In the spring of 2026 I took Perspectives on the World Christian Movement, a fifteen-week course on the biblical, historical, cultural, and strategic dimensions of missions. The course ends with an Integrative Project: choose an unreached people group, study them seriously, and design a realistic mobilization strategy for a real church. Allen Li, David Menna, and I chose the Gujarati, sixty million people worldwide with over a hundred thousand living around us in Middlesex County, and we wrote our project for our own church, Anthem. What follows is the report we submitted, lightly edited for the web and shared with permission. One local ministry goes unnamed here for the safety of its ongoing work.
Reaching the Gujarati Locally and Abroad
The Gujarati, a people group of roughly 60 million rooted in the Indian state of Gujarat, remain one of the world's largest unreached people groups, with 0.52 percent identifying as Christian. A significant diaspora lives in Middlesex County, New Jersey, within reach of Anthem Church. Drawing on an interview with Anthem's senior pastor and published research on Gujarati culture, religion, and migration, this report evaluates Anthem's readiness for cross-cultural ministry and proposes a phased mobilization strategy: short-term missions to Gujarat, congregational discipleship and training, trust-building partnership with a local ministry to the South Asian community, and ultimately church planting, locally and overseas, led by Gujarati believers.
Introduction
In this Integrative Project Report, we discuss a Church Mobilization Strategy for reaching the Gujarati people both locally and globally, an unreached people groupAn unreached people group has no indigenous community of believing Christians able to evangelize the rest of the group without outside help; a common benchmark is under 2 percent evangelical. with origins in India and also with a large presence in Middlesex County, New Jersey. In particular, we discuss an implementation roadmap for church mobilization for Anthem Church, currently based in Metuchen. In addition, we spoke with Anthem’s senior pastor, Pastor Hoon, to understand his approach and prayerful yearnings concerning the mobilization of Anthem and its congregation for cross-cultural outreach. In this report, we lay a foundation for cross-cultural bridge-building. We first describe the Gujarati people and their need for the Gospel. We then evaluate Anthem’s potential for cross-cultural outreach with input from Pastor Hoon, as well as from group members Nathan and David, who are congregants of Anthem. Lastly, considering the needs of the local and global Gujarati community as well as how God has positioned Anthem Church, we formulate a strategy for Anthem to serve the Gujarati community in their needs and mobilize church-planting teams among the Gujarati people.
The Gujarati People
People, Population, and Language
The Gujarati people are a people group from Gujarat, India. Gujarat is a state on the western coast of India. There is a wide diversity of people who make up the state of Gujarat; most are categorized as North Indian or South Indian. Gujarat is the fifth-largest state in India, approximately the size of Washington State. Gujarat was also the home of Mahatma Gandhi, whose writings continue to influence the state to this day. According to the Joshua ProjectA research initiative that catalogs the world's ethnic people groups and tracks each group's access to the Gospel., there are about 60 million Gujarati in the world, spread out across 22 countries.
The official state language of Gujarat is Gujarati. Gujarati is rarely spoken outside of the state; some neighboring areas of Rajasthan and northern Maharashtra also have groups of people who speak it. The language has several dialects: Kachchi, Kathiawadi, and Surati. In addition, Hindi is commonly spoken or at least understood in the more urban parts of Gujarat. Like most places in the world, English is widely used for business, education, and tourism, but it is not the default language.
Gujarat is one of the most industrialized states in India and accounts for the highest exports of any Indian state. It has the longest coastline of any state, and its international ports export manufactured goods such as chemicals, pharmaceuticals, textiles, and cement. Gujarat is also rich in natural resources such as minerals, petroleum, and natural gas, which drive its economy alongside its ports. Many people are employed in these industries.
Around the world, the Gujarati diaspora is largely concentrated in Pakistan, with almost all of them living in Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city. The second-largest Gujarati diaspora is located in the New York City metropolitan area, notably in India Square in Jersey City and in Edison in Middlesex County. This significant immigration followed the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, which attracted highly educated professionals (doctors, engineers, and business owners) from Gujarat to the East Coast of the United States. Their extended families followed in a second wave. While immigrants like those of the first two waves continue to arrive, Gujaratis of less wealthy classes have also been arriving, willingly taking lower-level service occupations. It is estimated that nearly 1 million Indians live in the NYC metropolitan area, with 125,000 of them being Gujarati. Our report focuses specifically on the Gujarati community in India and the Gujarati diaspora in Middlesex County. The difference is that the Gujarati in India do not have churches and present a greater cultural barrier than the Gujarati in Edison, who do have access to churches but remain largely unreached.
