By James Dotson GLORIETA, N.M. (BP)--When Franklin Jackson (not his real name)
arrived in South Asia nearly 10 years ago, there were only 28 struggling
Christian churches in his area of responsibility -- a region packing the
population of the United States into an area the size of Montana. Today, despite overwhelming persecution of Christians and
suppression of overt evangelistic activity, more than 1,000 churches
have started in the past five years. Another 500-800 new churches are
anticipated this year. The secret, Jackson said, has been obedience to the strategy modeled
by Christ himself as he established his church. "I asked God to give me five people I could pour my life into,
and as I trained them they went out and trained others," Jackson
said, adding that he has never worked with more than five people at any
one time and has limited his work to training leaders. "It's just a commitment that the secret to church planting is
discipleship," he said. "We disciple people to be church
planters -- not (just) to be good Christians, but to be obedient to
Christ in the area of living out lives as church planters." Jackson, a missions strategist for the International Mission Board,
shared details of his work during "Jericho: A Missions Festival to
Change Your World," July 24-27 at Glorieta (N.M.) Conference
Center. As one of many IMB personnel working among "Last
Frontier" people groups where the gospel is suppressed, his name
has been changed and the exact location withheld to protect the work and
the national Christians. The churches on Jackson's field confront a culture that rejected
Christianity entirely after gaining independence from a colonial
government. Because of that history, Christians are hated -- and often
killed by extremists of dominant religions. More than 250 Christians,
including eight pastors, have been murdered for their faith in the past
six years, he said. Twenty-five were massacred at a recent Christian
wedding. "When someone says, 'I am going to become a Christian and
follow Christ alone,' they know it means that they could face a death
sentence, because there are those who have made it their life to kill
Christians," said Jackson. "But every time we have a martyr,
we have a new church." Soon after his arrival, Jackson said God helped him identify the
five key leaders who were to start that explosion of growth. His
strategy was for intense training, requiring an intense commitment. "My process with them was, 'I will train you, then your
responsibility is to teach others. If you do not teach others, I will
not teach you any more.' And that was from lesson to lesson,"
Jackson said. Each time he met with them, he would ask them to teach him
the previous lesson. "And if they could not teach it to me, I said, 'Well, it looks
like you haven't been teaching this. Let me review it with you, but two
strikes and you're out. I cannot waste my time with people who will not
teach what they're being taught.' And that whole process has mushroomed
from the six of us to more than 700 full-time workers." The principle of reproduction also is ingrained in every new church,
he said. "The primary purpose of the church is to worship Christ, but
that worship is involved in replicating themselves over and over again
as quickly as possible," he said. "And you're not seen as a
good church if you're not starting other churches. The definition of a
good church is not in how big they are, but in how many new churches
they start." To avoid the negative baggage of the colonial Christian influence,
the new churches were based only on the New Testament. All other models
were rejected. "We don't call ourselves Christians," he said. "We
refer to ourselves as devotees of Christ. ... We don't use those
traditional churchy words that we are all comfortable with." Even
the music, he said, is original. Nothing is translated from other
Christian cultures. The main thing taught is "our responsibility is to be obedient
to Christ," he said. "And the only question you have to ask
your self is, 'In this situation and in this circumstance, how must I be
obedient to Christ?' And out of that we let our churches grow and
go." The churches also are a shining example of how God can use
even the illiterate to do great things, Jackson said, including one
72-year-old man who is their leading church planter. "He's been a Christian for two years, and he's started 46
churches," Jackson said. "Reading and writing is not a
condition for being obedient to Christ." The churches currently operate 10 training centers, each adapting to
its area, Jackson said. Where people live in apartments, training
centers operate out of apartments. Where they live in grass huts,
training is done out of huts. And because of the constant threat of
persecution, they dare not leave a center in any one place for more than
two years. That also works to the benefit of church starters, because
new congregations tend to cluster around each center's location. About 169 Christian organizations have been enlisted to network with
the churches, he said, offering assistance with special conferences and
other support. Although the growth has been staggering, so is the overall
objective. "We still have 172,000 villages that do not have a
single Christian," he said. "And in order to reach 172,000
villages in 20 years -- that's our goal -- we've got to plant 10,000
churches per year over the next 17 years." That work now will be led almost entirely by national Christians.
Although other IMB personnel recently have been assigned to the area,
Jackson said he soon will relinquish his leadership role to one of his
earlier disciples. His efforts now are shifting toward implementing a
similar process in other areas of the world where challenges are just as
great. In order to reach all people with the gospel in our lifetime, he
said, "We must be at heart first and foremost planters of the
church of Jesus Christ." [Baptist Press 7 August 1998. Reproduced with permission]
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