Featured

Over 14,000 attend BGEA’s Brussels event with Franklin Graham

Evangelist Franklin Graham shared the Gospel with thousands at the packed Festival of Hope event in Brussels, Belgium.
Evangelist Franklin Graham shared the Gospel with thousands at the packed Festival of Hope event in Brussels, Belgium. | Screenshot/Linkedin/BGEA

More than 14,000 people gathered in Brussels, Belgium, to hear a message about the hope of the Gospel from evangelist Franklin Graham at an event supported by 620 Evangelical churches.

Graham — son of the late evangelist Rev. Billy Graham and president and CEO of both the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association (BGEA) and Samaritan’s Purse — delivered the keynote message at the “Festival of Hope” evangelistic outreach at Brussels’ ING Arena on Saturday night.

“We praise Him for the hundreds of lives changed for eternity as people of all ages responded to the Gospel!” the BGEA wrote on social media following the event.

“In the heart of a country deeply divided by language and culture for decades, over 14,000 Belgians from Antwerp to Waterloo united together in one voice, praising God at the Festival of Hope with Franklin Graham in Brussels, Belgium.”

Although the ING Arena seats 8,965, the turnout was so large that an additional 5,000 attendees were accommodated in two nearby overflow areas, where they watched the event live-streamed on big screens. 

Organizers said the message was translated live into seven languages — French, Flemish, Slovak, Spanish, Portuguese, French Sign Language and Flemish Sign Language — to make it accessible to all attendees.

“It’s a miracle in itself to have such large numbers of people showing up for something like this and to have Dutch and French churches working and collaborating together — it is completely unexpected,” said David Vandeput, president of the Belgian Federal Synod of Evangelical and Protestant churches.

“It’s a sign that God is on the move and something real is happening. This is a milestone that will be remembered by the Evangelical church in Belgium, but it’s not about religion. It’s not about Evangelicals. It’s about Jesus Christ! This is just the start — it’s the launching point — I believe there is much more to come.”

According to the BGEA, the city of Brussels was once the center of religious tension during the Reformation, but it has become mainly secular in spiritual culture. However, the evangelistic association noted God working in the hearts of many attendees at the event, “moving mightily across language and denominational lines.”

Source link

Related Posts

1 of 64