
Evangelicals from two generations and diverse church backgrounds see the fruit of collaboration, says Croatian Jasmin AvdagiÄ. A festival brought together 1,300 people from countries of the former Yugoslavia region.
Evangelical Christians in the region that suffered deep armed conflicts around the dissolution of Yugoslavia are now speaking of a collaboration between new generations that has never been seen before.
1,300 church members from different backgrounds travelled to Ć ibenik, Croatia, in June to foster fellowship, worship God, have fun and receive good training. They came from Serbia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Slovenia, Montenegro, North Macedonia and Croatia itself.
It was a key moment of âunity in Christâ, believes Jasmin AvdagiÄ, who directs the Srcokret festival and serves as national coordinator for STEP (the IFES student movement in Croatia).
Not only was there diversity in the origin of the participants (the festival programme was translated into five languages), but most evangelical church denominations and organisations were represented.
âThe generation of mothers and fathers served the generation of sons and daughters, worshipped together and evangelised togetherâ, he explained to Evangelical Focus.
The summer gathering by the sea also sought to have a missional impact, making âa bold proclamation of the gospel to the city of Ć ibenik and the whole region, including a big evangelistic event in the main square of the city with praise and worship, preaching, testimonies and one-on-one witnessingâ.
âA strong breakthroughâ
Such collaboration between Christians across borders is taking place in an area of Europe with such a difficult recent past.
The Socialist Republic of Yugoslavia dissolved in 1990 after arduous conflicts that caused at least 100,000 deaths.
âWe had a strong breakthrough and closer relationships and coworking than everâ, says Jasmin AvdagiÄ. âIf we consider the region torn apart by war, this is amazing. The young generation is especially free from past bondagesâ.
Local churches are central to this slow work, while Christian organisations use their flexibility and international connections to work together to create a âKingdom culture and atmosphere in which young leaders are emergingâ.
Prayer amidst emergence of new divisive narratives
But it is not all plain sailing. In a political and social media context where ultra-nationalist rhetoric is re-emerging and reopening the wounds of war, churches have an important role to play in promoting long-term peace.
âWe have to be sober and alert and prayerfully watch over our nationsâ. The fact that there are young people who âclaim Christian heritage with a mixture of nationalism shows both a hunger for real Christian values in the postmodern liberal society and the danger of manipulating that hunger into politics and conflictsâ.
For Jasmin AvdagiÄ and other Christians, the âprayer and hope is that we will not go back to conflict but rather proclaim peace and mutual values in this regionâ.
Originally published by Evangelical Focus.
News Source : https://www.christiandaily.com/news/this-is-amazing-6-countries-torn-apart-by-war-see-breakthrough-in-christian-cooperation