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European Evangelicals End Annual
Assembly
European Evangelical leaders were
challenged to live out their “true identities”
as “Christian nobodies” by becoming God’s
catalysts for change.
“Christendom is dead, and thank God,”
said Gordon Showell-Rogers, General Secretary of the
European Evangelical Alliance, during the closing session
of the joint EEA, European Evangelical Missionary Alliance
(EEMA) and Hope for Europe conference, on Saturday,
Oct. 22, 2005. “Europe desperately needs God to
visit us and for God’s people to live as God’s
people.”
The four-day gathering in Tavira, Portugal focused
on the theme, “Gospel Relevance in Europe Today,”
and gave the continent’s top Evangelical leaders
a chance to reflect, bond, pray, renew their faith,
and share their stories.
“As a group of evangelical Christian leaders,
we have benefited greatly from being together and thinking
about our respective responsibilities in Europe,”
said Showell-Rogers. “Our hope is that what’s
happened this week might become strategic for the welfare
of European society.”
God and Politics
The meeting also featured special seminars on Religious
Freedom and the European Union that gave the leaders
new insights and resources on how to engage with secular
culture.
“I think of my role as helping Evangelicals around
Europe to become the salt and light in society,”
said Julia Doxat-Purser, EEA’s political representative
and religious liberties coordinator, who led one of
the seminars on Saturday afternoon. “We try to
engage, consult, train, and teach about best practices.”
Attendees learned about new developments in the EEA
Brussels office, which was established several years
ago to represent Evangelicals within the European Union.
Tove Videbaek, a veteran journalist, longtime politician,
and new Brussels representative, said politicians are
slowly starting to take notice of the EEA´s united
Evangelical voice.
“We will do everything we can to further Christian
values,” said Videbaek, who also asked for prayer
for her office. “In Brussels, we can have an impact
on the politics of all of Europe because it goes from
here to 25 countries.”
Forging new Relationships
Another highlight of the assembly was the establishment
of new relationships.
EEA members voted unanimously to accept the membership
applications from the United Christian Council in Israel
and the Protestant Evangelical Alliance in Bosnia and
Hercegovina (EABH), raising the number of EEA-member
Alliances to 35.
EEA voters also unanimously accepted the membership
requests from the European Evangelical Accrediting Alliance
– an agency that accredits schools of Christian
higher education, and JANZ team international –
a missions group that serves in several European countries.
Both the EEAA and JANZ already have work across Europe
associated closely with national Evangelical alliances.
That same day, they adopted a statement recognizing
a close partnership with the European Evangelical Mission
Alliance – a grouping of national missionary associations
in 12 European countries. The agreement outlines and
formalises the cooperative relationship that has already
been established between the two groups; in many countries,
members of the EEA and EEMA have been working together
since the Mission alliance’s birth in 1984.
“I think this is useful for both the EEA and
EEMA because we now have the official backing of church
community leaders to help new mission initiatives to
be started,” said Cees Verharen, head of the EEMA.
“Our vision is for every country in Europe to
develop a national missions movement.”
Meanwhile, in separate agreements, the EEA and EEMA
thanked God for positive initiatives from Hope for Europe
networks. Both the EEA and the EEMA are developing memorandum
of understanding with Hope for Europe.
At the closing ceremony on Saturday evening, representatives
from the EEA and EEMA sealed their partnership with
their signatures, and leaders of Hope for Europe joined
the others for blessings and prayers.
European Evangelical Identity
“Who are we? Where are we? Being who we are in
Europe in the early 21st century.” These were
the three points Showell-Rogers addressed as the final
focus of the assembly.
“The identity question is central in the world’s
trouble spots, and is part of the questions many are
asking about the way forward for the EU,” he said.
“This is part of the question that HfE, the EEA
and the EEMA have been asking this year, as we have
tried to understand what the best way to relate together
is.”
Ultimately, Showell-Rogers said, “we are Christian
nobodies.”
“God has, in His grace, touched our lives and
chooses to take our lives and make them count for something,”
he explained. “To make a difference in 21st century
Europe, we do not need something that God has not already
given.
“Europe needs us to be who we are, where we are
at this stage in history,” he concluded.
Over 200 Christian leaders representing 35 countries
attended the joint assembly, making it the largest annual
gathering in history. The assembly was held at the Vila
Gale hotel from Oct. 19 to 23.
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