What Do We Mean By Partnership?
| Written by Chris Heuertz |
| Tuesday, 03 November 2009 13:38 |
At the very least the recorded history of modern missions
has been largely read as a colonializing white enterprise of the Western
(European and American) church. This version of mission has often under reported
the role of partnership in service. It also fails to acknowledge the trending
reality that Christianity in 2009 is no longer a Western religion, but one
based among the Majority World.
Of course we know that most mission takes place locally and goes unnoticed and unreported. We also know that mission doesn't require organizational backing, but is often found in the slow and humble work of learning to love your own community. The organization I am a part of, Word Made Flesh (WMF), falls into a traditional missional community as it relates to the international communities we've help nurtured all over South America, South and Southeast Asia, West Africa and Eastern Europe. However, rather than framing the organizational infrastructure after a franchise model where the USA office would control the international projects, we've opted for a federation. A federation of similarly named organizations that share vision, staff and sometimes funding. Each international Word Made Flesh community has a locally registered board of directors and a local Executive Director. This model has been humanizing in its attempt to form a partnership around a metaphoric "round table"—one where each member of the federation has a voice that contributes to the development of the global movement. This is also placed within the recognition that in a globalized world, our realities may be flattening, but they are still slanted in the favor of the so-called Developed or Western World. Working to flatten this round table has been an exercise in mutual submission and dependency upon one another. We have found that mission actually unifies us and unites us around our shared vocation. Within this affirmation we have begun to work out what we mean by partnership. In February of this year, 36 Word Made Flesh staff and board members from 11 countries representing 15 nationalities, met in Nepal for a week long consultation on the issue of partnership. This month, as WMF “hosts” the Towards 2010 blog, we have asked participants from these consultations to reflect on partnership from their local context. Voices from India, Peru, Brazil, Sierra Leone and Moldova will reflect on the practicalities of partnership in mission for the blog. This is only a starting point for conversation, one that we hope will take place in your own communities and one that will continue to unite all Christians hoping to bear witness to the hope that there is a good God in a world that has reasons to question God's goodness. An activist, author, visionary and public speaker, Christopher L. Heuertz has traveled with his wife, Phileena, through nearly 70 countries working with the most vulnerable of the world's poor—Roma (gypsies), children with AIDS, prostituted women and girls, recovering drug addicts, children on the streets and refugees. Chris has led the Word Made Flesh community as the International Executive Director since 1996. He and Phileena reside in Omaha, Neb. Simple Spirituality: Learning to See God in a Broken World is Chris Heuertz' first book. It shares touching stories from Chris' life and working among the most vulnerable. Also see Chris's response to October's Lausanne Global Conversation topic of "whole Church, whole gospel, whole world". |





At the very least the recorded history of modern missions
has been largely read as a colonializing white enterprise of the Western
(European and American) church. This version of mission has often under reported
the role of partnership in service. It also fails to acknowledge the trending
reality that Christianity in 2009 is no longer a Western religion, but one
based among the Majority World.




Comments
I am the Africa Representative for Visionledd - a Canadian based ministry that works with the local church - all denominations - as we respond to all the issues coming out of the HIV & AIDS pandemic. I deal with many N. American Churches who send teams out and do an orientation for them when they arrive regarding how partnership should work or how they need to come to learn and listen and begin to understand their African brothers and sisters. It is challenging!
THere is an increasing request from ministries in many AFrican countries for help with receiving and hosting teams from Churches in the West and how to encourage them to "see" Africa the way God sees it - with great hope and knowledge of what He is doing here amongst His people.
THis is a great conversation to have and I hope to learn much from it.
God bless
Steve Bowler
Visionledd African Representative
In 2000 we produced 'Let my people go!' a DVD which outlines some of what the Spirit seemed to be saying to us. It's good to see thinking along broader lines.
David
TRANSLATION into English: "Never-the-less it is true that nearly all these Partnerships find themselves "obliged" to interact almost exclusively in English, or at least with English being -by far- the most predominant language, which -whether desired or not- is always limiting or even devalueing for those who do not have English as their mother tongue or a well-learned language. May the Lord help us serve and reflect Him together!