Spreading the Message of Christ in Manchester, and the rest of the UK, results in a special visit to Buckingham Palace for British evangelist, Andy Hawthorne
He and his teams are also able to present the Good News in many British schools, and it’s legal
By Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST News Service
IRVINE, CA (ANS – October 31, 2016)
-- Andy Hawthorne is a British evangelist, author and founder of The
Message Trust, a Christian mission organization with about 250 staff,
based in Manchester, England.
He
has been working for over 20 years with young people in this area of
the north of England, and his initiatives have been particularly
directed at those who are traditionally hard to reach -- those in prison
or from disadvantaged communities.
But
Andy got the surprise of his life when, one day in 2011, he received a
letter from Buckingham Palace saying that he was to be bestowed with the
OBE (Order of the British Empire), and so he dressed up, and it was
presently shortly afterwards by Prince Charles.
He
is one of the very few British Christians to ever be awarded such an
royal honor. It was given him after the Manchester Chief of Police had
recommended that he receive it for his outreach into the crime-ridden
areas of Manchester.
Andy
Hawthorne is unashamed of his Christian faith and describes it as the
“engine” of all that has been achieved through The Message Trust.
But
he not only speaks on the mean streets of his city, but on June 21,
2011 he addressed a group of cross-bench parliamentarians at the
National Prayer Breakfast at the British Houses of Parliament. He was
invited to speak on the theme of “Raising the aspirations of young
people,” and he said: “The Bible works – and Jesus is the answer ...The
message of the Bible raises the aspirations of young people -- we ditch
it at our peril. The best of our society is built on this precious book
... The more we invest in today’s young people the values that God gave
us in this book the better our society will become.”
In
the early days before he launched The Message Trust, Andy was a member
of the popular Christian band, The World Wide Message Tribe, which had
success in the UK and American pop charts.
With
a background like his, I was delighted to be able to interview him
recently for my “Front Page Radio” show at Mariners Church in Irvine,
California, where he was one of the speakers at Exponential West 2016, a
huge church planting conference, where people were attending from all
over the world.
“They
have come to be stirred and mobilized to plant churches, and I believe
the greatest tool for evangelism in this generation is church planting,”
he said. “This is not about building big churches, but about
multiplying, reproducing churches. So that’s what we’re all about here,”
he said.
He then talked about how his band came to have such a strange name.
“We
were called The World Wide Message Tribe, but I wanted to call it The
Massive World Wide Message Tribe, but like most of my best ideas, it got
watered down by my friends,” he said. “Initially, it was just myself,
and a friend, and some dancers from our youth group, doing dance rave
music in Manchester, and trying to reach people for Jesus.”
Andy explained that not everyone appreciated the band.
“The
first time we went outside of Manchester, to Holland, and all these
young people there, many were shocked that Christians could play this
crazy dance music,” he recalled. “But in our hearts, we were just
evangelists. I’m not really a singer, dancer, or rapper, but it was
bizarre that we ended up selling hundreds of thousands of CD’s and going
all over the world. But our passion and our commitment, was always to
Manchester’s young people.
“We
played in some secular clubs, but for 35 weeks a year, we would, and
still do, go into local high schools to present the message of Christ.
People here in America can’t believe that there is still an open door in
Britain for Christians to go into high schools and be involved in what
are called Assemblies. But, in fact, it is written into the law that
schools have to hold a religious act of worship, which is primarily
Christian, and also every young person [unless their parents opt them
out] has to be taught about the Christian faith. It’s written in the
law.
“Now
some schools break that law, but mainstream schools usually stick to
it. So we go into a school and say, ‘Look, we’re young men and women and
we do this crazy music, but we also talk about our faith and give young
people an opportunity to interact with us.
“We
are allowed to be very clear in sharing out faith, but what we cannot
do is an appeal [altar call] and invite people to become Christians or
do healings, but we can clearly present our Christian faith. We have six
bands and a theater company going into schools week-in and week-out.
“A
couple months ago, we were in 55 Manchester high schools in a month,
with our full-on mission teams. In fact, that was some 25 percent of all
the high schools in the area. It is an amazing opportunity, and the
door is still wide open; and we want to make the most of that while it
is.
“At
weekends, we would often do big evangelistic gigs, and we began seeing
thousands of young people come to Christ. And then, as the buzz got
around in those early days, we would get invited to go all over the
world, but our focus was always Manchester, so we were known as the band
you can’t book.”
Now
things have moved on and the group that Andy Hawthorne now heads up is
called The Message Trust, and so I wondered what had led up to that.
“The
World Wide Message Tribe was actually born out of a business that I had
with my brother. We used to do all this fashion accessories and
embroidery, and around the early 90s, when we formed the band, we were
embroidering all kinds of stuff,” he said. “At that time, Manchester
was, for a little season, the center of the world music industry with
all those crazy rave bands. And we were embroidering massive slogans
like ‘Global Technics Posse’ items and with all sorts of funny names
like that.
“So
I thought, ‘that’ll be cool’ and I said let’s call the band, ‘The
Massive World Wide Message Tribe,’ but it eventually got cut short. It
was always just a platform to share the Good News of Jesus. So out of
that business, we formed the band and we got such a buzz because we had
started to fill big venues, that I left the business in my brother’s
safe hands, and set up the original charity with just a one-man band.
That was 24 years ago, and it’s been an amazing journey ever since.
