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The Christian Medical Fellowship: Uniting & equipping Christian doctors & nurses to live & speak for Jesus Christ.
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Christian Medical Fellowship
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      • the Christian Medical Fellowship unites and equips Christian doctors and nurses to live and speak for Jesus Christ. We were formed in 1949. We currently have 4,000 doctors, 500 medical and nursing students, and 450 nurses and midwives as members.
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      • the trouble with opt-outs

        December 1, 2025
        Read more
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        Three-parent embryos: can the end ever justify the means?

        August 12, 2025
        Read more
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        The Leng Review and the leadership void: A call to fill the gap

        August 8, 2025
        Read more
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        10jan10:00 am4:30 pmRASH: Refugee and Asylum Seeker Health Course, London

        Event Details

        God calls us to care for the stranger in our midst, to protect orphans and widows,

        Event Details

        God calls us to care for the stranger in our midst, to protect orphans and widows, to ‘act justly and love mercy’ . (Micah 6:8) How does this translate to the way we care today?

        Given the proposed changes to the way that our asylum system works, how can we provide the best possible healthcare to those in need?

        The ‘Refugees and Asylum Seekers Health Course’ (RASH) aims to equip Christian healthcare practitioners and others to:

        • Improve knowledge of the healthcare needs, responses and challenges for refugees and asylum seekers in the UK
        • Hear examples of good practice
        • Foster a dialogue among those working with refugees and asylum seekers for mutual encouragement and support
        • Inspire creative ways to engage with health systems for better provision, support, and care

        View the full programme here.

        The programme is an interactive learning experience led both by those who have been refugees and those who are healthcare professionals in this field. Local charities or churches working with refugees and asylum seekers will also find this day useful. If you encounter people from outside the UK in your everyday practice, then this is the day for you.

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        Time

        January 10, 2026 10:00 am - 4:30 pm(GMT+00:00)

        Location

        London

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        Yarnfield, Stone ST15 0NLYarnfield Park Training & Conference Centre

        30jan01febStudent Conference 2026

        Event Details

        Select:ID Who are you? It is a fundamental question to answer as you start your journey as a health professional. The world has a lot of answers, you are your

        Event Details

        Select:ID
        Who are you?

        It is a fundamental question to answer as you start your journey as a health professional. The world has a lot of answers, you are your job, your sexuality, your gender, or your racial and national identity. But the gospel of Jesus tells us that we are forgiven, we are chosen, we are beloved, we are made holy, and we are God’s own treasured possession. How do we live out that truth in our everyday life, our studies, and our careers?

        Join us at CMF’s Student Conference – from 30 January to 1 February 2026 (Yarnfield, Staffordshire)

        If you’re a Student, here’s our top tips for booking
        1. Grab a cup of tea, and have a read to choose four seminars you would like to attend, look through your options in our Conference Programme.

        2. Get your Student Discount Code.

        If you have you joined CMF it will be able to access it via the member portal. If you are not yet a member you can join here

        3. Now you’re ready to book onto Student Conference 2026.

        Thanks to generous donations, extra subsidies may be available to help students attend the Student Conference. If any bursary is available, we’ll be in touch — any support will be arranged as a refund after the event.

        For non-Students
        1. If you’re a Medical School Link coming with a group of students, please select the Med School Link Ticket on the booking form
        2. If you have happy memories of your time at Student Conference, and if you would like to invest in the next generation of Christians healthcare professionals please use the donation form:

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        Time

        January 30, 2026 5:00 pm - february 1, 2026 3:00 pm(GMT+00:00)

        Location

        Yarnfield, Stone ST15 0NL

        Yarnfield Park Training & Conference Centre

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        05mar8:00 pm9:00 pmChristians in Healthcare Leadership Spring Webinar 2026 - How to Raise Concerns

        Event Details

        Open to all CMF Members 8 – 8.05. Introduction 8.05 – 8.15 Loving the individual, but hating the sin: Lessons from the woman at the well 8.15 – 8.30 Raising concerns: Avoiding the negative

        Event Details

        Open to all CMF Members

        8 – 8.05. Introduction

        8.05 – 8.15 Loving the individual, but hating the sin: Lessons from the woman at the well

        8.15 – 8.30 Raising concerns: Avoiding the negative and positively influencing culture

        8.30 – 8.45 Counting the cost: Institutional whistle blowing & Dealing with lack of insight

        8.45 – 9.00 Discussion and prayer

        Registration now, you will receive the Zoom details nearer to the event. 

         

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        Time

        March 5, 2026 8:00 pm - 9:00 pm(GMT+00:00)

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        Yarnfield, Stone ST15 0NLYarnfield Park Training & Conference Centre

        08may(may 8)6:00 pm10(may 10)2:00 pmNational Conference 2026

        Event Details

        Save the Date! Bookings will open in January 2026 for this conference...more details are coming soon.

        Event Details

        Save the Date!

        Bookings will open in January 2026 for this conference…more details are coming soon.