Way of Life and Culture
Gujarati people around the world lead a family-centric and business-oriented life. They value success, education, and financial security, as well as a life of social activities and festivities. Many work in trade and commerce and take entrepreneurial risks, with some owning businesses. They have strong family and community ties, providing a network that enables social and economic mobility. As a result of these factors, together with strong financial practices, many Gujaratis lead comfortable and even affluent lifestyles. In fact, the most common last name among the Gujaratis is “Patel,” which means landowner, underscoring their values regarding economic success.
Gujarat’s culture is also shaped heavily by its Hindu roots, like many states in India. This has strongly influenced Gujarati diets: many keep a strict vegetarian diet, though some Hindu Gujarati communities only avoid beef, while Muslim Gujarati communities avoid pork. Like the vast majority of Indian culture, they enjoy traditional Indian meals with rice, vegetables, curry, and roti.
Gujarati values have also been heavily informed by folklore. For example, Saurashtra Ni Rasdhar is a collection of love legends depicting the many forms of love, imparting the conviction that love makes the world beautiful, alongside patience, responsibility, commitment, and dedication. Other folktales impart humaneness, self-sacrifice, an adventurous spirit, and honest portraits of human flaws.
Religion and Practices
According to the 2011 Indian Census, Gujarat is primarily Hindu, with 88.57 percent of its population identifying as Hindu. The next largest group is Islam at around 9.67 percent. There is also a small minority of Jains at 0.96 percent, and 0.52 percent identify as Christian. This low percentage of Christians classifies the Gujarati as an unreached people group in missiological terms.
A Gujarati Hindu values the practice of bathing and bodily cleanliness. They also fast once a week, as well as on the eleventh day of every two weeks. They believe in an afterlife of either eternal paradise or suffering. Key in Hinduism are the two values of dan (charity) and daya (mercy shown toward other people).
Media
Gujarat is a modernizing and relatively highly developed Indian state. Around 97 percent of the state’s population has access to electricity, and the internet is widespread. This makes electronic popular media such as radio, television, and phones common and available in local languages. Gujarati people commonly use social media platforms such as WhatsApp, YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook. In addition, non-electronic media, such as newspapers and magazines, remain common.
Evaluating Anthem Church’s Potential for Cross-cultural Outreach
About Anthem Church
Anthem is a young, multi-generational, and ethnically diverse church plant in Middlesex County, New Jersey, focused on reaching the county with the gospel and inviting people to experience the fullness of life in Jesus Christ. One thing worth noting is a recent change to the governing board of elders: the board used to rely on senior pastors from different churches, but it has now shifted to individuals within the congregation itself. That shift signals genuine growth, and it also matters for cross-cultural ministry specifically, because internal leadership is better positioned to identify and platform diverse leaders from within the community it’s actually trying to reach.
Ministry Considerations for Unreached People Groups
In our interview with Pastor Hoon, the lead pastor of Anthem Church, he pointed to a new elder, Victor Alegria, as an individual who keeps international missions on the agenda. Without someone in leadership who advocates for resources and keeps the congregation looking outward, enthusiasm for global outreach can quickly fade as the church turns inward and becomes ingrown. Currently, Anthem Church’s local outreach looks like larger public events (for example, Easter egg hunts) aimed at getting in front of families in the area, and a personal emphasis on reaching one’s “one,” a specific person each member is actively in relationship with, who doesn’t know Christ. That combination means evangelism is at least nominally in Anthem’s DNA. But when it comes to the Gujarati community specifically, the church has not developed focused, contextualized initiatives yet. A few individual members are living as Global Christians, but most are not. The cross-cultural potential is real, but it has yet to be realized.
