This is the paper I presented at the IMA Conference today. It is a bit long.
My approach for this paper is to first look at what the church is meant to be. With this understanding of the church, I want to share my own understanding of missions as it grew from my walk with God. From here I want to progress to an understanding of what missions is especially in today’s world. With this understanding of the church and missions I will then see how they can be integrated practically and in a meaningful manner.
B. Once we accept the sanctity of professions like teaching and nursing or governance as roles where we are called by God, the formation of organisations like ETFI, ENFI, God@work etc. cannot be refused since these are profession specific. Our understanding of mission and the life of the believer needs to provide for such structures to exist.
C. Finally, if the above two are valid, I see no problem in organisations dealing with specific issues like AIDS, mission to Maltos etc. also existing to meet the demands of missions.
3. It is like an ideal father helping his child to understand God’s purposes in his life and equipping him to fulfil that, but at no time imposing his own desires and will on the child.
My approach for this paper is to first look at what the church is meant to be. With this understanding of the church, I want to share my own understanding of missions as it grew from my walk with God. From here I want to progress to an understanding of what missions is especially in today’s world. With this understanding of the church and missions I will then see how they can be integrated practically and in a meaningful manner.
WHAT IS THE CHURCH?
Jesus began His ministry with the
message “Repent for the kingdom of God is at hand”. In Mark it reads – “Repent
and believe in this good news.” The gospel was therefore the coming of God’s
kingdom into the world. The church was the manifestation of this kingdom in the
world.
The church is a community of
people following the values and principles as laid down by Jesus Christ. They
have been called out from the world to be a part of these communities. These
values are summarised in the word of God by Jesus as “love God” and “love your
neighbour” in Matthew22:37 and as “love your neighbour” by Paul in Gal 5:14 and
Romans 13:8-10. These values are not activities which we do “in the church” but
in life.
The outpouring of the Holy Spirit
on the disciples in Acts 2 equipped them to proclaim the word of God according
to Acts 2:17-18,
“And it shall come to pass in the last days,” says God, “that I will
pour out of My Spirit on all flesh; your sons and your daughters shall
prophesy, your young men shall see visions, your old men shall dream dreams.
And on My menservants and on My maidservants I will pour out My Spirit in those
days and they shall prophesy.”
So they prophesied. Since the
Holy Spirit was poured out upon all the members of the kingdom, the
proclamation of the word of God becomes the God given commission to all the
members of the church.
The message of the gospel was the
arrival of the kingdom of God (Matthew 4:19) in our midst and this was the good
news Jesus preached. This kingdom is where God rules and His values are
followed. It is where the community of people who live by God’s values and
principles are. They thus form a kingdom of priests as mentioned in Ex 19:5-6
“ Now therefore, if you will indeed obey My voice and keep My covenant,
then you shall be a special treasure to Me above all people, for all the earth
is Mine, And you shall be to me a
kingdom of priests and a holy nation.”
Israel was meant to be a kingdom
of priests where all were representatives of Yahweh, but they did not live up
to this and now the church is the new Israel who is meant to be the kingdom of
priests.
The hall mark of this kingdom is
right judgement and justice (Is 9:6-7).
“For unto us a Child is born, unto us a Son is given, and the
government shall be upon His shoulder. And His name will be called Wonderful,
Counsellor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. Of the increase of
His government and peace there will be no end, upon the throne of David and
over His kingdom, to order it and establish it with judgement and justice from that time forward , even forever.
The zeal of the Lord will perform this.”
In an era where people were
oppressed and justice was rare, they would form a community where mercy,
compassion and justice would be the norm. This community is the good news. The
good news is not a formula or road map to get to heaven. It is a commitment to
a community and its members. Hence Jesus said that “they will know that you are
my disciples because of the love you have for one another” John 13:35. Without
that love for the community there is no evangelism and no witnessing. It is because of this, missions always
begin with the church and ends with the church, and there is no mission apart
from the church!!
The kingdom was the life of the people of God; the spoken word was the
salvation of Jesus Christ on the cross. They always go together. Both together
form the gospel.
