The Current Global Setting Calls for Lay Missions
The world is undergoing
seismic changes—the mapping of the human genome, the collapse of the Soviet
Union, the frenetic growth of human knowledge, the development of wireless
and satellite communications, the explosion of the Internet. Sometimes we
can almost feel it shifting under us. Some changes are frightening. but much
is exciting. On one hand the door to traditional missions is closing in
country after country. On the other hand, there are enormous opportunities
for non-traditional mission workers if we have the eyes to see. I believe
God is trying to tell us something. The world has shifted radically. So too
should missions.
For the past 200 years
God has enabled an unprecedented explosion of donor-supported missions. He
enabled this through two unique factors-Western colonialism and
industrialization. Colonialism provided three critical ingredients to this
missions expansion: 1) access, 2) a medium of currency exchange, and 3) a
degree of stability for proclaiming the gospel. Industrialization provided
one equally vital ingredient—increased human productivity, which gave people
greater discretionary funds to support missionaries if they so desired. Up
to 100 years ago, it wasn't possible to fund an army of mission workers and
most missionary groups worked in some manner to contribute to their own
support.
Donald K. Smith of
Western Seminary in the January issue of EMQ states that "historically,
missions from the West began when those nation were not wealthy. The
Moravians worked to support themselves wherever they went, even selling
themselves into slavery to reach the slaves in the Caribbean. For years
William Carey received no financial support in India but worked in various
jobs to support his Bible translation efforts. His lifestyle in India was
little different than it was when he was a cobbler in England. In fact, only
in the last century have missionaries felt it necessary to be fully
supported from the homeland." In the last 100 years, "full-time,"
donor-supported workers with all the attached overtones have become so much
the norm that today this defines the very word "missionary."
But the world has
undergone a massive shift. With the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, the
last colonial empire, the Soviet Union, collapsed. Once again, a new crop of
countries sprouted on our maps. Gone forever are the colonial empires which
provided missionary access.
Instead, nationalism
defines this new era. Nations want self-determination and self-development.
Christians of all people should understand these longings of the human soul.
It is no surprising that these new nations do not want foreign culture or
economics or religion imposed on them. Furthermore, they have no way to
perceive Christianity except as a foreign religion which threatens their
culture. Most have no concept of a personal relationship with God nor of the
gospel's power to lift and ennoble culture without forcing it to Westernize.
Understandably, most nations refuse to grant missionary visas. We must
understand that this refusal to grant missionary visas is not primarily
Satanic, but simply nationalistic, though there is Satanic influence.
Today over 80% of the
world's population live in nations which restrict missionary visas so that
traditional missionaries cannot reach them. But they welcome Americans with
needed professional skills. Today over 4,000,000 Americans live and work
overseas. Why? Because nations want help to develop. And as we know, that
need is real and in many cases desperate. And what is the greatest physical
need of these nations? Genuine business and economic development. No other
developmental progress can be sustained without it. Without substantial
economic development, these countries will never escape the cycle of
dependence on other nations.
Three more traits
characterize the new global situation. First, there is a growing consensus
that freer economies are better than controlled economies and that
representative government is better than totalitarian government. Second,
these forces are combining with modern communication and transportation
technologies to fuel exploding international trade of goods and jobs. And
third, because of American ascendancy, English is now the world's trade
language. In a word, the world is globalizing with the U.S. at the center
whether we like it or not.
What does all this
mean for missions? The door for missions is wider open than every before,
but it is a different door. It is a door for lay missions. The door for
vocational missions is mostly shut and closing further. But nations are
welcoming and sometimes begging for qualified people to help them develop. A
few years ago the president of Kyrgyzstan stated that he wanted 7,000
English teachers.
Let's give them what
they want and need in Christ's name! Because servanthood is central to the
Christian life, our hearts should naturally be moved with compassion to
bring them the skills they need as Christ's representatives. What an
exciting time for missions! Imagine the possibilities if the Church caught
this vision. We could deploy tens of thousands. And if we send the right
kind of lay people, they can enter all sectors of society and impact whole
cultures with the gospel of Christ. As professional religious workers,
missionaries cannot do this. Only lay people can.
Does this mean
donor-funded, vocational mission workers are no longer needed. No! Never!
Would to God that more Patricks, Taylors, Amy Carmichels, Gladys Aylwards,
Jim Elliots, and Don Richardsons were going. These are my heroes. We need to
deploy more. But they are specialists.
The reality is that
for over 100 years we have emphasized "full-time," vocational, religious
workers and neglected regular, everyday Christians. I propose that we need
to shift our emphasis to deploy vast numbers of effective,
missions-committed lay workers. I believe God is urging us in this direction
through the current world situation. Because of the unique contribution of
tentmakers or lay mission workers, we would need thousands more even if
there were no limits on missionary visas. Let me explain by exploring the
compelling, timeless Biblical reasons for lay missions or tentmaking.
Timeless Biblical Reasons Call for Lay
Missions
Missions is currently
backing into tentmaking primarily to gain access to closed countries.
Missionaries are using secular roles to obtain visas. The result is hybrid
missionary-tentmakers with attendant ethical tensions. In many cases we
could accurately describe this as "stealth missions" and missionaries'
secular roles as "covers." Thankfully, the concept of "platform" is
replacing "cover," though this still implies that the job is primarily a
means to accomplish something else. This tension is easily resolved by
genuinely going as a lay person.
This use of secular
roles to obtain access is very understandable in light of history. Because
of colonialism, industrialization, and specialization, vocational,
donor-supported missions has become the paradigm of missions today.
When countries began to close, it is no surprise that in our commitment to
reach the world we simply tacked on secular roles in order to obtain visas.
And it is no surprise that we've done this without thoughtful reflection on
Paul's rationale for tentmaking.
But the consequence is
that we have forfeited the power and genius of Paul's strategy. Gaining
access never motivated Paul to make tents. In fact, it never occurred to him
because he could go wherever he wanted as a Roman citizen. Paul found other
benefits so compelling that he chose to work for a living rather than
accepting donor support.
