Equipping graduates to influence their workplace for God
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"I believe a strong graduate movement will lay the foundation for a sustainable student ministry."
Graduates are both the Fruit and the Future of IFES. In the post University world the most significant place for daily interaction with non-believers is our workplaces, where we sit day by day alongside people who may never know another Christian as well as they know us.

Much of European civilisation is built upon a collection of writings from 2000 years ago, known as The Bible.
Can this book still offer valid advice and positive framework for the cultures of Europe today? What interpretive principles help us to understand its texts? What worldview does it communicate?

We are setting up a brand new mentoring scheme to help inspire an emerging generation of young Christian professionals and academics as they start their careers.
We want to pass wisdom on from some of the best thought through Christians in a whole range of different academic and professional spheres to the young graduates coming out of IFES movements.
Featured Article
Sad to say my life is more often than not a complete mess. I work stupid hours, often working over weekends and often neglecting my wife, my family and my friends. Perhaps more subtly, though my frenetic pace of life most often causes me to neglect my relationship with the Lord Jesus, in whom my whole identity resides. I have to admit that I have often spurned the advice of others as they urge restraint and balance in my life – after all, I argue, if I don’t get the work done who will?
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Latest Resources
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Better Boasting
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Notes for Mentors
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Session 5 - Making a Good Start
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Session 4 - Witness at Work
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Session 3 - Relationships at Work
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Session 2 - Pressure to Conform
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Session 1 - Work in the Bible
Featured Articles
Sad to say my life is more often than not a complete mess. I work stupid hours, often working over weekends and often neglecting my wife, my family and my friends. Perhaps more subtly, though my frenetic pace of life most often causes me to neglect my relationship with the Lord Jesus, in whom my whole identity resides. I have to admit that I have often spurned the advice of others as they urge restraint and balance in my life – after all, I argue, if I don’t get the work done who will?
Read more
“Can't you find out God's will for you life and stick to it?” After four degrees in a variety of disciplines, five different full-time jobs, and at least two career changes this is probably a valid question to ask me. Is it right that my constantly changing career path is an indication that I have found it difficult to know the will of God for my life? The answer is both yes and no
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