The East-West Church & Ministry Report

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Occasional Papers on Religion in Eastern Europe Volume 23 Issue 3 Article 2 6-2003 The East-West Church & Ministry Report Mark Elliott Samford University, Birmingham, AL Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.georgefox.edu/ree Part of the Christianity Commons Recommended Citation Elliott, Mark (2003) "The East-West Church & Ministry Report," Occasional Papers on Religion in Eastern Europe: Vol. 23: Iss. 3, Article 2. Available at: http://digitalcommons.georgefox.edu/ree/vol23/iss3/2 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ George Fox University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Occasional Papers on Religion in Eastern Europe by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ George Fox University.

1 The East-West Church & Ministry Report by Mark Elliott Mark Elliott is director of the Global Center, Beeson Divinity School, Samford University, Birmingham, AL, and founding editor of the East-West Church & Ministry Report. Elliott has contributed numerous articles to REE. He is a member of the United Methodist Church. Origins The East-West Church & Ministry Report is a 16-page quarterly newsletter which began publication in 1993 at Wheaton College, Wheaton, IL, and since 1999 has been published at Samford University, Birmingham, AL. It serves as a clearinghouse for information on church life and missions in Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. It also serves as a forum for the exploration of a variety of issues relating to Christianity s presence in Europe s formerly Marxist states. 1 In its support of East European missions, the Report advocates, recommends, critiques, and cautions. As a forum for a wide range of topics related to religion in Eastern Europe, the Report gives voice to a variety of perspectives on contentious issues such as humanitarian aid, bribery, government legislation on religion, and the vagaries of church statistics. As founding editor of the Report this writer seeks to be an objective and independent observer of developments in the post-soviet orb. Yet at the same time as the Report aspires to dispassionate analysis, it naturally is influenced by its editor s own participation in the drama that has unfolded in the wake of glasnost and perestroika. Like the great majority of Soviet and post-soviet specialists who entered the field at any point prior to 1989, I have seen my research methodologies, travel, contacts, and career dramatically transformed since 1989. My graduate work in modern European and Russian history (University of Kentucky, 1969-74) began with a decided focus on political and military affairs. And my revised dissertation, published in 1982 under the title Pawns of Yalta: Soviet Refugees and America s Role in Their Repatriation (University of Illinois Press), dealt with political, diplomatic, and social history. Meanwhile, in my early visits to the Soviet Union (1974, 1981, 1985, 1989), I took what opportunities came my way to worship with fellow believers and was deeply moved by the tenacity and perseverance of Christians under siege. Those church visits ultimately drew me into an exploration of Russian church history and church life that continues to this day. 1 East-West Church & Ministry Report 1 (Winter 1993), 16. RELIGION IN EASTERN EUROPE XXIII, 3 (June 2003) Page 1

2 With glasnost and perestroika came a flood of new opportunities for travel, research, and cross-cultural collaboration in Soviet, and then, post-soviet territories. What was true for academia and business was also true for churches and ancillary mission agencies, often referred to as parachurch missions. The early 90s witnessed an explosion of East European mission activity. In 1991 alone, meetings dealing with East European missions numbered at least 16. 2 It was at just such a gathering at the O Hare Sheraton Hotel in June 1992 that various church and mission representatives urged the publication of a newsletter as a clearinghouse for information relating to Western Christian missions in Eastern Europe. Individuals who were key catalysts in the launching of what became the East-West Church & Ministry Report included Peter and Anita Deyneka (Peter Deyneka Russian Ministries), Billy Melvin (National Association of Evangelicals), and Peter Kuzmic (Evangelical Theological Seminary, Osijek, Croatia). From Subventions to Subscriptions; From Print to Internet While Deyneka staff member and founding coeditor Wil Triggs and I decided questions of coverage, format, and frequency of publication, Billy Melvin provided key contacts which led to foundation grants that saw the Report launched, with the first issue published in early 1993. In 1995, after two years of substantial grant support, the Report began to wean itself from dependence upon outside funding. It managed to survive the transition to a subscription basis and has maintained a stable, if modest, circulation to the present. 1996 brought additional change with the introduction of an e-mail subscription option. As expected, print subscriptions declined, but steadily growing e-mail subscriptions have more than compensated. Since mail service is problematic for much of the Report s intended constituency, e-mail has permitted the Report to reach a much more geographically dispersed audience than previously. E-mail, in addition, has tremendously simplified the process of communication with writers as well as subscribers. Since 1997 the Report website (www.samford.edu/groups/global/ewcmreport) has posted the full text of all issues more than one year old. These back issues on the Internet are available without charge, while a keyword search function expedites use of the Report for purposes of research. Report Readership 2 New Opportunities, New Demands in the Old Red Empire. Evangelical Missions Quarterly 28 (January 1992), 34. RELIGION IN EASTERN EUROPE XXIII, 3 (June 2003) Page 2

