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

Hostility, injustice and violence are a daily reality for millions of Christians across the Horn of Africa. In Somalia the militant Al-Shabaab group frequently kills suspected Christians on the spot, and believers keep their faith completely secret. In Eritrea the government views Christians as agents of the West and will arrest, harass and kill them with impunity. Hundreds are imprisoned in horrific conditions. Ethiopia is a Christian-majority country, but converts from Islam are rejected by their families and communities. In Kenya Al-Shabaab militants cross the border from Somalia. They killed dozens of Kenyan Christians last year. In Djibouti rumours of conversion are often enough for believers to lose their inheritance rights or custody of their children. Imagine living where, because you’re a Christian, you fail your studies, your neighbours beat you up, your home is destroyed, your family is put in prison, your father is killed. Would you lose heart, give up, change your faith? Please pray for those experiencing this daily.

Efforts continue to extract a Thai youth football team (aged 11-16) and their 25-year-old coach from a flooded cave in Thailand.  Water is being pumped out and officials hope the lowered water levels  will mean the boys could keep their heads above water and not rely on scuba apparatus to escape the cave in which they have been trapped for 12 days. Rescuers are battling against the clock to beat monsoon rains expected on 7 July. At the time of writing (5 July) the water levels have reduced by around 40% but parts of the passageway leading to where the boys and coach were found are still flooded all the way to the ceiling - leaving diving out of the cave the only option for survival if the water levels are not reduced quickly. They want to reduce the water enough for them to scramble out, walk and perhaps do a little diving.

88 million Mexicans voted on 1 July for a new president and over 3,400 government positions across all levels. The electorate decided that neither major party had a solution to curb spiraling violence and a plundered economy. Andrés Manuel López Obrador – or Amlo to his fans -  intends to deliver an unyielding assault on the scoundrels he claims have plundered Latin America’s second largest economy and plunged it into becoming a cauldron of thievery, bloodshed and want. The left-wing firebrand, who some journalists compare to Jeremy Corbyn, intends to increase minimum wages without raising taxes. He said it will be funded by stamping out corruption. He also promised to turn the opulent presidential palace into a public park, to sell the president's $300 million 787 Dreamliner jet and to cut his own salary to half of his predecessor's. Pray for his success in turning around environmental degradation, insecurity, extortion and kidnapping.

Few politicians have established such a connection with the millions of underprivileged families in Mexico as Lopez Obrador. He regularly campaigned draped with garlands and gaudy sombreros. Like Trump, the headstrong ‘Amlo’ is the heart and soul of his movement and his presidency could heighten tensions between Mexico and the United States over trade and migration if the two men clash. The prospect of a showdown between the two blunt men over the US-Mexico border and renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement has worried many. ‘There’s going to be a clash of vanities and a clash of egos. Who knows where it will end.’ said Juan Jose Rodriguez Prats, a former party colleague of Amlo who has known him for 40 years. President Trump tweeted, ‘I look very much forward (sic) to working with him. There is much to be done that will benefit both the United States and Mexico!’

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s plan to provide healthcare and insurance to half a billion Indians, a people-mass larger than the entire population of South America, is facing serious hurdles.  Almost five months after announcing the programme they are still working to lock in hospitals and insurance companies in time for the planned 15 August launch (India’s Independence Day). The healthcare scheme aims to cover the poorest 40% in a country where a 2017 World Health Organisation report found personal spending on health pushed over 52 million people below the poverty line. Although beneficiaries are identified and IT infrastructure is in place, the involvement of hospitals still needs to be finalised. It is the government's second major welfare push this year. It recently presented a draft bill on a social security programme designed to cover the country’s 500 million poorest workers, including those in informal employment.

In North America 70 wildfires are consuming 630,000 acres across Alaska, California, Colorado and other western states. Meteorologists warn of more blazes due to strong winds, dry conditions and low humidity. A huge fire in Canada’s British Columbia has been burning since 21 June at Comstock Lake. Another 12-hectare forest fire is being fought in Kawarthas near Toronto, Ontario.  In England a major incident was declared as moor fires converged in Lancashire. The Northern Ireland fire service has had to deal with 600 gorse fires this week and in Ireland Slieve Bloom mountains are alight with an uncontrolled fast-growing blaze. Nine out of ten wildfires are carelessly (or deliberately) started by people. A wildfire destroys ALL vegetation, causes erosion which degrades stream water quality and wildlife are burned, dehydrated and malnourished. The larger animals like deer can escape but squirrels, foxes and snakes are not always able to. Birds can fly away, but nests and eggs are destroyed. See also

Saudi Arabia is issuing driving licences to women after abolishing its ban on female drivers. 2,000 women want to complete a driving course now offered at all-female university campuses. However women are still restricted in everyday life. They can’t make major decisions without male permission. They must have a male official guardian, father, brother etc., and need their guardian’s consent to travel, obtain a passport or sign contracts. Their dress code is governed by a strict interpretation of Islamic law. The religious police harass them for exposing too much flesh or wearing too much make-up. Women must limit time spent with men to whom they are not related and most public places have segregation. They cannot use public swimming pools available to men neither can they compete freely in sports. Saudi Arabia proposed hosting an Olympic Games without women. They cannot try on clothes when shopping or read an uncensored fashion magazine.