{"id":8504,"date":"2019-01-01T01:00:11","date_gmt":"2019-01-01T08:00:11","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.asiamissions.net\/?p=8504"},"modified":"2018-12-27T17:52:47","modified_gmt":"2018-12-28T00:52:47","slug":"looking-for-gospel-laborers-dont-forget-the-university","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/ewcenter.org\/?p=8504","title":{"rendered":"LOOKING FOR GOSPEL LABORERS? DON\u2019T FORGET THE UNIVERSITY!"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>For the last decade I have had the privilege of pastoring an ordinary church with an extra-ordinary opportunity. Beijing International Christian Fellowship began about 40 years ago and now 20 congregations grow in our massive capital city. BICF is an interdenominational church with members from almost 100 nations, one of the largest international churches in the world. About 15 years ago the elders of BICF had the foresight to plant a church amidst the many universities in the northwest of the city \u2013 BICF ZGC &#8211; Zhongguancun. When their founding pastor, a friend of ours, was returning home we were invited to come and serve. My wife and I had served the International Christian Fellowship in Almaty, Kazakhstan for a decade at that point. As we considered this new call, a friend in Almaty said, \u201cMark, Beijing is the new Rome!\u201d When I heard that, I thought: \u201cWell, I guess we better go!\u201d<br \/>\nBeijing is rapidly growing into one of the world\u2019s most dynamic areas for diverse international campus ministry. It is home to two of the world\u2019s top universities, with 47 universities in Beijing accepting international students. As China, spurred on by rapid economic growth, has risen to prominence in the global marketplace, students have flocked to Beijing to study Chinese, coming just for a summer or semester abroad, or enrolling in full degree programs. It is one of the top destinations for international students studying abroad with over 70,000 international students at present. The nations have come to Beijing, and BICF-ZGC has been established under God as a light that potentially shines into every corner of the world.<br \/>\nLong ago Nebuchadnezzar sought to extend Babylon\u2019s global footprint by enlisting the brightest and best from around his world for service. We are witnessing something similar in Beijing, China today. The brightest and best international students from far away nations are here to study in China\u2019s universities. Students from literally every inhabited continent come to Beijing. They leave local communities, family, and childhood friends, and enter a world where they may have no relatives or friends for hundreds or thousands of miles. For some students, this may even be their first time living independently; away from home.<br \/>\nJust as the Lord God had a purpose bigger than Nebuchadnezzar\u2019s, now He has a grand kingdom purpose for many who will again scatter from here to be leaders. BICF ZGC has a \u201cworking relationship\u201d with China. They pay to bring students here to study, we evangelize and disciple them! BICF-ZGC is a registered international fellowship and openly meets with approval.<br \/>\nMany find, follow, and bear fruit for the Lord Jesus Christ in our BICF ZGC, and we are hearing great things about their impact as they return to the ends of the earth.<br \/>\nInternational students are at a key point in their life, open to re-evaluating what they believe and so may be more open to the gospel than at any other point in life. BICF-ZGC has many cultures, languages and nationalities already represented in their five congregations, so naturally members connect with a very wide range of students outside the fellowship.<br \/>\nLike any ministry, we face a number of challenges<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>Number, cultural and religious diversity of international students is immense<\/li>\n<li>High turnover of students \u2013 some are here for just one semester<\/li>\n<li>Certain restrictions on size and contexts for group meetings<\/li>\n<li>Diversity of doctrine, usage of the Bible and church culture<\/li>\n<li>False teaching and nominalism<\/li>\n<li>Language and culture barriers<\/li>\n<li>Cultural stress and superiority and inferiority complexes<\/li>\n<li>Students geographically scattered throughout this massive city<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>When I arrived I learned the motto of ZGC &#8211; \u201cGathering, Growing, Going.\u201d This catchy phrase helps us embrace the pain of transience as a ministry opportunity.<br \/>\nGathering \u2013 People from many nations gather together to worship and serve the Lord Jesus Christ throughout BICF. We have students from about 70 nations and probably as many denominations! Each Sunday we preview the day those from \u2018every tongue, tribe, people, and nation\u2019 will gather before Him. He is the Chief Gatherer and He enlists us to bring people into the joy of His family. On Sundays we\u2019re in a hotel ballroom. During the week we gather in dorm rooms, apartments, restaurants, parks \u2013 our Father owns this city! As we each share some of our time, talents, and treasures we see Him do great things for the glory of His name.<br \/>\nGrowing \u2013 Jesus invites us into a life-transforming journey with Him &#8211; He\u2019s given His Word, Spirit, and family. He is making us true \u2018living letters\u2019 for our lost world. The message of the Cross challenges this world. But a new world has been born in Christ\u2019s resurrection.<br \/>\nGoing \u2013 Jesus commands us to \u201cmake disciples\u201d \u2013 from every corner of this city and into every nation. He holds \u201call authority in heaven and earth.\u201d In ZGC we learn more about going with Him day by day so that we might serve Him around the world year after year. BICF is not their final home. It is not anyone\u2019s final home. We are preparing people for their next assignment, because everyone is \u201cGoing.