Showing posts with label Short-term missions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Short-term missions. Show all posts

Thursday, January 09, 2014

Effective Mission... investing the time to get it right...


Mission takes time.  Okay, let me rephrase that... effective mission takes time.

Sadly this is problematic for many people here in the US, especially those pursuing short-term mission strategies that promise quick results, instant impact and life changing ministry, all in the context of five days of dedicated service in some foreign locale.

Here’s the reality.  

If a major issue manages to cut through all of the news clutter and become a headline grabber in the US, chances are it will have a limited run with our truncated attention span.  That’s because, as soon as, the next disaster, celebrity run amok or political faux pas happens, that cataclysmic story of yesterday is passe.    

We are living in an era where if something happens, we need to know about it yesterday.  If it happened yesterday, it is almost as if it doesn’t matter.  With our hyper-connected lives bringing us the latest news every minute, we have become accustomed to having what we want, where we want it, and at the moment we demand it.  In short, we want to be in control of all aspects of our lives from the moment we get up, until our head hits the pillow at night.  Instantly.

It is this mindset, and the belief that everything in the world should function with a sense of speed and urgency, that has little by little seeped into our mission philosophy.  And it is vastly changing the way those of us in the field go about our mission because so much of what we do over there, is funded here at home.

A Training Center

In the summer of 2005, my ministry, Adventures in Life, began, alongside a group of churches and leaders in Oaxaca, Mexico, the construction of what would one day, become a training center for indigenous Zapotec Pastors and Leaders.  Over the next few years, working together, Christian brothers from the US, Canada and Mexico worked side by side, pouring tons of concrete, laying thousands of bricks, and running the electrical and plumbing systems that would one day be necessary.


Fast forward to January of 2014, and in a few weeks, that day will finally be here.  Nine years after we began construction, and after a few failed attempts at starting classes, the first classes at that facility will be offered!

Over the years I have listened as many short-term people who have served with me have become discouraged about the perceived slowness and lack of progress of that particular project.  Questions as to why it has taken so long to move forward are posed from a mindset which holds that instant is the most important concept in life.


What is interesting is that no one in Oaxaca has asked these questions.  People there have been patiently waiting for all the construction to be completed and for all the details to fall in line before getting to work on the next phase of the project, curriculum. 

Understand what that means.  The people with whom we are serving and working in Oaxaca are satisfied with the progress we have made together.  And they are excited to be starting classes on that site later this month.

Tomatoes, Tomatoes Everywhere

In February and July of 2012 we helped a church and a small group of people in the village of San Baltazar Guelavila, Oaxaca, put micro-greenhouses on their properties.  Totaling 200 square feet, these greenhouses support about 70 tomato plants each.  That’s a potential annual yield of almost 2000 pounds of tomatoes for each greenhouse.  Plenty for a family to eat, can, and sell to others in the city.  This is a huge economic plus to a family.


Like the training center in the above example however, it took awhile to get everything right and in order.  After we put up the frames, designed with locally available materials, the screen and plastic we needed was nowhere to be found.  Since we were buying small lots, no one was interested in selling to us.

Once we got that issue solved, we turned to the tomato plants.  Again, needing only a few hundred plants marked us as a small player in the Oaxaca tomato world.  After sitting completely framed with no plastic for months, and then finally covered in screen and plastic, we were stuck waiting for tomato plants.


Days and weeks of delay beyond our control turned into months, the kind of delay that drives short-term folks crazy.  Finally in June of 2013, a full 16 months after the fist frame was built, those greenhouses were planted.

Recently they were harvested and guess what?  Those little greenhouses were a complete success!  People across the village reaped the rewards as families gave away, or sold tomatoes at below market prices, helping augment the daily diets of a segment of Mexican society that frequently is gripped by chronic hunger and malnutrition.


Better yet, everyone in San Baltazar knows that those tomatoes came as a result of the work, generosity and love of a local church striving to follow Jesus.   

A Way Forward

What are we to make of these two examples?  Let me speak honestly here as one who has also struggled to balance the need for speed and the reality of working in another country.

Both of these examples highlight the reality that effective mission, the type of mission that cements long term results and opens the door for the Gospel.  Whether you are addressing spiritual, economic or physical health, effective mission takes time.  It is a blue chip investment that, like our faith, matures over the long haul.  Effective mission is not, and should not be about the quick payoff.

Just as a great portfolio of stocks, bonds and other investments takes time to mature, so does mission.  Many of us in long-term cross cultural mission know that we may never get a chance to see the harvest from our work.  But, that is okay because we view our work as pioneering and seed planting.

If we could get churches, groups, individuals and short-term teams to think of their time more as an investment, as opposed to a time to reap dividends, maybe short-term mission could see some real and profound improvement.

