Beyond the Chariots at the Singapore Expo


This performance of Beyond the Chariots was filmed live at the Singapore Expo for about 5,600 on the heels of the Youth Olympics.

The four-time Academy Award-winning film Chariots Of Fire tells how Eric Liddell refused to run the 100 meters in the 1924 Paris Olympics because a qualifying heat was held on a Sunday. Instead he ran the 400 meters, a race in which he wasn't expected to place. He finished it five meters ahead of the favorite, winning the gold and breaking the world record.

My one-man play, Beyond the Chariots, picks up where the film left off: Leaving fame and fortune behind, Eric runs his greatest race, as a missionary to war-torn China.

The event, which was hosted by Faith Community Baptist Church, was closed by Rev. Eugene Seow with rousing comments on themes from the play and Eric Liddell's life.

We're planning to bring the play to Paris for the 2024 Olympics, 100 years after Liddell broke that world record. Check www.RichDrama.com/Schedule as August 2024 approaches.

Articles about the live performances
The Shanghai DailyThe Flying Scotsman's China days
The Shanghai StarOlympic champion inspires one-man play
National Catholic ReporterRich Swingle acts out his ministry

I’m not sure which was better: the writing or the acting.
—Robert Fresco
Academy Award-winning filmmaker for Chechoslovakia 1968

At the Christian Worldview
Film Festival, 2016.
Courtesy Evergreen Media Productions.
We all need a reminder of what God can do through a devoted soul, and there is no better way to draw close to that than by watching Rich Swingle perform this miraculous one-man show. It's not just the layers Rich brings out of the characters, not just his command as an actor playing multiple roles, it isn't just the fine writing -- it's that God's spirit is present from beginning to end as Rich draws us into Eric Liddell's heart. I marvel at the depth of this performance and the power in this play. As a former runner, I loved how the intensity of running was captured on a small stage. Beyond the Chariots will take you through joy, pain, and redemption with laughs along the way. What it will not do is leave you untouched.
--Joan Bauer, novelist
Author of Hope Was HereStand Tall, and Rules of the Road
Awards include: Newbery Honor Medal, the LA Times Book Prize, the Christopher Award

...a fine story, lovingly and energetically told.
—The Scotsman

...the acting capabilities on show in this one-man show...were...astounding...
—ThreeWeeks

It is hard to tell a story as a single actor involving multiple characters - ambitious always, but Rich brought clarity and had a strong point of view throughout. His character work is really good and as always, his dialects are wonderful!
—John Forbes
Actor, Director, Producer
TV, Film - Stage - Off-Broadway, NYC


I have just returned from the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, having seen Beyond the Chariots. I thought it was BRILLIANT and marvelously performed. I would like to know if there are any plans to perform it in London?
—Susan Beck

Get everyone to see this that you can!
—Bobby Grayson
Emmy Award-winning makeup artist for Saturday Night Live

I was impressed with Rich’s work as an actor and producer for Beyond the Chariots.  Every moment was skillful.
—Max McLean
Actor

Great performance--authentic, moving, thought provoking! Beyond the Chariots grips you with Eric Liddell’s story of success to significance. 
Dr. James Hudson Taylor III
Great-grandson of Hudson Taylor, who founded the China Inland Mission, now Overseas Mission Fellowship International
When he was a boy, Dr. Taylor was in the internment camp with Eric Liddell.

