In his book, The Meeting of the Waters, Fritz Kling outlines seven global currents that he believes impact missional work in our world today. Here’s a brief description of each one:
Mercy:
Younger people of faith around the world increasingly demonstrate their love for Christ and others by serving – by feeding the hungry, addressing AIDS, rescuing girls sold in slavery, saving the earth, and much more.
Mutuality:
While the West was previously the center of worldwide “Christendom,” now Christians from countries all around the world have the education, access, resources, and confidence to take leadership.
Migration:
People everywhere are on the move, to meet economic needs, flee repression or combat, seek freedom or asylum, etc. Missions used to be from the west to the rest, but now it’s “everywhere to everywhere.”
Monoculture:
Pervasive brands, celebrities, and fads, are spreading around the globe, and values and worldviews are spreading too. In the global youth culture, kids in Cape Town and Shenyang often have more in common with kids in Nairobi or L.A. than with their own parents.
Machines:
The pace of technological change is stunning, rendering old approaches ineffective or obsolete. From evangelism to discipleship to disaster relief, technology offers exciting new opportunities for Christian workers.
Mediation:
Some experts say that the world is “flattening” and that differences are lessening. Actually, the internet and other media are providing more opportunities and tools for division. Christians will need, more than ever, to be reconciliers in a polarizing world.
Memory:
Even in the face of so many world-changing trends, every country, region and village has its own “backstory.” Christian workers must be alert to historical events which shape a people’s receptivity or resistance to the gospel today.
It is not my objective to get everyone to agree with what Fritz Kling has written. However, these global currents should cause us to stop and prayerfully reflect on our world, and the tremendous changes that are occurring.
In light of those reflections, we will need to define broad based solutions or strategies that will allow us to proactively respond to those global currents we perceive impact our work. These fresh approaches then will frame our ministries as we move into the future.
As we journey forward, this global conversation and our prayers become more and more essential to discerning God’s will together.
Filed under: Global realities | 1 Comment »