Solas Rewinds – Is Religion the Cause of Most Wars?

Solas Rewinds through the Short Answers archive to bring you Episode 34 – “Is Religion the Cause of Most Wars?” It is a common objection to the gospel but the historical data shows that it just isn’t true. So what is the cause, and what can be done about it?

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Frontlines / Christians at Work : The Doctor

Pete Aird is a GP (Family Doctor) working in the NHS in England. He told Gavin Matthews all about the ways he shares his Christian faith through work, in person and online.

Solas: Hi Pete! Tell us a little about your job? What are your roles and responsibilities?

PA: Hello Gavin! Well I am a just a jobbing family GP! I’ve been in this practice in Bridgewater in Somerset for almost 25 years. I have about 1800 patients who are registered with me and I seek to co-ordinate and manage their healthcare. I deal with as much as I possibly can here in Primary Care, but then refer on where appropriate. I work treating people for mental health issues; increasingly so since the pandemic started. Covid infection rates in Somerset have been comparatively low, and we haven’t had more than about half a dozen people who have been significantly unwell with it. We’ve had a few deaths, but only one outside a nursing home where the real problems were focussed. But mental health and anxiety issues are huge, especially about jobs, security and ultimately a fear of death. When people have no hope beyond this life, it’s easy to understand why the threat of death is such a huge thing. I was also GP trainer for many years, but relinquished that responsibility a couple of years ago.

Solas: And of all those things, what’s the best part of your job? What gives you job satisfaction?

PA: Undoubtedly it’s relationships – both with patients and staff. It’s a real joy to be in one place for almost 25 years, laying down roots; knowing people is lovely. My best friend is the one Dr who has been in the practice longer than me who I’ve known all that time. I’m a Christian, he’s an atheist and so we give each other a bit of gip about that! Knowing patients in the long term is great too. I saw a lady this week with her new baby, and first saw her as a patient when she was two years old! Science and medicine is not my primary interest actually, people are though; and it’s in knowing and helping them that I get job satisfaction. I wouldn’t want to be a surgeon, doing complex interventions but never getting to know the patients!

Equally I haven’t warmed to the remote-consulting we’ve had to do during Covid. I’m looking forward to seeing people again!

Solas: tell me about some of the challenges you face in your work, and then about how your faith in Christ helps you to navigate those challenges of work?

PA: Well there are a few issues around medical ethics which are a challenge for a Christian, most obviously around termination of pregnancy. That’s not something I have anything to do with. Early on in my career I did the referrals, but didn’t sign the form but attached a letter which said “Down to matters of conscience I cannot sign the form”. I felt that that was my little statement. However I felt a little uncomfortable doing that and after reading Corrie ten Boom’s book, “The Hiding Place” about the way her Christian family paid a high price for hiding Jews from the Nazis, I decided I couldn’t even do that. Corrie and her family did what they thought was right – and the consequences followed. I thought it was wrong to be involved in terminations so I told all my partners that I was no longer going to do referrals and if they didn’t want me in the practice anymore then so be it. But they were all absolutely fine with it, so now everyone in the practice knows that’s my stance. So there are a few ethical issues, but most of those are pretty few and far between.

A lot of GP work isn’t really ‘medicine’ as such, but involves a lot of supporting people through life. People sometimes say to me, “I’d love to have a Christian GP” but I’m not sure about that. I think it was Martin Luther who said he’d “rather be governed by a competent Turk, than an incompetent Christian.” And I think that’s right. You shouldn’t want to be treated by a Christian doctor, but by a good one! The two are not mutually exclusive I hope!! If you come to see me with pneumonia, what I would say and what my atheist colleague would say to you would pretty much the same. However a lot of what I see is related to unhappiness, marital problems, which are often brought to the doctor for want of anyone else to take these issues to these days – especially as the churches are not the source of wisdom and support that they perhaps were a hundred years ago. So of course, what I say to a patient who has sadness and dissatisfaction with life may differ from what my non-Christian friend and colleague says. And occasionally my faith does come up. Now it wouldn’t be my role in the workplace to offer to pray for people when they are diagnosed with pneumonia or cancer. That said, there have been patents who are Christians and are aware that I am a Christian and asked me to pray for them. And inevitably if a patient asks for my advice my faith will shape what I say in some way. So for example a lot of people are attempting to be “awesome”. The gospel begins by saying, “Well, actually you’re not, and it’s OK – of course you’re not, but there is someone who was, and that is what will make it right, rather than you trying a bit harder or trying to achieve what you can’t!”

Sometimes when I ask a sad patient what they most want out of life they say, “I just want to be happy”. So ask them, “What makes you happy?”, and that’s where the problems come. I don’t think that happiness comes from looking within, but looking without. So I have occasionally said to someone, “Have you ever been to the top of a high mountain, or seen a wonderful rocky coastline with waves crashing majestically and thought, ‘could you sit there and look at that for ever?’” And they’ll often say yes! I’ll point out that they were happy, and it had nothing to do with them but rather they were admiring splendour, rather than being splendid themselves. Now if you want to be infinitely and eternally happy, you need something which is infinitely and eternally great and eternal to enjoy. At that point, where the conversation goes is up to the patient. If they ask, I’ll say that “to answer that, I’d have to involve my Christian faith, are you Ok with that?” If they say no, that’s it – but sometimes someone will want to know more and I reply, “Well I believe God is the one who is infinitely great and eternal and happiness can be found in Him. That doesn’t mean that you don’t try and do your best but also accepting that our best will never be enough.”

A lot of my writing in GP online forum’s picks up that theme, “you’re not amazing – and you don’t have to live on that constant conveyor belt of trying to prove that you are”. It’s Tomlin who said, “The trouble with the rat-race is that even if you win, you’re still a rat.”

The third issue is that sometimes when things just get crazy-busy; it is helpful to remember that God is in control of this, not me. God is ultimately responsible for the life of every patient, not me. I’ll do my bit, but finally he decides who lives and dies. That relives a lot of pressure because if it was all down to me it would be overwhelming. All my patients will ultimately die, and if trying to keep them all alive was all my responsibility that would be impossible, so it’s a relief not to have to carry that whole burden.

Solas: So you are clearly known as a Christian at work. What kind of reactions have there been to that?

PA: No one objects, I don’t get hostile comments from staff. My best-mate and colleague who is an atheist said this week, “So when they find life on Mars, how will that change your God-thing, then?” There will be questions to answer if there is! Another guy said to me as we Ieft for the Easter weekend, “Have a good weekend, oh no sorry, it’s Good Friday tomorrow, Christians are supposed to be miserable then!” He was being tongue-in cheek, I don’t get real hostility just some good natured gip!

It’s amazing how much people just do not understand the gospel though. If I say something wrong they’ll quip. “Oh, well, you won’t go to heaven now.” They think that if you do anything naughty you get disqualified! That’s something that concerns me too about patients who profess Christian faith – a lot of them still think that it’s functionally all about good works. I had someone recently tell me she was worried that God would reject her because she had been a smoker, and it was my privilege to tell her what the gospel really is.

When I share Christian insights in the “Resilient GP” group on Facebook, I get cheeky comments sometimes. I recently posted something comparing the “What would Jesus do” slogan with “What has Jesus done?” I got some disagreement, and Facebook isn’t usually a good forum for debate, but you can sow a few ideas there. So, very little antagonism.

I’ve had one complaint about talking about my faith with a patient which was sad. The complaint didn’t even come from the patient (who was very positive about it) but from a family member. My partners at work are all atheists, but they are happy for me to share my faith – as long as I do it sensitively and appropriately. On a couple of occasions they have sent patients to see me because they have come in with some kind of ‘religious’ issue.

Solas: Have you ever had anyone push back with any particular objections (such as faith is incompatible with science), or is it more “that’s nice for you but not for me’?

PA: Lots of the latter – that truth is subjective and you should just believe whatever you feel. My atheist colleague likes to debate science and suffering. I’ve thought the suffering issue through extensively and written on it. I’m less up to speed with the scientific issues, although I did read Richard Dawkins The God Delusion, and was amazed about how little he knew about Christianity. Then a lot of his criticisms of religion I would endorse too. These discussions are the result of a 24year long friendship. Even when I was called a “Bible-basher” last week by a colleague, it was with a laugh and a smile!

Interestingly some of the non-Christian staff I work with engage positively with my more overtly Christian posts online. There are plenty of bad things about Facebook, but one of the nice things is that I can post something and people can read it if they want to, or ignore it if they’d rather! But I think that it can be used to invite people to think and occasionally people have contacted me to ask more about the things I’ve posted about the gospel.

