Make the Most of Your Mission Trip | Multiply Disciples

December Resource Reviews

  1. Fire & Ice: Missionary Adventures of the 1800s
  2. Listen: How to Make the Most of Your Short-Term Mission Trip
  3. Documentary Film: Love One Another
  4. Explainer Video: Christian Community Development
  5. Events: Inspiring Conferences, Classes, and More

Read or share the email edition or scroll down for individual items.

Dear readers,

Greetings from Oregon, where I’ve landed after a major cross-country move. Hope you had a great Christmas! As 2021 comes to a close, I’m encouraged by how we have seen light shine in the darkness this year.

  • Church and mission endeavors continue to face significant challenges, but many ministries have been able to adjust and innovative strategies seem to be gaining traction. For a longer view, see 40 Years of Mega-Change in Missions (from Marv Newell at Missio Nexus).
  • In quite a few places, training and conferences are happening again and picking up steam. Our 2022 events calendar is filling up.
  • It’s been a good year for books. See Best Mission Books of 2021 (a roundup from Catalyst Services). and check out the newest output of William Carey Publishing. Below, we highlight a few more gems you might not find on your own.
  • As Prayercast reminds us every year at this time, the Lord reigns over every heartbreaking event and every hopeful one. This was true in 2020 and 2021 and will be true in 2022. How will we respond? See Ten Questions for a New Year (Desiring God).

Whatever comes your way in the new year, we at Missions Catalyst wish you God’s peace and guidance.

Fire & Ice: Missionary Adventures of the 1800s

Source: Pioneers USA

Fire & Ice: Missionary Adventures of the 1800s, by John C. Lambert. Pioneers, 2021. 134 pages.

This book traces common threads in tales of missionary adventure from the 19th century. Glimpse the lives of pioneer missionaries and local Christians from the Arctic Circle to just beyond the southern tip of Patagonia and from the coral islands of Fiji to the Himalayan plateau of Tibet.

The diversity of those God called and equipped to carry out his worldwide mission in the 19th century is as staggering as the variety of places he sent them.

Kapi’olani, a Hawaiian chief, climbed a volcano to prove the power of her God. George Mackay, a Canadian, pulled teeth in Taiwan to prove the exact same thing. Coley Patteson and Allen Gardiner died on two beaches 7,500 miles apart for exactly the same reason. They believed the gospel of Jesus Christ is for every person on earth.

Fire & Ice condenses and updates for modern readers John C. Lambert’s much longer 1907 text, The Romance of Missionary Heroism (now in the public domain).

Pioneers-USA President Steve Richardson wrote a foreword for this edition. Fire & Ice also includes an epilogue based on C.S. Lewis’s thoughtful response to the question, “Why read old books?”

Get the paperback from Amazon for US$9.99. Or get the ebook from Pioneers for free. I helped edit this book. It was such a fun project. I hope you’ll enjoy it.

Listen: How to Make the Most of Your Short-Term Mission Trip

Source: The Upstream Collective

Listen: How to Make the Most of Your Short-Term Mission Trip, by Larry McCrary, Melissa Fu, Caleb Crider, Debbie Stephens, and Nathan Sloan. The Upstream Collective, 2021. 131 pages.

What would it look like to approach every aspect of a short-term mission experience as a listener? This workbook is designed to help mission trip participants focus their listening on what the scriptures and the Holy Spirit have to say to them about the mission trip and what God desires for it.

It is also designed to help readers learn to listen to teammates, church leadership, and on-the-ground ministry partners. The authors propose ways to engage in listening before, during, and after a mission trip. Included are tips for learning language and culture, understanding worldview, asking questions, telling stories, debriefing, reporting back, and more, with lots of space for writing your own notes along the way.

While listening may seem simple enough, it may be challenging for those of us accustomed to a more task-oriented approach. Making this shift, though, can make a huge difference for a mission team as well as those who send and host them.

Get the paperback from Amazon or elsewhere for US$9.99. If you find this book helpful, you will probably want one for each member of your team.

See also Tradecraft: For the Church on Mission and First 30 Daze: Practical Encouragement for Living Abroad Intentionally. These books and others are also available through the Upstream store.

