Saturday 19 November 2016

“The Current Trend of Missions” by Dr. Scott Moreau


On the 16 Nov, Dr. Scott Moreau from Wheaton College was invited to Barnabas School for Missions in Taipei to give a talk on “the current trend of missions”. This was his first visit to Taiwan:

God is very active in the world all the time. When we ask what God is doing in missions, we can ask what God is doing in the world.

There are four clusters to look at:

1)      The pace of missions:

Missions is going very fast today. It wasn’t always that way. A Japanese theologian wrote a book, “Three Mile an Hour God”, now we’re doing three-thousand miles per hour! 100 years ago the colonial power was very strong in the world.
1900: months by boat or foot.
1950: weeks by boat and car.
2016: days or hours by plane. For instance, 15-hour flight from Chicago to Hong Kong. Dr. Moreau’s shortest mission only took a weekend: Left Chicago Thursday night, arrived in Bulgaria on Friday, spoke all day long in a church on Saturday, preached in two churches on Sunday, then went back to Chicago on Monday.

1900: till death do I leave. In the 1900s, missionaries pack all their things in a coffin and ship all their things in the coffin. They aren’t planning on dying quickly but they plan on dying where they serve in their missions.
1950s: career in missions.
2000: short to mid-term missions.
Today: micro-term missions, being there for a few hours and fly back home.

The pace of communication:
1900: Letters take weeks by boat.
Now: One click of a button on social media and your family and friends around the world gets an update instantaneously.

Pace of mission and communication is fast.

2)      The economics of missions/Missionomics:

Eras of globalization:
1517-1791: Columbus sailed. Martin Luther nailed the 95 theses. Catholic church and orthodox churches were very active in missions, while early reformers were not engaged in missions. The Moravians were involved in missions, and they fund missions by giving people only enough money to go to the port! Then these missionaries needed a skill to get on the boat.
1792-1910: Catholics and orthodox were still engaged in missions. William Carey wrote a special book, “On a means of conversion of the heathen”. Carey suggest forming societies, which we call “mission agencies” today. The purpose of these societies was to collect funds for the missionaries and send the missionaries overseas. The organization raised the funds, individual missionaries didn’t need to.
1910: A very large missionary congress took place in Edinburg. This was the last conference the evangelicals came together with the mainline church. Conservative ones: Evangelicals. Less conservative: mainline church.
1911-1974: Rise of organizations of denominations that come under one umbrella, under ecumenical organizations, eg. World Council of Churches.
1974: The first year Lausanne had its first big gathering. Billy Graham was the main brain trust behind this. Some 4000 people came to the gathering. We see new agencies and parachurch groups. Campus Crusade was one of the parachurch groups that formed. Lausanne had people from all over the world: the most diverse gathering of the church up til the history of that time.
1974-present: Migratory missionaries, eg. Chinese diaspora, becoming missionaries in new places. Some are after better jobs, some are refugees. Sometimes they are accidental missionaries, they did not want to be missionaries. They carry their faith with them, so even though they didn’t intend to be missionaries, they still spread the faith. Missions is from everywhere to everywhere.  

Missions Funding:
1900: Wealthy benefactors.
1950: Generous individuals, many more person giving less per person.
1980: Charitable foundations, under a tax code.
2000: Income generating missionaries, the largest Korean sending agency has 1500 missionaries, about 1490 of those missionaries generate their money by working. They are “tentmakers”. Only 10 of them are supported by the church. They are not following the western model of missions, but developed their own model. The Koreans are very hard working. They also often have the wife who is the professional worker, and the husband evangelizes on campus. This is not even a normal Korean model!

3)      Missionaries and agencies:

20th century: Professional missionaries that go everywhere. Seminary degrees, training to work as missionaries.
Today: Many people who are amateurs in missions but still going out for missions. We need more schools like Barnabas School for Missions. They don’t have the same level of preparation like the missionaries 100 years ago, not as sophisticated theologically, and may be learning from error as they serve. “Missions, it seems, has become any Christian volunteering to be sent anywhere in the world at any expense to do anything for any period.” Ralph Winter. Winter is actually sad that this is what happening today.

