Why would I say, “Forget evangelism, be a missionary”? Aren’t we supposed to do evangelism? Aren’t we supposed to obey the Great Commission?
The problem becomes the modern connotations with the term “evangelism,” some of which are valid and others that are so disconnected from the biblical reality and confused with man-made traditions that it doesn’t properly express what it means to be like Christ. To use the term, evangelism, as biblical as the word is, brings to mind a one-way communication of the gospel designed to bring another person to conversion. Now, at some point, evangelism, even with this definition, should happen. The gospel must be communicated. Some point of commitment, repentance, is made. This is good, but only one piece of the picture if that’s all we understand.
A missionary is a more complete picture of what I’m talking about and is what is needed to bring believers to understand what it means to be like Christ and what we are all called to. A missionary is sent from one land and one people to another land and another people to spread the good news of the kingdom of God. Doesn’t sound like a big difference, but if you look at it, it is. We have been sent by God from His kingdom and His Church to the world and to its people to call them back to His Kingdom and His Church with us.
A missionary takes time to listen and learn, to discern the culture around him and his situation and context. A missionary feels called to people, not just to a message or just to preach. A missionary falls in love with these people and challenges them to leave their land and people for the kingdom and the church. A missionary seeks to remove cultural barriers, not create them. A missionary is willing to change his own stripes, as much as he can, to become all things to all men, to win them to Christ. A missionary seeks to learn, humbly, about a people before he tries to teach them.
A true missionary will evangelize by nature, but his identity is more like Christ, an alien in the land, and therefore a better representation of Him. The missionary will make disciples, not just converts, seek an indigenous expression of the church in a culture and place and time.
I’ve lived in another country, another culture; I know what it means to look and feel stupid, to be humbled, to not be able to communicate, to only eat peanut butter and jelly sandwiches because those were the only ingredients we could recognize at the store, to learn to love without feeling superior and appreciate other peoples not like me. It is powerful.
The truth, however, is I am just as much a stranger in a strange land here in the US as I was in Korea. And so are you. Start thinking like a missionary.
I know I promised some thoughts on the gospel … those are coming up … one more on being a missionary and then we’ll get there
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Peace.