\u201d Whether we go to another city or the Heavenly City, we want to be ready. ZGC is both a landing place and a launching pad. We want our people to \u201chit the ground running\u201d as vibrant, Spirit-filled, God worshippers and witnesses wherever they next land.<br \/>\nWe cannot keep our members \u2013 about a third leave every year &#8211; but we can strive for them to leave with a deep lifelong Gospel imprint for the glory of His Name. \u201cSo neither he who plants nor he who waters is anything, but only God who gives growth\u201d (1 Corinthians 3.7).<br \/>\nOur vision is \u201cTo present every international university student in Beijing mature in Christ by proclaiming him, admonishing and teaching them with all wisdom (Colossians 1.28). We yearn to see international students convicted by the gospel and trusting in Christ, living out the gospel in their Beijing context, sent as biblically trained, godly, mature graduates to be influencers for the gospel in their families, communities, nations and throughout the world, and for our church to be known in Beijing as a place where international students are loved, welcomed and can learn Christ.\u201d Over 1,000 people take part in the BICF-ZGC community. Services and small groups are conducted in English, Korean, Mandarin, Japanese and Indonesian. There is an Africa Connect Fellowship gathering African students together, as well as various on-campus small groups meeting regularly.<br \/>\nInternational students are strategic in reaching the nations with the Gospel: they interact on a daily basis with teachers, classmates, language partners, employers (many international students teach English or take other part-time jobs), and friends. International students are also highly mobile. After a limited stay in Beijing (as little as 6 weeks), they move elsewhere or return home for jobs or further training. If we share the life of Christ with the international student community, that sharing can have an exponential effect on the world as these talented students build their careers and relationships around the globe.<br \/>\nOur church, in the shadow of many universities, is oriented to the academic year. We have a big \u201cFall push\u201d and almost as big a \u201cSpring push.\u201d There is no sign for our church posted anywhere. We do have a website. Our main \u2018advertisement\u2019 is the witness of our members. Students bring their classmates and workers bring their colleagues. Many times people far from home are looking for some \u2018foreign familiarity.\u2019 People who might have walked away from their church at home are often willing to check us out. Putting some tasty food in the \u2018trap\u2019 really helps!<br \/>\nEvery congregation around the globe is a gathering of saints and sinners. But those lines are often etched more deeply in an international church (I.C.). Some prodigals who have found themselves in a far-away land with a few extra coins in their pocket have begun to do things they hope their Father will not discover. Some tender hearts have brushed against really lost people for the first time. And now they are more zealous to confirm their own faith and convey it to others. Some have lost the secure footing of the familiar, far from the Jesus of their home church and family; now they want to fully embrace Him as their own.<br \/>\nInternational Churches around the world are making an invaluable contribution to the church\u2019s mission to make disciples of every nation. Around the world, God is using International Churches to sow seeds of the gospel of Jesus Christ on the frontiers of lostness. Leaders in an I.C. must deal with people who are struggling with new tasks, strange customs and neighbors, missing friends, families, and foods, wondering about questions they have never considered, amidst the frustrations of gadget problems, money worries, and tummy troubles. These life-challenges often prepare our I.C. congregations to be like the one Peter met in the home of Cornelius, which said, \u201cNow therefore we are all here in the presence of God to hear all that you have been commanded by the Lord\u201d (Acts 10.33). God make us ready!<br \/>\nEvery Fall and Spring, when most of our new folks arrive, we have a several week \u2018Welcome to Beijing\u2019 program following our Sunday services. Each Sunday newcomers are invited out for lunch with longer term members and we hope to connect them with our many small groups. The church also produces a Welcome to Beijing e-file with language tips, maps, lists of restaurants, government offices, and other information that would be of interest to new expatriate residents. During this month we will have a program with short talks on various aspects of city life \u2013 riding buses and subways, shopping on the internet, renting dock-less bikes, and other practical tips. This is a well-received program by people of different faiths and no faith.<br \/>\nThe joyful surprises of Sunday morning are wonderful in any church. Anticipating who will come and what will happen is way beyond what our imagination can conjure up. Funny how that person for whom you have been crafting that sermon all week never seems to make it! But, as promised, the Lord Jesus arrives in the midst of His gathered ones.<br \/>\nThe greeting time becomes a geography lesson! Members rush to meet visiting country-mates from the other side of the globe, only to find they\u2019re from the same town, or church, or sometimes even the same family! That lonely nonbeliever who feels so alone in your city, who would never dream of visiting a church in their homeland, dares to come. A traveling seminary professor stealthily enters the assembly, then kindly corrects your exegesis as he bids you farewell. Muslims, Buddhists, Marxists, and Hindus take the chance to do what they have secretly wanted to do, but would never dare do at home &#8212; visit a Christian church! And then there is that heartfelt handshake from a dear saint who says with deep gratitude, \u201cWhen I left home, I never dreamed I would find a church I could attend in this place. I am so glad you are here!