Lausanne Connecting Point - December 2006 PDF 인쇄 이메일
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In This Issue:
 
Lausanne World Pulse

Lausanne World Pulse
In a pluralistic age when people around the world put their faith in any number of religious beliefs, what makes Jesus Christ and the message of the gospel unique? How do we share the Christian faith with those who hold to other faiths, such as Islam? These are the questions the authors in the December issue of Lausanne World Pulse seek to answer. The uniqueness of Christ is a concept that Christians around the world must understand in order to be effective witnesses.

Here is a sample of the articles you will find this month:

You will also find the following articles:

Questions or comments about Lausanne World Pulse may be sent to 이 이메일 주소는 스팸머로부터 보호됩니다. 보시려면 자바스크립트를 활성화 하십시요 . For more information on how to submit an article, please visit www.lausanneworldpulse.com/submit.php.

Dr. Donald Hoke Memorial Page

The Billy Graham Center Archives has established a memorial page to mark the important contributions of Dr. Donald Hoke to the cause of Christ.  Dr. Hoke went to be with the Lord on 14 November 2006 after an extended illness. 

Dr. Hoke was the Director of the 1974 International Congress on World Evangelization in Lausanne, Switzerland (Lausanne I).  He also served as treasurer of Lausanne and as Deputy Chairman of the Second International Congress on World Evangelization, Manila, Philippines (Lausanne II).

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State of the Gospel Resources Now Online

MomentumThe November/December issue of Momentum magazine is online, featuring an in-depth presentation on the State of the Gospel developed by Jason Mandryk (editor, Operation World) and Justin Long (editor, Momentum).  This presentation, first presented by Jason at the Lausanne Younger Leaders Gathering in Malaysia, is now posted with in-depth background on each slide so that the presentation can be used by others.

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Lausanne Consultation on Christian Encounter with New Spiritualities

30 September – 7 October 2006, Hong Kong
By Ole Skjerbæk Madsen, Missions pastor for Areopagos and Convener of Issue Group 16 and chair of the Lausanne network on Christian encounter with the new spiritualities

Summary
The work Issue Group 16 from the Lausanne gathering in Thailand in 2004 continued their work with a recent consultation in Hong Kong.  Through this meeting the new missional apologetic paradigm to new religions and new spiritualities was discussed, as well as the work of the issue group since 2004, and future planning took place.  This includes a conference for 2008 and preparations for the continued work going into the preparations for the Lausanne gathering in connection with the 2010 centenary of the Edinburgh meeting.

The consultation was a follow up on IG 16 of the Lausanne 2004 Forum in Thailand. The participants of IG 16 (LOP 45) and the 2006 consultation will continue their work as a Lausanne network on Christian Witness to New Religious Movements (NRM) and New Spiritualities (NS).

Through our sessions we confirmed the continuing development of an emerging new paradigm for a Christian engagement with the adherents and practitioners of NRM and NS.

This paradigm begins with and builds upon the insight of the 1980 Thailand report (LOP 11) that adherents of new religious movements are unreached peoples.  The development of the NRM and NS affirms this insight in light of the spiritual reality of the Western world which calls for mission and Christian witness as a priority of the Western Church and Evangelical Christians.  Furthermore the process of globalisation brings this development to the Two-Thirds world, especially in the big cities.

Since NRM and NS represent unreached peoples, they should be encountered missionally as any other unreached people group, i.e. the gospel should be contextually communicated to adherents and practitioners of new religions,

This new paradigm calls for an abandonment of the atmosphere of fear in the relationship with adherents of the NRM, of the automatic demonization of their spiritual practices, and of the typecasting of them as spiritual enemies.

The new paradigm looks upon the adherents of NRM and practitioners of NS as people whom God loves, potential disciples of Jesus Christ, and as neighbours for whom Christ died on the cross.

This does not mean that the discernment of spirits is abandoned in relation to NRM and NS, but it means that Christians should not be afraid of establishing friendships, of studying and understanding their beliefs, their practices, their hopes, their hurts, and their fears, and we recognize in and among ourselves the same beliefs, hopes, and fears shared in our common humanity and imago Dei.

