Lausanne Connecting Point - August 2004 PDF 인쇄 이메일
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In This Issue:

Greetings!
These are exciting days, as together we prayerfully prepare for the 2004 Forum for World Evangelization--which is just weeks away! Thanks for your continued prayers for the Forum leadership team and participants. The Praise and Prayer report below provides specific prayer needs for the Forum to help guide your prayers.

Today's ENewsletter features reports from 2004 Forum Issue Group 19: Media & Technology and Issue Group 24: Empowering Men & Women in Ministry. We invite you to visit the Lausanne web site for more information on the Issue Groups, including updated reports on their preparation for the Forum.

May the Lord bless you!
Naomi A. Frizzell - Editor

IG19: Media & Technology

By Wing Tai LEUNG, Convenor

Members: Members of this group range from the author of MovieGuide to a producer of children's programming, from the pastor of a church in India to the communications director of an international mission conference, from a director and publisher of mass media to an Internet "webmaster." Many members are media professionals with years of experience while others are innovative start-ups. They have one goal in common: to redeem the media for Christ and reach as many people as possible for the Kingdom of God.

Concerns: The concerns of this group are diverse. Some are interested in the use of new media - such as the Internet - for evangelization and training. Others are using entertainment mass media for promoting Christian values. Some are interested in media education or literacy. Many are concerned with using media in a culturally sensitive way that will be meaningful to target users. Effective communication models of using media and technology form the common concern.

Discussion Subgroups, Expected Outcomes:

  1. Media Specific Concerns: Explore common challenges faced by media practitioners in Internet, Radio, Television, Magazine, Book, Film etc. The media forms can dictate the message narrative, the audience reach and the process of communication. There are communication issues such as content treatment, editorial, narrative form, aesthetics, power structure, financial backing and others. There are also theological questions such as the portraits of Christ in media, use of parables, decision-making process and the ethics of communication. Other issues may concern cultural and sociological realms, such as cultural imperialism, unbalanced flow of information, gender-bias and articulation of the native people in dialogue.
  2. Mission Specific Concerns: Explore the processes of evangelism, discipleship, cross-cultural mission, church planting, Christian education etc., involving the media. We can explore issues of media- audience matching, cultural reading of texts, media and interpersonal ministries coupling, cross-cultural sensitivity, communication of the Word and confronting values and worldviews. We can also explore the primitive versus sophisticated media forms, the resources and effectiveness and the measure of impacts and outcomes.
  3. Communication Model Concerns: Explore the strength and weakness of various models of communication for evangelization.
    • Functional View: Follows a transmission of message and diffusion of innovation process, aiming at conversion of individuals.
    • Cultural View: Media for counter-culture. Media as cultural redemption.
    • Technology View: Technology can be a dehumanizing system. Christian media is an emancipation process for restoration of human dignity.
    • Covenantal View: Media is a symbol for a covenant between God and human. The Church is a covenant community and media follow the archetype of Christ the Mediator.
    • Linguistic View: Evangelization is a communication process. The emphasis is on narrative form, media semiotics and faith stories.
    • Developmental View: Evangelization is a liberation process for the oppressed. Media is to give voice for the voiceless.
    • Communicative View: Evangelization is a fellowship process. It is not a sender-receiver relationship, rather an "I-Thou" dialogue. People are not objects to be preached at but subjects to be engaged in dialogue.
    • Other Views: Mass media as agenda- setting vehicle. Christian media need to engage in the public opinion sphere. Information technology serves as a participatory process with multiform story-telling capability. Folk media for folk tales need a respect for integrity of material and heritage.

There will also be a separate stream on Discipling Visual Learners and the expected outcome of the work done on this issue is:

  1. A challenge to the global church to seriously consider the importance of reaching those who need to hear the gospel in a non-written form.
  2. Provide guidelines for churches and mission agencies as to ways in which they can communicate and how stories can provide an excellent basis for communicating.
  3. Draw attention of the global church to agencies that are already involved in creative ways of reaching visual learners as well as suggesting ways in which local churches with limited resources can reach these people.

