For the last few years, researchers have credited the underground
church in Iran as the fastest-growing Christian church in the world. It
has unique characteristics that defy comparison with churches in America
and Europe, and in the opinion of some who know it well, the church in
the West could learn by studying it.
“The fastest-growing church
in the world has taken root in one of the most unexpected and
radicalized nations on earth,” according to “Sheep Among Wolves,” the
outstanding two-hour documentary about the revival that has taken place
inside Iran. “The Iranian awakening is a rapidly reproducing
discipleship movement that owns no property or buildings, has no central
leadership, and is predominantly led by women.”
The documentary
was produced by Frontier Alliance International (FAI), which supports
disciple-making teams targeting the “unreached” and “unengaged” within
the 10/40 Window.
There is a mass exodus leaving Islam for Christianity within Iran, according to FAI.
“What
if I told you Islam is dead?” one unidentified Iranian church leader
says on the film. “What if I told you the mosques are empty inside Iran?
What if I told you no one follows Islam inside of Iran? Would you
believe me? This is exactly what is happening inside of Iran. God is
moving powerfully inside of Iran.”
Many of the ruling class still
follow Islam, “because that’s where the high paying jobs are,” according
to the film, but the majority of the ordinary people love God and
recognize that Islam is the problem.
“What if I told you the best
evangelist for Jesus was the Ayatollah Khomeini?” an Iranian church
leader asks. He maintains the ayatollahs brought the true face of Islam
to light and people discovered it was a lie, a deception. “After 40
years under Islamic law — a utopia according to them — they’ve had the
worst devastation in the 5,000 year history of Iran.”
Efforts by
the ayatollahs to destroy Christianity have backfired, but have served
to refine and purify the church. “What persecution did was destroy the
church that were not disciples, and destroy the church that were about
converts,” the Iranian church leader noted. “All these church planters
found out that converts run away from persecution, but disciples would
die for the Lord in persecution.
“So our model inside Iran is that we don’t convert to disciple, we disciple so we can convert.”
Often
a disciple making movement (DMM) begins the first moment someone comes
into contact with an unbeliever. “Everything is foundational on prayer.
We find people of peace through prayer. We even find locations through
prayer,” the Iranian church leader noted.
“When we do DMM, Jesus
has gone faster than us. He has come in their dreams or he’s come
miraculously in their lives. When we hear this, we know that Jesus has
gone ahead of us.”
Surprisingly, their emphasis is not planting
churches; it is making disciples. “He is letting unbelievers lead other
unbelievers to himself and the kingdom of God. If you plant churches you
might make disciples. But if you make disciples, you will plant
churches,” the Iranian church leader said.
“One thing powerful
with DMM is that it is obedience-based discipleship. It is based on the
authority of Scripture and every time you read the Scripture you must
obey it. This is how people become conformed to the image of Christ and
sanctified. They are not just reading the Bible for information. They
are reading the Bible to get transformed.”
About 55% of the disciple makers are women, according to one Iranian leader.
“What’s fascinating right now is that the most powerful leaders in
Iran are women, but it’s not in a bombastic, humanistic way…in fact,
they are the most gentle women. They are leading this movement, going
out in the highways and byways sharing with prostitutes, drug addicts,
with everybody they come into contact with, and that takes courage. They
are courageous women.”
The women leaders in Iran have not embraced a feminist theology,
according to one of the U.S.-based leaders with FIA. “In a biblical way
they are submissive to proper structure and the order of the church, but
when it comes to what Satan is doing, they are fierce. These are not
like modern angry liberal women that are just upset. No, there is a
gentleness and submissiveness that is beautiful and follows the biblical
pattern.”
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