(Rich has) exuberance and high energy in the portrayal of several well-defined characters of the piece. This guy is REALLY talented!
—Felicia Lopes
General Manager, Drama Desk Awards
President, 5 Stone Productions, LLC

If you need an event that will inspire believers in Christ, draw seekers to Christ, entertain all and amaze everyone, this is it!
—Susan Somerville Brown
CATS on Broadway


I just wanted to let you know that my wife and I had an opportunity to watch your one-man show of Beyond the Chariots. What an incredible performance!!!  Thank you for sharing this with us – we were highly entertained and inspired!
—Mark D. Rasche
Co-Founder, CEO
Wise King Media
Adventum, Johnathan Park Audio Adventures

This is going to blow you away! I've seen Chariots of Fire about 20 times, but I think this is more interesting.
—Chris White
Associate Pastor
Trail Christian Fellowship
Shady Cove, OR

Swingle's one-man, high-energy... play...won him many hearts.
—David Nadeau, The Capital, Three Hills, Alberta, Canada

I cannot possibly express how much last night's event moved me, apart from your amazing talent and marvelous dramatic presentation. Having never known my father, I have... looked for authentic experiences that confirm my impressions of him as a man. "Beyond the Chariots" made you feel the intensity and the "blood, sweat and tears" of my Father's life. It was wonderful. Thank you from the bottom of my heart.
Sincerely

—Maureen (Liddell) Moore

Rich's depiction of Eric Liddell's continued story is POWERFUL! I was instantly drawn into Eric's journey and was touched by his ministry, and the twist at the end. Only God!
--Becky Bartlett
Actress

Dr. James Hudson Taylor, III, wrote an informational tribute to Eric Liddell for our Off-Broadway program, which you can read here. For a list of books by and about Eric Liddell visit www.EricLiddell.org/ericliddell/books.

For more comments about Rich's work visit What people are saying.
If you've seen Beyond the Chariots, feel free to leave a comment below...
For more on Rich's work, visit RichDrama.com.


For licensing of group screenings or to book a live performance of Beyond the Chariots visit Beyond the Chariots.

Interview on CHINAmerica Radio

I did a radio interview for CHINAmerica Radio on Wednesday. I spoke about my one-man play telling the post-Chariots of Fire story of Eric Liddell. I also mentioned that I'll be speaking after two screenings of the new film on Liddell on November 3 and 4. You can find my review and details about the screenings of On Wings of Eagles at www.RichDrama.com/Wings.

The interview will air around the world on www.CHINAmericaRadio.com this Sunday at 10am Eastern, but you can hear it now by clicking this link.

See the rest of Olympic champion Eric Liddell's Chariots of Fire story by booking Beyond the Chariots.

Yale hosts Ravi Zacharias and Abdu Murray to Discuss Truth in a Post-Truth World

We live in a post-truth culture. Abdu Murray defined that as "a culture that elevates feelings and preferences over facts and truth." He and Ravi Zacharias engaged the Yale campus in a lively discussion about truth.

When Joyce and I were staying near the Yale campus a couple of years ago Joyce got me a T-shirt with the university's emblem. A few months ago a young man asked me what the letters were. Turns out they spell Urim v'Thummim, the stones the high priest would carry behind the breastplate to seek the Lord's direction. The Hebrew phrase was added to the Yale seal by Rev. Ezra Stiles, the university's president from 1778 to 1795, who also required freshmen to study Hebrew. It was only required of upperclassmen at Harvard. Urim vThummim is translated into their Latin motto, Lux et veritas, Light and Truth. How appropriate that these world-class speakers were brought there to discuss how our culture's approach to truth pales in the Light of Truth:
Yale Open Forum: Zacharias and Murray Discuss Relationship Between Truth and Freedom, Evidence for Christian Worldview 

As the Christian Union grows on the Yale campus, I'm praying that the school will return to its roots.

You can watch the entire event below, or if you're reading this in an email click here.



If you don't have time to see the whole program you should at least scroll through the Tweets of things they said.


See the rest of Olympic champion Eric Liddell's Chariots of Fire story by booking Beyond the Chariots.

Reveal the Christ

This morning I open our service at Westchester Chapel telling where I got my dashiki (what I'm wearing in the photo to the left). The fuller story can be found at www.RichDrama.com/Njeri. I share about our current Bible study, “Adjust Our Attitudes” – a study on the Beatitudes, and about my review of On Wings of Eagles, the new film about Eric Liddell. I read from Liddell’s book, The Disciplines of the Christian Life. Click for details on the screenings on November 3 and 4. I'll field questions about Eric Liddell after the film. I also mention Compassion International, who I represent when I perform my 1-man plays.