In ministering among the people who comprise the NRM and NS, we are dealing with a group of people who many times have been deeply hurt by Christians, and who have suffered from rejection and suspicion from Christians.  In the same group of people we find many who have misunderstood Christian teachings and practices, and who are unaware of the message and viability of Christianity in the post-modern world, but who nevertheless in their search for a spiritual dimension and meaning have found inspiration in new expressions of East Asian religions, in nature-based spiritualities such as Contemporary Paganism, Neo-Pagan movements, Wicca, and in various esoteric traditions.

A new paradigm includes learning from the NRM and NS, since their practice and beliefs may reflect the unpaid bills of the Church (LOP 45, par. H), or failures of the church in engaging significant issues, and in so doing, creating a vacuum filled by NRM and NS.  This reflection, as well as the discerning of the points of contact and the areas of potential conflict (LOP 45, par. G), may help the Church to understand the questions of post-modern men and women, and this in turn may help Christians to proclaim the gospel by meeting actual concerns instead of answering questions which may be of interest to the Church but which are often not raised by the people we seek to engage.  The recognition of these unpaid bills and points of contact may help the Church to find new expressions of its life and spiritual practice, which may contribute to an atmosphere and the creation of a revitalized Christian community where the spiritual seeker and the new follower of Christ may feel more at home in Church and accepted in Christian fellowship.  In addition to these positive aspects, the new paradigm also recognizes the reality of syncretism and therefore attempts to exegete religious and spiritual cultures, critically reflects on religious practices in light of historic Christianity, and develops culturally relevant Christian practices.

The consultation participants shared experiences and insights from American, Australian, and European settings and discussed religious phenomenology and a missiological models for cultural engagement.

The participants decided to continue as a network of missiologists, practitioners, and scholars from the 2004 Forum IG as well as from this consultation, and from an invited group of participants over the course of the near future.

Goals and Conferences
The IG 16 reached its goals established in the 2004 Forum in Thailand concerning forming a network and establishing a web portal, but the network will continue to work at reaching its additional goals of producing resources and working on cooperative projects.  These goals will be addressed in part at the conferences scheduled for 2008 and 2010.

The network plans a conference in 2008 at Trinity International University in Deerfield, Illinois, USA entitled “Post-Christendom Spiritualities: The New Unreached People Groups.”  The aim of this conference will be to continue to define and develop the new paradigm of Christian witness to NR and NS.

In the time leading up to the conference a call for papers from scholars and missional practitioners will go out that will solicit suggestions for academic papers.  Some suggested topics of praxis, theology and missiology include:

  • Developing a missiological model for engagement with NR
  • Defining Church in a post-modern world
  • A sociological analysis of NRM and NS as the biggest mission field in the Western hemisphere
  • The work of the Spirit in mission and New Spiritualities
  • Contemporary spirituality in relation to Christian tradition in cross cultural mission and/or the study of world religions
  • Creation and redemption in Christian theology
  • Goddess spirituality and the theology of God
  • Inter-religious apologetics in post-modernity
  • The emerging church and emerging spiritualities
  • Science and new religions
  • The Christian and the paranormal
  • Christian approaches to complementary or holistic medicine and energy healing

Co-authoring of papers will be encouraged, and critical responses will be sought to papers from experts in the appropriate fields.

In the time leading up to the conference, models and case studies of Christian witness to and presence among NRM and NS will be shared and prepared for workshops at the conference.  The models and case studies may deal with subjects relating to the topics of academic papers and subjects such as:

  • Ethos in participating in neo-spiritual events
  • Offering guidance as Christians in relation to prophecy and divination
  • Energy healing paradigm and Christian healing
  • Material for discipling converts from NRM and NS
  • The use of religious language in NS settings
  • Worship and ritual for Christians working in the NS milieu
  • Engaging with pluralist understandings of Jesus in NS

The conference is envisaged as taking place from a Thursday afternoon registration through Sunday lunchtime.  The accepted abstracts will be used to produce a brochure for the conference with intention of attracting participants from a wide spectrum of academics and practitioners in the field.

The issue group will meet before and after the conference to ensure the material from the conference is taken forward to fuel progression in both learning and practice in this area.

One of the outcomes of the completion of the conference will be a book and other materials that will be produced as a record and collection of resources from the cutting-edge of theology and praxis in this area.

