We continue to sort through strategies for developing effective ministry initiatives in a country with literally two different worlds; the rich and the poor, which live side-by-side, yet somehow manages to maintain an ability to function on completely different sides of the planet (socially and economically). It is very fascinating to study, but even more frustrating to understand; especially understanding people who are vocationally in "ministry". They make staying on their side of the cultural wall look way too easy… almost effortlessly.
During my daily devotions I was pleasantly surprised to learn how the Lord addressed this issue of racial and cultural segregation. It was a very direct approach and didn’t require much legislation or dialogue because it was an issue of the heart... and that is exactly where God went with the Apostle Peter… a direct hit to the heart.
In Acts chapter 10 (please read the whole chapter) Peter explains to Cornelius and his guests, “Talking with him, Peter went inside and found a large gathering of people. He said to them: "You are well aware that it is against our law for a Jew to associate with a Gentile or visit him. But God has shown me that I should not call any man impure or unclean. So when I was sent for, I came without raising any objection. May I ask why you sent for me?". – And so in Peter’s life the issue of race and segregation was immediately and eternally resolved. It was just that simple! Bam! The Lord said it and that was that! The argument was completely over.
Unfortunately this bit of news has not made its way as far as Brasil… at least not yet. And I honestly wonder has it really been understood in the United States. You see, for Peter this was not a thought or an idea that he somehow stumbled upon; and he didn’t hear it at a church growth conference or read it in a book on effective leadership. For Peter, this was nothing short of a divine revelation that caused an incredible collision at the core of his social, political and religious DNA. – This revelation hit at the extreme core of who he was as a person.
This revelation by way did not occur on the back side of a civil rights movement of any sorts; it did not come as a result of lawmakers or the actions of political-social groups… in other words, it wasn’t created because the social climate had become such that it only made sense to “switch over”. No! This was by divine revelation from God, which leads to my point: how many pastors, missionaries and post modern religious leaders currently in pursuit of growing multicultural ministries are doing it in response to a direct and personal revelation concerning the value of man; regardless their color, race or ethnicity? If not by revelation, then what are their motives?
How many of today's current church leaders have had the core of their cultural beliefs severely shattered and humbled by a divine revelation similar to the Apostle Peter? - Maybe that’s the reason why the church in Brasil has not yet been able to successfully bridge the deep social-economic canyon that exists today. In the United States, where it is currently fashionable to grow a “multicultural” church; for those who have yet to receive a divine revelation, what could their motivations possibly be? It certainly cannot be because it is the fashionable thing to do… can it?
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