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Cape Town 2010 Advance Paper

Witnessing to Christ in a Secular Culture

Author: Michael Herbst
Date: 14.07.2010
Location: Greifswald | Germany
Category: Truth & Pluralism

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Editor’s Note: This Cape Town 2010 Advance Paper has been written by Michael Herbst as an overview of the topic to be discussed at the Morning Plenary session on “Making the Case for the Truth of Christ in a Pluralistic, Globalized World.” Responses to this paper through the Lausanne Global Conversation will be fed back to the author and others to help shape their final presentations at the Congress.

1. This happened during a school conference in the city of Greifswald, Western Pomerania (former GDR). There was a parent representative on the school council who was completely unchurched, and was interested in the cathedral of Greifswald. He knew the church from various visits and now asked me the very telling question: “Do worship services still take place here occasionally?” The question was telling, because on the one hand it expressed the assumption that religious life in this city had perished long ago. On the other hand the question signalled that, although the religious life of this church has not perished, it happens in the corner of those who are faithful to the church anyway, and does not really become public.

2. Mission never happens without a context: God’s mission will take its own shape in every context. Thus we have to look at the East German post-socialist and post-Christendom context in particular.

One of the main challenges is certainly the stable situation of unchurched people in Germany: “By this we mean people who have not belonged to any church for three or four decades and ‘who have forgotten that they have forgotten God.’ In the East of Germany, they make up 70-75% of the population, which is about 10-12 million people; in the West, they make up 25-30%, which is about 15 million people.” (1) In 1959, the Pomeranian Church still had 700,000 members, whereas now only around 100,000 people belong to the Protestant Church, which is about 20% of the population.

It is a church that is still shrinking. However, it does not shrink so much because its membership is declining but because of migration to the West and because its membership is getting older. It has been like this for at least a generation. Many leave, mainly those who are gifted and nimble with their tongues. We speak about “brain drain”, the loss of the elites. It is a small church in a minority situation and surely no longer a “Volkskirche”.

3. When it comes to the matter of truth, the East German situation is ambivalent. On the one hand people experienced a strong meta-narrative during the GDR era. Marxism claimed to witness to a universal truth with a strong eschatology: the course of history headed for the paradise of communism. The Communist Party possessed ultimate authority in most questions of daily life, but also in questions of truth, meaning and ethics. This truth – being itself in a certain sense religious — included, as we will see, a vital anti-church appeal. It was part of the strategy to reject all religious convictions and to “inform” people that religion is nothing but “opium for the people”. On the other hand, this meta-narrative failed. In 1989 some rejoiced in the defeat of Marxism, others grieved for the loss of their ideological home, but most acknowledged the defeat of Marxism. The end of meta-narratives finds its very special expression in this context: many East Germans have lost confidence in any truth claim. “Never again”, they say! Their caveat against religious truth claims is twofold: their Marxist past makes them cautious when it comes to religion, their post-Marxist present when it comes to any truth claims.

Keywords: Witnessing, unchurched, secular, church, truth, meta-narrative, East German, Pomeranian, atheism, marginalization, indifference, mission, context, inclusion, humble, missional

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PhContributeBy
Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down Tom De Craene (-1)  
Belgium

Dear Michael,


Thank you for your article. The East German situation you describe has a lot of similarities with my own context, which is the Belgian one. I’d like to think through the isssue of what is means to cross boundaries the way Jesus did in my context, which is student ministry. Where would Jesus be, whom would he associate with, what are the marginalised groups within the student community.


 


I still had one question though. You mention that it would be a good idea to found Christian schools and to provide in Christian health and mental care. I find this very important, but I wonder why it is always those two areas we come up with: education and health care. It is relatively easy to develop a Christian perspective within these fields, but wouldn’t it be good for people to experience the difference it makes to be a Christian in other lines of work and vocations: lawyers, mechanics, carpenters, artists, engineers, ... How to develop a Christian paradigm on all kinds of work that go further than ’I don’t sheat’ or ’I don’t surf on the internet during my bosses hours’. This might be more related to ’market place’, but this was the question that arose while reading this article.


