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Monday June 23, 2008 ~ 6 Comments
Last week, I took my daughter to California and we spent a few days in L.A.. The diversity was much more evident there. In many places, we were the only ones who spoke English as a first language. Across North America, our airports, downtown streets, and even suburban malls have become a cornucopia of cultures and nationalities. Increasingly America just doesn't look much like me. However, as I enter the doors of many churches, I see mainly people who look like me. I recognize that there are strong ethnic churches and I do visit them, but I am concerned that too many churches are not engage in cross-cultural mission engagement when the opportunity is so clear. I do not see the variety of people groups in our churches that I see in our cities--and this grieves me. I have written about this lack of ethnic leadership in my own denomination, but it is an evangelical problem. I have shared some resources on the topic here. For the first time in recent history, more churches are being started in North America than are closing, yet this expansion of churches has made few inroads to internationals of non-Christian backgrounds living within our borders. This worries me, not only for the future of our country, but more importantly for the future of international missions. The question must be asked: If we as the church in North America desire to share the gospel to the world, how can we expect to be effective overseas when we cannot even reach the world at home? The church has some waking up to do. The U.S. Census projects that 50% of the U.S. population will be of a race or ethnicity other than non-Hispanic white by 2050. International immigration to North America has created an exponential growth among Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, and other non-Christian groups. Toronto, a city of over 6 million, is now 50% foreign-born. If we take Jesus' command, "As the Father has sent me, I am sending you," with any seriousness, we must be willing to share the gospel with "others" who are not just like us. And these "others" do not just mean people in different economic or racial positions. It also includes those "others" who speak other languages, adhere to foreign religions, and hold cultural values that are much different from mine and yours. I'll let the experts figure the forces behind the upsurge in immigration. I'll let the politicians argue about whether it is good or bad and what we should do about it. But, in the meantime, I will listen to Jesus and tell the good news to those peoples increasingly present around us. And, obviously, we need some hope to engage in this essential mission.
Kandace and Phillip believe, as do I, that the growing international population in our continent will not be reached through an elaborate, grandiose missions program. Instead, it requires a volunteer army of lay people, like you and me, spread all across North America committed to an incarnational ministry of proclamation and church starting, one international family and subsequently one people group at a time. Don't miss this! This book is not for the career missionary, although they could learn from it. It is for the missional Christian eager to engage across cultures. The book is only available for purchase at Phillip and Kandace's website, reachinternationals.com. So be sure to order yourself a copy, but also order one or two more to give to those people who can really use it! Kandace and Phillip are friends. Over the past several years, we have been in the same church, worked together on many projects, and have enjoyed time together as families. Phillip and Kandace are a rare breed. They are humble. But, do not confuse humility with lack of knowledge. I count them as the most knowledgeable people I know in ministering among internationals in North America. They are friends to my family, but more importantly, they are friends to the world living in North America. You will be blessed and challenged as you read their book. Posted on June 23, 2008 at 10:41 AM ~ 6 Comments Tagged with: connor, internationals, missiology 6 CommentsLeave a comment |



























Hey Ed
Thanks for swimming in these waters.
We are trying like crazy to build a multi-ethnic church here in the second most segregated city in America (Memphis)...
Fellowship Memphis
www.fellowshipmemphis.org
I naively thought that segregated church would go away when a new generation of leadership took over leadership of existing churches or planted new ones...but based on most of what I see in new churches and at conferences...it's amazing homogeneous and nobody seems to care.
Of course...everyone would wish that...but until the leadership and the decision makers around the table change...the outcome with still produce primarily homogenuity...be that a conference or a church.
Thanks for putting some attention toward diversity...it's a shame that our culture and our corporate world is outpacing the church in this area...when we have the only true solution (the gospel)...we just need some leaders who will care and champion the cause and champion how inconsistent segregation and homogenuity is with the Gospel.
Yes, very good things come from Golden Gate.
I am also trying to lead a mostly white church to become multi-cultural. If Memphis is the second most segregated city, what is the first? I live in Montgomery, AL. I would not be surprised if it were here. If it is not, it could be.
I was talking with some ministry leaders a month ago on this issue of diversity as well as different church forms. I was being pretty challenging. One of the men spoke up and said that, "Maybe we will not be able to bring the church to this. Maybe the next generation will have to be the ones that come along and do it." This statement would not be so surprising and shocking if the man was not around 25 years old. I challenged him to not give up so that he could lead a generation to the vision that God has for us.
We have a long way to go, but we will not get there unless people with a vision from God lead us.
I think the problem is what I call "culturism." The cultures of our different ethnic groups are difficult to blend. We have no interest in or comfortableness with other cultures, so we stay separate.
I think the solution might be to intentionally recognize and appreciate different cultural expressions - maybe even make fun of them
(I know that's weird, but I've seen that work among a group of minorities that make fun of each others' differences, with love, seemed to work).
Ed. . Great comments! I'm grateful unto God, that the church I pastor here in NJ actually looks like the community we serve. Our membership and regualar worship attendance includes folks from 6 latin american countries, 3 african countries, and two asian countries (Indonesia and Philipines). And the rest of us are either Caucasian or American Black. Plus, our facilities are used by a Chinese Baptist church in the afternoon, which have 2 congregations. And, on Sunday evenings, we are host to an Asian Indian Baptist congregation! I'm blessed!
Amen, John Bryson!
Ed, can you send me Phillip Connor's information - we'll be right up the road from them.
Good to see you in Vail.
glad i found you guys. looks like im a year too late. planting a namb/sbc supported multi-ethnic/international church in spartanburg, sc. we launch sept 13th, 2009. we need prayer and knowledge and love! im not sure who reads these but im open to any advice/encouragement you may have. spartanburg is home to around 70 nationalities (highest per capita in the state).
What's your advice on "target group" when it comes to this large of an ethnic population? As I see it the vision is God's, seen at the great commission, but even at Abram's call. Is it okay if our target group is all nations?!!