God’s vision for Europe’s cultures and generations

  • In HOPE
  • October 11, 2018
God’s vision for Europe’s cultures and generations

Hope for Europe Tallinn 2018 report from Tuesday the 9th and Wednesday the 10th

Arts have been one of the threads of the first two days of the Hope for Europe conference, in Tallinn (Estonia). “Burn walls and start to build bridges”, Estonian spoken word rapper Joel Markus Anston sang to open the Wednesday evening plenary session. His hip hop had been preceded the evening before by the music of the Latvian (country) foundation “Come Along”, a group of people with disabilities engaged with arts. Meanwhile, Estonian artist Ain Vares has been working on a painting with the theme “Unity in Diversity” which is expected to be completed by the end of the conference, on Friday.

Opening of the art Exhibition “Courage to be” and the performance of “Come Along” | photo: EEA, Christoph Grötzinger

 

Performance of “Come Along” | photo: EEA, Christoph Grötzinger

NATIONS AND CULTURE Meego Remmel, pastor and lecturer, Vice President of the Estonian Council of Churches and Vice President of the European Baptist Federation, addressed on Wednesday evening the challenges of a world in tension where the gospel shines if Christians respond to the call to love and suffer as Jesus did. “When the world looks at us Europeans, do they see Jesus as the Lord?”, he asked. The way churches reflect God in practice makes a huge difference.

Meego Remmel | photo: EEA, Christoph Grötzinger

Steve Hollinghurst (United Kingdom), who works for the Church of England Evangelism Community Church Army, within which he trains evangelists. “Jesus brings reconciliation through the Cross”. In Pentecost, “God enters into each culture and language to speak to them in their own language”, and the early church continued this “celebration of diversity, united as the body of Christ”. “In Europe, we have a national and European identity crisis, we don’t know who we are, we live in a vacuum of identity”. The problem, Hollinghurst said, when this empty space is occupied by ideologies that have nothing to do with Christianity (though some might speak in the name of Christendom). “What is the alternative we can speak out as committed Christians? How can we offer an identity that is affirming and uniting? How might your church bring about God’s vision into your country with the power of His Spirit and under His inspiration?”.

Dr Andrzej Turkanik | photo: EEA, Christoph Grötzinger

WORKING TOGETHER FOR A BIGGER VISION After the morning devotionals, participants from 37 countries have spent the mornings in one of the 17 thematic networks groups have reflected on how to cooperate to build gospel initiatives in Europe in which ideas and resources are shared. Coffee and lunch breaks are used for informal meetings, thematic discussion tables. Stands and posters give glimpses of what some ministries are doing across the continent.

Networking at coffee breaks | photo: EEA, Bori Braam

Best practices on issues like leadership succession, “The Peace Between” dialogue project (refugees) and financial discipleship, best practices of Evangelical Alliances in their influence in politics, were some of the issues discussed in small group seminars. Participants also gathered for times of worship and prayer. THE ISSACHAR PROJECT

Julia Doxat-Purser | photo: EEA, Christoph Grötzinger

Julia Doxat-Purser, socio-political representative of the EEA, introduced the Issachar project, a number of papers analysing the state of European politics, addressing the question of what God’s people should be doing in a context of polarisation, division, and hurting nations in which often Christians struggle to have a distinct voice.

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