To Infinity and Beyond…
It was Buzz Lightyear who gifted us with the iconic line, “To infinity… and beyond!” But way before him, the Great Commission was spoken by Jesus to 12 ordinary men, telling them to go to all nations and make disciples. Going to infinity and beyond began with Jesus. But what does this look like for us today?
Agapé’s Student Life is seeing students take the lead in exciting ways. Some students have been venturing off their own university campuses to help develop Agapé Student Life movements at other universities in their region. Others have been launching movements at their own universities where there are no Agapé staff at all.
Led by Students
Anna Du-mont is studying at the University of Nottingham, where there are currently no Agapé staff, “It was a year ago that I became a student leader. Amidst all of my other commitments and studies, I was initially apprehensive to join but I’m so glad I did!”
Through using Agapé resources and holding quirky fresher campaigns like ‘hook-a-duck’ on campus, Student Leaders at Nottingham are providing an open space for students to come together and talk about the big questions surrounding life and faith. “I am encouraged and surprised that every week students walk through the pub doors and sit down with us for our weekly meeting,” shares Anna. “They open up to us, sharing their opinions on life, faith, and everything in between.”
“Though the mission can feel daunting at times as a student-led movement without full-time staff, the boundaries are not limited to what can be achieved with God on our campus and beyond,” expressed Anna. “I can’t wait to see what he has planned for us next.”
Supported by Other Uni Students
Students from established Agapé Student Life movements are in turn helping to launch new movements at other universities. Joe Purnell, studying at Oxford Brookes, has been going quite literally beyond his own campus to join God in what he is doing regionally at Reading and Nottingham universities.
At the University of Nottingham specifically, Joe joined the search for new leaders, “I just recently had the privilege of meeting those new leaders that came out of that searching! God is so good in the way he promises things and never fails to come through, even when it sometimes feels fruitless on the day.”
“I have seen how powerful a Student Life movement can be as it has influenced my university experience significantly in Oxford. So to have the opportunity to share the movement elsewhere is really exciting! There’s also a certain freedom in taking risks in conversation, as I’m unlikely to see that person around my own campus” shared Joe. “It’s rarely easy to go up to students and ask what they think about life and faith. I’ve had one-word answers and been hurried along but there is such peace in knowing that each conversation could have an eternal consequence.”
Coached by Agapé Staff
It’s an exciting time for Agapé Student Life staff as we’re seeing students empowered to lead their own movements and help launch others. Becky Deare, Team Leader for Agapé Student Life in the West Midlands, shared how staff are joining in what God is already doing.
“This is not a new thing, but it’s a matter of owning the entire scope of movement building, not just on our doorsteps, but also up and down the UK,” explained Becky, who met Jesus and started the Agapé Student Life movement at the University of Birmingham almost 10 years ago. “It’s the same vision to see student-led movements winning people to Christ, building them up in Christ and sending them out to do the same with others, but it owns a much bigger scope.”
Becky has been supporting the Student Leaders at Nottingham from a distance through online coaching and showing up alongside them on campus. “God has blessed us with technology – Paul used letters; now we’re using Skype! Like each of us, students have been given the Great Commission from God and they have the passion to be a part of it – our job is to get alongside them and help empower them to do just that!”
Empowered by God
Through students actively sharing their faith on campus, many students at different points in their spiritual journey have been brought into the Student Life community and have experienced the acceptance that comes from God. “God is raising up student leaders and stirring the hearts of students to share the gospel,” shares Becky. “He is using young adults to change their campuses! The scope and vision of this is huge – we’re praying that as a movement, we would continue to dream big dreams, continue to have our eyes open to see where God is at work, and that we would remain sensitive to his leading.”
The Great Commission was given to reach far and wide to infinity and beyond. Jesus’ promise is what makes all the difference: “I will be with you to the very end of the age.”
Would you join in the work on a campus of your own or near you? To find out how you can get involved, head to www.agape.org.uk/studentlife and get in touch with us as you go into the beyond, right where you are…
Source: Agapé Student Life
Raising faith in our families
Paul writes to the Christians in Corinth: ‘I planted the seed, Apollos watered it, but God has been making it grow’ (1 Corinthians 3:6).
Care for the Family's book 'Raising Faith' has given lots of encouragement on how to be intentional in planting and watering seeds of faith in our children’s lives. We must never forget that it is only God who can make those seeds grow … but we get to partner with him in that incredible task!
Extracted from Raising Faith by Katharine Hill and Andy Frost.
