The Official Lausanne Movement Blog

Highlights from the Lausanne Global Conversation in preparation for Cape Town 2010.
Lausanne Blog
Highlights from the Lausanne Global Conversation in preparation for Cape Town 2010.

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Watch Out When You Ask A Question! PDF Versão para impressão Enviar por E-mail

Recently I asked a question of the active and growing facebook community for Lausanne. I asked expecting to get some response but was excited to see my question pick up speed and receive around 20 responses. This is just a small example of the global conversation building around the Lausanne Movement.

So what was my question? I asked . . . “If you had to explain to someone what the greatest need in global evangelism is, what would you describe?”

I agree that this is a big question that could be thought about in many different ways. That is part of why I asked it. I wanted to get a sense for how people might communicate the greatest need in global evangelism.

And what I found is very interesting and worth some thought as we interact with this together. As I studied the comments, I found that I could break them down into three groups:

  • Aspirational comments that spoke of things eternal and the global scope of the effort
  • Tactical comments that spoke of specific solutions that could be applied, measured and duplicated
  • Incarnational comments that spoke of the desire to face these needs with a holistic perspective

As we are interacting through the Global Conversation Web site, on facebook, via twitter, at lunch tables and in churches, I think we need to be mindful of how different people approach the great challenges of global evangelism.

I don’t look at any of these and say, “That is not important!” In fact, each one of these inputs is a key piece to what we are learning in community. The essential piece is to know who you are speaking to and what they bring to the table. If you are interacting with someone who sees the evangelism needs at 30,000 feet and you are taking a very tactical approach, you might be frustrated with the lack of detail and measurable solutions. If you are approaching the evangelism needs from an incarnational approach and your counterpart is taking a tactical approach, you will feel like their solutions are focused on programs rather than transformed lives. And we could slice it many other ways. The important thing to realize is that these ways of thinking (and many others) exist and define people’s approaches.

We need to be inspired, we need tools and techniques and we need to look at our ministry holistically. In short, we need each other to meet the challenges of global evangelization.

Participate: As you read people’s responses below, think about how you would answer that question and ask yourself how you can learn from the groups that approach the question differently.

Engage: Watch as you respond to key discussions within Lausanne and in your broader ministry context and try and identify the way you approach issues. Ask God to help you understand how He has designed you for His service.

Own: If you are in a discussion and people are not connecting, be the one to help them understand why and find the tools to engage in a God-honoring discussion that leads to Kingdom work being accomplished. 

See the facebook responses below . . .

Aspirational Comments:

  • God so LOVED the world that...
  • Matthew 24:14 "And this gospel of the kingdom will be preached in the whole world as a testimony to all nations, and then the end will come."
  • That there would be enough workers for the harvest.
  • Our "Mission": Worship the one, true living God and follow Jesus as His disciple, then go to all people everywhere to make worshipers of the living God and disciples of Jesus Christ. Repeat process until the King returns.
  • The heart of Christ.
  • Go back to sharing biblical Gospel.
  • salvation

Tactical Comments:

  • Make the Gospel relevant to those that you are telling it to
  • Gumption
  • Equipping the saints for the work of ministry from an international platform.
  • three things: senders, sent ones, and cents...
  • If each one of us "christian"really tried our best to live just a part of what we preach... The Holy Spirit would reach,teach and Evangelise. John 13:35
  • Get the Word out.
  • Supporting the hundreds of thousands of native missionaries barely surviving on $2 a day. They are the key to reaching all nations.

 Incarnational Comments:

  • Is getting people to incarnate evangelism as a life's style among their community: relatives, friends and neighbors.
  • In over 30 years of research at the Institute, the biggest problem is Christians not being real, faithful and fruitful giving our Lord a bad rap…
    Them.
  • Christ-likeness.
  • Obedience

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Your Part in Advancing the Cause PDF Versão para impressão Enviar por E-mail

I love the word “advance!” It communicates momentum, action and intentional activity. But in a world where everything is moving at lightning speed, the advance can loose some of its punch.

The truth is that unless we know where we are going, advancing is simply an act of physical movement without the intentionality that we desire to see. This is true with the Lausanne Congress just as it is true with so many other arenas of ministry.

So I want to pose a challenge to you that is critical to the success of the congress in October. Lausanne is currently releasing what they call “Advance Papers.” These are the work of key groups of thinkers around the main topics of the congress. The idea is that these Advance Papers will become the catalysts for your ideas and input in order to inform the events on the ground in Cape Town.

Only one problem—the movement can’t advance without the effort of people like you (whether you are going to the congress or not) to review these papers, add to the conversation and engage on the issues.

Before we get to the “calls-to-action” at the bottom that I always have, let me share a few thoughts on what it takes to advance a movement:

  1. You don’t advance a cause unless you spend the time.
  2. You don’t see the foundation of a movement develop unless you come prepared.
  3. If we want to see breakthroughs in our efforts towards global evangelization, we have to invest in understanding the issues.
  4. Even if we spend time, prepare and seek breakthrough as we understand the issues, we will not see global impact unless we are interacting with the same vocabulary, topics and content.

