NOT FAR FROM THE CENTRAL AREA of the German city of Hanover is a Baptist church that houses a Spanish-speaking congregation under the pastoral care of José Antonio Gonzålez. Like many young people from Spain in the 1960s, José Antonio left his beautiful town in Galicia and emigrated to Germany in search of a job. There he was befriended by Mrs. Pinto, a Bolivian lady whose family had also gone to Germany in search of economic security. She not only provided José Antonio with good spiced soups but also insisted on sharing the gospel of Jesus Christ and praying for him. As a nominal Catholic, José Antonio had never thought that this story, part of the folksong heritage of his native Spain, could have any relevance for an aspiring student of industrial design. Eventually the story of Jesus started to make sense to José Antonio, and he became a Christian believer. What he could not have dreamed was that he would eventually discern a call to the ministry and, after seminary training, become a pastor and preacher. I do not know how the gospel crossed seas to reach Mrs. Pinto in distant Bolivia, the heart of South America, but I am thrilled by the fact that when this simple Bolivian migrant housewife crossed the sea to go to Germany she became a missionary.
Christian mission in the twenty-first century has become the responsibility of a global church. As the missionary facts of our time make us pause in wonder, I begin with doxology by giving thanks to God for the mystery and glory of his gospel. Jesus Christ, Godâs Son incarnate, is the core of the gospel, which as a potent seed has given birth to innumerable plants. We can locate Jesus in a particular culture at a particular moment in history, for âthe Word became flesh and lived among usâ (Jn 1:14 NRSV). He lived and taught in Palestine during the first century of our era. After that the story of Jesus has moved from culture to culture, from nation to nation, from people to people. And something strange and paradoxical has taken place: though he was once an obscure peasant from Palestine, Jesus has since been welcomed and adored throughout the world, and people in all cultures and languages have come to see the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. Moreover, men and women everywhere feel that he is âtheirs,â and artists from the past and present have proved the point by representing Jesus in their own cultural terms. At this point in history the global church stands closer than ever to that vision of the seer in Revelation: âA great multitude that no one could count, from every nation, tribe, people and language, standing before the throne and in front of the Lambâ (Rev 7:9).
I cannot but wonder in amazement at the fact that the message of Jesus Christ is âtranslatable.â This means that the gospel dignifies every culture as a valid vehicle for Godâs revelation. Conversely, this also relativizes every culture: no âsacredâ culture or language is the exclusive vehicle that God might use, not even the Hebrew or Aramaic that Jesus spoke, because the Gospels we possess are already a translation from Hebrew or Aramaic into the Greek that was the koinÄ, the lingua franca, of the first century. It is clear that the God who called Abraham to form a nation, and who revealed himself finally in Jesus Christ, intended his revelation to reach all humankind. Jesus stated this clearly in the Great Commission when he instructed the apostles to make disciples of all nations (Mt 28:19); Paul too expressed it in statements such as âGod our Savior . . . wants all men to be saved and to come to a knowledge of the truthâ (1 Tim 2:3-4). Through twenty centuries in which diverse empires have risen and fallen, the Holy Spirit has continually driven Christians to obedience, so that today we have a global church.
In this book I shall explore how the church propagates the Christian faith. The heart of âmissionâ is the drive to share the good news with all, to cross every border with the gospel.
As a community of believers in Jesus Christ, the church performs various functions. It bears testimony just by being the church, the company of believers have fellowship and feel a sense of belonging, they express joyful gratitude to God in worship, they receive teaching on the Christian life, they provide service in meeting the needs of people both within and outside the church, and they are prophetic in the denunciation of evil when Godâs kingdom is proclaimed. All of these activities are part of the answer to questions such as âWhat is the churchâs mission in the world?â or âWhat does the church exist for?â Sharing the good news, going to âthe otherâ with the message of Jesus Christ, inviting others to Jesusâ great banquet, gives a focus and direction to all the other functions. Thus one can say that the church exists for mission and that a church that is only inward looking is not truly the church.
