"While we are witnessing the dramatic decline in Christianity among
Caucasians, the Western world is, at the same time, witnessing the
dramatic growth of newly emerging ethnic congregations. The Chinese,
Hispanic, African and Korean congregations, in particular, are
experiencing unprecedented growth.
This weekend, for example, I had the privilege of speaking at the
Rutgers Christian Community Church. It was planted only thirty years ago
by a handful of Chinese students from Rutgers University. Today, it is a
thriving Christian community with several thousand members. They have
English, Mandarin, and Cantonese congregations and are in the middle of a
major building program to build a new sanctuary.
Prior to my coming to Asbury I lived in the Boston area. Boston is
the home of a major spiritual awakening. More people have come to Christ
in Boston in the last three decades than during the Great Awakening,
but it has largely gone unnoticed, because it is occurring primarily
among African, Chinese, Korean, and Hispanic peoples. There are over 50
different African congregations in Boston and, indeed, on any given
Sunday in Cambridge, Massachusetts, more people worship Christ in a
language other than English than in English. It has been called the
“quiet revival.”
Read the entire article here. Good reason to re-examine our evangelistic efforts.
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