U.S. Center for World Mission

(Redirected from US Center for World Mission)

The U.S. Center for World Mission, later known as the Venture Center, was a collaborative Christian mission base in Pasadena, California from 1976 until 2019. The center sought to connect other like-minded organizations around prayer, research, innovation, media, education, strategy, and mobilization with a continued focus on unreached people groups.

History

edit

Spouses Ralph D. Winter (1924-2009) and Roberta Winter (1930-2001) founded the U.S. Center for World Mission in 1976 in a few rented offices on the campus of Pasadena Nazarene College. Their purpose was to pull people together to concentrate on the unreached people groups. The campus had previously hosted the Nazarene University Pasadena campus, and earlier the Pacific Bible College and Pasadena College (1897-1976).[1]

When the Pasadena Nazarene College campus was up for sale,[when?] the U.S. Center engaged in a bidding war with the Church Universal and Triumphant, which the U.S. Center won.[2] The money came primarily through small gifts of individual Christians around the country, and through the efforts of televangelist Dr. William Davis who promoted the project on national television and traveled across the country to meet personally with wealthy Christian donors. The final payment for the campus was made in 1988.

The efforts to establish the U.S. Center have also led to the development of a wide-ranging movement to the frontiers of mission that now involves thousands of people and hundreds of missions organizations. The Center seeks to serve this growing movement with resources, information, and strategic insights that can help the movement grow and effectively reach all the unreached peoples.[3] In 2015, the US Center was renamed the Venture Center.[4]

The Venture Center and its affiliated ministries are run by members of Frontier Ventures, which was founded by Ralph D. Winter.

Legacy

edit

Archives of the center now reside at the Ralph D. Winter Research Center. Many Christian ministries had their genesis at the center or resided for a season before moving on to new locations throughout the world.[2]

Venture Center Ministries

edit

See also

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ "Preachers, Pastors Pay Tribute to Dr. Ralph D. Winter".
  2. ^ a b Winter, Roberta H. (2003). I Will Do a New Thing: The 'U.S. Center for World Mission -- And Beyond. Pasadena, California, USA: William Carey Library Pub. ISBN 0-87808-448-7.
  3. ^ Parsons, Greg. "The Story of the U.S. Center for World Mission". Houston Perspectives on the World Christian movement course program. Archived from the original on 2014-11-16.
  4. ^ Wood, Rick (March 2015). "Frontier Ventures". Mission Frontiers.
  5. ^ Mission Frontiers magazine
  6. ^ Mission Frontiers Online
  7. ^ Global Prayer Digest
  8. ^ Global Prayer Digest Online
  9. ^ Joshua Project
  10. ^ Roberta Winter Institute
  11. ^ Roberta Winter Institute website
  12. ^ Insight
  13. ^ Insight, - INtensive Study of Integrated Global History and Theology website
  14. ^ International Journal of Frontier Missiology
  15. ^ International Journal of Frontier Missiology website
  16. ^ Perspectives Global
  17. ^ Perspectives Global Website
  18. ^ Prime
  19. ^ William Carey Library Publishers
  20. ^ Perspectives

Further reading

edit
  • Parsons, Greg H. (2012). Ralph D. Winter: Early Life and Core Missiology. Pasadena, California, USA: WCIU Press. (A published PhD from the University of Wales Trinity Saint David)
  • Winter, Roberta H. (2003) [1987], I Will Do a New Thing: The U.S. Center for World Mission – And Beyond, Pasadena, California, USA: William Carey Library
  • Winter, Ralph D. (2005), Frontiers In Mission, Pasadena, California, USA: William Carey Library
  • Winter, Ralph D. (1966). "This Seminary Goes to the Student". World Vision Magazine. Monrovia: World Vision.
  • Winter, Ralph D. (1969a). "The Reluctant Missionary". World Vision Magazine. Monrovia: World Vision.
  • Winter, Ralph D. (1969b). "The Seminary That Became a Movement". World Vision Magazine. Monrovia: World Vision.
  • Winter, Ralph D. (1970). "The Acron that Exploded". World Vision Magazine. Monrovia: World Vision.
  • Winter, Ralph D. (1972), The Extension Model in Theological Education: What It Is and What It Can Do, Pasadena: Fuller Theological Seminary.
  • Winter, Ralph D. (1992). "Defining the Frontiers: A Response". International Journal for Frontier Missions. 9: 9–11.
  • Winter, Ralph D. (2003b). "Eleven Frontiers of Perspective (Part 2)". International Journal for Frontier Missions. 20: 135–144.
  • Winter, Ralph D.; Hawthorne, Stephen C. (2009). Perspectives on the World Christian Movement: a Reader. Pasadena: William Carey Library.
  • Winter, Ralph D.; Latourette, K. S. (1970), The twenty-five unbelievable years, 1945 to 1969, South Pasadena: William Carey Library
  • Winter, Ralph D.; Winter, Roberta H. (1968). "When School is Half a World Away". World Vision Magazine. Monrovia: World Vision.
  • Winter, Ralph D. (1975). "The Highest Priority: Cross-cultural Evangelism". In Douglas, James Dixon (ed.). Let the Earth Hear His Voice: Official Reference Volume, Papers and Responses. Minneapolis: World Wide Publications. ISBN 978-0-89066-252-6.
edit