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Issue: Research

 

Lausanne has two senior associates working in the area of research, Dr. Peter Brierley and Todd Johnson. Learn more about their work and related content below.

A Message from Dr. Peter Brierley

Lausanne Senior Associate for Church Research

Peter Brierley
As Senior Associate I have been involved in a number of world wide projects including editing the publication World Churches Handbook, published in 1998 but now out of print, and global research required to identify the key issues for consideration in the Lausanne Forum held in 2004, for which also I contributed a paper.  In addition to that we have facilitated the Lausanne Consultation on Nominalism in 1999 and been responsible for organising the second, third and fourth Lausanne Researchers Conferences, and sharing the responsibility for leading the fifth to be held in Melbourne Australia in April 2008, details of the latter are available at www.christian-research.org.uk and www.cra.org.au.  
 
I believe that seeking to assess the "big picture" is important for strategy and decision making.  It is not that data of itself necessarily produces either the strategy or the decisions but is an important factor in determining both.  Looking at the entire world scene, both from a church point of view, an evangelical point of view, as well as a social and demographic point of view is critically important for identifying not just where Lausanne is going but other Christian organisations as well.  As a consequence part of the work that I do is not just providing the data, but seeking to help churches and agencies evaluate the implications of that data for their particular organisation and their future aims and objectives.  As a consequence I have written both books and often speak at seminars or conferences on these topics.  

A Message from Todd M. Johnson

Lausanne Senior Associate for the Study of Global Christianity

Todd JohnsonI hope to connect Lausanne to the resources of the Center for the Study of Global Christianity at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary. The Center’s mission is to collate, analyze, and make sense of the massive amount of data on church membership and evangelistic activities collected by 37,000 Christian denominations in all 238 countries. This analysis is then put in context of the status of other world religions and secular demographic data to provide an authoritative view of global Christianity. The Center will also host students, researchers, scholars, journalists and missionaries who want to research a specific area within global Christianity. A further aim is to apply the research of the Center in assisting churches in their strategic planning.