Subversive Mobilization: Help Tell the Story

Got a red pen handy and hankering to shape the future? I’ve recently submitted drafts for two articles for a missions course in Arizona. I’d love to have members of my tribe, like you, take a peek at them and offer helpful critique. No pressure, but if you’re game, here you go:

» God’s Grand Epic of Blessing, Glory and Kingdom

» Jesus and the Global Scope of God’s Purposes

Also, here’s a chance for a sneak peek at an important upcoming issue of Missions Frontiers. The editors expect this issue on 4×4 Movements to Christ (4+ streams of 4+ generations) in the U.S. to be a game changer. This is your chance to push the issue into the hands of a number of people who might use it to shape their work going forward.

» 4×4 Movements: Coming Soon to an Unreached People Near You!

Much thanks!

Missions Catalyst Practical Mobilization

In This Issue: A mission mobilizer’s Christmas list

About Us

Missions Catalyst is a free, weekly electronic digest of mission news and resources designed to inspire and equip Christians worldwide for global ministry. Use it to fuel your prayers, find tips and opportunities, and stay in touch with how God is building his kingdom all over the world. Please forward it freely!

Shane Bennett writes and speaks for a great organization called Frontiers. Lately he’s wondering about how Muslim immigrants in Europe might fully experience God’s blessing.

He’s also working with some buds to market smart phone plans that are price and value competitive, but put profit in the hands of mobilizers. Email him for info on the plan or the vision.

 

 

2013 Practical Mobilization Christmas List

By Shane Bennett

Ronnie-Smith-340x471It is with a sober heart that I welcome you to the 2013 Practical Mobilization Christmas List column. One of our brothers will celebrate this Christmas in a whole new way, but his family will deeply mourn his absence from their table, tree, and lives. Ronnie Smith was killed in Benghazi, Libya on December 5. He was teaching high school chemistry there and ordering his life in a way to bring God’s blessing to Libyans. He leaves behind a wife and young son, along with many saddened but inspired and resolute friends.

This year’s column is dedicated to the memory and example of Ronnie Smith. If you click only one link, let it be this one for a lovely book Ronnie edited called The History of Redemption. Proceeds of the sale of the book go to help Ronnie’s wife Anita and their son. If you’d like to simply make a donation to help them, you can do that here.

As often happens, I believe God will use Ronnie’s sacrifice to inspire many to step up and fill his place and go beyond. Here are some gifts that will lift people’s eyes to the harvest around us.

Faces and Places

Long-time friend and accomplished photographer Mike Staub offers his images of people and places around the globe for sale.  One of his shots, hanging on an office wall, will continue to draw a friend or loved one’s eyes and imagination to the nations. Maybe someday their feet will follow?

See also the great images produced by Matt Brandon and Tim Cowley.

Countries and Capitals

If you want to go big (and foldable), check out this recommendation from Anneli, who with her husband Frank has served with Operation Mobilization for 45 years. (Maybe you’d like to send them kudos or a thank you for their epic service!)

Anneli buys world map fabric, hems it, and gives it away. She says, “I have sent quite a few to pastors and missionaries and this map is an instant attention-getter. The name of each country and the capitol is on the map. It is fun to see students drawn to the map with many realizing their knowledge of geography needs a good brush-up! This fabric map is beautiful, machine washable, and easy to take with you or send overseas to friends.”

Cookbooks

Missions Catalyst reader Lori suggests that these cookbooks from our Mennonite brothers and sisters would make good gifts:

1. For raising awareness:

Through stories and simple “whole foods” recipes, Simply in Season explores how the food we put on our tables impacts our local and global neighbors.

2. For an international smorgasbord:

Extending the Table invites you to experience a vast table with room for everyone and laden with taste-tempting dishes from over 80 countries: peach chutney from Botswana, ginger cooler from Ivory Coast, rice noodles with vegetables from the Philippines, and more. Interspersed among the recipes for these and many more dishes are stories about how hospitality is practiced around the world.

3. For supporting someone else to do the cooking:

If the act of buying and preparing food wouldn’t feel all “holly jolly” to your friend, can I suggest you bypass the cookbook and go straight to something like the Shatila Bakery website? If the UPS guy showing up at your door with baklava doesn’t indicate that God loves the world, I’m not sure what does!

The Gift of Chickens?

Want to help feed the world? A suggestion from my brother: Give chickens!