My Facebook presence is somewhat strategic. I wrote a series of posts for “Resilient GP” based on “The Christmas Carol” which went down really well. They weren’t overtly Christian posts. They were influenced by my Christian faith but weren’t directly Christian and got a really good response. But writing is not all about me, or how many “likes” I get. People need to like Jesus, not me!

So I decided to be more overtly Christian and the first time I did that I was a bit nervous. I did it winsomely, not obnoxiously – and having built up a little following I was interested to see if I would be heard saying something more Christian. I sometimes put up a link to my blog page too where there are a lot of direct Christian messages. At peteaird.org, there’s medical stuff, Christian stuff and some poetry too. I don’t preach Jesus every week on the “Resilient GP” forum, as that would be inappropriate as that is not the purpose of the group. Nevertheless, there are a lot of Drs who are struggling, and my faith is definitely something that has helped to make me resilient, and so I can share that. I don’t know how effective this has been, I can just be faithful.

Solas: What’s your motivation for sharing Jesus?

PA: It’s just such good news! I once went to a truly great Somerset Cricket game – it was amazing, and I told everyone about it. CS Lewis said, “We want to praise that which we delight in”, so why wouldn’t you want to talk about the best thing? The gospel is unquestionably the best news – eternally. If you love people then you don’t keep good news from them. Imagine if a Dr had a cure for cancer but was too embarrassed to tell people about it! I do want people to know. It’s not because I judge people, or want them to try harder or do better, it’s just the best news for them to hear. It’s important to make clear that I don’t think I’m better than them, but that I need forgiveness too.

Solas: What advice would you give to a younger Christian starting out as a GP who wants to be faithful to Christ there?

PA: Don’t leave it a long time before telling people that you are a Christian. It is much better to be up front from the beginning. If you don’t get a job because you are a Christian, just do the right thing anyway – God will decide whether or not you get the job. Be faithful to God, it’s not wrong to tell the truth and be yourself. Also, if all you ever talk about is your faith you won’t get very far. So, be interested in other things, and in people. You are a whole-person of which your Christianity is a major part and you need to represent that, rather than just irritate people if you only talk about one thing. Care about people even in small things, my colleagues disagree with me but don’t object to me – perhaps because I have lots of normal conversations with them too. Workplace evangelism starts with personal relationships, not sermons!

Solas: That is really helpful, thankyou!

PA: Lovely to speak you!

The Return of Genexis!

Genexis is a series of unique events which allow people to explore questions of God, meaning and purpose in the company of leading world scientists and academics who present simple evidence for a creator.  Genexis events have proved to be popular with people who are not committed Christians, as they provide an evidence-based case for a creator in a thoughtful environment; where they are invited to think, not pressured to ‘convert’.

This year’s live events in Coventry (Sept 20, 21, 22) and London (Sept 27, 28, 29) will feature contributions from Professor Tom Mcleish, Professor Holly Ordway, Professor Paul Davies, Professor John Lennox, Tom Holland FRSL, Dr Sharon Dirckx, Dr Andy Bannister from Solas, Rev. Stephen Foster and Professor NT Wright.

Every evening in this remarkable series of public events will feature a series of short, engaging talks on scientific, philosophical and historical questions and promises to inspire much further thought, exploration and conversation about the nature of our existence, what it means to be human and if the there is a Creator God who is relevant to these great questions.

At Solas we are delighted to be involved in Genexis events again in 2021, having been involved with some of the online Genexis Course during lockdown last year. We are convinced that Genexis’ work in opening up these profound conversations in the public square is really significant. Many people have huge questions around life, purpose and meaning – but nowhere to explore them, and Genexis provides this. Others are simply unaware that there is evidence to consider for the existence of God, or that many atheist assumptions are also up for debate –and Genexis provides that too.

More details about these fascinating events can be found at the Genexis website, and free tickets are available here.

PEP Talk Podcast With Kyle Beshears

What has driven the shift in recent years from hostility towards apathy in relation to the gospel? When people don’t care about the questions of God and faith anymore, what DO they care about? Answering that can help us return our conversations back towards the joy in our salvation and pique the interest of the apathetic.

With Kyle Beshears PEP Talk

Our Guest

Kyle Beshears is the campus pastor at Mars Hill Church in Mobile, Alabama and a PhD candidate at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. He has written articles for Themelios and the Evangelical Missiological Society Series on the relationship of apathy and belief in God, and is the author of Apatheism: How We Share When They Don’t Care. Read more at www.kylebeshears.com

About PEP Talk

The Persuasive Evangelism Podcast aims to equip listeners to share their faith more effectively in a sceptical world. Each episode, Andy Bannister (Solas) and Kristi Mair (Oak Hill College) chat to a guest who has a great story, a useful resource, or some other expertise that helps equip you to talk persuasively, winsomely, and engagingly with your friends, colleagues and neighbours about Jesus.

The Impossibility Gap

Some of my favourite places to speak at are venues like coffee shops, workplaces, or universities. After one such university event, where the Christian Union had asked me to talk on “Why did Jesus have to die?” we had an amazing time of Q&A after which I felt the Spirit nudge me to end the event by leading people who wanted to in a prayer to commit their lives to Jesus. It was an incredible evening and God was very much at work. But I remember that one particular evening not for how powerfully the Lord moved, but for a conversation afterwards. As we were packing up to leave, a campus ministry leader came up us and asked: “How did you do what you did there?”

“What do you mean?”, I replied.

“You just preached the gospel very openly then prayed, very publicly, and invited people to respond to Jesus—and you did that in a university meeting room. I didn’t think evangelism like that was possible in this day and age. How did you and your colleague do that?”

That’s not the first time I’ve heard that sentiment expressed: that evangelism simply isn’t possible. That a workplace, campus, group of people, or even our culture is so secular and so post-Christian that evangelism just doesn’t work anymore.

I confess I’ve occasionally fallen into the same way of thinking myself. A few years ago I became friends with Peter, a Christian GP. And I remember being very surprised when one day he casually remarked “I love being a GP, it creates so many fantastic opportunities for evangelism”. Without thinking, I said words to the effect of “Really? I thought the health service was so secular and any expression of religious faith so frowned upon, that evangelism just isn’t possible?” Those three little words just slipped out: evangelism isn’t possible.[1]

Why did I instinctively respond with incredulity? Why was that campus minister baffled by seeing evangelism take place on campus? Why do many of us (if we are honest) worry or doubt that evangelism is really possible in “this day and age”? I think it’s because there is a massive temptation to buy into the myth that the secular UK (or the West in general) is simply too difficult ground for the gospel. But is this actually true? And if we’re in danger of thinking this, how can we overcome the Impossibility Gap?

CHALLENGING THE MYTH OF IMPOSSIBILITY

Because the Impossibility Gap is so deep rooted in many of us (we haven’t deliberately adopted it, but we’ve become quietly and subtly infected by it), I want to hit it and hit it hard—so here are six powerful pieces of counter-evidence that taken together will, I hope, form a powerful corrective.

First, however tough a context for evangelism the secular West may be, Christianity has grown (and grown rapidly) in equally tough (or even tougher) contexts in the past. For instance, look at the growth of the Church in the first century. The first century Greek and Roman world was not easy, far from it. Yes, it was very religious, but religiously pluralistic—the pagan world had little time for the idea there was one God and that every other god was a false one. Add to that the ever daily threat and problem of persecution, as the young Church was seen as an increasing threat to the authorities. Yet despite those challenges—a hostile culture and hostile rulers—the Church grew from 120 people in AD33 to 31 million by AD350; or to put it even more dramatically, from 0% to 52.9% of the Roman Empire in 300 years.[2] The early Church didn’t look at the culture and think “impossible”, they looked at it and thought “What a challenge! Let’s follow the Spirit’s lead and see what happens”.

From the past, we can also look to the present. For today, Christianity is growing like wildfire in far tougher contexts than the West. Look at China, where the Church is growing exponentially despite the best attempts of the Communist Party to stamp it out, that there are probably about 120 million Christians in China. Indeed, China is on track to become the world’s largest Christian nation by the 2030s.[3] That growth has all happened in the past few decades. Or consider Iran, where a totalitarian Islamic regime rules with the iron fist of Sharia Law and has made conversion from Islam illegal. But despite arrests and torture, the Iranian church now numbers over a million and is the fastest growing church in the world.[4] There are similar stories across the Middle East. Christians in these terrifically difficult settings could easily say “Evangelism is impossible; it can’t be done!” but they haven’t and God is at work in amazing ways. Let’s be encouraged by and learn from their courage, faith, and example.

