Subject: The business of faith (reg X'ian Proselytisation activities in
India, Published in Times of India, New Delhi)    The business of faith
7 Sep 2008, 0407 hrs IST, Amrita Singh ,TNN
(Published in the Sunday Times of India (at Page 17), New Delhi on
September 7, 2008)
   The commercial thrust has made the last decade one of the most
successful for the growth of Christianity in India. According to a
forecast by the World Religious Council, India's 25 million-strong
Christian population could balloon five-fold by 2050.

There was a time the Christian missionary spread the word of god in a
simple and direct way. He would step off a boat, make friends with
locals and after years of effort, count a sizable flock.

Cut to 2008 and it's a different scenario altogether. Church planting
agencies, as they are called, have taken over the evangelical role. They
ensure that growth targets are set and new churches built. There is
quantifiable growth. In the four years from 2003, 22 new International
Churches of Christ were built. The Adventists has concrete plans to
build 500 new churches too. The Presbyterian Church of south India,
which is funded by the UK-based Mission to the World, also has a goal of
500 new churches in the next decade.

The growth means the existing flock has to dig ever deeper into its
pockets because the new churches are funded partly by members and partly
by foreign donations. Senthil Joseph (not his real name), who goes to
church occasionally, says: "Even though I am not a regular, I have to
make donations for the new churches. In the last 10 years, since I moved
to Delhi, 10 new churches of my (Syrian Christian) sect have come up and
every time I have to pay a heavy donation."

Most Christian denominations use the name-and-shame method to force
their flock to donate generously. Joseph says: "The amount given is
published in the annual telephone directory of the community for every
one to see."

The commercial thrust has made the last decade one of the most
successful for the growth of Christianity in India. According to a
forecast by the World Religious Council, India's 25 million-strong
Christian population could balloon five-fold by 2050.

Church planting agencies have never been busier. These agencies are
described by the Indian Evangelical Mission as "specialists in taking
Christianity to places where it has no presence and training people to
establish new churches there."

One of the most effective church planting agencies working in India is
the US-based AD 2000 and Beyond Movement. It is impressively organized,
having mapped the whole of India by caste and identifying those most
likely to be receptive to their message. AD 2000 lists nine Indian
tribes as Priority-I, possibly because they are so poor they're deemed
most likely to convert.

The nine tribes identified by AD 2000 are: Bhilala, Binjhwari, Chero,
Kawar/Kamari, Lhoba, Majhwar, Panika, Shin or Sina, and Sikkimese
Bhotia. AD 2000 identifies thickly-populated, politically important and
moderately poor northern India as "the core of the core of the core".

In a sign of some of these church planting agencies' sense of purpose,
AD 2000 has drawn up detailed plans to target all of India's 75,000
postal pin codes with the ultimate goal of a church in each.

So, how do church planters work in the 21st century when the days of the
itinerant missionary are long gone? Helen, a missionary who has worked
among Bhils in Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh says the first step is to send
a reconnaissance team to the target area to find out if a church is
already under construction. The team would also need to study the area
and
understand its problems.

Armed with this basic information, modern missionaries are expected to
work out a sound socio-economic plan for the area. This could include
simple things to make the lives of locals better, such as starting a
school, a health centre, new self-help groups. It is only after a
minimum of five years of such groundwork that a Christian denomination
actually starts to
talk to local leaders about building a church.

The proposed church would initially be paid for by bigger ones in the
cities but it is expected to become self-supporting and entirely
locally-managed within 15 years. After that, it is time for the
missionary to move on and
adopt a new place.
timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/The_business_of_faith/articleshow/3453877.cms

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