Europe is not post-Christian. It is pre-revival.

Bible with map.jpgTuesday 18 June 2024 10:11

Europe is a tremendously diverse and dynamic context for Christian mission. With more than 40 countries and more than 30 national languages, Europe defies easy definition...

Adapted from an article in Church Leaders

The Church and Mission in Europe Today: Changing the Narrative

(by ECM worker Jim Memory)

Europe is a tremendously diverse and dynamic context for Christian mission. With more than 40 countries and more than 30 national languages, Europe defies easy definition.

Yet, in many ways, Christianity is what made Europe Europe. No other continent has been exposed to Christianity for such a prolonged period of time and in such an extensive way. Yet just as Europe was the first continent to be Christianized, it was also the first to be de-Christianized…or so goes the narrative.

Around the world, Europe is seen as “the Secular Continent.”  Mission mobilization to Europe is predicated on the tiny percentage of Evangelical Christians. And conferences often include the unchallenged affirmation that Europe is post-Christian and in need of re-evangelization.

Yet have we ever stopped to consider if these presuppositions are actually true?    

Sadly, many Christian leaders both in Europe and in other parts of the world, have internalized the myth of the inevitable decline of European Christianity. Rather than holding to our eschatological hope demonstrated in the resurrection of Jesus Christ, when it comes to Europe, we have internalized an eschatology of despair.  

So, to begin with, it is good to remind ourselves of how the story ends.

Revelation 7 is a postcard from the future, an image of a great multitude drawn “from every nation, from all tribes and peoples and languages, standing before the throne and before the Lamb” (v9) and that will include believers from all the peoples and nations of Europe.

Yet that is not only a statement of faith. It is something that, out of the spotlight, is happening right now. An extraordinary re-evangelization of Europe is underway.    

I think we can identify three primary dimensions of that re-evangelization. What follows is a summary but you can read much more in my Europe 2021 report.

Church Planting Movements

In almost every European country, there is an acceleration in the number of new churches being planted. Whether that is the result of denominational initiatives, mission agencies, individuals, national church planting platforms, or ministries that are facilitating church planting processes, new Christian communities are sprouting up almost everywhere you look.

Just one example: The vision of the CNEF (National Council of French Evangelicals) “1 pour 10,000,” meaning one evangelical church for every 10,000 people, has spurred on church planting in France and has seen, on average, one church planted every seven days or so over the last ten years.

Diaspora Churches

We are living in the age of World Christianity. The center of gravity of the world church has shifted from Europe to the Majority World. Yet, as missionary historian Andrew Walls observed, “the movement of Christianity is one of serial, not progressive expansion;” of gradual decline in its heartlands but rapid growth at the periphery. As Europe once again finds itself “on the periphery,” rather than nostalgia for a mythical Christian past, we should be filled with expectation for through migration the Spirit of God has drawn millions of Majority World Christians to Europe from Africa, Asia and Latin America.

Over the last thirty years, Latin American migrants have planted hundreds, thousands of churches in Spain, Portugal and beyond. African-initiated Pentecostal churches number in the thousands in Britain alone. And Asian Christians have been no less industrious. There are more Chinese Evangelical Churches in Italy (31) than the total number of Evangelical Churches in the neighboring country of Slovenia.

Next Generation

Amazing things are happening amongst Europe’s youth and again, I point you to the Europe 2021 report to read more about that, so that I talk more broadly about Europe’s future.

What will Europe look like in 2050, when those who are born today are in their early adulthood? Well the demographics of Europe’s tomorrow are already pretty certain, because birthrates across Europe over the last twenty five years have collapsed. Some Mediterranean countries now have rates that are among the lowest in the world—Total Fertility Rates 2022: Malta 1.08, Spain 1.16, Albania 1.21, Italy 1.24, Poland 1.29 (Source: Eurostat 2022)

Low birthrates are combined with a second demographic reality: a substantially larger older generation. Europe’s Old Age Dependency Ratio, the number of people aged 65+ per 100 people of working age, is expected to rise from around 30 in 2015 to between 50 and 60, and in the case of Italy and Spain, to between 70 and 80, by 2050 (Source: Eurostat 2021). In other words, for every five working people in Spain in 2050 there will be four pensioners.  

Last week, I sat down in church next to an elderly man I hadn’t seen before. Tony is a widower. His wife died just 18 months ago. He told his children he didn’t want to be a burden and he was very happy to go to an old people’s home. Tony used to be a Baptist minister, and now in the old people’s home, he has a queue of people waiting to visit him. The door to his room is always open and spiritually needy old people are seeking him out. “I have never had such a fruitful time in my ministry as I do now”, he said.  Tony is 85 years old.

In tomorrow’s Europe there will be more needy old people than in all its history. Lonely people, people who have lost hope, people living with fear, people who need to hear the gospel of Jesus Christ. What an opportunity God has set before us.  

God has not given up on Europe. It may be out of the spotlight but church planting is accelerating, diaspora churches are everywhere, and in the next generation, young and old will have unprecedented gospel opportunity.

And we know how the story ends: with every nation of Europe represented before the throne. So let’s change the story we are telling about the state of mission in Europe. Let’s stop talking about Europe being post-Christian. Europe is not post-Christian. It is pre-revival.

To find out about the work of Jim and Christine Memory at ECM please click here

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