Third, sometimes the Impossibility Gap grows because we have a tendency to romanticise our own past. We imagine that churches were full to bursting in Victorian times (and before) and we pine for the lost Golden Age of Christianity, when our country was so thoroughly Christian it was like living in heaven on earth.[5] But that is far from the reality. In Victorian times, surveys of religious attendance show a very mixed picture. For example, Horace Mann, commenting on the 1851 Religious Census remarked that ‘a sadly formidable proportion of the English people are habitual neglecters of the public ordinances of religion’.[6] One can read contemporary reports of ministers grumbling how ‘There were only a dozen people in church on Sunday, and three of them were drunk’.

A little earlier in time and Wilberforce, that famous Christian MP and reformer, was so upset by the spiritual state of the country that in 1787 he wrote in his journal that ‘God Almighty has set before me two great objects, the suppression of the slave trade and the Reformation of Manners’[7] (he meant by the latter the spiritual reformation of his country). A few decades earlier still, John Wesley was so concerned by the religious state of the UK that he threw himself into the re-evangelism of the UK, covering over 250,000 miles on on horseback and preaching over 40,000 sermons as he sought to share Jesus.

It is clear: the past was not a Christian utopia, but as tough then as it is now, yet that didn’t hold back Wesley and others from faithfully preaching the gospel. And I’m thankful that they did: it’s because of that Great Chain of Witnesses which stretches down through the centuries that you and I eventually heard the gospel ourselves.

Fourth, it’s helpful to remember that the West is highly unusual. The secularism that we see in places like the UK, Europe, and North America are a cultural blip both historically and geographical. In most parts of the world today, religion is growing—humanity is becoming more not less religious and worldwide, atheism is in decline. According to the latest research from the well-respected Pew Research Centre, by 2060 the number of people identifying as atheists or agnostics will have declined to 12% (from 16% today).[8] And those patterns are increasingly being reflected in the UK through factors like immigration. Many of the largest churches in cities like London are now immigrant churches—and there’s a beautiful sign of God’s long-term provision in the way that those immigrant churches are now helping to re-evangelise the nation that evangelised them through the missionary movements of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

Fifth, remember that the UK and the West are not Christendom. Sometimes we can have such a myopic view of culture and history that we begin to assume that God’s plans and purposes for his Kingdom have the UK, or the US, or the West at their centre. And no wonder we then get distressed when those countries undergo seismic cultural shifts. But don’t beat yourself up too much: this is simply the same mistake that as intellectual a giant as St. Augustine made when, watching the Roman Empire fall (it was largely Christian by this point) he felt everything was over. Then Augustine suddenly had an epiphany: God’s purposes were not dependent on one culture, country, or Empire. Empires rise and empires fall but the work of God goes on; the gospel cannot and has not ever been pinned down to one culture.

In his book, Whose Religion is Christianity?,[9] African theologian Lamin Sanneh points out that Christianity is the only major religion whose cultural centre keeps shifting. Islam, for example, began and has remained an Arabic religion—Muslims read the Qur’an in Arabic, and pray in Arabic facing Mecca in Saudi Arabia. Or consider Buddhism—despite many postmodern westerners trying out Buddhism-lite, true Buddhism has largely remained an Asian faith. Atheism, which functions for many as a faux religion, is largely a Western construction and has remained so.

But Christianity, by contrast, looks very different. It began in the Middle East and rapidly spread outwards across the Roman Empire. It then spread eastwards into India (where the Mar Thoma Christians of Kerala trace their heritage back to St. Thomas), along North Africa, and upwards into Europe. With the Pilgrim Fathers it travelled across the Atlantic and became an American faith but now is growing so rapidly in China, Africa, and South America, that the centre of twenty-first century Christianity is the southern hemisphere. You can’t pin the gospel down to a culture. And that’s a hugely encouraging thought.

And then, sixth, we can easily overlook the fact that the Church is growing here in the UK. When I moved back to the UK from Canada in 2016, I quickly noticed that in the six years I’d been away, lots of green shoots of church growth had popped up. I kept meeting church leaders whose churches were growing—and in unusual places: inner city Liverpool, the stockbroker belt just outside the M25, or among Iranian immigrants. These are often the kind of places that are missed by surveys that focus just on the decline of old established churches.

I’m not alone in noticing this: a friend of mine, Sean Oliver-Dee, wrote a whole book about. Called God’s Unwelcome Recovery,[10] it tells the story not just of how God is at work in all kinds of places, but also why that story is less than welcome. One can understand why the secular media don’t welcome positive stories about the Church, but there’s the slightly sharper of question of why as Christians we sometimes don’t want to hear them. Could it be that we need a bit of wakeup call: after all, sometimes it’s easier to sit around in small huddles, telling ourselves horror stories of how bad things are, rather than getting out there and doing something—sharing Christ and serving our communities. When Christians do that, God seems to have a habit of showing up.

Furthermore, we can also miss the huge openness in our culture. When Solas partners with churches to put on accessible evangelistic events in neutral spaces like cafes, coffee shops, pubs, universities, or workplaces, Christians find it really easy to invite their friends and those friends often show up! There are incredible opportunities for evangelism in our culture if we are willing to step beyond the four walls of our churches, address the questions that people are really asking, and show how Jesus and the gospel are as relevant as they have always been.

OVERCOMING THE MYTH OF IMPOSSIBILITY

Those are six good reasons why we need to nail the coffin shut on the Impossibility Gap and then bury it, six feet under, and ideally lay down some concrete on top for good measure. Evangelism is not impossible—not in the UK, not in the West, not in any context. It may be difficult, it be tough, it may require some godly courage and willingness to follow the Spirit’s leading in new ways; but it certainly is not impossible.

But I also realise that the Impossibility Gap may not just have crept into our minds but also into our hearts and souls and that facts, helpful as they are, are not enough to rid us entirely from its icy grip and its frosty whisper “Can’t be done” in our ears. So how can we, personally, take steps to overcome the Impossibility Gap and inject more joy, excitement, and enthusiasm into our evangelism? Let me offer a few suggestions that may help.

First, try praying. Pray especially that God would give you greater confidence in his plans and purposes, especially his plans for the growth of his Kingdom. You might also read and pray your way through biblical passages that talk about God’s power and rule, such as Psalm 93—this a great confidence building activity.[11]

Second, start reading testimonies of what God is doing in people’s lives. Our friends at both Christianity Explored and Alpha have pages on their websites full of stories of how people came to faith in Jesus—it’s hugely encouraging to feed your mind and heart with these kinds of testimonies. We also regularly feature similar testimonies on the Solas website: for example, check out the stories of people like Christopher Yuan, Peter Byrom, Sarah Irving-Stonebraker, or Dez Johnston.

Third, take action. Get involved in evangelism, of any kind—either through something your church is doing, or by prayerfully committing to sharing Christ with friends, neighbours, or colleagues. Now this is point at which the Impossibility Gap may become really personal, because maybe on hearing my third suggestion some readers might think: “Even if the things that Andy says are true, I personally can’t do anything because God can’t use me. I that accept evangelism is possible in this country, but it’s not possible for me.” And if we asked you why, perhaps you would object that you are too young, or too weak in faith, or too inexperienced, or whatever.

I understand the emotional force of those objections, I really do. But don’t let them hold you back. Be encouraged, because when you read the Bible you discover that God used people with all kinds of weaknesses, failures, objections, and hang ups for his purposes. I would go so far as to suggest that I can’t think of a single example in scripture of a perfect evangelist who had everything all figured out and together.

For example, God used Abraham (a coward and a liar); Moses (knock-kneed with fear at the thought of speaking); Jacob (a thief and a cheat); Jonah (a racist who so hated his enemies, he didn’t want to preach to them); Rahab (a prostitute); David (an adulterer and murderer); the Gadarene demoniac (a social outcast); a bunch of frightened men and women, hiding out in fear of the authorities. If God was able to use all those people (and others equally messed up), he can certainly use you and me.

God is able to use even the smaller and the weakest to spread the good news of Jesus. A few years ago I was involved in a mission week at a major university. My colleagues and I worked with the Christian Union on the campus to bring the gospel to thousands of students. We would start each day with a prayer meeting and would encourage the 50 or so students who attended it to invite their friends to the various outreach events that day. One particular student, Lucy, a tiny slip of a girl, repeatedly said she hadn’t got the courage to invite any of her friends—she was terrified they would laugh at her or reject her: “It’s impossible, they’ll never come anyway” Lucy said sadly.