Dr. Linda Warren teaches on Matthew 3:13-17, the baptism of Jesus. Unfortunately, there was a technical error, and recording was interrupted. Dr. Linda approved for me and Joyce to summarize the end of the sermon.

John C. kicks off Operation Christmas Child box packing, and Joyce leads the community in prayer.

Click the arrow below, or if you're reading this in an email you can click this link, to play the service:



This service is available for download free on iTunes, where you can also subscribe to our podcast. Search for "Westchester Chapel" on the iTunes Store.

If you want to more about starting a relationship with Jesus Christ visit www.WestchesterChapel.org/Salvation.



See the rest of Olympic champion Eric Liddell's Chariots of Fire story by booking Beyond the Chariots.

 

On Wings of Eagles

A new film about Eric Liddell is being released on November 3 in select theaters and online simultaneously. I'll be fielding questions after two of the screenings in NYC.

This is an answer to a prayer I've been praying since 1981 when Chariots of Fire won four Academy Awards. I wanted to know more about what the supertitles ending Chariots of Fire hinted at: “Eric Liddell, missionary, died in occupied China at the end of World War II. All of Scotland mourned.”

Click here for more about my connection to Eric Liddell's story.

In the year 2000 I started researching for Beyond the Chariots, my one-man play that tells the rest of the Chariots of Fire story from the perspective of Eric Liddell. My performance of the play at the Singapore Expo is now available: www.RichDrama.com/BtC.

Since I first started my research at the Eric Liddell Centre in Edinburgh I've tracked no less than seven attempts (including one of my own) to tell more of Eric Liddell's story on the big screen, so I'm overjoyed that this one finally made it across the finish line... but being so tied to the story, I feel let down on certain fronts.

Before I get to that, there is plenty to love about On Wings of EaglesI'll try to keep the spoilers to a minimum, but there are a few things I just have to mention....

Joseph Fiennes portrays Eric Liddell
coaching his track team from the
Tientsin Anglo-Chinese College.
Xu Niu is far left.
Though I did submit for the role, I'm completely thrilled with Joseph Fiennes' portrayal of one of my lifelong heroes. He captured the good natured charm and indefatigable joy I've picked up in the biographies and interviews with more than a dozen people who remember Liddell.

On Wings of Eagles is a total reworking of a film entitled The Last Race, which was released in Hong Kong and China last year. Producers Jim Green and Mark Bacino told me they took the raw footage and have reworked the storyline and introduced a narrator, the older voice of Xu Niu (played by Shawn Dou on screen and voiced by the older Bruce Locke). Though I haven't seen The Last Race, from descriptions I've heard I believe this is a much better film for Western audiences.

After my performance in Hong Kong
on 08/08/08, the opening day of the
Beijing Olympics with Leone and
Jim "Jamey" Hudson Taylor, III,
Chuck Allison, Steve Wible, and
H. K. Cheng.
Xu Niu is, from what I can tell, a fictionalized runner on Liddell's track team at the Tientsin Anglo-Chinese College. He follows Liddell throughout the story. In my play I also have a fictional student of Liddell's in a pivotal role. I call him Mai Ker. An actual former student of Liddell, H. K. Cheng, saw a couple of my performances of the play in Hong Kong, and after one of those performances he was kind enough to do an interview, which we hope to release soon. I asked him if the fictional Mai Ker was similar to any of Liddell's actual students. He immediately thought of a classmate!

As a young runner I was inspired by Eric Liddell the athlete. As a Christian I loved how Chariots of Fire showed Liddell refusing to run on a Sunday in the 100m, where he might have proven that he was the fastest man alive. Instead he trained for the 400m and broke the world record at that distance.

