The Christian  Century
 



Which global  church?
 
 
 
The Pentecostal World Fellowship and the  WCC


Jan  21, 2014 by _Wesley Granberg-Michaelson_ 
(http://www.christiancentury.org/contributor/wesley-granberg-michaelson)  
 
The new Calvary Convention Center in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, was filled  
nearly to capacity as 3,710 Pentecostals gathered from 73 countries around the 
 world. They came to this mostly Muslim country for the 23rd Pentecostal 
World  Conference, a global gathering which takes place every three years. The 
host was  Calvary Church, a Pentecostal megachurch in Kuala Lumpur whose 
lead pastor,  Prince Guneratnam, is currently chair of the Pentecostal World 
Fellowship. 
Many participants at the August meeting were young and reflected the  
enthusiasm of the fastest-growing segment of the Christian world. In 1970  
Pentecostals accounted for only 5 percent of all Christians, but today  
Pentecostals and charismatics—including those in other denominations who  
exercise 
Pentecostal or charismatic gifts—constitute 25 percent of all the  world’s 
Christians. In Asia, 80 percent of all Christian conversions are to  
Pentecostal forms of Christianity. Or think of it this way: one out of 12 
people  
alive today is Pentecostal. 
I attended the Kuala Lumpur meeting as part of a delegation from the Global 
 Christian Forum, an ecumenical initiative drawing together all the major  
families of world Christianity and supported by the World Council of 
Churches,  the World Evangelical Alliance, the Vatican’s Pontifical Council for 
Promoting  Christian Unity and the Pentecostal World Fellowship, among others. 
Before  leaving for Malaysia, I spoke with an outstanding journalist who 
covers religion  for a leading U.S. newspaper. She had not heard anything about 
the Pentecostal  World Conference. 
I wasn’t surprised. The Pentecostal world lives mostly within its own 
bubble,  and those outside it—both those in other Christian communities and 
those 
in the  media—remain largely insulated from a deeper knowledge and 
understanding of its  dynamics. 
The Atlas of Global Christianity estimates that Pentecostal and  similar 
renewalist movements are growing at almost five times the rate of  overall 
global Christianity. In doing research for a recent book on global  
Christianity, I found some staggering statistics. For instance, it’s estimated  
that 
throughout Asia there are 873,000 Chinese charismatic congregations. In  Latin 
America, Pentecostals are growing at three times the rate of the Catholic  
Church. And 44 percent of the world’s Pentecostals are found in sub-Saharan  
Africa. 
Attending the Pentecostal World Conference, I sensed a movement that was  
young, vibrant and confident. Its relative isolation from the wider Christian 
 community, however, tends to reinforce a parochial, narrow and even 
defensive  posture. And the non-Pentecostal world is unable to appreciate its 
gifts,  spiritual vitality and changing patterns of ministry and outreach. 
Two months after Pentecostals boarded planes to leave Kuala Lumpur, about 
the  same number Christians from every part of the globe were arriving in 
Busan,  Korea, for the Tenth Assembly of the World Council of Churches. For 
them the WCC  represents for the most part a very different stream of world 
Christianity. 
The WCC is composed of 345 member churches in 110 countries. Primarily 
these  churches are part of the historic Protestant, Orthodox and Anglican 
traditions.  Altogether, their combined membership totals more than 500 million 
people—a  figure actually somewhat less than the estimated 600 million 
Pentecostals and  charismatics in the world. 
Of the WCC’s 345 member churches, only seven are Pentecostal, and these are 
 small denominations, mostly from Latin America, whose combined membership 
is  only 281,600. The dominant ethos, culture and programmatic activity of 
the WCC  are shaped by the concerns of the historic Protestant, Anglican and 
Orthodox  churches. 
Assemblies of the WCC are held once every seven years, gathering delegates  
and other participants from its member churches as well as other observers. 
In  addition to acting as the WCC’s governing body, the assembly held 
