China: Happy Chinese New Year!

Source: Mobilizer Mom, February 2022

Between the Olympic Games in Beijing kicking off at the end of the week and [Tuesday] being the first day of the Chinese New Year, I hope you are taking some time to introduce this holiday to your children!

Need some tips?
Some craft ideas?
Some recipes?
Or to learn about the spiritual needs in China?

Read Travel with Me to… China.

You might use Alicia’s Olympic Games Devotionals this month. She writes, “I want to help your family watch the athletes and countries come together in Beijing with the purpose to see what God is doing in each of those countries and how he loves each person from every nation.”

For more insight on religion in China, see The Church in China: It’s Complicated, a short article Joann Pittman of China Source wrote for the UK mission info service OSCAR.

Japan: How the Japanese Deaf Are Sharing the Gospel

Source: World Venture, January 21, 2022

On Friday, January 14, 2022, Peter Persson prayed for and interviewed Mark Penner (United Bible Societies), Mary Esther Penner (WorldVenture), and Pastor Matsumoto of Yamagata Christian Deaf Church in Japan on Facebook Live on how the Japanese Deaf are sharing the gospel. They also featured JSL translator from Canada, Justina.

See the full story with a 60-minute video and links.

For more about international collaboration, evangelism, and Bible translation efforts, read Global Evangelism, Bible Translation Seek Common Goals (Wyclifffe Global Alliance).

Myanmar: A Message of Salvation Shines in Darkest Hours

Source: Christian Aid Mission, January 2022

Since the February 1, 2021 military coup that plunged the country of Myanmar into chaos, hundreds of civilians have been killed in random violence even as COVID-19 raged. Among victims of the virus were many Christian workers. A native ministry leader said that from May to August alone, 413 Christian evangelists and other workers with various ministry organizations died from the pandemic.

One of the native missionaries nearly died from COVID-19 in July, and since then he and his wife have planted a church, the leader said.

“He and his wife brought non-Christians and conducted salvation Bible training at his house five times in October and November,” the leader said. “He baptized 23 people, and they all joined the church.”

Another local missionary who works among devout Buddhists invited non-Christians to his house every weekend for dinner, where he taught them about Christ.

“In the month of November, he reached 48 people with the Good News, and 14 of them accepted Jesus Christ as their personal Savior and Lord. Halleluiah!” the leader said. “He said that if he’s not telling the Good News, he is not able to sleep or eat.”

Such gospel advance took place at a time when pandemic lockdowns and military conflict made going out of one’s house unthinkable in many areas.

Read the full story.

See also The Tearful Struggle to Heal Battered Burma (also from CAM, via Mission Network News).

World: The Ten Most Dangerous Places for Christians

Source: Open Doors USA, January 19, 2022

In 2021, even during the ongoing COVID-19 health crisis, persecution against Christians continued at an alarming rate around the globe. Research for the Open Doors’ 2022 World Watch List—the most in-depth investigative research and report on Christian persecution available—shows that today, more than 360 million people face high levels of persecution and discrimination for their faith. That’s an increase of 15 million believers in only one year.

That’s one in seven Christians, worldwide.

Below, we look at the top ten countries where persecution is highest. In many of these countries, life is already difficult, but making the decision to follow Jesus and live as a Christian is a choice that puts one’s life, family, and livelihood in jeopardy. In countries like Afghanistan, North Korea, and Somalia, faith in Jesus can be a death sentence. And in 2021, we saw a spike in violence, new technologies that threaten the faith of millions—and a new No. 1 for the first time in 20 years.

Read the full article or see the whole list of 50 countries and download a report. Watch a 3.5-minute video about the project, below.

Also see a free, 100-page prayer guide from Voice of the Martyrs.

https://youtu.be/fdpPeTKhTAc

Sudan: “In That Day, the Lord Opened My Eyes”

Source: Dispatches from the Global Village, January 6, 2022

At age 19, Yassir Eric, living in Sudan, was a radicalized Muslim. He had memorized much of the Quran and was militant in his hatred of Christians—indeed, of anything that was not in conformity to the Sunni Muslim Brotherhood.

But then Yassir met a Coptic missionary at a hospital where Yassir was visiting his sick uncle in Sudan. The Coptic missionary had come to pray for a sick child. Yassir asked him why he had bothered to come since the child had little chance of living. Yassir was puzzled. Misled by extremist propaganda, he didn’t think Christians prayed or even believed in God. He watched as the Coptic missionary prayed and then to his astonishment, observed the young boy open his eyes and move his hands as life reappeared.

“In that day, the Lord opened my eyes,” Yassir recalled.

When Yassir’s family learned of his conversion, he was not just ousted—they held a funeral service and a symbolic burial ceremony. To be excluded in this case meant separation from a very large family: his grandfather had six wives and his 69 uncles each had four or five wives each. The entire family turned their back on him.

