Making Projection Promises

January 18th, 2011 § 16 comments § permalink

The first time I heard it, it went something like this:

“With our method, we hope to plant 200 churches in the mission field within four years.”

Since then, the number of churches, or years, or the method changes every time I hear it, but it’s the same intent: an astounding number in a very short amount of time. And it makes me wonder, do missionaries have to make projection promises just to get funding? Or maybe attention?

I wonder because, by those kind of numbers, we’re pretty pathetic. In our first four years (according to the example above), we’ve planted nothing. Not even one. We’re not even at the beginnings of a church plant. Though I’m not trying to compare or measure up (we’re in a different field, etc.), other Christians have encouraged me over the years to direct my interest to a certain leader or group because “they have this great plan to plant ___ churches in ___ years!”

I have to say that I’ve never had someone suggest I go hear the exciting presentation from missionary who’s still slogging on for decades with perhaps a convert or two and a group of ten in church attendance. » Read the rest of this entry «

Are You Using “Toxic Phrases” When Fundraising?

January 12th, 2011 § 0 comments § permalink

The latest Newsletter from The Body Builders/Support Raising Solutions has a great article about “toxic phrases” that may be inadvertently stopping people from becoming regular financial partners in your ministry.  I especially appreciated the thought behind not using the phrase “Give to me/us”.  In last Thursday’s post, I linked to an article that essentially asked about possible misuse of money when giving to a charity or church (I think missionaries would fall into this category). The author, Maurilio Amorim had a great take on this: “No matter the size of the gift, my donation is to God first and foremost. Whether I’m giving to my church, to a ministry or to a stranger holding up a sign on the side of the road, I’m ultimately giving my money to God.” If we make it clear to our possible supporters that this is about ultimately giving to God, not just to our pet project, I believe there would be less apprehension about how and why the money is used.

Here’s the newsletter link: “Three Toxic Phrases Good Fundraisers Never Use”

The Ripple Effect of Missionary Sacrifice

January 10th, 2011 § 12 comments § permalink

If you’re new to missions (i.e., you weren’t raised as an MK [Missionary's Kid] or had close family that are/were missionaries), there are so many things to comprehend and consider.  Essentially, they’re everything that doesn’t get mentioned in the Missionary Deputation Presentation, such as strange comments and assumptions that people make about you, odd interpretations of what a missionary is or does, and what it’s like to be in two cultures but not fully part of either.

Because we’ve just come out of the “Time-To-Visit-The-Family Season”, this is the point that your choice to be in the mission field becomes crystal-clear as the sacrifice it is, even in this time of Skype and Twitter and Facebook, etc.  We couldn’t be there for Thanksgiving, and it’s just not the same 5,000 miles away.  We also couldn’t be there for several funerals during our time in the field, and we’ve missed graduations, milestone birthdays, anniversaries, too.  It can be easy to feel a bit sorry for yourself come November and December, and it’s so important to be on guard about it.  I had somewhat anticipated this would happen, but I really didn’t appreciate that my sacrificial decision as a missionary has caused others to sacrifice, too, whether they wanted to or not. » Read the rest of this entry «

From the Missionary Blogosphere

January 6th, 2011 § 0 comments § permalink

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Has this been true for you?  It has for us: “For Many Missionaries, More Tech Means Shorter Furloughs”

A good perspective for those concerned about misuse of money donated to ministry. (HT: Assume the Best)

Are we really running out of new missionaries to replace those retiring from the field?

Ernest Goodman feels that the mission has an image problem.

The Very Worst Missionary asks if you’ve dropped an awkward missionary bomb lately.

Favourite Posts of 2010

January 3rd, 2011 § 0 comments § permalink

Happy new year! While new posts to Missionary Confidential are brewing, I thought I’d list my Favourite Posts of 2010 for those of you who have just recently found the blog:

“Doing Ministry at Arm’s Distance”
“Perhaps it’s the Western concept of compartmentalisation of our lives that shapes our definition of reaching out to others during ‘church events’ or when ministry is scheduled to happen—but that stops when the prescribed time over.  Maybe the few months or years the missionaries were scheduled to spend in the mission field made developing relationships with nationals seem moot if they planned to return permanently to the States.  Western Europeans can be much slower to ‘warm up’ than most Americans are used to.  Whatever the reason was, it gave the impression to the nationals that the missionaries were primarily concerned with completing ministry tasks and nothing more.”

“Programme Overload”
“It gives me the impression that ministry, whether local or foreign missionary, has become an industrialised commodity.  Grab the package of books/DVDs, send it over, get results, rinse, repeat.  Hey, it’s in the same language, what’s to change?  Yet even with translated literature, a lack of cultural understanding could really impede rather than impact a people group for Christ.”

“Missionary? Not My Kid: When Your Parents Don’t Approve”
“While my parents’ long-term reaction may be on the extreme side of things, I was surprised to hear over the years from so many missionaries how many of their parents, sometimes one or the other or both, were so upset at their decision.  It’s not something that is talked about very often, understandably.  But I think it should be addressed because it is a serious issue.”

“Being There”
“Many missionaries have abandoned this field with plaintive cries of, ‘They just don’t want to hear the Gospel!’  What I’ve found is that people here do actually want to hear the Gospel and speak about spiritual matters (more so than my experience growing up on the West Coast of the States, oddly enough).  They just want to get to know you first, feel that you’re a contributing part of the social fabric, and know that you care for not only their eternal life but about the life they’re living right now.  The best way we can convey that is by being there, not just when it’s time to address spiritual matters but when the benign, everyday things happen, too.  And that takes time, loads of time, before they’re at that point.”

“What Are You Doing There? Justifying Your Call”
“It’s hurtful when people lob the follow up questions, ‘Why’d you pick an easy place to live?  Couldn’t handle Africa?  Wanted a vacation?’ Easy?  Since when do we start comparing fields amongst missionaries?  Who has the master list of Difficult Mission Areas in descending order?  Must all missionaries live in the very worst of physical conditions to qualify?  Right now, I think the hardest place for me to live would be back in the States!”

“When Sympathy Turns Demeaning”
“When we serve “for, not with”, when our sympathy is really a mask for our feelings of superiority, it makes the recipient feel that ‘I am a project, not a person’.  By breaking Christianity into tasks and agendas, methods and numbers, it’s scary how much of the humanity is stripped out of it.”

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