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Anglican Frontier Missions

Anglican Frontier Missions
AFM TEMP LOGO C.png
Motto

"Serving the Largest and Least Evangelized"

"Going Where the Need is Greatest"
Formation November 1, 1993
Founder The Rev. Tad de Bordenave
Type Missionary agency
Headquarters Richmond, VA
Location
Official language
English
Executive director
The Rev. Christopher Royer
Website anglicanfrontiers.com

"Serving the Largest and Least Evangelized"

Anglican Frontier Missions is an American-based Christian mission organization that "To plant biblically-based, indigenous churches where the church is not, among the 2 billion people and 6,000+ unreached people groups still waiting to hear the Gospel for the very first time."

Anglican Frontier Missions (AFM) originated at a meeting of 23 leaders of the Episcopal Church on November 1, 1990 (All Saints' Day), coinciding with the first year of the "Decade of Evangelism" of the Anglican Communion. Their decision to form a missionary society came to fruition three years later.

Founded by the Rev. E. A. de Bordenave in 1993, one thing notable about AFM is that it uses a non-denominational approach to missions, recruiting from any denomination or Christian faith tradition in order to reach the 29% of the world's population who have not heard the Christian message. This approach was new within Anglicanism.

In 2007 Dr. Julian Linnell was appointed second executive director of AFM. English by birth, Dr. Linnell focused his efforts on mobilizing churches, mentoring individuals and sending missionaries to ethnic groups in a region stretching from North Africa, through the Middle East to Southeast Asia. Prior to AFM, he served as a cross-cultural missionary in Southeast Asia.

The Rev. Christopher Royer was named third executive director of AFM in June 2014. Prior to his call to Anglican Frontier Missions, Rev. Royer developed a contagious passion for the unreached and a sensitivity to cross-cultural evangelism while serving and planting churches among Muslims in the Middle East.

Anglican Frontier Missions is committed to going where the need is greatest, to planting indigenous churches among the largest and least evangelized peoples in the world. AFM mobilizes churches and sends short-term and long-term missionaries to do pioneer, frontier missions, where the church is not. Anglican Frontier Missions serves as a bridge-builder enabling Christians to fulfill their call to witness to the unreached at the ends of the earth. As a bridge-builder, AFM connects the church, the steward of the gospel, with the unreached who have not yet been able to hear it. Thus, bridges are built both for those at home and for those at the ends of the earth.

Anglican Frontier Missions exists because the church does not yet exist in every ethno-linguistic nation of the world. Some geo-political nations, like Nigeria, which is made up of 537 ethno-linguistic nations, waited 1800 years for the life-changing message of Jesus Christ. Some 6,000 more ethno-linguistic nations are still waiting. Even though 67 generations have come and gone since Jesus' resurrection, still over 2.0 billion people are unreached with the Gospel. This unseen quarter of the world has no geographic and/or cultural access (or infinitesimally limited access) to churches and Christians. In spite of the great advances made by missionaries over the years, 1/4 of the world’s entire population still has not encountered a Christian, let alone the Gospel itself. These people will likely never have a chance to hear the Gospel before they die, unless intentional efforts are made to reach them. Yet only 3% of the Church’s missionaries and 0.1% of its resources are going to evangelize these unreached people groups. The two countries that send the most missionaries—the US and Brazil—are also the two countries that receive the most missionaries.


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