
Inspired by the first Lausanne Conference in 1974, the Italian participants returned home and formed the Italian Evangelical Alliance to bring unity and a joint effort for spreading the Gospel to their nation. It was a time of great rejoicing as churches and denominations joined together and the Alliance was born.
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The Evangelical Alliance Week of Prayer is an old but golden tradition. Going back to the year after the launch of the Evangelical Alliance in 1846, it was one of the agreed initiatives that came out of that founding conference and has since been celebrated every year across Europe.
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Every time the Apostle Paul moved from one city to another, there was great sadness on the part of the believers. Paul had been an initiator and a mentor, losing him was heartbreaking and probably a bit scary as they must have thought, “what now”?
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EEA paper written by Julia Doxat-Purser (EEA Socio-Political Representative and Religious Liberty Coordinator)
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The Evangelical Alliance was originally created in London in 1846. A number of founding members were representing European countries. The European Evangelical Alliance (EEA) was founded in 1951. The EEA exists to foster unity and evangelical identity and provide a voice and platform to 23 million European evangelical Christians. The mission of the EEA is to CONNECT for com-mon purpose, EQUIP for integral mission and REPRESENT with a united voice. It is a grassroots movement from all Protestant traditions present in 36 European countries. The Brussels office of the EEA promotes active citizenship of its constituency and represents it to the European Institutions. The EEA is part of the World Evangelical Alliance (www.worldea.org)
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