Finally by the Thursday of missions week, we had encouraged Lucy to pluck up the courage to invite just one friend to a lunchtime event that day, when the pastor from one of the nearby churches was going to speak on Christianity and sexuality. Her friend accepted the invite and came to the talk. During the Q&A she even asked a couple of questions and then hung around after the event to talk to the speaker. More questions followed—and more and more. For four hours she asked the speaker question after question until finally she said: “This all makes sense to me. How do I become a Christian?’ And there, at the back of the lecture theatre, Lucy and the pastor prayed with her friend to receive Christ.

The next day, at the morning prayer meeting, I have never seen such a rapid change in a person’s demeanour. From shy and timid, Lucy was now bold and confident—“God used me!” she kept repeating. “He used me! Me!” Despite her fear and trembling, Lucy had stepped up and the Lord had been faithful. And Lucy went from being the most timid person to one of the boldest student evangelists on campus I have seen, all as a result of that one experience of the Lord using her.

One of my favourite passages of scripture is Revelation 7:9-11 where John’s amazing vision of a “great multitude too numerous to count” are described, standing in heaven before God’s throne and worshipping. People, we are told, from every nation, language, people group, and culture. Which tells me that God plans to rescue and redeem people from every culture: from Iran to China, from ancient Greece to ancient Rome, right down to people from the secular post-Christian West. And the beautiful thing is that rather than do it himself, which he has the power to, God chooses to work through us, despite our fears and our inadequacies. God delights in using the weak things of the world—because it’s when we realise we don’t have the ability, we’re forced to rely on him, as we’re supposed to.

As C. S. Lewis would have put it, Aslan is very much on the move. And so the question is whether we going to stand, trembling on the sidelines and watch, or are we going to go with him. Maybe with shaky steps and fearful hearts and knocking knees, but nevertheless stepping forward, with confidence in our hearts and a song on our lips. Maybe a great missionary hymn to encourage us, such as this one:[12]

I, the Lord of sea and sky
I have heard my people cry
All who dwell in dark and sin
My hand will save
I, who made the stars of night
I will make their darkness bright
Who will bear my light to them?
Whom shall I send?

Here I am, Lord. Is it I, Lord?
I have heard you calling in the night
I will go, Lord, if you lead me
I will hold your people in my heart

I, the Lord of snow and rain
I have borne my people’s pain
I have wept for love of them
They turn away
I will break their hearts of stone
Give them hearts for love alone
Who will speak my word to them
Whom shall I send?

Here I am, Lord. Is it I, Lord?
I have heard you calling in the night
I will go, Lord, if you lead me
I will hold your people in my heart

I, the Lord of wind and flame
I will tend the poor and lame
I will set a feast for them
My hand will save
Finest bread I will provide
‘Til their hearts be satisfied
I will give my life to them
Whom shall I send?

Here I am, Lord. Is it I, Lord?
I have heard you calling in the night
I will go, Lord, if you lead me
I will hold your people in my heart

May this, indeed, be our prayer: “Lord, nothing is impossible for you! So here I am, Lord, please send me.”


[1]        Peter went on to explain how he’d just learnt to ask really good questions of patients: ‘Tell me about your diet, are you eating well?’; ‘And exercise: are you exercising properly?’; finally: ‘What about spirituality, are you finding space for that?’ Invariably patients reply along the line of: ‘Spirituality? What do you mean?’ And then Peter would say something like: ‘Well, you know, some people meditate; some people do yoga; in my case, I’m a Christian, I read the Bible, pray, and go to church—those kind of things.’ Peter went on to say that in the majority of cases, the patient would then ask: ‘You go to church, doctor?’ And now they’re asking him, and he is much freer to talk about his faith in reply to their questions.

[2]        A great account of the Early Church and its growth is F. F. Bruce, The Spreading Flame: The Rise and Progress of Christianity from its First Beginnings to the Conversion of the English. (Carlisle: Paternoster, 1982).

[3]        See https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/china/10776023/China-on-course-to-become-worlds-most-Christian-nation-within-15-years.html.

[4]        See https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/the-story-of-the-irans-church-in-two-sentences/.

[5]        This kind of romanticism is not helped by songs like Jerusalem. It’s worth remembering that the answer to the first verse is ‘No they didn’t’ and the answer to the second is ‘Fetch it yourself’.

[6]        Horace Mann, Census of Great Britain, 1851: Religious Worship in England and Wales, (Ge. Routledge), 1854, p. 93. Census of Great Britain, 1851: Religious worship in England and Wales, abridged from the official report made by H. Mann. 1854, Census of Great Britain, 1851: religious worship, England and Wales: reports and tables [1690] H.C., (1852-3), Vol. LXXXIX, 1, [1852-3] and Census of Great Britain, 1851: Religious worship and education: Scotland: reports and tables [1764] H.C., (1854), Vol. LIX, 301, [1854]. See the discussion at https://richardjohnbr.blogspot.com/2011/11/why-was-state-of-working-class-religion.html.

[7]        Cited in Kevin Belmonte, William Wilberforce: A Hero for Humanity (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2007) p. 100.

[8]        See ‘Size and projected growth of major religious groups, 2015-2060’, Pew Research Center, http://www.pewforum.org/2017/04/05/the-changing-global-religious-landscape/pf-04-05-2017_-projectionsupdate-00-07/.

[9]        Lamin Sanneh, Whose Religion is Christianity?: The Gospel Beyond the West. (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2003).

[10]       Sean Oliver-Dee, God’s Unwelcome Recovery: Why the New Establishment Wants to Proclaim the Death of Faith (Oxford: Lion Hudson, 2015).

[11]       I can also highly recommend the 30-day devotional book, Confident, published by Keswick Ministries; it’s a brilliant series of short daily Bible studies designed to help grow your confidence in God.

[12]       Dan Schulz, Here I am Lord. There’s a great version you can watch and listen to here: https://youtu.be/mgLwH5RdtPk.

The Christian Education Project & Solas

In something of a new departure for Solas, we have been asked to collaborate with “The Christian Education Project” who are providing resources for schools about Christianity specifically designed for use in the English GCSE curriculum.

The project is run by Helen Mullis-Kunda who used to be a full-time RE teacher in London. She says that while the RE curriculum is very rich in topics (including Sin and Salvation, Atonement, Grace, The Incarnation, The Trinity, The Role of Christ in Salvation and Philosophical Arguments for and against God) there was a need to provide new resources to explain them clearly and show their relevance to teenagers.

Based in the London Borough of Redbridge, the Christian Education Project has been especially helpful to teachers and schools from other faiths who have welcomed assistance from Christians in this area. Christianity is a compulsory element in the RE curriculum. Islamic state schools in London have been especially interested in accessing these materials and training conferences as they have appreciated assistance in this aspect of the curriculum from Christians.

The Christian Education Project is currently preparing a library of video clips on YouTube for teachers to use. There will be 60 videos in total, and will explore various aspects of Christian ideas, ethics and lifestyle. Andy Bannister from Solas has been involved in the video resources on the arguments for and against God, and in some of the differences between Christianity and Islam. Some teachers particularly expressed the desire to understand more about how Jesus is understood in the two faiths. Andy, who is a Christian but holds a doctorate in Islamic Studies, is ideally placed to help with this.

Helen Mullis-Kunda commented that one of the great encouragements she has had has been that these resources have changed the delivery of RE from being “dry”, to really showing the impact that faith has in people’s lives.

Solas has been delighted to be involved in this project. It’s really important for young people who have little knowledge of Christianity to see what it is really about, and encounter some Christians with real faith and life stories. Helen and the Christian Education Project are doing strategic work, and it’s been great to work alongside them.

The videos (including those from Andy Bannister) will be published here:

Solas Rewinds – Can We Be Good Without God?

Solas Rewinds through the Short Answers archive to bring you Episode 8 – “Can We Be Good Without God?” in which Andy reminds us that to objectively consider ourselves as “good” we need some sort of external reference, which really only God can provide.

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Frontlines / Christians at Work : The Police Officer

For this edition of Frontlines, Gavin Matthews spoke to Keith Evans, a police sergeant. He spoke frankly about the sometimes crushing stresses of policing, the faithfulness of God; and the day one of his colleagues became a Christian.

Solas: Hi Keith! Tell us a little about your job and what it involves.

