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Iberoamerican Church and the Missions Movement

Author: Carlos Scott - Misión Local y Global (GloCal)
Date: 23.03.2010
Location: Buenos Aires | Argentina
Category: Unreached People Groups, Leadership Development, Partnership

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Originally Posted in Spanish

A time for gratitude: A church that experiences the work of the Holy Spirit 

And the hand of the Lord was with them, and a great number believed and turned to the Lord.” (Acts 11:21). 

To begin with, we want to give glory and thanks to God for the Iberoamerican church. It is a church that makes us think and reflect. It is a church that reflects what the Antioch church lived in Acts 11. They experienced the power of God, and a great number believed and turned to the Lord. The church was established there because they spoke of Jesus Christ as the message of the good news of peace. Some people in Cyprus and Cyrene were bold enough to make a difference speaking with the Greeks, and not only the Jews. The church was established in Antioch as the result of a group of men and women without money, without plans, who left Jerusalem and headed to the coast, until they arrived at Antioch, sharing Jesus Christ.

 A church that lives under the influence of the Holy Spirit is a church that edifies, is solid, has vigor and an effective testimony, and grows.

 We give thanks to God that the Iberoamerican church has an evangelistic emphasis and and from it new churches are being formed. It is a living church that is growing, joyful, flexible, and has a young leadership with impetus and initiative. It is an enterprising and creative church. It is a united church that worships the Lord. It is a church that evidences the grace of God through its acts. It is a church that gives men and women opportunities.

 In recent years, the church in Iberoamerica has been awakened to social responsibility. This characteristic has been one of the greatest contributions to Latinamerican theology: the emphasis on the reality of the kingdom of God.

 The church has been established as a product of the work of the Holy Spirit and of missions work. Many men and women share their faith in Jesus Christ. Everything is very spontaneous. Iberoamerica loves the Lord. God is the one who causes others to know the Lord. The great hero in Iberoamerican missions is the Holy Spirit.

 The nationalization of leadership in the first half of the 20th century and the rise of national churches, in the 1930s, were other decisive factors for the development of structures that were ecclesiastic, contextualized and effective. The Holy Spirit is working in the life of the church. It is working in these structures, to reform them and to renew their faithfulness to the mission. The significant thing, however, is not the structure but  its mission.

 There are different sources of information that confirm that the total in the evangelical community in Iberoamerica in 1900 was 50,000 believers. In the Edinburgh Congress in 1910, there wasn’t any representation from Latin America. During the last century, the growth is reflected in these numbers: 1916: 378.000; 1925: 756.000; 1936: 7.200.000; 1967: 14.746.200; 1973: 20.000.000; 1987: 37.432.000; 2000: 80.000.0001.

A church that begins to separate, recognizing those that are elected by the Holy Spirit:

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Keywords: Gospel, unity, partnership, relationship, church, leadership, authenticity, mission, humility, integrity, globalization, theology, identity, indigenous, resources, stewardship, dialogue, evangelism, ministry, transformation, leaders, missions, truth

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PhContributeBy
Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down MisionGloCal1Scott (12)   
Argentina

Adjunto documento: Reflexión sobre la Iglesia Iberoamericana y el movimiento misionero. A sketch on the mobilization of the Latin American Church. The occidental Missions. Partnership and Money. 

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24.07.2010
PhContributeBy
Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down chikhali (1)
India

I read about your church. It is exciting to see the church growth taking place. The church in Antioch grew because people who fled from Jerusalem shared the gospel with the Jews and the Greek alike. Today our churches are not growing because we lack vision to share the word of God. Secondly, we take it for granted that evangelism is the work of the pastor. The whole church needs to take the whole gospel. We need to train, equip a
and motivate the pastors and the laity alike to share the gospel.
Suman Aghamkar


24.04.2010

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Location: Buenos Aires
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