Categories
Missions

Being a Missionary Right Where You Live, Work, and Play

Missionary. The word makes us think of someone who is living their lives overseas in a foreign country. But God said we were also to be His witnesses in Jerusalem (meaning within our own city). Too often we only think about missionaries as those who are sharing the gospel with the “ends of the earth.” But according to God, there is also a missionary task to undertake right here at home – where you live, work, and play. That is why our Church family at FBC Newton continues to hold to the idea of:

“I Am a Disciple.
I Am a Disciple-Maker.
And I Am a Missionary.
So as I am going,
I will change my conversations, and
I will excel still more.”

a map of the world to symbolize the role of missionary

Missionaries. We are to be on mission for Jesus. According to the Acts 1:8 passage I mentioned above, along with the Great Commission from Matthew 28:18-20, we are to be His witnesses as we are going. So I encourage you toward the following missionary tasks:

As I am going out and about each day, I will find intentional ways to take the gospel message to my neighbors – both to those who live next door to me and also to those who live far from me. This includes those who live very differently from me.

As I am going, I will pray for those I know who do not know Jesus. (I’ll keep a top 5 list of those who I know need to come to know Christ).

As I am going, I will also send others to places I can’t go. (I’ll give financially to send missionaries to farther locations.)

As I am going, I will be on mission. (I will personally get involved in missionary opportunities right around me – with people in community, with people who work beside me, and with the people I’m involved in recreational activities with.)

In regard to: “I Will Keep a Top 5 List” – Every follower of Christ is a missionary, and therefore every follower of Christ needs to keep a list of people they are praying for to receive Christ or come back to a right relationship with Him. Write down 5 blank lines somewhere in your Bible, or on a card that you put in your Bible. And begin asking God who to write into those 5 blanks as your top 5. Once you write them down, begin praying for them – strive to pray for them every day, and also pray that He will give you a chance to talk to them about Him someday.

In regard to sending others, be sure you are a good sender. Finances are important, but there is more to it. Will you commit to being a good sender? Will you bless those who have gone farther with your prayers, with your care, and with your support? Do you have a missionary you correspond with regularly? Why not?

In regard to the statement “I will go” – You are already going each day, so as you are going, be on mission. But also, God has a desire for more of us to leave the comfort of our homes and go farther. Where does God want you to go? Are you willing to ask Him?

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Categories
Christian Living

Roles for Every Christian: Disciple, Disciple-Maker, Missionary

One of the things we discussed at FBC Newton throughout 2017 was the role of a Christian. And within that discussion, we actually identified three roles that God has called each Christian to embrace:
       Disciple, Disciple-maker, & Missionary.

picture of footprints in the sand, symbolizing the need for us to live in a way that people should follow up as we live out the roles God has called us to
is anyone following you?

A quick definition of each of the roles:
Disciple: A disciple is a dedicated follower of Jesus growing in love and obedience to Him. (Are you growing in love & obedience to Him?)

Disciple-Maker: A disciple-maker is a disciple who helps a fellow Christian to grow in love & obedience to Jesus. (Are you helping anyone grow?)

Missionary: A missionary is a disciple who shares the good news of the love of Jesus with those who do not yet know Him. (Are you sharing with anyone?)

I hope that you truly believe that God has called you to embrace each of these roles:
      disciple, disciple-maker, and missionary.

At FBC Newton, We stated our commitment to these tasks and roles as follows:

“I Am a Disciple.
I Am a Disciple-Maker.
And I Am a Missionary.
So as I am going,
I will change my conversations, and
I will excel still more.”

How well are you at embracing the three roles?
How well are you at completing the three tasks associated with the roles:
(1) Are you going through life focused on God’s mission?
(2) As you go, are you changing your conversations to point people toward Jesus?
(3) And are you excelling in Christian living such that people can see Jesus in you?

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Categories
Christian Living

Being Obedient Means Always Placing Your Yes on the Altar

What does it look like to be obedient to God at all times?
What would it look like to always place your “yes” upon His altar?

Isaiah tells us that he saw a most spectacular vision of God, and just the vision of God on His throne with the end of His robe filling up the temple had Isaiah falling down on his face and saying: “God, I will do whatever you ask of me.”

There are great examples of those who have heard God’s call and simply answered “Whatever you ask God.” But there are other examples we find in the Bible as well:

We see Moses say something along the lines of: “God, I have a bunch of excuses for You, but even if you can give me some great reasons as to why those excuses aren’t valid, please don’t ask me to do it. Find someone else. I don’t care if I’m the perfect person. I don’t care. Just don’t ask me.” Have you ever felt like that?

