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WAR CRY 22 October 2022 50p Remembering the man who smuggled good news Bradley Walsh returns with The Larkins Artist brings angels into the picture
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What is The Salvation Army?
The Salvation Army is a Christian church and registered charity seeking to share the good news of Jesus and nurture committed followers of him. We also serve people without discrimination, care for creation and seek justice and reconciliation. We offer practical support and services in more than 700 centres throughout the UK. Go to salvationarmy.org.uk/find-a-church to find your nearest centre.
What is the War Cry?
The Salvation Army first published a newspaper called the War Cry in London in December 1879, and we have continued to appear every week since then. Our name refers to our battle for people’s hearts and souls as we promote the positive impact of the Christian faith and The Salvation Army’s fight for greater social justice.
WAR CRY
Issue No 7599
Editor: Andrew Stone, Major Deputy Editor: Philip Halcrow Production Editor: Ivan Radford Assistant Editor: Sarah Olowofoyeku Staff Writer: Emily Bright Staff Writer: Claire Brine Editorial Assistant: Linda McTurk Graphic Designer: Rodney Kingston Graphic Designer: Mark Knight Email: warcry@salvationarmy.org.uk
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Founder: William Booth General: Brian Peddle Territorial Commander: Commissioner Anthony Cotterill Editor-in-Chief: Major Mal Davies
Published weekly by The Salvation Army © The Salvation Army United Kingdom and Ireland Territory ISSN 0043-0226
The Salvation Army Trust is a registered charity. The charity number in England, Wales and Northern Ireland is 214779, in Scotland SC009359 and in the Republic of Ireland CHY6399.
Printed by CKN Print, Northampton, on sustainably sourced paper
From the editor’s desk
THE coastline of Britain is awash with coves and caves that were used by smugglers trying to avoid the taxes placed on goods entering the country. The illegal trade was so common in the 18th century that it is estimated that at one point about four fifths of all the tea drunk by Britons had been smuggled into the country.
Today there is a tendency to romanticise what could, in fact, be a deadly business and to think that smuggling existed only in a bygone era of frock coats, candlelit houses and horse-drawn transportation. However, it was just last month that a modern-day smuggler died.
Dutchman Anne van der Bijl, better known as Brother Andrew, was a different kind of smuggler. He spent years secretly taking Bibles to China and countries behind the Iron Curtain. After the fall of communism in Eastern Europe, he discovered copies of KGB reports that detailed his work in the Soviet Union.
As we report in a feature in this week’s War Cry, Brother Andrew also spent time speaking with the leaders of Hezbollah and Hamas. Eddie Lyle, who worked with Brother Andrew, tells us why.
‘His thought was: how were these people ever going to hear about Jesus if someone didn’t go and spend time with them, understand their mindset and unashamedly meet them as an ambassador – a peacemaker – of Christ, so that they could accept Jesus as their saviour.’
Brother Andrew was inspired in his work by his belief that anyone can have their lives turned round by becoming a Christian. He would have known the Bible verse that says: ‘God loved the people of this world so much that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who has faith in him will have eternal life and never really die’ (John 3:16 Contemporary English Version).
It doesn’t matter who we are or what we have done in the past. If we put our faith in Jesus, we can experience a life of purpose and fulfilment that will never end.
INFO INFO 2 • WAR CRY • 22 October 2022
Whenyou’veread the WarCry , whynot PASS IT ON f Front-page picture: ITV 15 8 Your local Salvation Army centre FEATURES 3 Larkin about Pop and family return in ITV drama 5 When you need a miracle Son and father look back on a life-changing car crash 8 Under cover Story of a Bible smuggler 10 Heavenly pictures Artist explains why she paints angels REGULARS 4 War Cry World 12 Team Talk 13 Now, There’s a Thought! 14 Puzzles 15 War Cry Kitchen CONTENTS 10
Primrose Larkin has a soft spot for the village vicar
Villagers border on trouble
New neighbours cause a stir in the second series of The Larkins TV feature by Sarah Olowofoyeku
SCHOOL’S out. It’s the summer of 1959 and the start of another funfilled holiday for the Larkins family in Littlechurch. But there are some new additions to the village landscape, who emerged last Sunday (16 October) in the opening episode of the second series of ITV’s The Larkins
The Rev Candy (Maxim Ays) has been brought in by the church to assist the longstanding and not-so-pleasant current vicar (Peter Davison) in his duties. It’s his first time away from home, but the young new vicar got straight to work to support
the people of the village.