One of the things I love most about On Wings of Eagles is that it shows Liddell turning away from fame and fortune that was promised after his Olympic success to minister to the people who nearly killed his family shortly after his birth during the Boxer Rebellion. Jacob Shams in his otherwise excellent review of the new film gets one thing wrong. He says, "...after his racing days were over, Liddell returned to the home of his birth, China..." Liddell's racing days were far from over! He broke the world record at the Paris Olympics when he was 22, and he left for China the very next year. I'll post more on Liddell's athletic accomplishments in China later, but the short version is that during a meet in China hosted by Japan for the Emperor's coronation, Liddell tied some of the winning times set in the 1928 Olympics earlier that year.

Liddell (Fiennes) races against
Chen Quan (Simon Twu).
Though the new film never shows Liddell running in his prime, there are two races, and in both Fiennes does a great job of showing him run beyond what his meager rations should allow. At one point we see him sharing his rations with children, which is a beautiful picture of who he was. At another point eggshells are being ground, and, indeed, they would add shells to meals to get every bit of protein they could. Doctors in the camp told Liddell they weren't eating enough for the youth to take place in athletics, but Liddell said without their bodies engaged, their souls would wither.

Fiennes portrays Liddell as a science
teacher at the
Tientsin Anglo-Chinese College.
The new film is shot in China, in Tianjin (spelled Tientsin when the story takes place), where Liddell taught science (not English as Shams says in his review), and in Weifang (spelled Weihsien when the story takes place), in the actual compound where Eric Liddell and his fellow Allied prisoners spent the end of World War II. There are a couple of scenes summarizing Liddell's life as a teacher and missionary before it cuts to him on board a ship with his family before it disembarks, carrying his wife Flo and daughters Patricia and Heather to their family home in Toronto. Flo (Elizabeth Arends, who made no attempt at a Canadian accent) was also pregnant with Maureen, now Maureen Moore. After seeing one of my performances of Beyond the Chariots, she described that first trip as being in a cab with the windows rolled up. I was blessed to see the photo of Maureen as a baby take such a prominent place in the storyline, as Liddell was separated from his family during his final years.

The farewell on the ship is a scene that may have been inspired by the Prologue in my favorite biography on Liddell, Pure Gold, by David McCasland, who saw my play and set up a tour of Tianjin for usI'll post more on that later. In both the biography and the movie, it is quite a moving scene.

It's not long (in the film and in reality) before Pearl Harbor is bombed and citizens of all Allied nations are put into internment camps. I performed my play for Jim "Jamey" Hudson Taylor III, the great grandson of the prominent missionary to China. Jamey, his three siblings and his grandfather were in the internment camp with "Uncle Eric," as all the students called him. After two of the three performances of my play Jamey saw in Hong Kong, he described how Uncle Eric was a father figure to so many children who were separated from their families. The new film captures this, in part with a sign Jamey Taylor mentioned to me. There were so many visits to Uncle Eric's flat that his roommate put up a sign indicating "Uncle Eric is IN" or "Uncle Eric is OUT."

Yoshinori Yumoto
(Shigeo Kobayashi)
There's a moment in the film that a Japanese officer, Yoshinori Yumoto (played by Shigeo Kobayashi), interrupts a wedding ceremony that Uncle Eric is conducting. He takes the wedding rings from the couple. Though it's a fictional element of the story, it reminded me of how Jamey told me the Japanese put labels on people and things that read, "Property of the Japanese."

The couple is separated when they're brought into the internment camp, but the new groom insists on married housing. Yoshinori Yumoto asks for proof that they are married, but of course he's taken their rings. Uncle Eric says, "What God has joined together let no man put asunder." Yoshinori Yumoto tells him, "My emperor is the god here." That much is in the trailer you can see below. It's Uncle Eric's response that is one of my favorite moments in the film on a number of different levels. I'm planning to talk about that after the NYC screenings.

