News
Wire Story

Rainbow Ministry: Summit Equips Leaders for Ethnic Outreach

Religious organizations targeting immigrant populations seek to make the church an embassy.

Though English was the group’s common tongue, the service at the National Ethnic Workers’ Summit at Biola University near Los Angeles started with a prayer in Spanish and later gave way to the lively tones of an Andean flute.

“The Holy Spirit is bringing to us across the entire globe,” Fuller Theological Seminary Professor Charles Van Engen said earlier in the day. The closing session seemed tangible proof of the professor’s words.

Drawing more than 500 people over three days in late April, the summit was sponsored by the Ethnic America Network, a group of evangelical Christian leaders concerned with the challenges and opportunities of the mushrooming ethnic diversity in the United States. The network belongs to Mission America (MA), a broad coalition of evangelical churches and church organizations. It works with groups that “consider themselves immigrants,” according to Corkie Haan of MA.

“Our purpose was to get as many people working in the same area together so we could get to know each other,” said Nick Venditti, international director of the Des Moines, Iowa-based Institute of Theology by Extension and a member of the summit’s organizing committee.

“It’s to connect,” said Allen Belton, so “people know who is doing ethnic work and in a way that ethnics can relate. So many times, the intention is to get the word out, but it’s done in a fashion that is culturally insensitive.”

Belton, who is director of the Department of Urban and Global Mission at University Presbyterian Church in Seattle, cited a unique dimension of the summit: equipping evangelical workers for ministry who are themselves members of ethnic minority groups.

Russell Begaye, summit chairman and head of the multiethnic church-planting unit of the Southern Baptist Convention’s North American Mission Board, said workers who are minorities don’t have to worry much about building cultural bridges. But within their own group, he said, they are often held to a difficult standard, with the community scrutinizing the slightest hypocrisy in these bearers of what is often an unusual message in their culture.

The summit’s numerous workshops were designed to provide help for ministries that meet the needs of ethnic groups. “It’s not just sharing God’s word with them; it’s friendship,” Don Apgar said of his work as a regional mobilizer with International Students Inc. (ISI).

Headquartered in Colorado Springs, Colorado, ISI matches international university students across the country with “friendship partners” recruited in evangelical churches near the students’ schools.

Asked how he felt about Christian attempts to evangelize ethnic populations, Orange County Muslim leader Hussam Ayloush said, “I don’t see a major problem if it comes with good intentions.” Hussam is executive director of the southern California chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations.

For Fuller Seminary’s Van Engen, evangelicals must present the Christian church as an “embassy,” a safe haven where people of varied backgrounds put aside conflict, even if they don’t abandon their particularity. “This is not multiculturalism. This is not cultural relativism,” he said. “It’s a completely new reality.”

Copyright © 2001 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere

The Ethnic America Network site has information about the network, its sponsoring organizations, and its conferences.

Ethnic Harvest has photos from the summit and loads of demographic information and other resources.

International Students Inc‘s site offers stories from students who’ve been in the program and other information about the organization.

Mission America has a bare-bones site.

Also in this issue

Solitary Refinement: Evangelical assumptions about singleness still need rethinking.

Cover Story

Solitary Refinement

Lauren F. Winner

Schools: School Fights Christian Athletes Club

Charles Adamson

Quotations to Stir Mind and Heart

Richard A. Kauffman

Conservation: Protecting Bald Eagles and Babies

John E. Silvius

Sudan: No Greater Tragedy

Jeff M. Sellers

Resisting Relevancy

Significance in a Small Package

Resisting Church Divorce

Richard Mouw

Merchants of Cool

"Education: Reading, Writing, Reform"

Corrie Cutrer

Health Fraud: Health Ministry in Receiership

Chuck Fager

Investor Fury: Elderly Investors Target Accountant

Chuck Fager

Briefs: North America

Wild Child: How Bad Is Child Care for Kids?

Christianity Today Editorial

Few to Receive AIDS Medicines

Ecumenical News International

Flying Unfriendly Skies

Deann Alford

Briefs: The World

Malaysia: Muslim Leader Appeals to Evangelicals

Anil Stephen

Nigeria: Teens 'Rescued' from Muslim Marriages

Deann Alford

Ecumenism: Pope Apologizes

Ecumenical News International

Does God Know Your Next Move?

Does God Know Your Next Move?

Christopher A. Hall and John Sanders

Does God Know Your Next Move?

Does God Know Your Next Move?

Does God Know Your Next Move?

Counteroffensive on RU-486

Wire Story

Indictments: Indictments Handed Down

Associated Baptist Press

Wire Story

Islam Muslims Report Steady Growth

Religion News Service

Review

Three Chords and the Truth

Steve Rabey

The Man Who Ignited the Debate

A Singular Mission Field

Margaret Feinberg

Surf Here Often?

Amber L. Anderson

Kissing Nonsense Goodbye

Rob Marus

Does God Know Your Next Move?

Chris Hall and John Sanders

Where Do We Go from Here?

Chris Hall and John Sanders

Wire Story

Presbyterians Launch ’Confessing Movement’

Religion News Service

Bush's Prolife Strategy Questioned

Sheryl Blunt

Basic Buddhism

James A. Beverley

Weighed Down by Karmic Debt

James A. Beverley

Blood and Tears in Tibet

James A. Beverley

Hollywood's Idol

James A. Beverley

Mind Over Skepticism

John G. Stackhouse

The Genesis of Our Woes

Martin Hengel

Revisiting Mt. Carmel

Ronald J. Sider

Putting Faith Back in Public Service

Ronald J. Sider

Straight Outta Dharamsala

Letters

View issue

Our Latest

Wonderology

Fault Lines

Am I bad or sick?

News

Utah Flocks to Crusade Event at Campus Where Charlie Kirk Was Killed

Evangelicals take the stage for worship and altar calls in the Mormon-majority state.

God Loves Our Middling Worship Music

Songwriting might be the community-building project your church needs right now.

Black Greek Life Faces a Christian Exodus

Alyssa Rhodes

Believers are denouncing historical fraternities and sororities that have been beacons of progress.

The Just Life with Benjamin Watson

Jasmine Crowe-Houston: Love and Feed Your Neighbor

Reframing hunger as a justice issue, not charity.

Which Topics Are Off Limits at Your Dinner Table?

Christine Jeske

A Christian anthropologist explains why we should talk about hard things and how to do it.

Are the Public Schools Falling Apart?

We need Christians to engage thoughtfully in local schools. That starts with understanding the problems.

Public Theology Project

The Church Sexual Abuse Crisis Should Prepare Us for the Epstein Files

The path to justifying predatory behavior often follows the same seven steps. We can respond differently.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube