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Mission engagement is changing, Mid-Atlantic CBF told

NewsJim White  |  March 19, 2012

SILVER SPRING, Md.—One of the of the most revolutionary changes in global mission engagement is the new centrality of congregations in the movement, members of the Mid-Atlantic Cooperative Baptist Fellowship were told March 18.

“About 18,000 people participated in church-sponsored mission trips in 1988,” said Rob Nash, global missions coordinator for the national CBF. “In 2012, we expect 4 million to do that.”

“When you see that kind of change, you can rest assured that there is a movement of the Spirit taking place that is grounded in the mission of God in the world,” he said.

Outgoing MACBF moderator Kasey Jones (left) and newly-elected moderator Cameron Edgar (right) talk with CBF global missions coordinator Rob Nash after his comments at the annual meeting.

Nash was keynote speaker at MACBF’s annual meeting March 18 at Montgomery Hills Baptist Church in Silver Spring, Md.

The MACBF, one of the CBF’s regional affiliates, is a network of about 50 churches in Maryland, the District of Columbia, Delaware and West Virginia.

Nash said the growing prominence of local churches in missionary activity is one of at least three dramatic changes in mission engagement. Also noteworthy is that the missionary movement is no longer the domain of Christian groups in the West—the global church now has a seat at the global mission table.

In addition, “the gospel is moving from everywhere to everyone,” he said. “It’s amazing to see how Europeans are in South America, South Americans are in Africa, Africans are in Asia and Asians are in North America.”

Nash cautioned that while “we live in revolutionary days, in which the Spirit of God works powerfully across … boundaries,” challenges to the mission engagemenet remain.

“The localization of missions is something to celebrate,” he said. “But what we do with that, how we nurture it, channel it, is something we’re all trying to figure out.”

A proposed multi-church mission trip to Haiti sponsored by the MACBF reflects the new mission paradigm, said Kasey Jones, the group’s outgoing moderator.

“There’s been a history in this region of sponsoring mission opportunities,” said Jones, pastor of National Baptist Memorial Church in Washington. “We want to sponsor a mission to Haiti. As a body, we want to put our money and our labor where our mouth is.”

“We know some churches may not be able to engage in mission trips by themselves, so we want to create an opportunity to combine resources.”

Jones said a date for the trip has not yet been set, but that $4,000 for expenses is allocated in the MACBF’s 2012-2013 budget, which the group later adopted.

Another new MACBF initiative is “to introduce ourselves to students in divinity schools and seminaries,” said Jones. She said the initial focus will be on three Washington-area schools: John Leland Center for Theological Studies, Howard University School of Divinity and Wesley Theological Seminary. Receptions and other events will be hosted at the schools, funded in part by a $1,000 allocation in the MACBF budget.

The total 2012-2013 budget provides $21,000 for the MACBF expenditures and anticipates $31,000 in church contributions for the national CBF and its offering for global missions.

Elected as moderator for the coming year was Cameron Edgar, pastor of College Parkway Baptist Church in Arnold, Md.  Jones will remain on the MACBF’s 12-member coordinating council as past moderator. Greg Wolfe, pastor of Seven Locks Baptist Church in Potomac, Md., was reelected as treasurer.

Robert Dilday ([email protected]) is managing editor of the Religious Herald.

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