“We’ve
obviously grown, and gone from a one-man band to maybe 250 of us who
gather in Manchester, and we’ve got multiple bands and different teams.
We’ve also done 41 church plants, and we’ve have buses that go out into
the city, and also take us to our prison work.
“We’ve
got five businesses where we employ ex-offenders who’ve come to Christ
in prison. So it’s grown exponentially, but still all the same heart
with Jesus at the center, because only Christ can change your life.
“My
great grandfather was one of the first Salvation Army missionaries to
India and the Salvation Army early days have always been an inspiration
to me. I believe that the brass band music was the rave music of William
Booth’s day. It was the music of the pubs and clubs, the chart music,
and it was when William Booth saw the impact that kind of music had on
the street people, that he formed all the brass bands. It was never
meant to be just collecting money at Christmas; it was always evangelism
to those that don’t know Christ. And that’s the heart of The Message.”
More about Manchester:
Manchester
is obviously known for its two soccer teams, Manchester United and
Manchester, but its earlier history is closely allied with textile
manufacture that took place during the Industrial Revolution. The great
majority of cotton spinning took place in the towns of south Lancashire
and north Cheshire, and Manchester was, for a time the most productive
center of cotton processing, and later the world’s largest marketplace
for cotton goods.
Andy
says the city has greatly changed since those days, adding, “There are
communities in the city that are thoroughly Asian; where you it’d be
hard to see a white face, and also they have a strong Muslim population
with their large mosques. Due to the European Union, lots of immigrants
from countries like Romania and Poland, have been coming to the city to
benefit economically from the UK’s economy. So there’s a big
multi-cultural community and yet we are able to do full-on Christian
clubs in schools that are 95% Muslim, and we’ll have kids coming wearing
their veils, while hearing about Jesus.
“Of
course, you have to be massively sensitive, but some of our best young
evangelists are former Muslims. We’ve got a guy called Mohammed Timbo,
who is a church planter in one of hardest areas of Manchester. He came
to Christ just before he went to prison for a long stretch and, while he
was inside, he led 600 inmates to Christ. Now, he’s part of our team of
evangelists. We’ve got another guy called Abdul, who’s just a
passionate about sharing Christ. He’s been to Sierra Leone where he led
his family to Christ. It’s all sensitive stuff, but it’s all got to be
done.”
Having lived much of my life in the UK, I wondered how he saw the spiritual state of the country these days.
“By
nature I’m an optimist, but actually the latest statistics from a guy
called Peter Brierley, who does church statistics, says that are coming
out of a ‘nosedive.’ And, in Manchester, the church is starting to grow
again, mainly amongst young people; and we can see pockets of that
growth also around the UK.
“Actually,
we’ve lost about half of our people in Britain in the last few years,
but a lot of that, I believe, was pruning for growth. Maybe, those
people didn’t really want to be there, and were just religious guys who
went to church. Now, I believe, we are coming into a season of great
renewal in the church, and it is engaged in a way that it’s not been
before in community. So I’m full of expectation and faith for this.”
Andy
Hawthorne closed his fascinating interview by saying that, although he
didn’t receive his OBE from Queen Elizabeth II, but from her son, Prince
Charles, he has met the Queen on previous occasions, and says that she
is a woman of deep faith.
“The
Queen’s amazing, and is actually a Christian,” he said. “I’ve been
involved in an organization called Hope, and we’ve just written a book
which has sold a million copies, called ‘The Servant Queen and the King
she serves.’ It’s all about her faith journey and how Christ has helped
her.”
He
added: “Queen Elizabeth is getting more and more bold with her faith
and, once a year, her televised Christmas Day Queen’s Speech goes out to
the people of Great Britain and also the whole of the Commonwealth.
It’s a long-standing tradition that we all sit down to watch her speech.
“I
tell you, Billy Graham couldn’t have written better speeches. It’s full
on Gospel stuff and it’s amazing. It’s all there on the Internet for
people to see. So the Queen agreed, amazingly enough, to endorse this
book. She doesn’t really write books, but we just pulled out different
things she’d said over the years about her faith, particularly more
recently, when it would appear her faith’s really come alive. So, what a
blessing it has been to get it into the hands of a million people in
the UK alone.”
By the way, Andy is married to Michele and together they have two children, Sam and Beth.
If you would like to know more about The Message Trust, please go to: http://www.message.org.uk/.
And, to listen to the entire interview, please go to: http://oldassistnews.net/frontpageradiofiles/FPRAndyHawthorne20161030Mono.mp3.
Note: I would like to thank Robin Frost for transcribing this interview.
Photo
captions: 1) Andy Hawthorne outside The Message Trust. 2) A Message
band performing. 3) Visiting a British school. 4) Andy Hawthorne
(center) was one of those who received the Urban Hero Award 2015. 5) The Servant Queen cover. 6) Dan and Norma Wooding outside their California home.
About
the writer: Dan Wooding, 75, is an award-winning author, broadcaster
and journalist who was born in Nigeria of British missionary parents,
and is now living in Southern California with his wife Norma, to whom he
has been married for more than 53 years. They have two sons, Andrew and
Peter, and six grandchildren who all live in the UK. He is the author
of some 45 books and has two TV programs and one radio show in Southern
California.
** You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).
Please tell your friends that they can receive a complimentary
subscription to our news service by going to the ANS website (see above)
and signing up there.
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar