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Divert the Funds!
Sedition
- Seditious Christianity!
- The Student Loan Game
- Divert the Funds!
- Are You Thirsty?
During my regular work out at the Cuyahoga Falls Natatorium, I took the time to notice the grandeur of the place: adorned in high ceilings, expensive equipment, spacious locker rooms, several pools, and even a childcare center. As I passed fellow-exercisers, I marveled at the irony of the American fitness industry. While we spend a fortune each year to work off extra weight, millions across the globe starve as they live on less than a dollar a day.
I shuddered when I realized it costs about a dollar a day to belong to the Natatorium–the same amount that Gospel for Asia requests from donors to support native missionaries. The Revolution Jesus launched means a compassionate heart for all people, not merely for our own kind. Especially for those of us living on American incomes, it’s surprisingly easy to become radical revolutionaries on a world-wide scale.
World-Wide Revolutionary
I just finished Revolutions in World Missions by K.P. Yohannan and found it a quick but convicting read. Yohannan tells how he founded Gospel for Asia, an organization that supports native missionaries in the 10/40 Window, which is home to most of the world’s unreached people groups.
At sixteen, he became a street evangelist in his native India through Operation Mobilization, an organization run by George Verwer, who spoke at the 2005 Xenos Summer Institute. After eight years of walking from village to village, spreading the gospel to many who had never heard it, Yohannan was offered the opportunity to study at a Bible college in the U.S. He accepted and moved to Texas.
A revolutionary heart
Yohannan was astonished at American affluence, including the wealth of many Christians. He became convicted about sharing the needs of Asian missionaries with the resource-rich churches of the West.
Meanwhile, his studies revealed that discipleship was missing from his evangelistic efforts in India. Native missionaries needed to help plant churches so new believers could grow in their faith. He wrote to a missions director he knew in India, shared his burdens, and started speaking to churches about supporting native evangelists.
Join the Revolution!
To make his request for support more tangible, Yohannan suggested setting aside a dollar a day in order to send in $30 a month. This goes directly toward the $90-180 it takes each month to support a native missionary in the 10/40 Window.
These missionaries are Asians who accept Christ, often as a result of missions work, and want to give their life to spreading God’s word. They train intensively for three years at one of the many Bible colleges Gospel for Asia has established. Once in the field, they target the most unreached people groups, often found in small villages where no one has ever heard the name of Jesus.
Yohannan makes a strong case for focusing American resources on supporting native missionaries, rather than sending more Westerners. While he isn’t against Western missionaries in Asia, he reasons that our time and money can go further because native missionaries are already acclimated to the culture, speak the same or a similar language, and live at the same level as the people they seek to reach, at $1-3 per day.
Due to the work of earlier Western missionaries, indigenous leaders have been raised and are capable of continuing the work. Because their work is a full-time job and the people they serve are so impoverished, outside support allows them to continue building the Kingdom.
Escape the Bondage
Yohannan referred to the U.S. as “a nation asleep in bondage” to a materialistic (and expensive) obsession with property. Even though we don’t have a church building or extravagant programs at NeoXenos, we must still prayerfully consider what sacrifices we can make to give to missions.
The author notes that many American Christians are very generous, but their lack of involvement in the Body of Christ often leads to ignorance of the needs and vast opportunities to help out. Truly value and practice Body Life by challenging one another to get involved in missions. There are some simple but tremendously-productive steps to take which can generate a revolutionary mindset for any Christian group:
- Start up a monthly prayer meeting devoted to spreading the Revolution overseas.
- Sponsor an indigenous missionary who’s fighting on the front lines, often on meager income.
- Take the Perspectives on World Missions course when it comes to town.
- Sign up for Frontiers Magazine, which has been a great source of motivating and educational articles on the world-wide Revolution. Published by the U.S. Center for World Missions, it’s a great publication to share during the opening prayer in your Study Group.
- Take a look at Gospel for Asia’s Web site and you’ll find many more ways to develop and build a Revolutionary consensus.
- Read Revolution in World Missions–it’s a free download from their Web site: www.gfa.org.
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Filed under: Ministry Tools · Tags: book reviews, missions











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I just wanted to add that the native missionaries approach generally works when there is a around 5% or more portion of the population. Otherwise there is not a sufficient national workforce to indigenously evangelize the area. In China and India there are some “reached” (5% evangelical) people groups who are able to evangelize unreached group, such as the Han Chinese.
That said, supporting indigenous leaders is always ideal, and I know a number of people in our fellowship are already doing this. Let’s hear from them!
Do you have some citation on this? That would be most helpful! Thanks, Kalie…
“Finishing the Task” –article by Ralph D. Winter, available at the U.S. Center for World Mission web site and in the Perspectives Reader.
The Joshua project definitions page: http://www.joshuaproject.net/definitions.php
This is a very old article you’re referencing. We used to teach Winter’s rap in the Perspectives class in the ’80s. But isn’t this the whole point behind “Revolutions in World Missions” — that revolutionary change in perspective is underway?
Take a look at what this missiologist says today:
The point is that China has recently thrown many long-held theories about missions into some confusion. There’s something we’ve been missing in our missions doctrinaire which calls for a smarter, more-revolutionary approach to missions.
Perspectives course is still using this article in their 4th edition, copyright 2009. This definition hasn’t changed. What’s working in China and India is because there was a sufficient (though small) percentage of Christians due to missionary work. I agree that where there is enough indigenous Christian presence Westerners need to step aside. I’m just trying to say that just because China and India reached that point doesn’t mean every nation or people group in the world is able to do this right now.