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f13.net  |  f13.net General Forums  |  General Discussion  |  Serious Business  |  Topic: If you're not yet Christian, you soon will be. 0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
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Author Topic: If you're not yet Christian, you soon will be.  (Read 1105 times)
Shockeye
Staff Emeritus
Posts: 6668

Skinny-dippin' in a sea of Lee, I'd propose on bended knee...


WWW
on: May 17, 2005, 02:48:09 PM

Quote from: World Net Daily
Welcome to my first column
Posted: May 17, 2005
1:00 a.m. Eastern

© 2005 WorldNetDaily.com

Let's start off with the biggest unknown fact of our time: The world is rapidly becoming all-Christian.

That's not theology or wishful thinking, just statistics. And the numbers are shouting at me. A billion people are going to switch their loyalties to Jesus in the next 11 or 12 years and that may be just the beginning. As you might guess, this megashift could play hob with the citadels of Islam, Buddhism and Hinduism. They might even hit a crashpoint.

It could also virtually wipe out secular humanism, the clueless corps of New-Agers, and the doomed hordes of post-modernists now wandering aimlessly about the wasteland of non-referential abstraction.

How do I reach such far-out conclusions? Am I as fringy as I sound? Let's consult the hard numbers. I'll start with the 20th century:

    * In 1900, there were 2 million evangelical or charismatic Christians in Africa. By 2000, there were 200 million.

    * In Latin America during that period, the born-again population zoomed from 1 million to 170 million.

    * And in China, just since 1950, Christianity has exploded from fewer than a million to almost 120 million.

Do you detect a trend here? If so, congratulations, you're ahead of the New York Times, CNN and the massed legions of academe.

But you may be saying: "Aww, that growth all happened before the '60s, Jim. The world has gone to pot since then."

Ooh, are you wrong.

You've looked just at the Western church, and you've seen a lot of stagnant or shrinking elements (notably liberal Christianity, whose basic tenets are the opposite of the Bible). The liberal collapse has fogged up the whole picture.

Inhale deeply. You're about to see the true figures for the first time:

I have discovered that there is a definable core of the Christian faith that is growing at a white-hot pace – 8 percent a year. If that doesn't sound white-hot to you, consider these details:

    * This growing heart of the global church is a powerful mix of charismatics, Pentecostals, evangelicals, and a few Catholics. They are in countable networks. In 1970, there were 71 million of them. By 2000, there were 707 million.

    * Now, straight-line projections are silly because nothing ever goes in a straight line. But just to give you a comically precise picture of our current momentum: At 8 percent growth a year, the world would have more Christians than people by the fall of 2032!

(Many thanks to Todd Johnson, co-author of the standard work in the field, the 14-pound, hernia-inducing "World Christian Encyclopedia," backed by $1.1 billion of research. Dr. Johnson and an associate generously gave me hours of their time to search out and isolate this growing heart phenomenon.)

More: Up until 1960, Western evangelicals outnumbered non-Western evangelicals – mostly Latinos, blacks and Asians – by two to one. Ah, the bad old days. But as of 2000, non-Westerners had shot ahead by four to one. By 2010, it will be seven to one. (From Patrick Johnstone, "The Church Is Bigger Than You Think.") Remember that the next time you hear someone bad-mouth Christianity as the white man's religion.

Never before in history has such a large part of humanity changed its religious loyalties in one century. And it's happening by acclamation, not by force.

So what's going on? How could such a hurricane of change escape notice? What exactly is in back of all this?

Oh, sorry – I'm running out of room. I guess it will have to wait until next week.

But I promise you'll find the events behind my numbers far more astonishing than the numbers themselves. In fact, you'll quickly agree that this movement is going to be much bigger than the Reformation. Even bigger than Wal-Mart.

OK, stop grumbling, I'll give you a hint: My research for my new book, "Megashift," has found 52 countries where God has brought people back from the dead, mostly in the last 20 years. And these are not near-death experiences, where someone on an operating-room table passes out and sees himself going down a long tunnel. These are stone-dead corpses.

Also, for what it's worth, I have zero interest in flying saucers, crop circles, the Bermuda Triangle, the anti-Christ, or the sexual preference of Spongebob Squarepants.

But I am seriously interested in a megashift so life-changing that it dwarfs anything ever seen on this warm green planet. And I think you'll get serious right along with me.
Bunk
Contributor
Posts: 5828

Operating Thetan One


Reply #1 on: May 17, 2005, 02:56:13 PM

snarf

"Welcome to the internet, pussy." - VDL
"I have retard strength." - Schild
Viin
Terracotta Army
Posts: 6159


Reply #2 on: May 17, 2005, 03:11:43 PM

Don't be angry, we will just meek you to death.

- Viin
Paelos
Contributor
Posts: 27075

Error 404: Title not found.


Reply #3 on: May 17, 2005, 07:33:46 PM

Um, all good statistical points. Except for the overwhelming fact that he left out the world growth rate in his calculations, in addition to the political shifts during the last century that precipitated the boom of new Christians. It would be like looking at the dot com era and declaring the years of the new millenium to be paved with gold.

CPA, CFO, Sports Fan, Game when I have the time
Roac
Terracotta Army
Posts: 3338


Reply #4 on: May 18, 2005, 09:15:57 AM

His "research" is worthless.  Like Paelos mentioned, he failed to figure in population growth.  Regional comparisons covering the world, not just select regions, would've been helpful.  He also failed to do any sort of equivalent comparisons against other religious movements.  Good analasys might've tried to identify why these trends are there.  In the case of Africa for example, churches are pumping tons of money into missionary efforts in the region.  A lot of people there are going Christian so they can eat. 

Which brings up another issue; he failed to mention or reference methods used in gathering his statistics.  How were these numbers calculated, and what determines one's religious tendancies?  He might've also mentioned the fact that it is terribly easy for large growth to be apparent when an entity is a tiny fraction of the whole: in this case, if your organization is <1% of the total, 8% growth might just mean someone decided to build another church in the area.

Quote
My research for my new book, "Megashift,"

That's what the article was about, really.  Hi, I love Jesus!  Buy my book? 

-Roac
King of Ravens

"Young people who pretend to be wise to the ways of the world are mostly just cynics. Cynicism masquerades as wisdom, but it is the farthest thing from it. Because cynics don't learn anything. Because cynicism is a self-imposed blindness, a rejection of the world because we are afraid it will hurt us or disappoint us." -SC
HaemishM
Staff Emeritus
Posts: 42630

the Confederate flag underneath the stone in my class ring


WWW
Reply #5 on: May 18, 2005, 11:10:51 AM

Quote from: World Net Daily
Welcome to my first column
Do you detect a trend here? If so, congratulations, you're ahead of the New York Times, CNN and the massed legions of academe.

I detect something, but it's not a trend. Perhaps the stench of self-righteous loathing of education and academic circles that is so prevalent among the "Conservative Christian" sect that claims to have won the last election for the Republicans?

I think it could be.

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