Updates from August, 2007 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Mark 3:17 pm on August 21, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    A Harvest in Bangladesh 

    bangladesh.jpg

    God continues to confound the wise and stupefy our best guesses. It is clear to me that God is actively pursuing people right around this world, and in many places (more than we will ever know) he is under the radar, supplying nutrients to grassroots, underground movements of God’s People. Joel News once again discovers yet another story to give Father praise for!

    The ‘grassroots’ house church movement in Bangladesh is beating its ten thousands, reports German missions strategist Wolfgang Simson. “In 1996 I was in Bangladesh, the third-largest Muslim country in the world, with only 600,000 known and organized Christians then. Only a few Muslims were coming to Christ, and found it extremely difficult to be integrated into the traditional churches. I spoke to the majority of Christian leaders connected to the Evangelical Alliance there about the need to start underground networks of house churches, allowing whole Muslim families to be discipled and multiplied. Many leaders shook their heads: ‘Impossible; unheard of; unpractical; difficult; deadly; ridiculous, maybe in China or India, but not here’ were some of the responses I got. Crammed into my airplane seat back home I felt like such a looser. Was it worthwhile to speak about these things at all? Should we not leave everyone just alone and do their thing?”

    “A few days ago in Zürich a few of us met with a man we call Brother Abdul from Bangladesh. He told us a story that made me cry – and maybe you, too. That very year I was in his land, he, as a 19 year old teenager then, started to do the very thing I was preaching. But he did not hear it from me, but from God. He started a movement to disciple Muslims through underground house churches we call ‘jamaats’, and it has now, in 2007, after only a few years, become the largest single movement bringing Muslims to Jesus in the world! Again and again people checked and rechecked the statistics; it is for fact that more than 500,000 Muslims have become disciples of Jesus through this house church movement, nearly overtaking the number of all other organized Christians in Bangladesh together.”

    Source: Wolfgang Simson

    Could this kind of “great awakening” have happened if traditional churches had simply figured out the right evangelistic strategy? Would there even be enough seats in the pews of the church buildings in Bangladesh to accomodate for such an amazing influx of church-goers? Thank God that his work is not confined to a church building’s retail space or conversion strategy.

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  • Mark 3:25 pm on March 29, 2007 Permalink | Reply  

    A Church Planting Movement 

    Humans love putting labels on what God is doing. That isn’t necessarily bad, it’s just sorta funny to see it happen sometimes. The big phrase these days is “house church” and “church planting movements”. Neither of these terms are in the Bible, but similar ideas like “the church that meets in your house” and “a gracious outpouring of God’s Spirit” are all over the book of Acts describing similar phenomenon.

    Below is an exciting video describing the realities of our world today. While the vocabulary words, music, and narration are kinda corny, I think it introduces people to the ideas that I’m wrestling with in my prayers and studies in just about a straightforward way as possible. In many ways, this video describes the kind of work of God that I am praying regularly about for the people of Abilene and Chicago. What would happen if a sweeping spirit of renewal hit our land? Only God knows.


    Will you partner with me in praying for this? — Father, I pray that you will heal our land and bring your Spirit to every person, giving them the joy they need to live a life that matters. I pray for an unleashing of a tidal wave of workers that are sent out into your harvest, and for myriad churches to be planted and countless lives transformed by the Good News!

    I love that I will not have to take charge of all that mission work! I love that people across the globe – regular, run-o-the-mill CHILDREN OF GOD have the capacity to join Father in such amazing ways! My job will/is like a “missions coordinator” simply helping along what is already taking place naturally…setting up the tee so they can take the drive. I want so badly to see God take back what is rightfully his, and this seems to be a major way he is doing that in our day.

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    • Don Fanning 9:52 pm on March 29, 2007 Permalink

      Excellent video. How can I get it to show in classes and put on our web site.

      Dr Don Fanning
      Liberty University.

    • Mark 10:46 pm on March 29, 2007 Permalink

      Dr. Fanning,

      My apologies for not putting the info directly into my post. (D’oh!)

      Head to http://www.churchplantingmovements.com/

      Here you will find David Garrison’s book “Church Planting Movements” that I have read and recommend to anyone even remotely interested in what God is doing around the world, and how we might join him in what he’s up to. On this main page you’ll also find a free downloadable e-booklet that gives the gist of the book in only a few pages.

      You’ll also find the movie at http://www.blip.tv/file/149518/ or you can order the DVD to play online through the CPM website shown above.

      Don, tell me a bit about yourself and what you teach at LU!

  • Mark 7:53 pm on July 11, 2006 Permalink | Reply  

    Joel News Reports on US Culture 

    I subscribe to a online newsletter called Joel News and they had some interesting things to say about the growing trend of people meeting to worship in their homes etc, rather than in traditional building structures.  Below is a selection from the newsletter and some (even more accurate) research giving some of the numbers of this movement in our culture:

    —————-
    There is a rapid growth of participation in house churches across the
    United States. Whereas most people continue to think of ‘going to church’
    as attending a service at one of the many church buildings located
    throughout their community, a new study from pollster The Barna Group shows
    that millions of adults are trying out new forms of spiritual community and
    worship, with many abandoning the traditional forms altogether.

    The new study, based on interviews with more than 5,000 randomly selected
    adults from across the nation, found that 9 percent of adults attend a
    house church during a typical week. That is remarkable growth in the past
    decade, shooting up from just 1 percent to near double-digit involvement.
    In total, one out of five adults attends a house church at least once a
    month. Projecting these figures to the national population gives an
    estimate of more than 70 million adults who have at least experimented with
    house church participation. In a typical week roughly 20 million adults
    attend a house church gathering. Over the course of a typical month, that
    number doubles to about 43 million adults.

    While many religious professionals say they are unaware of such activity,
    it might be because the house church is in its ‘ramp up’ phase in the U.S.,
    says Barna. One consequence is that millions of Americans are
    intermittently engaged in a house church, alternating back and forth
    between house church and conventional church. For clarity, the survey
    distinguished between involvement in a house church and participation in a
    small group that is associated with a conventional church.

    The study also discovered that church attendance patterns are being
    reshaped. The people most likely to attend a house church but not a
    conventional church were men, home-school families, residents of the West,
    and non-whites. Barna estimates that this trend will continue over the next
    two decades, substantially reducing the share of adults who call a
    conventional church their primary spiritual community.

    “The house church now appears to have reached ‘critical mass’ in the United
    States,” commented Barna. “Analysts typically find that once a new tool or
    institution reaches 15% market penetration, and has evidenced a consistent
    or growing level of affirmation for at least six years, that entity shifts
    from fad to trend status. At that point, it becomes a permanent fixture in
    our society. We anticipate house church attendance during any given week to
    double in the coming decade, and a growing proportion of house church
    attenders to adopt the house church as their primary faith community.”

    Full report: http://www.barna.org

    ————-

    Thoughts?

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