\u201d \u201cThus says the Lord GOD: Though I removed them far off among the nations, and though I scattered them among the countries, yet I have been a sanctuary to them for a while in the countries where they have gone.\u201d (Ezekiel 11.16)<br \/>\nPassing the collection plate around a hall of students has not gathered enough to make me a prosperity preacher. Many give generously (I don\u2019t see the books, and don\u2019t want to!), but I know we run a lean mean machine. Our only full time salaried employee is our valiant administrator, who does an amazing job. We pay a blistering amount to gather in a hotel the government approves of in close proximity to the students\u2026location, location, location! This means we are reliant on lots of volunteers.<br \/>\nAnd they do volunteer! We are a fully operational church of about 500, plus 100 under 10 who are happily thriving in a great kid\u2019s program. Recruiting, training, empowering, managing, troubleshooting, and starting the cyle all over again is our constant routine.<br \/>\nWe take the biblical standards for Deacons and Elders very seriously. We are just glad that Paul did not set a firm age limit. Our leaders, like our congregation, are young. We are thankful they strive to \u201cset the believers an example\u201d (1 Timothy 4.12). We miss the stability that older, longer term members bring to a church, but we are not lacking for zeal. Our members often marvel at how they are never allowed to \u201clead, preach, touch the sound board, or count the offering\u201d back home. If they did not do it in our church it would not get done.<br \/>\nA common misconception about international students in China is that instruction is all in Chinese. While most instruction is indeed in Chinese, many students can do their studies entirely in English. Throughout China a staggering 6,870 tertiary programs are offered in English. For example in Beijing alone there are 17 universities offering 77 English-medium science-related programs (22 bachelor, 34 masters).<br \/>\nA second myth is that all international students speak English, so ISM means ministry in English. This is not true. As can be seen from the list of the top 10 sending countries (below), many international students don\u2019t speak English. For example, Thai, Russian, Japanese and Kazakh students typically don\u2019t have English, and many Francophone African students do not either. Many students study Chinese intensively for one year, then proceed with further studies in their discipline in Chinese.<br \/>\nAs political and economic ties strengthen between many African nations and China, China has offered many top African students full scholarships for undergraduate and graduate studies. Many students from North America, Europe, Australia, and South America come for semester or year abroad programs, often as part of a gap year before going to work or college, or to continue language classes begun in their undergraduate years.<br \/>\nThere is also a notable population of Southeast Asian students: Singaporeans, Malaysians, Indonesians, Filipinos, students from Macau, and more. Russian and South Korean student populations are noteworthy. Russian-speaking students, due to the close proximity of China to Russia and the former Soviet republics, are common.<br \/>\nSouth Korean student populations are very prominent as well, with many students coming to study at Chinese colleges as a close and cheap alternative to the Korean university system. Due to China\u2019s relationship with more isolated near neighbors, there is also a notable number of students from these nations studying in Beijing.<br \/>\nAll those in our I.C. share one of the main characteristics that describe the New Testament church: they are pilgrims, wanderers, and strangers in a foreign land. Abraham, who held a promise he never fully obtained in life, is the father of our faith. And it was those rare opportunities of hearing God\u2019s voice, about ten times in a hundred years; that kept Abraham pressing on.<br \/>\nWhen Abraham took a ten-year detour in Haran on his trek from Ur to the Promised Land, God called him again. When he and Sarah cooked up shenanigans \u2013 twice \u2013 that almost compromised her dignity, God spoke with correction. When Abraham humbly allowed his upstart nephew Lot to choose the seemingly better land, God spoke with consolation. When Abraham doubted whether God would ever keep His promises, God took him outside to count the stars. When Abraham lacked a symbol to remember the covenant, God spoke and gave a sign of circumcision. When Abraham understandably wanted the best for his son Ishmael, God clarified His sovereign plan. When Abraham waved a knife over the head of his beloved son, God stopped him and commended faith and obedience. That might have been the last time Abraham heard God\u2019s voice, and the day he \u201csaw Jesus and rejoiced!\u201d<br \/>\nWe have the great responsibility of helping God\u2019s people hear His voice each week. Obviously we don\u2019t have the same omniscient insight into their needs as they journey, and each person is at a different place in the trek. But the Lord precisely ministers by His Word and Spirit in the hearts of all His children through us: \u201c\u2026you have heard about him and were taught in him, as the truth is in Jesus\u201d (Ephesians 4.21).<br \/>\nDavid Adeney said that hidden cultural prejudice is as obvious as garlic on our breath. We need to try to peel away our cultural appendages from our Bibles. There is nothing I can do about being a white American male \u2013 unpopular as that might be in the world today \u2013 but I can strive so that the only \u201cstumbling block\u201d in my practice and preaching be Jesus Christ and Him crucified.