Todd Johnson published an article titled “globalization, Christian identity, and frontier missions” in the Journal of Frontier Missiology in 2010. In it he discusses important trends with missions. One of those trends is that Christians have little significant contact with Muslims, Hindus and Buddhists.
The task remaining globally is predominantly among these three religious blocks. Sadly globally 86% of all Muslims, Hindus, and Buddhists do not know a single Christian. They have few, if no ways, of hearing the gospel and believing. Even in the U.S., 60% of ethnic non-Christians do not have a relationship with a single Christian. And 70% of Muslims, Hindus, and Buddhists.
According to J.D. Payne, in his recent book, Pressure Points: 12 Global Issues Shaping the Face of the Church. The U.S. is the largest immigrant nation in the world, with 43 million first generation legal immigrants (Russia is second with 13 million). There are nearly a million international students in the U.S. (with 194K from China, 100K from India, 70K from South Korea, 34K from Saudi Arabia). And there are 571 UPG (unreached people groups) in the U.S. and Canada. This is less than 10% of the UPG’s globally, but still not an inconsequential number. God has truly brought the nations to our doorstep.
There are also 51 million religiously unaffiliated individuals in the U.S. (third to China and Japan). And this number is rapidly growing. Thankfully well over 95% of these atheists and agnostics are in relationship with one or more Christians, and do have access to the gospel.
In last month’s personal reflections I shared about the Explore God campaign in my home of Austin. 370 Austin area churches working together to engage in spiritual conversations in low key ways with tens of thousands of Austinites. I heartily commend these efforts. Wouldn’t it be great if something like this happened in every major metropolitan area in the U.S. But even if it did, we fail to properly understand important components of the great commission if we focus most of our outreach energies of folks like ourselves. We must make ethnic communities and individuals from Muslim, Hindu, and Buddhist backgrounds a strategic priority.
I have been part of a multi-church, multi-generational missional community for 19 months. Our focus recently narrowed from engaging Austin area Muslims specifically to engaging Arabic speaking Muslims. Our objective is to see a rapidly reproducing Arabic speaking church planted in Austin. We are partnering with a Syrian pastor toward that end. We are a small missional community of a little more than a dozen and our impact to date is small. We saw two Arabic speaking couples come to Christ this summer. But our heart, our vision, and prayers are large.
Get out of your comfort zone. Engage the lost. And make special efforts to engage those with little or no access to the gospel. There are lots of ways to get started. If you’re not sure how to get started, let me know. I would be delighted to help point you to folks that can be a helpful resource.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment