
Introduction
Over the summer of 2015 I had a growing sense that God was asking me to encourage prayer for the M1 Corridor in the UK. Having spent months pondering this and praying about it I now have a clearer idea as to why and how this should be done.
Why pray for the M1 Corridor?
The M1 was the first motorway to be built in the UK. It connects the north of England (Leeds) to the South (London). On a map it clearly runs through the heart of England. For these reasons I believe the M1 Corridor is a symbol of the heart of these isle and God wants to touch that heart with the reality of His kingdom.
What to pray for the M1 Corridor?
- For God's Kingdom to come and God's will be done in the lives of all who live in the communities (large and small) near the M1 Including: Leeds, Sheffield, Chesterfield, Nottingham, Derby, Loughborough, Leicester, Rugby, Northampton, Milton Keynes, Luton and London.
- For all who work on and use the M1 including the emergency services.
- That God would heal the heart of the UK.
- For an outpouring of the Holy Spirit across the geographical area of the M1 Corridor where many may come to faith in Jesus Christ.
How to pray for the M1 Corridor?
There are many different ways of responding to this call to pray including:
- Praying in a church building or home near the motorway.
- Standing over or beside the motorway (on a bridge).
- Driving on the motorway, perhaps for just a few junctions and back.
- At one of the many service stations on the motorway.
- Praying in numerous locations in one of the communities that straddle the M1.
A prayer for the M1 Corridor
Heavenly Father, Lord God Almighty, as the M1 Corridor runs through the heart of England, we ask you to renew the heart of these lsles.
Touch the lives of all who live by, travel or work on the M1. May many come to faith in Jesus Christ and know the life, love, light and liberty of His saving grace.
We pray especially for all who live in poverty, the homeless, the exploited, orphans, the bereaved, those bound by addictive lifestyles, all who are poorly, the dying and this generation of children and young people. Bless them all with your protective healing peace. Amen.
Contact: Rev Tim Sumpter – This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
If you organise a prayer event, please let me know; thank you and blessings!!
Talking Jesus
Talking Jesus is research conducted by the Barna Group on behalf of the Church of England, the Evangelical Alliance and HOPE. The research summarizes people's perceptions of Jesus, Christians and evangelism in England and asked questions such as – What do people in this nation know and believe about Jesus? What do they really think of us, his followers? Are we talking about Jesus enough? And when we are, are we drawing people closer towards him, or further away?
'What this study reveals is that people are far more open than we might realise. After we've had conversations with non- Christians about Jesus, one in five of them is open to finding out more about him. The majority of people in this country still identify themselves as Christian, although they are not practising. The people who know us like us. They think we are caring, good humoured and friendly. They are open to us and they're open to Jesus.'
'We are believing, hoping and praying that this study - the first of its kind - will be a major catalyst for effective and focused evangelism in the years to come.
Read the research www.talkingjesus.org . Resources for 3rd January Talking Jesus PrayerCall will be available from mid November.
Jane Holloway
World Prayer Centre
A new season for WPC
There has been a bit of a culture-shift at World Prayer Centre (WPC) recently. Here's an in-depth interview with the Ian Cole, the founder of the organisation and the new Director, Steve Botham on what lies ahead for WPC.
Ian, tell us about your vision for a World Prayer Centre.
Ian: I had the vision for a World Prayer Centre in 1992 and for the last 23 years, alongside my wife Pauline and many wonderful colleagues, supporters, fellow Trustees and prayer partners, have worked and continue to work to see the fulfilment of the vision. We have known for a great part of that time that this journey and every aspect of the journey had to be Heaven to earth, and that even the building itself had to be, as we have often said, an Isaac and not an Ishmael.
Steve Botham recently became the Director of WPC. What does that mean for you and Pauline?
Ian: We are so pleased that Steve has accepted the position of Director of WPC. Pauline and I have known Steve and his wife Carol for many years and Steve has been an integral member of the Trustees. His appointment has not only allowed for increased development and growth of the team and our ministry, but also enabled Pauline and I to stand back and assess where we want to put the time and energy that God gives us each day as we seek to hear from Him and be obedient to His call on our lives. Over the years, a growing part of our ministry has been to encourage prayer and those involved in the prayer movement in a number of nations through the International Prayer Council and other global organisations. We count this a great privilege and as God gives us the health and strength, we will seek to serve Him and the body of Christ in this way. By God's grace we are not retiring but we are changing pace. (I think I just heard a chuckle from Pauline's office!!)
So, where are you at with the vision for the building?
Ian: The vision for the actual World Prayer Centre still burns in our hearts. We believe God has His hand on the actual site, and that one day in God's time and in His way we will see the vision come to fruition. The scriptural foundations of the vision came as I read the story of Nehemiah where the people stood shoulder to shoulder, building the gates, the walls and the towers with trowels, swords and a trumpet blower. As we move into the next phase of our journey, the towers from where the watchman watch's and warns, take on fresh meaning and purpose for us and the whole team, not only locally and nationally but across the world.
As the new Director of WPC, tell us a bit more about your background and getting involved with WPC?
Steve: I come from a business background and was the CEO of Caret Consulting Group a well-established firm focused on leadership and change. My strengths lie in strategy, working with groups and teams, executive coaching, community development and leadership training. I am just coming up to my 40 year anniversary as a Christian and have always looked to combine my calling into the marketplace with my faith. I was on the leadership team of my church Riverside in Birmingham and have been very involved with a range of Christian projects across the city. God has opened doors - many surprising ones for me to be a watchmen and I have good contacts with leaders in the council, health, economic growth and community growth across the city.
