The Life and Impact of Phil Parshall: Connecting with Muslims
By Kenneth Nehrbass and Mark Williams
()
About this ebook
Being a witness for Jesus in Muslim contexts is often difficult, complicated, and even discouraging. Over the past forty years, Phil Parshall, a leading authority on Muslim outreach, has demonstrated that making friends with Muslims—whether in the West or abroad—is where our witness usually begins.
"Brother Phil" and his wife, Julie, were missionaries in Bangladesh for more than twenty years and later worked among Muslims in the Philippines. During his tenure as a missionary leader, Parshall authored a dozen books that helped shape current missiological perspectives about Muslim outreach. In this volume, the only edited work dedicated to exploring Phil Parshall’s legacy, seven respected missiologists interact with those ideas.
While all the contributors to this book have been inspired by Parshall's life and work, some of them believe that Parshall’s methods of contextualization could have been taken even further. They ponder: How can we further remove obstacles to following Jesus? How do we navigate the fine lines between Muslim cultures and Muslim religious ideas? What cultural and social aspects of Muslim life could cross-cultural workers adopt when living among Muslims? Here they share some of their victories and challenges, encouraging Christian workers to press ahead on paths of outreach to Muslims that are fitting for the twenty-first century context.
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The Life and Impact of Phil Parshall - Kenneth Nehrbass
ENDORSEMENTS
This volume is a fitting tribute to Phil and Julie Parshall. Not only do the contributors demonstrate the global impact of Parshall’s writings, but they also build on his work in a variety of ways—engaging in biblical theology and sociological analysis, refining methodology and metrics. The need for Christians to bring the gospel to Muslims has never been greater. These contributors connect a new generation of missionaries with Parshall’s work, inspiring further commitment to thoughtful witness.
CARMEN JOY IMES
professor of Old Testament at Prairie College
author, Bearing God’s Name: Why Sinai Still Matters
I’m jealous … I wanted to write a whole biography of Phil and Julie Parshall, and I earnestly hope somebody does. For now, may The Life and Impact of Phil Parshall not merely inspire readers to emulate Phil, who has challenged us to constantly keep on asking, How can we do it better, wiser, and deeper?
but also move many to take up persevering residence among the most neglected, suffering Muslims on earth … through wars, famine, and floods, even denying themselves the joy of a large family to be more available to those whose families are in danger of being lost for eternity. Thank you, Phil, and Julie, for your contagious example both in thinking and doing.
GREG LIVINGSTONE
founder, Frontiers
Christians with a heart for communicating the gospel of Jesus Christ effectively in cross-cultural contexts cannot afford to neglect the conversation in which the experienced missiologists of this book invite their readers’ thoughtful participation. The decades of experience each of the seven contributors, together with the mentor they honor in this volume, Phil Parshall, reflects the investment of extensive time and treasure within various cultures of Islam. The principles they endeavor to refine here will sharpen the approach and better the wisdom of everyone who recognizes the challenge—in cross-cultural mission among any people group—of unburdening the gospel of the assumptions of one’s own culture in bringing it to another. Still, for all its thought-provoking analysis, the book offers the reader no mere technical manual. Its pages are inspired by the love each author has for the Muslims with whom they share life and by the desire each one has that these beloved people would one day also share in the atoning power of Jesus.
DONALD WESTBLADE
professor of religion, Hillsdale College
Topics related to Muslim followers of Jesus are hotly debated in missiology today. Phil Parshall, through his humble and gentle spirit and forty years as an effective cross-cultural witness among Muslims, has been an innovative pioneer in Muslim evangelism, opening the door for new ways of thinking, relating to, and living among Muslims. Others have built on his foundational principles and at times taken his contextualization ideas beyond his theological comfort zone. Now seven missiologists have written captivating, helpful, and practical essays to honor Phil Parshall. What a great gift they have given to missiologists and mission practitioners today.
DARRELL WHITEMAN
Global Development, Inc.
This book reflects and builds on the insights of Phil Parshall, a contemporary leader in Christian mission among Muslims, with whom I have had the privilege of working in the classroom and the mission field for many years. Likewise, the contributors bring a similar blend of the academy, experience, and creative insight. This book should be on the short list of every missionary to Muslims who wishes to enrich his or her call with the insights of those in whose footsteps they are privileged to walk.
