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In this issue:
Welcome to Integral Mission Issue Number 3!
a few housekeeping details if your new to Integral Mission
...
Feature Article
In our first issue, René Padilla heated things up with an article entitled Why Do People Hate Americans? Last month, Brian McLaren continued the conversation with a thoughtful and helpful response. Thanks to those of you who have engaged in the dialogue. I’ve found relatively few helpful venues for this type of discussion. We look forward to continuing it here. To that end, we offer in this month’s issue, the third item in this series: A letter from the US Conference for the World Council of Churches to the 9th Assembly of the World Council of Churches. In this brief but moving letter, U. S. church leaders thank the world council for their compassionate response to 911 and Katrina. They also comment on the role the U. S. has taken in this post 911 world. Read the letter.
Educational Article
Last month we introduced the introduction to a series of lectures on globalization delivered at Princeton at the end of 2005 by René Padilla. This month we offer the first lecture in its entirety. You can read it on the blog and offer your comments. This lecture along with two more and a bibliography have been added to the articles section of the website. They are well worth the time it will take to read them! To begin reading the first lecture,
Ministry Highlight
Ministerios Comunitarios or Community Ministries is a part of the Kairos Foundation network. They have long been a stellar example of integral mission for the church in Argentina. This month, Patrick Wimberly of Ecclesia Houston recounts his first-hand experience there and offers us the opportunity to join him in supporting Community Ministries as significant portion of their funding will be evaporating this June
Recommended Surfing
Have you discovered Common Dreams?

Welcome to the our second issue!

For roughly forty years, the term integral mission has been in popular use throughout Latin America to describe the multi-faceted, holistic approach to ministry that was the hallmark of the early church, is the mainstay of many churches and ministries in Latin America but is largely a foreign concept to evangelical Christians in North America. Of late, however, the movement has been gaining a hearing and even a foothold among some North American churches and ministries. It is our goal to see its propagation gain momentum.

To that end we are initiating the publication of a monthly e-newsletter. In these issues you will find:

  • Thoughtful and provocative articles on current issues by church leaders from around the world
  • A forum for dialogue between church leaders in North and South America
  • Practical information dealing with issues of poverty and injustice
  • Profiles of ministries doing the work of Integral Mission – ministries you can connect with and support
  • Practical information on the practice of integral mission in your own church or ministry context

If you are new to Integral Mission, below you will find a few housekeeping details. Otherwise, please enjoy issue#3!

In Jesus,

Jim Martin
Board President
Integral Mission

Housekeeping
If you would like to subscribe, please do so clicking here and filling out the short web-form.

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A letter from the US Conference for the World Council of Churches to the 9th Assembly of the World Council of Churches, Porto Alegre, Brazil 
Saturday 18 February, 2006

Grace to you and peace from God the Holy Trinity: Father, Son and Holy Spirit. As leaders from the World Council of Churches member communions in the United States we greet the delegates to the 9th Assembly with joy and gratitude for your partnership in the Gospel in the years since we were last in Harare. During those years you have been constant in your love for us. We remember in particular the ways you embraced us with compassion in the days following the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, and in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina just months ago. Your pastoral words, your gifts, and your prayers sustained us, reminding us that we were not alone but were joined in the Body of Christ to a community of deep encouragement and consolation. Even now you have welcomed us at this Assembly with rich hospitality. Know that we are profoundly grateful.

Yet we acknowledge as well that we are citizens of a nation that has done much in these years to endanger the human family and to abuse the creation. Following the terrorist attacks you sent “living letters” inviting us into a deeper solidarity with those who suffer daily from violence around the world. But our country responded by seeking to reclaim a privileged and secure place in the world, raining down terror on the truly vulnerable among our global neighbors. Our leaders turned a deaf ear to the voices of church leaders throughout our nation and the world, entering into imperial projects that seek to dominate and control for the sake of our own national interests. Nations have been demonized and God has been enlisted in national agendas that are nothing short of idolatrous. We lament with special anguish the war in Iraq, launched in deception and violating global norms of justice and human rights. We mourn all who have died or been injured in this war; we acknowledge with shame abuses carried out in our name; we confess that we have failed to raise a prophetic voice loud enough and persistent enough to deter our leaders from this path of preemptive war. Lord, have mercy...

Read entire letter and comment

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The Historical Development of Globalization
C. René Padilla

Globalization is a historical process. As such, it does not happen suddenly. In the case of present-day imperial globalization, it is the culmination of a process which started five centuries ago and that, throughout this period, has had different Western countries as protagonists and has affected “all other living societies, whether pre-civilizational or civilized” in different ways. My intention in this lecture is to show the connection between the first moment of imperial globalization and its  present-day moment. My claim is that, despite the very deep differences between these two historical moments, there is also a real continuity between them—a continuity which in fact makes of present-day globalization one of the greatest challenges to the Christian mission.