From Stephen Metcalf's interview in
Olympic Hero in China.
I love that there is an allusion in the new film to praying for their captors. Uncle Eric taught often on the Sermon on the Mount, and dedicates the better part of a chapter to it in his book The Disciplines of the Christian Life. In Olympic Hero in China, the documentary I helped create and for which I do the English narration, Stephen Metcalf, who was a young runner in the internment camp, said that one day Uncle Eric was teaching them the passage from the Sermon on the Mount that says, "Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you...." Metcalf said that Uncle Eric said, "'Prayer changes the whole situation. When you hate somebody, you're self-centered. When you pray for someone you become God-centered.' And so he said, 'I've been getting up early and praying for the Japanese.' And he challenged us to pray for the Japanese." Metcalf took up the challenge, and after carrying Uncle Eric's coffin to the grave he said, "I promised God that if I came out alive, I would go to Japan as a missionary like Eric." Metcalf served as a missionary to Japan for 40 years. 

The Music Department of On Wings of Eagles had a high bar set for them since Vangelis won the Oscar for his soundtrack to Chariots of Fire. My brother and I listened to the record the night before every cross-country and track meet. The new film's orchestrator, Steve Greer, arranged for a live orchestra in Macedonia to perform the music, and I think they did a wonderful job. There were two songs in particular that brought joy to my heart.

From Maureen Liddell Moore's
interview in
Olympic Hero in China.
The first was "The Ninety and Nine." In Olympic Hero in China, Maureen tells the story beautifully of how, as a young boy, her father would always ask to sing that hymn about the story Jesus told of the shepherd leaving the 99 sheep to go after the one who is lost. Young Eric would always cry when the family sang it. Maureen said, "...it helped me to understand that even as a young child my father had a strong, strong desire to reach out and touch people with the message that they were all loved and they would all be safe and they could all come home."

The second song that moved me was "Be Still My Soul." It was Uncle Eric's favorite hymn, and the new film introduces it early and it has a prominent place in the end.

This brings me to my disappointments with the film. Whenever a story is taken out of history and told as a movie there must be choices to fictionalize certain elements in order to make it work in the format of cinema. Sometimes those choices upset those who know the real story well. After a performance of Beyond the Chariots in Milwaukee, an audience member Lucy Storch gave me two letters she received from Uncle Eric's sister, Jenny Somerville. She said, "The girl playing myself (Cheryl Campbell) was nothing like me! I was never against my brother running....The scriptwriter (Colin Welland, who won the Oscar for it) said you need a conflict in a film, so I was the conflict!"

With the eldest Liddell daughters and
their husbands after one of my
performances in Toronto.
Though the use of "Be Still My Soul" at the end of On Wings of Eagles has its own artistic beauty, I missed the beauty of what actually happened. Uncle Eric's middle daughter, Heather Ingham, told me the family still has the slip of paper upon which her father wrote down the hymn's title while he lay dying in the internment camp's makeshift hospital. That slip of paper was delivered to someone in the Salvation Army band (alluded to in the film by a trumpet we see lying around in one scene). Prisoners were allowed to bring a few personal items into the camp, and band members had each brought their instrument. They played that hymn outside Uncle Eric's window on at least one of his final days. I'll post more about the Salvation Army band later.

At a certain point in the new film, Xu Niu's subtitles indicate that he used the word hell as an expletive. I was sorry to see this because hell is a real place, and no matter how the cultural narrative downplays it, it is not temporary or benign. There is nothing in Scripture that indicates it is a lukewarm lake of fire. Though the use of the word was used to give shape to Xu Niu's character arc, I think it's a shame that the word was used in a film that should attract impressionable youths.

Early on in the film we see Uncle Eric looking the other way when a bribe being given. Even if such a moment occurred, with only 90 minutes to flesh out his life, I think it was a very poor choice to show him benefiting from an illegal act without speaking against it.