J. DUDLEY WOODBERRY
dean emeritus and senior professor of Islamic Studies, Fuller Theological Seminary
The Life and Impact of Phil Parshall: Connecting with Muslims
© 2021 by Kenneth Nehrbass
All rights reserved.
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Scripture quotations marked (NKJV) are taken from the New King James Version®. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Scripture quotations marked (NASB) are taken from the New American Standard Bible®, Copyright © 1960, 1971, 1995, 2020. The Lockman Foundation. Used by permission. All rights reserved. www.lockman.org.
Published by William Carey Publishing
10 W. Dry Creek Cir
Littleton, CO 80120 | www.missionbooks.org
William Carey Publishing is a ministry of Frontier Ventures
Pasadena, CA 91104 | www.frontierventures.org
Cover and Interior Designer: Mike Riester
Copyeditor: Andy Sloan
Managing Editor: Melissa Hicks
Cover photo courtesy of Dr. Jim Plueddemann
ISBNs: 978-1-64508-336-8 (paperback)
978-1-64508-338-2 (mobi)
978-1-64508-339-9 (epub)
Digital Ebook Release 2021
Library of Congress Control Number:
2021938071
For Phil and Julie Parshall
In memory of Mark Williams
CONTENTS
Preface by Mark S. Williams
Introduction by Kenneth Nehrbass
Chapter 1: The Life and Legacy of Phil Parshall
by Gary R. Corwin
Chapter 2: Standing on the Shoulders of Others
by Kevin Higgins
Chapter 3: Only One Offense
by Miriam Adeney
Chapter 4: Urban Muslims
by Enoch Jinsik Kim
Chapter 5: Confronting Gospel Barriers
by Harley Talman
Chapter 6: Two Decades of the Letter C
by Joseph S. Williams
Chapter 7: Living Cross-Culturally in Muslim Contexts
by John Jay Travis
About the Contributors
Appendix: Academic Works by Phil Parshall
PREFACE
Mark S. Williams
Why would you want to read a book inspired by the life and work of a missionary who worked for four decades with Muslims? If you’re working in Islamic contexts right now, you’re probably familiar with Phil Parshall’s contributions. But what if you’ve never heard of Dr. Parshall, or never met a Muslim? It turns out that Parshall’s conviction that culture matters—that the gospel should make sense in local contexts—is as true for North Americans as it is for sub-Saharan Africans or East Asians. Looking back, I realize my own journey toward Christ was made possible because people worshiped God in ways that were relevant to my own cultural setting in Southern California.
As I was entering my junior year of high school, I had two good friends—one was a Roman Catholic (charismatic Catholic
) and the other was a Lutheran. At that time, I was the product of a nominal Christian (Episcopalian) home. But both of these friends were talking to me about having a vibrant faith in Jesus—something that was not a part of my Christian
experience at that time.
After some weeks, my Lutheran friend invited me to his church’s youth group—just to see how I would like it. I really did like it; and I joined that church soon afterwards. This friend also told me about radio station KYMS, 106.3 FM, where I was introduced to pop and rock music that was Christian.
Until then, I had no idea there even was Christian pop
and Christian rock
music!
Finally, this friend took me to a Saturday night concert at a different kind of church in Costa Mesa, California. At Calvary Chapel, headed by Pastor Chuck Smith, I heard in person the Christian bands that I had been listening to on KYMS. Instead of traditional hymns, a band played Christian worship songs with pop and rock styles. Calvary Chapel was already developing Maranatha Music; and the rise of a contextualized style of worship and form of church—attractive to young teens like me—was born.¹
After being married in 1985, my wife and I prayed about serving in China, as we felt that we were called there. A few years later we sought out a mission agency that was symbiotically related to the Bible school we both attended. When we went through their candidate orientation, they informed us that there was no placement on mainland China at that time (the year was 1989—the year of the Tiananmen Square incident).