Published by Care for the Family in association with Essential Christian (£4.99). cff.org.uk/shop
The power of prayer
We’ve shared many parenting principles and practical tips throughout the book, but we’ve saved the most important lesson until last. The truth is that we can do as much sowing, planting and watering as we like, but ultimately what will really make a difference is engaging in the power of prayer. God’s total desire is for his children to be in a relationship with him. So we can know without a doubt that when we pray this for our children, we are praying right in the centre of his will for their lives.
From their earliest days, Richard and I have tried to take a moment to pray for our four children every day. We used to pray for them all together in a pack, but we came to discover the power of praying for them as individuals, bringing their specific needs and requests before God.
As well as immediate issues – health concerns, fallings-out in the playground, struggles at school – as parents, we can try to look up and out and pray in bigger things for our children’s lives. We can look to the promises in the Bible and pray Scripture over them; we can pray ancient prayers of blessing; we can pray for Christian friends and people of influence to come across their paths at just the right time. We can pray for their character and for the fruits of the Spirit – love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. We can pray they will have the wisdom to make good choices and that they will be emotionally strong and able to recover from setbacks. We can pray for their future jobs, relationships and marriage partners – the possibilities are endless. But above all else, we can pray that they have soft hearts that respond to God’s love for them.
The Bible tells us to pray ‘on all occasions with all kinds of prayers and requests’ (Ephesians 6:18). There is no one or right way of praying that suits us all – our different personalities mean that we’ll find it easier to pray in different ways. Introverts may love praying on their own in their room with the door closed – what Jesus called ‘the secret place’. Those of us with more extrovert tendencies may find that extra challenging – though even we will need some time alone, but we can also pray using everyday family life as a prompt. We can pray for a particular child while tidying their room, or we might tiptoe into their room at night and say a short prayer of blessing over them while they sleep (not recommended for light sleepers!). We can pray as we sort out their clothes from the wash or as we load individual cups or bowls into the dishwasher. When one of my children has been going through a difficult time, I have often put their photo on my phone’s home screen. So every time I text, tweet, or take a call their picture is a reminder to pray. Be creative about setting up your own prompts to pray!
We’re playing a long game
It has been wisely said of bringing up children that, ‘The days are long, but the years are short.’ As any parent of adult children will tell you, the pre-school and primary years do go by so fast, so just as we nurture our children’s physical and emotional development, let’s try to seize every opportunity we can to sow seeds of faith in our kids’ lives in their early years.
The truth is that our task as parents is not to raise children or even teenagers, but to raise adults. This is a long game – something that is counter-intuitive in our instant, same-day, uber-society. These seeds of faith that are planted in our children’s young lives will slowly bear fruit and produce a harvest in the years to come. We can trust that their Father, the gardener, will play his part, and we can play our part in that process by praying – as people have prayed throughout the ages – that our children would know and respond as we have to his amazing love for them.
Source: Care for the Family
Prayershift - July 2018
July’s Prayershift gathering was a powerful time of prayer and testimony. Ian Cole shared a range of powerful stories from his recent meetings with Arab Church leaders:
- Since 2010 more than 4 million people have come to Christ in Egypt - this is a growth of over 40% in the church. They focus on —LOVE - PRAYER - TRUTH; their deep love for their Muslim neighbours enabling them to forgive even after horrendous massacres and attacks has shaken the Egyptian nation.
- A prominent Iman asked to go to a church prayer meeting in Egypt, whilst there he had a vision of Jesus and a conversation with the Lord that led to the Iman giving his life to Jesus. He then confessed he was nervous about seeing his devout Muslim wife. When he returned home she told him she had had a vision of Jesus and given her life to Him at the same time as her husband!
- A young woman and her baby were hit by a truck. sadly the baby died and was put in the hospital morgue. The young woman went home to her family. They were all recent Christians and they said - "didn’t we read the Jesus can raise people from the dead?" They prayed from midnight till six o clock. At six a nurse walked past the morgue and heard a baby crying, she opened the door of the heavily refrigerated unit and saw the woman’s baby sat up.
- In Turkey, many churches (often small in number) are tripling in size with Christians joining them from the refugee population.
We prayed for a number of issues God laid on our hearts - why don’t you join us and pray into these issues as well:
- Europe Shall be saved - we pray for a fresh move of God across Europe and for young leaders to arise as Evangelists, prophets, and teachers to take the gospel forward.
- We pray for the Balkans - for God to turn back the flood of Islamic missionaries and for peace to be restored between Macedonia and Greece.
- We pray for turning in our nation
- We pray for those on the frontline in bringing unity - for protection on their families and relationships. Many are under savage spiritual attack.
- We pray against fear - for people in the workplace, schools, communities to have the boldness to heart God’s call to demonstrate His kingdom.
