COMMUNITY TRANSFORMATION
Geoff Waugh
Whole communities transformed by God now give witness to
his power to heal the land and the people when we repent and unite in obedience
to his requirements.
The 2005 documentary report titled
Let the Seas Resound, produced by the
Sentinel Group (www.sentinel.com), identifies examples of transformed communities
in
Essential components of this
community transformation include these elements.
1. Honouring God.
Community leaders acknowledge that God creates and sustains life. They
rededicate their land and their people to Him. This approach transcends
doctrinal divisions, emphasizing the universal laws of God that apply to all
people of all nations.
2. Honouring people.
Community leaders acknowledge the importance of respecting all people. This
results in personal and public reconciliation. It is both compassionate and
inclusive, transcending division through mutual respect and unity.
3. Honouring justice.
Community leaders consult widely with diverse groups to identify and address
injustice. Issues are complex, and solutions not simple, but a common
commitment to God’s justice with mutual respect can open the way for community
transformation. God’s inclusive justice transcends sectarian divisions and
conflict with reconciliation and unity.
Many examples illustrate these
global principles. The following brief examples provide powerful case studies
of community transformation. Often a crisis, such as escalating crime, ethic
conflict or a political coup, becomes the motivating catalyst for change. For
example, community and church leaders may be motivated by the crisis to act.
However, communities can be transformed without waiting for a crisis to motivate
change.
In September 2004, 10, 000 people
gathered to worship together in
The President of Fiji, Ratu Josefa
Iloilo, called the churches to unite in repentance and prayer for the nation.
At a united rally in 2001, Laisenia Qarase, later elected as Prime Minister,
confessed: “Our efforts in building the country will come to nothing if they
are not rooted firmly in the love and fear of God. I ask Him to forgive me for
the times I have been neglectful and cold in my relationship with Him. With
Your guidance Lord, this sinner will renew himself; will find new purpose in
the pursuit of Your will. Lord, I entreat You, again, to forgive me, to save
me, to capture my heart and hold my hand. I honour You as the King of Kings.”[1]
The Association of Christian
Churches in Fiji (ACCF) emerged as one structural response to this desire for
reconciliation and unity among Christians and in the community.
As people of
Three days after the people of
Nuku made a united covenant with God, the water in the local stream, which for
the previous 42 years had been known as the cause of barrenness and illness,
mysteriously became clean and life giving. Then food grew plentifully in the
area.
Fish are now caught in abundance
around the
Many people of Fiji acknowledge
that these changes in reconciliation, unity, and in the eco-systems confirm
God’s promise in 2 Chronicles 7:14 – “If my people who are called by my name
will humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and turn from their wicked
ways, then I will hear from heaven, I will forgive their sin, and I will heal
their land.”
The town of
Donato Santiago, the town’s chief
of police, said, “People were always fighting. We never had any rest.” Now with
crime dramatically diminished and the gaols no longer needed, police chief
A few Christian leaders began
regularly praying together from 7 pm to midnight in the 1970s. As they
continued to pray in unity, increasing numbers of people were being healed and
set free from strong demonic powers or witchcraft. Churches began to grow, and
the community began to change. Crime and alcoholism decreased.
Within twenty years the four gaols
emptied and are now used for community functions. The last of Almolonga’s gaols
closed in 1994, and is now a remodeled building called the ‘Hall of Honour’
used for municipal ceremonies and weddings.
The town’s agricultural base was
transformed. Their fields have become so fertile they yield three large
harvests a year. Previously, the area exported four truckloads of produce a
month. Now they are exporting as many as 40 truckloads a day. Farmers buy big
Mercedes trucks with cash, and then attach their testimony to the shiny
vehicles with huge metallic stickers and mud flaps declaring, ‘The Gift of God,’
‘God is my Stronghold’ and ‘Go Forward in Faith.’
Some farmers provide work for
others by renting out land and developing fields in other towns. They help
people get out of debt by providing employment for them.
On Halloween day in 1998, an
estimated 12, 000 to 15, 000 people gathered in the market square to worship
and honour God in a fiesta of praise. Led by the mayor and many pastors, the
people prayed for God to take authority over their lives and their economy.
University researchers from the
The drug lords in cartels ruled
the city through fear. At times 15 people a day were killed, shot from the
black Mercedes cars owned by the cartels. Car bombs exploded regularly.
Journalists who denounced the Mafia were killed. Drug money controlled the
politicians.
By the early 1990s the cartels
controlled every major institution in
The churches were in disarray and
ineffective. “In those days,” a pastor recalls, “the pastors’ association
consisted of an old box of files that nobody wanted. Every pastor was working
on his own; no one wanted to join together.”
A few discouraged but determined
pastors began praying together regularly, asking God to intervene. Gradually
others joined them.
