spearhead 2010
DESCRIPTION
Experience Mission GLO Magazine 2010TRANSCRIPT
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his summer I had the great privilege of visiting Zambia for
two special reasons: Firstly, to join colleagues in GLO Zambia
in celebrating 25 years of training and equipping Africans for
mission. Felix Muchimba and his team have done a wonderful
job in preparing many young people to be used in mission across Zambia
and beyond. More than 300 men and women have been trained for ministry
through the GLO Discipleship Course.
The other reason that I travelled to Zambia was to attend two missions’
conferences. It was inspiring to hear reports from Angola, Chad,
Mozambique and many other African countries where mission is such a
priority and many are coming to faith in Christ.
It is humbling to hear young people telling of their sacrifice and
commitment to serve the Lord in mission. One longs for the flame
that is spreading through Africa to touch our shores here in Europe.
In this edition of Spearhead, from many different perspectives,
people are sharing their experience of mission. It reminds me of the
Scripture in Luke chapter 10 when Jesus sent the 70 into mission and
in verse 17 they returned to report with great joy all that they had seen,
witnessed and experienced.
John Speirs
Subscriptions There is no subscription rate
for Spearhead but readers
are welcome to send gifts
towards postage and
European EditionSpearhead is published
twice yearly by GLO UK to
report on the work of GLO in
Europe and around the world. Since
1971, in response to the Lord’s
command, ‘go into the world...’,
GLO has been serving the Lord
in establishing local churches
in partnership with assemblies,
missionaries and national leaders in
many countries. GLO workers are
commended to the Lord’s work by
their assemblies and are supported
on a faith basis.
Contents:Spearhead Winter 2009/10 Issue
Editorial:
Experience Mission 2
The French Connection:
A & V Kyle 3
From the other angle:
R Hamilton 4
Music for the Soul 2009: C Hall 5
Summer Mission Experience 2009 6
Welcome to Scotland
J Dick 8
Experience Mission through Tilsley
College - S McQuoid 9
An African Experience
H Peebles 10
Introducing New Workers 11
T
SPEARHEAD
Experience Mission
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The French Connectionn 1975, I joined a GLO team
in Caen, Normandy. It was
my first experience with
GLO and my first experience
on short term mission. During the 2
weeks I spent on the team I had the very
strong conviction that God was calling
me to work, one day, full time in France.
This needed to be confirmed, of course,
and a helping hand in this direction came
when I met Valerie (on a GLO team) on
another short term team in Caen. She too
had received a call to France. Five years
later, as a married couple, we arrived in
Rambouillet near Paris, to begin a full
time ministry in the Lord’s work. The
church was very small, so we immediately
thought about the possibility of having
a short term team. We contacted GLO
who gave us a quick and positive reply.
This first team was followed by many
others down through the 17 years that we
worked in this area.
We had several aims in inviting teams.
Firstly, we were able to accomplish more
evangelistic work in 2 weeks than
we could have done in a year or
more with the few Christians in
the church. In fact, some
of the activities that
the team members
undertook
would
have
been impossible to do without their help.
Secondly, we wanted the teams to be
an encouragement to local Christians.
As our church grew in numbers over
the years, we strongly encouraged local
Christians to be involved in the work with
the teams, in whatever way they could.
Some Christians even arranged to take
their annual leave to be with the team
full time.
Thirdly, as we had ourselves been so
blessed by our experiences with short
term GLO teams (in fact they changed the
course of our lives) our prayer was that,
by hosting teams we would encourage
other Christians to commit their lives
more fully to the Lord. We longed for
other Christians to take a more active
interest in mission.
Finally, short term teams were a
tremendous boost to us as a family.
Our three lads looked forward every
year to the teams and got involved in
them from a very young age. Mum and
Dad thoroughly enjoyed the fun and the
fellowship too!
Having moved to Dunkirk and having
worked with Petite Synthe, Dunkirk
assembly for 10 years, this year we asked
GLO to host our first short term team
since moving to the town. Our church
situation in Dunkirk is very different from
our early days of teams in Rambouillet.
We couldn’t help wondering if, after so
many years everything would go well.
