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Prophetic Justice

The Unreached People Groups Closest to You That You've Never Considered

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When the church talks about unreached people groups, the conversation almost always faces outward and away — toward the ethnic and linguistic communities in the Global South and East who have not yet heard the gospel, toward the distant places where Christian witness has not yet taken root, toward the mission frontiers that require the crossing of significant geographic and cultural distance.

This outward orientation is right and necessary. There are billions of people in the world who have not heard the gospel in any meaningful way, and the church's responsibility to them is real and urgent. But there is a blind spot in the conversation that is worth naming: the unreached and underreached communities that exist not on the other side of the world but in the communities where most American churches are already located.

The Refugee Community Two Miles From Your Church

In almost every mid-sized American city, there are refugee and immigrant communities that represent some of the world's most significant unreached people groups — people who have been relocated by war, political instability, or economic necessity and who are now living within driving distance of churches that have never intentionally engaged them. Somali Muslims in Minneapolis. Karen refugees from Myanmar in the suburbs of Indianapolis. Haitian communities in South Florida. Iraqi families in Detroit.

These communities often have minimal access to gospel witness, not because they are geographically unreachable but because they are culturally beyond the reach of the churches nearest to them. They speak different languages. They come from different religious backgrounds. They inhabit different social networks. The church that is committed to reaching the unreached in distant countries but has never walked across town to meet its Somali neighbors has a mission scope worth examining.

"The unreached community that requires the longest journey to reach is not always the one on the other side of the world. Sometimes it is the one two miles away."

The Incarcerated Population

America incarcerates more people per capita than any other nation on earth, and the prison population represents one of the most significant and systematically underserved mission fields in the country. Chaplaincy programs in correctional facilities do important work, but the local church's engagement with the incarcerated — and with people returning from incarceration — tends to be minimal compared to the scale of the need.

Every church that is serious about the mission of the gospel has a question to answer about the men and women in the correctional facilities in its geographic area: what is our responsibility to these people? What would genuine engagement look like? Not just prison visitation, but the genuine welcome of returning citizens into the community of the church — the hardest kind of welcome, and often the one that matters most.

The Spiritual-But-Not-Religious Population

Thom Rainer's research on the "nones" — people who claim no religious affiliation — has identified four distinct categories within this growing population, and the largest of these is not atheists or agnostics but people who retain a genuine spiritual openness while remaining skeptical of institutional religion. This population is enormous, it is growing, and it is largely unreached by the methods the church has historically used for evangelism.

These are people who might be surprisingly open to a spiritual conversation in the right context — and who will almost certainly not respond to traditional evangelism approaches. Reaching them requires new relationships, new points of contact, and new modes of witness that begin where they are rather than where the church expects them to be. The mission to the spiritual-but-not-religious is not distant. It is the mission to your neighbors, your coworkers, your family members who have left the church and are still, in some important sense, still searching.

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