To do so would be a profound success.

Tuesday, April 02, 2013

A New Resource from Jesus is the Answer Short-Term Missions!


Dear Fellow Kingdom-Builder,

We invite you to check out our new resource for missionaries and missions sending organizations... RateMyMissionTrip.com!  This is the first and only mission trip review website of its kind!

This new site is designed to be the go-to ratings hub for anyone seeking honest and reliable reviews about mission trips from the short-term missionaries point of view.  

That right, why bother to worry about what the in-country missionary hosts need, or even think!  After all aren’t most short-term mission trips about you and what God can do for you and your church?

It’s a known fact that the short-term mission industry is growing by leaps and bounds as the economy improves and people desire extreme faith experiences.  So why leave this important step in your faith journey to chance? 

At RateMyMissionTrip.com you can read reviews from people just like you and then make your decision as to whether or not you want to partner with a particular host missionary or group.

Think of it as Rate My Professor, but from a missions perspective.

Hear what some of the reviewers have had to say about recent trips.

I was able to share with poor people and my agency didn’t make me stay overnight with them.  One day I even got to eat a meal with them.  But the food was awful.  Other than that, I was blessed!
Gina J., First Church of Cabezon, CA


My mission ministry was in the toilet until I found RateMyMissionTrip.com. The reviews really helped me decide where the cheapest mission trips could be found without ever picking up a telephone.
Pastor Rich T., Kohler Baptist Church, Homeville TN

I am glad I got this chance to serve in Uganda.  I was told that poor people need us rich people so they know what to aspire to.  I was glad to be an example of what God wants poor people to look up to.
Susan R., Church of the Willows, Bullhead City, AZ 

I felt everything went well, I would go back.
Rick J., Stone City Church, WV


I did not get sick from the water nor did any of our kids.  Also, with this ministry, I saved tons of time preparing.  Praise Jesus!
Pastor Dave T., Church of Our God, Beulah, GA


See what we mean?  

Hard hitting reviews designed to help you, the short-term missionary or the short-term leader find a good mission where your spritual needs will be met.

Look, when you take a team to a far off country, you have a right to expect a big benefit for your group.  Don’t leave this potential once in a lifetime opportunity to impact your group to chance.

You’ll save hours of research time on the Internet and telephone just by visiting RateMyMissionTrip.com and then serving with one of our well reviewed mission opportunities.

Let’s face it, with so many mission opportunities you want to make sure you are serving with someone who sees you, the person paying the bills, as the most important person on the mission.  At RateMyMissionTrip.com you are king!

Take a look around our site and see how an approach that focuses on you, the short-term missionary, can benefit you and your church or group.


Sign up now and we will give you a 23% discount on our gold package which includes a review for for every member of your group, exclusive discounts on amusement parks near your mission site and a list of restaurants serving American food near where you will be serving.

You can be sure that RateMyMissionTrip.com will be here to serve you!

Contact us today on the web of by phone at 326.555.0976... Operators are standing by now!



[Yes it is snarky and satirical, but sadly, based in reality.  E-mail me for more info]

Saturday, March 23, 2013

What's in your Wallet?


Recently the question "What's in your wallet?" has become known as the advertising slogan Capital One and their multitude of charge cards.  This got me to thinking...

Over the years missions work and by extension missionaries have changed.

Years ago when a missionary for Jesus left the shores of his or her home country, the friends, family and church of that person held a wake or funeral.  Because of the difficulty of travel, likelihood of disease or danger striking, and short life spans in general, everyone knew it was not see you later, but goodbye.

When that person landed in his new land he set out to make new friends, build or find a house and put down roots.  His first task was to become part of the community he was sent to serve.  Locals saw a commitment to be part of them and this was a major step in the advancement of the Gospel around the globe.

For whatever other shortcomings we can now trace to bad missions work, the emphasis that we had on becoming part of the community we were serving was and is not one of them.

Sadly, we are quickly leaving this attitude behind, and it is not just in the short-term world.

Recently I was in Mexico City and was greeted by a US Missionary.  Like me, he has been serving in Mexico for 20 years.  He married a beautiful Mexican woman, his kids were born in Mexico and he helps pastor a church in a small colonia of about 4000 people hidden among 22 million other inhabitants.

He also lives where Mexicans live.  His house is typical for his area, his neighbors are all Mexican, and he is not dreaming of the day he will be coming back to the states. Clearly he has given his heart to Mexico and her people.

Too bad my experiences with Rod, whose blog you can read here,  are not typical.

I asked a good friend years ago why he was serving in Kenya.  Was there a specific call or experience that led him there?  "No" he answered, "there was just an opening."  When I asked him where he lived, he said he lived where the other missionaries lived... in a small gated community.