The Roots of Imperial Globalization
October 12, 1492, may be regarded as representing the beginning of the era of Western worldwide expansion. The “discovery” of America by Christopher (“the Christ-bearer”) Columbus was not merely an amazing feat of navigation but also the opening of a new world of bountiful treasures which in time provided the economic basis for Western development. The Genovese sailor, whom John A. Mackay described as “a mystic in no small degree” (1933:24), saw himself as sent by God to fulfill the prophecy in Isaiah 60.9: “For the coastlands shall wait for me, the ships of Tarshish first, to bring your children from far away, their silver and gold with them for the name of the Lord your God.” Therefore, according to Bartolomé de las Casas in his Historia de las Indias (Book 1, chapter 28; 1981:149), he offered, first to the king of Portugal and subsequently to King Fernando de Castilla and Queen Isabel de León, to discover “extensive lands, isles, and beautiful solid lands, very wealthy in gold, silver, and precious stones, and many people,” and to reach the eastern extremities of the Asian continent, including India and the kingdom of the Great Khan.      

The epic that followed Columbus’ accomplishment—the conquest of America—was marked by three ominous factors: greed, ethnocentrism, and religious justification...

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Community Ministries worth supporting (and a great place to visit!)
Patrick Wimberly

God is love. God takes up the cause of the weak and oppressed. What do those really mean for the church of Jesus Christ? Leading the way in answering that question with hands-on work is Community Ministries (CM) of Kairos Foundation in Buenos Aries. As a team of social workers, pastors, teachers, and other professionals, their work unfolds in three main arenas:

  • Training in planning, organizing, executing and evaluating their mission in their concrete situation.
  • Help in identifying and removing obstacles, and in recognizing and developing God-given resources for service to others.
  • Assistance in identifying problems and needs in the community, and in preparing and executing a plan of action in light of these problems and needs.

The reason I am writing to you is that CM’s largest contributor, Tearfund, recently redirected its funding to other ministries around the world.  What this means for Kairos is that there is a significant funding deficit. That’s where you and I come in. But first, let me give you a few pictures of CM’s work.

I recently had the privilege to spend eight days in Buenos Aires. I saw the work of CM firsthand.  As a pastor and member of the church in the U.S., I was humbled, to say the least, to see the Gospel alive in places where at first glance seemed hopeless. In support of these various communities and their creative efforts, Kairos was “giving a reason for the hope” we have in Christ.

There was no PowerPoint, wireless microphones, or elaborate stages; just a community of people coming together to break bread, enjoy fellowship, and support one another.  The little money they had helped feed the children on the weekends because they normally ate at school and their parents couldn’t afford to feed them. 

On a different night, I sat on the patio enjoying my new friends and their wonderful food; the believers in Acts 2 came to mind.  When they had excess, they gave, and when they had need, it was given.  This is what I saw happening firsthand in the barrios of Buenos Aries. I was humbled.  I experienced the Gospel in the barrios of Argentina in a way that I seldom do in the United States.  As seen in Christ’s teachings, there was simplicity in what they were doing, but the depth of insight and love was endless.

The best I can do is tell the stories of Christ work I experienced there and ask your help to keep this work alive through encouraging folks who have means to support this work.

I was thankful that CM’s reach touched places where I and my community could never touch as effectively. I would like to challenge you to seriously consider supporting the integral mission of Karios. With the recent loss of major funding, they need our help.

When I learned that the annual budget for CM is $36,800 (Which covers their work in three different provinces!) I could not help but think about the communities, organizations, churches, and individuals who could pull together their resources to easily ensure the work of CM this year and many years to come.  For $2450 per year ($200 per month) fifteen churches could fund an entire year of Community Ministries through CM.  If 20 churches pulled together it would only cost $150 per month. 

Here at Ecclesia Houston we believe the Gospel is at work Community Ministries and Kairos. We had a person in our community who we thought would be interested in the work happening through CM. We shared the vision and stories with this person and they have given a one-time gift of $5000. Please take some time to pray about how you can help keep this integral mission alive in South America.

Integral Mission is glad to serve as a conduit for giving to the ministries of Kairos. Contributing to Community Ministries is as easy as clicking here (or clicking the donate now button below) and filling out our secure web form. Your tax-deductible donation will be facilitated by Groundspring.org for a very small (3%) processing fee.

Thank You,
Patrick Wimberly
Community Pastor
Ecclesia Houston
DonateNow

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Common Dreams
The web is full of newsgroups and sites that aggregate news. Here we wanted to give a brief plug for one of them. CommonDreams.org is a "national non-profit citizens' organization working to bring progressive Americans together to promote progressive visions for America's future." (Text taken from the commondreams.org website.) Many of the board members at Integral Mission have found this site helpful we encourage you to check it out!

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all material © 2006 Integral Mission

Volume 1 issue 3
May 2006