We weren’t disappointed. Our church was
blessed. We were blessed. Many people
had the opportunity to read and hear
the gospel message through the efforts
of the team members. We pray that the
experience will leave a lasting impression
on the team members and on many
Christians in our assembly.
Go on… let’s have another team next
year! Why not join us!
Alan & Valerie Kyle
I Top left: Literature
Distribution
Top Right: GLO Team
2009, Dunkirk
Below: Alan & Valerie
Kyle
Gospel Literature Outreach
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aving served as a GLO
resident missionary in Italy
for some 19 years and having
hosted probably around 50
teams over the course of that time, you
can imagine how strange it was then to go
back this year as a visiting team member!
However that is exactly what happened in
June of 2009 when 10 of us from Aberdeen
went to form a GLO team in the Viterbo
area of central Italy. The experience was
interesting in the following ways:-
Recruiting and Planning
Our aim was to “fill” the GLO team in
Viterbo with folks from Aberdeen. So
from early in the year, we highlighted the
opportunity at Deeside Christian Fellowship
and other churches in Aberdeen. Within
a relatively short period of time we had
recruited the 10 folks required for the
team. Our ages ranged from a 19 year old
student up to a guy in his fifties. Because
we were all from the one area, we had the
advantage of being able to get together on
two or three occasions before going out to
Italy and, with information that the resident
missionaries (Regin and Heidi Guttesen) had
sent us, were able to do quite a bit of prayer
and preparation work.
“Emotions” upon return
It was a bizarre feeling to get off the flight
at Rome airport and be picked up by the
Giuseppe Longo the resident Italian worker
– a task I had done myself many times
in receiving visiting teams! Arriving at our
accommodation there was great expectation
on our part to see what it would be like – in
organising accommodation for many years,
I had probably forgotten how much that
particular aspect means to visiting folks.
Within a short time of arriving we received
a good team orientation session from the
Guttesens and Giuseppe Longo. Again, being
on the receiving end of this aspect reinforced
to me how important that is in helping the
visiting team members “find their feet”.
Frustration
I would have to admit to a certain feeling
of frustration as we launched into team
activities. Having been at the planning
end for many years, there was a sense
of probably ill-founded irritation that the
activities and events weren’t planned in the
way in which I may have done it! However
within a day or two I had “settled down”
and enjoyed not having the responsibility
of organising the programme and yet being
able to experience fresh ideas and ways of
doing things.
Joys
I hadn’t been away from Italy for all that
long (1 year) but there was tremendous joy
in being able to go back into that culture
and language that we had obviously grown
to love and appreciate. It was especially
refreshing to be involved again in overt
evangelism in the piazzas and on the streets
in a way in which in the UK is perhaps no
longer culturally viable (or maybe we have
just grown timid and fearful in our approach?)
Value
Not that I needed convincing but this
experience of going back to Italy as a visiting
mission team member reinforced to me yet
again the value of short-term teams. The
team was of tremendous encouragement
to the small struggling groups of believers
in the Viterbo area, it created an “excuse”
for them to have events to which they
could invite their non-Christian friends and
neighbours, it gave real encouragement
and practical help to the resident Italian
evangelist, Giuseppe, and indeed the whole
experience also brought a lot encouragement
to the GLO team members who came. I
would say that there is particular value in
recruiting an entire team from the one church
or locality and going on mission as a group.
Here’s to the next time!
Robert Hamilton
Deeside Christian Fellowship, Aberdeen
H
Experiencing mission from the “other” Angle!
“ The team was of tremendous encouragement”
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he GLO summer team Music
4 the Soul took place in
July this year. It’s the third
year we had organised this
particular type of team, basing all the
events around music and hour and a half
length concerts. The first two teams took
place in France, but this year we took the
risk of exporting the team to the UK.
We find there’s an element of stress in
the lead up to any GLO team that you’re
leading or organising, in that you have
no idea who will join the team, what
particular skills they will bring to the team,
how they will deal with team life, how
they will cope with culture and language
differences, whether people will respond
to invitations, etc.