I know you’re saying, “If I give my friend chickens, I’m going to lose that friend!” Good point. Lucky for you, World Vision allows you to buy two chickens for a family in the developing world in the name of your friend.

“Chickens give children and families a lasting source of nutrition and income,” explains World Vision. “Fresh eggs raise the levels of protein and other nutrients in a family’s diet, and the sale of extra eggs and chickens can pay for vital basics.”

Now, to return the iPad I got my brother and get him chickens instead!

Travel Clothing

Lori (of the cookbooks!) also says, “Give a great travel vest with lots of hidden pockets, so it doesn’t scream ‘Rob me, please!’” Lori’s vest from Scottvest.com was a gift from one of her supporters, which is nice because they’re rather dear!

Lori goes on, “Most of the pockets are on the inside with weight balance, so it doesn’t look frumpy. It helps me dress like a traveler, not a tourist.”

Gadgets

1. For plugging in: 

Here’s a cool gadget you may want to put in one of those pockets – a diminutive 3-outlet surge protector with USB ports and the ability to swivel its way to tough-to-reach outlets. Coupled with a set of adapters, your mobile friends should be able to tap the mains all over the planet.

2. For phoning home:

Some mobilizers never get on a plane, but drive trucker miles! Help them stay connected from behind the wheel while avoiding tickets with a sweet bluetooth headset.

Help those same friends keep their phone powered with this nifty credit-card-sized charger, and when they forget or lose the charging cord (or their kids take it to charge their own devices!), this hand-crankable charger may save the day.

Gifts that Keep Giving

One key task for most missionaries and mobilizers is communicating with donors. Here are a few gifts that will help your friend excel in this important endeavor.

1. For giving away:  

Our buds at the Center for Missions Mobilization are making Hudson on a Mission, a new, illustrated children’s book about church planting from a family’s perspective, available at a deeply discounted rate to any missionary or agency to give to their supporters for a Christmas to thank-you gift. How about grabbing two dozen? (Or whatever your gift budget allows, at US$4 per copy.)

2. For staying in touch:  

If your friend prefers to go electronic, consider blessing him with a gift certificate for a service that lets him create a postcard online with his own photo and text, then have it snail mailed to a donor, friend, or his grandma. At Postcardly.com, US$20 will get you 20 real-life postcards delivered.

3. For getting to the next destination:  

And finally, nothing says, “I love you” like “Here are some airline miles; now go somewhere else!”

Conclusion

May God fill your heart with warmth and joy this Christmas. As we wrestle with the weight of a world gone off the rails, may God give us all grace to celebrate the birth of the king and look forward with great hope to his kingdom’s full presence on the earth.

Practical Mobilization: A Dozen 2013 Highlights

Interested in more practical mobilization ideas? Here are highlights from Shane’s 2013 columns (and a few “special editions”), with links to the website where we archive everything we publish.

  1. Listening: Why, Who, and How » Read this article.
  2. Mobilization: It’s Ninety Percent Listening. » Read this article.
  3. Vision Variance: When God Says, “Go” but your Spouse Says, “Whoa!” » Read this article.
  4. Identity Dilemmas and Living in Both/And Land » Read this article.
  5. Look Smarter Than You Are: Ten Things You Need to Plan Ahead » Read this article.
  6. Seminary/Monastery/Mission Mash-up: How to Get the Next 13,000 Ready for the World » Read this article.
  7. Seven Steps to an Excellent Mission Trip Report » Read this article.
  8. Your Chance to Change the World, One Small Blessing at a Time » Read this article.
  9. Catch a Fish but Kill the Pond » Read this article.
  10. A Prayer for This Next Generation » Read this article.
  11. A Purpose Bigger than Ourselves: Thinking Big about Kids and the Kingdom » Read this article.
  12. Hope for Your Friends Who Hate Muslims: Five Strategies to Diffuse Fear and Anger » Read this article.

 

Missions Catalyst 11.13.13 – Practical Mobilization

In This Issue: Five strategies to diffuse fear and anger

About Us

Missions Catalyst is a free, weekly electronic digest of mission news and resources designed to inspire and equip Christians worldwide for global ministry. Use it to fuel your prayers, find tips and opportunities, and stay in touch with how God is building his kingdom all over the world. Please forward it freely!

Shane Bennett writes this month from Cologne, Germany where he’s helping an intrepid band of people who love Muslims learn about immigrants in that great city. Contact him if you’re interested in reaching immigrants in Europe.