Convener: Wing Tai Leung, Breakthrough Ministries in Hong Kong; Facilitator: Mike O'Rear, Global Mapping and Lausanne Senior Associate for Technology; Visual Learners Stream: Musili Roger Ndonga , North American Mission Board, Southern Baptist Convention

IG24: Empowering Men & Women in Ministry

By Mimi Haddad, Convener

More than at any other time in history, Christians around the globe are rigorously examining what the Bible says about gender. As the body of Christ discerns whether spiritual gifts come in pink and blue, we observe a burgeoning of literature and great discussion at a global level. Therefore, the 2004 Forum for World Evangelization has given nearly 50 Christian leaders, working in 35 countries, an opportunity to exchange ideas and determine ways men and women may advance the Gospel together in church, home and society.

The gender forum, aptly entitled: "Empowering Men and Women in Ministry" has engaged in a lively online dialogue that has explored the glory and challenge of humanity created in God's image as male and female. We are asking hard questions as to whether ministry is gift-based, rather than gender-based. We are also assessing ministry from a biblical, theological, historical, socio/psychological and missiological perspective. Since February, we have addressed the following questions:

  • What is a biblical perspective on the dignity and value of women?
  • Is evangelism and missions furthered or hindered when organizations and churches advance the spiritual gifts of all Christians?
  • What holds women back from using their spiritual gifts?
  • What impedes the mutuality of men and women in ministry and what strategies might we engage to enlarge the Church's ability to empower the gifts of Christians?
  • How do we define abuse and how can we educate, intervene and prevent the abuse of women and children?

Gender forum participants speak boldly on behalf of their biblical convictions and ministry experiences. Common ground continues to emerge perhaps because, unlike many others, missionaries have unique opportunities to observe the biblical truth that, as Oluwakemi Alabi from Nigeria suggests "the gifts of God are not gender bound."

Despite the enormous challenges and cultural complexities gender presents, Uma David from India says she believes that from Genesis to Revelation, the Scriptures impart equal value, dignity and ministry opportunities to both women and men. Suppressing women as Gospel bearers is not a biblical value, insists Uma. She writes, "The greatest barriers to the advancement of the Gospel are often found inside the church! These can be barriers in our relationship with God and with each other, including gender barriers. Satan uses them to make the church weak and a poor witness for the Lord."

As missionaries (such as those participating in the gender forum) live out the truth that God gifts all people for service regardless of gender, race or class, they also provide fresh vision for mutual cooperation between men and women. They serve as reformers by calling the Church to live a more credible and biblical witness, thus gaining new opportunities and vitality for the Gospel message. God's Spirit is indeed at work in our gender forum, as participants from many cultures engage the biblical material with great rigor, finding the message of mutuality flashing from the pages of scripture thus infusing new inspiration for the equal dignity, service and worth of all who serve Jesus.

Record Number of Missionary Workers from Poland

Poland is experiencing an unprecedented missionary movement and preparing for what may be its largest Christian revival in decades, says a key evangelical leader who almost died for his faith in Christ.

Full Story: Assist News

Latin Church Leaders & Internet Training

It's widely known that the church in Latin America is bursting its borders. That means trained church leaders are in demand. Evangelical Free Church Association's Keith Anderson says the challenge faced is how to get Bible training to the leaders. In 2002 they launched an Internet school of theology, but there's more. "There are a number of pastors who wanted more education, but were not able to continue their studies for a number of reasons. The Latin America Training Network (LATN) has responded to the needs of those leaders in Latin America to allow them to overcome those obstacles and to train at the masters' level," Anderson says. He adds they are well on their way to having the advanced curriculum ready for launch in 2005 because "This is a tremendous need that we're seeing. The number we use is about eight thousand new believers every day in Latin America. This creates a huge leadership vacuum that LATN is addressing."

Full Story: Mission Network News

Praise & Prayer

By Glenda Weldon--Chair, Intercession Working Group

"I turned around to see the voice that was speaking to me. And when I turned I saw seven golden lampstands, and among the lampstands was someone 'like a son of man,' dressed in a robe reaching down to His feet and with a golden sash around His chest. His head and hair were white like wool, as white as snow, and His eyes were like blazing fire. His feet were like bronze glowing in a furnace, and His voice was like the sound of rushing waters. In His right hand He held seven stars, and out of His mouth came a sharp double-edged sword. His face was like the sun shining in all its brilliance. When I saw Him, I fell at His feet as though dead. Then He placed His right hand on me and said 'Do not be afraid. I am the First and the Last. I am the Living One; I was dead, and behold I am alive for ever and ever! And I hold the keys of death and Hades. Write, therefore, what you have seen, what is now and what will take place later. The mystery of the seven stars that you saw in My right hand and of the seven golden lampstands is this: The seven stars are the angels of the seven churches, and the seven lampstands are the seven churches." Revelation 1:12- 20

