SUBVERSIVE MOBILIZATION: Turning Short Term into Long Term

Whenever someone disses short-term missions, I like to ask, “Have you ever met someone who went long term without first going short term?” One guy answered, “Yes, I did.” Cheeky little missionary! But that is the exception rather than the rule.

A friend of Missions Catalyst, Holly, is working on a project and looking for statistics from mission agencies on what percentage of your short-term workers have become long-term workers. If anyone knows where these kinds of statistics can be found or if you would like to contribute your own agency’s statistics, contact Holly. Information is needed by end of April 2014.

Thanks for helping Holly out. We’ll work with her to get the results out in a future Practical Mobilization article.

Missions Catalyst Practical Mobilization

Missions-Catalyst-no-tagline_largeIn This Issue: The Jonah juxtaposition

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!

About Shane Bennett

Shane has been loving Muslims and connecting people who love Jesus with Muslims for more than 20 years. He speaks like he writes – in a practical, humorous, and easy-to-relate-to way –  about God’s passion to bring all peoples into his kingdom.

» Contact him to speak to your people.

FEATURE: The Jonah Juxtaposition

Why people gravitate to God’s global purposes and why they run away.

By Shane Bennett

Jonah

Who wouldn’t want to have a book in the Bible named after themselves? My guess is that Jonah wouldn’t. As far as I can tell, though, he’s the only one to get four eponymous chapters dedicated solely to himself. And it couldn’t be the recounting of noble exploits or sharing of time-honored, God-revealed truth. Not even an angelic visitation. No, it had to be a giant, unmitigated foul-up. It may be Jonah’s one and only foul-up, but it’s preserved so we can read it, raise our eyebrows, cluck our tongues, and judge poor Jonah.

Or maybe he’s not so much “poor Jonah.” He clearly disobeyed. And in the process, he may provide mission mobilizers with a moral on a silver plate: “Obey God. Become a missionary. Don’t be a dope like Jonah.” Powerful stuff if wielded well, but not as interesting to me as the “why?” behind the “what?”

Why did Jonah, on hearing God’s call to Nineveh, head to Tarshish? Sometimes we go for a secondary moral: “Jonah was afraid of the Ninevites, so he ran away. Don’t be a baby like Jonah. Be brave. Follow God to where there aren’t even any Starbucks!”

But Jonah tips his hand at the end of his short bio and shows us it wasn’t fear that made him run. It was his conviction regarding the character of God: “Isn’t this what I said, Lord, when I was still at home? That is what I tried to forestall by fleeing to Tarshish. I knew that you are a gracious and compassionate God, slow to anger and abounding in love, a God who relents from sending calamity. Now, Lord, take away my life, for it is better for me to die than to live.” Essentially, “If I preach, they might repent. If they repent, you’ll relent. Ergo, no Ninevite carnage.”

Apparently Jonah was compelled by his logical conclusion that dead enemies are less likely to visit their nefarious plans on your beloved homeland. He prioritized his perceived national security over God’s glory and Ninevite salvation. He didn’t go because he didn’t want them at the party.

What about us? What about us? What causes us and our people to run away from or toward obedience to God’s purpose?

In the course of my job, I ask tons of people to jump into God’s global purposes. Many of them don’t say yes. And since I can’t stomach the possibility that it might be me or the way I ask, I have to wonder why. I frequently ask students the following question in Perspectives classes: “What are some of the reasons people, perhaps including you at some point, run from involvement in God’s purposes for the world?”

A bright class will generate a long list. Long enough sometimes that we have to stop before we all get convinced to bail out! Here are some of the top reasons.

Reasons to Run away from God’s Global Purposes

  1. I can’t learn a language.
  2. I don’t measure up.
  3. I’m really happy here and don’t want to leave what’s comfortable.
  4. I’m engaged in ministry locally.
  5. I can’t (won’t?) raise support.
  6. I don’t understand what it looks like. No role models.
  7. I don’t really care.
  8. I don’t like foreign stuff.
  9. Life is so full and crazy, it’s all I can do just to get by.
  10. I just don’t see the need.
  11. I didn’t know God was into that stuff.
  12. It feels so imperialistic, intolerant, and non-pluralistic.