Unfortunately today we have a
popular gospel which has little to do with the Biblical understanding of the
kingdom of God and presents it as a one way ticket to heaven. It is not a life commitment but an acceptance of
what God has done for us. In fact when I first accepted Christ as my Saviour
many of my close Christian friends told me to avoid the church and avoid
theological studies as both would destroy my faith. Fortunately I disregarded
them on both fronts.
We see the true gospel practised
in the early church of Acts 1-4. Here they lived as a community which shared
their resources so that no one was left hungry (Acts2:42-45).
“And they continued steadfastly in the apostles’ doctrine and
fellowship, in the breaking of bread, and in prayers. Then fear came upon every
soul, and many wonders and signs were done through the apostles. Now all who believed were together and had
all things in common, and sold their possessions and goods and divided them
among all, as anyone had need.”
And God added to this community
through the teaching of the apostles and the fellowship amongst the people. The
awe which was created amongst the people (Acts 2:43) “fear came upon every
soul” was not just the signs and wonders but also the strange sight of people
living for each other instead of for themselves. Of course signs and wonders
played an important part in showing Jesus as the Son of God and the expected
Messiah.
Hence mission is not just an
activity or a project which we indulge in but it is a life style which we lead.
Mission is not just making people into a disciple of Christ but also
incorporating them physically or spiritually in the community of believers.
Some because of their life situation may not be able to physically participate
in the activities of the church, but they will be spiritually present in the
prayers of the community and in the life of the community. (I refer to people
of other faiths who are in touch with individuals from the church, but because
of persecution are unable to be a part of the church.)
When persecution broke out in
Jerusalem in Acts, the members of the church were scattered into Samaria and
Judea. Acts 8:1 specifically says that the apostles remained in Jerusalem. This
scattered church took the gospel with them and spread the church all through
the region. Mission work was the work of
the members of the church and the existence of the church meant mission took
place.
There is a movement called the
‘missional church’ which deals with this whole issue of the church being a
living organism which is centred on missions, and I have given a link to their
website and an extract of their article in the Appendix for those who are
interested in this concept of the church.
Acts 13 saw a change taking place
with the sending of the first missionaries. With this we entered the missionary
era. Yet these missionaries were sent by the church and were a part of the
church, though we are not sure to what extant the financial support came from
the church and to what extant they looked after themselves. It would appear
from Acts of the Apostles and Paul’s epistles that Paul sustained himself by
tent-making for a part of the time, and he received support from a few churches
which he had planted, but Antioch is not mentioned as a church which sent him
financial resources. The strategy he followed and the plans he made were his
and not the church in Antioch. The church commissioned him and then released
him with no strings attached.
These missionaries created
communities wherever they went, of people who followed Jesus Christ and lived
by His values and principles. Thus the kingdom was spread around the known
world.
APPLICATION TO THE CHRISTIAN
The usual verse used to define
our responsibility for missions in this world is Matthew 28:19f.
“Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptising them in
the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to
observe all things that I have commanded you, and lo, I am with you always,
even to the end of the age.”
I prefer the verses John 17:18
and 20:21 – “Even as the Father has sent me I send you.” We have been sent just
like Jesus with the same commission. Jesus saw His mission encapsulated in the
Nazarene manifesto (Luke 4:18-19) as a call to give freedom to those in
bondage, respect and social justice to those who have never experienced it,
through the formation of kingdom communities.
“The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me, because He has anointed Me to
preach the gospel to the poor. He
has sent Me to heal the broken-hearted,
to preach deliverance to the captives
and recovery of sight to the blind,
to set at liberty those who are oppressed,
to preach the acceptable year of the LORD.”
The physical manifestation of
these communities is the local churches, and this is where the gospel is lived
and acted out.
Yet I cannot be schizophrenic and
live a life of justice and righteousness in the church but another of
pragmatism and worldly wisdom outside the church. My character is formed by the
Spirit of God within me and the blessings of the kingdom flow through me even
to those outside the church, and thus I become a witness and spokesperson of
the kingdom in places far away from the church.
Ephesians 4 then makes sense as
it makes the equipping of the members of the church for this role in the world
outside the church, as the responsibility of the officials of the local church.
Individuals are trained in the local church so that they can live the gospel in
the world outside.