US tentmakers tripled between 1996 and 2008. The industry has changed in the last 100 years. 1915 missions were dominated by mainline denominations, but with theological paradigm shifts, many lost their focus on mission, so that by the end of the 20th century 95% of the missionaries were coming out by the evangelical movement and not from the major denominations. Today, the evangelical movement is splintering and going into many different directions. Many of us know we just had an election in the US, and apparently 80% of evangelicals voted for Trump. Dr. Moreau joked to his wife that maybe he’ll just stay in his next destination Hong Kong instead of returning to the US, and ask her to join him there.

Comparing the Edinburgh meeting in 1910 vs. the Lausanne meeting in Capetown 1974: In 100 years God has raised up a church that is no longer male, white and old.

1910: People uses the term missions with “s” all the time.
1960: it lost its “s”.
When we use “s” today, it’s about activities, agencies, missionaries.
When we drop the “s”, it means everything that God is doing through the church, not just what the church itself is doing. We even have a bigger term now, Missio Dei, mission of God! All of mission is God’s work. You can’t go anywhere in the world where God hasn’t already been there in some form. He causes the sun to shine, the rain to fall, everywhere in the world. He reveals himself through nature, the sciences, and many other ways. God is active outside of the world, and Missio Dei is the word we use to describe that.

1900s: Social gospel, we need to meet the physical needs of people. This is due to a theological shift away from evangelism. As ministers became more liberal theologically, they back away from the gospel and started doing more social work. This was the first version of holism; Dr. Moreau calls it holism 1. Now we’re looking at a newer vision of holism. Early on, evangelicals said no to this: they separate themselves from those who preach a social gospel only. Word and deed must go together. The rise of the Pentecostal movement adds a third component: miracles and signs and wonders as a part of holism 2. From 1970s until today, evangelicals have been arguing about this. It will be interesting to see what comes out of this movement. We have to be careful not to let go of the gospel again this time.

New ways of “doing” missions:
In the early 1900s, we used the word “indigenization”. The people who developed this idea talked about the “3-selfs”, which draws on mission thinking. Churches that were self-governing, self-supporting and self-evangelizing. This is still good work today but has been replaced by the word “contextualization”, which talks about everything that the church is.

4)      New Partners in the Task

NEMA (Nigeria Evangelical Missions Association): 90 agencies and churches are part of this. They have a big vision: they want to send 25,000 Nigerian missionaries to go to Jerusalem. Currently there are 4,000 workers.

COMIBAM (Ibero-American Missionary Cooperation Congresses): An organization that helps Latin American church become a missionary community.

IMA (India Missions Association): They want to establish Jesus worshipping fellowships among every people group in India and beyond.

Even US agencies are hiring more non-US citizens than US citizens!
The center of missions has shifted completely. In 1910, it was from US and Europe to the rest of the world. Today it’s from everywhere to everywhere. We’re seeing God do amazing things.

Trivia:

Where is the largest church in the world? Seoul, Korea. 800,000 members of one church.

In what country are the churches working to mobilize 100,000 cross-cultural tent-making missionaries who will fan out across central Asia to the Middle East? China.

What continent has the most evangelical Christians? Asia (small percentage of Christians in a much larger population, eg. China has more people than Africa. India also has more people than Africa.).

What continent has the highest growth rate of Christians during the 20th century? Africa.

What continent has the highest percentage of Christians actively sharing their faith? Asia (60% of Asia’s 312 million Christians actively witness to their faith).

What is the largest mission association (umbrella organization for missions agencies) in the world? India Missions Association.

Which country has the most students involved in campus Christian groups? Nigeria.

Which country provides the most members of Operation Mobilization? India.

Which country sends out the most missionaries per Christian? Singapore.

In which country has it been reported that between 1/2 to 1 million Muslims come to Christ in the past 5 years? Iran.

Conclusion: It is God’s mission and He is doing wonderful things around the world!

Q&A for Dr. Moreau:

Q: Should we receive full theological training before we go out as missionaries?
A: I would rather you receive missions training. You can receive good theological training everywhere in the world. But I am not convinced you can receive good mission training everywhere in the world. Some people never grow in their knowledge of cultures. To be a good cross-cultural learner, we need to be humble. But we all have problems in learning how to live in a different culture. A good missions training with a theological foundation is better than just good theological training. I am not arguing against good theological training. Everyone can benefit from good theological training. However, most theological training does not understand culture very well.