Because of the nature of the Music 4 the
Soul team, there are also some particular
apprehensions such as: What if we get
10 singers and no musicians? What if we
get 10 trumpet players! Will the team be
able to pull the songs together in time
for the first concerts? Will we be able
to get the harmonies? Will the technical
side of things work out okay? Will team
members manage learning songs in a
different language? It has to be said, that
this particular team depends greatly on the
team members’ musical abilities. But it’s
always amazing by the end of the team to
see how everything works together.
And it has to be said, that through the
3 years that we have been organising this
type of GLO team, God has always provided
the necessary abilities and equipment to
perform quality concerts which express
who he is and his desire for us to be
reconciled with him. This year was no
different. Perhaps this has also to do with
the fact that the majority of those who
take part in a GLO team come with a very
humble attitude, willing to serve, and ready
to have a go at whatever is demanded of
them, with the aim of sharing God’s love
with others. This has certainly been our
experience of GLO team members and this
year proved to be no different.
As team leaders, it’s a massive
encouragement to see God working in the
team members. It’s great to see individuals
growing in their faith, being challenged
in their walk with him, using the gifts
and abilities with which he has entrusted
them, gaining confidence in those abilities,
taking risks, trying new things, and gaining
confidence in God as he uses them to
testify to his love and presence in their
lives. And their willingness to do these
things is itself a source of inspiration.
It’s also fantastic to see how appreciative
local churches are of the particular
evangelistic opportunities offered by a GLO
team, to see how churches are encouraged
by the individual team members, by their
desire and willingness to serve God, and
also to see local church members taking
part where they can in the life of the team.
As team leaders then, a GLO team is
an opportunity to see God’s provision, to
see him at work in the lives of individuals,
to see local churches encouraged, and to
see God reveal his love to those that don’t
know him through the willingness of his
children to make themselves available.
Chris & Michelle Hall
Chateau Gontier, France
T
Music 4 the Soul 2009
“ It was great to see the enthusiasm of the individual team members”
Gospel Literature Outreach
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If you want to make great friends,
have an awesome impact on a local
community, help others and completely
encourage your own personal faith then
go on a GLO Team – it was brilliant”!
Summer Mission Experiences 2009
“ The GLO Team made me totally fired up for God”
“ The team was refreshing and a real encouragement to both of us in our personal walk with God”
“ One of the best things I have
done in my life”!
“My walk with God certainly
deepened during this trip.”
“Amazing experience! The people were amazing, the food was really amazing
and it really helped me gain confidence in praying in front of other people!”
“It was such an amazing experience to
bring the Lord’s word through music,
many people were touched”
“Despite being terrified of meeting loads
of new people, the team bonded really
quickly and everyone really looked out
for each other. I felt part of a community
and looked after by the other team
members and being prayed for by them
was a very special experience.”
SPEARHEAD
Experience Mission
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“ This was a new experience and it taught us to rely on God.”
“ GLO Teams are a reminder
of how God can use us”.
Location DatesALBANIA
Vlore 3/9 – 13/9
AFRICA
Madagascar 1/8 – 18/8
FRANCE
Quimper 1/7 13/7Petite Synthe Dunkerque 2/4 – 10/4Laval 7/7 – 20/7Alencon 14/8 - 28/8
HUNGARY Domos 21/8 - 29/8
ITALY
Fuorigrotta, Naples 2/7 – 12/7Reggio Emilia 4/9 – 11/9
POLAND
Southern Poland 31/7 – 8/8
REP OF IRELANDEnniscorthy 7/8 – 21/8Limerick 7/8 – 14/8
ROMANIATalmaciu 1/7 – 12/7Talmaciu: GLO Centre / Lepsa: Teen Ranch 27/7 – 9/8
UK
Hereford, England 2/7 - 11 /7Johnstone, Scotland 3/7 – 11/7Renfrew, Scotland 24/7 - 31/7Newcastle Upon Tyne, England 1/7 – 11/7Crescent Church, Belfast, Northern Ireland 14/8 - 21/8Hillside Community Church, Ballymena 24/7- 1/8
For further details or an application form contact Anna Pinney, GLO
Admin Office. Tel. 01698 263483. E-mail: [email protected].
Or, check the website: www.glo-europe.org
Join In For 2010!
