Eurochurch Network
Connecting Missional Visionaries, Shaping the future. Together in Mission values our involvement in this network, and is a key player alongside other European leaders in mission.
Eurochurch “are hopeful about the future of the church in Europe because we believe that God is at work. We recognise that the future is shaped by committed minorities who use creative imagination to explore God’s purposes. We acknowledge that history often hinges on the courageous activity of a single generation. We desire this generation to be a hinge on which the future will be redirected. We are convinced that missional thinkers and practitioners need to be encouraged to provide future leadership.” For more information: http://www.eurochurch.net
This network sponsors a conference each year…
Eurochurch 2009 Conference: Incarnate
A church planter in Switzerland once described his task to me in this way. He said,
“I am working with postmoderns and in Geneva postmodernity is rather like a large banqueting table with great food. All are invited to eat except for Christianity, which had to stand in the naughty corner. Why is Christianity in the naughty corner? Because in the past Christians have misused power and now we have to figure out how to be welcomed around the table again.”
In a sense that has been the missionary dilemma for us Europeans – how to re-engage with the communities in which we live and work. In the midst of this challenge there are some signs that the presence and contribution of Christians is wanted, welcomed and sought. Europe presents many faces even within a single nation.
The theme of this year’s conference INCARNATE, suggests a way in which we might be present and be missional in the new Europe. Our two keynote speakers are able and intelligent thinkers and practitioners. We are asking them to engage with us in a dialogue. That will be a dialogue with each other as they present their material but also in dialogue with us. The conference has been deliberately structured to produce a high degree of interaction and debate.
We hope that you as someone who is either a thinking practitioner in mission of a thinker about mission that also engages in mission, will want to take part in this growing community of sisters and brothers from many denominations, streams and nations. It is in that spirit that we invite you to be with us in Rome from 5-7 May 2009. For more information and to book click here. Download a leaflet here.
Conference speakers
Gerard Kelly
|
|
Johannes ReimerJohannes Reimer was born in Siberia in 1955. Raised as a communist activist, he was given one day the task to divert two young Christians from the faith. After an intense study of the Gospel, he experienced a dramatic conversion and became a Christian activist.
His family moved to Germany in 1976. He studied theology in Wiedenest, Hamburg and Fresno (USA). In 1986, he started the mission ministry LOGOS International which he serves as an evangelist until today. 1995 he became Doctor of Theology and 1997 Professor of Missiology at UNISA (South Africa). Johannes has written a number of books on evangelism and mission subjects. Far from being theoretician, he was active in the planting of more than a dozen churches. One of his main concerns for the Church is that it becomes missional and relevant for society. |