Yassir was arrested due to his conversion and spent seven weeks in prison. When he could finally visit a church, the people there were unwilling to welcome him because of his reputation and that of his family. Eventually, a Swedish missionary, like first-century Barnabas, welcomed him and over many months, discipled him in the Christian faith.

“What held you together during this time?” I asked Yassir. “As devastating as it was to be forced out of my home,” he noted, “I found strength in the Lord’s Prayer. God was not sitting outside, but he’s the one who came into time [and] space, and I could call him father.”

Five years later, Yassir moved to Kenya, where he studied at Daystar University and met his future wife. The two eventually moved to her home country of Germany, where he completed further studies and pastored a Lutheran church. Today he is part of the leadership of Communio Messianica, a global network of Christians converted from Islam, often referred to as MBBs or Muslim Background Believers.

Though it is hard to verify numbers, reports of growing communities of Christians in Muslim-majority countries surface frequently. Since there is no official registration of membership, Yassir noted, only through friendships and baptisms can even Christians in these countries track the growth.

Read A First-Century Story for the 21st. In it, Yassir proposes five reasons for the movement of MBBs in our world today.

See also another testimony, this one from a woman from a Muslim background. It’s called A Fifty-Year Solo Journey (Frontiers USA).

Bringing Data & Stories to Life

Missions Catalyst Resource Reviews

  1. Data: Annual Statistics on the Status of Global Christianity
  2. More Data: World Maps and Bible Translation
  3. Infographics: The Unreached People in North American Cities
  4. Online Classes: Welcome to the Missions Academy
  5. Videos: Bring the Bible to Life with Animated Commentaries
  6. Events: Inspiring Conferences, Classes, and More in February

Read or share the email edition or scroll down for individual items.

Image: BibleProject.

Data: Annual Statistics on the Status of Global Christianity

Source: The Center for the Study of Global Christianity, Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary

Do you need to know…

  • How many Christians are there in the world?
  • What percentage of the world population are they?
  • How many live in cities?
  • How many live in Africa? Asia? Latin America?
  • How many denominations are there? How many churches?
  • How many mission agencies are there? How many missionaries?
  • How much money is given to global foreign missions?
  • How many people are unevangelized?
  • How many people belong to other world religions or are unreligous?
  • How many non-Christians know a Christian?

Every year the staff of the Center for the Study of Global Christianity publish an annual statistical table which is their most-cited resource. It’s just a one-page summary. Check it out.

For a more detailed picture with explanations, commentary, and ministry suggestions, you’ll have to pick up the related article World Christianity and Religions 2022: A Complicated Relationship in the International Bulletin of Mission Research (purchase or subscription required).

More Data: World Maps and Bible Translation

Source: Wycliffe Global Alliance, Operation World

For help visualizing the state of world evangelization, download a free digital version of the Operation World Wall Map, available in several languages. Though the most recent edition of the Operation World book, published in 2010, may be showing its age a bit, some of the related resources (including the English version of this map) have been updated in partnership. For more like this, see Mission InfoBank.

Want to know how many languages are there in the world, and how many have or still need the Bible? Wycliffe Global Alliance released new data back in September. See 2021 Scripture Access Statistics and follow links for additional data, graphics, and more.

Infographic: The Unreached People in North American Cities

People of many nations have landed on the shores of North America looking for refuge, community, a new home, and hope. These diaspora people groups have settled in urban areas, often creating sub-communities within larger cities.

As global dynamics continue to change there are great opportunities at our doorstep to engage with people that were at one time difficult to access. God has brought the nations to us; will we be faithful in taking his gospel to them?

View the North America Diaspora missiographic series. Cities include greater New York, Toronto, Los Angeles, Chicago, and now the latest, Vancouver.

Online Classes: Welcome to the Missions Academy

Source: Touch the World

Some 1.5 million American Christians serve on short-term mission trips every year, but more than 95% of them receive little or no pre-trip training. The Missions Academy hopes to help change that. Their curated selection of online courses address topics like these:

  1. A biblical understanding of missions
  2. Methods for culturally sensitive ministry
  3. An understanding of the complexities of poverty
  4. A heart focused on service

Access materials from anywhere, move at your own pace and interact with others preparing for mission.

Materials are designed with youth (over 12) and young adults in mind, but you should be able to use them with adults as well. It all feels agency-neutral (not specific to one brand or type of ministry) and is in line with the Standards of Excellence in Short-Term Mission.

A few mini-courses are free. Longer courses (still in bite-size pieces) range from US$17 to US$47 and are available in “bundles” of recommended training, or you can access all courses for US$9/month. You can also purchase workbooks including a 30-day devotional and a re-entry journal.

Touch the World also does in-person training and they are currently developing a global poverty simulation that can give your group a taste of what it’s like to live on two dollars a day.

Learn more about Touch the World or go right to The Missions Academy.