KE: I’m a police sergeant with Police Scotland, working in Western Argyll. I’m in charge of cops across two different police stations – Lochgilphead and Campbeltown where I’m the patrol supervisor for an area the size of Cornwall. My job is about managing day-to-day resources, dealing with incidents, and being the first-level line manager for all my staff. That involves quality assuring their work, making sure they are making good decisions and reporting up the chain of command.

Solas: Of all those roles, what do enjoy most about your job?

KE: I said to my Mum and Dad when I was nine, “I want to be a police officer” – it’s what I have always wanted to do. For me policing is much more than just a job for which I get paid; as a committed Christian it’s my calling too. I love helping people, and this job is primarily about that. At 3AM when a farmer has had a quad-bike stolen, and we’ve recovered it and got the thief locked up and the farmer comes up and shakes your hand and says, “thankyou for all your hard work, this means a lot to us” that’s great.

Solas: Obviously, you are doing a very challenging, demanding job. Tell us about some of the challenges you face, and how your faith helps you to navigate those.

KE: In 2017 I had a run of about six weeks when the pressures were overwhelming. In one month I dealt with six road deaths as the senior investigating officer. Two of those incidents were in 24hrs – and that happened twice. On Easter Saturday a motorcyclist died after a crash, and we did CPR on him for an hour – unsuccessfully. Then on the Easter Sunday there was a horrific crash on the A1, and we witnessed appalling suffering, injuries and death. Traffic police officers see some very distressing scenes indeed. Then, that week – when I was already struggling – as I awoke, my phone flashed next to the bed. My colleague on the night shift had texted me to say I had to attend a double fatality on a dual carriageway. Two hours after seeing those two women who had been killed, I completely fell over. I had a nervous breakdown and was desperately unwell. Chief Inspector Andy Piper heard something in my voice that day and phoned me to ask if I was OK, and I just wept. I was eventually diagnosed with complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (c-PTSD) and received eight months of treatment. So – when you ask about the stresses of the job, I immediately think of 2017. I was really unable to function, couldn’t look after my children, and had anxiety and panic attacks, it was a very difficult time. A ‘year from hell’, really.

But through all my illness, God had his hand on absolutely everything. So the first person I saw when I got back to the police station that day was my boss Rebecca – who is a Christian. She was able to get me home and make sure I was safe. When the police allotted me a trauma counsellor, the one I was sent to was a Christian. I was able to pray with my wife, with my boss and my counsellor – which was a great help. So, these are just of examples of the way in which – despite everything we went through – God had his hand on everything we did. When I was off sick and in a very bad way, I was invited to preach at a wedding. Standing in front of the church I actually felt OK. I felt like my old self again and my wife said, “it’s like there’s nothing wrong with you”. I said, “I think it’s God telling me that I’m going to be OK”. So although I wouldn’t wish PTSD on my worst enemy; I’ve always had this sense that God has got it, and God’s hand has been on us.

When we moved to Scotland, we sailed through the application process, despite the fact that I’d had had a mental illness and my wife had a knee injury! There was a police station who needed a sergeant and a constable, where we found a school the kids love, a house and immediately felt at home at Lochgilphead Baptist Church. God has had His hand on us – which is hard to explain to people without faith. But now I am here, and this is undoubtedly the right place, where God wants me to be.

Solas: Thanks for sharing that, because there’s a vulnerability to your story – but also a testimony of God’s faithfulness. So, now as a Christian, what difference does your faith make to the way you approach work?

KE: When I first joined in 1996 there was this ‘elephant in the room’ – how was I going to tell my new colleagues that I was a Christian?! When you are 22 years old, and new in the job – that is quite daunting.  I was reading a Christian book at the time, which I accidentally dropped in front of my new sergeant in the locker room. He picked it up and said, “I’ve read this” and told me he was a Christian too. So it went round the team that I was a “god-botherer” from the start! Everyone on our team had a nickname and I was “Dibley” as in “the Vicar of Dibley”. I don’t think that’s because I look like Dawn French!

More importantly people trust me to tell the truth; my word is always my word, because of my faith. I tell the truth, even when it’s not to my advantage to do so. Several years ago when someone raised a malicious complaint against me, the superintendent threw it in the bin – because it contained the allegation that I’d lied. And he knew that couldn’t be the case. Honesty, integrity, looking after people’s welfare – my faith affects everything I do. Sometimes, in the middle of the stresses of the job, I pause and pray; and can approach the task with calmness. I’d even write in the incident logs “taking 5 minutes to pray”, so that I can centre-myself and move on.

Solas: So how have people at work reacted to your faith?

KE: So being called “Dibley” – some people think that is a form of bullying, but I disagree because they have singled out something in me which is exactly the thing I want to share! Others have called me ‘padre’ and that never bothered me either. When I was introduced to a new team as a Christian someone said, “Oh no – it’s going to be kumbaya and hugs!!” But actually it was great, because that team was facing some issues with bullying amongst things. After about six months the Inspector asked me “What have you done, this team has transformed!” and I replied, “you know what I’m going to say, don’t you!” and he replied, “Yeah – you’re going to say that you prayed about it!!” And yes – that’s what we’d done!

So, I’ve never had any real grief about sharing my faith. And I’ve been able to have some great conversations about it. I was sat some years ago with leaders from the Muslim and Pagan police groups, having dinner, laughing and chatting. It sounds like the start of a joke, “there was a Pagan, a Muslim and a Christian in a police station…” We didn’t agree on everything, but we got on – and that’s how it is. Everyone is different and if you are not rude and abrasive and hitting people on the head with the New Testament, people respect that. If they want to know more, they will ask but if they don’t want to talk about it – that’s OK. However in 25 years of policing, people have always accepted that I’m a Christian.

Solas: And have you had opportunities to talk about the content of your Christian faith with people?

KE: Yes. Now obviously you have to be very careful in the Police service – where you have to be neutral about stuff. However, in private conversations with individuals or groups, if people ask you– you are allowed to answer their questions and share what you believe. There was one officer who had been unwell, and was seeking God, who asked me for a Bible. Then one day in his living room, when we having a cup of coffee he said “I want to become a Christian – how do I do that?” So he Googled “sinner’s prayer” – and there in his living room, while I was in full uniform I laid hands on him and we prayed. He became a Christian right there standing in his living room!

I always keep an Australian Police Bible in my locker – it’s my prize possession, and as long as I’m careful, respectful and responsible I can share it.

Solas: What motivates you to want to share your faith in Jesus with others?

KE: I just see the change in people who have come to faith! Firstly in myself. In our family. I told my Mum she was “mental” for becoming a Christian! But I was willing to go to her baptism and made some friends at the church and I found that there was something different about these people which I couldn’t put my finger on. One couple, called Mick and Jean regularly welcomed me into their home. Then one day when I was ill, I allowed the pastor to pray for me – standing outside the church in the pouring rain – and when he prayed I had an encounter with Jesus which changed me forever.

Then I’ve seen offenders come to faith and been changed. I’ve known people who once hated me because of my uniform, hug me and say “I love you brother” – because of the change that Jesus brings. One ex-offender came to a Christian meeting I was at with the Christian Police Association. He said, “don’t’ let me near them – I hate the police”. Carl Beech preached on the cost of following Jesus, and this guy responded, put his faith in Jesus and said to Carl, “I have to give up my anger and my pride – can you arrange for me to hug a cop?” So in the next meeting when Carl told the story, this guy came forward and a dozen policemen ran onto the platform and hugged him – in front of 3,000 people. We picked him up and prayed for him! There is nothing else in the world that can change someone like that in less than 24 hrs!

So, I’ve been changed by the gospel – and I’ve seen others changed too. I think that sharing our faith is life and death and eternity. It’s what we should want for all our mates – which is why I am not shy about telling them! I want other people to experience what I have experienced.

Solas: Finally then, what advice would you give to a young Christian entering the police force who wants to be faithful to Christ there?

KE: Actually I’ve just had a new recruit who is a Christian start on my team two weeks ago! I said to him, “don’t hide your light under a bushell”. Be up-front about who you are, because that is where credibility comes from. Never make a secret of who you are –so when people say ‘what are you doing at the weekend?’ say “Church”, because then they might ask you why. Just being visible as a Christian is enough to move some people towards asking questions about your faith. And always be willing to give an answer.

I heard about two cops in another office, who worked right next to each other for ten years and neither knew that the other was a Christian! That can’t be right. Share it – be up front, you don’t have to ‘bash the drum’, just be who you are. That’s where credibility comes from and that is what touches people.