Shockingly for him, he was soon petitioned not for faith-related advice, but by Primrose Larkin (Lydia Page) whose head had been turned by his good looks.
Although he turned her down, Primrose didn’t plan on giving up.
Meanwhile the merriment of the other Larkins was being interrupted by their new neighbours, the Jerebohms, who made quite an entrance.
a source of pain or joy. There can often be tension when we encounter people who are different from us or who we feel have done us wrong.
The Jerebohms are out for revenge
Jesus spoke about the importance of being a good neighbour to everyone, regardless of who they are. At that time, the Jews and Samaritans were geographical neighbours who did not get on. The Jews believed that Samaritans were the worst type of people.
The family are from the city and want to build a new life in the country. They are wealthy but, after realising that Pop Larkin made a huge profit when he sold them Bluff Court, they are out for revenge.
A dire dinner party at the big house ended with the newest neighbours on the block reaching for their guns. And that was just the start of the trouble between the two couples.
Simon Nye, writer and executive producer of the programme, says: ‘We get a whole series where two very different, very opposite couples are at each other’s throats.’
Whether in a village or a city, neighbours can be
So Jesus’ Jewish listeners were shocked when he told a story in which a Samaritan helped a Jewish man who had been attacked on a road. Not only did the Samaritan stop to help, after two Jewish religious leaders had walked past, but he also went out of his way to make sure that the injured man was taken care of – at his own cost.
Jesus told this story of the good Samaritan to demonstrate how we should be willing to help other people. It was a way of life that Jesus modelled.
It is difficult to treat others with kindness and go out of our way to help them, especially if we are not expected to. But it’s the best way to live. It also means we don’t get caught up in cycles of revenge.
Jesus’ golden rule was: ‘Do to others what you would have them do to you’ (Matthew 7:12 New International Version). If we can follow that teaching, then we can make our villages, cities and world a better place.
22 October 2022 • WAR CRY • 3
Recent arrivals the Jerebohms are not very pleasant ITV
WAR CRY
Broadcaster inspired by uni friend’s faith
ADRIAN CHILES told The Sunday Times Magazine how the Christian faith of a friend at university inspired him to convert to Catholicism 20 years later.
The Radio 5 Live presenter explained that he had always been a believer, but added that he had ‘never had a way of expressing it because my family were complete nonbelievers’.
Adrian, 55, said: ‘I was fascinated by believers, kids at school, some of them were churchgoers, then I went to university and met committed Jewish people and Muslims.’
He went on to say that when he started attending Mass, he felt ‘at home there’, describing the people he met in church as ‘the kind of people I could see myself hanging round with’.
Church finds way to grapple with belief
THE BBC has reported on a church in Bradford that has combined worship with wrestling.
Archbishop argues case to ‘disagree
THE Archbishop of Canterbury has said that society needs to find a way of ‘disagreeing without exclusion’, reported The Times
During a visit to Australia, the Most Rev Justin Welby said that people have lost the ability to ‘disagree well’ and warned that secular society risked fragmenting into ‘a whole bunch of small groups all of which are convinced they are persecuted minorities’.
He said: ‘We have not found a way of disagreeing without exclusion, without cancelling people. We are just in a place where since there is no one authority, we seem to be going to no authority at all, even the authority of a common concern for each other’s dignity and for freedom of religion and belief. We invariably end up setting one group’s rights against another group’s rights.
‘Freedom of speech, freedom of religion and belief and nonbelief is an essential for any society to live well together. But it has to be negotiated. You have to find a way of doing that in a way that does not result in people [saying]: “You know, if you belong to X organisation, you can’t do Y.”’
Fountains Church has its usual service on a Sunday and gives food on Saturdays to people experiencing homelessness, but also hosts wrestling nights, which members of the public attend. In addition it runs a wrestling school, through which it aims to engage young people who may have lost their way in life.
Gareth Thompson, a Christian and pro wrestler, opened the wrestling ministry to help people who may have had difficult childhoods. He experienced one himself, having been sexually abused as a child and kicked out of home.
‘The two things that helped me get my life back on track are wrestling and the Church,’ he says. ‘The driving force behind the training school is sharing my story and using my past to help others.’
He adds: ‘What really excites me is we’ve got this community of people who are coming together to support each other through life’s issues, whatever it throws at us.’
