The gospel is not a Western religion but originated in the East. Christians confess that the almighty God revealed Himself in the history of Israel, and that this good news spread through Turkey into Europe. In regions such as present-day Iraq, Syria, Egypt, North Africa, Ethiopia, Yemen, and India, strong churches emerged early on—long before the Germanic peoples ever heard the gospel. For the first 1,000 years, Europeans (and certainly North Americans) were a small minority among Christians, and in recent times this has again become the case.
While de-Christianization is advancing in the “Christian West,” churches in Asia, Africa, and Latin America are growing rapidly. Today, two-thirds of Christians have brown, black, or Asian backgrounds. Christianity is now largely shaped by the Global South (the “two-thirds world”). This is also true for mission: the majority of evangelical missionaries today come from countries such as India, Korea, the Philippines, Brazil, and Nigeria—no longer primarily from North America or Europe. They live out their spirituality in both word and deed.
There is much we can learn from one another, and we can support each other in training workers and developing new forms of church. Mission today is from everywhere to everywhere.