Solas: Thanks for talking to us Keith!

The Importance of Pre-Evangelism: Andy at Culduthel

Andy renewed our friendship and fellowship in the gospel with Culduthel Christian Centre in Inverness recently. It’s a church we have a close relationship with at Solas, and Andy Bannister went back there recently for a weekend of ministry. This took place when the meeting and travel restrictions prevented him making the long trip up the A9 and so zoomed in from his study in Dundee.

Andy’s first talk was on the uniqueness of Jesus Christ in a world of religions. The aim of that talk was to show folks both the unique message, and the unique person of Jesus; that both He and his gospel are quite apart from other truth claims.

The other meeting Andy took part in up there was an open online Q&A, on which he was joined by Culduthel’s pastor Alistair Macleod, and Angus Jamieson another of their leaders. The three of them interviewed each other, asking questions about how they each came to faith initially – but then also why they are still followers of Jesus today, weaving in a little bit of apologetics as they went. Then the floor was opened for a good time of Q&A.

Andy said, “These were a really lovely pair of evenings which I really enjoyed doing with the Culduthel folks. The key thing was that they used these sessions to launch their Christianity Explored course the following week. They wanted to do a bit of pre-evangelism, and then offer the course to people who wanted to explore the issues further. I was really glad to hear that twenty or so people are now doing the course too.”

One of our observations at Solas is that there are many people who are interested in spirituality, many who are interested in Jesus – and are asking serious questions. Many of them are just unsure about where to start looking. Take the Bible for instance, which can be fairly intimidating for the uninitiated. If someone opens it at random and stumbles in Leviticus, with no frame of reference, that’s going to be difficult for them. It’s important to help people see that if Jesus really is “the way, the truth and the life” then the whole thing centres on Him, and that’s where to start.

The other side of the story that Andy, Angus and Alistair tried to convey is the difference that Jesus makes to life today. They each sought to keep the focus on Jesus as they explained why as a writer, businessman and pastor respectively – they find that Jesus makes sense of life today.

There is sometimes a gap in our churches in this area of pre-evangelism. There are people who are gently interested, but are perhaps completely unfamiliar with the Christian faith, and interpret the world through a whole series of different lenses. Learning to begin by intriguing these folks with Jesus can lead onto more searching conversations.

Andy Bannister commented, “A church’s evangelism strategy should look a bit like a funnel. It needs to be as wide-as-possible at one end to draw in as many people as possible through all manner of events in which they form relationships with people in their community. They can be low-key things such as parent and toddler groups, community BBQ’s, charity quiz-nights or carol services. Secondly you need some pre-evangelism events. The funnel narrows a bit as people who are interested in going further with Jesus are identified, there maybe questions to be asked here about the purpose of life. Then thirdly the funnel narrows a bit more as people who really want to know can do Alpha or Christianity Explored. Finally of course, those who are persuaded, and who come to faith in Christ don’t stop there- but move through into discipleship.”

What is sometimes missing is that middle section, the pre-evangelism between the social event and the evangelistic course. It was great to be able to deliberately work on that with our friends at Culduthel in Inverness.

The Knowledge Gap 2 : fearing that ‘Killer Question’

The fear of being asked the unanswerable question has killed thousands of gospel-conversations before they have even got going! Worrying that we might be asked the killer-question we dread, we have shut down conversations with spiritual potential as if they were moments of threat rather than opportunity. Many of us want to speak about purpose, hope, meaning, truth and Jesus, but fearing getting embroiled in science, suffering and sexuality we have chosen to say nothing, in case we say anything ineptly.

PROCESSING MY FEARS AND FAILURES

Thinking through times when I have not grasped opportunities to speak out for Jesus and his gospel, I am struck by two things: The first is gratitude that God’s love is not contingent upon my performance, but flows to me through Christ from His gracious character. So when I look back on some shocker of a conversation; analysing my failures is then an opportunity to grow, not to sit miserably under a cloud of condemnation. The second thing is thinking through why I have failed to speak up. In many instances, especially when in the company of people far smarter than me, my witness has been stifled by fear of being asked the ‘killer question’.

The questions I have dreaded being asked have varied with time and company; but have included things such as Old Testament violence, the Bible’s sexual ethics, science and faith, and the reliability of the Bible itself. Being asked a question about science by a scientist – when you are not one – is intimidating; as it is in any situation where the questioner brings more knowledge to the conversation than you. It is perhaps even more-scary when their impressive mind is coupled to deep emotional or identity commitments which are in conflict with scripture. If like me, you instinctively avoid even the mildest disagreements about trivial matters with friends and neighbours and are more wired for ‘flight’ than ‘fight’, then the thought of the killer-question is enough to make the pulse quicken and coherent-thought made impossible as the cheeks redden and unhelpful quantities of adrenaline flood the blood-stream.

SAVOURING OUR LIMITATIONS

In The Knowledge Gap Part 1. David Nixon encouraged us to identify the questions we wrestle with and provided us with a host of resources to help us start to construct helpful answers to killer questions. He’s right – we need to be thinking, and learning and grappling with issues so that we can speak well for The Lord in the current moment.

But we are never going to have exhaustive knowledge of every good apologetic argument across every field. We can never go into the world with impregnable intellectual defences. If you spent years learning all the arguments relating to science and faith, you could still be floored by a question about language or philosophy you’d never considered. Or you could invest all your time in developing an apologetic for biblical ethics, and be pressed to answer a question about the origins of the universe!

RESPONDING TO KILLER QUESTIONS

So does this mean that we all have to shut-up and leave evangelism to Christians like “Dr Dr Dr” Alister McGrath with his multiple PhD’s across three disciplines? The answer I have found is ‘no’ – I can still have a part to play in proclaiming the gospel – even to people smarter than me; without being terrified of the ‘killer-question’. I have found four things liberating here.

  1. THE POWER OF “I DON’T KNOW”

The last time I had seen Richard was when he and I were students, several decades ago. He had gone on to a successful career in law, then had become a pastor and was now active in sharing the gospel.  When I met him again he told me, “When I was a lawyer, one of my main jobs was in preparing a witness for giving evidence in court – which is for most people a difficult and terrifying experience.” Richard went on to explain that he sometimes got witnesses to practice saying, “I don’t know” under high-pressure questioning. The reason was simple, Richard explained: “Our tendency under pressure is to appear smart, or to guess the right answer (because we want to please the questioner or the judge) or to embellish and add details that were not required or in the worst case – not actually true.  If we do that, and are caught doing so, the judge is allowed to throw out all of our evidence and disregard everything we say because we are not reliable witnesses”.

Admitting what you don’t know – protects the reliability of your witness about things that you do! I find that thought totally liberating in my gospel conversations. I suppose I had thought that in sharing the gospel I was like a barrister, preparing and presenting the case, assembling all the arguments and evidence and pressing for conviction. That is simply too hard for me to manage and I am intimidated by the thought. In Richard’s example I am not the lead prosecutor however, I am a witnesses charged simply with passing on what I do know, what I have seen, and what I have learned and experienced. The Holy Spirit is leading the case, and calling all kinds of people to the stand!

Richard concluded: “Saying I do not know the answer, may provide a weakness in that particular part of the case but all is not lost, in fact quite the opposite – it can mean that the witness is seen as reliable and authentic in other areas.“ I had thought that “I don’t know” was perhaps a permissible admission of failure. Richard showed me that it can also be a powerful commitment to honesty.

The complete case for the Christian faith is not owned by any one individual but by the whole church, and so we can follow up our “I don’t know” answer with– “but I can find out more and get back to you if you are interested”. One of the purposes of Solas is to provide somewhere you can go to find answers to share with people. That’s why we have material on science, sexuality, purpose, meaning, language, maths, beauty and so forth. Please do get in touch if you’d like a steer around a particular question. If we don’t know the answer, we will know people who do!

  1. HEARTS AND MINDS

The second thing I have to remember is that we are not just in the business of winning arguments, but in seeing people’s hearts changed. Very often the arguments people are willing to listen to are selected by their hearts, and prior commitments, not by some process of detached rationality. Asking people to believe that God is good (in the face of suffering and evil) or that his word promotes our flourishing (if it confronts our idols) is a matter of “taste and see that the Lord is good[i]” as much as it is “come let us reason together”[ii].

