What Pastors Can Learn from Missionaries

When I was young, I thought I was going to be a missionary. Growing up in a pastor’s house, we had tons of missionaries in our home. I loved to hear their stories. When in High School I took my first missionary trip to Colombia, South America. Later, in college, I spent a summer in Haiti. This exposure to missions and missionaries gave me a great appreciation for them. Even though God led me to pastor a local church, supporting and participating in missions have been part of my focus and ministry.

LET’S TALK…

A while back, Chuck Lawless wrote about nine things we can learn from missionaries. None of these things are new, but reminders for us all. They have great value here at home! So, here’s his list:

  1. Go to a place as a learner as much as a teacher. The culture may be ours, but we still need to exegete it as it changes. When we go as students, we learn more about the people we’re called to reach ‒ and we tend to be less susceptible to arrogance when we’re learning.
  2. Love people who are quite different from us. That love means not worrying about their skin color, their history, their traditions, or their language. It means loving them with the love of God, who demanded that we make disciples of all peoples.
  3. Prioritize evangelizing people who don’t know Jesus. Many of us wrestle with the tension of reaching lost people and equipping believers, but too many of us pastors focus on equipping without evangelizing much. We need more of the missionary heart that wants everyone to hear the Good News.
  4. Don’t worry about your own kingdom. It’s tough to build your own kingdom when your work focuses on reaching people in a place where few others are willing to go.  It’s ultimately not about our denomination, but God’s kingdom.
  5. Study the worldview of the people you want to reach. Just because the people we’re working to reach in our country may speak our language doesn’t mean that we understand the way they think. We’re wise to study their history, religion, relationship structures, etc., if we want to reach them.
  6. Genuinely live among the people. Missionaries do that by definition. Some pastors, I fear, live in a city but cocoon themselves among believers. They don’t really know non-believers around them.
  7. Learn the language of the people. Even if they speak our first language, they may still use a different vocabulary and different definitions. I assure you that I have to work hard to understand the English of generations much younger than I!
  8. Reproduce yourself. Missionaries know their responsibility is to raise up the next generation of believers who then become leaders themselves. For too many pastors, this process happens more by accident than by intentionality.
  9. Pray a lot. Many believers struggle with this discipline, but missionaries sometimes face such struggles and opposition that they know they must turn to God throughout the day. As pastors, we often need that reminder.

LET’S TALK…

So, what else have you have learned from missionaries?  I’d love to hear from you!

2 Comments Add yours

  1. Carl J Duhrkoop says:

    Great thoughts on an issue that is being overlooked by today’s pastors. Having gone on a missions trip in college, and three others since, I believe that every pastor, during their training, ought to spend some time on a mission field. How else will they know whether their call to ministry is one in our culture or another. If they do they will be more likely to allow missionaries to share their pulpit. How else will they believe that “We need more of the missionary heart that wants everyone to hear the Good News.”

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I agree. Every pastor should spend time in another culture and country doing missions.

    Like

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