A BBC documentary The Bradford Church of Wrestling is available on iPlayer.
nARCHAEOLOGISTS have identified what is believed to be the oldest surviving church in England, reports the Church Times.
The chapel of St Pancras in Canterbury, which was built and consecrated in about AD600 by the missionary Augustine, is believed to be the first purpose-built place of Christian worship constructed in Anglo-Saxon England.
Professor Ken Dark of King’s College London, who led the research, said: ‘The newly evaluated archaeological evidence from St Pancras’s, Canterbury, for the first time pinpoints where Christian public worship was officially first re-established after a period of pagan domination. It marks the official relaunch of Christianity in what would become England.’
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well’ 4 • WAR CRY • 22 October 2022 TheWarCryUK @TheWarCryUK warcry@salvationarmy.org.uka Do you have a story to share? salvationarmy.org.uk/warcryB
RUSSELL MOORE/ALAMY
‘I wouldn’t change a thing about my car crash’
CALEB FREEMAN suffered life-changing injuries after being in a car crash when he was just 16 years old. Now he and his father JEREMY FREEMAN recall how he overcame the odds to survive and why his faith is flourishing
Interview by Emily Bright
SIXTEEN-year-old Caleb Freeman was driving down a slippery wet road on 19 December 2017 on the way to a University of Oklahoma basketball game with his younger brother, Clayton, when he lost control of his car. It span into the middle of a major road and into the path of a 34-tonne articulated lorry which slammed into the driver’s side. Caleb’s head hit the grill of the lorry.
Just 15 minutes before, Caleb’s dad, Jeremy, had dropped off the tickets to his son. But as he arrived home, his phone rang, and Caleb’s number popped up. A stranger told him that Caleb and Clayton had been in an accident. ‘My heart rate went from zero to a hundred in two seconds,’ he recalls.
was something the emergency services weren’t telling the couple about Caleb. The ambulance he was in was swarming with paramedics. The events that followed are the subject of Jeremy’s book, #butGod
Jeremy tells me: ‘We went to the accident scene, and they wouldn’t let us see Caleb. They said that we needed to go to the emergency room. So my wife and I drove there, crying out to God to spare his life. At the hospital, we quickly discovered that Caleb had a brain injury.
Jeremy and Caleb Freeman
brain. They said: “We’ll do all we can, but we don’t expect him to survive.”’
Jeremy, a Christian pastor, turned to his faith for strength in such a frightening time. He says that God showed up in remarkable ways.
‘On the Glasgow Coma Scale – which rates your level of consciousness – he was a three, which is the lowest possible score, with survival odds of less than 10 per cent. Doctors told us that his brain was swelling rapidly and they had to get a drain in his head to get the fluid off the
‘A lady came running into the ER,’ he says. ‘She had blood all over her and
Jeremy went straight to the scene with his wife, Emily. When they arrived, they discovered that Clayton was concussed but otherwise OK. Yet there Turn to page 6 f
Caleb using a walking harness as part of his rehabilitation
22 October 2022 • WAR CRY • 5
c
From
asked us if we were Caleb’s parents. Then she said: “I saw the accident and pulled over to help. I’m a certified CPR instructor. I made sure Caleb’s airway was clear and that he was breathing. I’m also a Christian, and I prayed over Caleb from head to toe. God has told me your son’s going to live.”’
Despite this encouraging declaration, the outlook remained bleak for Caleb. The family waited anxiously for hours to receive an update. Eventually a member of the medical team spoke to them.
‘One of the nurses told me: “Your son needs a miracle.” I remember almost falling to the ground. At that moment, I realised that this was life or death. I got my phone out and sent a message to my family and friends, telling them what the doctors and nurses had said. Then I typed in two words: “but God”. And that was my way of saying that if God didn’t step in, Caleb was gone.
‘“But God” became this mantra, this declaration of faith through our journey. It’s a phrase you see all over the Bible. Every time they would tell us that Caleb would never walk again or eat again or do
whatever again, we would say: “That may be true, but God has the final say.”
Jeremy remembers how God answered his prayers time and again.
‘One night I was in the hospital with Caleb and he was neurostorming, his heart rate went up to 200 and he was sweating and shaking profusely. It’s a terrible experience to watch and had been going on for hours. By two o’clock in the morning, I was tired and angry at God. I said: “God, just say the word and you can stop it. Please do something.”