A GLOBAL CHURCH
Over four decades my family and I have had the privilege of being involved in missionary work. The missionary who baptized me in my homeland of Peru at the time I became a university student taught us Christian young people to get involved in planting new churches and evangelizing door to door. From Ruth Siemens, a tentmaker who came to teach in Lima, I got the vision of the university as a mission field. Since 1959 my wife, Lilly, and I have been involved in discipling university students in several Latin American countries, Canada and Spain with the International Fellowship of Evangelical Students. Students were taught to live their life on campuses with a missionary stance, with a sense that their presence had a purpose in Godâs plan for the world. After graduation some of those disciples became missionaries in their own country or in other parts of the world, and we had the privilege of encouraging the growing involvement of Latin Americans in global missionary practice and reflection. God has allowed us to experience firsthand the reality of a global church.
At the start of the twenty-first century, facilities for travel and the flow of information at a global level through the media, as well as colossal migration movements caused by economic change, allow Christians and churches everywhere to experience rich and diverse expressions of the Christian faith. I have met wandering prophets of independent African churches, native storytellers from Latin American Pentecostal movements, tireless missionary entrepreneurs spreading through the world from their Korean homeland and Orthodox priests regaining political weight in the lands that used to be part of the Soviet Empire. Their images fill the pages of our missionary books and the screens of our TVs. They are also a living testimony to the remarkable variety of human cultures and the uniqueness of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Migration patterns and refugee movements have helped to bring a multiplicity of cultures, as well as the different forms that the Christian church has taken among them, to Europe, the United States and Canada. At the heart of European and North American cities, Third World cultures, as well as varied expressions of the global church, have taken root. From the missionary perspective, indigenous churches from faraway places have become sister churches down the street. By the same token, growing Muslim or Hindu communities in Western cities have become a new evangelistic challenge that tests the quality of our Christian lives as well as our ability to communicate the gospel.
This has consequences for Christians in Western nations, because the form of Christianity that has developed in the Southern Hemisphere and has reached the great Western cities is a âpopularâ form of both Catholicism and Protestantism that we might well call âgrass-roots Christianity.â It is marked by a culture of poverty, an oral liturgy, narrative preaching, uninhibited emotionalism, maximum participation in prayer and worship, dreams and visions, faith healing, and an intense search for community and belonging. Evangelical leaders who have long emphasized the clear and correct intellectual expression of biblical truth and the rationality of the Christian faith especially need to be sensitive to this new expression of Christianity.
THE SHIFT OF CHRISTIANITY TO THE SOUTH
A systematic observation of the reality of the global church has also made us aware of the new balance of numerical and spiritual strength in the Christian world.1 As we look at the religious map of the world today we find a marked contrast between the situation at the beginning of the twentieth century and the situation in the early twenty-first century. Scottish missiologist Andrew Walls has described a âmassive southward shift of the center of gravity of the Christian world.â He understands the history of the Christian church and its mission as a sequence of phases, each of which represents the embodiment of Christianity in a major cultural area. This is followed by the movement forward through transcultural mission in such a way that when that major culture declines, Christianity continues to flourish, now in a different setting. In our times, Walls reminds us,
The recession of Christianity among the European peoples appears to be continuing. And yet we seem to stand at the threshold of a new age of Christianity, one in which its main base will be in the Southern continents, and where its dominant expressions will be filtered through the culture of those countries. Once again, Christianity has been saved for the world by its diffusion across cultural lines.2
The new situation has been hailed by Swiss missiologist Walbert BĂŒhlman, who was a missionary in Africa, as âthe coming of the Third Church.â He points to the fact that the first thousand years of church history were under the aegis of the Eastern Church, also known as the Orthodox Church, in the Eastern half of the Roman Empire. Then during the second millennium the leading church was the Western Church in the other half of what used to be the Roman Empire. Those familiar with the history of theology also perceive to what degree theological themes, language and categories have reflected this historical situation. BĂŒhlman goes on to say, âNow the Third Millennium will evidently stand under the leadership of the Third Church, the Southern Church. I am convinced that the most important drives and inspirations for the whole church in the future will come from the Third Church.â3
From my own experience and observation I can point to some examples of the drive and inspiration that come from this Third Church. In 1990 Samuel Cueva and his family were sent from their evangelical church in the central highlands of Peru as Christian missionaries to Spain. When I saw them in Barcelona, they were living in a large block of flats in which Samuel worked as a janitor in order to make ends meet. He believed that evangelical churches in Spain could be the source of new missionary efforts not only to Latin America but also to the Arab world. As he shared about his work, in his eyes was the same fire and enthusiasm for the gospel that I had come to admire in his father, Juan Cueva. Don Juan was a Peruvian businessman who traveled extensively selling medical equipment in the interior of Peru. He also used these sales trips as evangelistic and church-planting occasions. Samuel could have been a successful businessman like other members of his family, but his passion for Christ turned him into an entrepreneurial mission promoter.
