Monday, October 28, 2024

On Being Selfish: From Mission Field to Mission Force

This past week, I was privileged to speak at a missions conference in Tennessee, where I was reminded again of the incredible work that is being done in so many places of the world by ordinary people seeking to bring the love of Christ and the gift of grace to ordinary people in difficult circumstances.

While I struggled with some of the language around "mission" and "missionaries," I resonated with the speaker who said that representing Christ is "not a mission should you choose to accept it; rather, it is your identity."

Too often we still find that the language around missions includes the idea of a few people "going" to a place far away, yet all of us can be on mission every day of the week, as we meet people who might never step foot into a church and people that the pastor may never meet. 

I was reminded that while the USA is still the country that sends the highest number of missionaries globally, it is now also the country that RECEIVES the highest number of missionaries globally.  

In many places, the mission field has become the mission force.  The global south has more Christians than the global north.  The face of Christianity has moved from being a white Western male to being an African female (more women are Christian than men, and highest number of Christians are found in Africa).  

But I loved what one speaker said in talking about the US culture as it moves toward being post-Christian:  We must go to the nations so that they will come back to us when our Christianity has become "something-like-Christianity."

What a powerful statement.  

As the majority world moves from mission field to mission force, we find ourselves, in North America, moving from mission force to mission field.  

The quote below from A.W. Tozer reminds us that Christianity will always "reproduce itself after its kind." Who we are is what we will spread.  We must be careful in this.  He goes on to say, "The popular notion that the first obligation of the church is to spread the gospel to the uttermost parts of the earth is false.  Her first obligation is to be spiritually worthy to spread it."  While one could say that we can never wait until we are worthy (but through the grace of God), the argument of living of striving to live lives of integrity and wholistic discipleship needs to be beyond our words to our actions.

In another book I was reading this week, Leading Well in Times of Disruption, the writer said, "People are unreached because God’s people are unsent.  The unreached are not unreachable…but sometimes the unsent are not sendable.  We lack character formation."

May God help us to send the 99% of Christians who work in the marketplace.  May God help us to be sendable.  May God help us to do discipleship that will lead to people of integrity - living on the outside what we proclaim on the inside.

From the book, Of God and Men, this quote from A. W. Tozer

The task of the church is twofold: to spread Christianity throughout the world and to make sure that the Christianity she spreads is the pure New Testament kind....

Christianity will always reproduce itself after its kind. A worldly-minded, unspiritual church, when she crosses the ocean to give her witness to peoples of other tongues and other cultures, is sure to bring forth on other shores a Christianity much like her own....

The popular notion that the first obligation of the church is to spread the gospel to the uttermost parts of the earth is false. Her first obligation is to be spiritually worthy to spread it. Our Lord said "Go ye," but He also said, "Tarry ye," and the tarrying had to come before the going. Had the disciples gone forth as missionaries before the day of Pentecost it would have been an overwhelming spiritual disaster, for they could have done no more than make converts after their likeness, and this would have altered for the worse the whole history of the Western world and had consequences throughout the ages to come. (page 35-37).

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