Until All Have Heard
A Prophetic Report on the recent Until All Have Heard Gathering in London
On Sunday 1 February 2026, ExCeL London became more than a conference venue. For several hours it functioned as a spiritual crossroads, hosting the UK mission gathering of 2819 Church (inspired by Matthew 28:19), led by American pastor and evangelist Philip Anthony Mitchell.
Over two sessions, at 10:00 and 14:00 hours, some 8,000 people participated in a convergence of worship, intercession and proclamation, as believers from across Britain assembled with a shared sense that this was not merely another church event, but a moment of divine summons.
Branded simply as Until All Have Heard, these Crusade meetings carried the unmistakable weight of urgency. From the opening moments, it was evident they were framed, not around comfort or entertainment, but around confrontation, consecration and commission.
The atmosphere was charged with expectation. Voices lifted in worship, hands raised in surrender, and hearts opened to a message that would prove both bracing and clarifying. What unfolded over the course of the day was a call back to biblical Christianity, anchored in the Epistle of Jude and delivered with prophetic insistence: the Church must rise to contend for the faith once delivered to the saints.
The Vision of 2819
Philip Anthony Mitchell is
the founder and senior pastor of 2819 Church, a rapidly growing Christ-centred movement headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia. Raised in Queens, New York, Mitchell’s journey into ministry emerged from a profound personal encounter with Jesus Christ that redirected his life toward discipleship, teaching and evangelism.
The name 2819 is drawn from the Great Commission (Matt 28:19), and encapsulates the church’s singular vision: to proclaim the Gospel globally and to form believers who live as committed disciples rather than cultural Christians.
Mitchell’s ministry is characterised by verse-by-verse preaching, theological directness, and a refusal to dilute biblical truth for cultural approval. Through the 2819 Institute and an expanding international presence, he has developed a reputation for calling believers back to Scripture, holiness and mission. His messages often carry a prophetic edge, addressing both personal discipleship and societal drift, while consistently emphasising Jesus Christ as the only hope for humanity.
What unfolded over the course of the day was a call back to biblical Christianity ... and delivered with prophetic insistence.
The London meetings marked a significant milestone in 2819’s international outreach, signalling a growing burden for Europe and the United Kingdom in particular, regions increasingly shaped by secularism, moral relativism and spiritual apathy.
A Gathering Marked by Urgency
ExCeL London provided a striking backdrop for the event. Situated in one of Europe’s most diverse cities,
the venue symbolised the intersection of cultures, nations, and spiritual trajectories. Participants travelled from across the UK and beyond, filling the hall with a cross-section of generations, ethnicities, and church backgrounds.
The programme combined extended worship with teaching and prayer ministry. Yet what distinguished the gathering was not production or spectacle, but spiritual intensity. There was little attempt to soften the message. Instead, Mitchell delivered a word rooted firmly in Scripture, calling the Church to spiritual maturity and moral clarity.
Central to the day’s teaching was the Book of Jude, a short New Testament letter often overlooked, yet uniquely suited to moments of doctrinal confusion and cultural compromise. Central to the message was that the United Kingdom is just one generation from submission to pagan idols and ideology. Allied to that was the message that America has a window open, but the forces of darkness are striving to close it.
Reclaiming Christian Identity
Mitchell bergan by grounding the congregation in Jude’s opening declaration: believers are called, beloved, and kept.
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Called: Followers of Christ, summoned out of darkness into light.
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Beloved: Covered by the blood of Jesus, embraced by divine mercy.
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Kept: Preserved by God’s power, not human effort.
This triad became the theological foundation of the message. Christianity, Mitchell emphasised, is not self-improvement or moral striving; it is rescue. Humanity, apart from grace, is already on a path toward judgment. Salvation is not earned but received.
Central to the message was that the United Kingdom is just one generation from submission to pagan idols and ideology.
From this place flowed a teaching on mercy, God withholding what we deserve, and peace, described as the supernatural assurance that remains even when life feels chaotic. Several times Mitchell returned to this idea of peace that “confuses the devil”: a deep, anchoring confidence in Christ that persists despite external storms.
This framing served to re-establish the Gospel in its proper gravity. In an age that often trivialises sin and sentimentalises grace, Mitchell insisted on restoring the biblical weight of both.
A Wake-Up Call from Jude
Jude, Mitchell explained, originally intended to write an encouraging letter about “our common salvation.” Instead, he felt compelled to issue a warning. That pivot became a prophetic mirror for the present moment.
“I found it necessary to write,” Jude says, because false teaching and moral compromise were already infiltrating the Church. Mitchell applied this directly to contemporary Christianity.
