24th
November, 2003
He
was the first national director of Youth Alive and now lives in
Copenhagen where he heads up a mission to Europe, described by Time
magazine as “one of the darkest spiritual places on earth”.
DAVID ADAMS speaks with Mal Fletcher...
What is Next Wave
International?
“Next Wave International is a mission to the contemporary
cultures of the Europe and the churches that want to reach them.
Our particular focus is Western Europe but it’s not exclusive
to that area.”
People in Australia may remember you from your days as the
first national director of Youth Alive Australia. From that, how
did you come to be called to Europe?
“Back when we were pioneering Youth Alive through the Eighties,
I made visits to Europe about once a year, speaking at conferences
and so on, and I think without me knowing it at the time, God was
building a passion in my heart for this part of the world. I would
often come back and tell our Youth Alive team in Australia about
the need in Europe and a result of that some of my friends, I think,
identified a call of God before I did. So in 1994, my wife Davina
and I took our three children to Europe for four months...just testing
the waters and seeing what God was saying to us. Then in 1995 we
came to Europe permanently.”
In some of your promotional literature, you’ve quoted
Time magazine as saying “Western Europe is the darkest spiritual
place on earth”. Why do you think that’s the case?
“Well I think to substantiate that statement, people should
understand that in the EU (European Union) as it will be next year
there will be 450 million people and, of course that represents
mainly Westernised Europe. At the same time (we’re told) that
where Africa sees 15,000 saved every day and South America something
like 25,000, every week something like 7,000 people leave the established
church throughout Europe. There are 250,000 towns, cities and villages
in Europe that have no church at all and there are many other statistics
that back up the statement that Time Magazine made.
“As to why it is, I think it goes back historically to the
birth of the so-called Enlightenment here in Europe where post-Charles
Darwin humanist thinkers began to abandon their belief in God and
as a result Europe not only lost it’s religious faith it also
lost it’s true culture because culture is based on cult -
the religious practice of a group of people. As a result, today
Europe is in many ways struggling to find its identity. So much
so that the European Union’s draft constitution doesn’t
even mention God.”
How are you and other churches redressing this situation?
“We’re involved with a lot of churches obviously as
a mission to Europe and we have very good favor with some of the
key apostolic voices across Europe in major capital cities. What
we are doing is trying to equip the church to be not only contemporary
and in touch with the times but to be truly apostolic and prophetic
ahead of the times. That involves media - things like television
and the internet - it involves the whole way we do church and positioning
the church so it doesn’t just have influence on it’s
own people but it’s actually changing the culture of cities.”
Obviously you see television as a fairly important medium in getting
the message out?
“(P)eople say ‘why do you want to be on TV and why do
you spend so much time and money making such high quality programs
and then pushing to have them on secular TV?’ The answer to
that is most people do not go to church but almost everybody has
a television. I think the church sometimes is only looking at geographical
spheres of influence instead of seeing the areas of influence that
people value - like the media, like the arts, like politics. So
we are not only passionate about local church, we are also passionate
about doing what Paul did in Acts 16 and 17 when he first came to
Europe and that was touching the areas of business, the media and
so on - the major spheres of influence.”
You also hold what are known as “masterclasses”
twice a year. What are they?
“Masterclass is an intense experience in leadership and communication.
It’s not a seminar as such, it’s not a conference. It’s
much more intense than a conference and much more inspirational
than a seminar. It’s a bit hard to put it into one of the
existing boxes but we train hundreds of pastors now through those
masterclasses in cities across Europe to be more contemporary in
the way they present the gospel without straying off message.”
Are there in particular areas of the Europe that are particularly
open or where you’re seeing great growth in churches?
“In the UK there is a lot happening in the church but there’s
still not as much growth as we would like to see...In the northern
countries of Europe there’s a lot of church planting starting
to happen and what’s really exciting there is to watch Gen
X - those people in their mid 20s to late 30s - that are starting
to plant churches and to lead networks of leaders. In the east of
Europe there are some very big churches and churches are growing
very quickly right now in places that really nobody in the west
has heard much about; in places like Kiev and Riga, Latvia, and
even over as far as Russia.”
Is there anything Australia can learn from the experience of the
church in Europe?
“In countries like Australia, we need to be very careful that
we don’t assume we have more influence than we do. That in
some ways is what happened in western Europe. At one point in the
history of Europe, the church made an unconscious decision to be
more reactive than proactive and it felt overwhelmed by the changes
occurring around it. If we’re not careful when that happens,
we start to retreat into our shell and abandon our responsibility
in areas like education, like the arts, like just being involved
in the community...
“The other thing I would say is that Australia mustn’t
lose it’s pioneer spirit; it mustn’t ever take for granted
the fact that we have this spirit of adventure that says ‘Come
on, let’s have a go, let’s do it...I think God has placed
that in our culture because He loves to do things when people say
they can’t be done.”
You were in Australia recently. Was there a specific message you
had for this country?
“God really laid a word on my heart about the strongholds
we need to deal with if we’re to increase the influence of
the church in Australia and two of them in particular. One was political
correctness - there’s a form of political correctness that
can get into the church where we are just Paul says comparing ourselves
with ourselves and other churches that agree with us and instead
of seeking God’s unique plan for our particular church, we
are just doing what’s the latest flavour or the latest conference.
Australia needs a variety of expressions of local church.
“The other one was village thinking which I coined to describe
the idea that we are sometimes only geographically based, as I said
before, rather than being also focused on sphere’s that touch
people’s values and life. Once upon a time, the marketplace
was part of the town, it served the town but now the town is subservient
to the marketplace. People go online on the Internet buying products,
they go online to find friendships. The local church has got to
become more of a marketplace church too.”
Any particular prayer needs in Europe that you would like
to highlight?
“I think we could pray for the political development of Europe
because that expresses a statement of the future, of how we see
the future of Europe...I think we also need to pray for churches
in Europe: that they will have the faith, the courage, the boldness
and the resources to go out beyond denominational lines and touch
whole nations.
“Twice a year (we bring together) major apostolic leaders
from across Europe: it’s not denominational - the people are
there because we invited them there and they’re all leading
major networks of leaders in their own right. What’s really
exciting about that is...the sense of need...but also the enthusiasm
about the fact that it’s a great opportunity. Where there’s
great need, there’s great opportunity and so I’d say
to the churches in Australia, please pray for those major leaders
who are planting churches across Europe that God will continue to
give them faith.”
For more on Mal Fletcher - including the message he delivered in
Australia recently - see:
www.nextwaveinternational.com
www.edges.tv
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