‘God answered my prayer in a greater way – he sent someone to encourage me.
Caleb’s first speaking event after returning home from eight months of therapy
Caleb on a day trip after having had his ear reconstructed
page 5 6 • WAR CRY • 22 October 2022
I realised that this was life or death
One of the nurses walked in. She said: “Hey, I saw you on the monitor at the nurse’s station, and I felt that God told me to pray with you. Do you mind if I do that?” She prayed with me, and Caleb calmed down.’
Over time, through the support of two brain injury rehabilitation centres, Caleb became more alert and responsive, and relearnt how to eat, stand, walk, talk and bathe himself. Despite his remarkable recovery, Caleb still struggles with co-ordination and balance and lacks fine motor skills. Yet he says that he ‘wouldn’t change a thing’ about the accident.
‘I have a strong faith that I didn’t have before,’ he says. ‘I’d grown up in church, so I had an informationbased relationship with Jesus. I was convinced that all the miracles that God performed – making the blind see, opening deaf ears and making the lame able to walk – was something Jesus used to do.
‘But when I needed miracles to be performed in my life, God did them. I now know that God is for real, and I realise
that I can’t do this life on my own. This wreck showed how much I truly need him. And countless people have come to know Jesus after hearing about me going through the wreck.’
Caleb now shares his story at speaking events across the US.
Rather than feeling bitter towards the lorry driver who hit him, Caleb wants him to know God’s love and grace.
‘I pray that he comes to know Jesus Christ,’ he says. ‘I don’t think it was any mistake that he was in the wreck with me. This is my earthly body so, sure, I lost sports and running. But if that truck driver doesn’t come to know Jesus Christ, that affects us all in eternity. I decided that I’d totally forgive him so that he can know the grace that God shows.’
Jeremy explains what Jesus means to him and Caleb. ‘We believe that Jesus is the Son of God, and the fulfilment
of hundreds of prophecies in Scripture that foretold he would live a sinless and perfect life, die on the cross and be raised from the dead. Jesus is not just a person of history. He has the power to transform a person’s life. It’s through him that you come to know God.
‘In the Bible, Nahum 1:7 says, “The Lord is good, a stronghold in the day of trouble, and he knows those who trust in him.” In our household, we often say that, while life is often not good, God is always good. And you can always trust God, no matter what.’
l #butGod is published by Thomas Nelson
22 October 2022 • WAR CRY • 7
Jesus has the power to transform a person’s life
Jeremy baptises Caleb in November 2018
Caleb prays over an American football teamfrom Oklahoma after their game
Caleb played basketball at his school after the accident
Mission: impassable
THE man who spent years smuggling items into countries confessed something to Eddie Lyle one day. Eddie recalls: ‘He said to me that his greatest regret was that he didn’t take more risks. Yet, when you think of the things that he did…’
The ‘things that he did’ included crossing borders in a blue VW Beetle stuffed with the consignments that he was taking behind the Iron Curtain and landing on a Chinese beach under cover of darkness to rendezvous with people waiting on the shore for what he brought.
Dutchman Anne van der Bijl – better known by his nickname of Brother Andrew – who died last month, became renowned for his smuggling exploits. When he wrote his autobiography it was titled God’s Smuggler – because the items that he was passing into communist countries in Europe and into China were copies of a book that was being suppressed: the Bible. His work led to the founding of Open Doors, an organisation that today supports persecuted Christians in more than 70 countries.
Eddie, president of Open Doors UK and Ireland, says that Brother Andrew ‘fundamentally believed that it was a human right for everyone who wanted a Bible to be able to hold it in their hands and read it for themselves and be fed by it. He wanted everyone to have access to the word of God.’
Brother Andrew’s smuggling activities can be traced back to 1955, when he travelled to a communist youth rally in Poland to give out tracts. While there he discovered that the churches behind the Iron Curtain were vulnerable and in need of encouragement.
Eddie says: ‘God spoke to him through the Scriptures and the verse in Revelation that says: “Awake and strengthen that which remains.” He gave his life to that cause of helping the Church where it was
Brother Andrew 8 • WAR CRY • 22 October 2022
Brother Andrew, who died last month, crossed borders behind the Iron Curtain and took risks to pass on good news around the world
Feature by Philip Halcrow
vulnerable, such as places where there was persecution of which the world was unaware.
