Cookies on this website

This website makes use of cookies to function properly. If you would like to change which cookies we can use, change the cookie settings. Read more about our use of cookies in our privacy policy.

Cookie settings

Strictly necessary 3 cookies

You will only receive cookies which are needed for this website to function properly. You cannot disable these cookies.
Name Vendor Description Expiry

Preferences 0 cookies

This website stores your preferences so they can be applied during your next visit.

No cookies found

Analysis 0 cookies

This website analyses how it is being used, so that its functionality can be amended and improved. The data collected is anonymous.

No cookies found

Tracking 1 cookies

This website analyses your visit, so its content can be tailored to your needs.
Name Vendor Description Expiry

External 0 cookies

This website makes use of external functionalities such as embedded donation forms or videos.

No cookies found

Can we Re-evangelise Europe today?

chuttersnap-Ay5VDmOaKBo-unsplash.jpgTuesday 06 August 2024 13:35

An insightful new article on the spiritual state of Europe has just been added to The State of the Global Commission Report (produced by Lausanne).

The State of the Great Commission Report, the first major publication emerging from the upcoming Fourth Lausanne Congress, was published back in April. Now the dedicated European chapter entitled "Re-evangelising Europe", fruit of the reflection of six European theologians and missiologists, has been added. Here are a few quotes to whet your appetite to read more:

  • Re migration: "Many come to Europe in search of the materially affluent lifestyle it seemingly promises, only to find that having it all isn’t enough."
  • Re young people: "Europe’s young may not be physically hungry, but they are certainly spiritually hungry."
  • Re the church: "For decades we have depended too much on the ‘come to us’ model, believing that if our churches are entertaining enough, or our events loud enough, people will come. And yet Europeans are no longer coming to us. We need to go to them, with a revived courage and conviction of Jesus’ calling: ‘As the Father has sent me, I am sending you.’"
  • Re the challenge before us: "Now is the time for the European church to step outside its comfort zone and go to a community that may seem too busy, or isolated, but that is deeply spiritually hungry."

There is lots of good stuff in the report about:

  1. The meaning of trust/truth 
  2. The place of community 
  3. The challenges and opportunities of the digital world
  4. Creation care and climate justice 
  5. Unprecedented demographic change.
  6. A shift in morality affecting how the ‘good news’ of the gospel is interpreted by many Europeans.

You can read the full report here.

You can read the Europe section here.

Thanks to our friends at Lausanne for this excellent report.

Jim Memory and Usha Reifsnider are ECM workers serving as Co-Regional Directors for Europe for Lausanne

« Back