I have regularly sat and listened as US based missionaries on home leave make jokes and mock the country where they are serving.  It breaks my heart because if the people who our churches send to be "like Jesus" cannot be counted on to be an advocate for the country they are serving, who can?

I wonder if our desire to commit our lives, and indeed our hearts, to another country is just another relic of a bygone age.  I wonder if if our inability, or unwillingness to give our lives wholeheartedly to another country and people is hurting our missionary focus.

Short-term mission is here to stay.  As surely as the monarch butterfly migrates each year and the swallows return to Capistrano, thousands of people will annually leave the shores of the US to serve in other countries.  They will go through the rituals of getting prepared, making sure their to do list is all covered.

And then they will make one final switch sometime before they arrive on site.  They will take their US money out of their wallet and replace it with the currency of the country they are going to serve.

That's the reality.

I just wish we could switch our hearts as easily to that country.

A few years back I asked my wife out to dinner.  I was pretty embarrassed when the check came.  But it wasn't because I had no money.  It was because I had the wrong money.  I was loaded with Mexican pesos.  My wife wasn't surprised, having learned long ago that Mexico had become my adopted country.

When Alec Baldwin asks in that Capital One commercial what's in your wallet, he isn't even aware of how profound that question is.

When I think about a new generation of missionaries traveling around the globe to replace the fossils of the current missionary age like me, I hope and pray that their answer to Alec's question is not Capital One or dollars.

I want to hear dinar, pesos, yen, cuna, quetzal and rupees.

Because the first step in joining the community you are going to serve in knowing where your heart is.  That's why when Tim Dearborn, author of Beyond Duty, asked a Haitian Pastor what someone must do to be a good missionary to Haiti, the simple answer he received was "Love Haitians!"

Missions is about heart.

What's in your wallet?

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Adventures in Life Ministry, Oaxaca, and Short-Term Mission Success


I feel like Adventures in Life Ministry has won the lottery.

At least, never having ever bought a ticket, I feel like I think people feel when they win the lottery.

Let me explain.

Pastor Steve checking on the progress
In 1999, AIL Ministry went to Oaxaca to talk with a group of pastors and leaders to talk about coming alongside their ministries.  We were hoping to help them realize their dreams for ministry.  We did not go there to tell them how to do their ministries or to tell them what we were going to do.

We went to listen and offer our help in any way we could.

For the first couple of years we were essentially in a dating relationship with our new friends.  We helped a couple of churches in their outreach plans and then one day Pastor Saul asked us to help his church build a training center for Zapotec Leaders and Pastors in the Tlacolula Valley, 25 miles east of the capital city.

We broke ground on that training center in 2005.  This October, the National Baptist Convention of Mexico will be holding the first official training event there.

It is part of the national strategy of the Baptist denomination to reach the indigenous people groups of Mexico and teach cross cultural mission strategies to young missionaries for worldwide evangelism.



Let me put this in practical terms... The largest Protestant denomination in Mexico is now using the facility that Adventures in Life Ministry built in Oaxaca to train national leaders not just to reach the indigenous peoples of Mexico, but to inspire and send missionaries around the world.

This is a really big deal, and here’s why.  That little facility that AIL Ministry built with the tithes and donations of people and churches in the United States is set to train and empower a new generation of missionary leaders.

I cannot think of a better example of effective short-term mission.

From the US Standards of Excellence for Short-Term Mission, to which Adventures in Life belongs, lets see how our STM in Oaxaca stacks up to the 7 Standards....

1. God Centered... The entire idea of this project was centered around sharing the love of Jesus Gospel message in a largely under-reached population and extending God’s Kingdom here on earth.

2. Empowering partnerships with a focus on local initiatives... The center was the dream of local churches that were already working in the area.  They were looking for a way to improve their mission.  AIL Ministry came alongside them and helped make that dream a reality.

3. Mutual Design... Both local leadership and AIL Ministry worked hand in sometime difficult hand to get this center done.  It was a team effort all the way through.

4. Comprehensive Administration... AIL Ministry worked hard to raise the funds necessary for the center and together with our local leadership, strove to be good stewards of both the people and financial resources God had entrusted us.

5. Qualified Leadership... Again, together with locals, AIL worked to make sure that participants in this project had the tools, training and resources needed to successfully complete our portion of the project.

6. Appropriate Training... We made sure that when people took part in our STM, they saw how it was connected to God’s larger plan in Oaxaca, were prepared culturally and came with an attitude of a learner-servant, respectful of the local church.

7. Thorough Follow-Up... This is where we are now.  The ministry is now in the hands of local indigenous leadership in Oaxaca and the National Baptist Convention.  We will continue to work together whenever and however we can, but this season of work at Tlacolula has been completed.  It was a short-term mission for Adventures in Life Ministry and that mission is now over. 

