Welcome

And thank you for your concern about our ministry in Paris. This weblog is a crossroad for those who ask us for information, in order to pray better for a revival in Paris.

We apologize for the level of language and for all mistakes and faults in our english, but we are convinced that God will provide for comprehension, and we hope that you will not be blocked because of the inappropriate use of a word or any idiom.

Be blessed

Pastor Gilles Boucomont

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Mercredi 25 juillet 2007
So here I am in my last week at the Eglise Réformée du Marais, I can’t quite believe that my 10 months here have flown by and now it’s time to leave! God had blessed me so much by bringing me to this Church. I have met so many amazing people who love and serve the Lord, so many are such an inspiration. It has been wonderful to see how God is moving in this place and how much he has blessed the community. Meeting God’s people who come from such a wide range of backgrounds and experiences, but who are all one in Christ has been so enriching and inspiring. The sense of community here has also been a huge blessing to me. Right from the start I was warmly welcomed and the year has gone on I’ve felt that I’m more and more a part of the family. There is so much opportunity for sharing the joy and the love of Christ together. I’ve certainly had many new experiences here and I’ve learned so much – on a general life-experience level and on a spiritual level. The Lord has definitely enlarged my horizons. I’m really sad to be leaving such a wonderful place after 10 months. I’m taking a whole host of memories and experiences back to England with me. I’m pretty sure that I’m not going to be able to stay away and so I’ll be back to see everyone quite often as it’s so easy to get to Paris from where I live! Thank you very much for your prayers. It’s clear that the Holy Spirit is moving in this Church in Paris and has already done wonderful things. I know that the Lord has many more projects and plans for this Church in the future. Please pray for these projects, the members of the church and Gilles in your prayers: that the Holy Spirit will continue to guide them in their work for the glory of God and that he will continually renew their passion and love for Him, for each other and the people around them. God bless, Jenny
Par Jenny A. - Publié dans : France
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Jeudi 7 juin 2007
In September the church will be welcoming three new members to the family: One student from the Paris University of Theology, a Russian student and a Franco-Algerian student. Esther is in her final year at the University of Theology training to be a pastor. She is from Cameroon and lives in Sarcelles in the suburbs of Paris, the mother of a family and has a degree in Human Rights from Cotonou University in Bénin. She’ll be working closely with Gilles on a part-time basis. At first she’ll be finding out and learning how things are run in the church but she’ll become progressively more and more involved in church activities, including playing a part in the church council. Because Esther lives not far from the church and has a family to look after, she won’t be staying in the church apartment. Instead there will be two female students living there, Cathy from Russia and Kahina from Algeria. The story of how Kahina came about finding herself in this position is incredible. During the last church council meeting the issue of finding a second student to accompany Cathy was discussed and no solution was found and it wasn’t clear how they were going to find one. After the meeting, Christine, a member of the church, arrived with her Algerian friend who had wanted to have a look at Christine’s church. After having seen the building, Christine, Kahina and the church council members went across the street for a coffee and to just generally have a chat. Kahina told her testimony and explained that she had been forced to flee Algeria because of her faith and that she was having real trouble finding anywhere to live in Paris and even more trouble being able to afford it. Gilles and the other members of the council looked and each other in amazement. Gilles said to Kahina that they had just been trying to solve the issue of finding someone to live in the apartment here in the church. She said, ‘Oh ok, but how much would the rent be?’ ‘It’s free!’ was the reply! She was staggered! How amazing! Only half an hour earlier they had been at a loss as to know how to solve the problem and here was the perfect person to live in the apartment and who would benefit so much from it! God is good! Please pray for these three women who will be joining the church in September; that they can make all the preparations they need, that they feel welcomed and can easily fit into the life of the church, and that they can use their own gifts and ideas to the service of the Lord in this community.
Par Jenny - Publié dans : France
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Jeudi 31 mai 2007
After months of talks and meetings, the church building is finally going to be undergoing major restoration work from the end of June. This is going to be a huge project which will take 12 or 13 months, not finishing until August 2008. The front of the church is going to be completely restored, it’s not just a case of cleaning up the stonework: several blocks will be replaced as well as the columns and the statues. Several objects are also going to be renovated: the large main door, the stain-glass window, the surrounding fence, the steps etc. This is a major operation, one which is done every two or three hundred years on a monument such as this! Of course the work is going to cause major disruption to the everyday life of the church community. For safety reasons, entry to the church will be via a tunnel and for a short time the main entrance will be inaccessible. So as to avoid intrusions, the church will be largely boarded up. All this work is being paid for by the sate but in addition, the church council have decided to enlarge the capacity of the church by changing the entrance. The necessity for this work is a testimony to the great news that the church congregation has increased dramatically in recent months, but it won’t be paid for by the Paris town hall. The work in the entrance will hopefully begin in March or April so we have only until then to find the necessary funding and financial plan for the project. The members of the church are really relieved and happy that this work is going to take place. The church is a beautiful building and in a bit of a sad state at the moment. In August next year we’ll be able to see such a huge improvement. The building will be all the more attractive and hopefully the beautiful and renovated exterior will finally reflect the life and vibrancy that you can find within its walls. We would really appreciate your prayers for this huge project! We pray that the final plans and preparations will go according to God’s will. We pray also that we can find the needed finances for renovating the entrance area to increase the building’s capacity. And finally, that, despite the disruption that will be caused by the work, the church can still continue to serve and worship the Lord with ever more faith and passion.
Par Jenny - Publié dans : The Reformed Church in Le Marais