Special World Cup Outreach with OM - “The 2010 ULTIMATE GOAL CHALLENGE” - details can be supplied on request
Gospel Literature Outreach
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e began hosting GLO teams
in 2002 and from that time
we have received a variety
of team members ranging
from those living locally who wanted to
be part of this exciting church plant, to
those from overseas who discovered the
team on a mission form and signed up,
not knowing what they were coming to!
We have had people join us from Africa,
Italy, France, Germany, England, Northern
Ireland and from closer to home Paisley,
Bellshill, Motherwell, Greenock & Dalry!
Many people’s thoughts of going on
mission, involve heading overseas to
a sunnier climate, diverse cultures and
travelling long distance to reach others
for Christ, so why would anyone want
to experience mission in Johnstone,
Scotland.
The many valued team members
we have received over the years have
come and brought their various gifts
and talents to complement the willing
volunteers from our own church. As we
plan and prepare for the team’s arrival,
anticipating great things, we always
question, who are these people? Where
will they come from? What will they do?
And why are they coming? Each year we
have seen that the Lord has called and
sent the right people to come and be
part of this exciting work.
We have been blessed by those who
choose to invest a week of their lives
sacrificing their time and money to serve
the Lord. This had an impact on our new
Church who recognise that God is using
others to come and join them to serve,
and that our town is an important part of
God’s mission field on a worldwide scale.
This has also inspired our young people
to take their faith from Johnstone and
serve worldwide based on the examples
they have witnessed coming to be with
our church in Scotland.
All of the team members we have
welcomed over these seven years of
summer teams have been willing to try
new things, fully involve themselves
and embrace the local people where
they are at. We still have local contacts
who every year will ask if we will be
having our summer outreach programme
and are excited to meet people who
value their town, young people and
community. These links are so important
in our everyday interactions as we work
planting Dimity Street Church and seeing
relationships established and people
saved as a result of our faithfulness to
mission here in Scotland.
Maybe the Lord is calling you to short
term mission in the future, consider a
mission closer to home where you speak
the language, you can use your gifts and
talents and explore what God is doing
here in Scotland, changing lives and
seeing new churches planted in these
days of spiritual darkness in our own
nation.
John Dick
W
Welcome to Scotland
“ We have been blessed by those who choose to invest their time and money serving the Lord”
Top left - GLO Team
Johnstone 2009
Top Right - Dimity Street
Church Group
Below - Puppet Ministry
SPEARHEAD
Experience Mission
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H
ife is full of stereotypes.
People make assumptions
about lots of things in
life, not because they
know the reality of what is happening
but because they have a stereotypical
image in their minds. Consequently
the mental image they have becomes
their frame of reference.
Bible colleges often suffer because
of this. When people think of Bible
College, the kind of words that often
come to mind are things like: academic,
theory, ivory tower, detached, bookish
and anorak. Of course there can
be some substance to this because
theological education has at times been
about head knowledge and nothing
else. This stereotype, however, is not
true for all colleges and certainly not
true for Tilsley College.
Ever since Tilsley College was formed,
its focus has been on mission. Not just
the theory of mission but its practice
also. A key component in mission is the
missionary! Consequently the person
and his or her character is of great
importance. As a result, Tilsley College
focuses on three issues as it trains men
and women. These can be summed
up in the words knowledge, skills and
character. We want to produce people
who know God and his plans for the
world, and know how the mission of
God in the world should be carried
out. We want students to develop skills
that will enable them to participate
effectively in mission. But we also want
students to have a Christ-like character
so that they can engage in mission with
integrity. The result of this emphasis is
that our course is not just about theory,
but also the experience of mission.
Students experience mission on the
course in a variety of ways. Every week
they have practical assignments which
will give them an insight into aspects
of children’s work, youth work and
social care. These real life situations
are supervised to maximize the training
element, but it is real involvement
with real people. Throughout the year
there are also evangelistic opportunities
including innovative outreach in local
shopping centres and street-based work,
as well as taking services in a variety of
churches. At the end of the first term, the
students also spend a week, as a group,
in a European non-English speaking
mission situation. Here they hear about
mission from people who are practitioners
and get an opportunity to engage in
evangelism. At the end of term 4 the
students also conduct a 10 day mission
with a church somewhere in the UK. This
is followed by a field-term in which each
student will go to a location of his or
her own choosing and spend four weeks
working alongside a missionary or local
Christian worker. All of these experiences
are designed to envision the students
with the spiritual needs of the world and
give them the confidence to feel that they
can make a difference.