Q: Middle East is dangerous now. Are there still many missionaries going to Middle East? What’s the most effective way to evangelize to the Middle East?
A: Sat 7 is doing missions from outside the Middle East, but the programs are by Middle Easterners for Middle Easterners. They address the concerns the Middle Easterners have. One of the ways God is bringing Muslims to Christ is through dreams. I have yet to find an American theologian writing a book on dreams. If we begin to address the issues they are facing rather than carry our issues on to them, it will be easier to evangelize to them. It’s also a big challenge for me to go to the Middle East. You can tell I am American just by looking at me. If I go in without an income, they’d think I am CIA. You might be able to go the Middle East and they might think it’s strange to see you, but they will not think CIA. We don’t need Americans and Europeans going to the Middle East. We need Asians, Africans, Latin Americans to go in. Perhaps God is calling some of you to go into the Middle East. I would rejoice that. But I hope some of your training includes learning Middle Eastern culture. It’s a real challenge to go into the Middle East if you are a single woman, because in Muslim society an unescorted single woman is always a target. And yet a woman can get into the home of a Muslim family and speak with the wife, whereas a man can never get into the house. The man can speak with the man who has to defend his Muslim faith. But the wife doesn’t have to defend her faith. Many times we see the wife come to faith, who will lead the children to faith, and perhaps even the husband, but it’s a challenge. Do not force them to immediately do things like immediately be baptized. Many Muslims come to church and that’s ok, but they see baptism as a dangerous step. Let them decide what’s the right timing for it. There has been more Muslims moving to Christ in the last 14 years than the last 1400 years. God is doing very exciting things. For more details, read “A Wind in the House of Islam”, David Garrison.  

Q: What’s the pros and cons for professional missionaries vs tentmaking missionaries?
A: When missionaries rely on outside funding to keep the business alive, often the business will fail. And the local person will wonder who this person is that doesn’t make any money and he has a nice car and is able to fly home on a regular basis. And then they will think CIA again. If missionaries are trained properly they will find that there are many business opportunities around the world. But it is very hard work to start a business. Missionaries with good intentions but no trainings often fail in what they’re trying to do. Maybe we need to go back to the Moravian model. The ability to do business well is an important part of being a missionary. The Korean tentmakers: They did not all start their own business but they went to look for jobs in companies that would hire them as migrants. Often when the women are working, they work as nurses, with wonderful qualifications in an industry that needs a lot of employees. We have not done this yet but I advocate mission training incorporate good business practice training as well too. That way people go out as trained missionaries and business people and they are more likely to be strong and to survive when it gets hard. Maybe you can incorporate this here, which we cannot do in the US, and you can lead the way in this. The challenge is that some people may become so focused on doing business that they forget they are missionaries.

Q: Most of the missionary agencies require missionaries to do fund raising. For most of these missionaries coming from third world countries, how can they generate the money if their income is much lower than the countries they’re being sent to? 
A: That’s where I think mission agencies in the majority world need to set new standards. The traditional William Carey model is that missionaries do not generate income by work, but generate income by asking people. While there can be some benefits for Taiwanese going to the US to raise money, I also see some problems with it. There is an element of ongoing dependence. Americans can be generous, but they can also tell you how to be a missionary, so the money can come with some strings attached to it. Perhaps you have to start new agencies here to do this. One of my students from Wheaton wanted to be a pilot in the Middle East. He was hoping to fly for a Middle Eastern airline that he can use that as a platform for his witness. So he graduated from the program and became a pilot for the United Airlines for the US. After 8 years, Emirates had 12 spots for the position as a pilot and 20,000 applications for those slots. He got one of them. In part because he had two passports and his wife had two passports. The airline does not want to spend half a million training a pilot only to have the pilot leave the country 3 years later. As they looked at his application they probably saw that he has two passports as well as training in intercultural studies. So he was an expert pilot as well as expert in intercultural living. He’s not getting any money from the West for that. He’s getting paid by the Muslims.

Q: What do you see about refugees?
A: In the US, I am trying to help people welcome refugees. Often refugees have their faith broken and open to a new faith. They’ve been rejected by their own countries and their own people and they’re looking to start somewhere. I would like to see that our churches will help refugees even if they’re of other faith, and that our church will demonstrate to refugees that God loves them through the church. The success of a refugee resettlement program is not directly dependent on how many people come to Christ. It’s dependent on the church demonstrating the love of Christ for the stranger, the foreigner, the refugee.

The link to the power point slides of the talk:

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