In another moment Uncle Eric is forced to run on a Sunday. It is true that he eventually decided to referee games on Sundays in the internment camp because, without his presence, fights were breaking out. But to hear the challenge without fleshing out the mental anguish that would have gone into such a choice is wrong. I hope audiences reflect on the fact that the stakes were much higher than the personal glory Uncle Eric walked away from at the Paris Olympics.

Liddell (Fiennes) in the church of the
internment camp, which was
originally a seminary.
My biggest problem with the film is a single sentence. Xu Niu describes "Uncle Eric's message: His faith in the essential goodness of mankind touched the edge of my mortal soul." After spending the entire film showing, often in very creative ways, that every good work Eric Liddell did was through the inspiration and by the power of his faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, this sentence reverses and undermines it all! As a Christian Uncle Eric most certainly did not have faith in the essential goodness of mankind. He believed, as all orthodox Christians do, in the fallen nature of mankind and our need for a Savior.

At the moment that Xu Niu says, "Uncle Eric's message..." we're seeing a tight shot of the Cross. It is my prayer that viewers see the statement in the full Truth of that image: Uncle's Eric had faith that through the Cross we all have hope of goodness. As 1 Peter 2:24 says, "He (Jesus Christ) himself bore our sins in his body on the tree (the Cross), that we might die to sin and live to righteousness. By his wounds you have been healed."

If people miss that, I pray they'll see the statement about Uncle Eric's message as an observation by someone on his way to seeing his need for a Savior.

If you see your need for a Savior, you can reach out right now to the only One who bridges the gap between fallen humans and a Holy God: Jesus Christ. Visit www.RichDrama.com/MyPassion for more information.

I'll speak and take questions after two NYC screenings of On Wings of Eagles on November 3 and 4 at Cinema Village, 22 E. 12th St., Manhattan. We're planning to record the Q/A session, so if you're outside the NYC area, post your questions in a comment below, and if there's time I'll answer questions that are posted here.

Here's the complete list of theaters showing it, starting November 3:

1. Kansas City, MO; Barrywoods 24

2. Atlanta, GA; Southlake Pavilion 24

3. Cleveland/Akron/Canton/Solon, OH; Solon 16

4. Philadelphia, PA; Cherry Hill 24

5. Denver, CO; Highlands Ranch 24

6. Houston, TX; Gulf Point 30

7. Dallas, TX; Mesquite 30

8. San Francisco, CA; Deer Valley Stadium 16

9. Pasadena, CA; Laemmle Pasadena 7

10. Manhattan, NY: Cinema Village

Viewers should know:
* The word hell is used as an expletive.
* "My G_d" and "da_ _it."
* War violence.
  -A young boy is blown up.
  -[SPOILER ALERT] Another young boy is electrocuted and it is said that he will stay on the hot wires for a week. A real electrocution in the camp probably inspired this fictional element.

See the trailer below, or if you're reading this in an email visit www.RichDrama.com/OnWingsOfEagles.




See the rest of Olympic champion Eric Liddell's Chariots of Fire story by watching it online or booking a live performance of Beyond the Chariots.

John on Jesus and Judgement

This morning at Westchester ChapelJoyce teaches from Matthew 3:7-12, in which John the Baptist pulls no punches about judgement and the need for Jesus the Savior to avoid eternal suffering.

Pastor Jim Warren opens reading 2 Corinthians 6:14-18. He references his sermon from last week, Embrace the Oddness. Dr. Linda Warren releases the Treasure Seekers and shares the announcements. She praises the Lord that the largest Spanish speaking church in White Plains is Centro de Avivamiento Valle de Sitim, una Iglesia del Nazareno, which was established because we opened our doors and our hearts to them and agreed that we were one people with two languages.

Click the arrow below, or if you're reading this in an email you can click this link, to play the service:



This service is available for download free on iTunes, where you can also subscribe to our podcast. Search for "Westchester Chapel" on the iTunes Store.

If you want to more about starting a relationship with Jesus Christ visit www.WestchesterChapel.org/Salvation.