While the course is immensely
practical, it would be wrong to forget
that study is a vital discipline in
Christian service. If the students are to
be effective in mission (whether home
or abroad – as conventional
missionaries or missionaries
in the workplace) they
need to understand the
Bible, theology, issues
such as leadership
and youth work and be able to use
apologetics intelligently. Equally, they
need to be the kind of people God can
use in His service, and that means they
need to be mature, relational and Christ
like. The course, through its mentoring
system, is designed to work towards
this outcome.
Mission is not just something we
should talk about, it is something to be
experienced. I believe an ideal starting
point is to spend a year at Tilsley
College and experience mission within a
training context first hand.
Stephen McQuoid
L
“ Mission is not just something we should talk about, it should be experienced”
ntional
onaries
y
he
s
i t j t
Experience Mission Through Tilsley College
Gospel Literature Outreach
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eading a GLO team to
Malawi was for me at
the same time a totally
exhausting and wholly
positive experience. Team selection was
different from the norm in that virtually
all the 7 team members (8 including
myself) were personally invited to join
the team. I adopted this approach since
there are special cultural challenges in
visiting Africa that require a measure of
emotional stability as well as spiritual
maturity. Visiting villages in rural Africa
was a real challenge to some of the team
although the youngest member was 26.
Each team member was specifically
gifted and embraced the areas of
education, music, drama, sports coaching
and preaching. We went to support a
relatively new church plant in Blantyre.
It was a privilege to work with a
mature and very committed group
of young people who were ready to
tackle with enthusiasm every challenge
presented to them and who gelled
together as a unit from day one. This
team spirit was helped by a significant
amount of coordinated advanced
planning. We met for two separate days
at home to plan and pray, and had our
programme totally arranged in advance
on the basis of detailed discussions with
Jonathan Newall, the missionary with
whom we were working.
Leadership responsibility for the
significant variety of activities we
undertook was allocated to different team
members. Every member was responsible
for at least one aspect of the ministry
and that member was then responsible
to produce the necessary ‘ tools’ for each
task. (eg 10 netballs, 15 footballs, clothes
for dramas, literature for teaching English,
haggis for a Scottish night etc!)
Taking the risk of trusting young
people with real responsibility and
seeing them faithfully and effectively
fulfilling that responsibility in a sacrificial
way, for the blessing of others, for the
glory of God and for their own personal
development, was for me an enriching
and gratifying experience.
Leading a team with focused goals
for a specific period is an excellent
opportunity for developing leadership
qualities within the team members. It
is an opportunity to trust the emerging
generation to take real responsibility,
while being on hand to help if required.
Howard Peebles
L
An African Experience
“ Visiting villages in rural Africa was a real challenge for some of the team”
SPEARHEAD
Experience Mission
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e are Juljan and Suela
Muhameti from Vlore,
Albania. We both became
Christians in our teenage
years - Juli when he was 13 years old and
Ela when she was 9 years old. Ela was
brought up in a Christian home in the
capital Tirana and after leaving school went
to study English at Vlore University. Juli
was born and brought up in Vlore and is
still waiting for God to save his parents –
so please pray about this.
We got married in the summer of 2008
and even at this point in our lives we
had a real desire to serve God in Albania.
After 2 months of marriage we moved
to Motherwell, Scotland to study at GLO.
Both of us were aware of our need to learn
more about the Bible and to receive good
sound training in what it means to serve
God with our lives. While at GLO the Lord
really touched our lives in many ways and
it became clear that God was asking us to
serve him in Church Planting in the city of
Orikum which is located just a few miles
south of Vlore.
We returned to Albania in June 2009 and
after settling back into Albanian life started
serving God full-time from September 2009.
