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Get Involved
Final Thoughts...
We are in an era of increased
involvement in international missions. Partnerships and volunteer
projects continue to multiply, and that is good. It is our desire to
mobilize the resources and potential of churches, associations,
state conventions and every Baptist entity to reach a lost world for
Jesus Christ.
However, Americans often are unprepared
for the poverty and economic disparity they find overseas. It is
commendable that many respond with a compassionate desire to help
out of the abundance of their Western affluence. But many are blind
to the dangers of a valid spiritual ministry degenerating into
material assistance, and how creating dependency can be detrimental
to the health and growth of a church.
We are firmly committed to indigenous
methods in our work of evangelism and church planting overseas. This
means that mission efforts must produce churches that can exist,
grow and multiply within their own culture and economy without any
dependence on foreign resources. Over many years of missionary work
around the world, missionaries have recognized it is a mistake to
try to accelerate growth by an infusion of financial aid to build
churches and support pastors. The result is usually a welfare
mentality. Well intended financial assistance too often creates
dependence and handicaps the initiative and faith essential for
spontaneous growth.
One thing inevitably occurs when
Americans subsidize the work of churches and pastors on the mission
field: Potential growth is stalled because of a mind-set that it
can't be done unless an overseas benefactor provides the funds. The
congregation loses a sense of ownership and therefore ceases to be
responsible since others provide for the financial needs of the
pastor or the church.
Jealousy often develops among the
pastors and churches who don't receive assistance toward those who
develop a pipeline of support from the U.S. through their contacts
with volunteers and others.
Cooperation between churches diminishes
since they no longer need to work together in mutual support,
encouragement and interdependency. In the long-term, support breeds
resentment, especially if the support is not sustained indefinitely,
because it creates a patronizing dependency. The donor is under the
illusion of assisting the church just until it can grow to
self-support, but that seldom happens. People are deprived of
growing in faith, learning to depend on God and discovering that He
is sufficient for all their needs.
Subsidy propagates a Western model of a
church that sees a building and a paid pastor as essential rather
than encouraging a reproducible biblical model of the church as
gathered believers responsible to and for their own leadership and
facilities. The work of the missionary is undercut in his effort to
minister in a spiritual partnership since he is seen as uncaring in
not providing the same material and financial aid.
Explosive growth in China, a 50 percent
annual church growth rate in Malawi, 73 churches established in
Cambodia in the last four years, and similar advances around the
world would never have occurred if a pattern of subsidy and
dependence had been created. Unfortunately, well-intentioned help on
many fields has handicapped long-term potential growth.
Written by Jerry Rankin, President of
the International Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention.
"The Commission" magazine - 1997
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