3 The Report s readership is broader than its subscription base might suggest because libraries account for one quarter of subscriptions (Appendix A). Also, the Report regularly receives requests either to reprint or to redistribute published articles by electronic means: from 12 requests in 1993 to 20 in 2001, the last year available for annual totals (Appendix B). Of these 16 organizations four are churches (Quaker, Baptist, Lutheran, and Wesleyan), two are educational programs (Donetsk Christian University and Russian Language Ministries), and the remaining ten are mission organizations (Appendix C). For the month of September 2002, the East-West Church & Ministry Report received 4,205 visitors to its website. The average visitor session was 16 minutes, 37 seconds, with 14.45 percent of visitors being international. The three most frequently accessed articles from the nine years of articles currently accessible on the web have been the recounting of Leo Tolstoy s short story, How Much Land Does a Man Need?, Popular Faith and Practice in Bulgaria, and Five Protestant Views of Orthodoxy. Content Topics of articles most frequently requested for reprinting or redistribution have dealt with cross-cultural communications, theological education, or church statistics (Appendix D). In terms of overall coverage, the Report has addressed three issues more than any others: 1. mission case studies and advice for cross cultural missionaries, including examples of effective and ineffective outreach; 2. the interface of Orthodox and Evangelical Christianity in theology and in practice; and 3. East-European religious demographics, including statistical breakdowns by confession and denomination, by membership and attendance, and for missionaries, by country, organization, and terms of service. Articles on Missions Mission case studies and articles offering advice on best practices have included the following: Christian ministry to particular groups: women, youth, orphans and street children, alcoholics, prisoners, and Roma (Gypsies); medical ministries; sports ministries; and humanitarian aid guidelines. The article in this genre that has generated the greatest editorial response from readers is Collectivism in the Russian World View and Its Implications for Christian Ministry 6 (Fall 1998): 12-14; 7 (Winter 1999): 9-10. The author, Steve Chapman, served as a missionary with the Evangelical Free Church in a Muslim region of Russia and is married to a Russian currently enrolled in a U.S. medical school. Another well-received contribution of this type, one that RELIGION IN EASTERN EUROPE XXIII, 3 (June 2003) Page 3

