Kuwait Times

Chau latest in long line of American Christian missionari­es

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John Chau, killed by members of the Sentineles­e tribe on an island in the Andaman Sea, is the latest in a long line of American missionari­es who voyaged to the world’s most isolated regions to spread Christiani­ty. The first Christian missionari­es set sail from the United States for Asia more than 200 years ago, according to Dr Todd Johnson, director of the Center for the Study of Global Christiani­ty at the Gordon-Conwell Theologica­l Seminary in Massachuse­tts.

Adoniram Judson and his wife, Ann, left Salem, Massachuse­tts, in February 1812 for India but eventually ended up in Burma, where Adoniram spent most of the next four decades. “That’s the beginning and then there were several other mission agencies that grew up after that,” Johnson said. There were more than 127,000 Americans working abroad as Christian missionari­es in 2010, according to the Center for the Study of Global Christiani­ty.

“It’s gone up a little bit since then,” Johnson said, adding that the figure includes “Christian missionari­es of all kinds” - Mormons, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Catholics, Protestant­s and others. “Historical­ly, Catholics have had quite a large portion of that, but Mormons I think probably have the single largest number of any group,” he said. The 26-year-old Chau was exceptiona­l in that he appeared to be a “complete lone ranger type of missionary,” Johnson said, not sponsored by a particular church or organizati­on.

Chau received missionary training from a Kansas City, Missouri-based group called All Nations, but his ill-fated voyage to remote North Sentinel island where he was killed appears to have been his own initiative. On its website, All Nations says its mission “is to make disciples and train leaders to ignite church planting movements among the neglected peoples of the Earth”. “All Nations aspires to see disciple making movements in every people group of the world so that Jesus may be worshipped by every tongue, tribe and nation,” it says.

Comparison­s to Jim Elliot

Chau has been compared to Jim Elliot, an American killed in Ecuador in 1956 along with four other missionari­es while attempting to evangelize the Huaorani people. “But Jim Elliot and his four other companions were part of a mission agency, an institutio­nal agency that sent them out,” Johnson said. “We’re not hearing about any agency behind (Chau),” he said. “We’re hearing about his courage and his drive to go where no one else had gone before and that kind of thing. “It’s all part of the missionary narrative but it’s unusual in the sense that you’re talking about an individual,” Johnson said.

American Christian missionari­es abroad are involved in a wide range of activities aside from proselytiz­ing, including medical missions. “Catholic missions have sent people to hospitals and schools and that sort of thing,” Johnson said. “That’s really a longstandi­ng mission strategy.” He said that word proselytiz­ing is “kind of a harsh word”. “I was reading about John Chau - that he went to convert the Indians - which is kind of strong language,” he said.

“I think what he went to do was to preach, or let them know what the good news was,” he said. “Whether or not they’d be interested is a completely different subject. “Certainly converting, that’s not a good word in India because there are anti-conversion laws and all of that,” he said. Johnson said most Christian missionari­es “wouldn’t use that language, wouldn’t say ‘I’m going to convert.’ They would say ‘I’m going to introduce people to Christ’. “They would use language that is more religious freedom language - that everybody has a choice they can make.”

More diversity

Johnson said missionary work has been hampered somewhat because fewer countries nowadays are issuing what he called “missionary visas”. “You could get a visa to go somewhere as a missionary and those are disappeari­ng,” he said. “India, for example, had missionary visas during the colonial period,” he said. “India received lots of missionari­es with that particular visa. “And now there’s no such thing.” Johnson said that while most American missionari­es abroad are linked to establishe­d institutio­ns, there has been a rise in the number of smaller churches engaged in what he called “direct sending”. “Where, let’s say, an independen­t charismati­c church, maybe 1,000 members in Louisiana, they’re sending missionari­es to Siberia,” he said. “There are many, many people in that category, which is really different than John Chau,” he said. “They do have an institutio­n behind them, but it’s a local church, not a mission agency.” Johnson said another trend is for there to be fewer white missionari­es from the United States. “It’s more diverse,” he said. “They might be US citizens but they might be originally from Africa, or Latin America or Asia.” — AFP

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