Updated 07:54 am.EST, Mon November 23, 2009

World|Mon, Mar. 02 2009 08:34 AM EST

Christians Turn to God Over Moral Crisis in UK

By Maria Mackay|Christian Today Reporter

LONDON – “Your Kingdom come, Your will be done” was the prayer of hundreds of Christians who gathered at a central London church on Saturday to cry out to God over the moral and spiritual crisis in the United Kingdom.

  • State of the Nation
    (Photo: Christian Today / Alan Channer)
    Christians pray repentance and for God's Kingdom to come to the UK during the State of the Nation gathering on Saturday, February 28, 2009.

The State of the Nation gathering also focused on repentance over the church’s silence in the face of immoral legislation passed over the decades, particularly in the areas of the unborn child and marriage.

All mainstream denominations were represented at Saturday’s gathering at the Emmanuel Center, near the Houses of Parliament. Prayer gatherings were also held in Birmingham, Manchester and Edinburgh and in countries around the world, including the United States, Germany and Australia, in an expression of solidarity with the London meeting.

The day of prayer and repentance was organized following a meeting at the House of Lords last December of some 80 Christians from the church, the Houses of Parliament, and the business and education sectors. The meeting focused on the moral and spiritual implications of the financial crisis and concluded with a call for a season of prayer and fasting for the UK.

David Noakes, a member of the State of the Nation facilitating group, said the prayer meeting was possibly the most important gathering since World War II.

“Only then it was a nation. Now it is a remnant people. But don’t be dismayed that it is a remnant,” he said, pointing to the battle won by the Lord with the 300 warriors of Gideon.

Noakes chided the church for failing to speak out against ungodly legislation and urged the church not to be swayed by political correctness.

“God is not politically correct but biblically correct,” he said, adding that the church needed to cast out the sin within its own ranks and return to a fear of the Lord.

Noakes ended with a note of encouragement, saying that God had not forgotten about Christians in Britain because of the country’s special history and that the despair brought on by the financial crisis would prompt more people to turn to God.

“There are many people in great despair because the whole world system is coming down around them. God will bring many people into the light of salvation out of that darkness and they will come back again to a fear of the Lord.”

Dr. Clifford Hill, also on the facilitating group, echoed his sentiments.

“God loves to use people who have been found out of distress. We will see that increase in this generation,” he said.

Also joining the meeting was Pastor Jonathan Oloyede, convener of the Global Day of Prayer London.

He told Christians to overcome their divisions and unite as one under the Lord Jesus Christ and his victory on the cross.

“We need to repent of our divisions, of our failure to take responsibility,” he said. “Make a commitment from today that you will be an agent for change, an agent for the Kingdom.

“Put a stake in the ground and declare that we will no longer be divided and that we will allow the Lord to be Lord, and that the church will rise up and say ‘Lord, let Your Kingdom come, let Your will be done.’”

Much of the day was unscheduled, with the platform open to individuals to come to the front and share Scripture, prophecies and words they felt God had put in their hearts.

One young Christian, Thomas, told the meeting that boldness was found in being at peace with God and that the heart was important in the eyes of God.

“We can say the right things but God is looking at the heart and He will use those who are not doing things to be honored by men but who make their heart right before God. God is looking for ‘yes’ from His people,” he said.

Hill ended with a prophecy that winds of change would sweep through the church, through people in power and authority, and through young people and the unchurched.

“So take new heart because the Lord is with you. Your work will prosper and you will see the glory of the Lord in your time,” he said. “God is raising up a powerful remnant to transform this land.”

The facilitating group said there were plans for more prayer events in the coming months.

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  • Tue Mar 03, 2009 11:36 am Agree: 3   Disagree: 1

    I like that. There's an article on CP about how a majority of Britains reject Creationism and Divine Design....but they have no problem coming to God when they need help.
    "Let not that man think he will receive anything, for a double minded man is unstable in everything he does...."

  • Mon Mar 02, 2009 11:27 pm Agree: 2   Disagree: 1

    So many missionary movements were started from
    Britain, great men of God were raised from
    that nation to send revival to the world.
    Likewise, America was used by God as a nation
    to send more missionaries to other world
    than any other country. But both of these
    nations began to turn away from God, and
    we may have to pay the price of our sins.
    The world's best economists are working too hard to fix the economic meltdown,
    but nothing is happening.
    Atleast by this time, we must learn the hard
    lesson of life that only God can change the
    situation. So let us all humble before God and
    cry for His mercy.

  • Mon Mar 02, 2009 6:12 pm Agree: 2   Disagree: 2

    steveh20, as in our country chances are greed is at the heart of the economic crisis in your country as well, greed on the part of believers and non-believers alike. If one is truly a person of prayer, God will indeed reveal this to them both personally and nationally, as a result He would also challenge them to pray against this sin and to encourage other believers to be doing the same as well as honestly evaluating their own life to see if they are guilty of this sin and if so to repent of it in their own life and encourage others to do the same.

  • Mon Mar 02, 2009 5:57 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    I attended this meeting, and I am afraid that this online report is not really an adequate record of the day. I realise that space is limited, but to portray it as it has been here does not in any way do it justice.

    There was much, much more "meat" to the messages brought by David Noakes and Clifford Hill than has been recorded here...including some strong warnings on the consequences of ignoring what God was and has been saying to the Church in the UK for some time. And I am sorry to say that there was a minimal amount of actual prayer and a whole lot of singing.

    At one point in the early afternoon the thought struck me that much of the whole point had been missed: that all the situations we were bewailing were not the problems themselves, but the symptoms of God's judgement already in action upon this nation.

    The coming days, weeks and months will tell as to whether or not the day actually has made a difference or not...but somehow, I doubt it.

  • Mon Mar 02, 2009 5:23 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Explain to me believer please, the connection between the current economic crisis and lack of prayer.
    Thanks
    Steve

  • Mon Mar 02, 2009 4:25 pm Agree: 2   Disagree: 3

    h, or could it be that they realize the economic crisis could be partially the result of the lack of prayer on the part of God's people?

  • Mon Mar 02, 2009 4:17 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 1

    This is like de ja vue all over again. I remember Clifford Hill leading such meetings in the late 80's in Westminster Hall which included such items as repenting for the nation (a a very dodgy idea if you ask me). Come to think of it the prophecies are very much alike. This time though he seems not to have torn his dog collar as he did before when uttering words from the Lord.
    Am I getting to old?
    Steve

  • Mon Mar 02, 2009 12:36 pm Agree: 2   Disagree: 3

    Flagged as inappropriate. show Well all that praying is definitely easier than actually trying to improve the economy. hide

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