Tom


24.08.2010
PhContributeBy
Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down Michael_Diener (0)
Germany

I do agree that focusing on Gods commissioning and promises is what we need to do - everywhere. On the other hand, Paul for example planned his mission journeys carefully and strategic and used the experience and gifts God had given him. My be a "vivid reliance", "praying constantly" is what we need. Because it´s also impressing to recognize, that we do have regions in East germany, where socialism couldn´t destroy the christian churches, communities and christian life at all. These are areas where God granted spiritual revivals, more than 150 years ago and the fire is still burning....So, we do see, that "christianizing" a nation is not enough to resist against persecution. God aks for disciples and this is what we are sent for.


24.08.2010
PhContributeBy
Reply Flag 1 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down J. P. K. Neville Jayasundara (1)  
Sri Lanka

The answer lies in the lives of handful of believers remaining in East Germany.  They need to believe that the Lord is able to visit them once again with renewal and revival.  We must pray that the Lord may raise up a few with a great burden of prayer may be a few in a city.  The New Testament Church does not depend of buildings or an organized form of religion.  The remaining believers could gather on the basis of Acts 2:42 and work to bring other to Christ.  Those who are born again will have in themselves a desire to meet with other believers.  That will turnout to be a Chruch.  We need to realize the answer does not very much lie in our ’understanding’ and "analizing " of the situation but rather in the ’preaching of the gospel’ because "it pleased God by the fooolishness of preaching to save them that believe."(1 Corinthians 1:21)  


23.08.2010
PhContributeBy
Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down Michael_Diener (0)
Germany

Striking to recognize that the indifference of people in East germany (and may be elsewhere) towards the gospel is not only related to their socialist past in general but also somehow to their weariness of any truth claims, due to their ideological experience with socialism. And I strongly agree with the emphasis the article puts on the role of education and lifetime support in order to reach saecular people with the gospel


20.08.2010
PhContributeBy
Reply Flag 1 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down Sherry_L_Hauter (1)
Brazil

I was struck (shocked as well) by the phrases you wrote:  "Fathers did not have anything left to pass on.  Children did not learn the language with which they could have learned to believe."  I guess I did not realize the horrific price current generations are paying for the ungodliness that was promoted by communism.  I fear the ongoing secularization of American society and the liberal victories brought about by the current government will eventually make for the same phrases be true for the USA.  May God have mercy!


17.08.2010
PhContributeBy
Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down Mere_B (1)  
United States

Your situation in East Germany is not so very different from ours in America - especially among my own generation and those following me. Church has largely become irrelevant. Even when we succeed in piquing the interest of unchurched young people, the institutional church is not often equipped to receive them well. 


As a postmodern young person myself, I have found that an entirely different model of "church" is required - a new wineskin. Simple church or house church has met my needs for real Christian fellowship far more dynamically and relevantly than any institution. Currently I live in a home community of 6 believers - we all share meals together, pray together for an hour 3 mornings a week, and have a Sunday evening worship and fellowship time with 6 other believers who don’t live in the house but are invited to our activities. We engage in outreach together too. We are church. We don’t have a formal building, just a home. But I have never before experienced such deep intimacy with Jesus and others, such rigorous accountability and discipleship, and such dynamic and organic outreach. 


I believe that this organic simple church option is one that will touch the unchurched who come to follow Jesus in the most profound ways, as it brings Jesus, and faith, and the Body into everyday life. It takes following Jesus out of the category "religion" and makes it a radical, transformative, and irresistibly appealing lifestyle!


17.08.2010
PhContributeBy
Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down SergioLyra (3)  
Brazil

Even considering that your main missionary analyses are for the context of an East German city, some principles are precious for the urban evangelization. I would highlight four aspects: Friendship Evangelism; Special meetings with evangelistic approach; Relevant church in the community; Living gospel to entrust the message.


Thank you for your missionary contributions.


