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Welcome to a New World | Church | Conversation

 

“We need to talk.” When someone says that to us, it’s an indication that circumstances have changed. A relationship needs to be redefined; a job needs to be adjusted; a commitment needs to be examined. When “we need to talk” is said by our spouse we wonder. When it’s said by our boss we worry. But no matter who says it, the phrase is an omen that change is around the corner and may already be upon us.

Christian leaders around the country have agreed that it’s time for us to talk. Circumstances in our world have changed dramatically in recent years. Globalization has accelerated thanks to digital communication technologies. New political realities have made fundamentalist forms of Islam and Hinduism a rising danger. The number of children orphaned by HIV/Aids is expected to reach 20 million this year. And a poor African woman represents the new face of Christianity as the church continues to expand rapidly in the global south and shrink in Europe and North America.

But we are not just seeing a new world emerge; we’re also witnessing the rise of a new church here in the US. A new generation of evangelical leaders is extolling values considered peripheral by earlier generations—justice, compassion, and environmental stewardship. Are these values a threat to the proclamation of the gospel, or simply a deeper understanding of it? These under-40 leaders are also the first to have had access to cheap intercontinental travel during their formative years (I call them the “Jumbo Jet Generation”). They’ve experienced the dehumanizing impact of poverty first hand, and they carry a clearer vision for the global impact of the gospel. And they are the first generation to wrestle with how to advance Christ’s mission in a truly post-Christian, secular, and consumerist North America.

These two realities, a new world and a new church, carry significant implications for our mission. For this reason it’s time to have a new conversation. It’s time to talk.

Over the next six months our team will be coordinating and hosting 12 conversations in 12 cities where you will be able to interact with some of the church’s best thinkers and leaders about the future. These panels will include voices that span the generations as we seek wisdom from those who have led faithfully in the past, and hear what innovations are being incubated by those coming on the scene.

The conversation will culminate in October when delegates from the American church join 4,000 other leaders from 200 countries in Cape Town, South Africa, for the Third Lausanne Congress on World Evangelization http://www.lausanne.org/cape-town-2010 to address the global challenges facing the church and our mission.

This blog will by the hub of the conversation until Cape Town. Here you will find articles on the topics, videos from the panelists, and updates on the 12 gatherings. I hope you’ll join us by contributing your thoughts and prayers to this important work.

Picture of Skye JethaniSkye Jethani (www.skyejethani.com) is managing editor of Leadership Journal, and the author of The Divine Commodity: Discovering a Faith Beyond Consumer Christianity.

5 Responses to “Welcome to a New World | Church | Conversation”

  1. I’m really looking forward to the conversations surrounding Lausanne/CapeTown2010. I’d love to know of other delegates under 25 and under 20 who are also attending. It’s been exciting to see how justice and compassion are opening doors to share God’s love with my generaton. The works that come with faith are demonstrating a God that is acquainted with suffering and has a solution.

    If you’re a young delegate to Capetown 2010, let’s get in touch! loosechangetoloosenchains@gmail.com

     
  2. This looks like a long overdue conversation for the church. I look forward to civil, biblical conversations about our place in the lives of people as important contributors to the daily experiences of their lives. We have for too long relegated ourselves to one day per week influence, and that warped by a worldview that throws away large chunks of responsibility which God has placed in our hands. I regret that Houston, TX., soon to be the third most populated city in the U.S., after the 2010 census is completed, is not going to be a location for this conversation. Here social justice is being hashed out on a daily basis as we deal with immigrant populations form a wide variety of places in the world as well as thousands upon thousands of “undocumented” people living here. This would be a great place to continue the conversation.

     
    • Chas
  3. OMG I would love to attend this. I have so much to share regarding the Church!

     
  4. Hi everyone –

    Check out the new Lausanne Global Conversation website (www.lausanne.org/conversation) which launched this week to provide a place online to discuss these issues with others from around the world.

    Your voice is needed!

     
    • Naomi
  5. I was at the chicago event and it was a great time and a great conversation
    looking forward to it to come online.

     
    • Picard 224

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