<br \/>\nBut I know that I fail in many many ways that I never even notice. Cultural anthropologist Jacob Loewen said the global Church will more clearly understand the Bible when it is exegeted by believers from all nations. Being part of an I.C. moves us closer to that goal. This opens the very important topic of our cultural viewpoint as preachers.<br \/>\nNone of us ever delivers a \u2018purely Biblical\u2019 sermon. The fact that we have chosen to speak in English, from an English translation of the Bible, in a three-point thirty-minute discourse conveys a truckload of our own cultural suppositions. We instinctively know this any time we preach anywhere, but this is also greatly enhanced when as we gaze out to faces from around the globe. When the \u201cgreat multitude\u2026from every nation, from all tribes and peoples and languages\u201d gathers before the throne of God, their song will not be from The Beatles, Barcelona F.C., or even the latest iPhone! As we well know, they will cry with loud voices, \u201cSalvation belongs to our God who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb.\u201d (Revelation 7.9,10)<br \/>\nThe biggest challenge in an I.C. is that if you ever get the mix right, it will change next week! Someone has rightly described I.C. ministry as trying to help someone on the down escalator as you pass them by on the one going up. One quick touch is all you get sometimes. Just when you finally get an awesome worship leader, a faithful, reliable team of Elders, and small groups where lives are being changed: somebody gets sick, businesses merge, economies collapse, students graduate, visa rules change, and that wonderful ministry tumbles like a house of cards.<br \/>\nIt hurts to be pilgrims &#8211; a constant work in progress &#8211; aliens and strangers. Sometimes we ask why this era of salvation history is not more like the finished kingdom the prosperity preachers promise. But then, even as we ask the question, an even better worship leader arrives, more Elders line up, and small groups pop up that you don\u2019t even know about! It really is His church. He knows best how to lead and equip it \u2013 because He bought it with His blood &#8211; and He will bring it to completion.<br \/>\nPhil Jones has recently written some excellent articles that give more helpful information about the unique opportunities of reaching students for Christ and His Kingdom in China.<br \/>\nhttps:\/\/www.chinasource.org\/resource-library\/author\/phil-jones<br \/>\nMany Christians have been informed of the deep spiritual needs within China, and ministry organizations have responded with prayer, passion, sending ministry teams and resources. Those of us on the ground recognize the tremendous potential of the local church, but also see unique opportunities in the foreign student population in China.<br \/>\nDo you want to reach the far corners of the earth? Maybe the Lord of the Harvest has put some Gospel laborers on a University campus near you.<\/p>\n<p>=========================<br \/>\n<em><strong>Mark Frederick Blair<\/strong><\/em><br \/>\n<em><strong>markblair@bicf.org<\/strong><\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>Mark Frederick Blair, is the pastor of Beijing International Christian Fellowship, Zhong Guang Cun. In 1983, he obtained a Th.M. in Missiology from Westminster Theological Seminary, PA, USA. He is also a mission worker of Pioneers, Orlando, FL<\/em><\/p>\n<p><span class=\"share-link-wrapper share-link-button share-link-button-green\"><a href=\"http:\/\/ewcenter.org\/?ibsa=share&id=8504\" class=\"share-link\" id=\"share-link-66180944191\" onclick=\"iBeginShare.handleLink(event);return false;\">Share<\/a><script type=\"text\/javascript\">var el = document.getElementById('share-link-66180944191');el.params = {title: 'LOOKING FOR GOSPEL LABORERS? DON\u2019T FORGET THE UNIVERSITY!', link: 'http:\/\/ewcenter.org\/?p=8504', skin: 'blue', content: 'http:\/\/ewcenter.org\/?ibsa=get_content&id=8504'};<\/script><\/span><\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>For the last decade I have had the privilege of pastoring an ordinary church with an extra-ordinary opportunity. Beijing International Christian Fellowship began about 40 years ago and now 20 congregations grow in our massive capital city. BICF is an interdenominational church with members from almost 100 nations, one of the largest international churches in &#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"ngg_post_thumbnail":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[84],"tags":[173],"class_list":["post-8504","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-advance","tag-173"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"http:\/\/ewcenter.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/8504","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"http:\/\/ewcenter.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"http:\/\/ewcenter.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/ewcenter.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/ewcenter.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=8504"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"http:\/\/ewcenter.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/8504\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":8544,"href":"http:\/\/ewcenter.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/8504\/revisions\/8544"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"http:\/\/ewcenter.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=8504"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/ewcenter.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=8504"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/ewcenter.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=8504"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}