How Do I Prepare for the Mission Field?


Mimicking great missionaries is the best way to prepare for the mission field.

I know of no better example for such preparation than the Thessalonian Model in 1 Thessalonians 1. They followed a three-step process that every Christian can imitate today. After conversion, they became three kinds of people, each one in succession and in the proper order.

If prospective missionaries do not mirror this model, rarely will they reach the Arabs in Morocco, the Fulani in Niger, or the Bengali Muslims in Bangladesh. At the least, missionaries that shortcut the Thessalonian’s model will flame out fast, leaving the field soon after arriving.

The Emulator 

The first person a prospective missionary must become is an emulator. They locate a godly person they can follow and then emulate what they say and do. Paul said the Thessalonians “became imitators” (1Th. 1:6), a word meaning to mimic or mime. Yes, they copied “the Lord”, as this is primary for Christians. But the Lord is not the only person they imitated. By proxy, they followed “us”—meaning Paul and his companions. Paul not only allowed imitation, he commanded it, telling the Corinthians: “I urge you, then, be imitators of me” (1Cor. 4:16).

Charles Spurgeon found that many pastors in his day were stealing his sermons, including some of his students, preaching his words as though they were their own. This was wrong and he rebuked his pupils for such brazen plagiarism. But there was some virtue in their vice, a lesson from whom some pompous youth could learn. The thieves saw a good example and they copied it, in some ways less evil than Mr. Know-It-All who doesn’t even think of asking his pastor a question, let alone following his example. Continue reading

Have We Looked at All the Fields? The Forgotten Majority: 800 Words for 800 Million

–– Seth Meyers

Audio version of this article is available here: YouTube, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify.

The population of the world now lives more in cities than in rural areas—approximately 57% to 43%. But that number is reversed for Africa where more than half still live in rural areas

A brief comparison of urban and rural areas

If the numbers are accurate, 1.4 billion people live in 54 countries on this continent meaning 800 million are in the rural areas. It is very difficult to determine what the word rural means precisely, but I have commonly used the tripartite metric of jobs, tar roads, and use of English. As these three become more rare, the area deserves the title rural more and more. 

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Why the Difficulty of a Foreign Language Shouldn’t Deter Missions

Here is a common joke I’ve heard outside the US. The speaker of two languages is called bilingual, the speaker of three languages is called trilingual, and the speaker of one language is called an American.

It’s harder to learn a language for some citizens compared to others. I’ve found that my African brothers are far more skilled at learning foreign languages than I, in part because they’ve grown up around multiple tongues.

But learn the language we must if we want to reach lost people groups for Christ. This is because the gospel comes through words. Paul told the Thessalonians that the gospel came to them “in word” (1Th. 1:5).

The good news doesn’t come through dreams (Heb. 1:1-2) or declarations from the sky or the supernatural gift of speaking in tongues. I would be all too happy to board a plane, land among the millions of Sunni Muslim Yao in Malawi and suddenly preach to them flawlessly in their language which I had previously not known. That gift occurred in the early days of the church and the book of Acts. But it doesn’t work that way today. Reaching the unreached starts with vocab cards, not visions. Continue reading

Six Marks of a Good Missionary Newsletter

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Missionary newsletters (sometimes called Updates or Prayer Letters) help missionaries communicate with their sending churches and individual supporters back home. The purpose of these letters is to inform Christians about the details of the ministry so that they can pray for and support the missionary responsibly. Many of St. Paul’s epistles were first-century examples of missionary updates.

We as missionaries must improve our writing skills. I’ve read many bad prayer letters from missionaries. A handful are average and a select few are excellent. A quarter of them I wish would end after the first two sentences.

I understand this is somewhat subjective. What is good for one may be bad for another. I know there are different tastes. There is no Mosaic Prayer Letter Manual that Sinai insists we follow, though the writings of Missionary Paul are a good start.

I have no axe to grind. I’m pro missions. I’ve been a missionary for almost two decades. When it comes to missions, I’m like the mother who attends her son’s sporting events–pompoms, face paint, team jersey. I’m all in.

