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The Lausanne Global Conversation is on the World Wide Open Network

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The Gospel & International Studies

Autor: Douglas Shaw
Datum: 18.06.2010
Category: Leiterschulungen

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Ursprünglich geschrieben in Englisch

Globalization, one of today’s trendiest buzzwords, is nevertheless an amazingly potent force. The world economy has become porous beyond imagination. Existing transnational alliances, treaty organizations, and long-standing boundaries are now fading in significance. The word “Europe” now refers to a single, economic commonwealth. The bottom line? The same global upheavals which are forcing international business to become so fast-paced and responsive demand that we “spreaders” of the gospel do the same.

Asian Partners International declared that eighty percent of nations with unreached people groups are now closed to traditional missions. One by one, developing nations turn away Western families believed to be Christian missionaries. Global trends like the resurgence of fundamentalist Islam, anti-American sentiment, and rampant spiritual darkness make Christian evangelism the most dangerous practice across vast swaths of the planet. All around us glare the signs of a world that has transformed many of yesterday’s mission paradigms into noble but unworkable relics of a former era.

Our response to these shifts lies within our control. We, as the Church of Jesus Christ and the human agents of the Great Commission, can strategize differently, with the Holy Spirit’s guidance, to better reach this fluid and challenging new world of ours. We can reach out beyond traditional boundaries and address the universal desire for wisdom, while leading seekers to the call and claims of Christ Jesus.

International Students in the U.S. According to the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, approximately 260 leaders in the world today received their college education right here in America. What might the political and spiritual climate of our world look like if current world leaders—former international students—had been given the opportunity to hear the gospel and see it lived out in the lives of Christian Americans who reached out to them in love and friendship?

  The core of ISI’s mission strategy is cross-cultural outreach, or friendship evangelism. It’s showing international students the love of God.

Unfortunately, we have found that while studying in the United States, the majority of international students (as high as seventy-five percent) are never invited into an American home, and eighty percent never enter an American church. And with over 750,000 students from all around the world currently attending American colleges and universities, that represents a strategic mission field with great needs that are being unmet.

“Smart missions” means spreading the gospel in a far more intentional, thoughtful, precisely-targeted, and strategic manner than ever before.

The Washington Post published an article in July 2008 entitled, “Churches Retool Missions Trips,” examining a growing trend away from large, expensive church mission trips and toward deeper church involvement in local communities—or “smart missions.” While it is true that God has done wonderful things through teams of his people on short-term mission trips, the article pointed out that increasingly, these trips are becoming impractical for many churches. Our God is not limited by the impractical, but he does ask us to invest wisely in our global mission outreach.

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Stichwörter: international students, mission, evangelism

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Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika

Thanks for the great example on page3 (quoted here below):

<<Mohammed* was a student in America when a Christian student became friends with him. Eventually, Mohammed accepted Jesus. He received theological training, went back home and started a seminary in the Middle East. That seminary trained pastors from Middle Eastern nations to plant churches.>>


12.04.2013

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