During the twentieth century the word missionary in Peru was reserved for blond-haired, blue-eyed British or American Christians who had crossed the sea to bring the gospel to the mysterious land of the Incas. Today there is a growing number of Peruvian mestizosâdark-eyed, brown-skinned, mixed-race Latin Americansâsent as missionaries to the vast highlands and jungles of Peru as well as to Europe, Africa and Asia. The single-minded passion for Christ is still the driving force behind mission, but over the course of a century the composition of the missionary force has changed significantly, and changes are also coming to attitudes, methods and, of course, patterns of support for mission.
For several years I had the privilege of being a member of the board of the Overseas Ministries Study Center in New Haven, Connecticut. It had been designed as a place for rest and recreation for missionaries when they returned to their country from the mission field. During the last decades of the twentieth century this organization had to adapt its programs and policies, because the missionaries coming for rest or for continuing education are now Koreans who do medical work in Nigeria or plant churches in the Amazonian jungle, Japanese who work in theological education in Indonesia, or Filipinos who foster economic development in Bangladesh.
At the tables during events in this center you can hear conversations that reflect enthusiasm for what God is doing around the world; there is also a sense that these people feel deeply yet humbly privileged to play a part in the unfolding drama of Godâs salvific action. The script is still encoded in the vocabulary of Matthew the Evangelist or Paul the apostle, but there are new actors in the drama. Side by side with the Americans or Europeans you now find Asians, Africans and Latin Americans, with their peculiar character traits and eating habits! Like Samuel, my Peruvian friend, these new missionaries have dedicated their life to full-time service with a Christian missionary organization moving across cultural and linguistic borders.
Another missionary force is also at work today, though it does not appear in the records of missionary activity or the databanks of specialists. It is the transcultural witnessing for Christ that takes place as people move around as migrants or refugees, just as in New Testament days. Think, for instance, of the thousands of Filipina women who work as maids in the rich, oil-producing countries where Islam is the official religion and where no European or North American missionaries are allowed. I have had a chance to converse with some of them as, in the midst of daily chores, they sing Christian songs and tell Bible stories to the children they baby-sit. As in biblical times, these women see themselves as witnesses for Christ in a foreign land. They are missionaries âfrom belowâ who do not have the power, the prestige or the money from a developed nation, and are not part of a missionary organization. They are vulnerable in many ways but have learned the art of survival, supported by their faith in Jesus Christ and by the assurance that God is with them and will use them in spite of the adverse circumstances in which they have to earn their living.
It is not the case that human and material resources for mission have evaporated in Europe and North America. But, although the missionary enterprise is still strong, especially in North America, many of the older, more traditional missionary organizations do not find as in the past a regular flow of volunteers willing to be trained and sent as missionaries. On the other hand, youth movements such as Youth With a Mission, Operation Mobilization and the Mennonite Central Committee are able to mobilize young volunteers for short-term assignments, with some of these young people later becoming long-term missionaries with other agencies. Every three years in the United States almost twenty thousand university students, eager to learn and to receive an intense and s...