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
Jesus

Intentionally Choosing Death… How Strange

“Intentionally Choosing Death… How Strange”
  by brian rushing

“It is not strange that He, the Author of life, should rise from the dead. If he was truly God the Son, it is much more startling that he should die than that he should rise again.”

Absolutely.
It is not odd that the one who raised people from the dead could Himself rise from the dead. But it is very remarkable (strange, odd, unfathomable) that He would die in the first place.

gravestone symbolizing Jesus choosing death
And yet, parents, isn’t it true that you would willingly trade places with one of your children facing death in order that they (the child) could continue on in life? Certainly. Many children unfortunately end up in the hospital struggling for life. Parents pray fervently, and many will somewhere in one or more of those prayers ask God to let them trade places with their precious child. It is natural for us to be willing to choose death in order for us to save someone we desperately love.

What Jesus did for us is similar. The only way that I would be able to continue on in life forever was for Him to die as a substitute and take the punishment I deserved. So He willingly, intentionally chose death due to His love. In fact, He was born to die.

Though I now try to avoid using the word “church” to refer to a location, I used to call the main worship service on Sunday, “Big Church.” I still hear kids call it that today. And the word “Incarnation” is one of those “Big Church” words. At it’s simplest, it means a divine being taking a human form… God becoming a man.

How do we wrap our heads around that idea? Well, the New Testament doesn’t encourage us to worry too much over how it works, but rather encourages us “to worship God for the love that was shown in it. For it was a great act of condescension and self-humbling. ‘He, who had always been God by nature,’ writes Paul, ‘did not cling to his privileges as God’s equal, but stripped Himself of every advantage by consenting to be a slave by nature and being born a man, And, plainly seen as a human being, he humbled himself by living a life of utter obedience, to the point of death, and the death he died was the death of a common criminal.’ And all this was for our salvation.”

“The key text in the New Testament for interpreting the Incarnation is ‘You know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sake’s he became poor, so that you through his poverty might become rich.’ When Paul talks of the Son as having emptied himself and become poor, what he has in mind…is the laying aside not of divine powers and attributes but of divine glory and dignity.”

God the Son, Jesus, while in Heaven in His full divine glory and dignity loved me and you. Due to that love, He laid aside His divine glory and dignity for a time so that he could be born as a human with a plan to die a cruel death as a substitute sacrifice for you and me. In your eyes, I’m not worth that. And in my eyes, you’re not worth that. OK, maybe you and I would pick some people who we’d say are worth it, but there are a whole lot that we’d leave out. So I’m glad we weren’t the ones having to make a decision as to whether or not to lay aside divine glory and honor and dignity for the people walking around on this giant ball called Earth.

It is strange to think that Jesus…God the Son…would die at all, much less that He would willingly choose to die for such ungrateful, irritating people (including you and me). But, strangely, oddly, fortunately…He did!

Be sure to thank Him for setting aside His divine prerogatives in order to die for you! And then strive to tell this great news to someone else today.

        (Quotes in today’s post are from Knowing God by J. I. Packer)


Categories
Serving Others

The Cold Water Challenge!

three people taking the cold water challenge of having ice cold water poured on them for charitySo Facebook and social media are presently filled with people pouring ice cold water on themselves and asking others to do the same – all in the name of charity… “Pour cold water on yourself to serve others.” Sadly, we are finding out that several people may have died from the challenge, and warnings are popping up asking people to “not rise to the challenge.” So maybe it is time to take a different twist on it and engage in the “cold water challenge” that Jesus provided… “Give a cup of cold water to someone else to serve them with hospitality.”

As I mentioned in my previous post, to give someone a cup of cold water in Jesus’ day required effort – it meant doing a little extra to serve someone else through your hospitality. It meant more than just taking care of their thirst by pouring them a glass of room-temperature water from the water urn. Instead, it meant taking another trip to the well or the stream to get a fresh cup of cold water.

But another aspect regarding this idea of a cup of cold water is that anyone could provide this cold water to someone else. It didn’t require wealth. It only required effort. A cup of cold water was a blessing that even the poorest person could give to another. It would simply take the effort of going to the well and drawing the water.

This helps to teach us that kindnesses and hospitality are valued in Christ’s kingdom, not according to the cost of the gift, but according to the love and affection of the giver. This takes us back to the idea that God desires mercy & compassion for others to exist in us more than He wants us bringing an offering to the altar.

So the idea is that if you are truly full of the grace of God, you can also be truly rich in good works, even if you are poor according to the world’s standards. God desires us to sacrifice our own desires to care for others, and no matter who we are we have the ability to provide care for others. And we are to do it with the right heart.

So take Jesus’ “Cold Water Challenge” today and richly serve someone else.

How have you seen people show hospitality to others without having to use the world’s “wealth” to do so?

Categories
Christian Living

If He Is Worth Anything, He Is Worth Everything

My last post included this idea: If Jesus is worth Anything, then He is worth Everything.
Today is a follow-up to that statement.
My last few posts have been about the need to let go of things in order to take hold of Jesus.
Jesus tells us that to do this we even have to let go of our families and our very lives.

