An Answer to Critics
by
Seth Barnes, Executive Director
Adventures In Missions
Let's settle it once and for all: Short-term mission (STM) teams work
- sometimes spectacularly. At the same time, the uneven results they can
produce open the door to criticism.
The book of James says, "This is true religion—to help widows and
orphans in their distress." Jesus tells us, "Go into all the world
spreading the good news."
We can’t all go for the long-term, but almost everyone can do
something for a week. A call to battle has been sounded. We've been
commanded to get out of the malls and into the streets.
But, short-term missions can be too costly. Some may be overly
ambitious, aspiring to pierce the darkness in a place like Romania, when
it may be darker still in New York City. Some critics say STM groups are
on a kind of philanthropic sightseeing tour. Or, an STM team can be a
negative experience for both long-term missionary and participant alike
if the team is inadequately prepared.
The problem is not the idea of short-term missions, but the
questionable way in which some are implemented.
1. No Preparation
The first car ever made was full of imperfections and bugs. Did its
producers scrap it? No, they kept on improving it by making new models.
So it is with short-term missions. Many of the original models that
didn’t require much preparation don't work well. Look at the latest
models, which incorporate heavy doses of preparation.
2. No Prayer
Why do those of us in evangelical circles spend so much time organizing
our work and so little time praying about it? We should work toward a
goal of spending an hour in prayer for every two hours we spend planning
a mission project.
After a mission, the fruit produced in the home churches is also
noteworthy. STEM Ministries surveyed its project participants after they
had returned home. Both prayer and gifts for missions doubled after a
short-term mission. Prayer increases because people see in very
practical ways that it works. It is an essential ingredient of STM
projects.
3. No Jerusalem
Jesus said, "You shall be my witnesses in Jerusalem...and unto the ends
of the earth." Jerusalem represents our own backyard. It is
counterproductive for a group to gear up every year for another glorious
trip beyond our borders, but then slide back into the rut of feel-good
ministry at home. Unless your team is willing to first invest in a local
ministry, it has no business going overseas.
Begin with Jerusalem. See people through Jesus' eyes. Compassion for
the lost begins with those you see and touch every day.
4. No Ends-of-the-Earth
At the other end of the spectrum, those who are satisfied with nearby
service projects never experience the incredible blessing of
cross-cultural evangelism and church planting. A vast majority of the
world’s full-time Christian workers minister in America, expending a
disproportionate amount of resources on an increasingly cynical
populace.
People ask why I prefer ministering in Latin America as opposed to
the U.S. I tell them it's because the fruit is so much greater there.
Perhaps because the poor in places like Mexico are so absolutely
destitute, they more readily embrace the Gospel.
5. No Stewardship
Short-term groups need to demonstrate stewardship in selecting projects.
When leaders in our nation's wealthier churches spend money on mission
trips just because it's available, they are criticized for lack of
stewardship. Only groups composed of individuals who are actively
considering a career in ministry should invest the kind of money
required to fly to more expensive locations.
In general, it will cost much more to do an overseas mission project
than it would cost national Christians to do the same ministry. If both
groups competed for the same pool of money, this criticism would strike
home. However, usually short-term missions tap a completely different
pool of money. Whether the monies come from fund-raising events or
simply a vacation budget, they tend to be over-and-above funds otherwise
given to missions.
What is the value of developing a new generation of missionaries? By
giving young people the opportunity to see God’s power working through
them to bring hope to hopeless situations, they abandon their old
self-centered dreams. They become Great Commission Christians. A
majority of long-term missionaries start out on a short-term mission.
Mission committees can counter criticism of their stewardship by
placing the primary responsibility for raising funds on all short-term
candidates.
6. No Perspective
Often short-term mission teams have little understanding of the big
picture. A great gulf of perspective isolates them from the long-term
workers with whom they work.
A mission agency or missionary can impart their perspective by
helping to prepare and lead the group. STM groups can be a distraction
and an inconvenience to those missionaries who have teams thrust upon
them. If a missionary does not have a vision for a team, then perhaps it
is better to "just say no."
I have been a long-term missionary in the Dominican Republic and
Indonesia. I've seen how intrusive people from back home can be when
they come primarily to observe "mission life." I've also led thousands
on short-term missions around the world. I've seen their incredible
ability to facilitate mission work and to mobilize a great wave of
missionaries who will serve for longer periods.
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