One of the difficulties created
is that since we are called by Christ we do not look for a call from the church
and tend to run independently. But we need to realise that even when God has
called me I am ultimately sent by the church. David was anointed king by God
(through Samuel) but made king by the people.
My Testimony
When I accepted Christ my first
reaction was to resign from my profession and become a “Christian worker”. But
my pastor advised against it and said that you needed to wait for a specific call.
I then met with the verse II Cor 5:15 where it says “and He died for all, that
those who live should not longer live for themselves. But for Him who died for
them and rose again.” If I am not living for myself then why am I working? Does
a “secular” profession have any place in the kingdom? What is the motivation
for working, if it is not for one’s own benefit?
Unfortunately there is no
theology of work taught in the church, and most members of the church are left
with a vague feeling of guilt that they are not doing missions. They are second
class citizens of a class structure with the “full time” workers on top and
them bringing up the rear.
The first two answers I obtained
for working were the obvious ones.
1.
To finance my ministry and the ministry of the church
2.
To obtain a platform for witness to people who never come to church
However this was not satisfactory
as it gave no meaning to work itself, which was seen as an un-spiritual
activity. So the tendency was to spend as little time as possible in this
worldly activity and as much as one could in the church or in witnessing for
Jesus.
However Col 1:16 says that all
power structures that exist have been created by Christ and for Christ.
“For by Him all things were created that are in heaven and that are on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or principalities or
powers. All things were created through Him and for Him.”
This means that all the business structures we
see have been created by God and for God. Romans 13: says that all authorities
are God’s servants and rule on behalf of God.
“Let every soul be subject to the governing authorities. For there is
no authority except from God, and the authorities that exist are appointed by
God.”
Now we may see them rebelling against
God, but when we work there we bring them back into submission to God. That
means all work is spiritual and there is no such thing as un-spiritual work
though in accordance with Romans 9:21f some of these professions may have been
created for destruction and we need to stay away from them.
“Does not the potter have power over the clay, from the same lump to
make one vessel for honour and another for dishonour? What if God wanting to
show His wrath and to make His power known, endured with much longsuffering the
vessels of wrath prepared for destruction.”
The point I want to make is that
all professions are a calling from God and is a spiritual activity. Mission
takes place here in the market place where I interact with the people who are
outside the kingdom of God. Thus mission becomes my life style and work style
and not an extra-curricular activity in my spare time.
In the work place I bring the
purposes of God to the work, and see that the organisation that I am working in
fulfils the purpose for which God set it up. This purpose is linked usually to
the economy of God enabling mankind to sustain themselves by providing needed
services to them. So every profession is a service provided to mankind for
their survival. In other words all professions are a ministry to mankind.
At first I struggled with the
issue as to why God would require the professions to exist in His economy. One
insight was given to me by Peter Drucker who said that the Malthusian famine
never occurred because of continuous increase in the productivity of land. This
increase was achieved through technological breakthroughs in a variety of
sciences. Psalm 104:10-14 says that God is the provider of food for all
creation.
“He sends the springs into the valleys, which flow among the hills.
They give drink to every beast of the field; the wild donkeys quench their
thirst. By them the birds of the heavens have their habitation; they sing among
the branches. He waters the hills from His upper chambers, the earth is
satisfied with the fruit of Your works. He causes the grass to grow for the
cattle, and vegetation for the service of man, that he may bring forth food
from the earth.”
God does this today by scientific
developments and discoveries. So every profession was created by God and every organisation
was created by God to serve mankind and enable him to survive in this world. So
in my profession I am fulfilling the purposes of God and I make the
organisation fulfil the purpose of God by my presence.
In doing the work I practise the
values of the kingdom and my colleagues and my employees experience the justice
of God and the righteousness of God in the work place.
The link between mission and the
church then becomes the equipping done by the church as indicated in Ephesians
ch. 4. There is no control that the church has on this activity in the
marketplace. It cannot have any control. The only role they have is in
equipping the member effectively so that his response to every situation
becomes a presentation of the gospel.
WHAT IS MISSION?
I see mission as having two
parts. One is basic. It is the life of the Christian. Everything he does takes
the gospel out into the world as his life is a reflection of the love of
Christ. He carries the justice of God and His righteousness with him wherever
he goes.