That is not to downplay the mind, or to suggest that bringing the very best thinking to bear on a topic is not critical – it is! However, it is not in itself enough. I recently interviewed Dr Peter J. Williams, the noted biblical scholar, for a Solas article. He said to me, “remember that knowledge is morally structured” – because two people can see the same evidence and reach opposite conclusions. He pointed to the cross of Christ as the prime example because at the same moment that God most clearly reveals his love and glory – another person sees that same cross as a curse or a failure. God is both hidden and revealed in the same scene.

This means that the person asking the “killer question” needs more from me than a smart answer. They also need to know that I have listened to them, understood the logical force of their objection, and felt its emotional pull and sensed that they matter to me because they matter to God. I have discovered that running away from hard questions does more damage to people’s hearts than to their minds. Prayerful, thoughtful engagement with the person asking the question is a vital (and achievable) addition to the power of “I don’t know”.

  1. THE UNIQUENESS OF TESTIMONY

In comparison to what we don’t know – there are things that every Christian does know. That obviously applies to our thinking, there are areas where have thought deeply about the answers to questions and can share those. I spoke recently to a Christian GP who told me he’s thought long and hard about the suffering question and loves discussing it.

Sharing what we do know also applies to our knowledge of scripture. In an early edition of the Solas PEPtalk Podcast, the guest Sarah Yardley said that because she is soaked in scripture, when she chats to friends and neighbours she can naturally refer to what she has read, in connection with what they are talking about.

Another hugely significant thing we all know is our own story – our testimony. We know how we came to faith and why we believe. As witnesses we are not required to know every answer to every mystery; but we are able to know and own our own story and tell people what we have understood and experienced. Many people think that a ‘good testimony’ is a dramatic one (or at very least involve repentance from some form of criminality) and that most of our less surprising testimonies are by default less helpful.  Yet the importance of our testimony is in its truthfulness not its shock-factor. Our story is important to our friends because it is what happened to us. It is our witness statement which we can faithfully report which will resonate profoundly with people most like us.

4. SEEK AND YOU WILL FIND

Jesus promised us that when we seek we will find, that is that ultimately that we will find Him. Apologetics and grappling with questions and objections is only ever pre-evangelism; clearing away the rubble to help people in their seeking. We can pass that promise on to people who ask us difficult and troubling questions, to which we don’t know the answers. Seek answers, seek truth, seek Jesus – and you will find Him. We don’t have perfect or exhaustive knowledge, but we do know Jesus, and can help people to find Him. The Christian faith contains the most compelling arguments for the origins, purpose, meaning, value and future of us all – but yet the central feature of our faith is not being right about stuff – but being “in Christ”[iii].

We can confidently, prayerfully and joyfully share with the world what we have seen, and experienced; even as we are still learning. Fear of the unanswerable question should not be allowed to control us. We don’t know it all; but we do know the one who knows it all – and he gives evermore reasons to trust him throughout our lives.


[i] Psalm 34:8

[ii] Isaiah 1:18

[iii] Galatians 3:26-8

Hereford Confident Christianity conference report

John and Steve, warm and enthusiastic hosts

In a first for Solas, we were invited to lead a full Confident Christianity conference entirely online, in partnership with Hereford Baptist Church, Putson Baptist and Ross Baptist churches. We do understand why other churches have opted to postpone their conferences until after the pandemic; but it was great to see what we could manage together via the internet. John & Steve from Hereford Baptist hosted the day with great warmth and enthusiasm, while Solas’ Tim Allyn handled production duties which was no small task with hosts and a band in Hereford, and speakers in Dundee, London and Belfast!

Andy Bannister’s crash-course in conversational evangelism

Confident Christianity conferences exist to help Christians to speak more naturally, faithfully and winsomely about Jesus with their friends, colleagues and neighbours – and are always partnerships between local churches and Solas. These conferences always contain a devotional element, because genuine mission always flows out of worship. They also contain some helpful training in conversation and communication. Andy Bannister’s talk “How to talk about Jesus without looking like an idiot” is a crash-course in conversational evangelism, and he presented a new updated version of this talk at the Hereford conference.

Communicating truth in a ‘post-truth world’

Solas associate Kristi Mair took the second session of the day, and opened up the whole area of post-truth. She examined the contemporary cynicism about truth, and explored ways in which Christians can confidently, yet wisely, handle God’s truth in our context today.

Of course, we know that when we don’t hide our faith – but talk openly about it people raise objections. So in Confident Christianity conferences we like to look at common objections to our faith and think about how we might address them.  Solas speaker Gareth Black did exactly that around the question of suffering. While not trivialising the experience of suffering, Gareth looked at the total inadequacy of Atheist responses to it, and the hope that can be found in Jesus in the middle of a broken world. Hope in Christ is not a delusion, unlike the false hopes offered by the world.

Andy Bannister led the final session of the morning, looking at the whole question of human value and dignity. His talk entitled “Are we matter or do we matter?” explored the unique way in which the Christian faith explains the value of humanity, from creation in God’s image to salvation in Jesus.

Taking your place in God’s mission

After the lunch break Gareth pulled all the various strands of the conference together with an inspiring message about the parable of the talents, and God’s calling and equipping for mission. Then John from Hereford chaired a lively time of Q&A, in which the Solas team fielded questions on things such as sharing the gospel with Muslim friends, communicating truth to people who are relativists, the Holocaust and human evil, processing the failures of the church, developing an inviting culture in the Christian community, the hiddenness of God, Genesis, science and evolution. Contextualising the gospel, and how to make the first steps in representing Jesus at school, work and home.

The Solas team loved working with the guys from Hereford! Kristi Mair said, “It was a delight to be involved in the Confident Christianity conference in Hereford. The host church did an excellent job of facilitating the day, and we were thrilled to be able to engage with such thoughtful questions. I came away from the day giving great thanks to the Lord. At a time when in person events are not possible, this conference reminded me of the distinct privilege it is to be able to encourage each other through online training days such as these.”

Andy Bannister commented, “The Confident Christianity Conference Hereford Baptist with Putson and Ross Baptist Churches too) was the first time Solas had tried an online version of our popular apologetics conference and we were thrilled how well it went. We had a lively, engaged audience (who submitted some brilliant questions in the Q&A). Video conference meant we could bring together a fantastic team from across the country, which let us tackle a range of crucial topics — from practical stuff on how to share your faith more naturally to key topics like suffering, truth, and atheism. The key organising church were incredibly positive and have already invited Solas back for an in person event next year!

Gareth Black seemed to have enjoyed the experience too – his first online Solas conference! We had hundreds of views online, on Facebook and YouTube, and really good engagement via Pigeonhole in the final hour long session of Q&A. The questions were insightful, profound and pastorally significant too. Obviously people were wrestling with doubts and with reconciling their faith with some of the arguments they have heard from friends. Others were looking for practical advice on how to actually get going in everyday evangelism. The Hereford churches were lovely to work with and really ought to be commended for their vision, and courage in doing the conference this way. All in all it was a great day, the church seemed to be encouraged and we were able to show that Jesus and his gospel is credible and reliable; and that personal confidence in Him can spill-over into effective communication of that faith in really persuasive, meaningful and respectful ways among non-Christian friends. I was really grateful to be part of it.

However, we’ll leave the final word to pastor Steve Ansell of Hereford Baptist. “Working with Solas has been an absolute delight and I am so glad we decided to continue with hosting the Confident Chritianity Conference virtually. Though technically challenging, with wonderful support from Solas’ Tim Allyn, the conference ran seamlessly. Andy, Kristi and Gareth were inspiring speakers and we hope this is the beginning of a fruitful ongoing relationship. A massive thank you to everyone at Solas”

If you would like to find out more about bringing a Confident Christianity conference to your church or town, either in-person or online. Click here. We’d love to help!

Frontlines / Christians at Work: The Council Planning Manager

in this edition of Frontlines, Gavin Matthews spoke to Steve Matthews (no relation!) who works for Sefton Council in the North of England. Local government might appear to be a place which is hostile to Christian witness, but the workplace Christian group there has many opportunities, as Steve explains.

Solas: Tell us a little about your job? What are your roles and responsibilities?

SM: I am Planning Manager within the Planning Department at Sefton Council. I manage a number of teams providing different aspects of the planning service. I co-ordinate reporting the more contentious planning applications to the monthly meetings of Planning Committee.

Solas: What’s the best part of your job?

SM: I love trying to get the best out of people, helping them to do their jobs to the best of their ability. I often have to deal with complains about our service – when things go wrong or people feel aggrieved by planning decisions. It is a privilege to try to respond positively to these issues and to improve our service where we need to. I really enjoy the working relationship with Councillors.