4 stresses both Orthodoxy s positive and problematic influences upon Russian culture, is a twopart article, Perceptions of a Great Country, 8 (Spring 2000): 1-3; 8 (Summer 2000): 11-12. The author, Peter Lowman, is a British academic and pastor who frequently spoke to Russian student groups in the 1990s. It was reprinted in Moscow in 2002 in a Russian-English diglot, together with memorial tributes to highly respected missionary Peter Deyneka, Jr. (1931-2000) who first urged the wide distribution of Lowman s reflections. The East-West Church & Ministry Report also frequently tackles point/counterpoint mission theme debates, examples of which include Western funding of indigenous missionaries: 4 (Winter 1996), 2-5; bribery: 5 (Winter 1997), 8-11; language study methodologies: 4 (Fall 1995), 4-6; and the pros and cons of Western subventions for East European Christian publishing: 8 (Spring 2000), 3-8, 16, 15. Articles on the Orthodox Protestant Interface After articles on missions per se, the second largest number of articles in the Report treats Eastern Orthodoxy, especially as it relates to its uneasy relationship with Protestants in Eastern Europe. A review of From Nyet to Da: Understanding the Russians, Yale Richmond s excellent compendium of Russia s history, culture, and spiritual and cultural psyche, appeared in the Report s first issue 1 (Winter 1993): 13. And the latest issue includes six articles on the prospects for, and pros and cons of, Orthodox instruction in Russian schools. In addition, in the latest issue, Nina Naletova and Father Georgi Edelstein respectively absolve and condemn the Moscow Patriarchate s Soviet-era Kremlin ties. In between these two bookmark issues, a sampling of articles exploring the Orthodox-Protestant interface include a summary of five Protestant perspectives on Orthodoxy: 3 (Spring 1995), 5-7; an article that notes the frequently overlooked affinities of Eastern Orthodox and Slavic Evangelicals, in contrast to Western Evangelicals: 3 (Fall 1995), 16, 15; tributes to Father Aleksandr Men: 7 (Summer 1999), 1-5, 16; the debate over what constitutes evangelism and proselytism: 8 (Fall 2000), 1-3; and the troubled troika of The CoMission, the Russian Ministry of Education, and the Russian Orthodox Church: 8 (Summer 2000), 1-5. Articles on Demography and Religion The Report also has frequently entered the murky waters of demography and religion. Enumerating the region s believers and missionaries is fraught with multiple, methodological dangers. But, hopefully, attempts at balanced, educated guesses are preferable to no figures at all, and preferable to wildly divergent, contradictory claims by various parties. The Report s estimates of East European missionaries have prompted reactions of both too high and too low, which, on balance, is some comfort: 2 (Winter 1994), 5; 3 (Fall 1995), 3. Attempts at RELIGION IN EASTERN EUROPE XXIII, 3 (June 2003) Page 4

5 quantifying church allegiance have been at least as problematic and contentious an exercise: 9 (Summer 2001), 1-12, 16. Perhaps the biggest debate in the Report to date on church statistics has centered on the new second edition of David Barrett s World Christian Encyclopedia which, in this editor s opinion, frequently overstates Orthodox, Protestant, and Catholic allegiance in post-soviet territories: 9 (Summer 2001): 4-5, 16, 9; 9 (Fall 2001): 11-12. Other Themes Additional themes that have received ongoing coverage in the Report have included: 1. state and majority faith interference in religious minorities exercise of freedom of conscience; 2. Protestant theological education; 3. East European Catholicism; 4. Christian themes in East European film; and 5. new religious movements in the post-soviet era. Subjects that this editor would like to address more fully in the Report in the future include Pentecostal and charismatic church growth, church finances, church- and missionsponsored microenterprise development projects for the benefit of indigenous churches and charities, and Christian ministry to the handicapped. As for geographic regions, the editor hopes to publish more in the future on the Balkans, Central Asia, and Siberia. Other Features of the Report One final feature of the East-West Church & Ministry Report that deserves note is the attention it regularly draws to other resources for the study of religion in post-soviet societies. The Report publishes excerpts from new studies with the hopes of drawing readers into more extensive study of the issues involved. Recent examples include excerpts reprinted from two lucid and sober treatments of Orthodox and Evangelical common ground and irreducible distinctives: one edited by Timothy Grass for the British Evangelical Alliance: Evangelicals and Orthodox: Crossing Paths and Crossing Sword, 9 (Fall 2001), 1-4, an excerpt from Evangelicalism and the Orthodox Church (Carlisle, England: Paternoster, 2001); and the other, Don Fairbairn s article, Suggestions for Christian Workers in the East, 9 (Fall 2001), 16, 14-15, an excerpt from his newly published Eastern Orthodoxy Through Western Eyes (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 2001). The Report also carries reviews of books, videos, and websites dealing with religion in post-soviet states. Its annotations for one-hundred-plus religion websites have been collected from various issues of the Report and have been posted on the East-West Church & Ministry RELIGION IN EASTERN EUROPE XXIII, 3 (June 2003) Page 5

