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September/ Editorial by Dr. Ralph D. Winter An Announcement you can act on! The Largest Meeting of Pastors Ever! Christopher Columbus, A Sinner With A Heart for Frontier Missions Presbyterian Agency Votes $1,000,000 for Frontier Mission Outreach Uzbekistan: One Christian's Dream Mission Frontiers Vision Network Update Communication Christ to the Hindu World The IFMA Frontier Declaration of 1982 Lessons from William Carey for the '90s How Can All Peoples Be Reached By The Year 2000?
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Presbyterian Agency Votes $1,000,000 for Frontier Mission Outreach by Margaret Lyman "Great, new, exciting changes in our denomination!" is the way Tom Theriault describes the missions advances taking place within the Presbyterian Church (USA). Recently, unreached peoples, the Adopt-A- People concept, and new fields for service have loomed large in Presbyterian mission efforts. In order to appreciate the drama of these recent changes, and why a re-emphasis on unreached peoples is so revolutionary, a brief history of Presbyterian international mission practice is necessary. Beginning about 1958, Presbyterians recognized that the church had been well-established in the mission fields to which they had previously gone. They resolved that new missionaries should be sent only when there was an invitation from those established churches. Unfortunately, this policy meant that where there was no national church, no Presbyterian missionaries could be sent. The result was that for many years Presbyterians have not been much involved in frontier mission among unreached peoples. All this officially changed in 1991 when the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (USA) adopted the resolution Turn to the Living God: A Call to Evangelism in Jesus Christ's Way. The prologue of this mission statement for the church says: "The Presbyterian Church (USA), in grateful response to the triune God, commits itself with other Christians to witness to God's grace and love in Jesus Christ. Together we will invite people of 'every tribe, tongue, people, and nation' to join us in turning to the living God." Bold New Plans for the PFF The PFF, a volunteer organization under the leadership of Rev. Harold Kurtz, is a Validated Mission Support Group of the PC(USA) and has been around for about 10 years. It promotes the cause of the unreached peoples within the church. All monies raised by the PFF go entirely to frontier mission work. Just recently the board of the PFF met and determined to double its operating budget in 1993 from the current $500,000 to $1 million. Such funds already go to some 26 projects around the world, everything from computers which "speak" Laotian to Kenyan evangelists and joint German-American mission among Kurdish people in Berlin. Tom Theriault, board member of the PFF, says,"We believe that the Presbyterian Frontier Fellowship is one of the bright spots in the future of the Presbyterian Church (USA). It's one thing that Presbyterians of many stripes...can rally around." A Yupik Harvest With the advent of glasnost, first contact between American and Soviet Yupiks came in 1988. Alaskan Airlines sponsored a Friendship Flight, which was followed by the traditional Yupik welcome dance. Much to the amazement of the Presbyterian elders who made the flight, the dance music was Jesus Loves Me! It turns out that a small Christian radio station in Alaska had been broadcasting half an hour a week in Yupik. Later, through the courtesies of the Alaska Rotary Club, Presbyterian pastor Dr. Willa Roghair, who just happened to be a Russian major in college, went to Siberia as a translator. There she met Igor Pavlov, a government official who invited Dr. Roghair to start a Presbyterian church among the Siberian Yupiks! Funding for the training of American Yupiks to evangelize their Soviet counterparts was obtained through the General Assembly of the PC(USA) when the Yukon Presbytery overtured to annex eastern Siberia! They didn't get the land but they did get the money. Now training and evangelism are in full swing. It's no wonder that the capital in that area of Siberia is named Providenia! A further tool of the PFF is the Presbyterian Global Prayer Digest. Readers of MF are familiar with the generic GPD, but for those who want to remain up to date on developments in the PC(USA), a Presbyterian version is available. It has the same inner core as the regular GPD, but the outer pages contain special interest articles and a letter each month from Rev. Harold Kurtz, director of the PFF. PCMS Advocates an Adopt-A-People Program This creative plan links Presbyterians with people groups which are without the gospel--both in the USA and abroad. The inclusion of the adoption of a local people group as well as a distant one makes this plan different from many denominations. In the plan, Presbyterians are encouraged to pick two peoples, one close by, the other overseas. After approval from the GMU, they make the Commitment to Share Good News and develop a strategy to fulfill that commitment. In the 20 months since its inception, 7 congregations have adopted peoples through this plan. The PCMS also provides resources and research on unreached peoples to the denomination. A quarterly update to 5500 readers keeps friends of the PCMS filled in on the latest Presbyterian frontier missions news. Perspectives for Presbyterians Latest Developements Finally, through the work of the PCMS and the San Gabriel Presbytery, two overtures were presented to the 1992 General Assembly of the denomination. These overtures were designed to expand the role of presbyteries in the selection and funding of missionary personnel. Rather than simply sending gifts to a central mission fund, these overtures will allow congregations to directly support missionaries they know personally. The General Assembly responded by urging that a task force develop and test the idea further. At the 1994 General Assembly, this task force will present a strategic plan to increase the number of PC(USA) personnel working around the world and the involvement of presbyteries in their support and nurture. One Presbyterian missionary veteran says, "This is one of the most profound changes in Presbyterian Mission in our generation." With all these forward steps in Presbyterian missions, world Christians everywhere have reason to rejoice. This mainline denomination has made great progress. It's great success in past efforts had created so large an overseas movement that efforts at frontier outreach had drastically declined. It has great potential, and other mainline denominations must now ask, "Where can we advance likewise?" For more information contact: Presbyterian Frontier Fellowship, 6146 N. Kerby Avenue, Portland, OR 97217, (503) 289-1865 Presbyterian Center For Mission Studies, 1605 Elizabeth Street, Pasadena, CA 91104, (818) 398-2468 Margaret Lyman is participating in the Serve Work Study Program here at the Center and is serving part time in the Mission Frontiers office. See page 29 for more information the Serve Work Study Program. 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