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April/May 1989 "Allied Forces" Converge in Adopt-A-People Clearinghouse Introducing the 1990 Unreached Peoples Poster
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Allied Forces Converge in Adopt-a-People Clearinghouse by Kristin Kvaalen No one can dispute that a vital factor in the Allied victory in World War II was the ability of Britain, France, the U.S. and other countries to unite in such a way that they overcame a common enemy. This same kind of collaboration could bring great victories for the Kingdom of God in our day. Signs of a new unityand of a new movementamong mission agencies in North America emerged last month, with promise of just such allied forces potential. Men and women from 43 mission organizations and denominations met March 15-17 for an Adopt-A-People Symposium. To them, the urgently needed factor is a link-up between mission agencies and the local church in order to conquer the powers of Satan over scores of unreached people groups. The gathering, held at William Carey International University (WCIU) in Pasadena, California, crystalized long-held hopes of mission leaders for establishing a clearinghouse to help match local churches to specific unreached people groups. The event was co-sponsored by Global Mapping International, the Frontier Peoples Committee of the Interdenominational Foreign Mission Association, and the Mobilization Division of the U.S. Center for World Mission. Two prime results of the Symposium are the formation of a clearinghouse to aid in people group adoption and an anticipated greater ownership of unreached peoples by local churches. The clearinghouse will act as a comprehensive tracking station to enable the Church to see remaining gaps in its forces as it strives to complete the Great Commission by the year 2000. Opening the Floodgates Wesley Tullis, chairman of the Mobilization Division at the U.S. Center for World Mission, spoke of the intensity of the present opportunity. He is convinced local ownership will go miles in releasing personnel, prayers and funds needed for the frontlines. Just in terms of prayer fuel alone, Tullis points out that there are 70 million evangelicals in America. If only one million spent five minutes a day praying for unreached peoples, a dam of over eight years of cumulative prayer per day would break loose. But five minutes of daily prayer adds up to only two percent of the amount of time evangelicals spend watching TV and going shopping every day. Pioneers to the Movement In the last 12 years, Hunter has helped churches in the United States learn to shoulder the burden not only for a missionary, but for the people group itself in which the missionary labors. We know this concept works, he says. Hunter joins Tullis in his quickness to mention the first prerequisite in the program: The first platform that a church must establish in trying to reach an unreached people group is a prayer platform. Ive seen adoptions stand or fall on this basis. The adopt-a-people idea puts the local church back in its primary role, Hunter adds. The mission agency is precisely designed to work in partnership with the local church... as a service organization aiding the local church in its task as the sending agent. Another mission leader who has seen such linking work is John DeVries, executive director of the World Home Bible League. During one session in the Symposium, he reported incredible results in the past six months through the linking of churches in New England with Bible students in India who go out and preach among unreached peoples. DeVries observes, American churches are very, very eager to adopt people groups. Ive been thrilled with the prayer and financial responses of sponsoring churches! Action Steps Hammered Out In addition, a handful of mission leaders were nominated and approved to serve on an interim steering committee for the clearinghouse. Participants voted, too, that the chief executive officer, or his designate, from each agency or denomination in attendance would constitute the Advisory Council of the clearinghouse. Mission agencies participating in these proceedings included the Assemblies of God, Campus Crusade for Christ, Christian and Missionary Alliance, Conservative Baptist Foreign Mission Board, Gospel Recordings, India Gospel Outreach, Overseas Missionary Fellowship, WEC International, World by 2000, and others. Primary Clearinghouse Goals The Adopt-A-People Clearinghouse will also serve as a research center to track unreached people groups, coordinate data collection and data networks, publish selected data on orphaned or neglected people groups, and serve as a library of published materials available for use by mission organizations. Start-up Steps Seen as Urgent Says Kietzman, I have a sense of urgency. If there is to be closure by the year 2000, we need to find ways of getting accurate information about these unreached people [groups]. He further explains, We want to set up a program for graduate students at Christian colleges and seminaries to take on the research task. Students will be able to conduct research as part of their study programs. Such arrangements will be enhanced by the links between the Clearinghouse and William Carey International University. The work of the Clearinghouse will help mission agencies determine strategies for outreach in many cases and, Kietzman believes, it will serve to give great encouragement to churches, too, as they adopt specific groups and then receive reports back on tangible progress made. He hopes the initial start-up steps of the clearinghouse will be completed by September 1 of this year, with a first newsletter published by October. According to the agreed-upon action steps, the interim steering committee will pound out a number of essential details for the Adopt-A-People program. These details include: deciding minimal standards of responsibility for participating churches and agencies; finalizing clearinghouse goal statements; authorizing preliminary procedures in fund-raising, staffing and office operation procedures; and further defining the working relationship with Global Mapping. Other topics discussed during the symposium and requiring greater clarification include: confidentiality, where needed, about peoples in sensitive areas; and the degree to which promotion of the Adopt-a-People concept will be handled by the clearinghouse or by participating mission organizations or denominations. Sized to Fit: One of Many Marvelous Distinctives For one, he pointed out, whether ones church is a small country church or a mega-church, a denominational or an independent church, Adopt-a-People provides a model that will work well for direct involvement with an unreached people. In Hunters experience, sometimes the very best adopting churches have been the smallest. They can send and support just one couple or individual through partnership with either a sending agency or a larger church. Hunter enumerated a dozen other marvelous distinctives during the symposium, including: the opportunities Adopt-A-People presents to businessmen adept at enterpreneurship and intent on measuring results; the help adoption provides in discovering supernatural leadings from God at the nitty-gritty level; new motivation for primary and secondary research that is immediately relevantnot the kind which gets lost in a file; and the potential for churches to gently pressure mission agencies to target particular groups. He said churches in the West could co-adopt with churches elsewhere in the world, thus pooling their areas of expertise. Hunter and Kietzman both hope that the North American Clearinghouse will become a model for similar adoption agencies in other parts of the globe. Introducing the Point Man Garrison drew a distinction between non-residential missionaries and tentmakers, observing that a non-residential missionary may spend only a fifth of his time on location. He or she surveys the needs and the resources and can then draw together assistance from specific churches, businessmen, and others. The non-residential missionary acts as the point man, Garrison explained. He has an eye for seeing where the opportunity is, the way to get a foot in the door to a particular unreached people. An Idea Whose Time Has Come But the idea of a coordinated Adopt-a-People program is not a new one. As long ago as 1982, a select group of North American mission strategists met at Chicago's O'Hare Airport to define the common stages in reaching an unreached people. They dreamed of seeing churches link up with and own people groups until a viable church-planting movement could be established in their midst. Based on the definitions drawn up at the 1982 meeting, Ralph Winter, general director of the U.S. Center for World Mission, has recently proposed a timetable that would see all 12,000 remaining unreached people groups adopted by 1991 and then engaged (with missionaries on site) by 1995. A Picture on Every Refrigerator? The Church has not yet succeeded in bringing closure to the distinctively-missionary task of penetrating every unreached people group around the world. But this generation could, by Gods grace, do so, aiming directly to finish the Commander-in-Chiefs order by the year 2000. Given the new, explosive potential of the allied forcesboth churches and mission agenciesgetting into position, whos to say it cant happen? For further information about the North American Adopt-a-People Clearinghouse, write or call Dr. Dale Kietzman, chairman of the interim steering committee, c/o William Carey International University, 1539 E. Howard St., Pasadena, CA 91104, (818) 398-2119. 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