Did Paul work for a living as a policy?
But first, did Paul
really reject donor support as a policy? This is a critical question. I
realize you may think, as I did, that Paul took support when he could and
worked when he had to. But the New Testament record suggests otherwise. The
NT specifically reports that Paul worked in Galatia, Corinth, Thessalonica,
and Ephesus (1 Th. 2:9; 2 Th. 3:7-8; Acts 20:31-35; 1 Cor. 4:12; 9:6 [refers
to Paul’s ministry with Barnabas which took place in Galatia}).
However, the pivotal
text is I Cor. 9 where Paul defends himself against the Judaizers who
attacked his apostleship because he worked for a living and did not receive
support like the other apostles. Paul first gives the strongest rationale
for donor-support in Scripture and then proceeds to say three times that he
made no use of this right and never intends to (vv. 12, 15, 18).
It is important to
notice that I Cor. is written from Ephesus during Paul's third journey. This
statement covers most of Paul's recorded ministry. This means that working
for a living was Paul's standard operating procedure. Adding further weight
is the statement that Barnabas also followed this practice. Yet Barnabas not
partnered with Paul since their split after Paul’s first journey. Apparently
Barnabas maintained the same strategy after the split.
Paul advances this
argument further when he is forced again to defend his apostleship in II Cor.
He argues that far from undermining his apostleship, his working in order to
make the gospel free actually authenticates his apostleship in contrast to
the false apostles whose motives are polluted. The cost he paid showed the
high value he placed on those he won to Christ. Because he loved them like a
father, he wanted to provide for them, rather than they for him (2 Cor.
11:7-11; 12:14-16). In his final comment on this point, Paul says he is
going to continue this practice (11:12).
The one problem text
comes in the middle of Paul's defense in 2 Cor. He says he "robbed other
churches by accepting support from them in order to serve you . . . (because
his) needs were supplied by the brethren who came from Macedonia." (10:8-9)
But this text does not undermine our conclusion. First, our interpretation
of this text must be controlled by the larger argument of 1 Cor. 9 and 2 Cor.
11 lest we make Paul contradictory. Second, the statement is deliberate
hyperbole. Paul is using exaggeration to shame the Corinthians. Third,
Philippians clarifies this statement by informing us that “no church entered
into partnership with me in giving and receiving except you only.”
(4:15-16) This they did once or twice while he was in Thessalonica plus
maybe once while in Corinth. Thus the Philippian church is the only one
which sent support, and then, only a few times. Finally, Paul would have had
no need to defend his not taking support if it had not been his standard
practice.
The NT adds several
additional insights into Paul’s practice. First, how much did he work? In 2
Th. 3:8, he says he worked "night and day." Understand that Paul knew
nothing of our twentieth century American idiom. He is not telling us he was
a workaholic. He is referring to the two shifts of the Mediterranean work
day-"night" referring to the late afternoon-evening shift after the long,
midday siesta, and "day" referring to the morning shift. Putting "night"
before "day" is merely Hebrew custom as in Genesis 1. Paul is simply saying
he worked full-time.
Second, this practice
was so important to Paul that he made a point to pay for meals rather than
accepting normal hospitality (2 Th. 3:8). Third, did others on Paul’s team
also work? This had to be true for Paul to argue the way he did in 1 and 2
Cor. But does the NT explicitly confirm this? Indeed it does. According to 2
Th. 3:7-9, Silvanus and Timothy also worked. Eight times Paul uses first
person plural pronouns “we,” “us,” and “our.” “You ought to imitate us;
we were not idle when we were with you, we did not eat
any one's bread without paying, but with toil and labor we worked
night and day, that we might not burden any of you. It was not
because we have not that right, but to give you in our conduct
an example to imitate.” (2 Th. 3:7-9, 1:1; 1 Th. 2:9)
Careful reading of the
NT data makes it clear that Paul made a practice of working for a living
rather than accepting support. Further, his strong statements make it clear
that he did this for strategic reasons.
Reason 1: To provide credibility to the
gospel
The first reason Paul
gives is this: "We endure anything rather than put an obstacle in the way of
the gospel of Christ." (I Cor. 9:12) What obstacle? Mistrust of his message.
If Paul had made his living by preaching, people would have doubted his
message because they questioned his motives. But no one could say that Paul
preached in order to make a living! No one could say, "Paul, you make
converts because you get paid to" as was stated about missionaries in
Taiwan. Rather he funded his own ministry. In addition he paid a great price
in other ways to bring the gospel—imprisonment, beatings, stoning,
shipwreck, frequent danger, toil, loss of sleep, hunger, and exposure (II
Cor. 11:23-28). No one could doubt Paul's love, or his absolute certainty of
the truth of the gospel. This, I believe, is why he made such a point of
boasting that he made the gospel free of charge. (1 Cor. 9:15-18)
This obstacle is still
valid today, especially in unreached cultures. People know money is so
powerful that they always suspect ulterior motives. They ask how
missionaries make their living and wonder if they work for the CIA. Some
have unfairly thought missionaries were lazy. The same doubts exist in the
U.S. Godly lay people often have more impact than pastors because they are
not paid to share Christ. I remember how students responded to my strong
talks on quiet time and Lordship in InterVarsity. They half-humorously told
me that quiet time was easy for me because I was paid to be spiritual. In
other words, I didn't live in their world with their pressures and I was
rewarded for cultivating spiritual disciplines. Everyday Christians have
greater credibility because evangelism is not their vocation. They don’t get
paid to do it.
Reason 2: To identify and connect with the
people
This leads into the
second reason Paul chose to work—identification with everyday people. In
1Cor. 9, Paul says that though he is free from all people, he has made
himself a slave to all in order to win the more. Paul applied this principle
to every situation, contextualizing the gospel for Jews and God-fearers (Ac
13:16-41), for secular Greek thinkers on Mars Hill (Ac 16:22-34), and for
political rulers (Ac 24-26)]. But in this passage where Paul states this
principle, he uses it to explain why he worked for a living and gave up his
right to support. He did it to “become all things to all people.”
