One of the joys of working at WPC is to hear wonderful testimonies from across the world. We have so many examples of God on the move. Nowhere more so than in the remarkable work God is doing enabling unity across our cities. I have shown some testimonies below. Jesus prayed for the church – “That they might come into complete unity. Then the world will know that you sent me and have loved them even as you loved me.” John 17:22 As one person put it – “We have invested too much time in building our church, instead of God’s Kingdom.”

Movement Day in Methodist Central Hall, London in early October brought 1000 people together from across England, and many other nations. There were four key elements:

Prophetic teaching – Roger Sutton opened the event. He said God’s plan for transformation starts with personal transformation – changing our attitudes and deepening our commitment to each other, it creates a transformed church and leads to a transformed city. God so loved the world that He sent His son, and declares His ownership in every place where we plant our feet. World Vision shared how Jesus wept over Jerusalem, and continues to weep over cities today. God told people to pray for Babylon even though it was their oppressor. There is a prophetic grieving over the poor. The speaker said “Unless we grieve we just do projects.” He challenged church to take the presence of God to the poor so they know they are not abandoned.

Powerful prayer – there was a strong prayer foundation to the conference; Roger’s final comment when he closed the event was to thank the intercessors and prayer people. The prayer culminated in 1000 people including most of the main denominational leaders praying together in Parliament Square. A number of people had had prophetic visions of this event and there was a strong sense of excitement and awe as we praised and declared together. I had the privilege of praying with the leaders before and I would like to honour their humility and unity. It was particularly important to have Cardinal Nichols with us, again a lovely humble man who joined us to proclaim and praise Jesus. We prayed for three key things – unity in the church, for the church to bless the nation and for the United Kingdom to rediscover its call to take the gospel to the nations. Is it a tipping point in the nation? We shall see, but many believe this was a very significant time.

Extraordinary testimony – we have so many testimonies of God moving powerfully and graciously in cities. Here are some examples:

Toowoomba – Australia - city of 120,000 has seen churches work together to change the spiritual atmosphere. They have done a remarkable work with women, ministering to the hurts men have inflicted on them and releasing them into who Jesus wants them to be. To date 30,000 women have been heavily impacted by this. This led to a concern about domestic violence and the church challenged the city to look at porn. 1 in 3 girls in their city had been sexually abused. 81% of porn shows violence to women. Porn leads to marriage and family breakdown and abusive behaviour in men. The city recognised the huge damage porn was doing and the Mayor has declared his commitment to making Toowoomba a porn free city. Many in the audience wept as we heard the stories of church tackling tough subjects to see their city released.

Portland in Oregon - a city where churches and the city council were at odds. It was a liberal administration with an openly gay leader who was very wary of the church. The church wanted to break the antagonism and offered to give 15,000 man days over the year to serve the city in whatever way Portland wanted. They cleaned the streets, tidied parks and offered to serve a school that was in freefall with appalling results and a fast declining population. The turnaround was so remarkable the churches gained great credibility. Now churches across Portland and linked with every school in the city. The barriers are broken and the city recognises that the church is serving and blessing them.

Bristol -  worked hard to bring church and city leaders together. Prayer lies at the heart of all they do and they have the vision to pray for influence in every aspect of Bristol from its politics to its health, from its media to its schools. The newly elected mayor is a committed Christian who was with us at Movement day and Bristol has seen significant change and church growth.

Pretoria, South Affrica - Doxa Deo church commissions church members to minster in their place of calling whether it be the workplace, health, schools or serving the poor. They say “the churches programme is all about people – mobilising them to take Jesus into the city” They celebrate what God is doing in the hospitals, in the schools, with the homeless, in the police. Their church is a sending place.

A call to pray
Movement Day finished with a challenge from Pastor Agu as the Redeemed Church finished a 75 day commitment to pray for our nation following the “If my people” prayer. He called leaders to put prayer at the centre. He referred to Nehemiah’s call to transform and rebuild his city of Jerusalem. Nehemiah loves his city and he stops and weeps over its state. This leads to prayer and action. He challenged us to pray for breakthrough and to take on humanism, gangs, fundamentalist Islam and other issues in prayer. He said we must wrestle in prayer if we want to fuel revival. We should not let go until we see God move. We are at war for our cities and the weapons of our warfare transform mindsets and strongholds (2 Cor. 10). He said this is a time of freshness in the church as Jesus prepares to come for his bride.

 

Source: Steve Botham, World Prayer Centre

He did it out of compassion – responding to the horrors of botched ‘back street’ abortions performed on scores of desperate women who felt they had nowhere else to go – but David Steel MP’s 1967 Abortion Act resulted in the destruction of 8.5 million lives. This year marks the 50th anniversary of his Private Member’s Bill becoming law in the UK, except in Northern Ireland, and is a timely opportunity to prayerfully consider the practical and spiritual implications.


