| Dear Pastor,
 
				Through the years, my wife and I have worked in what are commonly thought to be 
				influential sectors of society, she in the media, and I in the corporate world. 
				In our careers and travels, we have witnessed a dramatic decline in the 
				influence of the Church in the West, and accordingly, in the spiritual and moral vitality 
				of our culture. We have had the growing sense that the hope of a people, and of 
				democracy, lies not in elected officials, entrepreneurs, military leaders, 
				academicians, or broadcast personalities. It is based on the faithfulness of 
				her Christian pastors. One such pastor was André Trocmé, who served a small 
				Protestant church in southern France during the Second World War. Largely 
				because of his preaching and example, the village of Chambon became a haven for 
				Jews escaping Nazi persecution. At great personal risk, he and his congregation 
				hid these refugees until they could flee across the Swiss border. Tutored in 
				the Word, they simply saw rescue as their Christian duty. Many have heard of William Wilberforce’s efforts in Parliament 
				to abolish the British slave trade. Few, however, know of his spiritual 
				grounding, of his home church in Clapham, England, where he was fortified and 
				inspired by the preaching of John Venn. We dream that a new generation of John 
				Venns would emerge to inspire and instruct a new generation of William 
				Wilberforces. It is a critical time, a kairos moment. Many say that 
				the West is a "cut flower civilization," scarcely sustained by the Christian 
				perspectives that once brought her life. The bloom is fading at a shocking 
				rate; we are desperate for spiritual renewal, grounded in Christ and His Word. We are convinced that the great cause of this day is to 
				embolden, equip, and encourage the pastor in his God-ordained work. For this 
				purpose, we have established the Kairos Journal.  Sincerely, Emmanuel A. Kampouris
 Kairos Journal |