Christian Vision for Men

Christian Vision for Men (CVM) is a registered charity[1] operating throughout the United Kingdom and based in Chesterfield. Its mission statement is to "connect men to Jesus and the church to men". It works with over 2,000 churches, mainly by having its materials used by the churches men's groups to achieve its aims.

CVM (Christian Vision for Men)
Founded1989
FounderMax Sinclair
TypeEvangelical Christian Movement
FocusEvangelical Christianity
Location
Origins London, UK
Area served
United Kingdom
Members
2000+ churches
Key people
Rev Carl Beech, Nathan Blackaby
Employees
8
Volunteers
100s
Websitehttp://www.cvm.org.uk/
Registered Charity number: 1071663

History

CVM was founded in 1989 by Max Sinclair. Until August 2006 it was known as Christian Viewpoint for Men,[2] working alongside Christian Viewpoint for Women which is now known as Activate Your Life.[3]

In 2006, Carl Beech became CEO, taking over from Richard Meryon[4] who went to work at the Garden Tomb in Jerusalem. Carl Beech moved to the newly created role of president In January 2015, being succeeded as CEO by Nathan Blackaby.

In recent years CVM has launched a series of initiatives and activities to further its aims. In 2009 it launched talkinghead,[5] a website to capture video testimonies. In 2010 it started codelife,[6] a simple list of twelve guidelines to help men to live by Christian teachings.

CVM gained mainstream press coverage in 2010 when it recommended churches to invite men to showings of World Cup football matches.[7][8]

Conferences

Throughout the 21st century, CVM has held annual weekend conferences, initially at conference venues like the Royal Court Hotel in Coventry (until 2007). An experiment in 2008 saw two smaller conferences run, at Cefn Lea Christian Conference Centre, Newtown, Wales, from 11–13 July, and aboard the vessel, 'Black Prince', sailing from Liverpool - Dublin - Liverpool over the weekend 10–12 October.

The 2009 and 2010 conferences were held at Warwick Conference Centre.

In an effort to make the conferences accessible to the maximum number of men, whatever their status and particularly their income, the format was changed in 2011 to "The Gathering", a weekend camp near Highworth. The event has grown year on year. In 2016 The Gathering was attended by 2,300 men.

One of CVM's regional events was also reported in the press in 2011: "Kingdom Warriors",[9] a conference at Southport.

About

Under Carl Beech's leadership CVM aimed to be more inclusive of a lower middle and working class constituency. Unlike many Christian events in the UK, there is a beer tent at The Gathering. The Codelife system is also aimed at giving a simpler message than the intellectual sermons of most evangelical churches.

CVM is a member of the UK Evangelical Alliance.[10]

gollark: Testbot, take -222 noble animals.
gollark: Testbot, take 86 noble animals.
gollark: Testbot, take -92 noble animals.
gollark: Testbot, take -0.0000000000000002 beeoids.
gollark: Testbot, take a beeoid.

References

  1. "English Charity Commission page on CVmen". Retrieved 2011-11-15.
  2. "CDRex companies information - CVMen". Retrieved 2001-11-15.
  3. "About Activate". Archived from the original on 2009-04-03. Retrieved 2011-11-15.
  4. "BBC interview with Richard Meryon". 2006-01-30. Retrieved 2011-11-15.
  5. The talkinghead website
  6. The codelife website
  7. "Churches to lure men back into pews by showing World Cup matches". Daily Telegraph. 27 May 2010. Retrieved 16 November 2011.
  8. Gledhill, Ruth (27 January 2010). "Real men find church too girly". The Times. Archived from the original on 7 October 2011. Retrieved 28 November 2011. Alt URL
  9. "Southport conference examines role of men in church". BBC News. 6 June 2011. Retrieved 28 November 2011.
  10. "Evangelical Alliance membership page - CVmen". Archived from the original on 2006-05-18. Retrieved 2011-11-15.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.