- We pray against the growth in drugs and knife crime
-
- Lord rescue 10 - 14 years olds who are being lured into drug gangs
- We pray your hand of protection on our towns and cities - the Police say they expect an escalation in violence over the summer - we pray against this.
- We pray against the drugs like black mamba and monkey dust, that rob people of their senses and kill, break up the gangs and rescue the victims
- We pray against those gangs claiming parts of our cities as their territories - we proclaim the earth is the Lords and everything in it, we pray against any no-go areas in our nation.
Steve Botham - Director of World Prayer Centre
Celebration of Hope June 2018 – Falkirk Stadium
Over 200 churches from central Scotland were actively involved in the Celebration weekend at Falkirk Stadium with Will Graham, from a total of 295 churches registered.
Before the Celebration, over 1550 took part in the Christian Life & Witness preparation classes held at 16 locations over 3 weeks in April, with 50 first-time commitments and 375 re-dedications and assurance of faith being made at these classes - 425 decisions even before the Celebration took place.
Attendance over the weekend was 9,500, with over 750 responses – 68% first-time decisions and 18% re-dedications plus others. Around 60% of Stadium responses were under 25 years, a trend that reflects what happened when Will was in Peterhead in October 2016 – of the 400 responses, half were under 25 years – there is definitely something stirring in that generation.
The evening sessions were live streamed and viewed in 87 countries, with over 31,500 devices registered as watching, resulting in 285 responses online – a total of 1,460 responses from the Celebration overall.
At the end of June, the meeting of the Falkirk ministers/leaders forum who invited Will and played a key role in the Celebration was ‘buzzing’, with each one present keen to share their highlight or personal story, sharing their joy at God working in so many lives!
Because it’s not just about the numbers. It’s about lives changed and transformed, it’s about family blessing and salvation; it’s about churches encouraged and many Christians having greater confidence in sharing their faith - seeing answers to prayer, seeing their ‘Be an Andrew’ invitations accepted and salvation resulting; and it’s about unity – the strong unity in the Falkirk Leaders Forum of around 25 ministers/pastors meeting monthly, forming friendships, praying for each other and their communities, creating the strong platform which resulted in the invitation to Will being accepted and from which God could operate so effectively; the unity amongst hundreds of counsellors, ushers and others from many churches serving together ‘As One!’ before and during the weekend; the unity of hundreds all around the nation and beyond praying faithfully for the Celebration.
Because of that unity, an outworking of Jesus’ prayer in John 17, God was true to his word (Psalm 133) and did command His blessing on the weekend and poured out His favour – especially with the Police, Council and Stadium authorities who were highly complimentary at the feedback meeting on how everyone had behaved and how tidy the Stadium had been left each day. “You are welcome back anytime,” was their overall view!
We are now in the crucial follow-up period. Please pray:
• that every referral to a local church will be followed up swiftly, so that none may be ‘lost’;
• that every new Christian will be warmly welcomed by their new church family and will be faithfully mentored and discipled;
• for the ongoing protection of the Falkirk leaders’ forum and their families, and that God will continue to use their unity to build His Kingdom in that region.
Alistair Barton, Director, Pray for Scotland
Gather North Festival
Northumberland became known as the cradle of Christianity when people like Aidan and Cuthbert brought the gospel into Britain; what happened here impacted the rest of the country. In 2018, we look to God to restore our inheritance, working through the church to bring Godly change to our region.
We have been stirred by the story of Gideon, where God's people were forced into shelters and strongholds by their enemy; good people working hard year after year to plant a harvest which was ruined or stolen before it could be brought in. Eventually a small number of people - 300 - took responsibility for their nation and confronted the enemy using Godly tactics. The result was a change in the situation which released God's people to fulfill their destiny, own the land again and reap bountiful harvests. Gather: Festival North takes this story and applies its principles to today's church in Northumberland.
Acting on behalf of all Christian churches, Gather: interleaves prayer and worship to defeat the work of the enemy; to release the Church into fruitful and effective harvest; to call the Church out of its strongholds and into our communities. We also look to equip God’s people to take the fight back into their communities, with prophetic input and healing prayer.
The festival runs from 3rd-5th August; for further info and to purchase tickets see: www.gatherfestival.co.uk
We seek your prayers to equip the ‘300’ of Gather: and protect them as they fight for the future of our county - and our nation.
Jane Holloway from the World Prayer Centre will be speaking at Gather North Festival.
Trumpet Call 2018: The turning journey continues
We are so grateful to all who were able to join us on 9th June for the Trumpet Call – either in the ICC, via social media or in your own prayer groups up and down the nation and beyond! Thank you for standing with us for the nation and the nations! We are also so profoundly humbled by all that the Holy Spirit released into and through that gathering of God’s people. Trumpet Call on 9th June saw an acceleration of the turning that He is calling for in order to see a healing in our land.
