Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Missions of the Church of the Nazarene

Evangelical Protestantism re eithery began with John Wesley, arguably one of the nearly charismatic, thoughtful and persuasive of the new brand of preacher appearing in America in the 18th century. The Methodist movement was build about an idea directly opposed to the Calvinist concept of pre-destination. What Methodism centered on was the idea that anyone could be saved. But, as that concept was Arminian, that salvation is contingent only through and through Grace, and that grace could not be earned through acts of humanity.John Wesley introduced and championed the idea that it was possible to elevate the human heart and mind, through communion, postulation and spiritual meditation, to a state of saviourian Perfection. At the yield of the 20th century, in addition to wholly of the other fundamental changes in society including the industrial revolution, the rise of American power in the realness, and the overthrow of sla truly and the pacification of the southerly, religi on and religious belief had again shape a central part of American life.Into this flux, and in an effort to recess the growing crisis of conflicting faiths and an increasing splintering of Methodism, a unifying religion appeared. Combining all of the Methodist Pentecostal denominations and the Holiness consummate of Christ and five other denominations, the perform of the Nazarene emerged under(a) the combined umbrella of Harding and the Holiness Movement neither of which had been combined previously on much(prenominal) large scale. The new church of the Nazarene, which combined churches in Europe, North and South America began expanding while simultaneously absorbing other holiness churches and upon very active missional that continues today. It is the purpose of this paper to present the state of the church of the Nazarene and how its missionary history helped it to continue to grow and expand into the ordinal century.The Nazarene perform missions ask, historically, placed themselves directly in the center of crises. It is no coincidence that all of the denominations that came together to form the church building of the Nazarene were missionary churches. At the beginning, the Nazarenes had 52 churches with 3,827 members, while the Pentecostals numbered 47churches with 2,371 members. The union made a combined list of 99 churches and 6,198 members,1.Hardings message was that while deity had chosen to give every human being a trusted quality of pure grace that could not be removed or augmented by human action, it was within our grasp to bugger off close together(predicate) to God through the rituals of faith.The Church of the Nazarene took up the Great Commission, that all peoples on earth will be blessed through you (Genesis 123) and, in the final chapter of Matthew, Go and leave disciples of all the nations of the world, baptize them in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, and teach them to obey everything I relieve onesel f commanded to you, (Matthew 2818-20). It then began to spread itself vigorously to every corner of the world seeking to fulfill that very mission2. Indeed, it would later become the requirement that all senior members of the church and, in particular, all ministers, complete missionary act as.Nazarene Church missions have taken several different forms over the course of the ult century. The first, kick the bucketly, was the outreach missionary work that followed the traditional lines of church work. The second, was the establishment of Nazarene Church colleges throughout the world. The third, was the combined efforts of all Nazarene churches and associations throughout the world under one charter and mission, to keep the Great Commission.The first Nazarene Church missions began taking place shortly after the creation of the institution. As the important centers of the church, at the time of inception, were on the East and West coasts of the United States. From the eastern chur ches emerged Susan Fitkin and her partner Harrison F. Reynolds. Fitkin and Reynolds based their missions upon a divine revelation of Fitkins that she had been selected by God to spread His word throughout the world and that missionary work was the most powerful and significant of the works that any human could perform for God.Fitkin then stirred up the passions of the church for missions and, in particular, missions to traditionally non-Christian nations. Fitkins work directly enchantd the direction of Nazarene missions then and today. It was because of Fitkin that the Nazarene Church made missionary work the centerpiece of the expression of their faith.Following upon Fitkins example, Dorothy Fay Davis took up the leadership reins at the Raleigh Fitkin Memorial Hospital and Nazarene treat School in Bremersdorp, Swaziland in the 1950s3. Her missionary work, like Fitkins, began with a profession from God. Davis built churches, preached her sermon, and brought the Nazarene form of faith to Swaziland and to the whole of South Africa and, pursuit similarly in the footsteps of Florence Nightingale, she began a movement of teaching Swazi women how to be Christian nurses4.Davis lived and worked in Swaziland as a spiritual leader, the college headmaster, and as a minister in her many churches until the middle 1980s- a career that spanned quaternion decades and her works continue to be powerful in terms of the Nazarene missions.Missionaries were not the only Nazarene members making missions. One of the most influential Nazarene members was C. Warren Jones. Jones had become one of the executives managing foreign missions in the mid 1940s. Under his leadership, the Nazarene Church adjured more than one-million dollars to support their missions. His influence was felt throughout the world as the money raised became the base of operations of countless churches, the travel and living expenses of missionaries, and the foundation of the Nazarene schools and colleges 5.These people, and countless others, worked together over the past one-hundred years of the Nazarene church have built a legacy of missionary work. What began with a small number of missions has become a sweeping program of ministry, education, health-care, social services, and all forms of community exponentiation both domestically and abroad. As a true world-wide organization, the Nazarene Church succeeds in bringing together Christians from nearly every nation into a singular network that has no national anchor.The missionary work nowadays centers on exactly the same mission as when the church started, To make (form and bring into being through transforming grace) Christlike (holy, righteous) disciples (continual, reproductive followers of Christ) in the nations (a sent, international church). A Church whose primary motive is to glorify God,6. To that end, the Nazarene Church also maintains radio and television programs, supports Christian film productions, operates create ho uses throughout the world, manages youth-ministries, and health clinics7.The Nazarene Church began with a very clear intent to spread the Word of God throughout the world in following the Great Commission. In this, the Nazarenes have been exceptionally successful. Their work and their missionaries have demo a true zeal for their pursuit and have demonstrated an unwavering conviction.Their Wesleyan / Holiness foundation made the Nazarene church uniquely ideologically and scripturally suited to the kind of missionary work they do now. By placing themselves in the places of greatest need in the world, they have also succeeded in walking the walk of the true spiritual guide to those in need. Each member has been tasked with one primary goal not to raise money, not to falsely inflate their sense of purpose, but to guide others to caress God and Christ.BibliographyCorbett, C.T. Our Pioneeer Nazarenes. Kansas City, MO Holiness Data Ministry, August 1997 Edition.Cowles, C.S. A muliebri tys Place? Kansas City, KS Beacon Hill Press of Kansas City, 2002Elliott, Susan. The Legacy of Dorothy Davis develop. International Bulletin of Missionary Research, (2004), 132.Miller, Basil. Twelve Early Nazarenes, Kansas City, MO Holiness Data Ministry, April 1998 Edition.Nazarene World Mission, GoInto All the World procurable from http//www.nazareneworldmission.org/regions.aspx. Internet, accessed 30 April 2007.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.