        Time

        May 8, 2026 6:00 pm - may 10, 2026 2:00 pm(GMT+01:00)

        Location

        Yarnfield, Stone ST15 0NL

        Yarnfield Park Training & Conference Centre

        CalendarGoogleCal

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HERO + HERETIC 22:

Jackie Pullinger: An unqualified hero

‘If I were you I would go out and buy a ticket for a boat going on the longest journey you can find and pray to know where to get off. If God doesn’t want you on that boat he is perfectly able to stop you… or make the ship go anywhere in the world.’

Jackie’s minister in London. (1)

I wonder what we would say if one of our friends decided to do just this – set off unprepared to an unknown destination, assured that God would lead them. Reckless? Entitled? Misinformed? But called…? I’d be tempted to brush off their insistence that God was leading them and talk about how Scripture is sufficient, that we just can’t expect guidance like that anymore. It sounds totally crazy, completely unbelievable, outrageously unwise: but there is no denying the good work that 22-year-old Jackie set out to do.

Jackie first describes wanting to be a missionary on hearing someone speak at her church as a child. This idea remained in her mind throughout her schooling, only fading as she progressed through music college and life as a teacher. Having dismissed any talk of a God who saves as ‘mass emotion’ in her teens, it is on attending a talk at a London flat that Jackie realised what Jesus actually came to do. And in that London flat our story begins.

Single, young and with a ‘whole life to give’, the missionary idea resurfaced. She wrote to schools, societies, broadcasting companies in Africa. They all rejected her offer — what could a music teacher in her twenties possibly give? But she continued undeterred. Growing increasingly convinced that mission abroad was her calling, she cast around for signs.

Seeing a map of Hong Kong in a dream, she set off on that slow boat to China without any particular plan. In an NHS climate of careful resource allocation, planning, and cost-benefit analysis, this still does not seem like a wise decision. But when we remember every human is made in the image of God… ‘You could go all around the world to talk to one sailor about Christ’ makes a bit more sense. The words ‘You can’t lose’ encourage her as she sets sail.

a relational message from a relational God

‘We loved you so much, we were delighted to share with you not only the gospel of God but our lives as well.’ (1 Thessalonians 2:8)

The venue for most of Jackie’s ministry was inside the Walled City. Its walls have long come down, but in the 1960s it was unpoliced, rife with gangs, unwelcoming to strangers. It was a dangerous place to go; she was told they usually got rid of missionaries within six months. The teenagers didn’t care how many activities were put on, how many meals they were fed: ‘What we want to know is if you are concerned for us’. Isn’t this the same for our teenagers in the UK? Jesus showed a deeply personal, intimate love for his people. Jackie challenges us in that actually: this is what we should give people first. The teenagers of the Walled City concluded that ‘either the British Government sent you here as a spy, or what you say about Jesus is true’. They could see no other reason why someone would give their life to them.

She tells stories of this Jesus who ate with outcasts. Spotting a boy from her youth group in the street, she makes him pause by enlisting his help with her heavy accordion. Christopher says he gave up trying to be a Christian because Jesus likes good people. ‘Do you know, if Jesus were alive today, he’d be here in the walled city sitting on the orange boxes talking to the pimps and the prostitutes down there in the mud.’ The story rings more true than any theology; by that dusty, noisy roadside, Christopher became a Christian.

Jackie constantly reminds herself that her God died for her whilst she hated him. How else could she keep going when her youth club was trashed, nobody seemed to appreciate her, she was left alone? ‘Praise God, Praise God’ she mutters tearfully, sweeping up the mess. ‘Praise God, Praise God’ as she sobs and wants her enemies to suffer too. ‘I did not feel like rejoicing or turning the other cheek.’ Incredibly, the work she is doing is noticed by the main triad (gang) leader, Goko. ‘You care for my brothers…’ he makes it his business to protect her. He sent her guards night after night, even when the guards became Christians, and consequently, rubbish fighters. This happened so often that gangs ended up needing to borrow fighters, as all of their men were either addicted to heroin or following Christ.

come and die

Maria was in debt and had no way to pay it off. The loan shark demanded she become a ‘snake’ — a prostitute under his control – for two years, whilst all her earnings go to him. She had wanted to follow Christ in the past, had been helped out of the situation but found herself stuck in it again.

Jackie thought ‘I had no intention of paying money to a girl who was not serious about changing her life’. But she went to see what she could do. On the way, she remembered her oboe: ‘Like all oboists, I regarded it as a personal friend — handpicked and almost irreplaceable.’ But someone who knew nothing of this had an interpretation of a message in tongues: ‘The Lord Jesus Christ gave up his most precious possession for you, even his very life. Why do you store up treasures on earth? You should rather store up treasure in heaven’. Jackie knew what her decision needed to be.

The loan shark plays her argument back to her: ‘Don’t think she is going to change her life or be grateful to you in any way’. But now she has remembered what following Jesus means: ‘He never said he would die for me only if I changed’. She answers Jesus’ call: come and die.

addiction: purely spiritual?

‘Only Jesus, the Lord of life, can settle a man’s heart and take away that craving.’