Photo courtesy of NicolettiPhoto.com.

The Cross and the Switchblade


Times Square Church is offering a new production of The Cross and the Switchblade throughout October at the Mark Hellinger Theatre. It's a Broadway house which has been the church's home since 1991.

This story is one of the reasons I moved to NYC. Mom read the book, The Cross and the Switchblade to us when we were kids. It tells how David Wilkerson (who founded Times Square Church) first came to New York City when he was still a country preacher in Pennsylvania. He ministered to gang members, the most notorious of which was Nicky Cruz, the warlord of the gang, the Mau Maus. I'm certain that book is one of the reasons I had the courage to move from our 70 acre farm to an 8-1/2' by 11' room on Times Square. I wrote a journal back then called Farm Boy on Times Square.

I've seen several productions of this story, and I was even cast as an understudy for the role of David Wilkerson when I was in my early 30s, though I never went on. Tonight I had a fresh thought: David Wilkerson didn't try to fit in. We live in a time that Christianity is disrespected, but not in the way gang members disrespected Pastor David. Nicky Cruz told him he'd cut him to pieces, and his response was, "You can cut me up into a thousand pieces, but everyone of those pieces will be telling you, 'Jesus loves you.'" Lord, give us the courage to speak Truth to this generation!

If you're outside the city you can see the production online for the next two weeks. If you watch right now or tomorrow before 3:15 (to finish before 6pm), you can see Nicky Cruz speak afterward. He said he doesn't know how much longer the Lord will keep him speaking. Be sure to catch him if you can.

* Parents should know: Gang violence; smoking and drinking alcohol depicted; drug use mentioned; Lord's name taken ("Oh my G_d"); "Go to h*ll," said on two occasions. 

See the rest of Olympic champion Eric Liddell's Chariots of Fire story by booking Beyond the Chariots.

Embrace the Oddness

I got to introduce worship at Westchester Chapel this morning with a story from growing up on a farm. Here's the video of skipping calves I mention.

Pastor Jim Warren opens our newest sermon series, How to Prepare the Way of the Lord, preaching on Matthew 3:1-6, Luke 3:1-20, Isaiah 40:18-19, 25-26. Dr. Linda Warren opens the service and teaches on the Feast of Tabernacles and shares announcements.

Click the arrow below, or if you're reading this in an email you can click this link, to play the service:



This service is available for download free on iTunes, where you can also subscribe to our podcast. Search for "Westchester Chapel" on the iTunes Store.

If you want to more about starting a relationship with Jesus Christ visit www.WestchesterChapel.org/Salvation.


Mully

We saw this outstanding film tonight. It's the story of an abandoned child who becomes a millionaire and raises 12,000 children. It's an amazing picture of the Lord transforming a life who transforms lives.

Find out more at www.MullyMovie.com.

My mom and aunt were raised in Kenya (www.RichDrama.com/Njeri), so it was wonderful to see the land I hope some day to visit.




A Clear Leading tells the story of Quaker abolitionist John Woolman, who spoke against slavery a century before our Civil War.
Registration is now open for the 2017 Rocky Mountain Christian Filmmakers Camp.

Renewing the Covenant

Joyce speaks on the God of the Covenant, whose faithfulness is unparalleled and utterly dependable, from Malachi 4: 1-6.  She also explains the Day of the Lord when evil is overcome and justice is rendered by the Lord God.  Rachel Taylor explains the Jewish roots of Atonement in an explanation of Yom Kippur from Lev. 16: 29-34 and Dr. Linda Warren prays for the message and over the offering.

Click the arrow below, or if you're reading this in an email you can click this link, to play the service:



This service is available for download free on iTunes, where you can also subscribe to our podcast. Search for "Westchester Chapel" on the iTunes Store.

If you want to more about starting a relationship with Jesus Christ visit www.WestchesterChapel.org/Salvation.

Photo courtesy of NicolettiPhoto.com.