What a glorious truth to take time to pause and consider as we move into "count down" time for the 2004 Forum! The Lord Himself is with us as we embrace His agenda for our world and work together to see "His kingdom come on earth as it is in heaven."
May we be flooded with the joy of His Presence today and be refreshed and encouraged in Him while we do all that is needed in preparation for the Forum.

PRAISE GOD FOR:

  • The special edition Bibles being donated to 2004 Forum participants by the International Bible Society.
  • His continued blessing upon the preparations for the 2004 Forum.

PLEASE PRAY FOR:

  • Leadership teams and all participants of the 2004 Forum Issue Groups.
  • David Claydon (LCWE International Director) as he finalizes the list of about 300 people who are to receive a Forum scholarship.
  • Those who are finalizing details for onsite registration.
  • Robyn Claydon (Forum Program Chair) as she pulls together all the details for the Forum program.
  • That those who are preparing the Bible Studies and those planning and leading the evening plenary sessions will prayerfully seek God's guidance in all aspects of their leadership role.
  • Gary Barnes who is working with Thai Immigration officials to get visas approved for all participants from countries where a visa is required.
  • The process of having approved passport visa stamps for those travelling from African countries. There are few Thai embassies in Africa.

IG12: Leadership
Thanksgiving to God for what He is doing and is going to do at the Forum in developing Future Leaders for His use toward fulfilling the Great Commission. "He who sacrifices thank offerings honors Me, and he prepares the way so that I may show him the salvation of God." Ps. 50:23
PLEASE PRAY:

  • For God's leading and anointing for the Taskforce as they prepare and make decisions on Facilitators and other matters.
  • That by the power of the Holy Spirit, Taskforce members, Facilitators and Participants will cooperate with God toward the fulfillment of the Great Commission. Ask God to catalyze in our midst a global movement of developing Christ-like leaders.
  • For protection from the enemy and for provision for finances, visas, time and all else that is needed to attend the Forum.

IG13: Prayer in Evangelism
PRAISE GOD FOR:

  • The progress being made in addressing the various topics that are part of IG13.
  • The provision of the funds needed for participant scholarships.
  • Please pray for discernment and wisdom from God as summary documents are being prepared for consideration of the whole group.

IG18: Evangelising Children
The convenors (Simon and Wendy) and the facilitator (Leanne) met recently to begin consolidating the final paper. They were very conscious of God's help as they met and read the contributions of the working groups. Now they have more content than they can possibly manage. Please pray that God will help them bring the very best out of the "good."

IG19: Media & Technology
PLEASE PRAY for this very diverse, experienced and creative group as they seek to:

  • Find ways to use the new media such as the Internet for evangelization and training. - Look at how to use the mass media of entertainment for promoting Christian values, for education or literacy for the users and audience. Many are concerned with cultural sensitivity of using the media that will be meaningful to the target users. - Have keen insight and wisdom from God as they explore effective communication models of using media and technology for the common concern.

IG19: Media & Technology
Discipling Visual Learners
PLEASE PRAY FOR:

  • This group as they seek to prepare material that will alert the global church to the importance of reaching those who need to hear the gospel in a non- written form.
  • Financial support of some of the participants, especially those from the Two-Thirds World.
  • The preparation of participants as many are heavily involved in the ministry and in tight schedules.
  • The Convenor and Facilitator. . .for wisdom and strength.

IG25: Making Disciples of Oral Learners
PLEASE PRAY FOR:

  • The 1.5 billion people who do not have access to the gospel and among them the 70% who are functionally illiterate. Pray for means to communicate the gospel to them in a way they can receive it and understand Who Christ is.

IG29: Bioethics
PLEASE PRAY:

  • Their draft is being revised but they need more input from around the world to turn principles into culturally relevant practical tools. They believe bioethics is not just a high technology Western issue: it impacts all countries whether they realise it or not.