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World Pulse: March 2006 online edition
World
Evangelism & Missions Reports:
Philip 8.4.8 and Short-Term Missions
Nearly one million people immigrate
to the United States every year. Many of these immigrants
come from countries where evangelism is illegal and
Christians are openly persecuted. Settling in immigrant
communities within large metropolitan regions, they
often form isolated subcultures and can live in the
US for years without ever hearing the gospel of Jesus
Christ.
One
Virginia-based ministry sees the incredible potential
within these communities. Since 2004, Philip 8.4.8,
a division of Accelerating International Mission Strategies
(AIMS), has sponsored short-term outreaches to regions
where immigrant populations have settled. Philip 8.4.8
is designed to serve as a mobilization strategy and
equip believers to reach the nations through connecting
them with ethnic communities in the US that have the
least opportunity to hear the gospel. Philip 8.4.8 seeks
to model national outreaches after the story of Philip
the evangelist, found in Acts 8:4-8.
"Once
churches have the opportunity to minister to unreached
people groups in our backyard, we hope that they will
develop a passion to reach unreached people groups in
other countries around the world," said Philip,*
coordinator of Philip 8.4.8.
According
to Philip, partnership is the key. Before initiating
any new outreach trip, he meets with existing ministries
in the metropolitan region who are actively reaching
the community with the gospel. He then connects them
with other ministries in the area that have the same
goal and brings in teams from other regions to help
them accomplish those goals.
"Once
churches have the opportunity to minister to unreached
people groups in our backyard, we hope that they
will develop a passion to them in other countries
around the world." |
Philip
8.4.8 outreaches generally last one week and attract
youth and young adult groups. However, interested laypeople
of all ages are welcome to join each outreach. Each
team is trained in evangelism techniques for the cultural
group with whom they intend to interact. Once there,
they have the opportunity to become involved in a variety
of outreach techniques including street evangelism,
park outreaches, tract distribution, worship concerts,
drama ministry and intercession.
"We
have to think about training, discipling and mobilizing
each generation in different ways," Philip said.
"Generations X and Y are hands-on. They have to
get out there and experience it themselves."
The
World at Our Doorstep
The high level of immigration to the United States offers
a great potential to reach the nations with the gospel.
The 33.1 million foreign-born people (eleven percent
of the population) who currently live in America (1)
often settle in gateway cities - metropolitan areas
that serve as an entry point to the country for many
immigrants. Major entry points such as New York City;
Los Angeles, California; Houston, Texas; Miami, Florida;
and Washington DC have become the new homes for more
than half of the total immigrant population in the US.
As
America's primary gateway city, New York City has welcomed
immigrants from almost every nation. The first wave
of Arab immigrants settled in the metropolitan region
in the late nineteenth century; however, when Ford Motor
Company began hiring Arabs in the 1930s, many Arabs
relocated to Dearborn, Michigan. Today, New York City
has the third largest Arabic population in the US, behind
Detroit and Los Angeles (2).
Since
1990, the Hindu population in the United States has
grown from 227,000 to more than 760,000, an increase
of more than 274% (3). Like immigrants from Arabic countries,
immigrants from South Asia, particularly India, have
settled in large metropolitan regions like Orlando,
Florida, and formed cultural communities.
Philip
8.4.8 has developed partnerships and begun ministry
efforts in Dearborn, New York City, Orlando, and Washington
DC.
Case
Study: An Open Door in Dearborn, Michigan
Located just outside of Detroit, Michigan, Dearborn
is known for its Arabic population. Of the 400,000 Arab
Americans living in the Detroit metropolitan area, more
than 150,000 live in Michiganís Wayne County
where Dearborn is located. Several communities on Dearborn's
south and east sides are more than ninety percent Islamic.
When Philip first heard about the Muslim
community in Dearborn, he immediately called more than
a dozen churches in the area and asked if they were
actively reaching out to the Arab community. Only one
church leader, Pastor Nicodemus, said they were.
