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50. Bishop Joe Aldred, Church of God and Prophecy Aston

By Power 50 on Jul 15, 08 10:08 PM in Third Sector

Name: Bishop Joe Aldred
Position: Bishop, Church of God of Prophecy
Sector: Third Sector
2007 Placing: 13th

Bishop Joe Aldred is well known for his vibrant ministry, delivered with the joy and enthusiasm of
a gospel singer. That's no surprise really. He used to be one.

Jamaican-born Bishop Joe was a noted singer at his church before he underwent training for ministry. In the 1970s he was co-lead singer with a group called The Spiritual Rhythms.

He studied at Sheffield University, gaining a masters degree in theology and ministry. Since then he has had around 25 years of pastoral experience around the country, including Ashford, Oxford and Sheffield.

In 1989 he was ordained bishop in the Church of God of Prophecy, the third largest black Pentecostal church in Britain.

Now he is chair of the Council of Black Led Churches and secretary of the Minority Ethnic Christian Affairs (MECA) for Churches Together in England.

Bishop Joe, who is married with three daughters, is not afraid to make his views - and the views of the community he represents - known, and he has been vocal on a number of key issues.

In particular he has an interest in health issues, having been a chairman of the Eastern Birmingham Primary Care Trust. Earlier this year he complained the Government was not properly consulting the black community about changes in the mental health system.

He said Ministers' commitment to consulting about the proposed new mental health law was "missing".

He said: "The mental health system ends up working against black people and needs a good look at. It is not enough for the Government to post information on its website. It needs to go out and consult."

Bishop Joe also has strong feelings on the issue of slavery, launching a five-pronged plan aimed at healing and reconciliation. His recommendations include a £20 million compensation fund, a monument in central London and an unequivocal apology for the slave trade.

"There needs to be closure by meeting the realities head-on and not skirting around the issue," he has said.

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1 Comments

Dear Brother,

I am Fahim Qaiser from Pakistan. I have studied your web site, and I found it the most wonderful site to get right to the True Word of God. My suggestion for you is to create your material in my language of Urdu and Punjabi also. It will bring lots of blessings of the Word of God for the Pakistani and Indian Urdu and Punjabi speaking people. For that purpose I as a translator will bring your material into Urdu languages and into Punjabi language as well. Although it will take your low expenses as well, as fund for the Word of God to reach out to the deserving people. I my self, work on a local radio station also. Many times it becomes difficult for us to keep doing this because of being minorities and because of the lack of the financial resources. I will wait for your response.

Sincerely,

Fahim Qaiser ( Pakistan ).

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