SUBVERSIVE MOBILIZATION: Best Practices with Mega-churches

By the kind gift of a gracious God, I happened to get to do some good work this past weekend at one of the 15 largest churches in the U.S. It got me wondering about mobilizing mega-churches.

I’ve got to be honest, I was a little dazzled by the scale of the operation and the staggering quantity of resources they bring to bear on the world. This church in particular is hitting missional home runs on a regular basis. But maybe they could be more strategic (Read: Hit into my section of the stands – unengaged Muslim peoples!).

So I’m looking for some friends who’d like to kick around best-practice ideas for mobilizing mega-churches. If you’d like to contribute to that conversation, shoot me a quick email introduction. I’ll float out some questions to the pool and we’ll go from there.

Missions Catalyst World News Briefs

Missions-Catalyst-no-tagline_largeIn This Issue: Constitutions, conflicts, and Central African churches

For additional news stories throughout the month, follow us on Twitter.

Missions Catalyst is a free, weekly electronic digest of mission news and resources designed to inspire and equip Christians worldwide for global ministry. Use it to fuel your prayers, find tips and opportunities, and stay in touch with how God is building his kingdom all over the world. Please forward it freely!

About Us

Missions Catalyst is a free, weekly electronic digest of mission news and resources designed to inspire and equip Christians worldwide for global ministry. Use it to fuel your prayers, find tips and opportunities, and stay in touch with how God is building his kingdom all over the world. Please forward it freely!

PatPat Noble has been the “news sleuth” for Missions Catalyst since 2004. In addition to churning out the news, she is working to create a SWARM (Serving World A Regional Mobilizers) in Northern New York using the NorthernChristian.org website. You can connect with her at www.whatsoeverthings.com.

 

 

TUNISIA: New Constitution Rejects Sharia Law

Al-Zaytuna Mosque, Tunis. Christopher Rose, Flickr/Creative Commons

Source: World Watch Monitor, January 20, 2014

Three years after the “Arab Spring” started in Tunisia, the country’s National Constituent Assembly is close to passing a new constitution which rejects Islam as the “main source of law,” but states it is the State’s duty to “protect the sacred.”

The new constitution, which has taken two years to conclude, comes almost three years to the day since the fall of President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, itself 10 days after the death of a Tunisian vegetable seller which began the movement that would sweep across North Africa and into the Middle East.

Since the revolution of 2011, the question of whether the State would be seen as the “protector of the sacred” has caused great controversy between the moderate Islamist party which came to power after the first post-Ben Ali general election and the broadly secular opposition.

As well as being the “protector of the sacred,” the constitution appoints the State as “guarantor of religion” and “guarantor of freedom of conscience” and promises the “neutrality of places of worship in relation to political manipulation.”

» Read full story, which discussing reactions to these decisions.

» For a long view on the Arab Spring, hear seasoned diplomat and ambassador Marwan Muasher speak at Yale on The Second Arab Awakening and the Battle for Pluralism. Well worth your 30 minutes. Jump to 6:30 where he begins (YouTube).

CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC: Church Protects 700 Fleeing Muslims

Source: Christian Post, January 21, 2014

A Central African Republic priest has opened his church as a shelter to Muslims fleeing the Christian militias terrorizing his community.

“I am not going to let anyone hurt the people inside my church; it doesn’t matter whether they are Christians or Muslims,” Xavier Fagba, who leads a church in Boali, a city northwest of the capital Bangui, told FRANCE 24.

At the service on Sunday, Fagba told his congregation to make their Muslim counterparts feel comfortable and greet one another with a “kiss of peace.”

“We just stop causing people pain,” he said.

Jean-Claude, a Christian, encouraged Ahmad – his Muslim neighbor for years – with a hug at the end of the service.

“You need to be strong. Stay positive,” Jean-Claud told his neighbor, who recently had his house destroyed in the violence.

Ahmad said that although he felt that there were individuals trying to protect him, he felt that he would not be fully safe unless he made it to the capital.

“There are people here who are good to us,” Ahmad told The Daily Nation. “But we can’t stay here any longer. We have to leave. I want to go to Bangui. At least there is still some safety there.”

Currently about 70 French troops are guarding Fagba’s church, where 700 Muslims, mostly women and children, are staying. The volume of people has put a strain on the church’s resources, especially its sanitary conditions, however, without a method to evacuate the people safely, they are planning to remain sheltered there.

» Full story with picture.

» Some readers might be interested in a related story, Victimized Christians Take Revenge in Central African Republic; Man Eats Muslim After Christian Mob Attack (Warning: video contains violent and disturbing images).

KAZAKHSTAN: Trial Begins for Retired Pastor

Source: Forum18, January 22, 2014

Eight months after his arrest and despite his failing health, 67-year-old retired Presbyterian Pastor Bakhytzhan Kashkumbayev was brought from prison in handcuffs [on the 22d of January] for the first hearing in his criminal trial in a court in Kazakhstan’s capital Astana. He faces charges of harming health, inciting hatred, propagating extremism, and leading an organization that harms others, Forum 18 News Service notes. The charges carry a maximum penalty of eight, seven, ten and six years’ imprisonment respectively. He denies all wrongdoing.

About 70 people were present in court to support retired pastor Kashkumbayev, among them foreign diplomats.

The alleged “religious extremism” is possession of two books entitled Healing the Broken Family of Abraham and “New Life for Muslims,” his lawyer told Forum 18.

» Read full story. For more about persecution in Kazakhstan and throughout Central Asia, see additional stories from Forum18 and the January 2014 issue of Persecution magazine (International Christian Concern).

