It's midnight millennium,
Time to bury the
past,
Midnight millennium
We're going to have a blast.
Midnight
millennium,
Three zeros all around.
Midnight millennium,
My computer's
gone down.
(c) 1997 club2000.com
With a crazy mix of doomsday dread and glib party wonder, a recent music CD
from club2000.com entitled "Midnight Millennium," captures both the excitement
and anxiety many people feel about the arrival of the Year 2000.
The Y2K computer problem, aka the Millennium Bug, is big business these days
for both computer programmers and apocalyptic preachers. As world Christians, we
are beyond that, right? "Millennium madness" is someone else's problem. Or is
it?
I have begun to wonder whether world missions has a programming error in
relation to the future. Like an imbedded computer code which will not work past
the millennium, a great deal of world missions today has been programmed by the
expectation that "A Church for Every People" can happen "by the year 2000."
Despite anecdotal stories to the contrary, come December 2000 some 4,000
peoples will still remain unreached, or 1/4 of humanity with no access to the
gospel in way that they can understand from their neighbors.
At that time, will world missions have the emotional energy to rewrite its
code for the 21st century? Will a new generation have the imagination to project
the unfinished task into the new century in fresh and creative ways?
This Spring marks the 20th anniversary of the watchword, "A Church for Every
People by the Year 2000." To mark the Watchword's 20th anniversary, I am
inviting a number of friends to gather in Colorado Springs on March 15-16th for
a national consultation, entitled "The Watchword in World Missions."
In view of this historic anniversary, here are five things you can do to
share the memory and shape the dream of the Watchword in relation to your
future.
1. Believe God for a new season in your life.
The origin of a "Watchword" in missions goes back to the calling of Jeremiah.
In Jeremiah 1, the prophet described how "the word of the Lord came to me."
Although he considered himself "only a child," God appointed Jeremiah as a
"prophet to the nations" and assured Jeremiah that "I am watching to see that my
word is fulfilled." (Jeremiah 1:12).
What new word is God giving you these days? In what way is your life becoming
a promise to the nations, both to uproot and to plant new things? In what ways
are you seeing God watch over that word?
I was deeply touched by the birth of the Watchword back in 1979. It brought a
whole new season to my life. Within 18 months, I witnessed the creation of the
Perspective study program, the launch of the Caleb Project and the gathering of
the Edinburgh '80 Consultation.
Nothing could honor the Watchword on its 20th anniversary than for you to
encounter the living God anew and hear his word speak to your destiny. [
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2. Think deeply about the meaning of world history.
The Watchword opens with the phrase, "A Church" for every people. Most think
of the church as a modern building, or at best an organization that can extend
across cultures.
If we are called to be prophets to the nations, we ought to rethink the
meaning of Christ in history. It was Jeremiah who prophesied the coming of a new
covenant when God would write the law on people's hearts.
As 21st century Christians, we should appreciate the radical nature of God's
New Covenant in Christ. Christ came to make all things new. There is nothing
beyond the power of New Creation which transforms all things in Christ.
The church, being gathered from all nations, is the vanguard of this New
Creation. Far from languishing unto the end, it builds up civilization to the
glory of God. To be a Christian at the advent of the Third Millennium is to live
one's life for the next 33 generations. It means to live in faith that the
church of the future, over the next 1,000 years, will reveal more of God and his
love in world history. [
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3. Open your heart to the stranger at your gate.
The Watchword also speaks about "every people." How open is your life to
others from different cultures and viewpoints?
In 1996, I have had the privilege to be in the West Bank and befriend some
Palestinian Christians. Initially, I experienced their aspirations for statehood
and self-determination as "strange" and counter to God's work in Israel. But
after working in preparation for Bethlehem 2000, I better appreciate their
faith. I can now believe God with them for a greater reconciliation of both Jews
and Arabs and the emergence of a new century of peace.
God has the deepest desire for every people. He longs to build their house as
they come into His. The Watchword speaks of this dynamic of God's work in and
through culture. It calls us to open our hearts wide to the redemptive
possibilities to be created among specific peoples in Christ. [
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4. Cultivate a fluency with the future.
When the Watchword was created in 1979, it envisioned a possibility in Christ
some 20 years in the future. What are your visions today for the year 2020? How
old will you be? Over the next two decades, what goals do you have for your
life, for your children and the nations?
I am saddened that so many people have embraced conspiracism, endism, and
isolationism. The church is being eaten alive by apocalypticism and has lost its
"fluency" with the future. We need to find authentic Christian ways to think and
pray for the human future.
Back in 1988, David Barrett, author of the World Christian Encyclopedia, told
me that there would be no future to AD 2000 thinking apart from futures study. I
didn't fully comprehend this at the time, but I took his advice and joined the
World Future Society.
I now realize that the study and creation of a better society is one of the
most Christian things I can do for the world. The church of the third millennium
will not just value "church history" but engage in creating "church futures." It
will draw on fields like agricultural genetics, materials engineering,
astronomical sciences, artificial intelligence, environmental management or
gerontology. And it will insure these sciences and technologies are transferred
to the Third World. [
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5. Approach the turn of the millennium as Magi.
The final way to honor the Watchword on its 20th anniversary is to approach
the year 2000 as more than a milestone. The year 2000 invites us to recapture
its spiritual roots. True, the appeal of the year 2000 has attracted all kinds
of causes, including world missions. But beyond its artificial role as a finish
line, A.D. 2000 reveals the very treasure of God, made known in Christ Jesus
some 2,000 years ago.
The year 2000 ought to be a living memorial to Jesus Christ. Anno Domini 2000
speaks of the two-thousandth anniversary of the coming of Christ into this
world. In this light, we ought to approach the year 2000 with the spirituality
that led the Magi to follow a unknown Star. The new millennium calls us to
embark on a journey in search of Christ, and to find his eternal Kingdom of
goodwill, which alone is worthy of our gifts and service. [
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De-bugging World Missions
Through the Watchword of "A Church for Every People," heaven invites us to be
pilgrims once again, as Abraham became, as Jesus was on his journey to
Jerusalem. Whole peoples and cities await the transforming power of the gospel.
The good news is that we share in that transformation "already here" through
Body and Blood of Christ.
In view of the arrival of the 21st century, it's time to rewrite the code of
world missions. It's time to call a whole new generation to enter a new land in
the new century.
I expect "A Church for Every People" to have a promising future in the new
millennium. It will not be an extension of a failed campaign, but a powerful
vision of transformation, for us as persons and for whole peoples.
This article was first published in World Christian Magazine, March
1999.