‘So he began some of his big initiatives – taking Bibles into Russia and then running Project Pearl, in which a million Bibles were taken into China in one night and distributed across the country.’
Brother Andrew told some of the exploits of those journeys in God’s Smuggler, written with journalists John and Elizabeth Sherrill, which has sold more than 10 million copies since it first appeared in 1967. He reveals the prayer that he would utter as he approached checkpoints: ‘Lord, in my luggage I have
Scripture I want to take to your children. When you were on Earth, you made blind eyes see. Now, I pray, make seeing eyes blind. Do not let the guards see those things you do not want them to see.’ He describes the joys of his missions, as well as the difficulties – as, for instance, when he was deported from Yugoslavia.
After the fall of the Iron Curtain, he obtained copies of KGB reports that detailed his work in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe.
The change that took place in Eastern Europe in the late 1980s and early 1990s did not signal the end of Brother Andrew’s work. In a 2008 interview with the War Cry
he spoke of how he had been ‘travelling, preaching and teaching in a good number of Muslim countries’ where ‘Christian believers were persecuted or at least intimidated into silence’.
Eddie Lyle says: ‘For several years he had been praying for the communist world and that the Berlin Wall would fall, and when that seismic change happened he was thinking about the world of Islam.
‘One of the things that was perhaps a bit controversial about him was his meetings with terrorists. He would talk with the leaders of Hezbollah and Hamas. I have a photograph of him sitting with his hand on top of the hand of the leader of Hamas, praying that he might have a revelation of Jesus.
‘His thought was: how were these people ever going to hear about Jesus if someone didn’t go and spend time with them, understand their mindset and unashamedly meet them as an ambassador – a peacemaker – of Christ, so that they could accept Jesus as their saviour.
‘I was having coffee with Brother Andrew one day when he looked at me and said: “When was the last time you prayed for Osama bin Laden?” At that time, I had never prayed for Osama bin Laden.’
Ultimately, says Eddie, Brother Andrew was motivated by his desire for Christians to be encouraged by – and non-Christians to discover – the truth about God’s love for them, as set out in the book that decades ago he began smuggling into Eastern Europe.
‘There’s a lot of talk today of fake news,’ says Eddie. ‘He believed that the Scriptures – those words passed on over hundreds of years – were good news and contained the truth that people were seeking.’
Open Doors UK and Ireland president Eddie Lyle
Brother Andrew with his VW Beetle, which he used on his smuggling journeys, and (top) with copies of the book he wanted everyone to read
22 October 2022 • WAR CRY • 9
Do not let the guards see
A brush with angels
Twenty years ago ANNE NEILSON painted an angel on a canvas. She talks about how that first picture started her career as an artist and why angels are significant to her
Interview by Sarah Olowofoyeku
‘NO two are the same,’ says artist Anne Neilson. She is talking about snowflakes, fingerprints and angels. The last are the subject of hundreds of pictures that have hung on the walls of her gallery in North Carolina and appeared in the two books she has put together, the most recent being Entertaining Angels
Anne had dreamt of working as an artist in childhood, but she had set the thought aside after receiving a bad grade in art class at school. However, about 20 years ago, after getting married and raising her four children, she decided to rekindle her desire to create art.
She began to paint and, one day, painted a little angel on a canvas. She
believes that what she created was inspired by God.
‘I sent it to my sister,’ she says, ‘and asked her what she thought. She said: “I think you’ve found your voice.” So, I began painting more of these tiny angels. And I would sell them. They started growing in value and going into galleries. People would gravitate towards these ethereal paintings.’
Anne describes how her paintings –which she eventually made more widely available by printing them in books – have affected people’s lives.
She says that after the publication of
her first book, Angels, she received a call from a woman whose granddaughter had died two years before.
‘The woman told me that she hadn’t been able to grieve her granddaughter, but when she got my book and read it cover to cover, the floodgates opened up and the healing began for her. So many other stories like that came in, and that’s when it shifted from being a happy passion to a ministry.’
Anne’s second book, Entertaining Angels, is filled with accounts by the artist and her friends of encounters that they have had with angels, or times when they have acted as angels in other people’s lives. One contributor talks of helping a single mother with her shopping at the supermarket. Anne herself descibes how as a toddler she was ‘carried by an angel’ when she fell from a window, two-and-a-half storeys high, but broke no bones.
