Friday, January 25, 2013

Missional Mindset




Surprise!

I’m not Courtney OR Ariel (though I might enjoy using parentheses even more than she does), but I’m
commandeering their blog! A long time friend of Courtney’s, and recent friend (and glad for it!) of Ariel’s, they
asked me to guest post for them this month. I am so flattered, excited, and nervous! A little bit about me: Jesus
lover, Entrepreneurship Major & German Minor at UNT (graduating in May!), music enthusiast, crazy cat lady, coffee addict. That about sums me up! You can check out my own ramblings here, where I’m currently blogging through my recent-ish mission trip to Germany… Which is a nice segway to the topic I landed on chatting with you about: grab a cup of coffee or tea, and let’s talk missions!



What is the first thing that comes into your mind on the topic of missions?

From my own experience, I feel that there are several common avenues of thought about missions and missionaries in America:

1) “Mission trips are just something youth groups do.”
2) “Mission trips are expensive, so only that’s why I don’t go/only the rich go…”
3) “I’m not ‘good’ enough to be a Missionary! It’s a noble thing, but not for me.”
4) “I don’t understand why one feels the need to move/travel across the world to share the Gospel when America is in such bad shape! We need Missionaries here!”

Have you heard any of these ideas? Or perhaps you've found yourself thinking these things, too, once or twice?

It’s my goal to touch on these potential misconceptions, challenge my own thinking, and hopefully challenge your perspective as well! I want to help you think about missions in a different way: Missions overall is part of God’s story for the world, and you have a part written in! Many of my thoughts are rooted from my participation in a class called Perspectives on the World Christian Movement (I highly recommend every believer to take this class, whether you feel you have an interest in missions or not!)

I’m not at all a biblical or missional expert, so I would love to hear your feedback and where you stand on the subject J



   1) Missions is biblical and part of God’s story for the world.
Let’s look at a few scriptures and their missional implications!

Genesis 12:1-3
“Now the Lord said to Abram,
‘Go forth from your country,
And from your relatives
And from your father’s house,
To the land which I will show you;
 And I will make you a great nation,
And I will bless you,
And make your name great;
And so you shall be a blessing;
And I will bless those who bless you,
And the one who curses you I will curse.
And in you all the families of the earth will be blessed.’ ”
The last line, also phrased “all peoples on earth will be blessed through you,” shows God’s purpose to reach all nations. It demonstrates to me not only how timeless God is (a promise made years ago to Abraham is still valid today), but also how truly global His mandate is. A mandate is better than a command; with God’s promise, we become partners with Him to proclaim the gospel of salvation and bring glory to His name. Our responsibility and purpose as the church is to be a blessing to others by bringing the message of salvation to the nations. This is “missions” in its barest form!
Romans 10:14-15 
      “How, then, can they call on the one they have not believed in? And how can they believe in the one of whom they have not heard? And how can they hear without someone preaching to them? And how can they preach unless they are sent? As it is written, 'How beautiful are the feet of those bring good news!'

      This one seems pretty straightforward to me: Matthew 24:14 (below) says the gospel will be preached everywhere and this excerpt from Romans follows up with the “how.” Someone has to go.

Matthew 24:14
“This gospel of the Kingdom will be preached throughout the whole world, as a testimony to all nations; and then the end will come.”

     This verse speaks about worldwide evangelization until the end of the Age. It gives us a hope that it is possible to reach all the nations (meaning ethne, people groups or ethnicities defined by language and culture) of the world and a focus to concentrate on those who have not heard the good news of the gospel of the Kingdom.

Matthew 28:19-20
“Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age.”

We can gather that Christ expected the Church to finish the Great Commission, because it would not be
completed with the first disciples. We are also called to be on mission with Christ, just as Christ was on mission
with God (John 20:21). This means we aren’t to be “like” Jesus, but are literally to do as Jesus did. And Jesus
reconciled us, once lost, to the Father. Therefore, we, the Church, are to be part of His mission to
reconcile a lost world to God. When this task is finished, there will be a people within every people-group
who worship and confess God as the only One.

Selah.
Stop for a moment and just think about how mind blowing this really is: take away all the preconceived notions
and human constraints placed on missions and meditate on the fact the Holy, Almighty, Sovereign, Perfect, Loving
Father wants to use you to bring the lost back to Himself. He is totally and completely capable of reconciling them
without your help, but He wants to include you in the story, because just as Christ, you are His child! He wants to
bring glory to Himself by making much of you.
Selah.

It is important to realize that these are not isolated, individual verses calling some people to missions. These
verses are part of God’s bigger story for a world to be reconciled to Himself: the entire Bible is God’s plan; the
whole story is one of missions. Think big picture, and it should be virtually undeniable that as believers, our
purpose on this Earth is to further the Kingdom.



2. We are all called to be involved in missions (whether that is to go or to send).

Checkout this quick video by John Piper!

True, America is in bad shape, and though you probably don’t need proof aside from the sad, deteriorating moral
state our country is in, how’s this for eye-opening: Did you know that during the 1990’s the number of non
Western missionaries grew eight times faster than those from the West? Did you know that the number of non
Western cross-cultural missionaries surpassed those from the West sometime around 2005?

Some of us are called to stay and some of us are called to go. That doesn’t mean those who are called to go are
any more “good” or “holy” than those called to stay; God is simply choosing to use each person in a different way
to further the kingdom. However, if you are using the argument “we need missionaries here,” before you rain on
some missionary’s parade, ask yourself whether you are being a missionary here…I don’t say that in a
condescending manner, because so often I take a step back in conviction and think to myself, “I claim that I feel
the Lord leading me to Germany as a long-term missionary, but how am I living that out in my daily life here in
Denton, Texas?” There seems to be a large stigma in our minds that missions is “going on trips,” when it
should truly be a lifestyle (regardless of whether that missional living is domestic or abroad). If we all
lived like missionaries, wherever we are, the world would look much different. Checkout this mind-blowing,
convicting video for a visual representation of what I mean! Seriously, watch it.

Wherever you are, be all there.” Jim Elliott, American Missionary and Martyr



   3. Missions is NOT the ultimate goal.

This point may seem counter-intuitive since I just spent the majority of this post expressing my belief that
missions is biblical & all believers are called to live a missional, discipleship-centered lifestyle. However, to show
what I mean, here is a quote from chapter 9 of John Piper’s book, Let the Nations be Glad:

“Missions is not the ultimate goal of the Church. Worship is. Missions exists because worship doesn’t. Worship is ultimate, not missions, because God is ultimate, not man. When this age is over, and the countless millions of the redeemed fall on their faces before the throne of God, missions will be no more. It is a temporary necessity. But worship abides forever. Worship, therefore, is the fuel and goal of missions."



Here is my commission to you: there are lost, dying, broken souls everywhere that are desperately in need of
Christ. In some places, like Eastern Germany (called by several sources to be the Atheist Capital of the world) and
as America seems to be moving towards, the people are fully aware that they are apathetic toward religion and
God. In other places (about 40% of the  world's population, actually), the people are known as "unreached people
groups" and have little to absolutely no knowledge of the gospel of Christ, and they cannot know until someone
brings it to them (or until God chooses to reveal it to them through dreams or another means...). Only about 10%
of the world’s missionaries are working among these unreached people groups! Where He calls me I will go. Until
He tells me where to go, I have been called to reach the city of Denton and the University of North Texas.



What’s He telling you?

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