Needs in Cross-cultural Ministry
Some of Anthem’s needs in cross-cultural ministry include diversified leadership that models the missional mandate to the congregation and represents the people group that the church wants to reach, in this case the Gujarati, and prayer for the church to obey the Great Commission with joy. When asked about Anthem’s greatest needs in cross-cultural ministry, Pastor Hoon highlighted leadership almost immediately. He mentioned that the church needs diversified leadership: people who reflect the communities Anthem is trying to reach and who model the missional mandate in their lives rather than just endorsing it. For Gujarati outreach, that means praying toward and developing leaders who understand Gujarati culture, speak the language, or at a minimum come from the broader South Asian community. Leaders from within or near that community catch what others miss, communicate with more credibility, and earn trust that a homogenous leadership table simply can’t access on its own. The second need is closely related: the congregation needs people who don’t just agree that cross-cultural mission matters but who are actually arranging their lives around it. Pastor Hoon was honest that Anthem has at times been better at missional language than missional practice. The call to reach unreached peoples has to come over and over again from leaders who are visibly doing it, not just talking about it.
Considerations for Selecting Cross-cultural Partners and Projects
Pastor Hoon described the church’s approach to selecting partners as filtering for theological alignment, ministry alignment, relational affinity, and geographic fit. Of these, the geographic dimension connects most directly to Gujarati outreach. Anthem’s location in Middlesex County was chosen partly because of Rutgers University, because the leadership genuinely believes that university students are in one of the most formative seasons of their lives, and the church wants to be present for that. That same logic shapes how Anthem thinks about missions partnerships: the church is particularly interested in supporting church planters who locate themselves near universities, because those are the places where international students and people in real moments of transition are. For Gujarati-focused work, this would ideally look like partnering with co-workers who are serious about church planting and participating in incarnational ministry in Gujarati communities. This would involve actual ongoing relationships with people the church knows and prays for by name.
Challenges and Obstacles
The biggest obstacle Pastor Hoon named is ingrown-ness. The congregation has tended to lean into each other rather than looking outward, and this is a spiritual issue. People who are genuinely gripped by the Gospel share it, but people who have settled into familiarity with it don’t. The Gospel always propels us to go. We must pray seriously for revival and for fresh conviction about the gospel’s urgency, because that produces outward movement. Without it, cross-cultural ministry becomes another program the church tries to sustain by willpower and eventually drops. The second challenge is resources, both money and people. Anthem is a young church plant already heavily committed to Rutgers, which is a resource-intensive ministry, given that college students do not give much back. The church leads with food, time, hospitality, and money, and it does that by conviction. Layering in sustained Gujarati outreach means asking a congregation that’s already stretched thin toward a financially limited demographic to give even more. Overall, this means that cross-cultural ministry is not impossible, but these challenges are a reality, since Anthem is a young church where a significant portion of the congregation is students.
Strategies for Reaching the Gujarati Locally and Globally
Synthesizing What We Know
With only 0.52 percent of Gujarati identifying as Christian, the Gujarati are certainly an unreached people group. This emphasizes the urgent need for a mobilization strategy that connects believers with Gujaratis and addresses the core worldview and beliefs of the Gujarati. In this section, we discuss how Anthem can mobilize the Christian community to ensure that the Gujarati will hear and believe in the Gospel. The following sections present this mobilization strategy in sequence. While the strategy follows more or less of a logical flow, it will unfold only through prayer and alignment to God’s will, taking place over the course of many years.
Making Initial Contact Overseas: Short-term Missions
To position Anthem as a sending church and to signal to its congregants that Anthem understands the gravity of the Great Commission, Anthem should first mobilize church members who already have an interest in missions to go. An effective way for a church to warm up to missions is a short-term missionShort-term mission: a trip of days to weeks in which a team serves alongside established workers, learns the culture, and returns to mobilize the sending church. to the state of Gujarat in India. While the STM appears less accessible compared to local outreach due to distance and the seemingly large amount of resources required to send a team abroad, an STM is a short-term endeavor, whereas local outreach is a persistent endeavor, requiring a constant outpouring of people’s time and energy throughout the year.
