Tuesday, February 16, 2010

missionaries- pass or fail?

I'm amped up, excited and can hardly wait. Next month (March 13-21) is our time of missions emphasis at Knott Avenue Church. We call it, Beyond...9 Days in March, and we use it to encourage those we support locally and globally, as well as to educate and challenge our people about missions on a worldwide scale. And what they can do to help get the job done.

Having been a missionary, I've heard much of the negative attributed to those who leave their own cultures to share life and message with those who don't know the Savior. I realize that far too often missionaries brought western culture, thinking, values and ways with them, and taught people as much about being western as about being Christians. I know that they often promoted a colonial mindset among those they went to serve, keeping converts dependent upon foreign direction, leadership and funding. That the message of Christ too often got overlaid upon a bed of indigenous beliefs, creating syncretism and Cristo-paganism. Yep, in some places, missionaries made a mess of things. We don't deny that.

But I also know that it was missionaries who went where real trouble and needs existed. They were founders and propagators of the bulk of hospitals, orphanages, schools and charities in the most challenging parts of the world. They risked (and often sacrificed) their lives because of a passion to alleviate suffering and bring healing and hope to those in dire need. They actually acted as a buffer in many places, preparing people for the inevitability of encroaching of western expansion. They brought peace among peoples who had warred for hundreds of years, changed the source of social policy for the betterment of the people, led campaigns for the rights of the oppressed and suffering. And all too often, suffered right alongside them.

I recently heard Ray Bakke (a renowned urban pastor, professor and author) speak and his reference to what missionaries have done historically gave me pause for reflection and joy. He said that in 1900, 90% of all Christians in the world were white, northern and western (European and North American). 90%! But by 1980, more than 50% of the world's Christians were non-white, non-northern and non-western. And that today, 80% of the world's active Christians are outside the West! That for the first time since the 5th century, Christianity is a non-western religion!

And he went on to ask his audience if they understood what those statistics meant. They meant that, among other things, missionaries did their job! That they were successful in getting the Gospel from here to there! And I remembered that even in weakness, in failings, and fall-short efforts, God works. He takes what is bring to His table, however little, limited or flawed, and makes of it great success, great progress, great gain. Not because of who we are, but because of who He is.

And then I reflected on our labors, both in the Philippines and here, and I was filled with joy. Because I knew that God took what we gave, and somehow fashioned it into the tool He was looking for to make a difference in lives in need. Because of who He is. And what He wants to see happen. And I remembered again that whether it's outside my front door or outside my borders, there are people to be reached, lives to be touched, needs to be met. And that sometimes I may need to support a missionary, while other times I need to be that missionary.

Join us in March, won't you, as we allow God to speak to us as people who both support and go, whether around the corner or around the world, with a message of hope for a dying world.

Give 'em heaven, missionaries.

2 comments:

Phylly said...

Last year was my first missionary trip and it was really a wake up call about what God really wants us to do in His kingdom. People are not connected to God in a tangeble sense. They need to see and hear Jesus affect their lives. Even in a location like Atascadero where there is no real poverty or social oppression the need to be intimately connected with a God who is listening and cares was clearly evident. All over the world people are facing the same spiritual delema. Where is God, do I really matter and how can He meet the needs I have? As God looks out from our eyes and guides our hands and speaks His will through us, we are answering the most profound questions of the human heart. To me, it's not the spoken needs that need the most attention but the inner screams of a soul without hope. And you can see them behind the eyes of people all over this suffering world. Just take a walk across the room and look into the calling of Gods missionaries. I am looking forward to going again this year, I've heard the universal language of Gods love and can't wait to share it with the people that are screaming out to be saved, in every way. Can you hear them?

Joe said...

Hey Mike!

I'm linking back to this from a post I have scheduled for tomorrow morning:

http://mayheincrease.com/2010/03/edens-dust/

See you soon!

Joe.