TL;DR:
Globalization presents both opportunities and challenges to world missions efforts. It accelerates communication, travel, and cultural exchange, creating open doors for evangelism and cross-cultural teamwork. Yet, it also fosters secularism, syncretism, and resistance to outside influence. For the Church, the key task is wise contextualization.
The Unisphere, built for the 1964 New York World's Fair, photo by Beyond My Ken | Image Source
More classic art masterpieces used as illustrations
Globalization became a hot topic in the 1980s. It still is. If you search for "globalization" on the Internet, search engines like Google will give you tens of millions of web pages to read.
Conversations about globalization bring to mind beverages, clothing, and electronics brands sold worldwide, as well as identical restaurants popping up around the globe. Some have used "mcdonaldization" as a synonym for globalization. Of course, such images barely scratch the surface of the topic of globalization.
The Lausanne Committee Occasional Paper #30 tries to capture the wide-ranging and deeply interconnected nature of globalization by describing it as the result of "a constant, but uneven, flow of ideas, goods, images, people and diseases across national borders."
The phenomenon is much older than the word "globalization." Indeed, this intersecting, clashing, and merging of people and their cultures can be seen in the Bible as early as the book of Genesis.
Globalization is both good and bad for world evangelism. Honestly, the Church itself has been a globalizing force. Christianity was born in a specific cultural context: First Century Middle Eastern Judaism. However, in obedience to Christ's Great Commission, the Christian faith has now put down roots all over the world. Christianity has sparked change and nourished connectedness everywhere it has gone.
Some things about globalization actually help world evangelism. For instance, because of easy mobility, millions of believers have crossed international borders on short-term mission trips. On the other hand, today's missionary teams are often multi-national. That means missionaries have to think cross-culturally just by being on ministry teams with missionaries from other nations.
At times, globalization gives rise to seemingly contradictory trends. For example, globalization leads some people to see religion in private and individualistic terms. For others, globalization has caused them to slide toward secularism or, at the very least, embrace shallow forms of spirituality. Then, tragically, the flow of religious beliefs and practices across cultural boundaries has too often caused aggressive intolerance.
In a world affected by globalization, missions leaders know that proper contextualization of the Gospel is extremely important. In today's globalized world, situations like the yawning gap between rich and poor, the mass migration of people (forced as well as voluntary), human trafficking, and debilitating addictions cry out for God's people to get involved. These and other results of globalization can make people fearful. They fear being stripped of familiar things and values. They fear being torn from their heritage and thereby losing their identity. They fear being marginalized in their homeland.
As cultures rush along the globalization path, we must help believers avoid the extremes of xenophobic isolationism on the one hand and naive cultural syncretism on the other. The Church can be a lighthouse guiding people toward the fulfillment of God's design. Believers can be a healing force for societies in pain. They can give voice to the oppressed and marginalized.
May we be wise and perceptive as we deal with the things globalization throws at us.
-- Howard Culbertson, hculbert@snu.edu
This blog on a key issue in world missions outreach is one of 12 articles in the "Mission briefing" series published in Engage magazine.
Globalization has a complex impact on Christian world evangelism as it both helps and obstructs the spread of the Gospel.
G - Growing access to distant lands has opened many doors,
L - Languages can now be learned and shared through global tools and stores.
O - Opportunities arise for partnership across the seas,
B - But with them come distractions and diluted theologies.
A - Avenues for mission flourish through media and flight,
L - Luring materialism dims some hearts’ gospel light.
I - Information flows with speed, spreading truth and lies alike,
Z - Zeal can fade when comfort zones grow wide and ministries shrink in might.
A - Authentic community thrives when cultures interweave,
T - Though tensions rise when worldviews clash and some believers grieve.
I - Interconnected networks aid discipleship and care,
O - Overexposure, though, can numb the call to serve and share.
N - Nations join in worship now—yet face new trials too,
Still, God's mission marches forward with a global, faithful view.