Before departure, it is essential that the team shares with the church about their preparation and the support required from the congregation. While on the trip, the team should send constant updates to the church regarding praise items and prayer requests. Following their return, the team must share what the Lord did during the span of their trip and what they learned about Gujarati culture.
In order to maximize the team’s effectiveness abroad, we recommend that Anthem partner with an existing church in Gujarat and support them in their ministry. This church should be strong in its missional foundation and ideally have Gujarati leadership in the Stage 3 or Stage 4Stages of indigenous leadership development in church planting; by Stages 3 and 4, local leaders are shepherding and multiplying the work themselves. phase.
Bringing Revival to the Congregation and Instilling Confidence Through Training
The issue of ingrown-ness mentioned above is common among many churches. Indeed, we are grateful that God has provided such a wonderful Christian community for congregants to rely on, but we must encourage the congregation to mature further and share the Gospel with those outside the church. This inward leaning occurs because many churchgoers do not understand that the purpose of a Christian is more about bringing glory to Christ by the work of the church than seeking a self-contained fellowship with God and other Christians. Furthermore, even for those who do know that outreach is the right thing to do, fear and lack of discipleship may continue to hold them back.
We propose that Anthem initiate a formal obedience-based discipleshipDiscipleship measured by whether people practice what Scripture says, not only whether they can explain it. program (as opposed to a merely knowledge-based one) that becomes an organic discipleship structure as disciples naturally grow into disciplers. We also propose that Anthem teach a Perspectives LiteA condensed adaptation of the fifteen-week Perspectives course, teachable as a Sunday school series. Sunday school and gather as many members as possible. Through obedience-based discipleship focused on living the Gospel out loud and understanding the role of the church in the Great Commission, a larger portion of the congregation will understand the pressing need for sharing the Gospel and also be equipped to do so. Confidence needs to be instilled in the congregation that “the earth will be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord, as the waters cover the sea” (Habakkuk 2:14), emphasizing that we are serving the Lord in His guaranteed victory.
Making Initial Contact Locally: Building Trust and Seeking God
Upon successful mobilization of a larger team impassioned for sharing the Gospel with the unreached, the team needs to receive training on local outreach to the Gujaratis. They need to understand their culture, their religion, and their socio-economic status. To understand the culture, the team should first partner with an existing local ministryNamed in the original report; unnamed here for the safety of its ongoing work. in Middlesex County formed specifically for reaching the Indian community. When building trust with the Gujarati, it is a key factor for a coworker that within the first three meetings with a person or a family, they share that they are Christian. Otherwise, it becomes more and more difficult to reveal our faith as time passes. They need to know that we believe in Christ Jesus our Lord, and it is because of His love and His mission that we are learning the way of the Gujarati, so that the Gujarati may follow in His love and His mission.
In one exchange our group had with one of this ministry’s coworkers, the coworker mentioned that the Gujarati of Edison share many of the traits of a typical New York metropolitan area resident: busy with business and family affairs, and often coming from business-oriented family backgrounds. While it may seem the Gospel has little to offer the wealthy, the coworker noted that large families and successful businesses can come with a host of familial issues and stress. We can offer support with a listening ear and an outside perspective, and build trust that way. Partnering with ministries like this one also provides opportunities for learning the Gujarati language and for sharing in their culture and lifestyle practices, so that we can enjoy enriching friendships with the local Gujarati. As Paul writes, “I have become all things to all people so that by all means I might save some” (1 Corinthians 9:22). So to the Gujarati, let us become more like the Gujarati for the sake of their salvation.
A Church-Planting Movement Locally
When Anthem congregants have gained enough experience with the partner ministry, they may continue in its outreach initiatives or seek to build relationships with Gujarati people beyond its reach. In this section, we refer to these Anthem members as “coworkers.” Similar in concept to InterVarsity’s Five ThresholdsA framework describing five thresholds a skeptic crosses on the way to faith: trusting a Christian, becoming curious, opening to change, seeking, and entering the Kingdom., when a coworker builds trust and engages curiosity in Jesus with a Gujarati, this opens the door to holding a Discovery Bible StudyA simple, reproducible group study format: read a passage, retell it, ask what it says about God and about people, and commit to a concrete obedience step., an accessible form of Scriptural study that encourages simple observations and direct applications of the text. Since the Gujarati have large families, this also presents an opportunity for them to invite their friends and families to the study. In one of the course lectures, it was discussed that for unbelievers who are curious about learning more about the Bible, coworkers should not start a study with them until they have invited their friends and family. This prevents any feeling of isolation as they explore Christianity; they must explore alongside fellow Gujaratis.
