The archives of MRA/IofC in South Africa are housed in Pretoria.
The archives of MRA/IofC in South Africa are housed in Pretoria.
For more information please email Pieter and Meryl Horn.
Physical copies available in this location
العناصر المتاحة
A talk by Dr Paul S. Campbell at 45 Berkeley Square, London, November, 1967
Impression of the Oxford Group movement by Foss Calcutta, son of Bishop Foss Westcott
We are now fighting a greater War than any since the world began. It is not nation against nation, but chaos against God.
The Group came with no harsh criticism of the Church.
Rev Norman Rawson wrote that The Oxford Group is 'surcharged with hope from the ministerial angle.'
Growing out of the needs of our own generation, it has helped many people discover real religion for the first time.
Rev P P W Zieman writes how grateful he was for the Oxford Group's visit, making 'the naturalness of Christianity' plain.
'Messengers of a vital religious experience have brought us great help', says Rev A P Menzies.
A short history of the Oxford Group and MRA.
Groupers believe that Christianity should not be an opiate - but a dynamic, writes Olive E. Bruce.
Bishop of Chota-Nagpur spoke as an Ulsterman, long resident in India, and gave his views.
Return to the ideals and ways of the Primitive Church.
The Oxford Group made plain certain primary religious experience which some of us have not successfully put into simple language
'It has revived the spiritual faculties, tested the faith and challenged sincerity of professing and non-professing Christians.
There is much about the Oxford Group Movement that I do not understand.
The messsage from the leaders is simplicity itself.
'Is there anything this Continent needs more than going into Silence, there to wait expectantly for what God has to say?'
'One thing is sure: if it is sound and time-worthy, no amount of criticism can detain it.'