17.08.2010
PhContributeBy
Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down Mary Ann Smith (0)  
United States

Michael,


Thank you for your insights from the East Germany situation.  It is quite similar to what we have experience in ministry in Estonia.  Some of your thoughts clarified what we have seen and heard.  It is also quite normal there NOT to attend church.  Our work is focusing more on children as they are more open to coming for at least special events.  The parents sometimes follow but they are still in the mindset of this being abnormal for adults.  The issue of the new pattern of family is so important for us to understand - they couldn’t share their faith for fear of being sent to Siberia.  Thus, we have more than one generation with that language in which to believe.  It is the desire of the church in Estonia to reach out but they are still learning the concept of ministry outside the walls of the church and it is primarily the young people who are grasping that.  They are being touched by the Holy Spirit but need the encouragement and financial support of older adults for ministry which then creates a greater challenge.  And you are very correct in the "cities without God" in the concrete housing blocks.  The people seem to grow as hard as the concrete they live in!  Thank you for your article and the insights that were helpful to us in working in the former Soviet Union. 


Mary Ann Smith


12.08.2010
PhContributeBy
Reply Flag 1 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down Sharon M (3)  
Singapore

Thanks Michael for sharing your perspective and experience from a European perspective.


I particularly resonated with your statement that "to be holy means to cross boundaries, to connect with others and to welcome the very people who had previously been "outside the door".  While very often we have heard the phrase "to be holy is to be set apart", sometimes we have gone to to an extreme and mistaken that to be separated is to totally ’sanitize’ ourselves from the world and cluster ourselves in ’holy huddles’, building walls to ’protect ourselves’, rather than building bridges.  For us to come out and actually communicate to people, "Please grant me your trust," it first asks of us to leave our comfort zones, cross that boundary and go to ’where they are’, rather than expecting them to come to us.  I’ve found that many times, in my areas of ministry in secular spaces, I have to work hard to ’earn the right to speak’.  And the work often involves listening and loving hard, connecting authentically first, before even venturing an opinion.


I see some common threads of observation between yours and my context, a hot pot of Asian cultures (deeply respectful of one anothers’ religious beliefs) which has also embraced Western influences for the sake of economic progress.  In my part of the world, some of the churches I’ve worked with have suffered a little of the ’holy huddle’ syndrome, so mired in the Christian ’sub-culture’ that it seems as if they’ve forgotten how to relate to people with totally different world views and priorities.  But the good news is that God can stir up communities like that with Holy Spirit-awakened love for the lost, to the extent that some have indeed crossed the boundaries to engage non-believers in a way that’s both authentic and life-giving.  Imagine cell groups that have 20% pre-believers who choose to be part of the community because they feel ’safe’ enough to participate, without the pressure to convert right away.  And they know that just because they don’t believe right now doesn’t mean that these Christians are going to stop loving them.  These groups are just as comfortable praying for people and having spiritual conversations in bars as they are in church.  And to quote one pre-believer who’s part of one of these cells, "These Christians can be a bit weird with their praying and stuff, but I like them.  So I’m going to continue hanging out with them."  These groups have certainly brought to life the observation that in this post-modern generation, many need to belong first, before they’re even asked to believe and become.


I know I may be venturing into a very controversial topic, but one particular "outside the door" people group I struggle about is the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender (GLBT) community.  I’m still wondering what does it mean to cross boundaries, connect with others and welcome this particular group, when there is so much baggage and defensiveness between our communities.  What is God asking of us to do in this particular ’mission field’?


09.08.2010
PhContributeBy
Reply Flag 1 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down Bryan Nicholson (1)  
United States

Thanks, Michael, for your insights and regional example.  I especially enjoyed your recognition that a non-privileged status of Christianity can allow for seekers to connect with Jesus in a personal, less traditional way.  And, approaching the world humbly, willing to serve, and willing to engage in meaningful relationships are all essential techniques that we can remember for our ministries in various contexts.


08.08.2010

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PhContributeBy Michael Herbst  
 
Location: Weitenhagen
Country: Germany

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