Carey Baptist Church

Carey Baptist Church is an independent evangelical/Baptist church in Reading, England.[1]

Carey Baptist Church
Carey Baptist Church, front facade
Carey Baptist Church
Location within Reading
51°27′11.1″N 0°58′47.13″W
LocationReading
CountryEngland
DenominationBaptist
Websitecareybaptistchurch.org.uk
History
Founded1867
Architecture
Functional statusActive

History

The church was founded in 1867 and was named after William Carey, a famous missionary from Northamptonshire, who went to India in 1793, and never returned to his homeland.[2]

Notable past elders include Rev. Theodore Harold Bendor-Samuel.[3]

Additional premises, The Carey Centre, in Anstey Road (a parallel road behind the chapel) were acquired in 1993, following the closure of Central Evangelical Church.

As of June 2009, Carey Baptist Church now owns part of what was the Oasis Public House.

Carey today

The church building is on Carey Street (Anstey Road) in central Reading,[1][4] close to the Inner Distribution Road (IDR), Oxford Road, and The Hexagon.

The main service times are 10:30 and 18:30 on Sunday. MP3-format files of the sermons are available on the church's website[5] and Sunday services are streamed live from the website.

The church is affiliated to Affinity and the FIEC Fellowship of Independent Evangelical Churches.

The current pastors are James Muldoon and David Magowan.[6] Jonathan Stephen left the church on 16 July 2006 to take up the position of principal of the Wales Evangelical School of Theology in September 2006,[7] while Basil Howlett retired from the position of co-pastor in January 2009.

Missions

The church continues to work in the tradition of William Carey by sending missionaries abroad to India [4][8] and the Amazon.[9] In 2005 a missionary from Carey, David Barnes, was serving in Aysana, a small village, about five hours down river from Iquitos, Peru.[9]

Ian Stillman, a deaf missionary sent to India by Carey Baptist, was arrested in August 2000 and charged with smuggling 20 kilograms of cannabis after the drug was found in a shared taxi. It is widely believed that the charges were fabricated. Parliament "pa(id) tribute" to Carey Baptist on the successful campaign to obtain Stillman's release from prison.[10]

References

  1. Carey Baptist Church, Reading, Find a Church, UK.
  2. Churches named for William Carey, webpage of William Carey University, accessed May 11, 2011.
  3. Theodore Bendor-Samuel, April 1998, Evangelical Times
  4. "Praying that Ian will be freed Archived 2011-09-28 at the Wayback Machine", January 14, 2002, GET Workingham newspaper.
  5. Sermons, Carey Baptist Church, Reading, UK.
  6. "Minister set to move on to pastures new," 5 August 2009, Whitby Gazette.
  7. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-06-09. Retrieved 2011-05-11.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Rev. C. Jonathan Stephen, Principal, faculty page, Wales Evangelical School of Theology, accessed may 11, 2011.
  8. "Stillman hearing challenged," Jan. 25, 2002, Church Times.
  9. "Can you help fill a shoebox?, August 26, 2005, Get Surrey newspaper.
  10. "Early day motion 321." Dec 9, 2002, Parliament of the United Kingdom.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.