I have always been interested in prayer and how God wants us to know his heart of compassion and his vision for change. Last year started with a period of real challenge for WPC and increasingly I felt it was time to give more support and use my strategy and change experience to help look at the future direction and calling of WPC.
How are you looking to move forward with the vision of WPC?
Steve: I have five key areas of focus:
- To grow prayer - simply put I want more people to pray - it draws us closer to God and empowers the church. We are working on the website, social media, new resources and with other organisations to grow prayer. We believe this is a key moment when Jesus is mobilising us to pray.
- Deepen prayer - there are those with a deeper prayer calling, we need to see more watchmen with grace and authority to mobilise others to pray, we need to pray into spiritual change and release blessing. These are changing times so we need to be open to learn and to go deeper.
- Build unity - WPC is a generous networking organisation and we feel that doors are being opened for us to encourage, support, and enable. Unity is about Jesus, representing Him better, serving Him more successfully and making Him number one.
- Providing day-by-day leadership - Ian and Pauline will continue to inspire us, pray with us, and engage in much of the strategic thinking. My role is to make change happen with the wonderful WPC team, our support base and our partners in the UK and working with Ian and Pauline in Europe.
- Communication - we are at a significant growth point for WPC. We need to be able to communicate quickly and mobilise prayer around fast-changing issues like the refugee crisis and all the knock-on issues this will produce. It means being more deliberate in fundraising - encouraging people to invest in moving prayer forward. It means our prayer events will be supplemented by more day-by-day communication to enable us to pray effectively in our families, neighbourhoods, cities and nations.
What are the areas that you want to grow and develop within WPC to fulfil its calling?
Steve: WPC has a watchman calling to give direction and prayer encouragement. I have been watching and looking at strategic things in my city, Birmingham, for many years. There are so many practical issues for us to pray into as God calls us to lift Him up, to bless what is good and provide spiritual protection. We have a national and a global perspective and we partner with like-minded organisations. E.g. looking at Europe, we ask "what is God doing in nations like Germany, Hungary, Greece at this time" and then looking at the deeper spiritual issues - is God testing our hearts? What are the prayer issues in this time of significant shaking?
At the core of this is more prayer and greater awareness of the issues on our doorstep as well as on the news. Jesus came to dwell amongst us. He is supreme over all things. I personally feel this is a great privilege and adventure - following in His footsteps as He shapes and enables change.
So in conclusion, there are exciting times ahead for WPC. We would so value your continued prayers for us as we press on into all that God has for us in the coming days.
Christian refugees left out in cold
About 350,000 Syrian Christians have been forced to flee their homes. Many have been killed, sold into sex slavery, or forced into hiding. They are not going to U.N. refugee camps, where they often face further persecution, sources tell WND.
As U.S. and European leaders reach out with open arms to tens of thousands of Muslim refugees flooding into Europe, the groans of persecuted Christians in Syria, Iraq and Pakistan are increasingly drowned out.
President Obama announced Thursday that the U.S. will accept an additional 10,000 Syrian refugees over the next year, on top of the 1,600 that have already arrived. The Syrian arrivals coming from United Nations refugee camps to date have been 95 percent Muslim.
When it comes to the plight of Christians, most of the voices of concern for "refugees" – whether they come from the EU, the White House, the Congress or in the media – fall silent, says a spokesman for the International Christian Concern.
The ICC posted an alert on its website Thursday that an estimated 30,000 Pakistani Christians have been forced to flee their homeland due to persecution from the Muslim majority in Pakistan. They are living in crude conditions in Thailand, Sri Lanka and Malaysia with little help from the United Nations or various international aid agencies. Christians in Pakistan are often jailed for their beliefs, their churches are bombed and their pastors killed. The president of Pakistan Christian Congress has urged the European Union, the United States, Australia, Canada and other countries to open doors to the persecuted Pakistani Christians. Nazir Bhatti, who launched the Pakistan Christian Congress in 1985 and was forced to flee Pakistan in 1998 after he challenged the nation's Islamic blasphemy laws, has written leaders of the E.U., U.K., U.S. and other European countries asking that they receive Pakistani Christian asylum seekers, reported the website Christians in Pakistan.
Bhatti's plea comes after the announcement from Prime Minister David Cameron that the U.K. will accept 20,000 Syrian refugees, while Germany is welcoming 800,000, Spain is taking 20,000 and France 24,000. President Obama has previously committed to taking 5,000 to 8,000 Syrians over the next year, but his administration announced today it is considering increasing that number by 10,000.
Refugees or migrants? Despite all of the attention being given to Syrians as "war refugees," data from the United Nations refugee agency indicates that the majority may actually be economic migrants rather than true war refugees. The UNCHR data shows, for instance, that 75 percent of the so-called refugees flooding into Europe this year are men, and that only 51 percent are Syrian.
Bhatti has petitioned the leaders of U.K., Germany, Holland, Spain, Portugal, Italy, Romania, Hungry, Sweden, Norway, Denmark and other E.U. member states to give refuge to Pakistani Christian asylum seekers by allowing them easy entry into their countries.
Lord George Carey, the former archbishop of Canterbury, in a recent op-ed in the Telegraph, urged Britain to focus on taking Syrian Christians, saying they are the most vulnerable and repeatedly targeted victims of the Syrian civil war. While Carey said he welcomes Cameron's announcement to take in more Syrian refugees, the most targeted refugees are being left behind to face their Islamic killers. "But the frustration for those of us who have been calling for compassion for Syrian victims for many months is that the Christian community is yet again left at the bottom of the heap," Carey wrote.
Source: International Prayer Connect