pacific

changing lives

For Gordon, there was nothing to indicate that he wasn’t a Christian. ...

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statistics

population:
20.1 million

languages:
English

principal religions:
Roman Catholic (27%), Anglican (22%), and other Christian

ethnic groups:
European (96%), other Asian (2%), Aborigines (1.5%)

current ministries:
church planting, Bible college, and camp; Year entered by BMM: 1968

 

PacificTwo

Australia

The Land and the People
Australia has always been a land of immigrants.  Today, 23 percent of Australia's population is foreign-born, with the largest number of immigrants (32 percent) coming from Asia.  Most of the population lives in one-third of the country in the southeast and along the coastal areas of the south and west.  One-third of the continent is virtually uninhabited, with another third very sparsely populated.

Religion
With only 19 percent of all Australians attending a church of any kind, and a solid 25 percent of the people disavowing any religious beliefs, a spiritual vacuum exists in present-day Australia--a vacuum that is being rapidly filled by cults and Eastern religions.

Past and Current Work
William and Glenna Grant began a work in Australia in 1968.  A church was organized in Benalla in July 1969.  The work grew to include ten missionary families on the field, six indigenous churches, a Bible college, and a camp ministry.  Victoria Baptist Bible College was begun in 1972.  Several VBBC graduates are pastoring churches, and numerous others are involved as Christian workers in their local churches. Crystal Creek Christian Camp is an important ministry to the youth of Australia.

Goals

While the work is progressing, the challenges and opportunities are greater than the present personnel can adequately handle.  Metropolitan Melbourne is a vast ethnic mission field in its own right with Italian, Greek, Slavic, Jewish, Chinese, and Vietnamese communities, to mention but a few.  Workers are needed to reach these people and teach the truth of the gospel.  Gambling, drinking, and a general "she'll be right, Mate!" attitude of the people are hindrances to the spread of the gospel.  The strongest opposition to the work in Australia is the apathy of the people toward spiritual matters.

Workers needed
Church planters
Bible college professors
Camp ministry workers