OMS Outreach Jan-Apr 2014 | Page 8

Discipling the Responsive People Groups of India By Bishop Ezra Sargunam, Evangelical Church of India One Mission Society entered India in the state some of the missiological factors beearly 1940s, after the door was closed in hind the phenomenal church growth: China. Driven by this strong conviction that “the Orient” should be evangelized by its • Unlike some other overseas misown sons and daughters, OMS established sions that may focus on establishing seminaries to train national evangelists. With schools and hospitals and other relief that heritage and specific call, OMS first and development projects, OMS has started a seminary in Allahabad and then in had a clear vision and mission since Madras, which is now Chennai. the beginning to disciple people, plant OMS then established the Evangelical national churches in the countries Church of India (ECI) in 1945 after India bewhere they operate, and then train and came independent. Despite not having strong equip national leaders to plant indigdenominational ties or partnerships outside enous churches. of OMS (like other successful churches in • Since India has 27 major languages India have), the Lord has enabled us to exand hundreds of other dialects, we felt perience phenomenal church growth. Today, the need to establish regional Bible we have more than 3,500 local churches and schools. It was OMS missionary Dr. 4,000 house churches, with a total memberElmer Kilbourne who helped us to ship of over 600,000 people and 3,000 pasestablish the first 11 Bible schools. tors, evangelists, and lay preachers. We also These small regional schools currently have 13 seminaries and Bible schools across train more evangelists and pastors to India, training hundreds of young men and minister to various regions than our women for ministry. ECI has 765 indigenous major seminaries. missionaries working in the northern states of India, sent through the Indian Missionary • According to studies conducted by Movement (IMM), the missionary division of Joshua Project and Operation World, ECI. 16,804 people groups exist in the Even in the late 1970s, Dr. Donald McGavran, world today. India has more than 4,000 the father of the modern church growth sub-castes, tribes, and other ethnic movement, observed that, “The fascinating groups, among which only about 300 story of the unique church planting ministry to 400 people groups have had some of ECI in India … achieved by Dr. Sargunam sort of exposure to the Gospel. ECI and his colleagues must be told everywhere has a strong ministry among all these in the pessimistic missionary world.” least-reached and unengaged people I wish to share the ECI story briefly and groups. 8