6 Report section of Samford University s Global Center website under the heading of links: www.samford.edu/groups/global/ewcmreport. The East-West Church & Ministry Report is a member of the Evangelical Press Association and received EPA Awards of Merit in 1993, 1997, 1998, 1999, and 2001. It is indexed by OCLC Public Affairs Information Service (formerly PAIS), Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI), and Zeller Dietrich (formerly Zeller Verlag). Geographic Coverage In terms of geographic distribution, the Report has covered various post-soviet territories roughly in proportion to their percentage of the region s population, with the exception of Russia, which because of its size and its historic, political, and cultural importance, has received greater attention: 35 percent of the region s population, but 45 percent of articles (Appendix E). A Subscriber Profile Based on surveys conducted in 1998 and 2001, a profile of the typical subscriber is as follows: male (86%), in his 40s or 50s (60%), Protestant (94%), holding an M.A. or doctoral degree (64%), who uses a computer 20 or more hours per week (62%), and who regularly uses the Internet (98%). The typical subscriber is most likely to be a missionary (42%), a mission administrator (42%), an educator (36%), or some combination of the above (Appendix F). The academic orientation of the Report s readership may be underscored by the fact that libraries, as noted earlier, account for 25 percent of total subscriptions. In Conclusion A major goal of the East-West Church & Ministry Report from its inception has been (1) to publish material from academic sources that could benefit the understanding and the ministry of East European missionaries and church administrators, in the East and in the West; and (2) to publish material drawn from the experience of missionaries and indigenous Christians in post- Soviet territories for the benefit of academics with an interest in religious life in Eastern Europe. Letters to the editor and anecdotal evidence suggest that the Report is reaching both an academic and a missionary audience. The Report s goal for the second decade of publication is to develop a much wider readership among both academics and the church and missions community. Appendix A East-West Church & Ministry Report - Library Subscriptions Institution Subscriptions Seminary* 49 RELIGION IN EASTERN EUROPE XXIII, 3 (June 2003) Page 6

7 Christian University 15 Christian College* 14 Bible College 13 Mission Organization 5 Church Library 3 Foundation Library 2 Secular College or University/Institute 1 *Includes three double entries for combined Christian college and seminary libraries. Appendix B East-West Church & Ministry Report - Requests to Reprint and Redistribute Articles Number Year 12 1993 10 1994 13 1995 5 1996 14 1997 13 1998 24 1999 19 2000 20 2001 16 2002 (to date) Appendix C Organizations That Have Made Multiple Requests to Reprint or Redistribute East-West Church and Ministry Report Articles, 1993-2002 Number of Article Requests Organization Location 7 Eastern European Harvest Alabama 5 Russian Language Ministries South Carolina 4 Friends United Meeting Indiana 3 Donetsk Christian University Ukraine 2 The Alliance for Saturation Church Hungary Planting 2 Berry Publishing Services California 2 Covenant Baptist Church of Kansas Topeka 2 Christian Medical & Dental Tennessee Society 2 Eastern European Bible Mission Colorado 2 InterAct Ministries Oregon 2 Peter Deyneka Russian Ministries Illinois 2 Project Cross Arkansas RELIGION IN EASTERN EUROPE XXIII, 3 (June 2003) Page 7