Anne believes that angels are present in the world and that they can make a difference in various situations. One thing Anne is sure of, however, is that the angels do
10 • WAR CRY • 22 October 2022
Anne Neilson
not exist of their own accord. She says that they are created and sent by God.
‘They’re his messengers and they’re our protectors. The angels are real, but we don’t worship them – we worship God. In the book, there’s a story about a near car crash, and I believe that angels were really stood there.
‘I think a lot of people do believe in ethereal spiritual beings, even if it is only in some kind of abstract way. But I want to encourage people that there is a God who created those spiritual beings. I hope that the
stories about encounters with angels in the book might help people to go a little deeper and connect with the heavenly Father.’
Earlier in her own life Anne was deterred by ‘the religion and performance of Christianity’, and kept God at arm’s length. But, at the age of 30, she ‘surrendered to God’.
‘I love to control things, but you have to let go of that control and let God step in,’ she says.
It was in the following years, after she rediscovered her faith, that Anne also rediscovered her artistic gift. Since then, her angel paintings have sold so well that she has been able to open an art gallery where she lives in Charlotte, North Carolina. The success has also allowed her to be philanthropic and give to communities in need, and particularly
to people experiencing homelessness.
‘My mum taught me from an early age to be a giver,’ Anne says. ‘When I started painting, I wasn’t sure how I’d be able to help others. But I felt that God wanted me to help those communities in need through painting. He said I should paint and give back. So I began to partner with various organisations throughout our community and then the country, and we give back by donating a portion of our profits.
‘Never in my life when I first painted that angel did I think I’d have a gallery, my own product line and books. But God can do more than we could imagine.’
22 October 2022 • WAR CRY • 11
l Entertaining Angels is published by Thomas Nelson
People gravitate towards these ethereal paintings
YOUR prayers are requested for Ann,
she will be healed of her bipolar disorder and will find a
The War Cry invites readers to send in requests for prayer, including the first names of individuals and details of their circumstances, for publication. Send your Prayerlink requests to warcry@salvationarmy.org.uk or to War Cry, 101 Newington Causeway, London SE1 6BN. Mark your correspondence ‘Confidential’.
jBecoming a Christian
There is no set formula to becoming a Christian, but many people have found saying this prayer to be a helpful first step to a relationship with God
Lord Jesus Christ,
I am truly sorry for the things I have done wrong in my life. Please forgive me. I now turn from everything that I know is wrong.
Thank you that you died on the cross for me so that I could be forgiven and set free.
Thank you that you offer me forgiveness and the gift of your Holy Spirit. Please come into my life by your Holy Spirit to be with me for ever.
Thank you, Lord Jesus. Amen
‘
T E A M TALK
talkTeam talk ’
Is there an overkill of crime dramas?
Claire Brine gives her take on a story catching the attention of War Cry reporters
AS my colleagues and I discussed ideas for future issues of the War Cry, we began talking about new crime dramas and how they seem to pop up on television every week. While many of the editorial team love a good whodunnit, we wondered if any viewers were beginning to feel exhausted by the genre. Days later my editor emailed me an article from The Times with a subheading that asked: ‘Why are we relaxing by watching murder on screen?’ The piece by arts writer Ed Potton pointed out that, for the previous two weeks, the ‘most popular show on Netflix’ had been Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story. The 10-part drama focuses on the true story of a man who ‘killed, dismembered and in some cases ate 17 men and boys between 1978 and 1991’. Though the subject matter sounded horrifying to me, Ed reported that the show broke the streaming platform’s record for ‘most watched new series in its first five days of release, with 196.2 million hours of viewership’.
It seems that when it comes to crime stories –whether they are fictional or real-life – people can’t look away. Perhaps many of us are drawn to subjects that shock us. Maybe we watch to see the ‘baddies’ getting caught and justice being served. Ed wrote that real-life crime dramas can also be educational, with many highlighting historic problems of racism and homophobia and the need to treat certain people in society better.
All things considered, there may be lots of good reasons why people are watching crime dramas. But I can’t deny that, sometimes, saturating myself in these programmes unsettles me. Stories of death and despair night after night make me feel anxious, sad and burdened. I become tense. None of that’s good for me – or the people I live with.
That’s why I think it’s important to switch off from such shows occasionally. Taking a break from content that has the potential to overwhelm us enables our mind to make space for other things: things that are pure, wholesome and hopeful. Life can be full of goodness – but only when we choose to see it.