We find Jonah’s attitude to be: “God has asked me to do something. I ain’t gonna. I’m skipping town. I’m going to go the exact opposite way that God told me to go.” Have you ever been that disobedient? Jonah eventually goes and is obedient (after being vomited out on the shore covered with the stomach contents of some great fish), but he obeys with anger and he is upset over the outcome of God’s kindness to people he doesn’t like.

Who are you going to be like when God calls you? Awestruck Isaiah? Willing Joseph or Mary (see my earlier post by clicking here? Reluctant Moses? Rebellious Jonah?

God still has the same call to each of us: “Who will go for Us, and whom shall I send?”

I’m not talking about overseas missions. I’m not talking about going to a nation like Nineveh nor preaching repentance to an unreached people group in the wilds of the jungle. I’m not talking about going to a king like Pharaoh and trying to talk to heads of state about Jesus. Those things all scare us. Certainly, if that is what God calls you to do, then I hope you will answer that call, knowing that He will give you the ability to be obedient. But what I am talking about is that the call on your life is to be a missionary all the time to the people right around you.

You are to be on mission for God all the time. Wherever you are going to work today – as an employer, as an employee, as a student, as a retiree going to drink coffee with some friends – Wherever you have been placed by life’s circumstances, your choices, and God’s sovereign hand – you are to be on mission for Him.

You are to be the messenger of God for those that you are around. You are to say “Yes” to God every time he asks you to be obedient.

Categories
Missions

Crazy Missionaries. Why Do So Many of Us Think Missionaries Are a Bit “Off”?

Crazy Missionaries. Idealistic Dreamers. Men and Women Enjoying an Extended Vacation. These are some of our secret thoughts about those who go overseas with the gospel.

I don’t mean this post to be offensive in any way. I don’t want you to think I am not a patriot or am in any way criticizing our military. I am so proud of the men and women who serve in our Armed Forces in a sacrificial way. I am just wondering why we Christians aren’t just as proud and supportive of our missionaries who serve God’s Kingdom in a sacrificial way.

After watching the movie, The Insanity of God, the following question was raised in one of my men’s small groups:
“Why is it that we applaud young men and women for volunteering to join the military, knowing that they might have to lose their lives in service to this country, yet we often have less favorable thoughts about those who volunteer to become missionaries?”

It is odd that both groups choose to risk their lives for a cause they believe in, and for one group we call them “patriots” and are proud of their sacrificial decision, but for the other group we think of them as “idealistic dreamers” who need to get a dose of reality because we feel they are spending their lives frivolously.

This is not a new phenomenon. Many of the missionaries in the past faced the same type of negative scrutiny from others. Too often, they heard negative comments from fellow Christians.

an ancient map of the world to go along with a post on crazy missionariesLeaders in the British East India Company said at the beginning of the nineteenth century: “The sending of Christian missionaries into our Eastern possessions [India] is the maddest, most expensive, most unwarranted project that was ever proposed by a lunatic enthusiast.” Ouch! What an encouragement that must have been to those who felt called of God to reach the lost people of India.

However, at the close of that same century, the English Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal said: “In my judgment, Christian missionaries have done more lasting good to the people of India than all other agencies combined.”

I have known of multiple families who made sure that their children were in the missions education programs of their church (such as the R.A.’s and G.A.’s for Southern Baptists), and yet when their young adult children indicated that God was calling them into overseas, cross-cultural missions, the families quickly indicated to them that they must have misunderstood what God said.

Even now, I know of missionaries whose families are not extremely supportive of what they do, nor of the costs that they pay to follow the call of God. It is as if many of us think that because the missionaries are in far-off, “exotic” places that they are on some kind of extended vacation. The reality is that the mission field can be lonely and difficult and cause missionaries to have the cry of Jeremiah when he said:

O LORD, you deceived me, and I was deceived; you overpowered me and prevailed. I am ridiculed all day long; everyone mocks me. Whenever I speak, I cry out proclaiming violence and destruction. So the word of the LORD has brought me insult and reproach all day long.

Lottie Moon prayed: “I hope no missionary will be as lonely as I have been.”

