Empowering Missions Through Bible Translation and Local Engagement

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The greatest missionary is the Bible in the mother tongue. It needs no furlough and has never considered a foreigner. William Cameron Townsend was one of the most influential missionary leaders in the last century. Born in California 1896, raised in a Presbyterian Church, he was inspired to join a student volunteer movement after hearing missionary John Mutt speak. [00:00:27]

The cutting comment of this Indian so troubled Cameron that he dedicated the next 13 years of his life to translating the Bible into their language. He then began an organization known as Wycliffe Bible Translators, named after the morning star of the Reformation, Professor John Wycliffe of Oxford University, who was the first to translate the Bible to English. [00:02:15]

William Townsend has been credited with launching the new missions frontier, which no longer focuses on reaching continents and inland countries but on every distinct ethnic group or people group in the world. Now, they've been three great phases of missions. The first great phase of missions we generally understand was launched by William Carey. [00:04:02]

The great commission is not merely to take the gospel to every one of the 222 countries in the world but to each of the at least 16,000 ethno-linguistic people groups in the world. Unfortunately, many today are confused about the concept of nations. He talked about nation, and many people don't understand what Jesus said when he spoke nations. [00:06:18]

The Scriptures emphasize that all the families of the nations of the earth ought to sing the praise of the Creator in every language. Should tongue look at this, this is mind-boggling for the average liberal globalist revelation. And they sang a new song saying, you are worthy to take the scroll to open its seals. [00:20:20]

World Missions is no longer just across oceans, deserts, and mountains. And that's why Daniel's message on a stationary Christian and be our terror and Christian is just so important. We've got to rethink our idea of missions. Missions is no longer far away in another country only. Missions is in every city in the world. [00:28:20]

The written word can go where the human voice cannot, like passing cars at taxi ranks at traffic light. It is the most cost-effective way of proclaiming the gospel, getting out onto the streets with gospel literature. It has no passport or visa problems like we have passport and visa problems. Literature knows no fear. [00:33:07]

The Word of God is living and powerful, sharper than any double-edged sword, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit, of joints and marrow, and it is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart. Stock up on spiritual ammunition. We are involved in the world war of worldviews. [00:34:20]

The Bible's of the Christians are more powerful than the bombs of the Muslims. Jesus said on this rock I'll build my church, and the gates of Hell shall not prevail against it. So let's think literature in Africa today. Statistically, there are 500 million people who claim for Christians. [00:52:48]

The church in Africa is growing so fast we cannot keep up with providing enough literature for the many people being born and born again. There's a battle going on. [00:53:19]

The Scriptures make it clear that the Hebrews remained Hebrews even after four hundred and eighty years in Egypt. They never became Egyptians. Yet today, people want you to believe that where you are born, which could be a geographic accident, determines your nationality. That is not a biblical concept. [00:19:20]

The mission field is now in our neighborhoods, with diverse ethnic groups living in our cities. This shift requires a new approach to evangelism, recognizing the cultural and linguistic diversity around us. [00:28:20]

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