Reasons to Run toward God’s Global Purposes

  1. I want to obey what the Bible says.
  2. I feel compassion for people in need.
  3. I sense an opportunity for adventure.
  4. I honestly think I can help.
  5. I want to join in what God’s doing.
  6. I want to live a life of purpose.
  7. I believe God is worthy to be followed by all peoples.

For people like us, these lists do a couple of things. One, they give us language to articulate our judgmental, Pharisaical attitudes. I don’t recommend using them that way. (Although I should probably add, “Do as I say. Not as I do!”) But they also give us a window of understanding into the people we hope to mobilize for God’s global purposes. And maybe if we’re smart and work together, we can mitigate some of the first list and maximize the second one.

That said, I’d like your help. Can you take one minute right now and do something for me? Pick an item from each list and suggest a way to decrease its impact (first list) or increase its effect (second list). Because I’d really like this exercise to change things, pick items you feel have the best combination of “easy to address” and “high potential to make a difference.”

This article is a full 25 percent shorter than normal! Whoop! Please use the extra time that just landed in your lap to share you smarts with the tribe. I’ll follow up next month.

Editor’s note: For some more on Jonah, listen to a message from Shane, “In the Steps of Jonah or Jesus?”

 

SUBVERSIVE MOBILIZATION: Best Practices with Mega-churches

By the kind gift of a gracious God, I happened to get to do some good work this past weekend at one of the 15 largest churches in the U.S. It got me wondering about mobilizing mega-churches.

I’ve got to be honest, I was a little dazzled by the scale of the operation and the staggering quantity of resources they bring to bear on the world. This church in particular is hitting missional home runs on a regular basis. But maybe they could be more strategic (Read: Hit into my section of the stands – unengaged Muslim peoples!).

So I’m looking for some friends who’d like to kick around best-practice ideas for mobilizing mega-churches. If you’d like to contribute to that conversation, shoot me a quick email introduction. I’ll float out some questions to the pool and we’ll go from there.

Missions Catalyst Practical Mobilization

Missions-Catalyst-no-tagline_largeIn This Issue: Three new models for connecting with like-minded people in the new year

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!

About Shane Bennett

Shane has been loving Muslims and connecting people who love Jesus with Muslims for more than 20 years. He speaks like he writes – in a practical, humorous, and easy-to-relate-to way –  about God’s passion to bring all peoples into his kingdom.

» Contact him to speak to your people.

Three Models for Connecting with Like-minded People in the New Year

By Shane Bennett

With a gloriously clean year stretching out before us chock full of hope and possibility, I want to ask you to consider connecting with like-minded people in some new ways. If you are a classic Lone Ranger, and experience has taught you that your productivity increases with increased distance from other people, this isn’t for you! Otherwise, read on.

1. Starting Ripples of Prayer

My friend Robby of Mission Network turned me on to this. “Prayer ripples” are a simple way to encourage colleagues and friends who share your interest in God’s global purposes. Someone – like you, for instance – can invite four friends to pray with them monthly for one hour via Skype, Google hangouts, or simply over the phone. You might use an online tool such as doodle.com to find an overlapping hole in everyone’s schedule. Three days before the appointed time, the convener (you, for instance) will write and send out an agenda. It may include prayer for the world, the participants’ areas of interest or ministry, and their personal concerns.

Several minutes before the scheduled event, the convener (you know who!) will set up the call. Even with people who are rather computer-literate the technology aspect can be a little tricky. Give everyone some grace to work through the kinks. As you wait, humble yourself by considering what William Carey would have accomplished with an iPad and a fast internet connection!

Honor one another by sticking to the agreed-upon time table. Honor God by giving the bulk of your time to prayer rather than conversation. If you do this monthly with people you even half-way like, that will be way easier to say than to do! Part of the convener’s job will be to watch the clock and the schedule, gently moving the group along.

Now this is where a prayer ripple gets interesting: from the outset the understanding is that each participant will also start their own monthly gathering with others. If you participate in one prayer ripple, convene and participate in another, you’ll devote three hours a month to this effort. Three hours of your schedule matters, but the investment may be well worth it as we significantly bump up the amount of prayer lifted for God’s global purposes.

» Forward this idea to three or four people scattered around the planet who you’d like to pray with monthly. They might be workers your church is connected to, people in your organization, or like-minded people you met at a conference or on a trip.