The second is the assembling of
like minded people into a project where mission becomes a project. This is
secondary but an equally important aspect of missions. However, this should not
be to salve one’s conscience for not doing the first, but should be an outcome
of one doing the first.
The first takes place because of
the teaching and disciple forming process of the church, though this can be
supplemented by the work of professional groups like ETFI, ENFI, FCCI etc. The
second often takes place through para-church structures, though it also happens
through projects of the church.
PARA-CHURCH GROUPS
Profession specific groups
With the roles in the world
becoming more complex and issues becoming profession specific, there has been a
growth in para-church organisations focused on specific professions and groups
of people. Such are EU amongst students, ETFI, ENFI, FCCI, God@work etc. These
groups help their members to be an effective disciple of Christ in their
professions. These organisations do not come under any church, but their
members are from churches and carry the teaching of their churches with them.
The influence or the control the church has on these organisations is through
their members who are present in these organisations.
For example, even though
education was greatly influenced by the church, today the church has little
teaching on the purpose of education. So the teacher, if he or she is looking
for guidance as to why God created schools and colleges, they find little or no
teaching in the church. So they turn to groups like ETFI who have spent their
time and energy in finding out answers to such questions, and so enable their
members to be trustworthy stewards of God in this area.
The same is true of engineering or
the government where I have worked, or a multitude of other professions. In the
back office and software industry there are a variety of issues which challenge
a Christian and the church is ill-equipped to provide the support and so a
plethora of para-church groups have grown to meet these needs.
Just as the church does not
participate directly in mission in the market place, but influences the same through
their members who work in the market place, so also in these organisations the
church does not participate directly but influences the same through their
members. These organisations are also not mission organisations as such, but
assist the church in the equipping of their members for their role in the
market place.
Mission specific groups
In a complicated world there are
hundreds of issues plaguing mankind. In dealing with these issues, it is
neither efficient nor practical for each church to have their own mechanism to
deal with them. So it becomes more effective to form a group drawn from all
churches to address these concerns. Most often these groups are formed by
members of different churches who have a common burden to deal with specific
issues. These can be issues of hunger, orphans, AIDS, people groups who have
not been addressed, raising missionaries, etc. Such organisations include the
Gideons International, Cassette ministry, IEM etc. Many are small and generally
unknown, more a ministry of a family or a small group of people living in a
locality. Others are city wide or state wide and yet others are national and
even international.
The National and City-wide
organisations are able to make better use of resources by combining into one
large organisation rather than having many small organisations. On the other
hand many of the small family organisations are able to focus on small specific
areas and take the influence of the gospel to areas which may be missed by
larger organisations. It is difficult for churches to be involved in all the
problems in a locality, but it is much easier for individual members to be
involved in specific problems of localities.
These mission organisations do
not come under the control of the churches and the influence that the church
has on them are through their members who are working in these organisations.
Because of their lack of control over these organisations the relationships
between churches and para-church organisations have traditionally been bad.
Some churches openly say that para-church groups should not exist. They accuse
them of robbing the money belonging to the church etc. Others are more broad
minded and encourage the para-church organisations openly. What is a Biblical
position?
A. My profession. If my
profession is a ministry and a calling from God as indicated in Colossians 1:16
and Romans 13:1f, then these are in effect para-church organisations. They are
organisations that fulfil the purposes of God but are not directly controlled
by the church. It would appear to have Biblical sanction and therefore
para-church organisations of this nature cannot be ruled out from the Bible.B. Once we accept the sanctity of professions like teaching and nursing or governance as roles where we are called by God, the formation of organisations like ETFI, ENFI, God@work etc. cannot be refused since these are profession specific. Our understanding of mission and the life of the believer needs to provide for such structures to exist.
C. Finally, if the above two are valid, I see no problem in organisations dealing with specific issues like AIDS, mission to Maltos etc. also existing to meet the demands of missions.
CONCEPTS FROM SERVANT LEADERSHIP
Jesus in Matthew 20:25-26 says
“You know that the rulers of the
Gentiles lord it over them, and those who are great exercise authority over
them. Yet it shall not be so among you; but whosoever desires to become great
among you, let him be your servant.”
