Steve Chong

Steve Chong (born November 30, 1978) is founder and director of the RICE (Renewal and Inter-Church Evangelism) Movement, originating from Sydney, Australia, which attracts thousands[2] of young people in what is Australia's largest Asian youth movement.[1] He rose to national prominence when he appeared on the controversial[3] SBS reality TV series "Christians Like Us."[4] ABC characterised him as a Christian leader who "sees an Asian future for the church Down Under."[5] As well as leading the RICE Movement, he is an itinerant evangelist,[1] preaching and teaching in Christchurch, Vancouver, San Francisco, Perth[6] as well as home town of Sydney.[7][8] He has been trained and mentored by American minister, Tim Keller.[9]

Steve Chong
Born (1978-11-30) November 30, 1978
EducationThe University of Sydney (Bachelor of Commerce)
Occupation
  • Pastor
  • Evangelist
[1]
Spouse(s)Naomi Chong
Children4[1]
Websitericemovement.org

Early life and education


Chong was born on November 30, 1978, in Sydney, Australia to Chinese-Malaysian parents, they converted from Buddhism to the Christian Faith at the 1979 Billy Graham Crusade.[5]

He attended James Ruse Agricultural High School and went on to obtain a Bachelor of Commerce from The University of Sydney.[7] With the plan of becoming an Anglican minister, he studied for a Bachelor of Theology at Moore Theological College.

Ministry career

Chong went on to study at bible college where he was trained in the Anglican Diocese of Sydney by renowned evangelist John Chapman.[2] He then spent 7 years as a young minister at Kirkplace Church, Kogarah in Sydney's inner south, throughout which, he founded the RICE Movement. He has been further trained and mentored by American minister, Tim Keller (pastor).[10]

RICE Movement


Founded in 2002 in Sydney, Australia, Chong formed the RICE Movement in order to raise up a new generation of people sharing the gospel of Jesus. Initially starting out with only 6 youth groups and around 120 people, RICE has since grown to involve thousands of young people in what is Australia's largest Asian youth movement with annual rallies — a RICE Rally — held each year in August.[1] Numbers for the rallies appeared to peak in 2008 with an audience of 3,800, tapering to 2,000 people by 2015.[11] As a stated nondenominational movement, RICE Rally has attracted thousands of youth, particularly from the Asian Australian demographic, though Chong says that he never set out to start an Asian-focused ministry.[12] While he says many Asian young people suppress creativity and passion, "we love unlocking that."[5]

RICE Movement's reach has since expanded from Sydney, to Melbourne, Auckland, Perth and Sao Paulo in recent years.[12] In addition to the annual 'RICE Rally', RICE Movement also runs two school focused ministries in the form of RICE Catalyst and RICE Twelve as well as a Grad Program.[13]

RICE Catalyst

RICE Catalyst is a schools-based ministry that 'aims to relight the flame of Christian youth by exploring the depths and riches of God's Word together.' Catalyst runs a conference in addition to the main RICE Rally called Catalyst Conference, which brings youth groups and school Christian groups together in order to 'train, encourage and challenge one another the fundamentals of Christian living.'

The main theme of Rally carries through to the main talk, with additional topical workshops, practicals and Q&A panel.[14]

RICE Twelve

RICE Twelve is a study camp initiative, specifically for Year 12 students, to help them prepare as well as 'provide a Christ-honouring perspective to their work and priorities.'[14]

Grad program

RICE Movement's Grad Program is aimed at setting 'young adults up for evangelism and ministry in their local church and beyond.' The program has partnered with Ravi Zacharias ministries for apologetics training as well as other local social justice organisations dependant on the city.[14]

Views

Chong has a high view of the significance of Asian people in Western nations like Australia, not simply because of their influence in the culture, but because they will be part of the future of the global Christian faith:

People are having to realise we’re in the China century. And Australia has such a significant part in that. Everything we do is so pegged to Asia. We’re this unique Western country in Asia. That’s why we’ve got this ability to cross these cultures right now. Whether it’s the boom of the church in Korea, or the underground church in China — the crazy statistics that there are more Christians in China than America — the West hasn’t stopped to engage with this. Has the centre of Christianity moved?[5]

Media

In 2011, Chong appeared on the top-rating[15] Australian breakfast show, Sunrise. When asked about what drove his passion to pursue youth ministry he said:

"It's something I'm so passionate about, I feel like, young people particular these days, they're craving relationships, I mean you just see it. They're hunched over on their computers all night on Facebook. Why? Because they're craving relationships."[16]

In 2019, Steve Chong appeared on the SBS (Australian TV channel) show 'Christians Like Us'. The show was billed as “10 Australian Christians with vastly different beliefs live under one roof for a week to confront the controversial topics of their faith. They will grapple with what makes a good Christian, and the role religion plays in modern life.”[17] When later describing the experience Chong said, "“Some of the conversations were really intense. And I think that’s to be expected: some of these issues are so personal for people, and go to the heart of people’s backgrounds and hurts they’ve experienced.”[18]

Personal life


Steve is married to Naomi Chong and together they have four children, two boys and two girls.[1]

References

  1. "Sight Magazine - EVANGELISM: SYDNEY'S RICE MOVEMENT PREPARES TO REACH OUT TO MELBOURNE'S ASIAN YOUTH". www.sightmagazine.com.au.
  2. September 14th, Ben McEachen; Comments, 2017 03:49 PM | Add a Comment. "Does this guy have the best job in the world? - Eternity News". www.eternitynews.com.au.
  3. "Christians Like Us". SBS On Demand. Retrieved July 15, 2020.
  4. "What participants learned in the 'Christians Like Us' house". Topics. Retrieved July 15, 2020.
  5. "Asian Christianities beyond Asia". ABC Radio National. August 16, 2019. Retrieved July 15, 2020.
  6. S, John; June 17th, eman |; Comments, 2019 03:10 PM | Add a Comment. "Global harvest for RICE movement as it hits streets - Eternity News". www.eternitynews.com.au. Retrieved July 16, 2020.
  7. "Steve Chong".
  8. March 19th, Ben McEachen; Comments, 2020 01:36 PM | Add a Comment. "Join an online pop-up Youth Group this Friday - Eternity News". www.eternitynews.com.au.
  9. March 26th, Tim Keller on the value of Christian mentoring |; Pm, 2014 03:37. "Tim Keller on the value of Christian mentoring - Eternity News". www.eternitynews.com.au. Retrieved July 8, 2020.CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  10. March 26th, Tim Keller on the value of Christian mentoring; Pm, 2014 03:37. "Tim Keller on the value of Christian mentoring - Eternity News". www.eternitynews.com.au.CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  11. Lau, Sean (August 10, 2017). "The End of the Chinese 'Christian Revolution' in Australia". ABC Religion & Ethics. Retrieved October 12, 2020.
  12. April 4th, Kaley Payne; Comments, 2019 11:44 AM | Add a Comment. "The future of the church is Asian - Eternity News". www.eternitynews.com.au.
  13. anvas.sydney.edu.au
  14. "MINISTRIES".
  15. "Brekky TV wars begin early, with Sunrise rushing back from holiday". NewsComAu. December 19, 2019. Retrieved August 12, 2020.
  16. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6di-XoW_mwk&t=202s
  17. "Why I went on national TV to talk about Jesus". sydneyanglicans.net.
  18. April 2nd, Kaley Payne Ben McEachen; Comments, 2019 11:03 AM | Add a Comment. "Church divide laid bare in SBS series 'Christians Like Us' - Eternity News". www.eternitynews.com.au.
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