RUSSIA: Praying for Sochi and the Winter Olympics

Sources: Various

Athletes, sport fans, and tourists from around the world are gathering in Sochi, Russia for this year’s Winter Olympic Games (February 7-23). What a great opportunity to pray for all those in Sochi and the countries they represent! Many Christian ministries have also been planning and preparing for outreach events for many months. Will you join us in lifting them up?

Engage Sochi includes three virtual prayer walking guides to take you around the Sochi region and the Olympic venues where the games will be held.

Athletes in Action‘s website features stories about the journeys of some of this year’s competitors.

Russian Ministries and more than 500 Russian churches are partnering in a scripture distribution effort; pray for that!

» Know about other ministry efforts, prayer campaigns, or interesting stories related to the Olympics? Let us know.

EUROPE: Seven Signs of Hope

Source: Joel News International 888, January 9, 2014

Almost 3,000 young people from 40 nations in Europe started the New Year at the Mission-Net congress in Offenburg, Germany, where they received faith, hope, and vision for their continent. Jeff Fountain was one of the speakers who shared about seven signs of hope he sees in Europe today. These signs are:

1. New prayer initiatives are emerging across the continent.

2. The shakings of God: [God] has been shaking the Marxist world, the Muslim world and now the world of Mammon. “Everything not based on God’s kingdom will be shaken,” says Fountain.

3. New spiritual hunger: Despite (or because of) secularism, spiritual hunger is rising. Here is a ripe harvest field for incarnational mission.

4. New expressions of church are emerging outside of traditional church walls.

5. The New Europeans: Look who God is bringing to Europe – from Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Almost half of all EU migrants are already church members. Migrant churches contribute to urban church renewal bringing lost gifts of spiritual discernment, colorful worship and bold proclamation.

6. Unity of heart: Never before has there been as much convergence as today between old rival church traditions – Pentecostal, Protestant, Catholic, and Orthodox. Spiritual renewal movements have swept over denominational barriers.

7. Recovery of the gospel of the Kingdom: The awareness that the Gospel is not just good news about salvation, but about Christ’s lordship over all spheres of life is leading to expressions of mission involving the transformation of individuals, families, and communities.

» Subscribe to Joel News. For more perspectives on Europe from Jeff Fountain, read his Weekly Word (The Schuman Centre).

» See also Faith Rising in East, Setting in West – Europe and Christianity (Christian Post) and Sharing the Gospel in the UK: A Nigerian’s Perspective (Christian Today).

 

Missions Catalyst Resource Reviews

Missions-Catalyst-no-tagline_largeIn This Issue: Book reviews, videos you can use, and more

BOOK: A Wind in the House of Islam

Reviewed by Marti Wade, Missions Catalyst

A Wind in the House of Islam: How God Is Drawing Muslims around the World to Faith in Jesus Christ, by David Garrison. Monument, CO: WIGTake Resources, 2014. 314 pages.

In more than 14 centuries of Muslim-Christian relations, tens of millions of Christians have been assimilated into the Muslim religion. During this same time period, we can document only 82 Muslim movements to Christ.

What’s most remarkable about this, says researcher and strategist David Garrison, is that 69 of history’s 82 movements have occurred in the past two decades alone. “We are living in the midst of the greatest turning of Muslims to Christ in history.”

To better understand and respond to this phenomenon, Garrison and his collaborators traveled to each corner of the Muslim world (which Garrison calls the nine rooms in the house of Islam) and conducted interviews with more than 1,000 former Muslims who have come to faith in Jesus within 45 of these movements. Garrison’s definition of a movement is a fairly modest one: at least 1,000 baptisms or 100 church starts among a Muslim people over a two-decade period.

The book includes a strong emphasis on context. It includes an extensive introduction and explanation of research methods and a historic survey of Christian outreach and Muslim response to the gospel both globally and in each of nine world regions. Details of each region’s history, peoples, religion, and political dynamics provide a backdrop for the stories of the Muslim-background believers who emerged from such contexts.

The book concludes with a tentative but insightful list of ten “bridges of God” (ways God is working among Muslims today) and five barriers to seeing movements like these flourish, along with five practical steps we can take right now that will align us with God’s redemptive activity among Muslims.

I finished this book somewhat disappointed, primarily because though the history was helpful, I was left wanting more: more quotes and contemporary stories, analysis of what God is using to reach Muslims today, and suggestions for the response of the global church. If the movements Garrison describes continue to grow and multiply, however, this will certainly not be the last we hear of them.

» Purchase this book for US$13.27 from World Christian (paperback and hardback editions only; no electronic versions available). See also the book website.

VIDEOS: Asia, Africa, and Beyond

Sources: OMF, AIM, and Prayercast

Mongolia – An Off-road Vision Trip (OMF Media). Dream about using your media skills to tell the stories of the nations? Follow an OMF Media team into Mongolia, then check out the new Mongolia videos (and gems like The Task Unfinished) in OMF Media’s Vimeo stream.

The Distant Boat (AIM On-field Media). This feature-length drama is designed to stir the African church in its involvement in global outreach. You can watch the trailer online and download the film for US$5. (Thanks to Perspectives in Practice for bringing it to our attention.) See also other work by AIM’s media team.

His Praise Goes On (Prayercast). The praises of God’s people are lifted up in a never-ending stream that circles the globe daily. Watch this exquisite music video and be inspired. While you’re there, let videos guide you pray for Ukraine and South Sudan.