Pullinger is perhaps most famous for her ministry to addicts. This was never her specific intention. It started off informally, inviting those addicted into her house as a safe place to withdraw. She was insistent that, even if release from physical dependence could be gained by (consensually!) locking someone in a room for a week, unless some new purpose captured their heart they would go out and take the drug again. Indeed, she saw many young men turn back to Christ and have a lasting release from drug addiction. Her ministry was not without mistakes, at first believing that ‘this experience [healing from addiction] should be possible for others if they were converted and filled with God’s power’.

She doesn’t offer answers as to why the miracle was not always repeated, but gives us an example of trusting God even when we don’t understand. The controversy came when methadone was offered – and they decided to try without it. I’m not sure what to make of that. Some claimed that faith was simply a distraction, but Jackie remarked that anyone who said the work was simply mind over matter had not seen someone come off heroin before.

There were some extraordinary stories which challenged me and raised questions about the role of tongues and miraculous healing. In fact, a large part of the ministry involved praying in tongues. She tells a woman on conversion ‘the Lord will also give you power to help you pray and this power will stay with you and teach you everything’. Although this does not necessarily mean speaking in tongues, this seems to be the pattern for all whom she led to Christ. I don’t think Jackie would say that all Christians must speak in tongues: but she does argue against seeing spiritual gifts as an optional extra.

in all the streets and all the blocks

‘Where can you find us if you visit Hong Kong? Hopefully in all the streets and all the blocks.’

Most of this article is based on her book Chasing the Dragon, which spans about 20 years. Since then the walls of the city have come down, but Jackie (now aged 77) remains there. St Stephen’s Society for drug withdrawal remains and continues to see miraculous results. Jackie is clear that it isn’t a building or a specific ministry she wants to remain there; rather the relational love of Jesus permeating that city.

What can we learn? What struck me most about Jackie’s ministry was the truly relational, self-sacrificial love she showed for the people of the Walled City. It’s so easy to go into something with these intentions… and then have the people we are called to love turn into a statistic. I’m sure we have all seen this often on the wards. Jackie shows us how she walked alongside them, knowing she had found the treasure that is worth selling everything for (even your oboe!). She left London knowing God would make good his word of giving her more brothers and sisters, and really did treat the new converts like her family. And as she lives and works and worships in that city, she reminds them, herself, and us of the ‘unreasonable’ love Christ has for his people.

lessons from Jackie’s life

  • God can use you (yes, you!) in your city, no matter your lack of worldly qualification.
  • God really can and will provide for his people today – practically.
  • Showing the person of Jesus is usually more compelling than reasoned theology.
  • The gospel is a relational message from a relational God: this profoundly affects how we share it.
  • Christ’s love for you is unreasonable. Nothing you do can change it — this should be the pattern of how we treat others.

Author details

  • Rebecca Horton

    An FY1 in Oxfordshire

    View all posts

Related Publication


  • Nucleus – Winter 2018

Related Articles


  • CMF Global & you

  • God’s mission: the goal of history

  • Evangelism or social action — must we choose?

  • Models of medical mission in the 21st century

  • Remember those in prison

References

  1. Pullinger J, Quicke A. Chasing the Dragon. Revised edition, London: Hodder and Stoughton, 2006

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Privacy Policy

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Join CHLN

The Christian Healthcare Leadership Network (CHLN) is an initiative of the Christian Medical Fellowship (CMF). To be eligible to join the network, you need to be registered with CMF as a Member/ Associate Member or CMF Friend. If you are not already registered as any of the above, please sign up to a member or a friend of CMF before proceeding with your application to join CHLN.
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Would you like to join our monthly prayer WhatsApp group? If so please provide your mobile phone number below
The Christian Healthcare Leadership Network is an initiative of the Christian Medical Fellowship (CMF). To be eligible to join the network, we ask that you are a registered CMF Member/ Associate Member or CMF Friend.
Please confirm that you are a CMF Member or CMF Friend.(Required)

You can update your contact preferences at any time. We take your privacy seriously and will not give your data to any other organisation for their own purposes. For more information see cmf.org.uk/about/privacy-notice

You can update your contact preferences at any time. We take your privacy seriously and will not give your data to any other organisation for their own purposes. For more information see cmf.org.uk/privacy-notice/

Contact the Pastoral Care Team

Pastoral Care is a member benefit for those who join CMF. If you want to access this support, contact us using the form below and we will arrange a telephone call. We aim to get back to you as soon as possible, but we are not a crisis service, and there may, therefore, be a short delay in our response.

Please note, sadly we do not have the capacity to offer this service to non-members.

Please confirm you are a CMF Member(Required)
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Please use the best number to contact you on
e.g. morning, afternoon
Why are you contacting the Pastoral team?(Required)
We will add them to our daily prayers. Please respect patient confidentiality.
Include information on whether you would like to get some mentoring or become a mentor

You can update your contact preferences at any time. We take your privacy seriously and will not give your data to any other organisation for their own purposes. For more information see cmf.org.uk/privacy-notice/

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You can update your contact preferences at any time. We take your privacy seriously and will not give your data to any other organisation for their own purposes. For more information see cmf.org.uk/about/privacy-notice

You can update your contact preferences at any time. We take your privacy seriously and will not give your data to any other organisation for their own purposes. For more information see cmf.org.uk/privacy-notice/

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