Because work is so
central to human life, working for a living is one of the most profound ways
of identifying with people. Paul was one of the people. He shared their joys
and struggles. He genuinely depended on his earnings. He knew what it was to
be tired at the end of the day, to be cheated by customers, to wrestle with
ethical issues, etc. No one could say, "Paul, you don't understand what it's
like to have to work."
The gospel calls for
the most profound turn-around of a person's whole being and this takes time.
People do not simply hear the gospel once or twice and make a decision.
Regeneration is a process though we may not see the whole process. People
must come to see the credibility of the gospel, the compelling Lordship of
Jesus, God's rightful claim on their lives, their own culpability before
God, and God's gracious offer of pardon. Finally, they must surrender to
Jesus' gracious reign. Though God can greatly accelerate the process, he
does not bypass it because doing so would violate our humanity.
This is why
identifying with people is so important. The first task in a new people
group is to authenticate the gospel. An unreached people group does not yet
have a company of Christians in whom they can see the reality of the gospel
in all of life. They need to see Christians who validate the gospel by their
integrity, servanthood, love, joy in God's grace, and words about Christ.
Only everyday Christians can show them. At work, tentmakers are constantly
being observed. Working for a living allows them to incarnate and
authenticate the gospel in everyday life.
Despite our
fascination with mass evangelism methods, the gospel basically travels along
networks of relationships through friends, co-workers, and family. Seldom
does a person just come to a meeting, receive a Bible or tract, or hear the
gospel once, and come to Christ. Almost everyone who comes to Christ at a
crusade is brought by a Christian friend. Further, a decision at a crusade
is often only a turning point which leads to real understanding and
conversion later as other Christians follow-up.
Working provides
natural, ongoing contact with people along which the gospel can flow. Even
when tentmakers do not yet speak the local language, they share professional
vocabulary and interests with their co-workers. Missionaries must create
such contacts. People need both authentication of the gospel and ongoing
input as they process the gospel. This is why the gospel travels relational
networks. In unreached groups, the gospel can actually spread rapidly
through such networks if we do the right kind of evangelism. In addition,
lay people can infiltrate all sectors of society-agriculture, health care,
industry, banking, services, education, government, etc. They can impact the
whole culture with the gospel.
Reason 3: To set a pattern of everyday
discipleship and witness
a. To model godly
living in all of life
Paul's third reason
for working was to set an example. By working Paul modeled discipleship for
every aspect of his converts’ lives. In fact he states that modeling is
pivotal to his strategy. He repeatedly points to his own example and tells
people to imitate him. Phil. 3:17: Brethren, join in imitating me, and
mark those who so live as you have an example in us. I Cor. 10:31-11:1:
So, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of
God. Give no offense to Jews or to Greeks or to the church of God, just as I
try to please all men in everything I do, not seeking my own advantage, but
that of many, that they may be saved. Be imitators of me, as I am of Christ.
Notice the particulars
Paul calls us to imitate: to live lives which promote the gospel versus
being enemies of the cross (Cf. Phil. 1:27-30), to give up rights where it
will help to draw people to Christ, to do everything for God’s glory, to
live ultimately for the hope of heaven versus earthly gratification, and to
count every gain loss for the sake of knowing Christ even to the point of
sharing in his sufferings and death. (3:7-10) Can you imagine the impact of
Christians living this kind of life with this worldview? If even a minority
lived this way, the impact would be enormous.
b. To model a godly
work ethic
Paul writes to the
Thessalonians that “with toil and labor we worked night and day, that we
might not burden any of you. It was not because we have not that right, but
to give you in our conduct an example to imitate (2 Th. 3:8-9).” Paul set a
pattern of a godly work ethic in an indolent society. The Roman empire
suffered from a poor work ethic. Paul says many of his converts were idlers,
thieves, drunks, adulterers, prostitutes, etc. (1 Cor. 6:9-10) So important
is this issue to Paul that he mentions it seven times. (Ac. 20:53; Eph.
4:28, 6:5-9; 1 Th. 2:9-12, 4:11; 2 Th. 3:7-10; Col. 3:23; Tit. 3:1)
How does this relate
to our modern situation? Earlier I stated that business and economic
development are ultimately the biggest physical need around the world. What
is my rationale? Simply this: the ultimate reason people do not have
adequate food or health care, cannot meet natural disasters, cannot read,
and cannot rise above poverty is the lack of economic development. Without
adequate economic development, a nation cannot sustain any other area of
development like transportation, health care, communication, etc. The only
immediate hope in these situations is charity. The receiving nation is on
welfare, which just underscores the problem.
I believe the major
root of this problem is lack of a good work ethic. A decent work ethic has
been torpedoed in the former Soviet Union. The people say, “We pretend to
work; they pretend to pay us.” Lack of trust is destroying productivity in
many nations. In Zambia, it required over ten times the work time to sell my
brother some hardware he needed. The clerk had to find the hardware because
customers were not to be trusted. Then it took two clerks to check him out
to prevent either one from cheating. It is impossible to build a productive
economy with such work ethics.
But “working hard to
get ahead” is not a good work ethic. A morally good work ethic means working
hard to genuinely serve one's boss (as if one is serving Christ), one's
customer, and one's fellow-workers, as well as one's family, and those in
need. Thus a Biblical work ethic includes diligence, excellence, honesty,
and servanthood. Such an ethic inevitably tends to create a productive and a
just system.
I am fascinated by Max
Weber's conclusion that a society needs a critical mass of Bible-believing
Christians to produce a successful market economy. Why? Because a market
economy requires high levels of honesty, trust, and hard work. If this is
so, we very much need godly, missions-committed lay people in every people
group to seed that group with a godly work ethic.
c. To model lay
witness and ministry
But let me narrow your
attention to Paul's call to imitate and join him in advancing the gospel.