Once these Discovery Bible Studies have been planted, the coworker can consider planting a house church. It is important to let the Gujaratis decide on the cultural aspects of the church setup, ensuring a degree of contextualization, while the coworker ensures sound theological alignment on the Scriptural definition of a church.
A Church-Planting Movement Abroad
In this section, we discuss Anthem’s return to the global stage and its evolution from STM participation in Gujarat to sending long-term missionaries to plant churches. The whole purpose of this buildup, first sending an STM to Gujarat to learn the Gujarati way, then mobilizing the congregation to reach the Gujarati locally, then discipling the local Gujarati, is for the local Gujarati to receive God’s calling to return home to Gujarat and plant churches there. It is wonderful when God calls non-Gujarati church members to plant churches in Gujarat. However, this would pose significant challenges, as such activity would likely measure up to E-3 on the E-ScaleRalph Winter's scale of cultural distance in evangelism: E-1 shares the hearer's culture, E-2 crosses into a similar culture, E-3 crosses into a very different one.. Such missionaries would need to cross significant cultural barriers to reach the Gujarati. On the other hand, if first- or second-generation Gujarati from Edison return to their roots, we would see E-1 or E-2 activity, and the cultural barrier would lessen substantially. Furthermore, anti-conversion laws and rising religious nationalism in parts of India make open Christian work difficult. Gujarati church planters would have better knowledge of navigating this environment in a way that is safe yet continues to nurture the local Gujarati church.
In practice, Anthem would partner with a reputable missions agency and send trained church members, either a Gujarati coworker or a non-Gujarati coworker who has spent considerable time in local outreach to the Gujarati. When the coworker begins to plant churches, they can employ the same strategies used in local outreach, such as finding a Person of PeaceA local person who welcomes the messenger and opens their household and network to the message (Luke 10:5-7). and inviting families and friend circles to a Discovery Bible Study, making adjustments to better fit the Indian context (as opposed to an Indian-American context back home). As Gujarat is a disproportionately wealthy state compared to the rest of India, there is also a great opportunity for the Gujarati church to support community development efforts for those who remain poor in Gujarat, or to extend care to neighboring states, as the various states of India are known to be disunified.
Lastly, Anthem Church back in New Jersey must act as Godly senders. They must pray that the missionaries, the Gujarati they are reaching, and the churches would bear fruit, and bear fruit that lasts. The congregation back home should continue to support them financially and with other resources, such as helping them with their taxes or lending a car when they return from furlough. The senders and the missionaries are in on God’s mission together, working jointly as one body in Christ. Soon enough, God will raise several more from the congregation to go to Gujarat and to the ends of the earth.
Conclusion
At 0.52 percent Christian, the Gujarati are certainly unreached. Many of them live right in our neighborhoods, yet few attend a church, and only a small group of coworkers are working to reach them. God has placed Anthem Church in Middlesex County as His means of reaching communities such as the Gujarati. With proper discipleship and fervent prayer, the congregants of Anthem Church will reach a state of surrender to the Lord, preaching the Gospel to Gujaratis locally and abroad.
References
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- ”Gujarat Census 2011 Data.” Census Organization of India, 2011, www.census2011.co.in/census/state/gujarat.html.
- ”Gujarati Language: History, Grammar, and Script.” Itihaas, itihaas.ai/en/languages/gujarati-language.
- ”Gujarati of India.” Joshua Project, joshuaproject.net/people_groups/11982.
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- International Institute for Population Sciences. National Family Health Survey (NFHS-5), 2019-21: India: Gujarat. People’s Archive of Rural India, 2021, ruralindiaonline.org.
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- Varghese, Shiny. “In Gujarat, Garba Is as Much a Part of Christmas Celebrations as It Is of Navratri.” Scroll.in, 24 Dec. 2018, scroll.in/magazine/906762.