Tuesday, July 16, 2019

Drug Deaths - The Darkness in Progressive Liberal Scotland


Today’s widely reported news that Scotland has the highest rate of drugs-deaths in Europe is a glimpse beneath the veneer so often painted over our society.

The latest figures represent hundreds of ruined lives, broken families and the heart-breaking loss of human souls made to be great and glorious. The statistics are all the more jarring when so many in Scottish public life seem to be obsessed with virtue-signalling policies, lecturing the rest of the world about (and indeed imposing on it) its liberal values, and congratulating themselves as the champions of progressive enlightenment.

A deep malaise
Now of course there are many good things to celebrate in Scotland and it would be churlish to pretend otherwise – but running through Scotland is a deep malaise. It’s at heart a spiritual problem, and thus not unique to Scotland, but it often seems to manifest itself here in particularly chronic ways. Its symptoms are seen in….

Abortion[i] – rates at a 10-year high. That’s 255 unborn children killed every week.

STIs[ii] –Gonorrhea up by 24% in a year. Chlamydia up by 4% in a year. Syphilis rates at 15-year high.

Marriage Rates[iii] – the bedrock of a stable society and the provider of the best life outcomes for children – now at an historic low.

Anti-depressants[iv] – 900,000 Scots prescribed at least one during 2017/18. A rise of 3m (+73%) such items prescribed in a decade.

Mental Health[v] – a 68% increase in the number of students seeking help with MH issues in 10-years. The number in Edinburgh alone doubling in 5 years.

Alcohol deaths [vi] – 54% higher than in England & Wales (2015 fig).

Drug Deaths[vii] – a 27% increase in one year. The highest rate in Europe (and exceeding even that of the USA)

Now of course individual statistics can be misleading and fraught with pitfalls – also not every social trend is negative (e.g. suicide rates have decreased, as have unwanted teenage pregnancies and the overall crime trend[viii] - there are also some government initiatives that may yet push against some of these statistics, e.g. minimum alcohol pricing).

No solutions
Taken together, however, it’s evident that Scotland is a country full of deeply wounded men and women. Behind every one of these measurements are lives lost, confused, and seeking fulfilment in dead-end promises – and then off-setting the emptiness of it all in ‘medications’ of all kinds.  

Our society offers no lasting solutions – just a few slogans about ‘believing in yourself’, ‘following your dreams’ and ‘not letting anyone hold you back’. In a world where the pursuit of self-fulfilment is paramount no wonder record numbers of the unborn are disposed of and partners left behind as personal tastes change.  

The broken image of God
But of course, it doesn’t deliver – it never can. We weren’t made for gratuitous self-seeking. We were made in the image of God – who is supremely self-giving. It may be an image we reject and thus have broken – but try as we might to seek an alternative the fracture will never stop aching.

As the Augustine famously said – ‘Our hearts are restless until they can find rest in You’. It is the truth expressed by Jesus – only if you lose your life for my sake, you will find it’. Only by being what we were created to be can we find the peace and satisfaction we crave. 

Anything else and Scotland’s people will continue to stumble from one false promise to another.   

There is an alternative
Good government programmes can help but the great solution Scotland needs is the Gospel – the good news of Jesus Christ – a Saviour who alone can meet the deepest needs of the human heart - a way back to God, forgiveness, healing and life-giving purpose.




Monday, July 15, 2019

Independent Church Ministry Course

Article written for FIEC Website. 
FIEC’s Certificate in Independent Church Ministry course will run for its fourth year this September. Now available online, course coordinator Andy Hunter explains why signing-up would be time well spent for anyone seeking to serve their local Independent church better.
Study Independent Ministry Online primary image
If you Google ‘Independent Churches UK’ – more than half of the top 10 results are typically linked to FIEC. With more than 600 churches, we are the largest network of independent churches in Great Britain. Our size and history means that when it comes to understanding ‘Independent churches’ we can draw on a huge reservoir of experience and wisdom.
This understanding is something we are keen to share not just across FIEC churches but also with the many other non-denominational churches across the country. Indeed, recent years have seen a proliferation of such churches – new church plants, congregations leaving denominations, and the rapid growth of fellowships in areas with lots of ethnic minorities.

Independent church challenges

Independent churches come in all shapes and sizes, with a variety of formats and traditions but equally they share many similarities. They also face many of the same challenges and questions…
  • What kind of self-governing leadership structures will best serve the gospel?
  • Where will the next generation of pastors and other gospel workers come from and who will train them?
  • What’s the best way to organise services without a common ‘rule-book’?
  • How can mission be advanced beyond particular localities?
  • How can Independent churches best relate to each other?
  • How can a struggling Independent church be revitalised?

Helping leaders

Our Certificate in Independent Church Ministry is a course specifically designed to help leaders in such churches to think through these issues. Run in conjunction with Edinburgh Theological Seminary (ETS) this 12-part course looks at the history, theology and practicalities of being an Independent Church in Britain today.
Students at the Independent Church Ministry Course
Each session will be led by an experienced church leader including FIEC Directors and other experienced pastors. Set in a seminar format each session will include time for questions and discussion. Participants who complete the optional assignment (2000-word essay) will receive the Certificate, endorsed by ETS.

Now online

The Tuesday afternoon classes (2-4pm) will be streamed online - thus allowing participation from anywhere across the country. It means that you can watch, ask questions and take part interactively from the comfort of your home or office.
Additionally, there are discounted fees for those from FIEC churches or Pastors’ Network Members.

Working on the church

Many church leaders spend all their energies working ‘in the church’ – this course is designed to help them step back and spend some time ‘working on the church’. To think through some of the bigger structural issues that in the long run can yield great spiritual dividends.
So sign-up for some ministry time well spent.
For details of the programme, fees and to register, visit ets.ac.uk
or for the Course Handbook email admin@fiec.org.uk