But what does that look like in real life?
I want to share with you some words from A.W. Tozer’s book, The Pursuit of God. He provides a great illustration of what it means to believe that God is worth EVERYthing. And he does this by using the story of Abraham. I imagine you will see yourself somewhere in the story:

    In the story of Abraham and Isaac we have a dramatic picture of the surrendered life….

    Abraham was old when Isaac was born, old enough indeed to have been his grandfather, and the child became at once the delight and idol of his heart. From the moment he first stooped to take the tiny form awkwardly in his arms, he was an eager love slave of his son. God went out of His way to comment on the strength of this affection. And it is not hard to understand. The baby represented everything sacred to his father’s heart: the promises of God, the covenants, the hopes of the years and the long messianic dream. As he watched Isaac grow from babyhood to young manhood, the heart of the old man was knit closer and closer with the life of his son, till at last the relationship bordered upon the perilous. It was then that God stepped in….

    “Now take your son,” said God to Abraham, “your only son Isaac, whom you love, and go into the land of Moriah; and offer him there as a burnt-offering on one of the mountains of which I will tell you.” fire symbolizing a burnt offering where we give all things to the One worth everything

    The writer spares us a close-up of the agony that night on the hillside when the aged man had it out with his God, but respectful imagination can gaze in wonder at this bent form of a man wrestling under the stars. Possibly not again until One greater than Abraham wrestled in the Garden of Gethsemane did such mortal pain visit a human soul.

    If only the man himself might have been allowed to die. That would have been a thousand times easier, for he was old now, and to die would have been no great ordeal for one who had walked so long with God. Besides, it would have been a last, sweet pleasure to let his dimming vision rest upon the figure of his stalwart son who would live to carry on the Abrahamic line and fulfill in himself the promises of God made long before in Ur of the Chaldees.

    How could he slay his son! Even if he could get the consent of his wounded and protesting heart, how could he reconcile the act with the promise, “Through Isaac your descendants shall be named”? This was Abraham’s trial by fire, and he did not fail in the crucible. While the stars still shone like sharp white points above the tent where the sleeping Isaac lay, and long before the gray dawn had begun to lighten the east, the old saint had made up his mind. He would offer his son as God had directed him to do, and then trust God to raise him from the dead. This, says the writer to the Hebrews, was the solution his aching heart found sometime in the dark night, and he rose “early in the morning” to carry out the plan. It is beautiful to see that, while he erred as to God’s method, he had correctly sensed the secret of His great heart. And the solution lines up well with the New Testament Scripture, “Whosoever will lose for my sake shall find.”

    God let the suffering old man go through with it up to the point where He knew there would be no retreat, and then forbid him to lay a hand upon the boy. To the wondering patriarch He now says in effect, “It’s all right, Abraham. I never intended that you should actually slay your son. I only wanted to remove him from the temple of your heart that I might reign unchallenged there. I wanted to correct the perversion that existed in your love. Now you may have the boy, sound and well. Take him and go back to your tent. Now I know that you fear God, seeing that you have not withheld your son, your only son, from Me.”

And though God always knew Abraham’s heart, now Abraham also knew where his chief allegiance lay.
Abraham had learned that “If God is worth anything, He is worth Everything.”
There is a bit more of Tozer’s illustration that I’ll share with you next time.

Until then… what do you need to remove from the temple of your heart so that God might reign unchallenged there?

(Public Domain Image Credit: the image was obtained from picturespublicdomain.com/fire-picture-public-domain/fire-public-domain, though as of 3/31/2015, this link is no longer valid.)

Categories
Christian Living

There Is No Middle Ground

a throne room with one throne signifying that there is no middle groundWe all have a Central Command Post inside of us. You have a “Mission Control” Center that runs your life. I often call it the Throne Room of life. There is only one throne in that room, and laying beside the throne is only one crown, only one kingly robe, and only one royal scepter. And only one person can sit one that throne with these royal items – and you get to choose who it will be.

For most of us, the person seated on our throne is “self.” But God tells us that He is the only One who can sit on that throne and not destroy a life. But I feel like I could do a pretty good job of running my life, so maybe I should retain ownership. So who will I invite to sit on the throne of my life?

Verse 39. He who has found his life will lose it . . .
Jesus makes it very clear that there is no middle ground. He will not share the throne with me. Either he sits on it completely or he stands aside. He doesn’t say, “Brian I’ll sit over here on this half of the throne, and you come squeeze in beside me.” Two people on the throne is one person too many.

So Jesus gives us only two alternatives: spare your life or sacrifice your life. He leaves no room for middle ground. If I decide to protect my own interests, I will lose. But If I die to myself and live for His interests, I will find true success in life. Jesus knows that the real war that I am fighting is spiritual and that it takes place inside of me – and it comes down to who will I choose to sit on the throne and run my life . . . it comes down to selfishness versus sacrifice. (Warren Wiersbe)

As a Christ-follower, I am to give up all of my individual “rights” to the King, together with any possessions, passions, pastimes, or people that might distract me from following Him. In “losing” these lesser aspects of earthly life, I “find” true worth — I find God’s purpose, joy, and reward. (Holman New Testament Commentary)

And that is the best thing anyone could ever find.
Today, I’m getting off of my throne and asking Him to take His proper place.
Who will you invite to sit on the throne of your life today?