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  #91  
Old 07-29-2011, 11:11 AM
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LadyRev LadyRev is offline
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Re: Why do We Romanticize Foreign Missions?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Charnock View Post
Most home missionaries work jobs. Foreign missionaries are fully supported. Not only are foreign missionaries fully supported with a great salary and benefits, they also receive a lot of funding to build facilities.

Home missionaries, on the other hand, are mostly on their own. Metro missions pays a small portion of HM pastors salaries, and there are loan programs, like church in a day, that helps with facility costs. However, these programs are tiny compared to foreign missions.

Mostly, home missionaries are on their own. They have to be full time secular workers, and full time pastors, all while trying to build a congregation and facility in an increasingly secular and anti-Christian society which doesn't trust them.
The bold is a blanket statement and is not true for all.

As for home missionaries having to work full time secular jobs, SO WHAT?

My pastor and pastors wife both work secular jobs. Guess what? We aren't "home missions" so theres no support at all coming from anywhere. Our church has been around for over 30 years and has been through hell and back multiple times with multiple pastor changes over the years. There has been no help during those times when attendance has been so low that the building was almost repossessed. People worked, people gave and God blessed and somehow the church has survived it all.

I suppose my pastor and his wife should get upset over those foreign missionaries that receive support and may not have to work secular jobs? I guess they should get upset that there was no plan in place to help them when they first took the church under less than perfect circumstances?
THEY WOULDN'T DREAM OF IT!

If this wasn't so sad it would be laughable...
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  #92  
Old 07-29-2011, 11:24 AM
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Re: Why do We Romanticize Foreign Missions?

*sigh
I have a tremendous amount of respect for anyone who devotes their life to the furtherance of the gospel. I can appreciate the sacrifice of one who starts a home missions work. Like I said I have a great deal of insight and perspective from both sides of the issue.
That being said, do some of you honestly and seriously not understand the simple logistical difference between starting and running a single church and running the multitude of works in an entire nation or region?
Like I said earlier, I personally know a missionary whose circumstances are such that they do work a secular job. I said earlier that the size and scope of the work has a lot to do with it. I can assure you that operating the mission fields that I am personally familiar with is much more than a full-time job in and of itself.

...and once again, I would not wish deputation on my worst enemy...
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Last edited by tstew; 07-29-2011 at 11:30 AM.
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  #93  
Old 07-29-2011, 11:38 AM
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Re: Why do We Romanticize Foreign Missions?

Quote:
Originally Posted by tstew View Post
*sigh
I have a tremendous amount of respect for anyone who devotes their life to the furtherance of the gospel. I can appreciate the sacrifice of one who starts a home missions work. Like I said I have a great deal of insight and perspective from both sides of the issue.
That being said, do some of you honestly and seriously not understand the simple logistical difference between starting and running a single church and running the multitude of works in an entire nation or region?
Like I said earlier, I personally know a missionary whose circumstances are such that they do work a secular job. I said earlier that the size and scope of the work has a lot to do with it. I can assure you that operating the mission fields that I am personally familiar with is much more than a full-time job in and of itself.

...and once again, I would not wish deputation on my worst enemy...
Amen!
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  #94  
Old 07-29-2011, 12:47 PM
mizpeh mizpeh is offline
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Re: Why do We Romanticize Foreign Missions?

Quote:
Originally Posted by LadyRev View Post
The bold is a blanket statement and is not true for all.

As for home missionaries having to work full time secular jobs, SO WHAT?

My pastor and pastors wife both work secular jobs. Guess what? We aren't "home missions" so theres no support at all coming from anywhere. Our church has been around for over 30 years and has been through hell and back multiple times with multiple pastor changes over the years. There has been no help during those times when attendance has been so low that the building was almost repossessed. People worked, people gave and God blessed and somehow the church has survived it all.

I suppose my pastor and his wife should get upset over those foreign missionaries that receive support and may not have to work secular jobs? I guess they should get upset that there was no plan in place to help them when they first took the church under less than perfect circumstances?
THEY WOULDN'T DREAM OF IT!

If this wasn't so sad it would be laughable...
Once the churches are built, how long does a foreign country need American missionaries? Shouldn't the saints of that country do exactly what the saints in your church did? When does foreign missions to certain countries become like the American welfare system?

BTW, if you read Charnock's post in which you responded there was nothing but facts given and not sentiments good or bad. What do you find "so sad" with his words?
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  #95  
Old 07-29-2011, 12:48 PM
mizpeh mizpeh is offline
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Re: Why do We Romanticize Foreign Missions?

Quote:
Originally Posted by tstew View Post
*sigh
I have a tremendous amount of respect for anyone who devotes their life to the furtherance of the gospel. I can appreciate the sacrifice of one who starts a home missions work. Like I said I have a great deal of insight and perspective from both sides of the issue.
That being said, do some of you honestly and seriously not understand the simple logistical difference between starting and running a single church and running the multitude of works in an entire nation or region?
Like I said earlier, I personally know a missionary whose circumstances are such that they do work a secular job. I said earlier that the size and scope of the work has a lot to do with it. I can assure you that operating the mission fields that I am personally familiar with is much more than a full-time job in and of itself.