Get in touch with him as well if you’d like 50% of what you pay for mobile service to go to God’s global purposes.

 

 

Hope for Your Friends Who Hate Muslims: Five Strategies to Diffuse Fear and Anger

By Shane Bennett

Care about Muslims, but find your buds not as passionate about them as you are? Probably few of your friends go so far as hating Muslims. Maybe they have some anger, a little animosity, or just some vague bad feelings. Maybe they think you’re naive because you have Muslim friends or because you’re not as mad about world events as they are. How can we respond to this tension with the love of Jesus, not the self-righteousness of the Pharisees? Is there a way we can humbly but tenaciously engage the debate?

Two caveats:

A) There are serious problems in Islam, and Muslims have done things, sometimes in the name of their religion, that I can’t begin to comprehend.

B) Jesus was serious about that body of Christ thing. God equips and inspires his kids for different kinds of work. At the same time, it’s not kind to leave your friends wallowing in misplaced anger and fear. The trick, as usual, is to discern what God is asking.

If he is asking you to shape your friends’ thinking, it never hurts to start by looking at how Jesus interacted with his disciples. (Although, let me write out what hopefully just floated through your head, “It’s dicey to put yourself in the sandals of Jesus, with your friends playing the part of dopey disciples!”)

I think Muslims today share significant parallels with the Samaritans in the New Testament. How Jesus interacted with them in John 4 gives us some key points to consider. By conversing with the woman at the well and telling her plainly that he was the Messiah, Jesus showed the disciples that God has great love for Samaritans. When he tells the guys to lift up their eyes and see the harvest, he let them know God intended to bring tons of Samaritans into his kingdom. And finally, he agrees to a two-day stay-over in the village, indicating his desire for the disciples to actually connect in relationship with Samaritans.

I think God would like to sink these truths into our friends’ lives and ours in relation to Muslims. He loves them, he’s bringing huge numbers of them into his kingdom and he wants us to befriend them toward that end.

With that in mind, and happy we don’t have to change everybody’s thinking to mirror ours, consider these five strategies to shape the thinking of your non-Muslim-friendly friends.

1. Listen to them.

Writer David Augsburger says that being heard is so much like being loved, that for the average person, they are almost indistinguishable. Listening does two things for us: It helps us imitate the love of Jesus as we honor our friends. It also demonstrates humility and respects both the complexity of the issues and the passion people feel for them.

If we ask our friends why they have negative emotions toward Muslims, we’ll hear some interesting reasons. I put out the question on Facebook and was intrigued by some of the responses

“Because of the violence I see in Islam”

“Violence and oppression toward women”

“Apparent lack of response from moderate Muslim leaders to terrorism”

“Opposition to Israel”

“Koranic permission to kill non-Muslims”

“Fear of growing Sharia law”

We may logically question the validity of some of these reasons, but we can’t discount the intensity with which they are held. It’s only as we listen and understand the reasons behind our friends’ animosity that we can respond to it.

2. Be kind, talk respectfully, but don’t back down.

Since it’s probably not best to just out-shout people who disagree with you, we need to find some other tactics to challenge wrong thinking. Sometimes I’ll ask people where they get their information. We all from time to time accept something of sketchy origin simply because it agrees with our currently held notion. And sometimes I think much of what we hear from popular news outlets should be dismissed out of hand.

Another tactic is the “Do your Muslim friends think that?” ambush. When someone tells me how mean/scary/evil Muslims are and how they want to deceive and kill Christians, I like to ask them if they find that in their Muslims friends. This is an ambush because I know they probably don’t have any. I encourage them to make a couple Muslim friends, then get back to me.

Sometimes we need to ask people to check their math, or rather the math behind the scary statistic they’re passing along. The internet is rife with false information used to make the case, “this is why you should run for your life!” Often it just takes a couple of clicks and a little reading to find truth to diffuse the terror.

Final stand-your-ground tactic: Tell your story. I readily admit I haven’t had the experiences some have had. At the same time, they haven’t had mine. It’s hard to argue with someone’s story. And if it’s a good one, it can actually change minds. If you’ve been treated kindly by Muslims, which isn’t exactly rare, tell people about it.

3. Choose your battle grounds.

I suspect you agree with me that Facebook is not the best venue in which to hash this out. It’s better than not talking about it, but full of pitfalls. Given that, what are some places in which you could write or speak that would contribute to more people caring for more Muslims? I’m thinking Sunday School classes, small groups, Bible studies, denominational magazines, blogs, online periodicals, etc. It may be that we really need to hear your voice.