After planting Harvest International
Worship Center in Dearborn in the early 1990s, Pastor
Nicodemus began talking to Arabs on the street. He wanted
to learn about their culture and understand their beliefs.
As Muslims began to convert to Christianity and join
the small congregation, members of Harvest International
joined their pastor in reaching out to those around
them.
Although
the outreaches were successful, Pastor Nicodemus wanted
to do more. However, he knew he could not accomplish
the task alone. For three years he spoke with other
churches and organizations about sending ministry teams
to help, but in the end, every effort failed. Then he
received a call from Philip. In August 2004 thirty-nine
teenagers, young adults and youth pastors from Philip
8.4.8 arrived in Dearborn.
The team focused on community outreach,
talking with people in the neighborhoods, handing out
tracts and offering to pray with anyone in need. They
organized an outreach in a community park with live
worship, music, puppets and drama. Although the team
met some resistance, most people were very receptive
to the group.
One
team member said, "The trip opened my eyes to other
beliefs out there. I now have a burden for the Muslim
people and for every person I meet who doesn't know
Jesus Christ."
When
Philip brought two additional teams to Dearborn in summer
2005, they focused on finding individuals who specifically
wanted to speak with a pastor, join a Bible study or
receive information about becoming a Christian.
"After
the first day, we had gathered fourteen positive responses,"
said Philip. "That's more than we had during the
entire trip last year. We knew that we were experiencing
a miracle from God." By the end of the two week
trip, Harvest International had seventy-five individuals
to contact for follow-up.
"Dearborn
actually lends itself to reach Muslims in interesting
ways," said the Islamic World Missions director*
at Calvary International in Jacksonville, Florida. He
participated in a 2005 Philip 8.4.8 outreach in Dearborn.
"There's a broad spectrum of Middle Eastern Muslims
within a close proximity, and believers have the freedom
to reach them," he said. "You can go door
to door and hand out literature. Those freedoms don't
exist in other nations."
Since
the first Dearborn outreach, Pastor Nicodemus' ministry
has soared. He began networking with other ministries
in the region, accepting invitations to speak at various
churches and planning a summer internship program which
will begin May 2006. He will continue to partner with
Philip 8.4.8 for short-term outreaches and is working
on a partnership with other organizations like Calvary
International, that will send their missionaries to
Dearborn before commissioning them to Arabic nations.
Changing
Lives for Missions
The Philip 8.4.8 trips have also changed the lives of
many teenagers and young adults who have participated.
One parent commented that her daughter's attitude and
temper were transformed. Another young adult decided
to commit her life to missions work. Two of the youth
groups that participated in the first trip to Dearborn
have begun witnessing in their respective neighborhoods.
"This
trip put a fire under every single person in our youth
group," said Pastor Cory Elliott, youth pastor
at Bethel Christian Fellowship in Virginia Beach, Virginia.
"It woke us up as a youth group."
One young woman named Diana said the
experience gave her a new boldness to minister to others
around her. Growing up during the Civil War in Lebanon,
Diana felt bitterness and anger toward Muslims. When
she heard about the trip to Dearborn, she didnít
want to go, but felt the Lord wanted her to participate.
While there, Diana began to share her experiences with
other Lebanese women she met. She connected with several
Arabic families and continues to minister to them via
email and telephone.
"All
these years, I've been trying to get people interested
in the Middle East," the Islamic World Missions
director with Calvary International said. "When
I saw these kids pouring out their hearts to Muslims
right here in America, it blessed me to see them have
a passion and a heart for the Arab people."
#
# # #
*
Note: Some names have been changed or omitted to protect
the identity of persons ministering in regions that
are hostile to the Gospel.
Endnotes:
(1) Center
for Immigration Studies
(2) Arab
American Institute Foundation. Estimates
by Zogby International.
(3) American Religious Identification Survey. City
University of New York Graduate Center.
For
reprint information, please call the AIMS publication
office at (757) 495-5850 or email the editor at aims@aims.org.
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