On Saturday, September 22, the New York Times ran a front page article entitled, The World Comes to Georgia and an Old Church Adapts. The aritcle tells the story of Pastor Phil Kitchin of Clarkston, GA, and his successful efforts to revitalize a dying church around the multi-ethnic vision. Beyond this, the writer (Warren St. John) eludes to the growing fascination with diverse congregations of faith - namely, the emerging Multi-ethnic Church Movement. Here in bold is an excerpt:
"When the Rev. Phil Kitchin steps into the pulpit of the Clarkston International Bible Church on Sunday mornings, he stands eye to eye with the changing face of America. In the pews before him, alongside white-haired Southern women in their Sunday best, sit immigrants from the Philippines and Togo, refugees from war-scarred Liberia, Ethiopia and Sudan, even a convert from Afghanistan.
'Jesus said heaven is a place for people of all nations,' Mr. Kitchin likes to say. 'So if you don’t like Clarkston, you won’t like heaven.' ...
"The transformation of what was long known as the Clarkston Baptist Church (now known as the Clarkston International Bible Church) speaks to a broader change among other American churches. Many evangelical Christians who have long believed in spreading their religion in faraway lands have found that immigrants offer an opportunity for church work within one’s own community. And many immigrants and refugees are drawn by the warm welcome they get from the parishioners, which can stand in stark contrast to the more competitive and alienating nature of workaday America.
"Indeed, evangelical churches have begun to stand out as rare centers of ethnic mixing in a country that researchers say has become more culturally fragmented, in part because of immigration."
If you read the article, you will see that I, too, am briefly quoted (and Mosaic mentioned) on page 2; and after contacting Pastor Kitchin to inquire as to how I had come to be interviewed, he responded with "the rest of the story." Here's what he had to say ...
Hello Mark,
Good to hear from you. I met you two years ago at the Multi-ethnic Church Conference at Rehoboth Baptist Church here in Atlanta. Like you, we have numerous people groups within one mile of our church. Warren St. John came to our community last year to do an article about the Fugees Soccer program here in Clarkston. Although his article was not about our church, he referred to us as a Christian Church who uses basketball as a guise to do Muslim evangelism. I called his hand on that and suggested that he come down and find out what we really do. He accepted the challenge and was astonished to find so many different people groups worshipping God in one place and not killing each other. That’s when I mentioned your name and the pioneer movement going on in the US to have true, multi-ethnic churches. I hope that was alright with you.
I love your work brother, and I have already ordered your book.
In the love of Christ,
Phil Kitchin
Of course, it was alright with me:-)
More importantly, I want to congratulate Pastor Kitchin for his bold vision, leadership and well-deserved recognition that has led to hundreds of thousands of people (in March 2007, the paper reported a weekday circulation of roughly 1,120,420) being exposed to his heart, the vision of his church and, indeed, the movement that will literally change the face (and, more importantly, the heart) of the American church in the 21st century. For as my book will make clear, it's not about racial reconciliation, but rather about reconciling men and women to God through faith in Jesus Christ and reconciling the local church to the pattern and practices of the 1st century church so the world will know God's love and believe (John 17:20-23; Acts 11:19-26; 13:1; Ephesians 2:11-4:6).
On a related note, Mosaic was also cited this week in the Christian Science Monitor in an article entitled Little Rock Marks a Civil Rights Victory (9/26/07), and, as well, in the Arkansas Democrat Gazette in an article entitled, Multi-ethnic Church Thrives in Little Rock (9/22/07). This article is available only via purchase through the Arkansas Democrat Gazette's online archives.
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