8 2 Reach Out Ministries Georgia 2 Russian Resources Press Florida 2 Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Wisconsin Synod 2 Wesleyan World Missions Indiana Appendix D East-West Church & Ministry Report - Reprinting and Redistribution of Multiple-Request Number of Requests 5 Mark Elliott Guidelines for Guest Preaching, Teaching, and Cross-Cultural Communication Author Article Title Vol/No/Year 3 Sharyl Corrado Early Russian Evangelicals: Ministry Lessons for Today 3 Nicholas Holovaty An Ideal Theological Education: The Vision of Moscow s Protestant Leaders 10/2/2002 8/4/2000 8/4/2000 3 Tiberius Rata Theological Education in Romania 10/2/2002 2 David Barnes, Irina Kargina & Mark Elliott Protestants in the Former Soviet Union: What Survey Findings Reveal 2 Mark Elliott Analysis of World Christian Encyclopedia Figures for Post-Soviet Christians 2 Kimmo Kaariainen Lowest Church Attendance Rates in Europe 2 David C. Lewis A Sobering Critique of Russian Protestant Church Growth 2 Mike Stachura Seven Principles for Highly Effective Short-Term Missions 10/1/2002 9/3/2001 9/3/2001 9/3/2001 2/4/1994 Appendix E: East-West Church & Ministry Report - Geographic Coverage, 1993-2002 Country/Region Number of Articles/ Percentage of Population Population** (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania) Editorials Articles/Editorials Percentage Russia 167 45 35 143,500,000 Ukraine 6 2 12 48,200,000 Baltic States 4 1 2 7,200,000 Central Asia (Uzbekistan, 6 2 14 57,100,000 Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Krygyzia, Kazakhstan) Other Former Soviet Republics 2 1 7.5 30,600,000 (Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova) *Former Soviet Union 46 12 Former Soviet Union Subtotal 231 57 *70 286,600,000 Bulgaria 9 2 1.9 7,800,000 Albania 4 1 1 3,100,000 Romania 12 3 5.5 22,400,000 RELIGION IN EASTERN EUROPE XXIII, 3 (June 2003) Page 8

9 Hungary 4 1 2.5 10,100,000 Czech Republic 4 1 2.5 10,300,000 Slovakia 0 0 1 5,400,000 Poland 8 2 9 38,600,000 Former Yugoslavia 6 2 5.5 22,400,000 *Central and Eastern 21 6 Europe Central and Eastern 68 24?? 120,100,000 Europe Subtotal ***Articles that Cover Both the Former Soviet Union and Central and 72 19 Eastern Europe Total 371 100 100 406,700,000 *Covers through Volume 10, Issue 3 ** PRB 2002 World Population Data Sheet (Population Reference Bureau: http://www.prb.org/). *** Articles treating more than one country. Appendix F: East-West Church & Ministry Report - Typical Subscriber Typical Subscriber 1998 2001 Male 75% 86% 40 to 59 years old 59% 60% Protestant 91% 94% Holds an M.A. or doctorate 71% 64% Uses a computer 20 or 20% 62% more hours per week Has Internet access 94% 98% Is most likely to be a: Missionary and/or 47% 42% Mission administrator 35% 42% and/or Professor/teacher 21% 36% Lives in the United States 43% 65% Appendix G Ten Most Frequently Accessed Articles - (September December 15, 2002) Kristian Ismail and Gary Griffith, Popular Faith and Practice in Bulgaria Today Mark Elliott, How Much Land Does a Man Need? Don Fairbairn, Eastern Orthodoxy: Five Protestant Perspectives Juris Rubenis, Rebirth and Renewal in the Latvian Evangelical Lutheran Church Sharyl Corrado, Internet Visa Instructions Boris Vukonic, Catholic Pilgrimage: The Phenomenon of Medugorje Don Fairbairn, Islam in Pre-Soviet Eurasia Paul Carden, Cults and New Religious Movements in the Former Soviet Union Caroline Swartz, Longer Term Solutions for Romanian Orphans Mike Stachura, Seven Principles for Highly Effective Short-Term Missions RELIGION IN EASTERN EUROPE XXIII, 3 (June 2003) Page 9