January 13, 1999
 'Jesus' sinks 'Titanic' in worldwide influence ___By Erich Bridges ___SBC International Mission Board ___RICHMOND, Va. (BP)--So you think "Titanic" was big? Here's a movie that redefines "big." ___It didn't win an Oscar or appear on any critics' "Top 10" lists. It's 20 years old. It features no major stars. It's not even the best movie about Jesus Christ from an artistic viewpoint. ___What, then, makes the film called "Jesus" so remarkable? For starters, consider these numbers: ___ At least 1.5 billion people in more than 220 countries have seen "Jesus" in theaters, on television, via video or--still the most common method--watching 16-mm reels projected onto portable screens, sheets or walls. ___ More than 73 million people publicly have declared their decision to follow Christ after seeing the film. ___ "Jesus" has been dubbed into more than 450 languages, making it the most widely translated production in film history. Hundreds more translations are in the works. ___ More than 800 mission agencies now partner with the Jesus Film Project, an arm of Campus Crusade for Christ, to evangelize the lost, disciple new believers and start churches using "Jesus." Southern Baptist International Mission Board missionaries remain the largest single group of users besides the project's own workers. ___ Nearly 2,000 film teams devote themselves exclusively to screening "Jesus" for people around the world--often in the face of violent opposition. ___One Uzbek convert who showed the film 25 times was arrested, tortured and dumped into a mental hospital. In Laos, a preacher spent months in a bamboo cage when an official's wife was caught watching "Jesus." ___In Nigeria, hostile locals tried to drown one film team worker. Extremist Muslims threw rocks during the screening. Every member of the film team was stung by scorpions. But more than 500 people saw "Jesus." ___Film team members in India were beaten by militants and ordered to worship a monkey god. "Only Jesus is our God," team members replied. They were beaten even more savagely, then warned never to return. Battered and bleeding, they stumbled away, praying all the while for their attackers. ___What is the power of this film? Part of it lies in a simple fact: When people see "Jesus," they see Jesus--and understand his words--often for the first time. ___"Jesus speaks our language!" joyously cried one elderly woman in Mozambique after seeing the first showing of "Jesus" in her Makhuwa language. IMB missionaries spearheaded the Makhuwa version of "Jesus" and saw thousands come to Christ and many churches planted among Mozambique's 5 million Makhuwa, considered the largest unreached animistic people group in Africa. ___"I've just learned that Jesus speaks Bengali," wrote another woman after seeing it in Bangladesh. The revelation of hearing him speak in one's "heart language" usually overcomes barriers raised by the fact that a white, Western actor is playing Jesus on the screen. ___"We start the showing without any promotion or advertisement," explained a film worker in a Muslim North African city. "And people will start coming from everywhere. By the time we finish, there are several thousand people on
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