...and once again, I would not wish deputation on my worst enemy...
When should the work become nationalized? Do they need missionaries indefinitely?
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To be a servant of God, it will cost us our total commitment to God, and God alone. His burden must be our burden... Sis Alvear
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  #96  
Old 07-29-2011, 12:56 PM
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Charnock Charnock is offline
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Re: Why do We Romanticize Foreign Missions?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Charnock View Post
Most home missionaries work jobs. Foreign missionaries are fully supported.

Not only are foreign missionaries fully supported with a great salary and benefits, they also receive a lot of funding to build facilities.

Home missionaries, on the other hand, are mostly on their own. Metro missions pays a small portion of HM pastors salaries, and there are loan programs, like church in a day, that helps with facility costs. However, these programs are tiny compared to foreign missions.

Mostly, home missionaries are on their own. They have to be full time secular workers, and full time pastors, all while trying to build a congregation and facility in an increasingly secular and anti-Christian society which doesn't trust them.
Quote:
Originally Posted by LadyRev View Post
The bold is a blanket statement and is not true for all.

As for home missionaries having to work full time secular jobs, SO WHAT?

My pastor and pastors wife both work secular jobs. Guess what? We aren't "home missions" so theres no support at all coming from anywhere. Our church has been around for over 30 years and has been through hell and back multiple times with multiple pastor changes over the years. There has been no help during those times when attendance has been so low that the building was almost repossessed. People worked, people gave and God blessed and somehow the church has survived it all.

I suppose my pastor and his wife should get upset over those foreign missionaries that receive support and may not have to work secular jobs? I guess they should get upset that there was no plan in place to help them when they first took the church under less than perfect circumstances?
THEY WOULDN'T DREAM OF IT!

If this wasn't so sad it would be laughable...
Your diatribe only serves to prove ILG's point.

Now imagine if your pastor's family, and the local assembly was fully supported. I imagine that would make a difference in the health of the church.

American pastors are leaving their posts in droves, and it's not because they aren't called, are lazy, selfish and/or worldly. The simple truth is, many of them can't afford to pastor.

Consider these numbers from the UPCI:

Year 2010 Churches

2320 affiliated
1666 non-affiliated

3986 TOTAL



Year 2000 Churches

2398 affiliated
1551 non-affiliated

3949 TOTAL

The UPCI added 37 churches in the last decade. That's less than four per year. At the same time,

Year 2000 Ministers

4097 Ordained
2214 General
2237 Local

8548 TOTAL

Year 2010 Ministers

4240 Ordained
2281 General
2642 Local

9163 TOTAL

So, the UPC added 615 ministers to take care of 37 more churches? What does this tell us?

1. We are losing a lot of churches. This must be assumed when we consider the massive number of church plants each year. The idea that only 4 churches a year were added is mind-blowing.

2. We are adding a lot of ministers to do roughly the same amount of work as ten years ago.

The question is why?

a. Why are we losing so many churches?
b. Why are there so many new ministers added to existing churches?

For the past year, I have been conducting research to find out. The number one answer is burnout, which is caused by unrealistic expectations from others, lack of ministry resources, and financial strain.

Pastors are developing new ministers to help them carry a very heavy load. Yet, even with that help, they struggle.

Look, this is not about whining, It's about attrition. If the American church continues to decrease, foreign missions will suffer. It's time to renew our focus on core things, especially the health of the local church.

When the local church is healthy, the entire body grows. When it's not, sickness and death come in.
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  #97  
Old 07-29-2011, 01:04 PM
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Re: Why do We Romanticize Foreign Missions?

Quote:
Originally Posted by mizpeh View Post
When should the work become nationalized? Do they need missionaries indefinitely?
I can't speak for anybody else in this regard but from what I can tell that is a growing trend and the direction many countries are heading in. Many churches are focusing on establishing "self-sufficiency programs", for example, that are intended to help subsidize the works. In some countries, self sufficiency is much more real and attainable. In others, the conditions and economies are such that the gospel could not effectively be spread without outside assistance in my honest opinion. At the end of the day, spreading the gospel is the ultimate goal and there is an eternal reward for those who make it possible here or around the world.
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  #98  
Old 07-29-2011, 01:43 PM
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Re: Why do We Romanticize Foreign Missions?

Char,

Don't you think the economy has something to do with all this too? People are losing their jobs, so there's less money coming into the churches.

I realize that's not the only reason, but I would think it has something to do with it too.
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  #99  
Old 07-29-2011, 01:57 PM
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Charnock Charnock is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rgcraig
Char,

Don't you think the economy has something to do with all this too? People are losing their jobs, so there's less money coming into the churches.

I realize that's not the only reason, but I would think it has something to do with it too.
The stats are from 2000-2010, and the recession didn't hit until 2008. I do think Americans are hurting now. That is definitely impacting the church.
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  #100  
Old 07-29-2011, 02:24 PM
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Re: Why do We Romanticize Foreign Missions?

The way I see it, that may actually be good news!

In spite of a so-called WPF split, and other seemingly regular departures spawned by anti-standards ministers, and the economic hit (in 08, and 09) the UPC continues to grow.

No doubt this is more groweth than many denominations have experienced in recent decades.
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