2. Mission Meet-ups

This takes a ton more work than a prayer ripple. Really, maybe just pass on this one! You’d be crazy to try to pull together the various missions-interested parties in your city for a monthly meeting of information and encouragement. Probably someone else has already tried and failed anyway.

But what if you could do it? What if God gave you favor and people responded to your invitation? Can you imagine the strength and hope that might emerge as individuals who thought they were the only ones realize that God has many in your city fully devoted to his global purposes?

I’ve been encouraged when I’ve had the opportunity to visit gatherings like this, but I’ve also been equipped. Missions consortiums (as they’re sometimes called) provide several tangible benefits:

  • Corporate prayer: Pray for upcoming events, for a particular local ministry, and for God’s empowering of the people and work represented.
  • Information and resource sharing: New resources can be offered for review and improvement. Helpful tools can be shared for broader benefit. Local or visiting experts can share their expertise.
  • Networking: Missions consortiums provide a setting in which to find people with skills and expertise you lack. And to offer capacity you have which could benefit the broader community.
  • Project collaboration: You can consider city-wide projects that would be beyond the scope of a single group or church, such as Perspectives or Pathways classes, or Bridges or Al Massira training.

If you’re going to give it a go, here are some pointers to keep in mind:

1. Make sure your city/region doesn’t already have a missions consortium.

This could save you significant embarrassment. See this list of about two dozen (and let us know if you have updates).

2. Fish from the biggest pool possible.

I’m thinking in terms of organizations and denominations as well as varied styles and approaches. How open you can be will vary depending on a number of factors. And probably if you invite “that” church, that “other” church will refuse to participate. Happily, missions people, perhaps more than any other subset of church people are able to look beyond difference and collaborate for the sake of God’s purposes.

3. Find an anchor church.

It might be your own. Your anchor church should be centrally located, broadly respected, able to seat and feed 50, and have at least one stakeholder who thinks what you’re up to is a good idea!

4. Pick a good time.

Some groups meet for lunch. I like a week day at 6.30 or 7.00am, as this allows participation by people whose bosses actually expect them to show up for work! If you can swing a light breakfast, more or less covered by donations, you’ll help people allocate the time.

5. Invest in invitation.

Visit 20 key people you’d like to see participate. Call another 30. Email 100.

6. Focus on value over size.

A good missions consortium will likely start small, but will grow as people sense value in it.

7. Get a great emcee.

If this isn’t your strong suit, now is not the time to try to grow! If you can find a respected pastor who will agree to emcee for six months, you’ll benefit from name recognition and consistency. All the better if he or she can tell a good joke!

8. Start and end on time.

Nothing encourages people to stay home next time like, “If I could just take a few extra minutes…”

9. Bring in a ringer.

Don’t be afraid to launch on the strength of an outside expert, but build on the value of local connection and collaboration.

» Please take a minute to comment on our website (below) if you have further ideas for these meetups or would like to mention good models you know.

3. Hub Communities

My friend Nate, author of the new book Coffee & Orange Blossoms: 7 Years & 15 Days in Tyre, Lebanon, has given the lion’s share of his attention and ample talent over the past two years to spreading the word about city-based groups that call themselves “hub communities.” These groups are designed to provide mutual support for a small, but beloved set of people: those who are actively pursuing friendship with Muslims. The word “hub” connotes a center or core, plus it’s the Arabic word for love!

Nate has found that often people who have a passion for connecting with Muslims in their town tend to assume they’re the only ones. Maybe they’ve shared their conviction with a pastor or Sunday school class with less than resounding endorsement. Maybe they’ve invited friends to join them, but it just hasn’t happened.

The Hub Community Network aims to gather these people together for ongoing mutual encouragement. The only requirement for joining one is that you have a Muslim friend. That’s the common denominator. The groups are not heavily “led,” nor do they follow a standard curriculum (though they have collected a list of quality resources). Someone simply facilitates the gathering. The group decides what they might like to study together. They share with each other how their relationships are going. And they pray for each other and their Muslim friends. Simple, but life-giving.

While hub communities are specifically being implemented for people befriending Muslims, the idea could certainly apply to people building relationships with other unreached groups.

» Learn more about The Hub Community Network and how to join or start a hub community in your city.

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.