
The Network for Peace and Reconciliation in the European Evangelical Alliance (EEA) has been created in 2016. Our world has become a world of conflict, “a world of war” as the American theologian John Howard Yoder once called it.[1] Motivated by the dedicated commitment of its members in many places in this world of growing and spreading peacelessness, the EEA has created an instrument to help support Christians in Europe and worldwide in their efforts for peace.
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My father was to be admitted to the ICU today. But he’s not going to be treated in it.
A woman explains that her father, affected by the coronavirus and with serious respiratory problems, was scheduled to enter the ICU (Intensive Care Unit) that day for treating his condition. That same morning, a 44 years old seriously affected man came to hospital and…

2020 is no doubt a year we will remember but not exactly as planned. No Europa League. No Formula 1. No Summer Olympics. Almost certainly no big celebrations of 75 years of the ‘liberation of Europe’. All these events have been cancelled due to a virus going around and making thousands of casualties.
READ MORE![The [Im]Possible Dream](https://www.europeanea.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/IMPOSSIBLE-330x242.jpg)
The [Im]Possible Dream – New Workbook by the EA UK New workbook published to assist in integrating different ethnic groups The [Im]Possible Dream is a new workbook published by
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We are looking for supporters across
Europe with a passion for giving
Christians a voice in European politics –
Would you contribute €100 to make our
EEA lobby work in Brussels possible?
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The EEA Prayer Network meets every Tuesday, on Zoom.
Let us know if you would like to be added to the distribution list and receive the Zoom link, by reaching out to our Prayer Network here.

Europe feels tense. Russia is testing NATO and the fear of war on our continent is no longer an abstract scenario but a daily news item. At the same time, internal polarisation is increasing. Right-wing extremism and violence are becoming bolder—as seen in the riots in The Hague on Saturday, 22 September. The combination of external threats and internal divisions weighs heavily on the hearts of many Europeans. For many, the word “hope” seems fragile, even naïve.
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What the next five years will bring, no one can predict with certainty. Sadly, the clouds of war seem to be gathering once more on the horizon. Re-armament is well underway.
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When I think of relationships, I first think about the first one we read about in the Bible. The relationship between the Godhead. “Let us make mankind in our image, in our likeness…” Genesis 1:26. This relationship is followed quickly by a second relationship in Genesis 2:18, “The LORD God said, ‘It is not good for the man to be alone. I will make a helper suitable for him.’
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According to the latest Gallup study – a large-scale, ongoing survey that tracks public opinion and well-being across the globe – the greatest need people express today is hope.
Hope is the bridge between present and future. People often feel anxious when they worry about what lies ahead. But hope gives us a different perspective.

Alexander Pope’s line still speaks across the centuries, especially in times like ours—marked by war, upheaval, and deep uncertainty. The truth of it is being tested in Ukraine more than anywhere else in Europe today. What is it that causes Ukrainians—bombed, displaced, bereaved—to continue believing, rebuilding, resisting, and praying? How can hope still survive such devastation?
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Despite the daily threat of shelling, the Kherson Pentecostal Church had a water baptism on the first Sunday of August for those willing proclaim their faith publicly and to enter into a covenant with the Lord. It was not possible to use the Dnipro River, as it was before the war. The ceremony took place in a specially equipped, festively decorated pool located in a churchyard of Kherson safer district.
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When I found a sailboat at my disposal as a teenage boy, I found no greater pleasure in it than to fight alone with the element of wind and water in very rough weather. I really enjoyed sailing as close to the wind as possible. When there was a great gust of wind, it sometimes happened that my boat capsized and I had to try to get the boat back up.
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Pressure in human life arises from internal and external demands. expectations, obligations, or barriers that create a mental, emotional, or physical sense of strain.
For people with disabilities, this pressure often takes on unique dimensions: