Venture Center

The Venture Center was a collaborative Christian mission base located on a 15-acre campus in Pasadena, California. It has moved to a virtual "hub" approach, and sold the campus in 2019. The Venture 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. The U.S. Center for World Mission (now named Frontier Ventures) archives now reside at the Ralph D. Winter Research Center, which houses collections (archive papers and library) of Ralph D. Winter and Donald McGavran and other special collections. Many Christian ministries had their genesis at the center or resided for a season before moving on to new locations throughout the world.[1]

Founders

The center was founded by Ralph D. Winter (1924-2009) and his wife Roberta Winter (1930-2001), who served as Presbyterian missionaries for 10 years to the Mam people, a Mayan tribal group in Guatemala. After that, in 1967, Ralph Winter served as professor at the School of World Mission (or SWM, now called School of Intercultural Studies) at Fuller Theological Seminary until 1976, when he founded the U.S. Center for World Mission (now called Venture Center) on the former Nazarene University campus in Pasadena. This was also formerly the site for the Pacific Bible College and Pasadena College (1897-1976).[2]

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

History

In 1974, the Institute of International Studies arose out of a need not only to train people as missionaries but also to provide an intensive foundation on what is happening in the world and what needs to happen. It is now called the "Perspectives on the World Christian Movement", or "Perspectives" for short. With over 100,000 alumni in North America alone, the course covers information crucial to any person interested in "God's global purposes" and has said to be a "life changing experience" for many who have taken it.

Building on these ministries, the Winters founded the U.S. Center for World Mission in 1976 in a few rented offices on the 17-acre campus of Pasadena Nazarene College. Their purpose was to pull people together to concentrate on the unreached people. The U.S. Center went on to purchase the campus which was up for sale at that time. They were involved in a bidding war with the Church Universal and Triumphant. [1] 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]

Venture Center Ministries

See also

Notes

Further reading

  • 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.
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