The personnel director of the mission agency went on to say, "There is, however, in the country of the Philippines, an exciting collaboration between SIM, OMF, and SEND. SEND is a mission consortium that was created with the intention of reaching the Magindanaon people—the largest Muslim people group of the southern Philippines on the island of Mindanao. Our agency sends missionaries to SIM for this work. The one in charge of this consortium is Dr. Phil Parshall, a leading innovator in the principles of contextualization in Muslim ministry. Before deciding whether or not to join this consortium, it is advisable to read Dr. Parshall’s book, New Paths in Muslim Evangelism, and to take courses through the Zwemer Institute of Muslim Studies near Fuller Seminary in Pasadena, California."
This is the context in which I want to introduce to you my long-time friend and mentor (to many others, as well as to me) in ministry to Muslims, Phil Parshall (DMiss, Fuller Seminary). As my wife and I joined Serving in Mission (SIM) in that ministry context in April 1990, we embarked on a thirty-plus-year journey with evangelical contextualization
theory and practice—mostly in the realm of Muslim contexts. With the highest esteem for my dear friend Phil Parshall, I count it a great privilege to write the preface to this Festschrift² in honor of Kuya Phil
(Brother Phil), as he is known to like-minded Filipino missionaries in the Philippines.
While Phil is arguably best known for his writings on contextualization strategies in Muslim contexts, one of my favorite writings is his ponderings on keeping missionaries safe
in their ministry allocations, addressed in his 1994 Evangelical Missions Quarterly article Missionaries: Safe or Expendable?
That hard-hitting commentary will likely continue to stimulate thinking and conversation, even in the context of recent evacuations due to world events like COVID-19.
The list of articles that Phil has written for EMQ, Christianity Today, and Missiology constitute a substantial bibliography in and of itself (see the appendix). His contribution to evangelical missiology is rounded out nicely by nearly one dozen monographs and books he has written on topics of evangelism and mission to Muslims over the course of a missionary career that spanned from 1962 to 2006. In addition to The Cross and the Crescent (Tyndale, 1989), Phil’s more prolific publications from Baker Book House include New Paths in Muslim Evangelism (1980), Bridges to Islam (1983), and Inside the Community (1994).
It is for this servant of God, then, that the contributors to this Festschrift offer their musings on various topics related to ministry to Muslims, evangelical contextualization, and broader concerns of missiology—put forward in a thought-provoking style similar to that of our brother and colleague in mission, Phil. Indeed, he would welcome the discussions brought forward in this volume as per his statement in his EMQ article Danger! New Directions in Contextualization,
written in 1998: Let’s bring the subject out in the open and dialogue together
(410).
Phil and Julie Parshall, courtesy of Phil and Julie Parshall
INTRODUCTION
Kenneth Nehrbass
Whether or not you work with Muslims, this book will inspire you to respect the culture of the Other. It will help you think through what contextualization looks like in an age of globalization. Christian outreach among resistant groups can be discouraging; but the contributors to this book have encouraging stories to tell about the progress that can be made when you make friends across cultures by learning from them, and even serving them.
In chapter 1, Gary R. Corwin summarizes the life and legacy of Phil Parshall. In some ways, Phil’s formative Christian journey was rather unremarkable: He was raised in the church; he had a personal awakening; after some pursuing, he persuaded his sweetheart to marry him; and then he went to Bible college. Yet in other ways, Parshall’s ministry and influence has been extraordinary: He pioneered the field of Muslim contextualization through his twelve academic books and many articles (see the appendix). Parshall inspired Corwin, along with most of the contributors in this book (and countless other missionaries), to learn and respect the cultures of Muslims, and to pass on what they learned to others.
Parshall’s ideas about missions among Muslims were innovative. Yet sometimes thinking outside of the box can put you in a lonely place. In chapter 2, Kevin Higgins develops a metaphor of innovations in folk music to describe how Parshall’s creative approaches to missions were subsequently misunderstood by critics and adopted by fans. Higgins is one of these fans who took Parshall’s ideas in a slightly different direction as he speaks of holy envy
and finds ways that indigenous forms
can be kept if they serve a Christian function.
In chapter 3, Miriam Adeney describes the sacrifices
Parshall was willing to make (like giving up pork) in order to live at peace with Muslims. Ethnic culture matters to people, and even in an age of globalization we all still find identity in our cultural roots. Adeney looks at the book of Acts to explore how cultural differences were