84 episodes

The podcast, brought to you by Premier, which takes you deeper into the stories impacting Christians around the world. Each week we’ll dig into a particular issue in the church world and go behind the headlines, hearing from those directly involved, experts, theologians, activists, journalists and others to make sense of the story and why it matters.

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    • 5.0 • 2 Ratings

The podcast, brought to you by Premier, which takes you deeper into the stories impacting Christians around the world. Each week we’ll dig into a particular issue in the church world and go behind the headlines, hearing from those directly involved, experts, theologians, activists, journalists and others to make sense of the story and why it matters.

    Schism among the Methodists

    Schism among the Methodists

    It’s not just British denominations which are splintering under the weight of their divisions. The United Methodist Church in the United States has also gone through a painful five years of divorce, with up to one in four congregations choosing to leave. The crisis was, inevitably, precipitated by deep disagreements over LGBT issues including same-sex marriage. When a crunch vote in their assembly came, the conservatives won and yet it is the conservative churches which have left, some to a brand-new breakaway denomination. In some ways the split has been amicable and orderly, and yet it has also caused huge pain for others on both sides. What does the future hold, both for the conservative churches which have left and for those who remained? And is the path of mutually agreed separation a good model for other denominations experiencing similar fractures?
    Guests this week:
    - Tom Berlin, UMC bishop in Florida
    - Gregory Palmer, UMC bishop in Ohio
    - Timothy Tennent, president of Asbury Theological Seminary
    - Heather Hahn, assistant news editor for United Methodist News
    - Megan Fowler, religion journalist and contributing writer at Christianity Today

    • 1 hr 3 min
    The future of children's ministry

    The future of children's ministry

    It’s not just a toddler group. Emphasis on the ‘just’. That’s the title and message of a new report which urges churches to take their midweek parents and toddler groups more seriously. These groups are not just about toys on mats and beakers of juice for tired mums, but vital for children’s flourishing and also for drawing families into the wider church community. The report is one of a number of recent initiatives trying to reignite ministry with children, which had been hammered by the pandemic, where lots of young people lost touch with the church during lockdown and never came back. How we are doing at relaunching children’s ministry since then? Is it properly integrated with the rest of our church lives? And what about those thousands of churches that don’t really have any young people any more? Is Christianity becoming a religion for grown-ups only?

    • 40 min
    The consultation and the compromise: Gay marriage and the Baptist Union

    The consultation and the compromise: Gay marriage and the Baptist Union

    It is not just the Church of England and the Catholic Church which has been wrestling with divisions over same-sex marriage in recent years. The Baptist Union is also split between those who believe God affirms gay marriage and those who hold to a traditional opposition to it. Yet unlike other denominations, the Baptists have come recently to an interesting compromise. Individual congregations are at liberty to host same-sex weddings or not to, according to their consciences. But gay Baptist ministers will not be allowed to themselves enter same-sex marriages. What has led the Baptists to this unusual position? Could it be a solution other denominations should explore? And, can this settlement hold into the future?
    Guests:
    • Ashley Hardingham, affirming Baptist minister
    • Chris Goswami, traditionalist Baptist minister
    • Mark Woods, Baptist minister, writer and formerly editor of the Bapist Times

    • 49 min
    What's the point of ecumenism?

    What's the point of ecumenism?

    Ecumenism. Even the word itself is probably putting some of you off right now. A tiresome bit of churchy jargon that has no relevance for your church or spiritual life, right? But working for unity across churches and denominations is for some a genuine passion, an urgent priority, even a lifetime’s ministry. Earlier this year, a group of Catholic and Anglican bishops spent several days in discussion, joint services, pilgrimages and worship together. As these kind of ecumenical events always do, it ended with lots of warm words, a fairly vague joint communique, and promises to do it again in a few years. But did it actually change anything on the ground? Are denominations as separate as Catholicism and Anglicanism actually serious about trying to reunite? Should it be taken more seriously by ordinary churchgoers and ministers, or is it just cups of tea and endless talking shops?
    Guests this week:
    • Christopher Landau, Anglican priest and director of ReSource, a charity promoting Charismatic renewal
    • Jan Nowotnik, national ecumenical officer for the Catholic Church in England and Wales
    • Paul Murray, professor of systematic theology at Durham University
    • Shermara Fletcher-Hoyte, principal officer for Pentecostal, Charismatic and Multi-cultural Relations at Christians Together in England

    • 55 min
    Faith in the beautiful game

    Faith in the beautiful game

    Many of England’s biggest football clubs – today some of the country’s largest entertainment businesses – were originally started by local churches 150 years ago. Fascinatingly, the connections between Christianity and football are not solely a historical quirk either. There are Christians playing the game at every level, managing teams and running clubs, while churches use the sport for both outreach and pastoral care. So much so that even the thoroughly secular Football Association held a jamboree at Wembley Stadium last year to celebrate the interplay between the beautiful game and Christianity. This week’s episode digs deeper into the links between the church and our national pastime, exploring everything from muscular Christianity to faith literacy to evangelism inside the dressing room.
    Guests this week:
    • Michael Wakelin, Norwich City fan and former BBC religion producer who organised the FA’s Wembley event
    • Graham Daniels, former player and manager, now director at Cambridge United and head of Christians in Sport

    • 36 min
    Gay blessings in the Catholic Church

    Gay blessings in the Catholic Church

    Just before Christmas, the Catholic Church surprisingly announced priests could offer pastoral blessings to same-sex couples for the first time. The announcement has been a jolt of energy to the church, delighting liberals who have been quick to publicise their blessings, and equally infuriating conservatives. Why has the backlash been so vociferous, and what might this mean for the remaining years of Francis’s pontificate? Is it actually that big a reform after all, or has it all been blown out of proportion? Will it entrench schisms within the Catholic Church worldwide or push the denomination firmly towards progressive reforms in the future?
    Guests this week:
    • Catherine Pepinster, freelance Catholic journalist and former editor of The Tablet
    • Charles Collins, managing editor of Crux, a leading Catholic news website

    • 41 min

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