Documentary Film: Love One Another

Source: International Covered Ministries

Hear about disciple-making movements in other countries and wonder if something like that could ever happen in your backyard? This film will encourage you. Watch a handful of individuals strive to live out the commandments of Jesus: to love God, love others, and make disciples as a church.

Barry, the preacher, needs to see how this works for himself. Alex and Morgan learn how to live out disciple-making principles themselves as they connect and support other practitioners around the world. Amanda shares her powerful transformational story and shows that God still moves in miraculous ways. And Becky and others in Tampa, Florida share what they’ve learned—and how they’ll never be the same.

Watch the trailer below, then go to the Love One Another website to watch the film (92 minutes). They can also set you up with training and support to put what you learn into practice.

Explainer Video: Christian Community Development

Source: Global Frontier Missions

There can be a tension in missions between the call to make disciples of all nations and the mandate to love others. Christians must holistically embrace the Great Commission and the Great Commandment. But if we’re going to holistically bring social action with the gospel, we have to do it the right way.

This five-minute whiteboard video was inspired by principles in When Helping Hurts by Steve Corbett and Brian Fikkert. It’s the latest in a series of short training videos GFM has produced over a number of years.

Check out Global Frontier Missions to learn more about their missionary training school and other resources.

Events: Inspiring Conferences, Classes, and More

Source: Missions Catalyst Events Calendar

January 7-8, The Journey Deepens (Glendale, AZ, USA). Retreat provided by MissionNext to help you deepen your walk with God and discern next steps.

January 10 to April 10, Encountering the World of Islam (online). New online classes start several times a year. Also available in other formats and languages.

January 12-13, Support Raising Bootcamp (Fayetteville, AR, USA). Similar events are held in various locations by Support Raising Solutions.

January 12 to February 7, Equipping for Cross-Cultural Life and Ministry (Union Mills, NC, USA). Provided by the Center for Intercultural Training. CIT plans to offer the course four more times in 2022.

January 13, 40 Years of Mega-Change in Missions (online). Webinar provided by Missio Nexus and featuring Marv Newell.

January 13, Focus on the Word: Where Do You See That in Scripture? (online). Nugget Training from Beyond.

January 13, Partnering: Choosing Church and Agency Partners (online). Greenhouse workshop for church mission leaders from Pioneers-USA.

January 17 to March 11, Trauma and Crisis Care Course (online). How children respond to trauma and how you can help. Provided by Crisis Care Training International. During the same period, CCTI is offering courses on restoring hope to children with disabilities, [working with] street children, and counseling children.

January 17 to May 22, Perspectives on the World Christian Movement (online). New online classes begin regularly. Many in-person classes also begin in January.

January 20, Love Thy Millenial Neighbor (online). Part of an online training series from All Nations. Future sessions will focus on loving your Muslim neighbor and your refugee neighbor. All Nations also offers a variety of other online and in-person ministry training programs.

January 21-22, Mission ConneXion Northwest (Beaverton, OR, USA). Free, community-based mission conference held annually in the Portland area. Back in-person this year, with four dynamic speakers, more than 100 workshops, and 80+ exhibitors.

January 26, Essentials for Fundraising and Development (online). Webinar provided by Missio Nexus, featuring a panel of fundraising veterans.

January 26, The Lausanne Update: State of the Great Commission (online). CEO Thought Leader Briefing provided by Missio Nexus, this one featuring Michael Oh.

January 26, Best Practices for Mobilizing GenZ (online). From the Center for Mission Mobilization and Retention at Trinity Bible College and Graduate School. Online events held monthly.

January 27, Discovering the Effective Writer Within You (online). Webinar provided by Missio Nexus.

January 27, Extraordinary Prayer: The Spiritual Posture of Disciplemakers (online). Nugget training from Beyond.

January 28-29, Missions Fest Santa Barbara (Santa Barbara, CA, USA). An annual community-based event.

January 28-30, Mission Central Conference: Serve (online). Formerly Missions Fest Vancouver.

January 31 to February 1, Support Raising Bootcamp (For Worth, TX, USA). Provided by Support Raising Solutions.

View the complete calendar. Corrections and submissions are welcome.