2010 Lausanne Congress
Concerning the 2010 Lausanne Congress, the Lausanne network on Christian Witness to NRM and NS envisage these issues:

  • The need to recognise that the NRM and NS are major unreached people groups that encompass the globe, if not increasingly the major unreached people groups in the developed nations of the Majority World where they often represent mainstream spiritualities that often replace or supplant traditional religions (including Christianity).
  • The new missiological challenge stemming from the spread and adaptation of such spiritualities as part of globalisation in developing nations.
  • The close linkage of the New Spiritualities to the spiritual search of women and young adults and its importance to this area of mission amongst these groups.

We therefore believe that the importance of this issue requires representation in the main plenary sessions for Lausanne as part of the programme for the 2010 conference, and this issue group offers to work with the conference organisers to enable this to happen.

The participants of the consultation extend their thanks to Areopagos for providing scholarship support for the attendance and participation of several members of the network at this consultation.

The network shares its insights in a discussion forum established as a Yahoo! Group of which membership is by invitation only.

Thousands Attend COMIBAM 2006 Congress

By Federico A. Bertuzzi, Department of Publications

COMIBAM 2006“Results and Challenges among the Unreached” was the theme of the Third Iberoamerican Missionary Congress that took place in the historic Andalucian city of Granada, Spain on 13-17 November 2006.  The congress was summoned and organized by Comibam International.  More than 2000 people from 37 countries attended the gathering along with 300 Latin missionaries.  Together participants analyzed and evaluated the last two decades of work of the Iberoamerican church among the people groups of the world who have not had a clear opportunity to hear the gospel message.
 
During the inaugural meeting, the mayor of the city, José Torres Hurtado, gave a warm welcome to all those present, as well as representatives of the evangelical church in Spain and Granada.  The executive secretary of the Federation of Evangelical Entities in Spain (Ferede), Mariano Blázquez, expressed his greetings as a representative of the evangelical people of Spain and Pastor Miguel Fernández did the same in representation of the pastors of the churches of the hosting city.

Sacrificial Spirit
In his inaugural speech, the outgoing president, David D. Ruiz M., said “because of the serious nature of the missionary endeavor, it is time to examine how our missionaries have done their work.  It is imperative that the movement write a missiology that, while firmly based on Scripture, will allow us to reflect the best way to work on the field.”

It is estimated that there are nearly 10-thousand Iberoamerican missionaries in the world, sent by a great variety of agencies and local churches.  According to field research presented during the congress, many of those missionaries have suffered due to the lack of preparation and adequate support and the inherent difficulties that are part of the work.  Dr. Levi DeCarvalho, who led the research, emphasized that “In spite of the fact that the majority of those interviewed expressed the lack of the minimum resources to accomplish their ministries, all of them remain firm in their calling.  If there is something praiseworthy in our Iberoamerican missionaries is it their sacrificial spirit to do the work that the Lord has entrusted in their hands.”

COMIBAM III offered ample time for participants to hear and personally dialogue with the invited missionaries through discussion tables in the dining room, in forums or panel discussions.  The well known Latin-American missiologist, Samuel Escobar, who led one of these panels expressed that “one of the important components of the program was what we could call ‘critical reflection of the practice of missions,’ which took up a good part of four mornings.”  Escobar believes “the congress (was) an enriching experience and it has provided a vision of hope by giving us a glimpse of the great thrust of the missionary movement of the evangelical churches of Latin America.  The feeling of celebration, without a sense of overconfidence, was very comforting.”

Carlos Scott from Argentina, the incoming president of COMIBAM International, highlighted the risks and challenges that the missionary work faces including “a real understanding of the unity of the people of God, a greater participation in the global missionary movement by making ourselves participants of the universal church, sharing in the global challenges with a complete integration and a search for cooperative models as well as understanding missions as a process and not a project.”

Carlos Madrigal from Spain, whose work led to the first legally registered evangelical church in Turkey, was grateful for the congress and is convinced that “much fruit will be harvested as a more efficient and responsible work in missions is done by the Iberoamerican movement.”

COMIBAM Leadership Update
During the International Assembly (triennial) that took place during the Congress, the new board of COMIBAM was elected as follows: Carlos Scott, President; Jesús Londoño, Executive Director; and regional directors: Jasón Carlisle: Hispanics of North America; Luis Martí: Central America; Víctor Ibagón: Andean countries; Rubén Suárez: Spanish speaking area of the Caribbean; Marcos Agripino: Brazil; Daniel Bianchi: southern region of South America; the regions of Mexico and the Iberian Peninsula remain under the leadership of the interim directors Juan C. Gómez and Enrique Montenegro until the end of their terms at the beginning of 2007.

