Efforts to fulfill this challenge are affected by something known as "environment.” This lesson
introduces the subject of environment, defines the term, and explains how the environment
relates to the mission of the Church.
ENVIRONMENT
The "environment" includes the physical, social, cultural, and spiritual factors which surround a
person. It includes all parts of the society in which a person lives, works, and ministers.
The physical environment includes the visible material things which surround a man. It refers
to the country, city, or village in which he lives. It refers to all that can be seen with the natural
eye such as buildings, land, animals, trees, mountains, material possessions, etc.
The physical environment may be a dry dessert, cold mountain region, jungle, or island. It may
be a very nice environment with mild weather where crops grow easily. It may be a very harsh
environment, with bad weather which makes providing adequate food supplies difficult. The
physical environment may be a crowded city populated with many people or a remote area with
only a few people.
The social environment refers to the people who live in any physical environment. The social
environment is the people among whom you live, work, and minister.
Individuals in every society are members of families. These families may be organized into
castes, clans, or tribes. Within these groups are other divisions such as the poor, rich, educated,
and uneducated. A nation is made up of many "people groups,” about which you will study
later in this course. The way people are organized in the environment is called the "social
structure.”
The cultural environment refers to the accepted patterns of life and behavior within a group of
people. These patterns include such things as language, manners, customs, and material
standards of living.
Culture also includes such things as the music, art, science, literature, educational systems and
political structures. Culture develops as a result of religious and political influences and by
repeated practice of customs over a long period of time.
Culture varies between nations and even between groups of people within a nation. For
example, in Bible times the culture of Jews was different from that of the Gentiles. The Jews did
not eat meat and they practiced circumcision. The Gentiles ate meat and did not practice
circumcision. The two groups varied in religion, customs, and social structure.