A small group of pastors planned a
combined service in the civic auditorium in May 1995 for a night of prayer and
repentance. They expected a few thousand people, but were amazed when 25, 000
attended, nearly half of the city’s evangelical population. The crowd remained
until 6 o’clock the next morning at this the first of the city’s now famous
united all-night prayer vigils held four times a year.
Two days after that event in May
1995, the daily newspaper, El Pais, headlined,
“No Homicides!” For the first time in anyone’s memory, 24 hours had passed
without a single person being killed. Then, during the next four months 900
cartel-linked officers were fired from the metropolitan police force.
By August 1995, the authorities
had captured all seven of the targeted cartel leaders. Previously the combined
efforts of the Columbian authorities, and the American FBI and CIA had been
unable to do that.
In December 1995, a hit man killed
Pastor Julio Ruibal, one of the key leaders of the combined pastors’ meetings
and the united prayer gatherings. 1, 500 people gathered at his funeral,
including many pastors who had not spoken to each other in months. At the end
of the memorial service, the pastors said, “Brothers, let us covenant to walk
together in unity from this day forward. Let Julio’s blood be the glue that
binds us together in the Holy Spirit.”
Now over 200 pastors have signed
the covenant that is the backbone of the city’s united prayer vigils. What made
the partnership of these leaders so effective are the same things that always
bring God’s blessings: clean hearts, right relationships, and united prayer.
As the
Churches grow fast. One church
that meets in a huge former warehouse holds seven services on a Sunday to
accommodate its 35, 000 people. Asked, “What is your secret?” they point to the
24-hour prayer room behind the platform.
A former drug dealer says, “There
is a hunger for God everywhere. You can see it on the buses, on the streets and
in the cafes. Anywhere you go people are ready to talk.”
City authorities have given the
churches free use of large stadium venues for their united gatherings because
of their impact on the whole community, saving the city millions of dollars
through reduced crime and terrorism.
Teen
Illicit drug abuse and addiction
create social and personal devastation internationally. Federal dollars in
Research published in 1999
included comprehensive statistical analysis comparing drug rehabilitation
success rates for Teen Challenge (130 centres and 2885 beds) with public funded
and insurers’ funded programs, particularly the popular Short-Term Inpatient (STI)
drug treatment programs of one to two months. The study surveyed key areas of
rehabilitation including freedom from addictive substances, employment rates,
productive social relationships and better quality of life.
Evaluation of the Teen Challenge
program conducted by the National Institute of Drug Abuse (NIDA) in 1975 found
that 87% of former abusers were abstaining from Marijuana seven years after
completing the program, and 95% of former heroin abusers were abstaining from
abuse seven years later. Similarly, the 1999 research found that 86% of former
abusers were abstaining from drugs after their Teen Challenge rehabilitation.
No public funded program showed such success rates. Most research showed that
less than 10% still abstained from drug abuse five years after treatment.
Research identified the following
factors as the most positive, helpful and effective dimensions of the Teen
Challenge rehabilitation program, in this order of importance:
Graduates of the program identified other helpful factors as seeing lives changes, self-motivation, prayer, outings, helping others, forgiving self, changed thinking, hope and good food.
A powerful dimension of the Teen Challenge program, particularly relevant to this article on community transformation, is the significance of the inter-cultural, inter-faith and inter-racial communities in Teen Challenge. These communities transcend racial barriers, such as noted in these comments: “I loved to be around these people from different places, I wished I could have got their numbers; it was a beautiful thing, living with them with no prejudice or racism. We loved one another. It was a beautiful thing. We all learn something from each other; I still learn from them today.”
These brief sample case studies of community transformation provide hope for change and a way ahead. It is possible. It is happening.
The conclusion may be stated in words from the timeless biblical record, spanning many millennia and diverse national and cultural communities:
Then that honour me, I will honour (I Samuel 2:30).
If my people who are called by my name will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked way, then I will hear from heaven my dwelling place, and will forgive their sin, and heal their land (2 Chronicles 7:14).
What does the Lord require of you? To do justice, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God (Hosea 6:8).
Seek first the
Discussion Questions
© Renewal Journal, (www.renewaljournal.com). Rev. Dr.
Geoff Waugh edited Issues 1-20 of the Renewal
Journal. This article may be reproduced as long as the copyright
information is included with the text.
[1] Information from the Sentinel Group 2005 video/DVD, Let the Seas Resound (www.sentinel.com).
[2] George
Otis, 2000, “Snapshots of Glory” in Renewal
Journal, Issue 17 (www.renewaljournal.com)
and the Sentinel Group 2000 video/DVD report Transformation.
[3] Information from George Otis, 2000, “Snapshots of Glory” in Renewal Journal, Issue 17, reproduced in www.renewaljournal.com.
[4] Information for this section on Teen Challenge is from the article “Teen Challenge’s Proven Answer to the Drug Problem” in a review of a study by Dr A T Bicknese titled “The Teen Challenge Drug Treatment Program in Comparative Perspective” on www.teenchallenge.com/tcreview.html.