The first Iberoamerican Missionary Congress took place in 1987 in Sao Paulo under the presidency of Luis Bush.  The second Congress was held in Acapulco, Mexico in 1997 when Rudy Girón handed the presidency over to Bertil Ekstrom (current executive director of the Commission of Missions for the World Evangelical Alliance).

During the next two years Comibam International will continue the mission investigation and analysis already in place, focusing during this stage on senders and receivers in the mission field.

Latin America Blessing the World – Personal Reflections on COMIBAM

By Chacko Thomas, Missions Mobilisation Network

It was no small privilege to attend and interact with so many in Granada, Spain at the third international gathering of the missions association of Latin America, COMIBAM (Spanish for Cooperation of Missions of Iberia and Americas).  I felt I was transported back in Latin America. 

“Granada was chosen not only for its conference facilities for such a large gathering but also to bring the meeting closer to the missionaries,” most of whom were serving in the Indian Subcontinent, Europe, Central Asia, Middle East and North Africa regions according to David Ruiz, President of COMIBAM.  Ruiz, from Guatemala, added that “This also enabled many of the participants from Latin America to visit their missionaries before or after the conference.  Grenada being the last Muslim fortress of Islam in Spain, after 900 years of Muslim occupation, was a bold reminder of what God can do.”

Experiences From The Field
Listening to “the Missionaries experiences from the field in order to learn objective lessons about the mission process and to make necessary adjustments to be more effective in the field and help the church to multiply its effort among the unreached” were among the objectives of the Congress.  A series of five messages in the mornings were entitled “Message to the Church,” as missionaries reflected on the state of church in Latin America as a sending church.  “Put Christ in the centre of the church, not ‘bless me’ or even ‘my denomination,” pleaded a missionary who has returned after serving 20 years in North Africa.

There were three Egyptians in the conference, one of them a speaker in an evening session.  After a presentation on the vibrant and in some places persecuted church, he pleaded with the conference to work closely and in consultation with the national church.  “It is a lie of the devil that we can do it alone,” he said. 

A married couple form Morocco participated in one of the Panel sessions.  In one of the panel sessions, a pastor from Albania represented the missionary receiving churches.  Both of the latter, incidentally, were converted through Latin missionaries, and are now serving the Lord full time; one through radio ministry the other pastoring a significant mission-minded church.  Experienced mission leaders like Bill Taylor, Samuel Escobar, David Ruiz and Bertil Ekstrom led the panels, on themes such as Training, Sending, Missionary Care and etc. 

History and Future of Latin Americans in Mission
Two experienced researchers working with COMIBAM reported on where Latin American Missions have come from and where they are today, especially highlighting issues facing Latin Missionaries.  Their findings formed the basis for discussion of the Work Groups that met daily.  Each group had Latin missionaries in them.  “Your findings would be taken seriously and implemented,” emphasized Dr. Levi de Carvalho, on behalf of COMIBAM.  The research is available in Spanish, Portuguese and English on www.comibam.org

Today, after some 25 years of Latin American involvement in the world mission force, there are 400 mission agencies sending out 9000 Latinos into missions.  Some leaders believe the actual number is probably closer to 12000 missionaries, as many have gone out on their own outside of a traditional missionary sending structure.  Of the 9000 only 2000 are serving outside of Latin America.  This is partly due to the fact that many have to serve cross culturally in Latin America before they are considered for Asia or Africa.  780 Latinos serve among the Muslims, 246 in India and 128 among the Buddhist people.  Altogether there are about 1440 serving in the 10/40 Window.

Pastor Waldimar from Brazil who attended the conference told me that his mission (Kairos) will celebrate its 20th Anniversary in 2008.  His beginning in missions was sparked by the ministry of the Operation Mobilization ship M.V.Doulos in his country in the early 1980s.  An American Christian leader advised me, “Informally and on a smaller scale Latin America has been sending out missionaries for a long time.”  I agreed and remembered seeing a Latin Missionary in 1979 in Buenos Aires who had returned to Argentina after serving 20 years in India with his wife and family.