Jesus Film Riders in Ghana… and a Dispatch from Ukraine

Five young men in Ghana spend their days riding motorbikes across the country on an important mission (One Way Africa, via Mission Network News).

Missions Catalyst News Briefs 12.15.21

  1. Ghana: Jesus Film Riders on a Mission
  2. USA: Most Americans Don’t Believe Jesus Existed Before His Birth
  3. South Korea: Christmas Carols Called a Deadly Weapon
  4. World: Five Stories to Watch and Their Possible Kingdom Impact
  5. Ukraine: A Dispatch from the Global Village

Read or share the email version or scroll down for individual stories.

Ghana: Jesus Film Riders on a Mission

Source: Mission Network News, December 6, 2021

Five young men in Ghana spend their days riding motorbikes across the country on an important mission. Each of them carries a projection kit to show the JESUS Film in different villages, some of them completely unreached with the gospel. They are called the Jesus Film Riders. The initiative is part of OneWay Africa’s Jesus Film Campaign.

Reagan Opoku Agyeman, one of the Jesus Film Riders says, “Jesus Christ has given us the commandment that we should all go into the world (Matthew 20:18-20). So that’s why I do this!”

It’s not easy. They must ride across rugged terrain—often for hours—to reach remote and isolated villages. Each Jesus Film Rider must be willing to go anywhere, sleep anywhere, and eat anything.

Another Jesus Film Rider, Lord Cyrus Nyamenlewoke, says, “I’ve been inspired by St. Francis of Assisi spreading the gospel to places that were dangerous to his life. And so it inspires me to know that I can also do something for God and my life.”

Read the full story or watch a five-minute video about this ministry.

For another encouraging story, this one from Australia, read Indigenous People Going to Lead Revival in Our Nation (Eternity News).

USA: Most Americans Don’t Believe Jesus Existed Before His Birth

Source: Christian Headlines, December 9, 2021

A new study from Lifeway Research found that most Americans believe that Jesus was born in Bethlehem more than 2,000 years ago, but less than half believe that Jesus existed prior to being born on that first Christmas.

“Most Americans consider Jesus’ birth a historical fact,” said Scott McConnell, executive director of Lifeway Research. “It can be easy to only evaluate Jesus like you would any other historical figure—thinking about when He lived and what He did. However, the Bible also describes Jesus in a way that [you] must evaluate who you believe He was. Most Americans believe his origin was from God the Father, but half as many believe He existed before His birth.”

Read the full story or go right to the report from Lifeway Research.

Note from Pat: I have been reading the book An Advent for the Cosmos by Jeffrey Pitts. It makes a strong case for the existence and ministry of Jesus before the incarnation.

South Korea: Christmas Carols Called a Deadly Weapon

Source: International Christian Concern, December 8, 2021

A Buddhist association in South Korea is upset about Seoul’s decision to subsidize the playing of Christmas songs in the coming weeks. It is filing a lawsuit to prevent the government from using its budget for the carol campaign.

Copyright laws have been enforced in South Korea to the extent that Christmas songs are disappearing during the festive months. In response, the Ministry of Culture, Sports, and Tourism recently allocated 1 billion won (US$850,000) to encourage commercial radio stations and public spaces—including shopping malls, cafes, and restaurants—to play the Christmas tunes in the next few weeks.

The state-sponsored program is not well received by everyone. [On December 2] the Association of Korean Buddhist Orders announced its decision to sue the government.

The statement reads, “The Ministry of Culture, Sports, and Tourism, which should be fair and impartial in policies regarding religion, is leading a Christian missionary project on the pretense of comforting people.”

The Buddhist group added that “If the songs, which some people are uncomfortable about, are played continuously through the media, it turns into a deadly weapon and is nothing more than pollution.”

The ministry has responded to the complaint by saying that it did not favor any religion but rather seeks to promote festive spirit towards the end of the year.

Read the full story.

By the way, could you or your church use some global advent songs? Paul Neeley of Global Christian Worship made a great YouTube playlist. Languages include French, Yoruba, English, Arabic, Irish Gaeilge, Huron, Norwegian, Nepali, German, Hindi, Thai, Italian, Urdu, Spanish, Pangasinan (from the Philippines), Zulu, Korean, and Swahili.