Indigenous v. cross-cultural mission day

Matthew Evans  |  UK & Ireland
Date posted:  1 Jul 2013
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Indigenous v. cross-cultural mission day

Barry King (2nd from left) and John McDonald (R) in discussion during the day

On May 20, Affinity held its annual Churches and Mission Day at Highbury Baptist Church in London, discussing the question ‘Is sending cross-cultural missionaries preferable to supporting indigenous gospel workers?’. John McDonald of Grace Baptist Mission urged churches to see that supporting a gifted national believer may be a far better way of using limited resources. If encouraged to support an indigenous worker, churches may say that they cannot support or pray for someone they have never met. And how will he or she send prayer letters if they do not speak English? Yet Paul had never met the Colossians and was constantly praying for them (Colossians 1.9). This is a challenge to our churches.

Culture of dependency

Do our mission strategies help or hinder? Do we ‘use’ national believers in our strategy, or do we serve them in theirs? If some level of control and accountability is lost in the process, is that a sacrifice worth making? Unless we let them lead, they may not escape from a culture of dependency which will stunt their maturity as leaders and churches.

Brian Kirik, UK Director of Gospel for Asia, gave the example of one illiterate woman in India who saw her whole village converted. We would never develop an ‘illiterate woman strategy’!

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