An account of the fervent desire to promote Christianity across the world.
Brazilian journalist Carranca offers a penetrating report on the clandestine world of Evangelical missionaries, many from Latin America, who come to the Middle East to convert people. Her primary guide to this dedicated community is S.P. Luiz. In 2003, he and his family left their native Brazil—the second-largest sender of missionaries—to save souls in Afghanistan. Luiz’s journey, Carranca writes, “took me to underground house churches in Afghanistan, among persecuted Christian converts in Pakistan, to a close-mouthed summit on global Evangelism in Indonesia, the world’s largest Muslim country, and to mission fields in Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Syria, and Turkey.” She came to understand that the missionaries’ work, as they saw it, was not to liberate inhabitants from poverty and oppression, but to free them from being “‘enslaved’ by Islam, Hinduism, and Buddhism.” Missionaries, she writes, believe “they are fighting spiritual battles, and they see poverty, wars, and disasters as caused by evil forces to which the only solution is Evangelism.” Their missions are dangerous, to be sure: They are subject to constant surveillance, death threats, and arrests. To protect themselves, they use encrypted messages and email to communicate, never talk about religion on the phone, and use fake names. They keep religious materials and images hidden; sometimes, they are forced to flee for their lives when terrorists rampage through their communities. Yet their work has been successful, with large numbers of converts, and Evangelicals’ experiences throughout the Global South have changed the sect. No longer homogeneously white and socially conservative, they have become a diverse group whose leaders, rather than support isolationist policies, see themselves as part of a global community—all “God’s Kingdom, conceived by Evangelicals as universal and borderless.”
An eye-opening look at a hidden reality of Evangelical missions.