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Mardi 29 mai 2007
‘The organisation “Mission Intérieure” [which translates as ‘Mission on the Inside’] of the Lutheran church in Paris started new orientation towards diverse, church-orientated forms of evangelism through the launch – among other initiatives - of the course “Becoming a Christian, remaining a Christian”’. It will work with a local project of two churches : the Reformed Church of Le Marais and the Lutheran Church of Les Billettes. Up until now, the ‘Alpha Course’ has been running, very successfully, in many French churches. This cross-denominational evangelistic initiative takes the form of a preliminary, adult-orientated introduction to the Christian faith within a friendly, comfortable and non-threatening setting. The course has its origins in the Anglican Church – specifically at the Church of Holy Trinity Brompton in London. This new course, ‘Becoming a Christian, remaining a Christian’, has its origins in the Church of Hanover. Originally designed by Burghard Krause, a Lutheran missionary-theologian, its aim is to invite all those who are interested to explore the Christian faith. The theological bases on which the course is founded are purely protestant-Lutheran. Although anyone is, of course, welcome to take part, the course is not tailored specifically for non-Christians; rather, it is aimed at those who find perhaps themselves on the fringes of the Church, who might be looking for a deeper meaning to life. The course is equally directed towards those who would consider themselves to be Christians but who would like to ‘rediscover’ their faith. There are significant numbers of people in our society, and culture, who are born into Christian families but who, partly on account of the lack of religious instruction, and the development of misled ideas of what it really means to be a Christian, gradually lose touch with a faith they might have once had. As a result, many of us live under the impression of having somehow received our ‘Christianity’ by birthright: no longer is Christianity a faith which we ourselves have discovered, but merely a set of traditions – constituting a kind of identity-building toolbox – which has been passed down to us by our parents. What this course offers is the opportunity for people to ‘get back on track’ with their faith; to find an identity in Christ for themselves, and to find out how to preserve, and live out, this identity. The format of the course is akin to a journey. It invites participants to explore the realm of faith in the same way that they might explore a foreign country. The ‘exploration’ takes place in a conference setting, instead of within the milieu of small groups – one of the characteristics of the Alpha Course. The aim is that people come and hear about the Christian faith. The last session, however, takes the form of a kind of open Church service, which brings together all various elements of the course as it has progressed. While the course is in progress, however, the participants can – if they wish - follow up what has been said in each talk, in their own small groups. An important emphasis is placed on flexibility: participants are free to simply come, listen and reflect; or, if they want to, to discuss what they have heard with others. The small groups that develop often prove to remarkably long-lasting. For example, it can sometimes happen that small groups continue to meet for months, even years, following the end of a course. The course ‘Becoming a Christian, remaining a Christian’ was introduced in Alsace a few years ago by the pastor Guy-Pierre Geiger, a church inspector from Bouxwiller. It worked very well, and since then the course has been translated into French, and two pastors have been trained to lead it in France. In Alsace a number of churches or a number of villages tend to get together, whether in churches or in village or town halls, in order to ensure the course a kind of ‘strength in numbers’. The fruits of this approach are considerable: there are sometimes as many as 200-300 participants. The courses will take place in november. In order that this initiative might be as successful as in Alsace, those churches involved won’t be organising any other meetings throughout these two weeks. This November session is designed in particular (though by no means exclusively) for those who hold a position of responsibility within the church: pastors, members of church councils, synod councillors, bible teachers… . The aim of this is that they might themselves develop in an interest in the idea of running the course in their own church.
Par Robert - Publié dans : Paris
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Mercredi 9 mai 2007
“A new commandment I give to you: Love one another. As I have loved you so you must love one another. By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.” John 13:34-35 Over Easter my best friend from England came over to Paris to stay with me for a long weekend. She’s not a Christian but she’s looking to find out more about God and faith and has opened up to the idea fairly recently. We had a great time spending time together but also being involved in church events. Of course because it was Easter there were a lot of things going on! At the end of her stay she remarked at how friendly and how welcome everyone had made her feel. She really felt at ease and had had a wonderful time. This is great in itself, but what makes her comments all the more poignant is the fact that she felt this despite not being able to speak a word of French! I translated quite a bit for her but obviously I couldn’t translate every single conversation or sermon. Luckily a lot of people in the church speak very good English and made the effort to include her in the discussions and the jokes. She also picked up the feeling of community and happiness just from the atmosphere during the Easter services, meals and times of sharing together. We all had a good time together and laughed a lot over the weekend! She had said previously that she finds that the Christians she knows and that she’s met are always so friendly, so welcoming and so inclusive. There’s definitely something different about them. In the Tuesday prayer meeting before she arrived the people in my small group and I prayed that she would really be able to see the love of Christ in this community and could feel that the Lord is present here. I really think that God answered my prayers. Even though she didn’t speak French and couldn’t understand the teaching from sermons or the prayers, she could still receive and appreciate the message of the love of Christ shown through his Church. I find this truly amazing and so encouraging. If we choose to accept Jesus’s love and to share it with the people around us there are no language barriers. It can come across even in a simple smile or a small gesture. When she left I was sad that I wouldn’t see her again for another couple of months, but this was quickly replaced by joy when I thought about the feelings and experiences that she was taking away with her and the impact that I pray it will have in her search for faith. I praise God for this community here in the Marais which has welcomed me with open arms as well as my friend, and which is so ready to demonstrate and to share the awesome gift that it Christ’s love.
Par Jenny - Publié dans : France
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