While some newsletters are like Rachel, beautiful to behold, others are like Leah, plain and lacking vitality. I’ve read newsletters with over 3,000 words–equal to nine pages in a typical book. I’ve read other letters with scores of photos, including vacation pics, birthday parties and lots of cutsie photos of the kiddos–more man-centered than Christ exalting.

Below you’ll find six marks of a good prayer, followed by a couple helpful examples. Continue reading

Four Humble Ways Missionaries Can Make Disciples

 Podcast Edition HERE

Anthony Norris Groves is one of the great missionaries in Church history. Most of Christendom has never heard of him.

His first missionary stint was a “failure” to the Arabic-speaking Muslims in Baghdad, Iraq. He began there in 1829 and left just a few years later. His wife died there. So did his infant daughter. Floods, famine, plagues and war pounded relentlessly upon the little mission team. He moved to India.

God had not given Groves many natural gifts for ministry success. He was a dentist by trade and was not a natural street preacher. He lacked the passion and oratory skills that often drive evangelists to far-away lands.

But he accomplished much. Among his greatest feats was training John Arulappan (1810-1867), a promising young Indian Christian that had grown up in one of the missionary schools. He mentored John for almost 20 years and through him Groves saw innumerable churches planted and people won to Christ. What was the secret?

The answer, in part, can be found in the following quote from Groves:

“It would be desirable for every evangelist [i.e. missionary] to take with him wherever he went from two to six native catechists, with whom he might eat, drink and sleep on his journeys, and to whom he might speak of the things of the kingdom as he sat down and as he rose up, that they might be, in short, prepared for ministry in the way that our dear Master prepared his disciples, by line upon line, precept upon precept, here a little and there a little, as they could bear it, feeling from beginning to end that our place is not to set others to do what we cannot do ourselves.. but that we are rather to be examples of everything we wish to see in our dear brethren.” (p. 478, The Father of Faith Missions, Dann)

From this quote I can find four humble, practical ways missionaries can make disciples.

  1. Keep the Roots Shallow

Groves referred to himself as an “evangelist” or missionary. He resisted the urge to become a kind of extended pastor on the foreign field. He knew his role was foundation-building like Paul did in Romans 15. The Apostle often carried responsibilities of a pastor but never used the title “elder” for himself—though Peter did (1Pt. 5:1). Paul poured the footings, then moved on, periodically returning from time to time to visit.

The natives on the New Hebrides referred to John Paton as “Missi”, an abbreviated form of missionary. As far as I can tell, nowhere in his 500-page autobiography does he use the title of pastor when serving as a missionary.

Linguistic precision like this goes a long way toward missionary disciples. It says, “You’re up next.” It says, “I’m moving on.” It says, “I’m not the running back. I’m the QB that hands off the ball so that you can score.” Continue reading

Seven Ways Churches Can Care for Visiting Missionaries

A22BB42C-2128-40E2-A869-1A03BB35E993A church we love dearly is excited. In a few weeks a missionary couple in Turkey is returning to this church to report what God has done. The church sent out that couple to the field after the man had served as an elder in the congregation for many years. The church loves and cares for them but wants to find ways to improve. Healthy churches always want to be healthier.

Below is the best way I know how to give them counsel.

  1. Spend Lots of Time with Them

Acts 14:27-28 speaks about the lengthy time the church of Acts spend with Paul the missionary after he returned from his first missionary journey. It is rare to find churches that are concerned about the nations. One way the church can show they are interested is by spending “not a little time” with the missionaries. What kind of time should they spend with missionaries?

First is home visit time. There’s a different vibe when missionaries are in a person’s home. You notice a side of them you normally don’t see. Christians encourage missionaries when they show interest in them across the dinner table over a plate of lasagne. Continue reading

How Do I Choose a Mission Field?

1CD8271D-4348-4476-B45B-C42E8014ACCDA common question people ask me is this: “If God calls me into missions, how do I know where I’m supposed to go?”

Here are three guidelines Christians should use when seeking where to land in missions. They are as follows: Use wisdom, follow providence, get busy. The Apostle Paul followed these three principles. You should too.

  1. Use Wisdom

Don’t spin the globe, close your eyes and point. Paul didn’t guess or move at random (Acts 17:1). Wisdom was his companion. Find wisdom from these five sources. Continue reading