Building Jerusalem

Building Jerusalem

Among these dark satanic mills

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Stephen Kneale

My name is Steve Kneale. I am married to Rachel and have two children. I am the pastor at Oldham Bethel Church, an FIEC church in the Greater Manchester area of the UK which is also affiliated to the North West Gospel Partnership. I hold qualifications in History & Politics (BA, University of Liverpool), Religious Studies & Philosophy (PGCE, Edge Hill University) and Theology (MA, University of Wales: Trinity Saint David). My theological convictions can be described as Modern Reformed Evangelical. I hold to the doctrines of grace, credo-baptism (significantly informed by my Grace Baptist/strict & particular baptist background) and subscribe to the traditional tenets of Evangelicalism. My political convictions can be described as Democratic Socialist and are largely in line with the Calvinistic Socialist tradition (particularly the Welsh and Scottish forms). I favour public ownership, wealth distribution and a regulated economy. I believe in fairness in the markets and freedom for the individual. I minister in the Glodwick area of Oldham. Oldham has previously been labelled by the Office of National Statistics as the most deprived town in England. We are frequent flyers in the list of England’s most deprived towns. According to the Church Urban Fund, our area of Glodwick is among the most deprived wards in the country. Glodwick is overwhelmingly populated by Pakistani and Bangladeshi Muslims, with the largest mosque in the borough about 300 metres behind our church building. Historically, Oldham was at the centre of the industrial revolution and was once the largest cotton producer in Europe. Many of the original Victorian mills are still standing and were in use until the 1990s. However, since the last mill closed, the town has faced high levels of unemployment. With large numbers of South Asians brought over to work in the once thriving cotton industry, coupled to the loss of the mills, racial tensions run high. The town is highly segregated with almost exclusively Asian areas separated from wholly white estates. Such tensions led to the 2001 race riots centred on our area of Glodwick. The worst rioting took place on the road where our church building is sited. The name of this blog has been taken from William Blake’s poem Jerusalem. Blake references the ‘dark Satanic mills’ that are ubiquitous in Oldham. The poem, set to music, became a Socialist anthem due to Blake’s reference to building Jerusalem in ‘England’s green and pleasant land’ and was used as a slogan by Clement Attlee at the 1945 Labour conference. Others interpret the ‘dark Satanic mills’ as referring to the Church of England and the power held by the Protestant Ascendancy in the Victorian era. Given my political and ecclesial backgrounds, the blog title seemed apt. However, we are at work in this deprived mill town because we want the people of Oldham to become citizens of the New Jerusalem. We really want Jerusalem to be built here. We long for people – regardless of nationality, ethnicity or class – to come to know Jesus Christ as their personal Lord and saviour. Whether we view the mills as emblematic of people ensnared in poverty or not, there is a greater slave master; the problem of sin. We long for people to know the freedom from sin that comes only in and through the person of Jesus Christ. Hopefully, these things will help you make sense of what is written here.q
12 November 2025 Stephen Kneale

What’s the point of home groups?

11 November 2025 Stephen Kneale

Sure of Heaven? A clarifying, but not final, question

10 November 202510 November 2025 Stephen Kneale

Editorial misrepresentation isn’t only a media problem

09 November 202506 November 2025 Stephen Kneale

Snippets from the interweb (9th November 2025)

08 November 202505 November 2025 Stephen Kneale

Podcast hiatus

07 November 202505 November 2025 Stephen Kneale

On remembrance Sunday as an act of worship

06 November 202505 November 2025 Stephen Kneale

If you had £40 million for gospel work, is this what you would do with it?

05 November 2025 Stephen Kneale

How do you decide what to sing?

04 November 202503 November 2025 Stephen Kneale

Independent Eldership

03 November 202531 October 2025 Stephen Kneale

Glorify God and be faithful

02 November 202531 October 2025 Stephen Kneale

Snippets from the interweb (2nd November 2025)

01 November 202531 October 2025 Stephen Kneale

Podcast hiatus

31 October 2025 Stephen Kneale

How do I know I am saved?

30 October 202529 October 2025 Stephen Kneale

Theonomy, Christian Nationalism and a problem of consistency

29 October 2025 Stephen Kneale

Your will be done

28 October 2025 Stephen Kneale

Echoes down the line

27 October 202526 October 2025 Stephen Kneale

Because you are there

26 October 202524 October 2025 Stephen Kneale

Snippets from the interweb (26th October 2025)

25 October 202524 October 2025 Stephen Kneale

Podcast Hiatus

24 October 202522 October 2025 Stephen Kneale

Calling to ministry & mission

shallow focus photography of a man in white collared dress shirt talking to the phone using black android smartphone
23 October 202522 October 2025 Stephen Kneale

What should we make of calling to ministry?

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