American missionary Dr. Don McCurry came by and sat next to us three (East) Indians for the opening session of the conference.  Don was a missionary to Pakistan and has spent much of his life serving among the Muslims in many nations.  When I asked him for his link with Latin America, he said that he is training Latinos in being effective in missions to the Muslim world.  I noticed that during the evening many Latinos waking by us and stopped to greet Don.  He has been in all the Latin American nations conducting training programmes for them.  He assured me that his counterparts are also there training Latinos for the Hindu and Buddhist worlds.

After the session by Dr. Ted Limptic in which he reported that there may be up to 3,000 Latin missionaries not accounted for, I sat at lunch with a young, middle class couple that fit Dr. Limptic’s comments.  This couple came from a small church (60 members) in Brazil to work in Spain and narrated to me their long and difficult journey into missions as a young couple and new converts with no financial or other support.  Their difficulties included a six months separation from their little boy who was sent to the grandparents (to spare him the troubles on the mission field), and the wife’s miscarriage.  The husband said that he could not even afford the bus fare and had to walk 8 KM daily to see his wife in the hospital.  I said to the American mission leader sitting on the other side of me that “it is a miracle that they are still in missions, still in the faith and still married.”  To which the mission leader agreed.  But God’s hand was upon them and the wife said “all the difficulties have drawn us together to each other and to the Lord.”  They have seen a small church plant where they work (one of the most difficult parts of Spain) and part time employment to put bread on the table.  Their son is back with them and enjoys life in Spain.  God is gracious and sovereign.

The Congress also addressed the issue of religious persecution with a presentation by Dr Rajendran Krishnamurthy, General Secretary of the India Missions Association, and Dr. Bob Fu, from China.  Dr. Fu’s topic was “Missions in the midst of martyrdom,” based on II Timothy 3:12, “everyone who wants to live a godly life in Christ Jesus will be persecuted.”  He had three points:

  • Stand up (for the gospel)
  • Speak up and
  • Shut up

He told us that there are 60 million Christians in China who are not persecuted because they tow the Government lines.  But, he said, if a Christian stands up for Christ, for truth, “the whole truth and nothing but the truth,” even in America they will be persecuted.  Dr. Fu gave the illustration of a young lady who was imprisoned and terribly tortured but refused to betray her pastors or other believers.  He said in China, people are giving thanks to God not for their second car or something similar but for the honour of suffering for Christ.

The closing ceremony which followed was as spectacular as the opening ceremony with flags of many nations and a speech by David Ruiz who gave the leadership of COMIBAM over to Carlos Scott from Argentina.  Ruiz has been at the helm of the movement for nearly seven years, as its president and stressed that the “Latin American mission movement will continue.”  His years of service were very much appreciated and it is clear that as “a pastor with a heart for the unreached” he left his mark on the mission movement.

In his acceptance speech, Carlos Scott gave a fiery message entitled “A New Chapter of the Acts of the Holy Spirit,” from the book of Acts and similar passages in the New Testament.  Scott made it clear that Latin missions is a movement of the Iberia-American Church, but even more than that it is the movement of the Holy Spirit.  Scott wants mission as a result of looking to God and mission that is obedience-centred rather than centred on the need of the people.  Many felt confidence in Scott, with his deep commitment to the Lord, His word, His church and His mission along with his business background and having played major role in a local church he planted as a missions pastor.  Scott has also served roles in the nation’s National Missions Movement and in the regional leadership of COMIBAM for the Southern Cone of South America. 

Maybe a Korean Mission leader speaks for all of us as he expressed it to a Japanese lady who asked him “what would you take back form this conference?”  After a short pause he said “Koreans are not the only ones doing missions.”  We all, including Latinos, can add the name of our nation to this reply.  While “Standing on the shoulders of Giants” gone before them, the Latin mission has its own distinct identity.  There are many things we can also learn from them, however long or short we have been in missions.  Latino Churches are blessing the world by the design and power of the Holy Spirit.  With more than 85 million evangelical in this region, they have a major role to play in Missions.  May the huge church growth in Latin America spill over into the rest of the world.

I was blessed at the airport as I was waiting to check-in, seeing a Mexican lady reading a book on Bihar, India.  I traced it to a Mexican couple who is returning to Patna (capital of Bihar) after the conference.  They have been Bihar for six years. God is using them there in the whole state sometimes known as “the graveyard of missions.”  This is a state that is very close to my heart having given the region seven years of my life in my teen and twenties.  Today the graveyards everywhere are turning to be vineyards of mission.  Let us rejoice and give God thanks for the Latin flavour entering World Missions today. 