This theme rides on the surface or just below through the entire book of
Philippians.: I thank my God in all my remembrance of you . . .thankful for
your partnership in the gospel . . . And it is my prayer that your love may
abound more and more . . . so that you may . . . be pure and blameless for
the day of Christ, filled with the fruits of righteousness . . . to the
glory and praise of God. Only let your manner of life be worthy of the
gospel of Christ, so that . . I may hear that you stand firm in one spirit,
with one mind striving side by side for the faith of the gospel, etc.
(including suffering). Do all things without grumbling or questioning, that
you may be . . . children of God without blemish in the midst of a crooked
and perverse generation, among whom you shine as lights in the world,
holding fast the word of life, etc. But whatever gain I had, I counted as
loss for the sake of Christ . . . I press on toward the goal for the prize
of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus. Let those of us who are mature be
thus minded . . . Brethren, join in imitating me . . . (1:3-11, 27-30,
2:14-16, 3:7-21) Paul consciously called his followers to imitate him in
incarnating and proclaiming the gospel.
But what did they
observe to imitate? Was it only his preaching to crowds or his miracles? Or
did they see him witnessing in his everyday work? The answer is both. It
would be impossible to imagine Paul's looking for every opportunity to share
Christ and then being silent at work. Though Acts is long, Luke is very
selective, reporting only the facts needed to communicate his main points.
Paul's practice of work is not one of them, so his data is limited. But I
believe it is clear. In Ac. 18 Paul found Aquila with his wife, Priscilla,
and stayed with them because they were tentmakers like him. Luke describes
Aquila as a Jew who had been expelled from Rome by Claudius, the Roman
Caesar. Acts uses the term Jew to refer to non-believing Jews. Apparently
Paul led them to Christ in the workshop.
Acts 19 gives us a
fascinating window into Paul's activity. Luke tells us that Paul daily
argued for the gospel in the hall of Tyrannus. Then he tells how people
carried away Paul's “handkerchiefs” or “aprons” to heal and deliver people,
the only time this practice is mentioned in Acts. But what are these
“handkerchiefs” or “aprons?” A leather-worker's apron and the cloths with
which he wiped his hands and mopped his brow. Apparently Paul engaged the
hall of Tyrannus during the siesta break when the hall was free. He went
over in his work clothes and taught, and then returned to work. Acts 20:31
takes us further. There Paul says he admonished the Ephesians night and day
with tears obviously including his work time. Those he admonished cannot be
limited to Christians. Undoubtedly, interested people visited Paul in his
workshop in all stages of spiritual progress from seekers to leaders.
By working for a
living, Paul established a pattern of lay witness and lay ministry. He could
speak with authority about on-the-job evangelism because he did it. No one
could say, "Paul, you don't understand the pressures, mistreatment,
exhaustion, drudgery, ingratitude, and ridicule we face." Paul lived in
their world. He made it normative for every Christian to evangelize and
disciple.
In the early years,
Paul's churches never saw a professional, donor-supported worker. They
expected everyone to witness simply because they belonged to Christ. Only
years later after the churches had grown, the pattern of lay ministry was
established as the norm, and leaders were proven, did Paul instruct them in
the pastoral letters to support leaders who labor in preaching and teaching.
Paul's strategy immediately produced self-supporting, self-directing, and
self-reproducing churches. This is why the gospel exploded in those early
years and why Paul could say he had fully preached the gospel throughout
Asia Minor and Macedonia and that there was no longer any room for work in
those regions. (Rm. 15:19,23) He had planted churches which were penetrating
their people groups. His task was finished.
The power of
modeling
Paul's working for a
living was an incarnational missions strategy! Paul modeled everyday
discipleship. He showed his disciples what he told them. Instead of
apologizing for modeling, Paul recognized the power of imitation and called
people to imitate him.
I remember my
2-3-year-old daughter visiting me in my attic office. She saw me writing
with a pen and wanted to do the same. Being a wise father I gave her a
pencil instead. But would that do? No! She had to have the pen. "Monkey see;
monkey do!" People learn more strongly by imitating than any other way.
So powerful is
modeling that we cannot escape reproducing ourselves in others.. During a
lesson on culture to a group of Christians from a South American Indian
tribe, Jacob Loewen explained that people of every culture have one or
several cultural universals-such as social organization, education, economic
organization, religion, and material culture-at the center of their way of
life. He asked the national Christians whether, after 20 years of contact
with Western missionaries, they could identify the central component of the
missionaries' way of life. "Money!" was the unanimous and unhesitating
response. The surprised instructor asked if the missionaries really taught
about money. Of course not-they speak of God and religion. But the
missionaries present grew increasingly uncomfortable as the national
Christians supported their conviction with numerous damning observations.
With "devastating accuracy the Indian Christians one after another recounted
personal experiences that showed how money was the ultimate yardstick
(value) in both the material and spiritual areas of the missionaries' life
and culture."
The nationals had also
had a little contact with Communist propaganda, and were able to identify
political structure and economics as the centers of the Communist way of
life. Loewen brought the conversation closer to home, asking what had been
the central feature of their grandfathers' lives. "War," was the prompt
response. The first-generation Christians explained that, though their
ancestors had not enjoyed killing, it was the only way to acquire spirit
power. "And what if they had been Christians?"
Without as much as
blinking, the teachers responded: "The Spirit of God, because he . . . "
Just then an audible gasp by one of the missionaries caused the speaker to
hesitate for a moment, but he continued: ". . . because the Spirit of God
is the most powerful of all spirits."
"And now," [Loewen]
continued, "that all of you here are Christians, is the Spirit of God the
axle of your Christian way of life, too?"
"No," they responded,
obviously subdued, "our axle now is . . . is money."
"How come? Are you
not children of your ancestors? If the axle of their Christian life would
have been the Spirit of God, why is it not yours?"
"Money is our axle now
because that is what we have learned from the missionaries." (from the
Introduction of Culture and Human Values by Jacob Loewen)
People inevitably tend
to become like their leaders. Most do not rise above the level of their
leaders.