We are involved in the very early stages of
Church planting, have a prison ministry and
are involved in the work amongst the many
students in Vlore. We are so thankful to
be serving God in this way and would
value prayer as we work full-time with GLO
in this service.
rian & Liz Hawthorne from
Newtownards, N Ireland
are working, in association
with GLO, within Albert
Hall, Renfrew. They studied at Tilsley
College, Motherwell during 2006/07 and
subsequently undertook the Second Year
Internship Programme before moving
to Renfrew. Brian and Liz have three
children: Benjamin (17 years), Rebecca
(15 years), Grace (11 years).
They recently organised a special
Christmas programme for schools in
association with Scripture Union and their
report follows:
Over four days, the church welcomed
almost 300 primary 6 children from all
five primary schools in Renfrew. The
two hour programme was packed
with a number of short and engaging
sessions that would try to help the
children understand the real meaning of
Christmas.
We began each session with some
fun challenges followed by a special
Christmas craft time that would involve
making a stable, gift or candle from
coloured mosaic tiles.
The Christmas story, itself, was told
using a variety of presentation methods;
flash cards, drama, puppets, video clips
and there was also good opportunity for
group discussions and reflection.
As we reflect on the week, we have
so much for which to praise God:
• We had sufficient and valuable helpers
each day.
• The response sheets from each of the
teachers were very positive.
• Each child received the UCB bag of
hope along with a gift and an invitation
to our special Christmas services.
W
B
Above Left: Vlore, Albania
Above: Juli & Ela
Muhameti
Introducing GLO Workers
Juli & Ela Muhameti – Vlore, Albania
Brian & Liz Hawthorne – Renfrew, Scotland
Brian & Liz Hawthorne with Benjamin, Grace and Rebecca
Albert Hall, Renfrew
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UK:Newcastle upon Tyne Andy & Claire GibsonJohnstone Bobby & Mairi SneddonJohn & Fiona DickRenfrewBrian & Liz HawthorneBellshillColin & Margaret MacPhie#Alasdair & Lynsey Burt
MISSIONS:Sam & Andrea Gibson
BUSINESS MINISTRIES & ADMINISTRATIONJohn & Cathie SpeirsJan GoodallAnna PinneyIan & Jenny Smith
TILSLEY COLLEGE:Stephen & Debbie McQuoidCarolyn BakerDavid & Margaret ClarksonMark & Shirley DaviesAllison HillAlastair & Ruth Noble
ALBANIAVloreJuli & Ela Muhameti
DENMARK:CopenhagenValdemar & Ruth LützenJógvan & Elin JacobsenAndrew & Sara Berghamar
FAROE ISLANDS:TorshavnJógvan & Unn Zachariassen
FRANCE:Bagnols-sur-Ceze Pierre & Alison BariteauDavid & Sheena BuchanDavid & Dominique Buc
LavalMike & Alison PackerChateau GontierChris & Michelle HallChristian & Catherine MoreauMarseillePhilippe & Marie-Christine PerrilliatGarry & Kim Blair (on furlough in Scotland) Marie-Christine FaveChristian & Ruth-Lise PiagetNanteWilliam & Liz IrwinQuimperYannick & Margaret Ollivier
ITALY:CampobassoRegin & Heidi Guttesen
MarscianoErion & Victoria Pici
Naples Patrizio & Jennifer ZucchettoPozzengo #Adino & Eleanor RicossaTuscany Leo & Angela Isac
IRELAND:EnniscorthyAndrew & Lorna BurtMagdalene BurtLimerickJohn & Linda Stanfield
Berny & Michaela Tuccillo
ROMANIA:TalmaciuGeorge & Lidia SortanDani & Doina Vasilca
SPAIN:MurciaAurelio & Nani Esquembri
#self-supporting
Gos
pel Li
tera
ture
Out
reac
h78
Mui
r St
reet
Mot
herw
ell
ML1
1BN
Tel 01
698
2634
83Fa
x 0
1698
275
418
E-m
ail:
adm
in@
glo-
euro
pe.o
rgIn
tern
et: w
ww.g
lo-e
urop
e.or
g
GLO European Workers
For further information or up-to-date details of team places still available
please contact Anna Pinney: Tel: 01698 263483
E: [email protected] W: www.glo-europe.org
Gospel Literature Outreach
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