Turning from and Turning To 2 Chronicles 7:14
The day was framed in worship to Jesus – The Lamb who has conquered - and included deep times of humbling, confession and repentance both after RT Kendall and Malcolm Duncan had spoken. The promise contained in 2 Chronicles 7:14 invites us to continue to come to our heavenly Father on an ongoing basis for ourselves, for the Church and for our nations, in humility and confession in order that we might see a continuation of the turning from our wicked ways. We highlighted certain areas that we have been led to as a WPC team to prompt our turning from and turning to on 9th June. Do use these as a resource.
We have had many encouraging comments. One Church leader reported how it had completely turned around his ministry, another said “awesome is an overused word but it truly was awesome”. We have had very positive feedback on the two key “gospel words” from R.T. Kendall and Malcolm Duncan. We have also been very encouraged by feedback on evangelistic events happening at the same time and the week after and by conversations about prayer and mission whilst recognising that there is a hard road ahead of us.
R.T.Kendall is a great father of the church and theologian. He said of Trumpet call if he were never to preach another sermon in his life this was the one he would want to be remembered for.
He started with a clear declaration from Romans 1:16 “I am not ashamed of the gospel of Jesus Christ for it is the power of God that brings salvation to everyone who believes” R.T. said that we have lost the focus of the gospel and made it about politics, health, wealth etc. He stressed how important it is to address the issue of death.
The gospel is about salvation. If we die without Jesus we go to hell. We go to heaven not by good works, family connections, or regular church attendance but by surrendering our lives to Jesus. The blood of Jesus opens the way to heaven. His last words on the cross, “It is finished” or in Greek testelestai was found on business documents meaning – “paid in full”. There is no need for hoops and barriers – accepting Jesus brings salvation.
There is an absence of the fear of God in the nation but this reflects the absence of the fear of God in the Church. Jonathan Edwards preached that we hang over hell by a slender thread and people responded in large numbers to his word. We need more preaching on heaven and hell and salvation. Paul is beaten, hungry, shipwrecked and continues because he has a vision of heaven. We need that passion to share the gospel, and the sure faith in our call to heaven to be stirred up afresh.
Malcolm Duncan, freshly installed as Senior Pastor at Dundonald Elim spoke about the need for a reality check in the church. He spoke about Jeremiah’s long ministry and unpopular message. His father Helkiah had been the man who found the books of the law in Josiah’s reign. This led the people of Israel to turn back to God but their turning was not deep or permanent enough.
Jeremiah spoke into the reality of the situation in the nation, he was calling people to move from complacency to repentance. We cannot pretend God is moving everywhere or that there is a widespread openness to the gospel. We cannot describe small moves of God as an awakening. Joel 2 tells the children of Israel that they needed to rend their hearts - a deep and painful response. It is only after this heart rending that God sends His Holy Spirit. We can fall into the trap of exaggerating what God is doing, when in reality the church is starving from a famine of God’s word. In Israel, Josiah built a fresh understanding of God’s word and he purified worship but it did not last. Judah fell away from God and the book of Lamentations is Jeremiah’s heart cry at the brutal devastation of Jerusalem. Jeremiah says “We are dressing the wounds of our people as if they were not serious.” “My people have forsaken me.”
In Jeremiah 6, we are told to walk in the ancient pathways, and give heed to the sound of the trumpet. It is time to repent, to ask for the ancient paths, to listen to God, to love His word, and His presence, and hold tight onto Jesus. Jeremiah 7:2 says Stand at the gate of the LORD's house and there proclaim this message: "Hear the word of the LORD, all you people of Judah who come through these gates to worship the LORD.”
Both words need careful consideration. You can watch them on the World prayer centre YouTube channel.
I was reflecting on Trumpet Call with a Vicar friend of mine, he was particularly struck by Malcolm’s plea for reality in the church. God is doing amazing things but we can fall into the trap of ignoring the reality that the world is far from salvation and the Church is struggling to proclaim the gospel. Reality leads to real pray, to rending our heart and crying out to God. Of course, we love it when God is moving and celebrate His mercy and love but we have to ask – is this enough? Or do we need more in the church and the nation? Let us seek God and know His heart. “Show me your ways, LORD, teach me your paths. Guide me in your truth and teach me, for you are God my Saviour, and my hope is in you all day long” Ps.25: 4,5.
The WPC Team
TRUMPET CALL DVD
Our friends at British Christian TV have put together a video summary of the day. The DVD's are £10 each.
To buy one, email your name, address and pbone number to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. They will contact you to take payment by cheque or card. You can also call on 01260 633 644.