The previous story is
a very sobering. But the flip side of that is very positive. In my former
life I served with InterVarsity Christian Fellowship. I remember arriving on
campus at Johns Hopkins University and finding the Christians very
intimidated by the campus. Academic demands are very high and the gospel is
viewed with disdain. To them two things seemed impossible 1) that they could
give significant time to God's interests and still fulfill the academic
demands, and 2) that the gospel could win people on that campus. I pulled 12
students together into a discipleship group and we began to study Scripture.
We made a very simple agreement that we would attend all meetings and that
we would seek to live out what we learned. These students began to take
small steps of faith, first giving time to seeking God and serving God. They
also began taking small risks in evangelism. As time passed they discovered
they could be good students and set God's Kingdom first, and that God did
bring students to himself. Do you know what happened to the Christians who
came after them? For them it was much easier. When they arrived on campus,
they saw it was possible to give real time to Christ's agenda and
that they could win people to Christ! They stood on the shoulders of those
who had gone before. They traded on their faith.
The implications of
modeling for missions
This is why modeling
is critical in missions. We need to fully enter people’s world to incarnate
the gospel and establish a model of everyday discipleship and witness. We
need tentmakers or lay mission workers who are trailblazers in the
workplace, who know how to honor Christ in their jobs and how to integrate
work and witness. We need models of the highest integrity, quality work,
true servanthood towards employers, customers, and co-workers, genuine
caring, compelling love among Christians, and deep joy in Christ.
Vocational
missionaries cannot provide this not because they aren't Christ-like, but
because they are not in the workplace. They can't speak to workplace issues,
because they don't face them. The only exceptions to this are missionaries
with strong previous work experience in which they integrated work and
witness and lived distinctly Christ-like lives. However, even they cannot
model workplace Christianity or address the unique pressures of the
target culture. But effective tentmakers can. They live in the people's
world.
Reason 4: To Create Rapid Church
Multiplication
Paul planted churches
very quickly. He often left churches after only a few months or less and
then appointed leaders on the return trip. (Ac. 14:21-23). The longest he
ever stayed was 2½ years in Ephesus, which he used as a base for his team to
strengthen the surrounding churches and to plant more. In just 10-12 years,
Paul planted 10 churches that we know of. Others, like Laodicea, Colossae,
and Hierapolis, were launched by members of his team or by other churches.
Probably many of the churches of Revelation were started by his converts.
Paul's strategy produced a blitzkrieg of rapid church multiplication.
Paul expected new Christians to take responsibility immediately and for
leaders to surface quickly. Acts shows that Paul never ran a local
church, but rather coached them into existence.
Paul immediately
indigenized the Church
Paul practiced
immediate indigenization meaning he immediately gave leadership to new,
local Christians. You cannot do this if you have to wait to train and fund
workers. You can only do this by fully engaging lay people. Paul believed in
people’s potential and in the Spirit’s power. He knew the Spirit transformed
and energized every Christian to make disciples. So he expected them to do
so, and they did! No wonder Paul’s churches spread the gospel so rapidly in
the first century.
Paul played a
coaching-mentoring role to birth churches under local leaders. His letters
show that while his authority was real, it was not absolute. Paul painfully
recognized that it was entirely possible for a church to refuse his
direction because they were ultimately in charge. This made their
responsibility real and forced them to grow.
Paul’s churches were
self-governing, self-funding, largely self-feeding (digging into
the Old Testament and Jesus’ teaching for themselves), and
self-multiplying almost from the beginning. Paul taught, but did not
control. He gave minimal structure—probably only baptism, Sunday communion
and teaching, and multiple elders. Other development was left to the
churches. The churches never had to get rid of a foreign pattern because
they never had it. The churches began indigenizing the gospel from the
beginning.
Paul immediately
partnered in church planting
Paul began partnering
with new local Christians from the outset. The book of Acts and the greeting
sections of the epistles show how attached Paul was to indigenous leaders
and his genuine partnership with them. Because of the Spirit’s power, he
really believed in them, expected them to carry responsibility right away,
and collaborated with them as peers. As evidenced by people’s names and
scattered statements, ethnicity seemed to make no difference to Paul. When a
person came to Christ, they were part of the Family, and promising people
were invited into Paul’s church-planting team as co-workers.
What takes this to the
next level is the size of Paul’s “missionary” team. Over a period of 10-12
years Paul recruited about 24 identifiable people into his church-planting
team plus others who are probably never identified in the New Testament.
Paul added 2-3 people every year to his team from the local people groups.
Only Silas came from Jerusalem. The rest were the “Turks,” “Berbers,”
“Kazaks,” and “Spaniards” of his day.
But how could he add
people so fast? Because Paul’s team followed his pattern of working for a
living. Paul confirms this in II Thess. 3:7-10 by using the words “we,”
“us,” and “our” eight times to explain that he, Silvanus, and Timothy worked
in order to give the Thessalonians an example to imitate. Paul’s
“missionary” team was actually a tentmaker team.
A recent article on the
breakthrough among the Mongolians described the genius of Ghengus Khan’s
army. The Mongol army was the most mobile in the world because they took
their supply line with them. Family and herds traveled just behind them.
This enabled them to quickly penetrate deeper and deeper into enemy
territory. Paul did the same thing. By building a working lay team, he took
his supply line with him.
Think of the
implications: Paul led a totally mobile, self-funded mission team. They
could quickly plant churches, move to new cities, and add promising people
because they embraced local believers and used a lay ministry strategy. They
did not have to wait for members to raise support or go to seminary. Paul
provided the most effective training—apprenticeship to
himself. It was Paul’s lay missions strategy which generated a high momentum
church planting movement and rapid expansion of the church-planting team.
Not all vocations are as
portable as Paul’s, but we need to think about how we might apply this
insight. For one thing, it offers the solution to funding workers quickly in
the Third World and to avoiding paternalism. And again, it carries with it
the power of incarnated Christianity. Can you imagine the impact if we fully
developed this approach to church planting.
History proves the
power of lay ministry
The genius of a lay
ministry strategy has been proven every time it has been tried. A most
striking example is the relative growth of three U.S. denominations over 200
years.