4. Offer hope to diffuse anger and despair.

Could it be that some anti-Muslim sentiment stems from a sense that Muslims are taking over, that God is getting beaten and there’s nothing we can do about? My darker response to this is that if we are overrun by enemies of God, it would not be the first time this has happened to God’s people. In fact there are places where it’s happening now. The question is, as always, how do we follow Jesus in these circumstances?

The happier response is to tell people about the staggeringly huge turning to Christ presently underway in the Muslim world. David Garrison, in his soon to debut Wind in the House of Islam  says essentially that in the first 1300 years of Islam, there was only one unforced movement of Muslims to Christ. (A movement is when thousands from the same ethnic group begin to follow Jesus during a short period time.) In the next 20 years, which corresponds to 1980 to the year 2000, there were 12. In the past 12 years, 71!

If your anti-Muslim friend is a person of influence, offer to buy them a copy of Jerry Trousdale’s Miraculous Movements  in exchange for reading it and publicly posting a review.

5. Finally, one of the strongest antidotes to fear, suspicion, and rejection is connection.

After a healthy verbal sparring match, take your non-Muslim friend to drink tea with your Muslim friend. Sure, it will be weird at first, but it grows on most people. Thomas Friedman used to say that no two countries with McDonalds had ever gone to war with each other. Similarly, it’s hard to dislike someone with whom you’ve eaten baklava! Because baklava is, after all, the pastry of peace.

Photos: Wikimedia Commons

Subversive Mobilization: Help Us Make Our Christmas Lists

It’s that time again! Next month is the world-famous, annual Practical Mobilization Christmas lists edition. Please take a moment to email me or comment below with your ideas for:

1. Gifts that express or inspire care for the nations.

2. Gifts that a mobilizer would like to receive.

Thanks!

Missions Catalyst 10.9.13 – Practical Mobilization

In This Issue: The Powerful Role of Prayer

Missions Catalyst is a free, weekly electronic digest of mission news and resources designed to inspire and equip Christians worldwide for global ministry. Use it to fuel your prayers, find tips and opportunities, and stay in touch with how God is building his kingdom all over the world. Please forward it freely!

Shane Bennett writes and speaks for a great organization called Frontiers. Lately he’s wondering about how Muslim immigrants in Europe might fully experience God’s blessing.

He’s also working with some buds to leverage a $49 a month smart phone plan to raise a ton of money for cross-cultural workers. Email him for info on the plan or the vision.

 

 

The Powerful Role Prayer Plays in Missions

By Shane Bennett

If there’s anything more potent in shaping missions vision than taking Perspectives on the World Christian Movement, it’s teaching it. In fact, if you’ve not taught (or coordinated) Perspectives before, I encourage you to give it serious thought. A few days ago God challenged me while I was preparing to teach the lesson on eras of mission history. (Actually, “preparing” is a little generous. I was really just reviewing a brilliant lesson plan Marti Wade had loaned me!)

I was impressed again with the powerful role prayer seems to have played in modern missions, from the early Moravian movement to Hudson Taylor, and in many instances both between and since. Thinking of a particular church I’m trying to mobilize, I realized I’ve talked, cajoled, encouraged, challenged, and strategized with little response. What I have not done is mobilize prayer. Now I’m changing course.

I invite you to consider doing the same, though you may already pray far more and better than I do.

This issue contains two things to digest. The first: a sermon clip from John Piper. Prayer Causes Things to Happen is likely the best four minutes of video I’ve seen this year! Watch it and pass it along.

The rest of this month’s Practical Mobilization column is given to the second thing, a prayer for the next generation of kingdom warriors from my friend Nathan D’Jiim. Please read this. Pray it. Pass it along to others who may do likewise. Then look forward with me in great hope to the ways God will answer this powerful prayer.

A Prayer for This Next Generation

by Nathan D’Jiim

Father of Jesus,

Before whom angels bow and archangels veil their faces,

I commend to You this next generation of Kingdom warriors. Designed to rule, each carries extraordinary potential to influence this world for good. So much uncharted passion, so much life, either it will labor for Your glory or lapse into selfishness in this myopic culture. I want You to receive glory from these priceless image bearers. You have made young men and women in Your likeness, designed to reflect Your glory and make You look good with all that they are, have, and accomplish.