plenary  sessions devoted to themes of the WCC’s work, daily worship, Bible 
studies, a  wide range of workshops and an exhibition space for ecumenical 
groups 
from  around the world. The Busan assembly was the fourth WCC assembly I’ve 
had the  privilege of attending, first as a WCC staff member, then as a 
member of its  Central Committee, and most recently as the ecumenical adviser 
to the delegation  from my church, the Reformed Church in America. 
Reflecting on these two global gatherings provides a window into these  
different streams of world Christianity and the distance between them, as well  
as on surprising points of potential contact. 
In Kuala Lumpur, high-octane contemporary worship with smoke, flashing 
lights  and huge screens energized and empowered worshipers. The theme of the 
gathering  was “In One Accord—Rallying, Reaching, and Releasing the Next 
Generation.”  Several of the world’s best-known Pentecostal preachers delivered 
stirring  messages, followed by altar calls for those seeking the fresh 
empowerment of  God’s Spirit. 
Some of the leaders of the church in the Global South are little known in 
the  United States—such as Enoch Adeboye of the Redeemed Christian Church of 
God.  Founded in Nigeria in 1952, it has 5 million members in 147 countries, 
including  several congregations in north Texas, where it recently 
dedicated a pavilion  center costing $15.5 million. 
The Kuala Lumpur meeting was more like a global revival service than a  
conference. With very little infrastructure, the Pentecostal World Fellowship’s 
 business was done behind the scenes by its executive committee. 
By contrast, delegates to the WCC assembly spent considerable time acting 
on  lengthy reports in business sessions, as befits the governing body of a 
complex  organization with a budget of over $30 million. The assembly theme 
was “God of  Life, Lead Us to Justice and Peace,” which provided a framework 
for worship and  Bible study. Of the four assemblies I’ve attended, this 
assembly’s theme seemed  the weakest, for it emphasized commitments already 
enshrined in the WCC, and it  didn’t open space for creative theological 
reflection that could expand and  inspire the WCC’s vision. 
The greatest difference between these two gatherings is in worship. I’ve  
often found worship in WCC gatherings to be inspiring, for they have gathered 
 sounds and styles of the world church into creative expressions of 
confession  and praise. But more recently the WCC’s worship life has been 
negotiated into  highly scripted forms guaranteed not to offend various 
sensibilities. In part,  that’s the result of listening more deeply to the 
WCC’s 
Orthodox members, who  have insisted that these practices should not even be 
called 
worship but rather  “common prayer.” 
The WCC book containing the liturgies and songs for morning prayer each day 
 was in five languages and was 244 pages long. Themes for each day, like “
water,  fire and wind” and “food and soil,” tried to integrate the worship 
with the  Bible studies and connect to the assembly’s main emphasis on 
justice and peace.  All activities were tightly choreographed and televised. 
The 
work the planners  put into this was enormous. 
But the result, at least in my experience, was an experience of worship  
tightly controlled in form and dominated by the pragmatic goal of making some  
important point relative to the assembly’s agenda. 
In Kuala Lumpur, by contrast, not a sheet of paper was used in worship. The 
 dominant focus was on enlivening the inward spiritual experience and 
commitment  of each participant. Opening space for the free movement of God’s 
Holy Spirit  was the constant goal. These services had their own “liturgy”—a 
sequence of  praise, ecstatic prayer, passionate preaching and an altar call 
for personal  empowerment. Eventually, this became predictable in its own 
way. 
Every one of the preachers at the Pentecostal World Conference was a man. 
In  light of Pentecostalism’s history of affirming women preachers, this fact 
seemed  curious, at the very least. To any ecumenical observer, it was  
incomprehensible. 
Despite the lack of any significant participation by Pentecostals and  
evangelicals in the life of the WCC and the marginal presence of Catholics (who 
 