Comparison of Church Growth: 1750-1950
|
|
Year |
1750 |
1850 |
1950 |
|
Congregational |
600 |
1,600 |
3,200 |
|
Methodist |
0 |
1,200 |
5,800 |
|
Southern Baptist |
200 |
8,600 |
45,000 |
Southern Baptists
built the most lay- oriented movement; Congregationalists, the least.
Congregationalists required Bible college or seminary plus apprenticeship
under a senior pastor before preaching. Methodists allowed greater lay
initiative. But Southern Baptists encouraged the greatest lay involvement.
They required the least formal training and used bi-vocational and lay
pastors to pioneer new churches.
The less the
requirement for formal training and the greater the involvement of lay
people, the greater the growth, the faster the mobilization, and broader the
impact. This is essentially what we have witnessed with the growth of
house churches in China, with the growth of small-group driven churches in
Korea, Colombia, the U.S., and other countries, and with the huge impact of
the relatively small Moravian movement, etc.
To effectively deploy
lay people you have to mentor them, model for them, support them, and give
them responsibility-ownership. You don't have to give them money or status.
In fact, that will generally torpedo their spiritual lives. This is why Paul
tells us never to appoint novices to ecclesial position. Giving people
genuine responsibility and ownership and expecting them to deliver are the
secrets. Paul immediately expected new believers to produce. In fact, he
never pastored any of his churches, but quickly appointed local leaders.
The impact of
over-using vocational missionaries
Because modeling is so
powerful, our pattern of sending “full-time,” vocational religious workers
is replicating itself all over the world. As a consequence we have
marginalized the primary workforce of regular, everyday Christians. We've
developed a whole theology around this approach. Because vocational
religious workers are “full-time” and have received a “special call,” they
are the really important players. Since regular Christians have not received
this call and are only “part-time,” we cannot expect that much from them.
Instead they are relegated to second string status where many simply cheer
and warm the bench. By implication, lay people don't have the same God-given
potential nor the same empowering by the Spirit. Can you imagine suggesting
this to Paul?
Our dependence on
vocational religious workers creates a second problem—over dependence on
money. Since we need “full-time” workers, we must find money before we start
any ministry. This tends to kill church growth momentum. In addition, it
makes Western paternalism almost inevitable because of our relative wealth.
We can send financial peanuts overseas and have it balloon into a large sum
which can fund whole divisions of Third World workers. Relatively small
sacrifice gives us enormous power. But even with the best of intentions, the
elephant eventually squashes the mouse with which it dances.
A lay ministry
strategy is the solution to both these problems—the marginalizing of the
major workforce of everyday Christians and the problem of paternalism and
dependence.
Tentmakers are
effective today.
Let's forever drop the
objection that lay people cannot be effective and even plant churches. Paul
and his team did it, powerfully. And tentmakers are doing it today.
Ken Crowell
went to Israel a started a company with the conscious purpose of planting a
church. Ken gained high credibility in Israel because of his genuine servant
heart and his quiet, open witness to Christ. Even before he returned to
Israel to start his company, he was frequently introduced in Israel as a "
Christian engineer." Ken started his company in Tiberius because there had
been no significant church there for hundreds of years and because there was
a tremendous need for industry. So he started essentially the first industry
in the city. He deliberately hired Jews, Arabs and Christians in order to
provide a setting in which witness could take place. Ken struggled against
great odds in the beginning. Before he left for Israel, his partner
absconded with the manufacturing equipment he had bought and set up for test
production. As a result, he had to use his wife's oven to bake the pvc onto
his antennas. Ken's company supplies most of the antennas for Motorola cell
phones. Orthodox Jewish extremists attacked him repeatedly. At one point
they threw stones into his home, one of which struck his wife. Another time
they sought to incite a riot with his workers, but instead of abandoning
him, they defended him. The little hotel the Christians rented for the
fellowship was burned to the ground. Several times the rabbis slandered him
and launched criminal investigations against him. They even accused him of
kidnapping Israeli children and selling them to N. Africa. But God blessed
and the church grew in sync with his company-when there were 30 in the
company, there were 30 in the church and when there were 300, there were 300
in the church, of course not all the same people. Ken repeatedly asked
government leaders how he could help them and did so. He was awarded the
Decade Award for the best firm of the decade and the Kaplan Prize, the
highest award for industry. These were presented by the Prime Minister in
the hall of the Knesset before Israeli dignitaries.
Ruth Siemens
ended up teaching fifth grade at a secular international school in Lima,
Peru At this time, almost fifty years ago, Peru was largely unevangelized.
But Ruth managed to find a small, evangelical church nearby where she
offered to teach a Sunday School class to which she could invite her
students. Though she had perfect freedom to preach the gospel in class, she
did not do so because it would have violated her educational task. Instead,
she freely shared her life in Christ, and invited her students to her Sunday
School class. Most of them came and most became believers. So respected was
Ruth in her work, that she revised the curriculum for the whole school
during her second year. Ruth also reached out to colleagues through
friendship and evangelistic Bible studies. A number of colleagues found
Christ as well as a number of staff. Then in her "free" time Ruth went to
the university in Lima repeated the same process and started the Peruvian "InterVarsity"
movement. Some of these have become national and international leaders. Soon
the Peruvian movement was going strong and had helped start the Ecuadorian
movement and Ruth felt she could move on. So she sent her résumé throughout
Spanish-speaking countries in Latin America, but to her surprise, no offer
came. So she finally accepted an unsolicited offer from an international
school in Brazil to serve as principal. Once again she repeated the same
process, winning students, faculty, and staff to Christ and starting the
Brazilian "IV" movement. In the middle of her work in Brazil, the
International Fellowship of Evangelical Students asked Ruth to leave her
job, go on support, and give full-time to the student work. So after turning
down an offer to double her already good salary, Ruth transitioned from
tentmaking to donor-supported ministry. By the time she left Brazil there
were student fellowships on 30 college campuses. At the invitation of IFES,
Ruth then moved to Spain where she pioneered the Spanish and Portuguese
university student movements. Let me just observe, that if Ruth had started
such Christian fellowships in the larger ethnic communities, they would have
been churches.