Over 120,000 unborn lives were aborted in England, Scotland and Wales during 2016, and abortion not only destroys unborn lives but deeply wounds the women who decide to terminate their pregnancy. The British Pregnancy Advisory Service – a major abortion provider – claims that one in three women in mainland Britain will have had an abortion by age 45. Many of them belong to our churches, probably feeling deeply guilty and unable to share their secret with anyone else. That’s why CARE’s initiative ‘Open’ reaches out with healing and hope to Christian women who have had terminations – and miscarriages too – through healing retreats, training for church leaders and speaking. www.weareopen.org.uk. There are also scores of Christian centres around the country living this out, by offering advice and support to those affected by abortion. www.pregnancycentresnetwork.org.uk.


Currently there is heated debate in Northern Ireland, with those resisting any change in the law to allow abortion sometimes caricatured as judgemental and uncaring. Earlier this year CARE was part of the ‘Both Lives Matter’ campaign, which put out an advertisement saying ‘100,000 people are alive today because of our laws on abortion – why change that?’ There were more than a dozen complaints to the Advertising Standards Authority but they ruled that this statement was perfectly reasonable – so not only was the objection dismissed but the ad received far more publicity than before!

We face a considerable battle at this time. There are many who favour making abortion more accessible by removing the legal requirement for two doctors to approve and allowing anyone to have a termination for any reason. Not wanting a girl for example, or aborting a child on grounds of disability. MPs have already framed Bills to present to Parliament and the battle continues.

Please consider being part of an important commemorative event CARE is hosting to mark the 50th anniversary of the 1967 Abortion Act, at the Emmanuel Centre in Westminster on Saturday 28 October at 2pm. You can apply for your free tickets at www.care.org.uk/event, by emailing This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or phoning 020 7233 0455. We would so appreciate your support.

Lord, please have mercy on our nation which has sanctioned the wholesale killing of our most vulnerable citizens – those not yet born. May Your forgiveness and grace be received by those who are affected and Your wisdom given to every Christian organisation working in the political sphere to oppose still further liberalisation of the law. 

 

Source: CARE

 

The streets of Kiev were filled with songs of praise and thanksgiving from 500,000 evangelical Ukrainian Christians who had gathered to celebrate the 500th anniversary of the Reformation. People travelled from all four provinces to celebrate and thank God for the freedom to worship, to preach the Gospel in their country, and to celebrate His faithfulness to His Church. The gathering took place after Ukrainian president Petro Poroshenko signed an order recognising the anniversary of the Reformation.

A North Korean defector, Jung Kwang-il, has used 350 helium balloons to send 1,000 flash drives loaded with portions of the Bible from South to North Korea. The flash drives were donated by college and high school students in the United States. Jung said, ‘It was confirmed by GPS that all balloons dropped in the Mount Kumgang area of North Korea. This launch is the last one for the year, because the direction of the wind is due to change.’ Fifty-four-year-old Jung, who was sentenced to three years in a North Korean prison camp, is now based in South Korea and often sends USB drives, SD cards, and other devices carrying Christian material and testimonials from North Korean defectors across the border.

It is usually easier to pray for someone than to talk with them, but the Great Commission is not ‘Go into all the world and pray...’ Perhaps now is the time to start a conversation. Ask questions. Be a listener. You could maybe suggest, ‘Have you ever tried praying about that?’ See what opens up!

(David Hill, trypraying)

In a statement to MPs, Theresa May called for a ‘unique and ambitious economic partnership’ with the EU after Brexit. ‘Progress will not always be smooth’, she said, but the UK can ‘prove the doomsayers wrong’. Following her speech in Florence, when she gave assurances on payments to the EU and citizens' rights, she said the ball is now in the EU court. Her statement came as the fifth round of negotiations began in Brussels, the final set of talks before EU leaders meet on 19 October to decide if enough progress has been made to enable them to move forward and talk about post-Brexit trade relations with the UK. Two white papers, covering future trade and customs options, are being published (see next article). Justice minister Dominic Raab said that while the UK had to ‘strive for the very best Brexit outcome’, it must also ‘prepare for all eventualities’. ‘No-deal Brexit planning is under way'.

The Trade Justice Movement has welcomed the Government’s recognition, in its white paper, that our trade policy should be ‘transparent and inclusive’. However it has criticised its commitments so far as woefully inadequate, in particular the lack of any clear role for parliament in scrutinising trade deals. The white paper outlines the contents of the forthcoming trade bill, a cornerstone of the Government’s planning for Brexit. Trade deals have profound effects across domestic policy: health, environment, jobs, inequality, and climate. As a result, campaigners are calling for a democratic and transparent process for negotiating and agreeing trade deals after Brexit, with parliamentary oversight at its heart. So far 90 MPs have signed an early day motion supporting the campaign, calling for clear legislative frameworks guaranteeing the role of Parliament in trade policy.

Sixteen-year-old singer Rai-Elle Williams has battled through to the next round of the X Factor by singing the gospel classic 'Break every chain'. She was forced into a sing-off to decide who would go through. Three artists had to sing in front of thousands gathered at Wembley. While the two others blasted out mainstream pop hits, Rai-Elle shocked the judges by singing the words 'There is power in the name of Jesus'. Her performance saw judge Nicole Scherzinger rise to her feet, along with many in the audience. Sharon Osbourne, who is mentoring the girls' category of the ITV show, said, ‘You are fearless for a sixteen-year-old - you're unbelievable.’