are officially observers), the WCC displays an incredible diversity, and 
its  gatherings are an incredible feat and a rare gift. My Bible study group 
in  Busan, for instance, included two women pastors from Africa, a woman from 
the  Coptic Church in Egypt (who was co­moderator of the group with 
me), a  Baptist pastor from England and another from Hong Kong, and two women 
from  Indonesia. Our conversations were unforgettably rich. The Spirit moves 
in fresh  ways when there is such a diversity in Christian tradition and in 
geography, age  and gender. 
If Pentecostals might press the WCC on how they make room for the power of  
God’s Holy Spirit in their worship and life, those in the WCC movement 
might ask  Pentecostals how they obey God’s expectations for justice. Both 
questions are  fair. 
I came to Kuala Lumpur especially attentive to what the world’s Pentecostal 
 leadership might say about the biblical themes of justice and mercy. Often 
what  I heard surprised and encouraged me. For instance, Billy Wilson, the 
new  president of Oral Roberts University, urged listeners to get beyond the 
first  four verses of Acts 2, pointing out that the whole chapter shows the 
church  meeting concrete social needs. The work of equipping a younger 
generation, he  stressed, must recognize that they have been “graced” with a 
passion for justice  on earth. 
Glen Burris Jr., the president of the Foursquare Church, which has 7,000  
licensed pastors, gave a powerful message focusing on God’s mercy, based on  
Isaiah 58 and Micah 6:8. His plea was to “mobilize the whole church to take 
the  whole gospel to the whole world.” Concluding his message, he asked the 
music  group to return to sing “Hosanna,” by Hillsong United, centering on 
the phrase,  “Break my heart for what breaks Yours,” reflecting on the world
’s pain and  injustice. 
The Pentecostal World Conference also had workshops, and I went to one on  “
Pentecostalism, Social Engagement, and Justice,” led by Ivan Satyavrata, 
who  heads an impressive Assemblies of God ministry in Kolkata (Calcutta), 
India. His  presentation was titled “Power to the Poor: The Pentecostal 
Tradition of Social  Engagement,” and he argued persuasively how empowerment of 
the 
marginalized in  society has been a key feature of Pentecostal ministry in 
many parts of the  world and a reason for its growth. His perspectives 
echoed the finding of  scholars Donald E. Miller and Tetsunao Yamamori (authors 
of Global  Pentecostalism: The New Face of Christian Social Engagement). 
The Pentecostal and ecumenical worlds need one another in the journey 
toward  Christian unity, for the sake of God’s mission in the world. It’s 
possible to  envision avenues of dialogue and fruitful points of interaction. 
But 
for the  most part, these two Christian environments have been hermetically 
sealed off  from one another. It’s as if we’re in a state of 
ecclesiological apartheid.  There are barely 50 people in the world who 
attended both the 
Pentecostal World  Conference and the WCC assembly. 
Some quiet initiatives and gestures of ecumenical hope have been taken 
place.  At the WCC’s Harare assembly in 1998, a Joint Consultative Group 
between 
 Pentecostals and the WCC was established, and the group has worked well. 
Over  the past five years, the group focused its reflections on the nature of 
the  church, and it presented its report to the Busan assembly. Through 
initiatives  established at the 2007 world gathering of the Global Christian 
Forum, held in  Limuru, Kenya, the Pentecostal World Fellowship extended an 
invitation for WCC  General Secretary Olav Fykse Tveit to bring greetings to 
the 22nd Pentecostal  World Conference when it met in Stockholm in 2010. And 
Prince Guneratnam brought  greetings to the WCC assembly in Busan. Both of 
these were historically  unprecedented events. 
Most promising has been the strong and active engagement of the Pentecostal 
 World Fellowship in the Global Christian Forum, in which Pentecostals have 
 interacted with historic Protestant, Orthodox, evangelical and Catholic  
partners. Tentative plans call for the next world gathering of the Global  
Christian Forum to take place in Brazil in 2016, directly prior to the 24th  
Pentecostal World Conference in São Paulo. 
Yet a century of isolation, with a history of rejection and mutual  
recrimination, has left enduring suspicions and deep wounds between Pentecostal 
 
and ecumenical communities. As Pentecostalism matures into a major stream  
shaping the future of world Christianity, and the ecumenical movement looks to  
its new horizons, the time seems right to foster a broad and serious 
engagement  between these separated parts of the global body of Christ. 
Returning from Busan, I imagined what could have happened if the theme at  
Kuala Lumpur had been “God of Life, Lead Us to Justice and Peace.” And what 
if  the WCC assembly had used the theme “In One Accord: Rallying, Reaching, 
and  Releasing the Next Generation.” Both would have found themselves 
stretched in  unfamiliar directions. Each could have been challenged more fully 
to engage the  whole gospel for the whole world. Such are the new frontiers 
before us in the  enduring call to Christian unity.

-- 
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