At the annual gathering, held this year in Dallas, attendants heard from a number of speakers including Hindu followers of Christ, former missionaries, an evangelism and church growth consultant, and an expert on global Christianity.
Also speaking was Dr. Ralph D. Winter, one of the founders of the ISFM and the U.S. Center for World Mission, who has been noted by Time Magazine as one of America’s top 25 evangelicals.
At the conclusion of ISFM’s Sept. 15-17 meeting, Winter spoke with our Christian Today Correspondent to share his views on frontier missions in a land containing one of the world’s largest unreached populations.
The following are excerpts from the interview with the world renowned missiologist:
Why is India the focus of this year’s ISFM conference? Is it because there is not enough mission attention on India or perhaps because the mission approach to India has been wrong?
Winter: Well, I wasn’t involved in the decision so I’m not sure what was the exact reason, but India is one of the most astonishing problems of contextualisation. Islam is so near to Christianity that it doesn’t seem like a big leap, but Hinduism is so radically different from Christianity that it seems to be an impossible leap. Therefore it is more of a critical area.
The specific focus of this year’s ISFM conference is sharing Jesus Christ with caste Hindus [The conference did not focus only on “high” caste Hindus per se, it simply did not focus on Dalits or tribals.]. Why has this population not been reached in the past? It is well known that there is a large Christian population among the Dalits (formerly known as untouchables). Are higher-caste Hindus more difficult or is it just that they’ve been neglected?
Winter: Strictly speaking, there are more than 600 million caste Hindus and, as a bloc of peoples, they have been neglected. However, the number of caste Hindus in India who are devout followers of Jesus Christ but who don’t call themselves “Christians” is estimated to be upwards of 14 million. That’s more than the number of devout followers of Christ who do call themselves “Christians” – perhaps two to three times as many! Because even in the United States, people who call themselves “Christians” – like Presbyterians, Baptists, Methodists – are not all necessarily devout followers of Jesus.










