The Living Church

Year Article Type Limit by Author

The Living ChurchJuly 4, 1999Fr. Green: The Way Forward Is Through Evangelism by Bill Ferguson219(1) p. 8

"There's a dramatic shift going on in the Anglican Church with great growth in Africa and Asia while in America, the church continues to lose ground. The average person in the Anglican Communion is no longer white, well off and comfortable but Third World, black, poor, evangelical and almost certainly charismatic."

This was the observation of the Rev. Michael Green of Oxford, consultant on evangelism to the archbishops of Canterbury and York, in a keynote address at the Evangelism Congress '99 held June 3-6 at Ridgecrest Conference Center in North Carolina.

The conference was sponsored by the Brotherhood of St. Andrew and the Evangelism Office of the national Episcopal Church. Nearly 500 people from all over the U.S. participated in three days of worship, gospel music, noted speakers and workshops all dealing with aspects of evangelism.

Using Dickens' words, "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times," Fr. Green described the "best" as the growth of the church in the Third World, "80 to 90,000 becoming Christians every day - 20 percent in China." Against this, he related the statistics for the Episcopal Church over 10 years, "loss of a third of membership including 400,000 in the Decade of Evangelism."

He spoke of disunity, internal conflict and "single issue people" as contributing to the decline. But he was optimistic about the possibilities. Calling the congress "very wise," he said that the best defense is to advance, "and this congress is doing just that. There's no reason why you can't turn the tide through evangelism."

With the vision of church growth in Africa before them, the congress heard from the Most Rev. Emmanuel Kolini, Archbishop of Rwanda. He spoke of "mysterious" events in his land, the 1935 East African Revival which started in Rwanda, and of the 1994 genocide which swept his country.

"Ninety percent of Rwandese are supposed to be Christians," he said, yet terrible events happened. He witnessed killings in Uganda by Idi Amin's soldiers. And he said he struggled with the Christian way of forgiveness. Finally he decided, "by the grace of God I can do it."

The Rev. Franklin Reid, rector of St. Luke's Church, Bronx, N.Y., achieved rapid and rapt attention when he declared, "I bury more children than adults." He said "there is pain in the city," citing gangs, drugs and crime.

He sees the crying need for evangelism relating to the "something" people are looking for, the "something" they are coming to church to find. He urged his listeners to evangelize "by the working of God's Spirit."

The Very Rev. John Rodgers, Jr., former dean of Trinity Episcopal School for Ministry, chose 1 Peter 3:15 to emphasize the need for Christians to speak out about their beliefs. Peter was speaking of Christians being persecuted for the gospel's sake.

He said people are not allowed to speak out in many places such as Sudan, India and Islamic nations. "But we are protected by law, so be faint hearted no longer. Be a witness no matter the cost."