Joe L went with
5 others to China on an exchange program. He taught English and studied
Mandarin. Within a short time the other 5 had either left or been expelled
because of discontent, immorality, or unruly behavior. As a result, three
Chinese students asked Joe, "Why aren't you like the others'?" So Joe
invited them to visit and he would tell them. That evening they appeared
bringing several others. Over the next few weeks Joe led three to faith and
began discipling them. When his contract expired at the end of the year, he
returned to the US, very concerned for these new believers. But almost as
soon as he arrived home, he received a letter asking him to return, because
of his integrity and excellence. That fall when he stepped off the plane,
one of the three he had discipled met him with a big grin and introduced a
friend whom he had led to Christ. He asked, "Do you have any materials? I
want to teach Deng." During his second year, officials asked Joe to teach a
course on American holidays to 60 exchange students going to America. Joe
responded, "But I can't talk about American holidays without talking about
Christianity." "That's okay," they answered. Later authorities asked him to
help them set up a program to recruit more English teachers for China-
"people just like you" they said. Joe continues to work in China today.
“John and Beth”
have been tentmakers in Japan for about 15 years. Jim works as an engineer
for a corporation under contract to the Air Force. This could easily
insulate them from the Japanese people, but they have deliberately centered
their lives around reaching the Japanese. Their home is a constant parade of
Japanese friends coming and going seven days a week. Both they and their
children have opened their hearts and their home to the Japanese. They teach
conversational English and Bible several times a week. Barbie teaches
patchwork quilting and a women's Bible study. At various times, they hold a
weekend camp for Japanese young people. And hospitality is a constant. “John
and Beth” have befriended and witnessed to many Japanese. Over these years,
more than 80 have trusted Christ and joined Japanese churches! Jim's job
requires him to travel to the Middle East to service high tech avionics
equipment. Jim has repeatedly seized these opportunities to do ministry as
well.
Paul’s Invasionary
Strategy of Evangelistic Expansion
Luke does not organize
Acts around Paul’s three missionary journeys. That is a foreign construct
imposed on the book from our missions viewpoint of home churches and the
field. Luke doesn’t view it that way. Why do I think this? Because Luke
clearly indicates the close of each section of Acts with a refrain—some kind
of summary statement like And the word of God increased: and the number
of disciples multiplied greatly . . . (Ac. 6:7) Sometimes it says “the
church grew and was multiplied,” other times, “the word grew
and multiplied.” The summaries are Acts 6:7. 9:31,12:24, 16:5, and 19:20. By
the way, these summaries fit perfectly the three stages described in Luke’s
introduction: “You shall be my witnesses in Jerusalem and in
all Judea and Samaria and to the end of the earth” (1:8).
What is remarkable is
where the last three summaries come. They do not come where we would expect,
and understanding why they come where they do leads to startling insights.
Luke does not divide Paul’s mission into 3 journeys, but into three
advances. The first summary comes after Paul has returned from his first
journey, decided the Judaizer issue with the Jerusalem council, carried that
decision to Antioch and the churches of Syria and Cilicia, and revisited all
the churches he had planted in Phrygia and Galatia. Then comes the
summary.
At this point, he is at
the front of the gospel's advance. This front then becomes the new staging
area for the next thrust into Macedonia and Asia. The next summary comes
after Paul has started churches throughout Macedonia, Achaia, and Asia,
returned to Antioch, Syria, revisited the churches of Phrygia and Galatia,
and returned to Ephesus. Once again the new front of the gospel becomes the
new staging area for the next advance into Rome and Italy.
What Luke is describing
is a virtual military strategy in which the gospel advances to new fronts
and these then become the staging points for each succeeding advance. He
does not seem to see the “home church-mission field” concept. Nor does he
see the “sending church” as we do. I do not believe Antioch ever sent Paul
and Barnabas in the sense we think of it, nor that Paul reported back to
Jerusalem and Antioch because they were sending churches.
What does Luke see? He
sees the whole world full of peoples as both “mission field” and “staging
area” as the gospel advances. He seems totally blind to ethnocentricity. To
him the whole world is the mission field initially. The gospel naturally
advances with power into new territory. The new territory then becomes the
new front and new staging area for the next advance. This process is
repeated over and over and provides an ever enlarging team for further
advance into the world. And where did Luke learn this? >From Paul.
Finally Acts ends with a
wonderful, non-concluding summary comment that the gospel is going forward
unhindered. What Luke is saying is, "Et cetera, et cetera, et cetera." The
story of Acts is continuing in like manner to the end of history which means
that Acts is normative for missions till Christ returns.
So let us return the
entire Great Commission to the laity. Let us send them to unreached peoples
as full partners to vocational mission workers. In fact, why don’t we give
the job back to all Christians and become the equippers who empower them for
ministry? Is that not what we were meant to be? Why not make lay missions
central to missions today!
The world is crying
out for the deployment of effective, missions-committed lay people who can
help them in all areas, demonstrate the power of the gospel, and reconcile
them to the King of kings and Savior of the world. Let us mobilize the tens
of thousands of committed Christian professionals they need.
(c) Dave English, May
3, 1999
Addendum: What Do We Need?
But what will it take
to produce effective lay mission workers? As you have been reflecting on the
missiology I've presented, you realize that we have a serious challenge.
Since modeling is the single most powerful teaching method and inescapably
produces disciples of like kind, then exporting effective tentmakers is no
walk in the park. How many American Christians have worked out and lived a
genuine Christian theology of work? How many practice servanthood toward
employer, client, and co-worker as central to how they work? How many even
practice true Christian ethics at work? How many genuinely care for the
needs of those around them? How many show that their joy in God supercedes
all other sources of fulfillment and thus rises above all other goals? How
many have integrated work and witness so that they do appropriate, effective
evangelism at work? How many are impacting the ideology and practice of
their professions?
