Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byCameron Williamson Modified over 9 years ago
2
The Church Across the World We will look at seven main areas:- The world-wide church – the global shift A renewed church – who is an inch wide and mile deep? A growing church? – or static ignoring the hard places? An unequal church – the poverty and power divide A missional church – from the rest to everywhere A fragmented church – sin by association A moving church – cities and migration
3
Non-Western Christians
4
The southern church of 2025
6
1. The Global Shift Take the story of Christian growth in Africa. In 1900, Africa had 10 million Christians representing about 10% of the population By 2000, this figure had grown to 360 million, representing about 45% of the population.
7
GLOBALISATION - POLITICS How do you see the world?
8
1. The Global Shift How is the church around the world adjusting to this shift?
9
2. The Renewed Church Evangelicals and Pentecostals now represent a far larger segment of global Christianity. These newer churches preach deep personal faith, communal orthodoxy, gifts of the spirit and a return to clear scriptural authority. In particular Pentecostals, Charismatics and associated movements have grown in the last 100 years from a handful to over 600 million.
11
Soft discipleship How will the western church, trapped in its secularism and modernity, respond to this shift?
12
3. Growth or Stagnation? Yet is there growth really? The world in 1900 was about one third Christian and it is still the same percentage today. According to the International Bulletin of Missionary Research, in 1900 those claiming to be Christian was 558 million out of a world population of 1.6 billion or 34%. Today it is only the same with 2.3 billion out of 6.9 billion or 31%. So have we actually made any progress and only shifted the centre from the West to the Global South?
13
3. Growth or Stagnation? Sources: Center for the Study of Global Christianity and Population Reference Bureau Asia now has large numbers of Christians compared to 100 years ago but as a percentage of population it is very small at just 8%.
14
Hard places? 85% of all Christian mission is aimed at other “Christians”. What about those who have never heard of Christ?
15
Hard places? There are more people alive today that do not know of Christ or experienced Christian care or even met a Christian than ever before. We cannot ignore this and something needs to change. Is ensuring we serve the hard places a key part of the church’s strategy across the world?
16
The world by income
17
4. An Unequal Church While the
18
4. An Unequal Church The numbers may now be in the Global South but the money and power are still solidly in the West. How is the western church going to respond to this? Christians in the Global South make up 60% of all Christians. However their income is only about 17% of the income of all Christians. More Christians worldwide speak Spanish are their first language than any other language. How will the English speaking church engage with the vast majority of the world-wide Christians for whom English is foreign and in many ways unnecessary?
19
THE WEST RULES OK! We can only make progress in the global church through honest dialogue and careful discernment. We must remain committed to the teachings of Scripture that affirm that those who are in Christ Jesus, have “received the Spirit of sonship” (Rom 8:15) and are “members together of one body, and sharers together in the promise in Christ Jesus. (Eph 3:6). There is need for the West to understand the need for change to be Christ-like rather than western-like.” Peter Oyugi
20
THE WEST RULES OK! “Through all the ages to come the Indian church will rise up in gratitude to attest the heroism and self- denying labours of the missionary body. You have given your goods to feed the poor. You have given your bodies to be burned. We also ask for love. Give us FRIENDS!” VS Azariah – Edinburgh 1910 Does the west understand the need to be Christ-like rather than western-like?
21
5. New models of mission - From the rest to everywhere
22
5. New models of mission Too much mission focuses on ‘Christians’ Mission has been left to the professionals Women are effective gospel agents Will the Global South repeat our mistakes? The local church needs to assume its real seat at the ‘missions table’, for too long dominated by missiologists and mission agencies.
23
Mission at the heart of the church, the church at the heart of mission
24
Mission at the heart of the church, the church at the heart of mission
26
From the rest to everywhere Can the West work alongside these new models rather than seeking to take them over, learning together a way forward?
27
6. The Fragmented Church
28
Christians are now found in some 41,000 denominations. “Christianity has become too fragmented. Existing in a fragmented world, churches fail to show a united front. There are so many divisions within Christianity that it is an intriguing task to clarify a Christian identity”. Moonjang Lee How can we witness to a world badly in need of Christ in a more unified way?
29
7. The Moving Church
30
The growing cities in the south
31
7. The Moving Church Does the mission world understand this urban shift, especially in Asia? Are our mission priorities and strategies still based around rural and people groups - when people groups are now more scattered than ever before. Are we prepared to find news ways of engaging in this new dynamic of urbanisation?
32
The Church Across the World Globalisation has a special relevance for Christians because the Christian faith is essentially a global faith. What place does the western church and mission movement have as part of the new worldwide church? Can we replace the ‘us and them’ perspective (West to the rest) by a worldwide ‘we’? Can the church engage in the mission of God is new ways? Together we can be a new community – a 100 places learning from each other, with no one single centre or single type of mission activity.
33
Questions to discuss: 1. How is the church around the world adjusting to this shift? 2. How will the western church, trapped in its secularism and modernity, respond to this shift 3. Is ensuring we serve the hard places a key part of the church’s strategy across the world? 4. Does the West understand the need to be Christ-like rather than Western-like? 5. Can the West work alongside these new models rather than seeking to take them over, learning together a way forward? 6. How can we witness to a world badly in need of Christ in a more unified way? 7. 7. Are we prepared to find news ways of engaging in this new dynamic of urbanisation?
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.