The most valuable resource of a church are its tested people

1 06 2013

Excerpt from THE AMAZING POTENTIAL OF ONE SURRENDERED CHURCH (p. 93)

 The believers in Antioch surrendered their two key leaders, and thereby became more of what God wanted them to be. They illustrate what the parable of five loaves and two fish looks like when acted out in a church setting. Like the lad who did not withhold his lunch, the five elders did not cling to their two beloved leaders, and God multiplied their sacrifice so that multitudes of Jews and Gentiles were spiritually fed. In fact, we today are still enjoying the feast of their surrender and obedience.

In the process, the Antioch elders remind us of a lesson we may have forgotten: Our tested people are our most valuable resource. The one thing God required of them was their proven leaders.

Today we are very possessive of our good leaders. We willingly spare our mediocre leaders, but we’d never think of giving away our exceptional leaders. Yet this may be the very sacrifice God requires. This may be the kind of calling that moves our church from being preservation-oriented to being mission-oriented.

FOR DISCUSSION

What people resources has God given your church at this time? How is God preparing them for greater service?





Guess what’s impeding new movements in mission

29 05 2013

Jesus said, “The times, they are a changin'”  Okay, so that’s a loose paraphrase of what He really said, to the effect that the old categories (think of them as wineskins) no longer fit the new movements 737px-Airplane_vortex_edit( think wine, churning, fermenting, expanding).

Now think mission. (I use the singular because my interest is not so much in our missionS, i.e. in our trips, as it is in God’s one mission…singular). Our old categories are increasingly shrinking while we have been busy looking at our handbooks and guidelines. In recent years, well meaning mission/s strategists have sought to help local church mission committees apply their mission dollars more strategically. Their advice has been to (a) direct your funding to the 10/40 window of north Africa and the Middle East, or (b) support indigenous evangelists who are in the country and already know the language and, boy, did you know how cheap it is to support one of those guys?!, or (c) you fill in the next blank.

So let’s you and I go next summer to Somalia, squarely in the 10/40 window, with mostly unreached people groups. Hmmm, not such a good idea. Might not be able to get a flight in there. Even if we could, we might encounter an assault weapon within the first day. Okay, bad idea. let’s support a Somali national. Right, let’s find one. Let’s interview him so we know he is legit. And if I may get a bit more controversial, let’s tempt him to get greedy with access to the mighty dollar.

Well, I have a better idea. Here in my city of Seattle there are over 60,000 Somalis, all but a handful are Muslims. Many are desiring to learn English, so they can pass their citizenship. They are eager to learn to drive, to learn how to catch the right bus, to relocate to better housing. Doesn’t it rather appear that we have a big theme of God’s mission story happening right before our eyes?

“Yeah, but we can’t support that kind of mission work in American because our policy says our mission money is for global, not domestic, outreach.” Or as another mission pastor said, “We have worked hard to get __% of our budget going overseas.”

I guess you can tell that I am more than a bit frustrated to realize that the mission strategy of the past generation is now an impediment to one of the most amazing activities of God. (One of the observations of Systems Thinking is that yesterdays solutions are today’s problems!)

I wish I could say His new “wine” was cracking a few wine skins. Instead, I see the old wine skins are tied shut and the new wine is not being contained.

“Wow, Seattle is an amazing place then, eh? That many Muslims! I bet that’s about the only city other than NYC that is like that!” Friend, I would love to tell you the amazing mosaic God has been painting for decades, drawing color and culture from every tribe, tongue and nation. And His artistry is on display in a city near you.

Jonah resisted God’s call to the despised Iraqis because of his ethnocentrism. Bluntly, Jonah knew his people were the chosen, and all others were below them. I believe that ethnocentrism has crept into mission strategy today in a subtle form. Many today think that the USA is so richly blessed that, surely, every other country needs what we can give them. So let’s send our missionaries out of here, because the rest of the world is so much worse than we are. And since the number of American missionary candidates has been diminishing for years, let’s at least give the other commodity the rest of the world craves — our dollars.

I regret to say that, in my opinion, the Church in our country has already bought the lie that it doesn’t matter who gets the job done. Let me tell you, there are many hidden gains by sending and receiving people from our own churches. It does make a difference. Our churches ought to celebrate and encourage those, young or old, who feel called of God to cross cultures with intentionality, whether going by plane to another land or reaching out to immigrant neighbors here in our towns. To the degree we have already delegated our mission involvement to indigenous evangelists and to our pocketbooks, to that degree we have lost a share in the glory of God’s mission.

