Lausanne World Pulse – Themed Articles – Bridge Peoples: The Role of Ethnic Minorities in Global Evangelization
By Winston Smith
May 2010
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Partnering with Bridge Peoples Be a Learner. The most important thing to remember when ministering to people of a different cultural background is to adopt the attitude of a learner. Nothing will limit your ministry more than coming in with your plan already decided without first humbling yourself to learn from them. Learn their culture, how they read the Bible, how they view God. You will find that they will have done more for you and your relationship with God that you ever did for them. Adapt to Unique Cultural Characteristics. Incorporate what you are learning about the culture of the ethnic minority group into your ministry structure. If the extended family plays a greater role in the community, explore how you can best utilize that in your ministry. Meet Social Needs. Often, minority groups will have unique social needs that you can help meet. It could be offering language courses for recent immigrants. It may mean getting involved in the school system to ensure their children have access to a quality education. Each setting is different, so the more you learn from members of the community, the easier it will be to identify the social problems to which your church or ministry is best equipped to respond. In your preaching of the gospel, don’t forget to live it out. Look for Unreached Segments. Perhaps there is already a ministry targeting a particular bridge people in your area. Look for opportunities where you can step in. For example, most language courses appeal primarily to older immigrants, as their kids are already picking up the new language in school. You might start a ministry in your language to the children or college students of bridge peoples. Send from the Beginning. Look for opportunities, right from the start of your ministry to ethnic minorities, to involve them in ministry. Often, we focus all of our energy on reaching them with the good news of Jesus and forget that as bridge peoples they have a unique role to play in world evangelization. Make sending just as much a priority as reaching. |
A prime example of this transition stage is the church at Antioch, the first great mission-sending church in the history of Christianity. As Luke tells the story in Acts 11, it was bridge people who were at the center of the Spirit’s movement to the world. Persecution had spread believers from Jerusalem all the way to Antioch. But the Jewish believers shared the gospel only with other Jews they met. “Some of them, however, men from Cyprus and Cyrene, went to Antioch and began to speak to Greeks also, telling them the good news about the Lord Jesus” (Acts 11:20).
These believers were bi-cultural, at home in both a Jewish and Greek environment. As a result, they naturally began to share the gospel with the Greeks they met in Antioch. What was so difficult for the Jews from Jerusalem was second nature to these believers. They naturally crossed cultures with the good news of Jesus because it was part of their very identity as bi-cultural people.
When the church in Jerusalem wanted to check up on the believers in Antioch, they sent Barnabas, another bridge person (a Jew from Cyprus) to report back. Is it any wonder, then, that when the Spirit chose two missionaries to send out who would bridge the gospel from Asia to Europe that he chose Barnabas and Saul—two bridge people from the original bridge church?
Bridge People and Global Evangelization
With rapid advances in transportation and technology over the past century, we are seeing an explosion in the number of ethnic minorities immigrating to new lands. Whether Indians in Australia, Turks in Germany, Arabs and Africans in Western Europe, or Latinos in the United States, God is creating a new generation of bridge people. Ethnic minorities present an incredible opportunity for the expansion of the gospel and the fulfillment of the Great Commission.
Our task in ministry, then, becomes not only to reach these new neighbors in our hometowns for their own sake (which is reason enough), but because we need them to partner with us to reach the world. They have unique cultural connections to some of the least-reached peoples on the planet.
For example, as a result of the Moors controlling Spain for over seven hundred years, there are more than four thousand words in Spanish that originate from the Arabic language. In fact, most of what we think of as Hispanic culture, food, language, architecture, and dance is influenced by Arabic and Jewish cultures. Is it an accident that God is bringing millions of Latinos to the United States “for such a time as this”? Could they be some of the ones God will use to finally bring the gospel to the peoples of the 10/40 Window?
God is continuing his work among bridge people just as he has throughout human history. Let us move forward in an attitude of faith as new neighbors with different accents move in across the street.
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Winston Smith (pseudonym) is a staff member serving with Campus Crusade for Christ. He is seeking to build movements of Latino university students who will bridge the gospel from the West to the unreached peoples of the world. |