The Whole church taking the whole Gospel to the Whole world is becoming a reality.

Mission at the Heart of the Trinity

Delegates at the recent Global Connections' conference in the UK heard how mission is central to God's very nature.

Conference speaker Clive Calver, Senior Pastor of Walnut Hill Community Church in Connecticut, USA and former General Director of the Evangelical Alliance, said that God is a sending God; the Father sent the Son; the Son sent the Holy Spirit; the Holy Spirit sends the Church.

Sue Jackson, Lecturer in Mission at the London School of Theology commented that “My thinking was taken in new directions to consider how each person of the Trinity was completely involved in the task of mission and this must work out in our practices.”

Martin Lee, Executive Director of Global Connections, said “It was great to rediscover the missional heart of God and that mission cannot be on the edges of church life but is actually in the very nature of God and so should be at the core of who we are.”

Calver’s message to the conference reflected the mission statement of Global Connections, which is “Mission at the heart of Church; Church at the heart of Mission.”

The conference was attended by 170 delegates, including church leaders and Bible College principals; and leaders from organisations including Tearfund, BMS World Mission, Interserve, FEBA Broadcasting, CMS and WEC International also attended.
 
Global Connections helps God's people in the UK be active and effective in global mission, through networking, assisting Churches, raising standards and providing support services.  More information and downloads from the most recent meeting are available at http://www.globalconnections.co.uk/.

Photo Courtesy of Global Connections.

21 Days of Prayer & Fasting

By Ryan Shaw, Co-founder and Executive Director of the Student Volunteer Movement 2
 
We are living in critical times indeed! Never before has the possibility of seeing the literal fulfilment of the Great Commission realized been greater.  As a result, never before has the spiritual warfare around such a possibility also been more intense.  Jesus calls us to live in a perpetual state of being awake, alert and watching (Luke 12:37) as we anticipate His return.  Part of this is understanding the spiritual nature of the times we live in and responding accordingly with vibrant faith, uncompromising righteousness, and a wholehearted commitment to act and partner with God to bring forth His Kingdom purposes among the unreached.
 
Not By Might, Nor By Power
The Bible and church history display the incredible power of the emerging generation of believers in helping to usher in God’s purposes in every era.  Today around the world today it is no different.  God is on the move among the emerging generation of believers, aligning hearts with His own, strengthening spirits to trust Him, crushing the obstacles and clearing the way, renewing vision and purpose, and saturating His people with an ever-growing love for Jesus.  The enemy, however, is deeply disturbed by this fact and is using every counterfeit attempt to confuse, disrupt, sidetrack, lie to and deceive, accuse, discredit and rip-off this generation.  It is crucial that we wage spiritual war against the kingdom of darkness now over and among the emerging generation and recognize what God recognizes in and through them – the increased potential to bring about the fulfilment of the Great Commission and the return of the King for the reward of His glorious sacrifice.  This is not an unrealistic dream, but an absolutely plausible outcome if we seek God for it with wholehearted earnestness.
 
Zechariah 4:6 is a helpful parallel to consider: “Not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit, says the Lord!”  The context of this well-known exhortation is the children of Israel having returned from the Babylonian exile and residing in Jerusalem.  With them they carried the authoritative decree from King Cyrus for the rebuilding of the temple.  The work was progressing with great enthusiasm when organized opposition ground it to a stunning halt.  Discouraged by the turn of events, the people of God spiritlessly gave up their task.  J. Oswald Sanders comments, “It would be easy to condemn their lack of spirit and lack of confidence in God, were we unfamiliar with the intricacy and treachery of our own hearts.  Under less testing circumstances we have doubtless made no better showing.” (Sanders, p.150).  During these circumstances God unveils a prophetic vision to Zechariah for the purpose of building hope into His people once again.  The vision centers around His promise to complete the work started through the hands of His servant Zerubbabel and bring the temple construction to completion.  The achieving of such a feat however, would be “not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit.”  Sanders goes on, “Despite the virulence of the opposition, despite their lack of resources, despite the incompetence of their leaders, victory was assured so long as they followed the Divine strategy.  Success depended on neither Zerubbabel nor Joshua; on neither human force nor human power, but on the power of the Holy Spirit.” (Sanders, p. 151)
 
