Dominic McDermott is a team
member of the European
Network of Communities (ENC) and the
ENC Coordinator for Prayer &
Intercession. He is also involved in the Towards Jerusalem
Council Two (TJCII), a global
ministry seeking to reconcile Jewish and
Gentile believers in Jesus. He leads a
small ecumenical covenant community,
called The Source, in High Wycomb,
England, and is active in a local
ecumenical House of Prayer which meets
weekly to pray for the town. The following
report details how the Lord led him to
help initiate an ecumenical Holocaust
Memorial and Repentance Service which took
place on January 29 2020 in High Wycombe,
England.
On January
29, the Holocaust Memorial and Repentance
Service was held in the large All Saints
Anglican Church in High Wycombe, England. This
event was hosted by the vicar of the church,
Rev. Hugh Ellis. Fifteen years ago, Rev. Tim
Butlin (Anglican vicar of St Peter’s
Loudwater) had the vision to hold a repentance
service for England’s expulsion of the entire
Jewish population of High Wycombe in 1234 AD.
In November 2015, I received a prophetic word
that “now is the time” to resurrect the idea.
This historical expulsion in 1234 had left a
spiritual cloud over the town that had never
been dealt with. After many years of
preparation, in 2019 I received another word
that this repentance would allow the Lord to
pour His Spirit out upon the town. A sign of
this outpouring would be the restoration of a
stream in a local park that had been dry for
more than two years. As the date for the
Repentance Service drew closer, my wife
reported that the stream was flowing. I went
to record it in my prayer journal. I
found my last entry from a few days earlier
was that I had “dreamt last night that the
stream was back!” This and other signs
led us to expect great things of this service
and the night was no disappointment.
Dominic McDermott (at the
podium) addresses the Ecumenical Service
More than 300 people from 50 different
churches gathered to hear about historic
anti-Semitism and its root in replacement
theology at a service entitled “Changing Our
Future by Confronting Our Past.” Others who
attended included the mayor, our local Member
of Parliament, the deputy Lord Lieutenant and
the High Sheriff (the Queen’s representatives
in the area), since the expulsion had been on
the order of King Henry III. I spoke about the
root of anti-Semitism in Christianity and
replacement theology up to the Reformation,
including High Wycombe’s contribution to
England being the first entire nation to expel
all it’s Jewish population in 1290. Dr. James
Patrick (a TJCII UK member and European
theology coordinator) showed how this
anti-Semitic root led to the Holocaust. A
personal response was read aloud from Catholic
Archbishop Kevin McDonald, who sadly was not
in attendance due to sickness. These messages
were followed by Rabbi Janet Darley on
anti-Semitism today and Sheikh Dr. Ramzy on
Islamophobia today.
Christians in the congregation were invited to
stand for a declaration of repentance for past
racial and religious hatred. Then Edwin
Shuker, Vice Chairman of the Board of Deputies
of British Jews, gave a moving response of
gratitude. After this, the congregation was
invited to stand up for a joint declaration of
our intent to stand together in the future as
brothers and sisters. A framed copy of this
declaration was presented to Mr. Edwin Shuker.
We later discovered that Shuker had cancelled
an opportunity to speak in Parliament that
evening in order to be with us. He considered
it so important an occasion! We thank God for
making all this possible and pray for much
fruit from the event in the future.
We are already looking to plan another event
of repentance for the 1222 Synod of Oxford’s
800 anniversary in two years time. We hope
that you will stand with us in prayer as we
continue to labour for the Lord and the vision
of reconciliation that TJCII brings for Jews
and Gentiles in the Body of Messiah.