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ASSIST News Service (ANS) -
PO Box 609, Lake Forest, CA 92609-0609 USA Saturday, September 29, 2012 Orality: Changing the Face of Missions around the World Timeless Principles for Making Disciples Anywhere, with any People By Jerry Wiles, President Emeritus, Living Water International Special to ASSIST News Service HOUSTON, TX (ANS) -- How could something as simple as telling stories and asking questions bring such transformation to individuals, families and communities? The answer to this question is being demonstrated every day in many parts of the world. It’s not complicated; God is interested in His people understanding and applying some basic, but very important, Kingdom principles in our lives.
Jesus had been teaching a large crowd of people all day. Some of His teaching had been about “The Parable of the Sower," also in Mark 4. In that parable we learn about the different kinds of soil, how they represent the different conditions of people’s hearts, and how they respond differently to the seed of God’s Word. In that same teaching session, He shared some principles of the Kingdom of God. Jesus taught that the Kingdom of God is like a mustard seed--it is a very small seed, but produces a large plant. He also taught that the Kingdom of God is like yeast--a very small amount of yeast can produce a large lump of dough. People usually come to the conclusion that little things can make a big difference.
Later, when Jesus was getting into the boat to leave, the man begged Jesus to let him go with Him. Jesus told him he couldn’t go with Him. He told him to go back to his home town, to his people and tell them what great things that Jesus had done for him and how He had mercy on him. So the story tells us that the man went away and began to tell in the Decapolis (a region of ten cities) what great things the Lord had done for him and how He had mercy on him. And all the people were amazed. The next time Jesus was in the region of Decapolis, there was a gathering of more than 4,000 people. This story and the others in the story-set bring amazing insights and understanding into the ways of God. A great lesson from this story is how one person can be so mightily used to impact many others. It also illustrates how differently people respond to Jesus and the Word of God. While the man who had been delivered wanted to go with Jesus, the herdsmen who were tending the sheep wanted Him to leave the region.
Several years ago, Robert Coleman wrote a book titled, “The Spark That Ignites,” it was later revised and republished as “The Coming World Revival.” God’s Story, with the anointing of the Holy Spirit, really does ignite a fire in people’s hearts. It’s that burning passion to share with others the wonderful redemptive Story of Jesus that can spread like wildfire. However, it is important that the truth of the Word of God be communicated in such a way that people can hear, understand, respond to and then pass it on to others. That’s where Orality is so significant. It makes the message available in a way that can go anywhere, anytime and to any people. An important thing to remember, however, is that without passion and the working of the Holy Spirit, the methods, techniques and strategies will not produce lasting fruit that remains and reproduces. Followers of Jesus in Africa, Asia, Latin America, and even the United States and the Western World, become excited and energized to share with others when they realize and experience the power of God’s Story and the working of the Holy Spirit. Not everyone responds in the same way. Understanding the lessons from the Parable of the Sower is liberating. We should recognize that the Seed (of the Word of God) tests the soil of the hearts of people who hear. When we sow the seed of God’s Story in a way that people can receive, understand, respond to and reproduce, it takes root and transforms lives--some 30, some 60 and some 100 times what was sown.
These questions need to be answered, not based on some denominational or institutional tradition, but based on what we learn from Jesus and the Scriptures. Kingdom principles are timeless and universal. They can work anytime, anywhere and in the lives of anyone. God’s truths and Kingdom principles are not limited to any culture, time period or worldview. As a result of our spiritual union with Christ, He can reproduce His life in and through each of us. He is the ultimate disciple maker and desires for every follower of His to be fruitful and multiply. So, whether it is under a tree, in an auditorium, at work or school or in the marketplace, Orality methods make it possible to spread the Good News and make disciples every day, wherever we happen to be. One of the encouraging developments that is taking place in the Church world today is the recognition that we in the Western World, and especially in the United States, can learn from what God is doing in the Global South and in the Oral Cultures around the world. When we think about church life, disciple making and reproducibility, many are discovering more fruitful models in places outside the United States. Smaller, simpler and cheaper models are working better than the big, complex and expensive models many are seeking to implement. Congregations that meet under trees, sit on rocks and logs and worship in spirit and truth are more reproducible than the large buildings with all the high tech concert-style meetings that may cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. Recent research shows that behavior change and character transformation take place faster and more effectively by orality methods than literate means. Also, when people with a biblical understanding and an awareness of what is going on around the world think through the important issues, they normally come to the right conclusions. The following are some of the important questions to ponder: * What does a person need to know to come into a relationship with the Lord? Other questions that we at LWI use in our training are: * What is a church, from our understanding of Scripture, not from some tradition that has developed over the past 2,000 years? When we ask ourselves the right questions, we discover that many times we need to rethink, unlearn and relearn many assumptions that have hindered the advancement of the Kingdom of God and the growth of the Church. In his new book, Miraculous Movements, Jerry Trousdale has a chapter titled “Simple Churches, Dramatic Transformation, Rapid Replication.” In that chapter he talks about two kinds of churches: * Elephant churches have lots of programs, activities, and people. We need churches like this, but they are very slow to multiply, just like two elephants that take two years to produce offspring. * Rabbit churches are small, able to hide in plain sight, and multiply very quickly. Two rabbits can theoretically produce more than one hundred million rabbits in three years. I was recently reminded again how seemingly little things can have a big impact. At a conference with mission leaders from around the world I reconnected with a pastor from Africa who had attended an LWI orality training workshop two years earlier. This pastor, who is also a church planter and mentor to other pastors, told me he had trained 200 pastors with the orality methods he had learned in our workshop. It is encouraging to see how some people who have open and receptive hearts, receive the Word of God and reproduce and multiply its impact.
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