The task of the church will never be accomplished through human endeavor.  The idea behind the phrase “not by might” relates to a focus on collective power, the force of men and their means.  The Lord is highlighting the concept of human resources.  The phrase “nor by power” is used in connection with an individual and their proficiency and enthusiasm.  Together these two phrases communicate that those who put their hope and trust on the “combined strength of men organized to assist one another, or on the prowess and drive of any single individual” are laying foundations on faulty ground.  Instead our task depends wholly and thoroughly on the Holy Spirit because we have been called to a completely superhuman task.  Sanders again states, “the great danger faced by the church is lest, in the midst of careful planning and seeking improved methods, she forget the superhuman factor without which her task will never be encompassed.” (Sanders, 153)  Just as success for the children of Israel depended on the power of the Holy Spirit and not on the absence of opposition or human power and resources, thus we also find ourselves before an increasingly dark world. 
 
Corporate Prayer
God is building a prayer movement for the nations among the emerging generation! Its focus is on seeking His face for more abandoned devotion to Jesus and wholehearted commitment to global proclamation in our lifetime.  To help propel this focus across the student mission world internationally, Student Volunteer Movement 2 (SVM2) is calling for a corporate 21 Days of Prayer & Fasting in January and February.

The great need in this hour is for the people of God to see themselves as His message bearers and light bearers and through the Spirit be aflame with that light.  That light only remains bright and vibrant to the degree that it is consistently consuming the oil of the wick, as it bears no light in and of itself.  This is a great focus of this call to prayer.  God is waiting for a generation which will do whatever it takes to see the gospel planted in today’s most unreached areas by long-term message bearers.  A generation who throws off all that so easily entangles and runs the race with perseverance and sacrifice.  Those who wait upon Him and are ravished with affections for Him and who dwell in the secret place.  Those who are ready to pay the price in ongoing and committed intercession to see entire people groups prepared to receive the gospel.
 
College campuses and college ministries are uniquely positioned for developing deep and mature devotion to Jesus Christ, resulting in cultivating the characteristics necessary for fruitfulness among the forgotten.  Historically and even today these can be powerful places of preparation for the missionary movement and must be seen as such.  It is time to pray corporately for campuses, asking God to pour out His Spirit and bring spiritual revival and transformation for the purpose of preparing and fashioning His message bearers for labor in the hardest places around the world.  Revival is not an end in itself but is for the purpose of preparing and shaping those who will be used to take His power and message to the nations and to all ethne.  Together, we are seeking revival among the emerging generation that will thrust the supremacy of Christ to the forefront of every college ministry and cause multitudes to respond to His supremacy by giving themselves in full surrender to His role for their lives among the forgotten.
 
This season of prayer and fasting will be undertaken by individuals, campus ministry fellowships, local churches, and Christian campuses.  For detailed information, please go to www.svm2.net and click on the tab for the 21 Days.  Here you will find all the information necessary regarding the 21 Days, as well as a downloadable poster to promote the 21 Days.

Praise & Prayer

By Sarah Plummer, Intercessory Working Group Chair

Christ’s birth has revealed the nature of our God, the God who comes to us.  The incarnational character of our Lord who breathed a word and it was so, who was worshipped by millions of angels, came to us, as a fragile vulnerable baby.  We also know that Jesus said he would return.  This Christmas I’d like to encourage all of us to grapple with the incredible magnificence of both realities.  May this impact our prayers, our hospitality, and our speech over this Christmas season.

1 Peter 4:7-11
“The end of all things is at hand; therefore be self controlled and sober minded for the sake of your prayers.  Above all, keep loving one another earnestly, since love covers a multitude of sins.  Show hospitality to one another without grumbling.  As each has received a gift, use it to serve one another, as good stewards of God's varied grace: whoever speaks, as one who speaks oracles of God; whoever serves, as one who serves by the strength that God supplies - in order that in everything God may be glorified through Jesus Christ.  To him belong glory and dominion forever and ever. Amen.”

Praise God for:
• his coming to us, the first and the last time
• his gifts of grace
• him alone belong glory and dominion forever and ever

Pray for:
• the family unit God has given to us and it's crucial place in community
• the local family of believers that they may use their gifts to truly serve one another
• that local families of believers will be planted in the new year
• the global family in Christ, may we recapture our beginnings afresh
• the imprisoned, infirmed, isolated or persecuted that they may they know the love of Christ's family in some way

May the peace of God be with you afresh this Christmas!