Solas: What are some of the challenges that you face at work – and how does your faith in Christ help you to navigate those?

SM: Managing people is not straightforward and it can be difficult to be even-handed in my dealings with the team. I have been challenged that my work is actually part of my worship so I know that God is intensely interested in all I do and that it matters to him. So I bring each day to him and ask him to guide me through it.

Solas: Does being a Christian make a difference to the way you approach work?

SM: Yes – no problem is insurmountable with God’s help. And if things go well it is good to remember that it is God who gives success. I trust God to help me order my priorities, to know how to handle problems most effectively, and strategies for relating to individual people. I have found it’s important to praise colleagues when they do well, and to admit it quickly when I get things wrong.

Solas: Do people you work with know that you are a Christian? How do they react to that?

SM: My colleagues know I am a Christian. We have a white board on which we write when we are out of the office. When I was working in the office, I would jot down on the board when I was at the Christian group meeting on Thursday lunchtimes. Colleagues with whom I have never had an opportunity to talk about my faith would say ‘I know you’ve got your group meeting coming up now – I’ll speak to you when you get back’.  I have put up a poster about our Christian group on the office notice board and publicity about Alpha.

Solas: Have you ever had opportunities to share your faith with people you know through work? What things have helped you to have good conversations about faith? Did you deliberately set about to have these conversations, or did they occur naturally?

SM: Yes, in small ways, offering to pray for people in times of crisis. This has been natural as people know I am a Christian. Our Christian workplace group was invited to put up a display about Easter in the foyer of our Council offices. I had the opportunity to invite some of my colleagues passing through the foyer to write a thought or prayer related to an Easter theme (e.g. suffering, injustice) and to attach it to the display. I am praying that as I try to model the Christian faith at work I will get more opportunities to speak to people about it personally.

Solas: How do people react when you talk about your faith in Jesus? Interested? Angry? Apathetic? Do they ever raise objections…. What were they and how did you respond?

SM: Colleagues are often apathetic … most have said ‘No’ to Alpha when we ran it a few years ago, though one or two have come along. I am disappointed that I haven’t had that many in-depth conversations with people about faith, though hugely encouraged when one colleague decided to come to Alpha a few years back when I was sure he wouldn’t be interested! When we offered to pray for our senior management team, one of them replied with specific prayer requests and wrote about how delighted he was to have this support from the workplace Christian group in the staff bulletin that goes to everyone we work with.

Solas: Why do you want to talk to colleagues and friends about Jesus?

SM: Jesus offers forgiveness from the past, purpose in the present and a hope for the future. This is such good news for everyone – why wouldn’t we want others to know? This is especially so during Covid-19 when people may be anxious and fearful, and are more likely to be open to thinking about all that is going on around them and why. The challenge is finding ways to open up conversations with colleagues. We are planning to run an online Alpha in Spring 2021 to give people an opportunity to find out about the Christian faith.

Solas: What advice would you give a young Christian entering your field of work who wants to be faithful to Christ there?

SM: Take it step by step – God will open doors for you. Be yourself, be natural. Look for ways to bless your colleagues – be genuinely interested in them and their families and how they are doing in their work. Making a coffee for someone when they’re under pressure or leaving chocolate at their desk if they’re having a bad day (in the days we worked in an office!) goes a long way. In these days when tolerance is such a prized virtue, people are very open to the idea of faith even if they might think it is just your thing.
I would encourage young Christians to look out for other Christians at work and to try to join a Christian group or start one. There are tremendous opportunities to influence an organisation when you meet and pray with other Christians. Transform Work UK will help to support you in this. Go for it, you have nothing to lose!

Solas: Thanks for chatting to us Steve!

“How to approach scripture” – Gareth Black at Ulster University CU

I recently had the privilege of speaking to the Christian Union at Ulster University (Belfast Campus). I have spoken to the CU a couple of times previously, but this time they had asked me to come and teach them the entire Book of Ruth as part of a series they were doing on Inspiring Characters in the Bible. The Book of Ruth is one of my absolute favourite books of scripture. Yet more than simply my love for the subject matter, I wanted to take up this opportunity to help these students engage with the bible in a deeper way than they often do, allowing our interactive session to help them glean (no pun intended!) valuable tips and methods for how to get the most out of bible study for themselves. Central to this was teaching them to ask questions of the text. So often many of us find that we don’t get much out of scripture precisely because we don’t know what we should be looking for and, therefore, end up engaging with the text without looking for anything in particular. We need to remember that although the Bible is certainly more than a book, it is not less than a book and, therefore, we need to effectively employ all the normal approaches and skills of comprehension that we would to any other book if we are to discover its message.

Strangely, many of us all too often fail to do this when it comes to the bible because we have an often unconscious assumption that, because we are engaging with the holy and living word of God, it somehow should mysteriously speak to us without our employment of these basic approaches to understanding literature. I have found time and time again – especially when engaging with students and teenagers who feel the expectation that they should be getting lots out of scripture when they read it but, if they are honest, don’t when they read it – that if you can help people know how to engage with scripture by asking the right questions, such as “Does the author state why he is writing?”, “What does the text actually say (before we think about meaning or application)?”, and “Why might these things be said in this book and not in another book of the bible?”, scripture begins to come alive and speaks with authority into their lives as they begin to experience the wisdom, coherent thought-flow and power of the Word of God. Of course, starting with a short manageable book like the Book of Ruth can be very effective in helping people see these things quite easily.

It was no different for the students at Ulster University. As we walked our way through the story, asking these questions, giving voice to the things we didn’t understand or found bizarre in the text, I began to have to say less and less as the students visibly and audibly began to be inspired and, consequently, invest in owning the study for themselves because the message had begun to come alive with interest, relevance and power for them. It was a privilege to end the Zoom call, hearing their fresh hunger to dive further into the text and fresh confidence that scripture – if we take it seriously and allow it to do its work – can speak with authority and relevance to some of the most pressing questions and social issues of 2021.

As I continually see students respond to scripture in instances like the CU at Ulster, I am reminded of an important lesson, one that we who value the importance of apologetics can often unconsciously forget. It the lesson that , as immensely important as it is to have things to say and arguments to make about the reliability of scripture in terms of its historical accuracy and integrity to what the original authors said, ultimately we need get to the bible.

If, in our minds, the bible’s authority simply rests on what we say about it, it will never ultimately convince us that it is the word of God and is authoritative and powerful to speak at the deepest level of our hearts and minds. Ultimately, God has promised that “faith comes by hearing and hearing by the word of God” (Romans 10:17); it does not come by the arguments we make about the Word of God. The difference is subtle but crucial. It is the difference between a technical or merely creedal acknowledgment of the inspiration of scripture, and one forged through profound and consistent hearing of the word of God through personal engagement with it. At the end of the day, Scripture does not become the Word of God because of the things I say about it. Therefore, the best thing we can do in serving students – or anyone else for that matter – when it comes to building their faith, is to learn to do the hard work of opening up the bible and allowing it to speak for itself. For, in the end, the bible is its own apologetic. Very often in the contemporary world of Christian apologetics, our relationship with the bible is often one in which we analyse culture, identify a problem, and then resolve the problem via a blend of philosophy and scripture before moving on to the next problem. The danger is that this makes our relationship with the bible merely a collection of problem-orientated solutions. I am very grateful to those who have helped me to see that the bible wasn’t written that way: it was written in books.

I have, therefore, discovered that it is possible start the other way round: to begin with scripture and allow it to both illuminate and address the human problem – problems that, at their core, have been consistent throughout the millennia of human history and only appear in different guises with the passage of time. The benefit of this approach to building Christian faith, is that it avoids the danger of people’s confidence resting on the authority of an individual Christian speaker’s analytical powers and argumentative prowess, however brilliant, and scripture only being employed referentially. Instead, once people – including students and teenagers – begin to truly see that scripture itself is alive and relevant and the best discerner of the thoughts and intentions of both individual hearts and cultural movements, it enables them to actively place their confidence in the word of God itself as authoritative, whether they have access to brilliant speakers/thinkers or not.

It was a delight to begin just a little of this journey with the students at Ulster University. The greatest compliment they paid me that evening as we departed had nothing to do with anything they said about what I personally had contributed. Instead, it was to allow me to observe – without them even realising it – their very evident and organic appetite and renewed confidence vis-à-vis scripture itself. Because, when students truly hear scripture speak, they inevitably want more. And if they are confident that it can’t speak to them with supernatural power and authority, they are far more likely to believe that it can do the same among their unbelieving student friends.