War
Newington
Looking for
Prayerlink
12 • WAR CRY • 22 October 2022
"
Extract from Why Jesus? by Nicky Gumbel published by Alpha International, 2011. Used by kind permission of Alpha International
We are drawn to subjects that shock us
Address
help?
Cry 101
Causeway London SE1 6BN Or email your details and request to warcry@salvationarmy.org.uk Name a To receive basic reading about Christianity and information about The Salvation Army, complete this coupon and send it to
that
fulfilling relationship.
by Modupe Ogunniyi
Don’t let worry be an uninvited guest
I
F you’re anything like me, you do a good job of pushing worries to the back of your mind. Right now, one of those worries is the cost of living crisis. It’s an underlying anxiety that many people are living with, and one that is continually brought to our attention by headlines about price increases. I try to focus on being grateful for the energy support scheme and other help available but, like an uninvited guest, this crisis remains on the peripheries of my thoughts.
Anticipation anxiety functions in this way. We can hope things will work out, but the niggling fear of ‘What if it doesn’t?’ remains. It’s understandable.
The Christian response would be: ‘Just trust God.’ But truths about God can comfort us only when they move from head knowledge and into our hearts.
I’ve learnt that it’s easier to trust when I have proof, so when doubt kicks in and fear wishes to cripple, I recall my experiences of God providing for me – for example, when I worried about how I’d afford my mortgage.
Whenever I feel anxiety starting to rise, I remind myself of words that Jesus spoke: ‘Look at the birds in the sky! They don’t plant or harvest. They don’t even store grain in barns. Yet your Father in Heaven takes care of them. Aren’t you worth much more than birds?’ (Matthew 6:26 Contemporary English Version). My love for this verse runs so deep that I bought myself a bird pendant to remind myself not to worry.
Whether it’s the pendant or a memory from the past, I have many things to draw faith from. They all remind me that I can trust God, regardless of what looms around the corner.
Anyone can experience that support from God. We can all rely on him, whatever tough times we may be experiencing right now. There’s no need to push our worries to the back of our minds. We can give them to God and trust him to help us through.
Q A ANSWERS 1.Germany.2.Destiny’sChild.3.Japan.4.RedDwarf 5.BenOkri.6.Rembrandt. Who did England beat in the final to win the Women’s Euro 2022 football championship? Beyoncé Knowles, Kelly Rowland and Michelle Williams were members of which girl group? Which country’s national flag comprises a red circle on a white background? Craig Charles played spaceship crew member Dave Lister in which TV comedy? Who wrote the novel The Famished Road? Which Dutch artist painted The Night Watch? QUICK QUIZ 1 2 3 4 5 6 22 October 2022 • WAR CRY • 13
NOW, THERE’S A THOUGHT!
We can hope things will work out
Look up, down, forwards, backwards and diagonally on the grid to find these words associated with autumn AMBER BONFIRE NIGHT CONKER CRISP FALLING LEAVES FRUITAGE GOLDEN HARVEST JUMPER POPPY PUMPKIN REMEMBRANCE DAY SCARECROW SQUIRREL WINDY YIELD PUZZLES Fill the grid so that every column, every row and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 to 9 1 7 6 2 3 5 4 8 9 5 9 8 4 1 6 7 3 2 3 4 2 8 7 9 1 5 6 7 1 5 6 2 4 8 9 3 6 2 9 3 8 7 5 4 1 4 8 3 5 9 1 2 6 7 9 6 7 1 5 8 3 2 4 2 5 1 9 4 3 6 7 8 8 3 4 7 6 2 9 1 5 7 6 9 9 1 6 7 2 8 9 5 1 8 2 3 7 4 3 6 6 1 8 2 1 9 4 7 8 9 1 SUDOKU WORDSEARCH J B O V F S W K V X P C C H N X F L S U A E Q H Y H Q E G L E S U F G R L Q Y N V V T K M Y M Z N L C B Y H B Z U V K B H D P C H L P M O Q L T D L E I Y L G S C E L P R S N