Evangel Dean Basic Training Manual-English
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One veteran missionary, who has served in both U.S. and Brazilian cities, describes successful churches among the urban poor in this manner:
Churches . . . that used a “we-help-you-in-your-need” methodology were not winning the lower, working class. People were helped but the spiritual direction of their lives did not change . . . . [whereas] churches that lacked financial and earthly resources were filled with poor people, were led by barely literate lay preachers, and made hard demands on people. New members were expected to be faithful tithers, to wear clothes that conformed to a rigid dress code, to carry their Bibles to church, and to dedicate a large amount of time to worship services, healing services, home prayer meetings, street meetings, and outreach visitation. The churches that gave the most and expected the least were not growing, but those that gave the least material benefit and demanded the most were growing fastest. They demanded conversion from sin and preached that Christ had the power to make it happen, and that this power could be received though faith and prayer. ~ Charles D. Uken. “Discipling White, Blue-Collar Workers and Their Families.” Discipling the City: A Comprehensive Approach to Urban Mission , 2nd ed. Ed. Roger S. Greenway. Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1992. p. 180.
We honor both God and the poor when we respect them enough to believe that they will function as full-fledged disciples of Jesus Christ.
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