While in the Philippines last week, I rubbed
up against several snippets of World Christianity: Asian Evangelical
mission leaders, Nigerian Pentecostal GOFAMINT missionaries, and Filipina Roman
Catholic Missionary Benedictine Sisters. Spending time with such a tapestry of
active participants in Christian mission was a fresh reminder of how
expressions of Christianity are always both local and universal - “glocal” is
one expression used to express the combination of “local” and “global” - as
well as both concrete and other-worldly.
Attending the 12th Triennial Convention of the Asia Missions Association (AMA) provided the primary impetus for traveling to Manila. The Rev. Dr. David Cho, now 92 and still attending, was the pioneering instigator of the AMA at the time with the Lausanne Movement as a whole began in the early 1970s. Korean leadership, numbers, and finances have continued to provide significant support, but AMA participants are spread throughout South, Southeast, and East Asia - even if the MIddle East, Central Asia, and China were not represented at this particular gathering. (Read more about the AMA here.)
For some it may be
surprising to learn of Nigerian Pentecostal missionaries, including of
such missionaries serving in the far-flung Philippines. In fact, Christian
mission today truly reflects the oft-noted but idealistic-sounding dictum,
“From everywhere to everywhere.” I had met Rev. Michael and Anna Omolaoye last
August when they and many other missionaries had returned to Nigeria to attend
the special Jubilee GOFAMINT (Gospel Faith Mission International) Convention in
Ibadan. (I had received a gracious invitation to that Convention through the
efforts of OMSC** alumnus Rev. Ayodeji Evenezer Ayeni.) As a mission and church
- two sides of one coin, if you will - GOFAMINT is one of several thriving
Christian movements that have shot up in Nigeria over the past few generations. (Read more about GOFAMINT here.)
Rev. Michael and
Anna have been serving among the poor in Manila for nine years. It was
inspiring to have them take an entire afternoon and evening, drive me through
stifling Manila traffic, and introduce me to some of the communities where
they are ministering with gospel preaching, education, and food distribution.
Spending an
entire day with some of the Missionary Benedictine Sisters of Tutzing was also
an inspiring privilege. OMSC alumnae Sr. Theodora Bilocura and Sr. Joanne Lico
Ungay are the two I knew best, but the indomitable Sr. Mary John Mananzan (do
an Internet search to learn of her many titles, awards, accomplishments, and
responsibilities) also took time out of her busy schedule for a visit and a delicious Japanese lunch. I was able to visit St. Scholastica’s College in
Manila and the priory house in lovely Tagaytay City, nestled in the mountains
south of Manila.
Established in
the Philippines in 1906 by five German nuns, the Filipina Missionary Benedectine Sisters
are fearless and compassionate - and contemplative - social activists. Over
recent decades they have contributed greatly in some of the key political
movements in the Philippines, and they continue zealously to advocate, for example on behalf of indigenous peoples against abuses inflicted on them by the mining industry (Read more about the Missionary Benedictine Sisters of Tutzing in the
Philippines here.)
Again, these are
just a few snippets of World Christianity in the Philippines. Roman Catholic
history in the Philippines is of course lengthy and eventful, and recent growth
of larger evangelical and charismatic movements are noteworthy. Even so, just
the few examples I encountered represent traditions that have roots in various
peoples of almost every continent.
I hope that this
brief report points to the reality that, wherever one looks, specific “glocal”
expressions of World Christianity are present.
**OMSC is the Overseas
Ministries Study Center in New Haven, CT, USA, where I served from June, 2011
until April, 2015.
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