Not only are our missionaries isolated from family and friends as they try to share the message of Jesus with people who often are not receptive, but too often it is their own families, friends, and church members who are not very supportive. We ask awkward questions such as, “When are you coming home?” when their home is now on foreign soil where they live for 50 out of 52 weeks each year. I fear that we have not served well as senders of those we know who serve as missionaries. In fact, some of us have inwardly considered them a bit crazy, just like the East India Company leadership did.

I am glad that the missionaries I know have had the additional feeling that Jeremiah shared when he followed up his complaint with:

But if I say, “I will not mention him or speak any more in his name,” his word is in my heart like a fire, a fire shut up in my bones. I am weary of holding it in; indeed, I cannot.

Let us who know missionaries be better senders. Let us think better thoughts of them. They are not on an extended vacation. They have devoted their very lives to endure hardship, persecution, loneliness, and isolation all for the sake of the gospel. Their love for God and the lost has compelled them to go. May our love for God and for the lost compel us to support them with our inner thoughts, our love, our words, and our actions. Let us always remember these truths and applaud them for their willing sacrifices. Let us thank them for their example to us of what it means to lay down their lives for Jesus and others. And may we never discourage our own children or fellow church members from the missionary call of God.

Categories
Serving Others

Your Mission if You Choose to Accept It… Is At The Office

“”Your Mission if You Choose to Accept It… Is At The Office”
      by brian rushing

…or at the factory or school or hospital or wherever you work.

the mission impossible logo symbolizing our mission is at our office
I am about to wrap up these thoughts on being a witness in your workplace, but I think this idea is so very important for each one of us. I think that we too often believe that our work can only be considered a benefit to God’s Kingdom if we are in a church-related occupation. Nothing could be further from the truth. God has placed you where you can benefit His kingdom in the work you are presently in.

John Piper says that you should – “Stay In Your Job With God”:

The call to be a Christian was not a call to leave your secular vocation. Paul said: “So, brothers, in whatever condition each was called, there let him remain with God.” Paul’s view was that God had sovereignly “assigned” or “called” unbelievers to positions in life where their conversion would have significant impact for his glory. “Only let each person lead the life that the Lord has assigned to him, and to which God has called him.” Paul does not mean that changing jobs is wrong in the Christian life. What Paul does mean is that when we are converted we should not jump to the conclusion: “my job must change.” Rather our thought should be, God has put me here, and I should now display his worth in this job. Therefore, the burning question for most Christians should be: How can my life count for the glory of God in my secular vocation?



Many people in the secular world enjoy their work and have spent much time learning how to be effective in their field. Why feel that you must step out of the area where you are effective and which you enjoy. You can learn to “make much of God” by how you work in your secular job. Piper says the Bible gives us at least six ways in which a person can make much of God through their secular job:

1. through the fellowship that we enjoy with him throughout the day while at work.
“In other words, we enjoy God’s being there for us as we listen to his voice, and talk to him, and cast all our burdens on him, and experience his guidance and care. Christians do not just go to work. They go to work “with God.” They do not just do a job. They do their job “with God.” God is with them.

2. by imitating God in our creativity and industry.
God is at work and God is a creating, creative God. And He created us in His image to work and to create. As we do so with joy and satisfaction, we make much of Him.

3. by enhancing the portrait of Christ that people hear in the spoken Gospel.
As we share that we are Christians, our fellow employees will be watching to see what that means. How we conduct ourselves at work shows others a glimpse of the picture of Jesus.

4. by earning enough money to keep us from depending on others, while also focusing on how our work helps others.
“This is paradoxical. I am saying, yes, we should earn enough money to meet our needs. But, no, we should not make that the primary focus of why we work. Don’t labor merely with a view to the things you can buy with your earnings. Work with an eye not mainly to your money, but your usefulness. Work with a view to benefiting people with what you make or do. Labor to love people and honor God. Think of new ways that your work can bless people. Stop thinking mainly of profitability, and think mainly of how helpful your product or service can become.”

5. by earning money with the desire to use our money to make others glad in God.
God tells us to work to meet the needs of others. And here is one of my favorite lines about why we should work:
“You can steal to have. Or you can work to have. Or you can work to have to give. When the third option comes from joy in God’s goodness, it makes him look great in the world.”

6. by treating the web of relationships at work as a gift of God and to whom we share the Gospel and offer practical help.
God has placed people around you who need your love and help. Make Him look great to them by loving them and helping them as their workplace pastor.

Your place of employment is your mission field. Will you choose to accept your mission?


        (Quotes in today’s post are from Don’t Waste Your Life by John Piper)