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Has the Baton Been Passed to the Asian Church?

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J. Lee Grady

Last week in Singapore I saw the future of
Christianity—and it has a definite Chinese flavor.

Last week during a trip to Singapore I enjoyed all
the tastes and smells of China—chili crab, salted milk crab, prawns, ban
mian
(flat noodles), bak chang (rice
dumplings), lychee fruits, chicken feet (not my
favorite!) and several varieties of fish. But the flavor I savored most was
found in the worship times at Cornerstone Community Church.

“Missionary strategists have already
predicted that by 2035 China will be a Christian nation. Then nations of Asia,
including Singapore, are positioned to be 21st century Antiochs.”

I got choked up while watching the young people at
Cornerstone last Sunday. Hundreds of young people—mostly Chinese, many
first-generation converts to Christianity—jammed to the front of the auditorium
at the close of their youth service. Many were on their knees. Some were
sobbing. They were all singing:


Set this generation apart for You
Let me be a part of what You’re doing
I want to stand in purity and righteousness
Set this generation on fire
Lord I will burn, I will burn for You.

This was not shallow emotionalism. These kids were dead serious about
following God. I preached in seven services at Cornerstone last week, and every
meeting was filled with high school and college students as well as young adults.
A majority of the young people who attend the 3,000-member church are involved
in weekly cell groups that offer discipleship training. At a leaders’ meeting
held on Saturday morning, more than half of the church’s leaders were in their
20s or younger.

The church’s youth pastor, Paul Liu Jiancong, a thin guy whose English
has a dignified British accent, knows that something unusual is stirring among
the youth in his country of 5 million people. “Let’s press in for revival!” he
exhorted the crowd. “Let’s consecrate our hearts!”

The founding pastor of Cornerstone, Yang Tuck Yoong, 52, knows that
revival is much more than altar calls and emotional displays. It is measured by
a growing number of solid converts. Here in Singapore, where the government
enforces a policy of tolerance toward all religions, the number of evangelical
Christians has been steadily rising in recent years. Many new Christians come
from Buddhist backgrounds.


Anglicans and other mainline churches were hit with charismatic renewal
in the 1970s and ‘80s, sparking a wave of church growth. Today Singapore is
home to numerous charismatic megachurches. One veteran charismatic Anglican
leader told me that the percentage of Christians in Singapore has now risen to
18 percent, up from 14 percent just a few years ago.

Yang and his wife, Daphne, started Cornerstone in 1990 when they were
still Anglicans; they broke from that denomination in 1995, and Cornerstone
became an independent Pentecostal congregation. The church now meets in a
massive facility that was once a nightclub.

What I saw in Singapore last week filled me with
hope for the future of the global church, for three key reasons:

1. They are taking world evangelism seriously. Last year Cornerstone
Church sent out 52 short-term mission teams to various nations, including
Uganda. Because Singapore enjoys financial prosperity (some analysts say
Singapore has already passed the United States in per capita wages), many of
its churches invest millions of dollars in mission work. Singapore already has
one of the highest percentages of commissioned missionaries, per capita, in the
world.


2. They understand the importance of the Holy
Spirit’s power.
Growing churches in Singapore have abandoned formalism to embrace
Pentecostal doctrines. However, many of them also pursue biblical balance and
stress the need for discipleship. At Trinity Christian Center, for example, a
fast-growing Assemblies of God congregation pastored by Dominic Yeo, its 7,000
members are trained in weekly care cells.

3. They are investing in the next generation. One young man from
Cornerstone named Nathaniel told me that he came to Christ from a Taoist background. “Many Taoists are coming to Jesus
today,” he said. “As they become educated they are turning to Christianity.
They are leaving the old superstitious religion behind.” These young
people—many of them bright professionals—are now being trained to take their
faith into the marketplace, or on the mission field beyond Singapore.

What does this mean for us? I believe it’s obvious
we’ve entered a new season in which the Asian church will set the pace. The
baton has been passed. Missionary strategists have already predicted that by
2035 China will be a Christian nation. The nations of Asia, including
Singapore, are positioned to be 21st century Antiochs. I hope we
will be humble enough to learn from them. And I pray they will stay humble
enough to avoid the mistakes we’ve made in the West.

J. Lee Grady is contributing editor of Charisma. You can follow him on Twitter at leegrady. For more information about
Cornerstone Community Church, click here.


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J. Lee Grady is an author, award-winning journalist and ordained minister. He served as a news writer and magazine editor for many years before launching into full-time ministry.

Lee is the author of six books, including 10 Lies the Church Tells Women, 10 Lies Men Believe and Fearless Daughters of the Bible. His years at Charisma magazine also gave him a unique perspective of the Spirit-filled church and led him to write The Holy Spirit Is Not for Sale and Set My Heart on Fire, which is a Bible study on the work of the Holy Spirit.


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