The leadership and the authority
that Jesus wants us to exercise in the kingdom is that of a servant. A servant
aims to help the master fulfil his dreams and desires and does not impose his
dreams and desires on the master. The slave or servant has no will of his own
except for the will of his master.
I ask the question – should the
congregation help the pastor fulfil his vision or should the pastor help the
congregation members fulfil their visions? It is the latter that makes the
church powerful and involves the church in the practical mission of its
members. By helping his members fulfil their individual visions for the kingdom
of God, the pastor’s vision is fulfilled. The sales managers vision is
fulfilled by helping each of his salespersons fulfil their visions!!
This simple principle is hard for
many pastors to accept. I know how unpopular I became with the pastors’ spouses
in two churches for teaching this principle. J
When we are looking at the
leadership which the church needs to give to missions, let us keep this
principle of servant leadership at the back of our minds. It is not a
leadership of dominance or authority but one achieved through being a servant.
How does this work?
1. By the leader helping his
people to understand the vision of God and the heart of God
2. By the leader helping the
people to draw up their plans to fulfil the vision of God3. It is like an ideal father helping his child to understand God’s purposes in his life and equipping him to fulfil that, but at no time imposing his own desires and will on the child.
RELATION BETWEEN THE CHURCH AND THE MISSION ORGANISATIONS
So how should the church relate
with these organisations?
Firstly the church needs to
recognise that these are organisations created by God to further His mission in
this world. His mission includes social justice, healing physically,
emotionally and spiritually, economic deliverance from bondage, and of course
deliverance from spiritual bondage the greatest bondage of all.
Secondly the church needs to
recognise that these organisations give their members an opportunity to be
involved with avenues of God’s mission which may not be available in his or her
church, but where God has laid a burden in his or her heart.
Thirdly the church needs to
recognise that these organisations are doing what they themselves are unable to
do.
Recognising that these
organisations have been created by God for His purposes, the local church needs
to see how they can assist these organisations to fulfil their objectives. One
of the primary responses the church can make is to commission and send their
members to work with these organisations. Just as Paul was sent as a missionary
without any strings being attached by the church at Antioch, in the same manner
we should send our members to work with these organisations and bring the
blessings obtained to the church.
The church needs to recognise
their members who are so involved with these groups and honour them for their
sacrifice of time and energy just as much as they recognise those who volunteer
with the church.
The local church needs to give
their members who are involved with these groups time to share with the church
what their experiences have been and how these groups are functioning.
Participating in these
para-church groups is as much a part of the Christian life as is volunteering
in the church and being an active member of the church, just as Paul was an
active member of the Antioch church and also its missionary sent to Asia and
Europe.
NATIONAL INTEGRATION OF CHURCH AND MISSION.
I do not believe that we can have
a structural integration of mission and church if we understand mission as
primarily the life style of the members of the church, the profession of their
members and the mutual association of Christians according to interests.
However we have loose
collaborations, where individuals are members of multiple organisations, and these
members form the links between the different organisations. This becomes
especially true when each individual is seen as sent by his church to his
organisation of interest or call. The integration of church and mission then
comes about through these individuals who report back to the church what is
happening in the para-church group or organisation. For this to happen there
needs to be a strong relationship between these individuals and their churches.
The stronger the bond between the individual and his church the stronger the
integration between the church and mission; the weaker the bond the weaker the
integration.
For instance, when I worked in
the government, my church had no say in what the government does. But my
problems at work would be shared in the church and strategies discussed and
committed to God in prayer. Through these discussions, the church influences
what happens in the government.
The late Rev. Stubbs was an
effective practitioner of this. His members were all seen as evangelists, and
every member of the church went out and witnessed for Christ in their
professions making it the fastest growing church in Hyderabad. It is
recognising that your members do ministry outside the church that makes a
church effective.
SUGGESTION 1
My suggestion is for each pastor
to have a database of church members indicating the professions and para-church
they are involved in apart from what they do for the church. They should have
them report back in suitable forums as to what has been happening and give
guidance and teaching to them to help them perform effectively. This way an
informal “connection” between the church and the field or missions will be
maintained.