But Savior, Your church has offered them few battles to fight, fewer challenges to answer, and no mission great enough to arouse them from their spiritual apathy. You called us to leave the numbing trivialities of this world, to come carry crosses You have graced us to bear, to swear allegiance to a King and fight battles for His Kingdom, to sell all, give all, come follow You … and always marvel how much we gained for having given so little. But oh, Your timid church has saddled this next generation with little more than the drudgery of mere church attendance, sitting still through another “talk,” one more retreat, another spiritual experience. Savior, my heart cries out, “Your ways are far more tantalizing than this!”

We have sold You too cheaply. Arouse this generation, numbed by endless dead-end entertainment, to follow the way of the cross with its adventure, joy, and suffering!

And so I come to You, remorseful but also restless; remorseful for having asked so little, restless with anticipation of the way things could be … if we asked what You ask – a singular holy passion for God!

In the words of George Whitfield,

“God give us a deep humility, a well-guided zeal, a burning love, and a single eye, and then let men and devils do their worst.”

As one yoked to Jesus, allow me to co-labor with You to inflame young hearts with this same passionate cry: “Give us a deep humility, a well-guided zeal, a burning love, and a single eye, and then let men and devils do their worst.”

But, Savior, before the devils have their chance, capture these young men and women preparing for their journey of life. Take them to Yourself. Take them for Yourself. They belong to You, not to this world. Take them as Your inheritance, Your beloved, Your battle-ready bride, Your ambassadors of justice to an unjust world. Grant me a part in calling out and readying this generation with such holy passion, devils flee before they ever take up sword to fight.

Lord and Liege, launch a missional army of goodness. Draw millions to worship, to prepare, to grow, and then to rule in Your Kingdom together. Savior, I earnestly knock at Heaven’s door begging that millions of young men and women would chose the way of the cross. And then send down the Holy Ghost and shake us as You did long ago. We will see Your face or we won’t see anything at all! Breathe and blow over this generation until millions commit to a lifelong mission, a single passion, an obsession … for God and God alone!

O Father, I yearn that this one holy passion includes a hunger for You, a deep, satisfying treasuring of You. Multiply spiritual disciplines of prayer, fasting, silence, whatever will inflame their hearts. May they all enjoy apprenticeship to Jesus – becoming obedient to Your words, work, and ways. Give them to gossip – to gossip about Jesus as though sharing about a Treasure from delight, not duty. May numbers of them be blessed to see healings in the Name of Jesus; commission them as Your arms to hold a hurting world.

Oh, that many would have the profound privilege of launching reproducing Jesus communities, Kingdom communities, here and worldwide.

And Lord, accomplish all this in a spirit of humble brokenness. We Your people are terribly damaged by sin. We are a poor showcase of Your glory, but we long to be healed and whole. And so I ask that a spirit of brokenness over sin permeate this generation. Christ-like disciples – that’s what we need and You desire. Make us like Jesus. Make us one, dear Father. Make us peacemakers, brokers of peace. Make us as gracious with others’ confessed sin as You are, as un-accepting of our own un-confessed sin as You are, and give us the wisdom to know the difference.

I won’t deny that I would take great joy in seeing millions of young men and women labor together under the downpour of Holy Spirit, answering the joyful call to a lifelong single holy passion for God and God alone! But I know this would give You much greater joy. And so I am bold to ask:

Arouse the passion of this generation to give You all they have of heart, soul, mind, and strength. Enlist these young warriors as helpers to the hurting worldwide. Thrust forth laborers into the harvest to bring the Kingdom’s goodness to single parents and at-risk kids, the neglected elderly and the abject poor, the militant and the resulting migrant, the religious fanatic and the fleeing refugee, the prostitute and the prisoner, the AIDS patient and the pregnant in crisis. Wherever Satan has sown in darkness, may this generation bring light.

Take back Your army, the one our culture has absconded for its own deadly and boring ends. Take back Your warriors, created in Your image to fight for their King.

Take back the hearts of those You have created passionate beings. Take back the energy, the life, the zeal, the bravery, the wisdom, the strength, and the endurance of this generation, the one You designed to be Your front line troops in the battle for Your Bride.

Take them for Your glory and fill them with Your joy as they enter a life of mission, purpose, passion, and joy unspeakable.

And in so doing, hasten the day when … the end shall come! Even so, come Lord Jesus!