The message was unambiguous: this is not a season for passive faith. The Church is being called to contend earnestly for the faith, not for denominations or personal preferences, but for the historic, biblical Gospel “once and for all delivered to the saints.”
This contending, Mitchell clarified, is not about hostility but fidelity. It is a refusal to allow truth to be reshaped by ideology or convenience. It is standing firm on the exclusivity of Christ: Jesus is the way, the truth, and the life, no one comes to the Father except through Him.
Christianity is not designed to blend seamlessly with prevailing values when those values contradict Scripture.
The tone here was deliberately confrontational, warlike even. Mitchell spoke of compromise and complicity, urging believers to come out of comfort and cultural accommodation and be prepared to engage in spiritual warfare. Christianity, he insisted, is not designed to blend seamlessly with prevailing values when those values contradict Scripture.
Worship and Warfare
A recurring theme throughout the day was spiritual warfare expressed through worship. Mitchell warned that the enemy understands humanity’s design: people are created to worship. If Satan cannot prevent worship altogether, he redirects it, toward false gods, ideologies, pleasure, success or self.
This, he explained, is why cultural idols rise so quickly. The battle is not merely political or social; it is spiritual. False doctrines and deceptive philosophies thrive when believers disengage from Scripture.
“You can’t contend for what you don’t know,” Mitchell declared, urging attendees to return personally to the Word of God rather than relying solely on preachers or platforms. This exhortation carried prophetic significance. In a digital age saturated with opinions, Mitchell’s call was refreshingly direct: read the Bible; know the faith; anchor yourself in truth.
Righteous Indignation and National Intercession
The message did not shy away from contemporary moral issues. Mitchell addressed the erosion of biblical marriage, the tragedy of abortion, and the proliferation of false prophets and indoctrination. These were framed not as political talking points but as spiritual indicators of a society drifting from God.
He called for righteous indignation; not anger rooted in pride, but grief and resolve shaped by God’s heart.
Intercession became a central focus. Participants were urged to care deeply about the spiritual condition of the nation, the laws being passed in government, and the souls affected by these decisions. Prayer was presented not as a peripheral activity but as frontline ministry.
Prayer was presented not as a peripheral activity but as frontline ministry.
Repeatedly, Mitchell emphasised that revival begins with surrendered lives. Believers were invited to place themselves on the altar afresh, yielding ambitions, reputations, and comforts to Christ.
Mission as Mandate
Threaded throughout the gathering was the global mandate of Matthew 28:19. The phrase Until All Have Heard served as both rallying cry and prophetic declaration. Mitchell reminded the congregation that Christianity is inherently missionary. The Gospel is not meant to remain contained within church walls. It is destined for streets, cities, and nations.
This missional emphasis extended beyond evangelism to discipleship. The vision of 2819 is not simply to gather crowds but to raise mature believers who embody biblical truth in everyday life. In this sense, the London meetings functioned as a commissioning moment. Attendees were not merely encouraged; they were charged.
Why This Message Matters Now
What made the ExCeL gathering significant was not novelty, but alignment. The message from Jude landed with striking relevance in a season marked by theological confusion and cultural fragmentation. Mitchell’s teaching resonated prophetically because it addressed root issues: identity, truth, worship and obedience.
The Gospel is not meant to remain contained within church walls. It is destined for streets, cities, and nations.
This was not a prosperity message, nor a self-help seminar. It was a call to return to apostolic Christianity. Three prophetic currents were especially evident:
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First, a restoration of biblical clarity. The insistence on one true faith and one way to God confronts the pluralism of modern spirituality.
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Second, a reawakening of spiritual responsibility. Believers were reminded that faith requires action; prayer, study, holiness and courage.
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Third, a renewal of mission. The Gospel was presented not as private comfort but as public commission.
In many ways, the gathering echoed the spirit of Jude himself: seeing danger on the horizon and choosing to speak.
A Call That Echoes Beyond ExCeL
The 2819 Church mission meetings at ExCeL London on 1 February 2026 stand as a defining moment for many who attended. Through Mitchell’s uncompromising exposition of Jude, believers were summoned back to the foundations of their faith and forward into their calling.
Believers were summoned back to the foundations of their faith and forward into their calling.
Joshua conquered land, Othniel preserved peace, Ehud disrupted tyranny, Deborah prophesied. Now, in a different age, the Church is being reminded again:
We are called - We are beloved - We are kept. But we are also commissioned in a time of war.
The greatest hope for humanity remains Jesus Christ. And until all have heard, the work will continue.
Nick Thompson, 04/02/2026