We need to recover
a Biblical approach to work
If we are honest,
Christians have largely been neutralized in the workplace. They have been
silenced by the pressures of tolerance and pluralism. Too many of us are
seduced by the values of self-fulfillment, materialism recreation, and
comfort. The joy of knowing God is not greater than the pursuit of other
gratifications. Research shows that there is little difference between
Christians' and non-Christians' practice of ethics at work. Protecting
personal rights is far more common than servanthood toward others. And
giving time and effort to meet the needs of so many needy people around us
loses out to more important things.
We need to get fresh,
clear grip on reality. Work is central to human life. And it should! God is
the Great Worker-the Creator, Sustainer, and Redeemer of the universe! And
He is still working. We are made in his image and working is central to
being like him. Furthermore, God gave us the task of managing and developing
the earth to His glory. This is called the creation mandate and has never
been revoked. All legitimate work is part of this mission. What redemption
does is to restore our capacity to fulfill this mission. It restores our
motives, understanding, and actions so that our work once again advances
God's purposes as vice-regents under him. And when we get to the new heavens
and new earth, I believe we will finally work with complete God-centeredness
and complete joy. We will no longer have to fight evil and call rebels to
God's grace.
Since work is always
central to human life, the gospel must make it in the arena of work. If it
cannot redeem work and, by implication, all our everyday relationships, it
is worthless. We must re-sanctify work and learn to live “full-time” for
Christ in all of life. And we must learn to represent Christ effectively.
Let us champion those who make breakthroughs in the workplace and begin to
master the elements of glorifying Christ there, like integrity, excellence,
servanthood, love, and joy in God. Let's cheer on those who become effective
in integrating work and witness. (By the way, I realize many of us can't
imagine this happening because we don't have a model for effective witness
in today's relativistic, pluralistic workplace. Let me just point you to
Ruth Siemen's paper, “Workplace Evangelism: How to Fish out Seekers” on our
website, www.globalopps.org. She
has some answers.)
The need to recover
discipleship in other areas
And what about family
life? Christian divorce rate essentially matches non-Christian divorce rate.
Apparently we do not know how to build and maintain lasting, committed
marriages. Since there are so many repeat divorces after teaching and
counseling by pastors, obviously we do not know the critical components of
Biblical loving which produce lasting marriages. Instead we have imbibed
many of the culture's distortions of love. In light of premarital sex rates
among Christians, similar things can be said about our understanding and
practice of Biblical sexuality. And how well are we doing at raising
kingdom-committed children? To what degree have we been sucked into the
child-rearing mentality and practices of our culture?
We should also raise
the question of how much we are impacting our overall society and culture
with a Christian worldview and Christian values. All of us lament the moral
decline of our culture, but much of the fault lies at our feet. The words of
John Stott have haunted me for years on this issue. Commenting on Jesus'
call to be salt in the world, he said that it is the nature of meat to go
bad. When it goes bad we do not blame the meat. We blame the salt. So if our
culture goes bad, it is no surprise. It is the nature of human society to
degenerate. It is the church which serves as the conscience of society and
which preserves and protects society from degeneration. So when a Christian
society declines morally it shows that the Church has declined and lost
impact in society.
By the way, I believe
that following Christ in these areas is far more important to the gospel's
credibility than the issue of the excluded middle and the lack of miracles.
Often, Christians long for these as shortcuts. But the supernatural
transformation of character is much more demanding of and demonstrative of
faith and ongoing power. This includes our joy in God even in the middle of
suffering. Supernaturally transformed lives also provide the proper context
for the witness of miracles and the kind of faith which such lives demand
and produce readily allow for performing miracles as God leads. I believe it
is because transformed lives are so crucial to the gospel's credibility that
Paul spends so much of his teaching on issues of Christ-likeness and
everyday faith even in the middle of real pain.
I should go just a
little bit further and mention the challenge of impacting the overall
worldview of our culture. I would submit that along with everything else we
are exporting, the biggest thing we export is Western ideology and
worldview. Everywhere I went in Africa, I found that Africans ultimately
knew there was a Supreme Being, though he may have removed himself from
them. But after they went to university, many were no longer sure. The began
to doubt. The same observation extends to other aspects of Western
"enlightenment." Probably the biggest market for Americans overseas is as
teachers at all levels. Are we Christians able to effectively engage Western
thinking and replace it with a Biblical worldview? Or are we simply
exporting Western worldview and ideology even with our Christian teachers?
None of these
deficiencies means we should lose heart. The One in us is still greater than
the one who is in the world and the gates of hell cannot stop the advance of
the Church. Also, God is the God of new beginnings who is always ready to
remake us when we ready for a fresh start. I believe that we will make great
progress if we will commit ourselves to working on these areas personally,
in the church, and in our missions agencies.
This discussion does
provide us a clearer picture of what we need in effective lay missions
workers and how to equip them. Essentially we need to recruit and equip lay
Christians with effective spiritual disciplines, Christian theology and
practice in the workplace (excellence, integrity, servanthood, care for
others), integrated workplace witness, effective engagement with Western
worldview, risk-taking faith, greater joy in Christ than in other pursuits,
and effective discipling and church planting.
If our goal is the
planting of self-sustaining, self-directing, self-multiplying churches
capable of penetrating their people groups with the gospel, then I submit
that we must produce witnessing churches and salting churches capable of
impacting their culture with the gospel. Without this the church may grow
for a while, but eventually it will become an island of irrelevance and stop
growing. The key is for the church to live out a Christian worldview with
thoroughgoing transformed values combined with a thoroughgoing new view of
the world and of life.
And we cannot do this
without mobilizing the laity, without returning the great commission to
them. Only they can engage the culture and workplace because only they are
there. Only they can work out and model workplace discipleship where people
spend most of their time. Only they can set a pattern of lay witness and
ministry. And only when they are fully mobilized do we have the full force
of workers deployed in the task. As long as we keep missions as the domain
of specially called, full-time workers, we kill rapid church multiplication,
as well as the full health and independence of daughter churches.
(c) Dave English, May
3, 1999
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