Obviously this will only work
where there is a strong bond between the pastor and the church members. Also
this will only work where we have a structure similar to Exodus 18:25 where
there are leaders at different levels – over 10, over 50, over 100, and over
1000. That means in a church of the size where I worship we would have 80
elders looking after 80 cell groups of 10 members each!! These 80 would form 16
groups of 5 leaders each group representing 50 people and having a head. These
16 heads would form 8 groups of two each for mutual support and these 16 would
report to the Pastor.
Then it would be the 80 cell
group leaders who would mentor their members in their association with
para-church groups and also in their professions. They would hear feedback and
pray and give advice.
This way there could be a good
level of interaction and confidence building between the members of the church,
and the church hierarchy could know what is happening in the life and ministry
of all its members.
Also the church instead of
controlling the lives of their members, needs to see what God is doing in their
lives, what is the hand of God on them, and commission them to the area where
God has taken them and not necessarily where the church would like to send
them!
SUGGESTIONS 2
Para-church organisations can
also take leadership in including churches in their brain-storming sessions,
especially the churches of their members, so that the churches know what is
happening and can contribute their inputs to the mission. So YFC should invite
the pastors of their volunteers to either be there or send a representative to
planning meetings and brainstorming sessions. They need to see their volunteers
as members of churches who are willingly sent to work with them.
Ideally just like Philip and Paul
went back to the church at Jerusalem to discuss issues which arose in their
ministries, para-church groups needs to go back to the CHURCH. But today that
is a problem – which church? There are a 1000 churches and no one body bringing
them together. You have NCC, EFI, and other groupings so whom do they go back
to? So they have generally ignored all and found their own way. Hence my
suggestion that they at least get the ‘minders’ of the churches from where
their members come from to be a part of the referral process.
Unfortunately the cohesion within
most churches is so weak that neither of these suggestions seem to be practical.
In my own church, no department knows what the other is doing and there is
little cooperation between them. How much less will be there in interaction
with a para-church group with which some of their members are involved? Without
the active effort of the Pastor of the church this will not happen. I must say
in defence of my pastor that the situation is much better today than it used to
be.
THE CONTROL FREEDOM DIVIDE
Supporters of centralised
planning insist that centralisation reduces waste, duplication and coordinates
efforts better. The extreme of centralised planning were the communist statist
regimes which were disasters. In their desire for missions to begin and end
with the church we should not duplicate these statist regimes.
The free market or laissez-faire
systems were the other extreme where it was argued that local people know best
the problems in their areas and so they should be the decision makers.
Unfortunately this has also not worked well with the weak being the biggest
sufferers. The argument of the free market is that the weak should die. That is
not the gospel or Christianity. We should not let missions become a free for
all where each does what he wishes.
So my suggestion is that we try
and retain the best of both worlds. Let the mission organisations have their
freedom, but let them recognise that they are a part of the church and see how
they can link with the churches of their members meaningfully. In the same way
the churches need to see how they can link without interfering with the
organisations of their members.
ABERRATIONS
There are many aberrations to
this ideal scenario that I have drawn. Many para-church members do not actively
participate in their churches, and the para-church organisation becomes their
church. In fact I have seen that the head of many para-church organisations
have little involvement with their own local church.
This is unfortunate. We need to
recognise that our primary fellowship is the church. It is here that we live
the gospel. The para-church groups are our projects and should be seen as
secondary to our church membership. This applies also to those working in
para-church organisations.
The other extreme is where the
church discourages their members from participating in para-church groups saying
that they have to be active only in the church. It is impossible to involve the
whole church into the activities of the church as there will be too many cooks.
Hence for effective spiritual growth of its members it is essential that the
members get involved in para-church groups.
My church used to give Rs 50000 a
month to a mission organisation. When the bishop (several years back) heard of
this he asked for this to be stopped and the money to be diverted to home
missions. The argument was ‘when the church was having a need, money should not
be sent outside’. The only result was people stopped giving and now neither
home mission nor the mission organisation gets any money.
We need to recognise that God
owns all of creation and there is no shortage of resources. We need to raise
resources and not squabble over resources.
These aberrations come from
thinking that God cannot provide resources for us and making us stingy and
tight fisted instead of being generous.
See this website on the missional church
http://www.friendofmissional.org/
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