This is not surprising:
New figures show that the modern missionary is eschewing countries such as Nigeria, Papua New Guinea or India in favour of that unlikely heart of darkness: France. The latest edition of Religious Trends, a compilation of Christian statistics published last week, shows that France overtook Kenya last year as the leading destination for British mission agencies.
In further evidence that Europe is increasingly seen as more spiritually needy than Africa or Asia, in third place is another country with strong Roman Catholic roots, Spain.
The situation has shifted markedly since 1991 when France languished behind Zimbabwe, Kenya, and South Africa and Spain was eighth in the list, the report by the Christian Research organisation shows. Despite its cathedrals, clergy and plethora of saints, France is now considered one of the world's most secular countries, partly because of its clear separation of Church and state.
Its geographical proximity and relative lack of Bible-based Protestant churches has made it increasingly alluring territory for British evangelicals. Moreover, large parts of the Third World are now so teeming with Christians that they are no longer seen as obvious destinations - and they are even exporting their own missionaries to the West.
Monday, September 19, 2005
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3 comments:
Sounds more like a vacation destination than a place for missionary work, though the Hugenouts might beg to differ.
"Spiritually needy" -- perhaps there is a need for missionary work in our own backyards.
The main problem in France is that they permitted too many Muslims to immigrate in the 1970s and 1980s and now they form a large subculture there and are trying to make sure that France cannot return to being a "Christian country." Even worse situation in the Netherlands due to the immigration of Muslims, so much so that in the Netherlands it is considered a matter of national destablization.
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