B H B P O F P R D I K S A L S E K K P V F J U M P E R N T B Y K V M Z E H V T T A M O C F E I S C A R E C R O W H N N J P T Z R L W E B M M V G Q L N W V F P K Y I U L G V Z B I X U Q Z U A D Y C I F G I Y Y R R E X A H K O V G Z Q D N V Y T O Q A W R J P V R G O D P I O L T O A F N H W T H U T H O Q L K B R K U Z G C Z Q C U O S C N L B R I V I L M T E H C Y D X I Z A Q D P V T Q I P K D H F M Z W F F G J I E W R F Z E R A B L T B Q Q L R J Q P N E L X U V Y G Z H K X ACROSS 1. Inundate (5) 4. Tarnish (5) 8. Statute (3) 9. Stop sleeping (5) 10. Truism (5) 11. Electrical unit (3) 12. Notions (5) 13. Component (7) 16. Robust (6) 19. Hasty writing (6) 23. Technical expertise (4-3) 26. Intended (5) 28. Forty winks (3) 29. Trample (5) 30. Likeness (5) 31. Nothing (3) 32. Amid (5) 33. Portal (5) DOWN 2. Conscious (5) 3. Satisfied (7) 4. Lashed out (6) 5. Proverb (5) 6. Artless (5) 7. Confess (5) 9. Assumed name (5) 14. Spoil (3) 15. Fresh (3) 17. Unit of weight (3) Quick CROSSWORD HONEYCOMB Each solution starts on the coloured cell and reads clockwise round the number 1. Portable steps 2. Female parent 3. Relating to the nasal passage 4. Electronic pen 5. Take a different route 6. Turn around ANSWERS 14 • WAR CRY • 22 October 2022 QUICKCROSSWORD ACROSS:1.Swamp.4.Stain.8.Law.9.Awake. 10.Axiom.11.Amp.12.Ideas.13.Element.16.Sturdy. 19.Scrawl.23.Know-how.26.Meant.28.Nap. 29.Tread.30.Image.31.Nil.32.Among.33.Entry. DOWN:2.Aware.3.Pleased.4.Swiped.5.Adage. 6.Naive.7.Admit.9.Alias.14.Mar.15.New.17.Ton. 18.Row.20.Compile.21.Lithe.22.Awning.23.Kitty. 24.Omega.25.Hydro.27.Adapt. HONEYCOMB 1.Ladder.2.Mother.3.Rhinal.4.Stylus.5.Divert.6.Rotate. 176235489 598416732 342879156 715624893 629387541 483591267 967158324 251943678 834762915 618 21947 891 18. Argument (3) 20. Put together (7) 21. Supple (5) 22. Canopy (6) 23. Pool (5) 24. Greek letter (5) 25. Spa (5) 27. Adjust (5)
Prawn ramen bowl with spicy kimchi
Ingredients
2 reduced-salt
vegetable stock cubes
1tbsp sesame oil
2 garlic cloves, minced
8cm piece ginger, peeled and finely grated
4 nests medium egg noodles
1 head broccoli, cut into small florets
400g prawns, cooked and peeled
2tbsp reduced-salt soy sauce
Korean kimchi, to garnish
1 chilli pepper, sliced to garnish (optional)
1 lime, quartered, to garnish
Method
Dissolve the stock cubes in a little boiling water and set aside.
Heat the oil in a large pan, then cook the garlic and ginger on a low heat for a few minutes. Add 750ml boiling water and bring to the boil. Add the dissolved stock cubes, noodles and broccoli. Cook for 2-3 minutes.
Stir in the prawns and cook until they are piping hot and the noodles and broccoli are cooked through.
Season the broth with the soy sauce, then divide into bowls. Garnish the ramen with kimchi, chilli slices (if using) and a segment of lime, to serve.
Curried prawn pilaf
Ingredients
1tbsp vegetable oil
1 small onion, finely chopped
1tsp ground cumin
3tbsp korma curry paste
300g basmati rice
700ml reduced-salt chicken stock
24 king prawns, cooked and deveined
250g frozen peas
1tbsp fresh coriander, chopped
Recipes provided by Seafish.
Method
Heat the oil in a large pan over a medium heat. Gently fry the onion, cumin and korma paste for 3-5 minutes, until the onions are soft.
Add the rice in small batches, stirring to ensure it doesn’t stick to the bottom of the pan. Pour in the stock, cover and cook on a medium heat for 15-20 minutes, until the rice has absorbed the stock.
Add the prawns, peas and coriander and heat until the prawns are piping hot, adding a little extra stock, if required.
Serve in bowls.
For more information visit seafish.org
Recipes reprinted, with permission, from the Vegetarian Society website vegsoc.org
SERVES 4 SERVES 4
22 October 2022 • WAR CRY • 15
WISDOM,