One of our teams working on the water system at the training center

 But while our mission is over, the ministry moves forward.

Some of the strongest criticisms of short-term mission are a lack of long-term impact and a focus on projects designed by Americans for American ministry.  From the start, this project was birthed, fed, and nurtured to completion by the local church in Oaxaca.

It was not easy.  There were times when like any married couple we fought.  I remember one particularly bad day when I was literally yelling at Pastor Saul insisting he was wrong.  But we got it done.

Together... in Christian partnership.

And now that little ministry center in Tlacolula, directed by local Oaxacan leaders, will begin training cross cultural missionaries to share the Gospel of Jesus in Mexico and beyond.

I feel fortunate, blessed, and incredibly honored to have played a part in making this happen.

If you’ve ever contributed to Adventures in Life Ministry, participated on one of our Oaxaca teams, or prayed for our ministry, you should feel likewise... because this is the fruit of your ministry and investment in Adventures in Life.

Thank you for being part of extending God’s Kingdom not just in Mexico, but around the world through your investment in Adventures in Life Ministry.

Short-term mission... long term impact.

Photos courtesy of Mission Focused, a ministry partner of Adventures in Life... check them out here!




Monday, July 02, 2012

Missionary Follies... when separation replaces real mission engagement...


Yesterday I learned of a potentially grave consequence for mission work in my area of Latin America.
An organization with whom I am acquainted here in Oaxaca is in danger of being asked to leave the area.  It is an organization that is involved in some vitally important work in helping spread the Gospel in Southern Mexico and Central America.
What, you might ask has been their crime?  What is it that they may done to anger their national hosts and the leaders of the community where they serve?
They have chosen to work alone and not be involved with the larger community of people who live around their ministry base.  To put it another less charitable way, they have decided to not engage the community where they serve and have instead chosen to live a separate missionary life devoid of local contact.
It was not always this way.  There was a time when people in this community respected and felt connected to the larger work of this ministry.  The missionaries saw it as part of their ministry to engage and connect with the community in a variety of ways.
With the passing of time and a new generation of younger workers, that is no longer so.
Children of the missionaries no longer attend community schools, their parents deciding it is best to send them to the private English speaking school, which is miles away.  This was effectively the first step in breaking community with the very people they are serving.
Next was a gradual diminishment of personal involvement with the local Mexican church, choosing instead to worship together at their compound in English.  Now I know that these local churches are not the best, but perhaps those local missionaries could have been part of really helping and supporting the new emerging and struggling Christian community in Southern Mexico.
The people of the village, remembering the past when leaders of this ministry would be in homes and side by side locals in the market and at school meetings are feeling abandoned and neglected.
They are trying to figure what they must have done wrong to warrant such a pull back from a relationship that had transcended generations.  


They are hurt.
Now the leaders of the village are saying that if the outsiders do not really want to be part of their community, why should they continue to let them live there.
Should anyone be surprised?


I believe when missionaries from another country go to live in a foreign land, for the sake of the Gospel, they should become part of the local community.
I do not favor missionary compounds and have learned over the years that locals tend to subtly resent missionaries who refuse to be part of their community.  That is one of the primary reasons my own ministry, Adventures in Life, has worked hard to stay connected to  communities in ways that can enable us to be seen as part of that community.  It is that connection that helps us to really understand the culture of the people we are striving to serve.  
Let me give you an example.
A few years back, all across Mexico, people in rural areas were talking about the Chupacabra.  For the uninitiated, this legend is almost equivalent to the tales of the Loch Ness Monster.  The Chupacabra was a nasty beast that would kill your animals, and maybe even, your young kids.
I happened to be in a village at that time with an in-country missionary when a woman named Gloria mentioned her fear of the Chupacabra.  Because I was aware of this legend, she and I immediately had a bond that transcended our cultural barriers.  We were able to connect.
My missionary friend, who had served that area for almost 20 years had no idea what we were talking about or what this Chupacabra was.  He told me he never pays much attention to those types of things or the local goings on across Mexico, choosing instead to stay focused on his missionary work.
Hear me well on this... If your missionary work, be it in Mexico, Los Angeles, China, or your local Starbucks does not include understanding the local customs and culture of the people you are called to serve, you are going to fail!
This is what that mission organization here in Oaxaca has failed to understand and because of that, an entire ministry may soon lose its opportunity to continue some very important work.
There is evidence that at least some in the organization have gotten the message.  Over the last few weeks, leaders have started attending local services and asking the local church to pray that they are not forced out.
I wonder when they will begin asking for forgiveness and repent for rejecting the very people they have been called to serve.


Because if they don't, their ministry will soon look as if had been attacked by the notorious Chupacabra of Mexico.