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Taking ownership of the call

NewsJim White  |  September 4, 2009

Two years into a three-year strategic partnership with a church in Grenada, Manly Memorial Baptist Church in Lexington noticed a change in its members’ attitudes toward mission.

“We took a team of 15 last year and 11 this year to work with the Grenadan church,” said Mike Wilkins, pastor of the Lexington congregation. “It was interesting. Some of those who went weren’t sure that the mission thing was for them. But when they came back, they were enthusiastic about returning for another year.

“There’s no question. Our members have bought into the mission endeavor in a much more personal way than before.”

First Baptist Church of Plano, Texas, discovered direct involvement in mission partnerships — including hands-on work with several congregations in southern Mexico — led to renewed passion for global missions.

Churches are exploring new ways to impact the globe.

“The more our people became involved in a personal way — once their hearts were plunged in it — their energy and efforts and money tended to follow,” said Jerry Carlisle, pastor of the suburban Dallas congregation.

Those two churches are among thousands that have changed the face of mission involvement as congregations like them have taken on greater roles in selecting and developing strategic partnerships around the world.

While few have abandoned support for large missionary-sending organizations like the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship and the Southern Baptist Convention’s International Mission Board, increasingly churches are taking more ownership of their call to take the gospel to the “uttermost parts.”

“My guess is that partnership missions have taught a lot of people how they can engage internationally,” said Craig Waddell, missions partnership coordinator for the Virginia Baptist Mission Board. “Now that they know what to do and have developed international contacts and connections, people are saying: ‘Hey, we can do this ourselves. We can do more of what we are called to do as a church.’ … Experience is translating into confidence.”

Clyde Keen of Manly Memorial Baptist Church in Lexington bonds with a child in Grenada.

Reductions in the cost and ease of travel and communications have created “an inevitability about the shift,” said Alistair Brown, who last year became president of Northern Baptist Theological Seminary near Chicago after a long stint at head of Great Britain’s Baptist Missionary Society.

“People travel and become familiar with an overseas place, so it’s inevitable that they will select and form partnerships with churches abroad.”

The move away from exclusive reliance on large institutions and toward local church-based mission endeavors is a widely-noted phenomenon. In fact, it largely defined mission trends in the last half of the 20th century, many observers note.

“Short-term foreign missions projects by teams from local churches were rare before 1950,” Bruce Gourley wrote in a recent issue of Baptist History and Heritage. “Locally churches faithfully contributed to the missions institution by sending money; teaching missions lessons to the children, youth and adults; and listening to the occasional missions sermon. Sometimes youth groups participated in a missions project, and, on relatively rare occasions, a local church rejoiced over one of their own sons or daughters who, after graduating from seminary, received an appointment as a missionary. …”

Today, “this snapshot of … missions has been obliterated,” said Gourley, a Baptist historian.

Though resisted at first, church-based mission endeavors now are widely accepted by large mission agencies. Last year, for example, the International Mission Board revised its vision, mission and core values statements to focus more on local churches’ involvement in missions.

First Baptist of Plano, Texas, partners with congregations in Chiapas, Mexico, where these children live.

“The revised mission statement … reflects that the Great Commission is the responsibility of the local church and refocuses the efforts of the agency on assisting churches to fulfill that responsibility,” according to a 2008 IMB news release reported by Associated Baptist Press.

The values statement, the release continued, shifts “the role of the agency from a primary focus on sending missionaries to one that serves the churches in their involvement in the Great Commission and the sending of missionaries.” Because churches are “personalizing” the mission task, “mission-sending agencies are having to change the way they go about establishing contacts and sending personnel,” said Jerry Jones, leader of the Virginia Baptist Mission Board’s glocal missions team.

“For churches who initiate mission involvement on their own, the large monolithic sending agencies are virtually unnecessary and are becoming obsolete, and certainly not cost effective in this day and time,” said Jones, “The term ‘career missions’ is gradually disappearing, or at least has taken on new meaning.  Short and long-term volunteerism can be achieved via direct church involvement without the hassle and red tape involved in going through a sending agency.”

Not everyone agrees churches can remain effective in engaging mission without assistance from established mission agencies.

“I’m very committed to the local church and always have been,” said Kent Parks, president of Mission to Unreached Peoples, a nondenominational agency in the process of moving from Seattle to Dallas. “And I very much believe in effectively partnering between a local church and a sending mechanism.”

But, he added, there are strategic and funding issues that churches simply can’t do on their own, said Parks, a former CBF missionary who lives in Plano and attends First Baptist Church there. “The  unreached  population  is  growing beyond our ability to impact it. … We need to be about the Kingdom [of God] and  avoid an ecclesio-centric approach, but be about strategy and long-term results.” Working with mission-sending agencies can assist churches to do that.

Northern Seminary’s Brown agrees there are downsides to an exclusively church-based approach to mission. “An immense amount of money is spent on travel, going and doing things that could be done locally and done better locally,” he said. “Is this just missions tourism? I hope not.”

“I really think we can take the best of direct involvement of churches, if they will take a little strategic guidance from mission agencies.”

For churches to adopt the global mindset necessary for effective mission, a “focus on mutual partnership is crucial,” said Waddell of the Virginia Baptist Mission Board. “How are you going to allow your partner’s journey with God to inform your faith? That’s where we drop the ball a lot. How does our partner’s perspective in faith challenge our status quo? That is a critical question in being truly global.”

Parks added that cultural awareness is essential. “Every church ought to take the 15-weeks Perspective on the World Christian Movement course,” he said. Perspective is a ministry of the U.S. Center for World Mission and offers classes around the country.

Brown offered a five-point checklist for churches:

• Be strategic.

• Understand the local context.

• Structure projects to avoid engendering dependency.

• Ensure a project can be sustained to its conclusion.

• Make good use of Kingdom resources.

Robert Dilday is managing editor of the Religious Herald.

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