One of the fun sparkles about God’s new wine is the chance to do mission locally and discover a strategic part in an overseas vision. I just returned from my third annual trip to Ethiopia. I was not the American lone ranger cutting my own trail. No, our small team has gone at the invitation of an Ethiopian pastor who serves a church in Seattle and carries in his heart a vision to bring Biblical training to church leaders in his homeland who could never access Bible College. We just handed out over 100 diplomas to pastors, elders, women’s leaders and evangelists who, following two years of practical study, now feel more confident in their ministries. And we came alongside an Ethiopian brother in the USA and had the privilege of assisting him in His God-given vision.

What we need is a few decision-makers who sit around tables in board rooms to recapture the courage of Carey, Taylor and Paul. Let’s keep a priority on the unreached in restricted areas. And let’s flex to see that more and more are coming within reach.





Surrendered leaders produce surrendered churches

18 05 2013

The vibrancy of a congregation depends on the willingness of its leaders to seize their call to surrender. An excerpt from THE AMAZING POTENTIAL OF ONE SURRENDERED CHURCH (p.97).

When a church, in obedience to God, gives sacrificially of its best people and resources in order to launch a new ministry initiative, it unleashes a process of spiritual fruit-bearing that multiplies indefinitely. The Holy Spirit’s strategy of multiplication of disciples and churches has proven effective since the Day of Pentecost. Any church, large or small, will find God’s favor when they look for ways to have global impact through evangelism, discipleship, and church multiplication.

No church better illustrates this than Antioch. In surrendering Barnabas and Saul to God’s calling on their lives (Acts 13:2,3), they gave a gift greater than they could possibly have imagined, for the ministry which began that day not only took the gospel to many cities during their era, but has now spread to many countries right up to the present time. More than any other act of the Antioch assembly, their risky mission initiative illustrates the amazing potential of one surrendered church.

FOR DISCUSSION

  1. What positive dynamics are sustained in a church that has an ongoing heart for spreading the gospel to areas and peoples that still need to hear it in a way they can understand?
  2. What negative dynamics result from becoming inward-focused, lessening the outreach and mission mandate?




There is only one reason anyone believes in Christ

1 05 2013

We should expect both resistance to, and acceptance of the good news of salvation. An excerpt from THE AMAZING POTENTIAL OF ONE SURRENDERED CHURCH (p.19).

The only reason any church has the right to exist, much less advance, is that its Founder and Head has authority over the whole world. That statement will earn a scoff from cynics, but it accurately reflects Jesus’ own statements. Christ’s authority gives a church the proper perspective on why and how it should operate.

Jesus commanded us, “Go, therefore, and make disciples of all nations” (Matthew 28:19). The “therefore” thrusts us back to the basis for such an outrageous command. The reason we have the right and responsibility to make disciples for Jesus in every nation without exception is because Jesus has been given authority in every nation without exception: “All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on earth” (Matthew 28:18).

Since the Father has granted the Son such global authority (and commensurate responsibility), the Son in turn has inducted believers, the Church, to discharge His plan and to do so in His delegated authority.

PRAYER APPLICATION

A season of prayer could focus on asking Christ’s saving authority to become known in specific families, neighborhoods, ethnic groups, etc. which surround your church.





Why numerical church growth is not all it is cracked up to be, and what is

17 04 2013

An excerpt from THE AMAZING POTENTIAL OF ONE SURRENDERED CHURCH (pp.24-25).

In fact, we should focus less on numerical growth and more on having the hand of the Lord with us. If we have His benevolent hand, we will see the numerical increase He desires. And numerical increase without His blessing—which seems quite possible—is merely a shadow of a church, lacking the substance of God’s favor.

This should lead us to learn from Antioch what it means to have the Lord’s hand with us.

The hand of the Lord, in and of itself, is not a desirable thing. We sometimes see God’s hand against the nation Israel (Ezek. 3:14) and against false prophets (Ezek. 13:9). Even in Paul’s upcoming ministry, the Lord’s hand of judgment (through blindness) will be upon Elymas the Magician (Acts 13:11). So, we only want the hand of the Lord if it is with us.

What does that look like? The hand of the Lord is with a church as He chooses it and uses it as His instrument. This is the sense in which the phrase is used of John the Baptist’s ministry (Luke 1:66). The hand of the Lord is with a church when God is making Himself known to them in a real way; this is Ezekiel’s sense of it in Ezekiel 3:22 and 8:1. And here in Antioch, the Lord’s hand is evident, not only in the numerical growth, but in the entire story of the church—both the outward results and the inner conditions. That’s why we must read between the lines to discover the spiritual environment that God granted them.

In our churches today, we are very keen to have numerical growth. But we might be closer to the target if we ask God to reveal any ways we are preventing His hand from being with us.

FOR DISCUSSION

A lengthy session could be given to praying and discussing how this applies to your church, both historically and at present. What seasons in your church’s past were characterized by God’s favor? What can be learned from these observations?  To what degree do you feel the hand of the Lord is, or is not, with your church now?