“A mission to, for and with children”

The Quito Call to Action on Children at Risk analyses how church has usually failed in recognising children’s needs and their role in church. The Lausanne Movement network propels ways to include children in the mission.

Evangelical Focus

Lausanne Movement · 15 DECEMBER 2015 · 18:20 CET

Lausanne Consultation on Children at Risk, took place in November, 2014 in Quito, Ecuador,
Lausanne Consultation on Children at Risk, took place in November, 2014 in Quito, Ecuador

The Lausanne Children at Risk Network, along with Anne-Christine Bataillard, Senior Associate for Evangelism among Children, have published the “Quito Call to Action on Children at Risk” document.

The document is the result of the Lausanne Consultation on Children at Risk, which took place from 17-19 November, 2014 in Quito, Ecuador.

More than 60 participants came from every continent, including theologians, church leaders, missiologists, academics, and representatives from child-focused non-governmental organizations.

The event was held in response to the Cape Town Commitment (CTC), which emphasizes ministry with the poor, enslaved, and oppressed. It also calls the people of God to engage in study, training, and action on behalf of children-at-risk.

All participant´s goal was “to better understand what it would look like for children-at-risk to be meaningfully incorporated in the mission of the Church.”


WHO ARE THE CHILDREN AT RISK?

According to the Quito Call to Action document, children at risk are “persons under 18 who experience an intense and/or chronic risk factor, or a combination of risk factors in personal, environmental and/or relational domains that prevent them from pursuing and fulfilling their God-given potential.”

The Lausanne statement specially emphasised “situations where children experience significant unmet needs, and where outside engagement is most urgent.”  This includes “all aspects of human experience: spiritual, physical, social, emotional, mental, linguistic, environmental, etc.”

 

Lausanne Children at Risk Network

They also believed that there is “an emerging change in adult understandings of the active and vital roles that children play in mission.”


FAILING TO RECOGNISE CHILDREN´S NEEDS AND CAPACITIES

The Quito Call to Action recognises that Christians “often failed to fully understand and practice mission to, for, and with children”, not always fulfilling their responsibilities, and even “undervaluing children as co-labourers with adults in God’s mission.”

The document also denounces “the suffering and exploitation of children-at-risk around the world”, and admits the ways and times that Christians have failed to act for children.

“Failing to meet children’s most obvious needs when we see them only as souls to be saved”, or “entertaining children-at-risk with a gospel message that does not address the suffering they face”, are some of the examples given by experts in Quito.

All of this brings them to “give thanks for how the Bible presents children, and especially for the life, actions, and words of Jesus Christ. It is because of his example that we affirm a high view of children as whole human beings created with dignity.”

 

A MISSION TO, FOR, AND WITH CHILDREN

The Call to Action stresses the importance of the involvement of families, churches, denominations, mission organizations, non-governmental organizations, schools, and individuals in a mission:

  • To children, by “turning toward them, offering what is needed to them and their families for healthy and abundant living in all areas, including introducing them to the gospel of Jesus in meaningful ways.”
  • For children, by “standing at attention, placing children behind us to shield them from harm, as we engage the abusers, exploiters, and systems that hurt them.”
  • With children, by “welcoming them as full church and mission members, and empowering their engagement in ways that respect their changing and developing capacities.”

 

The network propels ways to include children in the mission.

 

QUITO CALL TO ACTION´S GOALS

The document hopes to be “inspiration and encouragement to implement actions together with the global church.”

“Our ministry practices must be biblically-informed. We call ourselves to action to address children’s life-threatening injustices and abuses, empowering them as vulnerable agents of God”, the statement concludes.

 

FUTURE STEPS

The Lausanne Children at Risk Network´s next step will be “to write a Lausanne Occasional Paper (LOP) on Children at Risk.”

They also “plan to use the Call to Action as a major reference document for workshop discussions at the 2016 Younger Leaders Gathering

Published in: Evangelical Focus - life & tech - “A mission to, for and with children”