I know that each person reading this blog wants to see evangelism advance and at the same time I know that each person is very busy in their ministry/professional lives. So here is what I suggest . . .

Participate: Go to the Advance Paper section and select just one to read and interact with. Put aside one hour to invest in reading one and posting a response.

Engage: Take the topic that you responded to and commit it to prayer over the next few months leading up to the congress. Ask God to give you insights and for insights to those interacting on the topic online and in person.

Own: Pick a meeting you are leading this week within your sphere of influence and challenge each person there to read one of the papers and respond.

 


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Barriers Don’t Equal Thwarted Ministry PDF Versão para impressão Enviar por E-mail

altHow many of you have ever made your way through a maze or completed the same sort of activity in paper? The interesting thing about mazes is that they are full of barriers. In fact, it wouldn’t be considered a maze if the barriers didn’t exist!

Our goal, of course, is to get to enter in from one door and either find a central point or find our way out through the second door. As we walk through the maze barriers keep us from seeing where that destination is. So we must keep trekking around one corner after another trying to make sense of our surroundings so that we can progress towards the goal.

Many times ministry feels like this as well. Our goal in ministry is to reach the lost and help them grow in Christ. But the entire journey seems to be one barrier after another. Many times we wonder whether the dream that God put in our heart is even possible!

But it seems that God allows these barriers in our ministry lives as a way of creating opportunities and challenging our faith. As we come around each corner of the maze, we have to decide whether we will do the ministry set before us and continue even when we hit a wall we did not expect.

A great example of this is Paul’s life. After sitting in a prison for several years, he finally was put on a boat to Rome. Imagine what he must have felt when the ship floundered and they had to swim for an island! But Paul’s words ahead of that swim are telling: “But now I urge you to keep up your courage, because not one of you will be lost; only the ship will be destroyed.” Acts 27:22

What an amazing ministry opportunity. What looked like a barrier – a huge storm – became a ministry to the soldiers, prisoners and those on the island where they sought refuge.

One place in ministry today where we see many barriers is in the area of Bible Poverty. Everywhere we look there is a barrier that seems to keep people from engaging with Scripture. It might be language, culture, access or indifference – all barriers that seem to tower above us as we reach out. That is the theme of the Advance Paper for the Lausanne Congress written by the Scripture in Mission Multiplex Resource Team. The team has identified many of the key barriers and developed the paper around the major priorities we must have as the Church in this area.

Participate: Please take a minute to read “Major Priorities in Eradicating Bible Poverty” and think through the priorities they have defined to overcome the barriers that exist. Make sure to leave some thoughts as these Advance Papers need input from our Global Conversation.

Engage: Sit down in your next quiet time with the Lord and make a list of the barriers that exist in your own ministry. Use that list as an ongoing prayer tool as you seek to overcome these barriers in Christ.

Own: Challenge others who are involved in similar ministry to yours to consider the barriers that they are facing. Share how you began praying for victory in the face of barriers and encourage others to do the same.

 


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What is Your Response? PDF Versão para impressão Enviar por E-mail

altWhat is our response to the teeming cities that are scattered about this world? As we smell the pollution that billows and the cuisines coming from thousands of kitchens, do our senses demand of us a response?

What about when we are standing in a subway, bus or elevator with humanity pressed up against us? Do we see the masses as a blob of flesh moving in some chaotic dance or do we see each individual face that represent families, livelihoods and dreams?

What is our response when we stand on a lonely city street late at night with the neon blinking and the people slipping in and out of the shadows? For some of us, our response is to pity these city-dwellers. Others survive the city by keeping their guard up and keeping people at arm’s length. Still others thrive in the busyness of the city street.

But our response to the city should not be based on how we feel should it? Instead our response should be centered on Scripture and our actions driven by obedience to Christ’s heart for the city.

That is the theme of Tim Keller’s Cape Town 2010 Advance Paper called “What is God’s Global Urban Mission?” Tim takes us beyond our feelings about cities to the strategic importance of these amazing places to the cause of global evangelization. What moved me about this paper is that it provides us with a context for how God has worked in cities throughout time and then asks the big questions about what effective ministry looks like in these places.

JD Payne, a member of the Lausanne Blogger Network, wrote a helpful response to Keller’s paper that put an exclamation point on one of his key themes. In relation to the growing significance of cities in setting the global agenda, he asked, “How many of us are leading our churches, seminaries, colleges, mission agencies, etc. with this reality guiding our strategies?” What a great question! We know cities are important but so many times we fail to train up believers to see cities as a critical element to global evangelization.

Keller also talked about the chaos of cities and the instability they can bring to those who are not prepared to minister in the urban environment. The challenge for those who come from rural or suburban settings will be to learn how the streets of a city work and how to reach out to those who walk on them. But it seems to me that for those city dwellers, who are now the majority of all people on this planet, the challenge is a different one. It is a challenge of seeing beyond their apartment building, ghetto, subway stop or church building. City dwellers have the unique challenge of feeling completely comfortable in a city where they know almost no one and where they have carved out a routine. To go beyond your network of people and to break that routine must be a very difficult task.

So for those outside of the city, we must redouble our efforts to understand their strategic importance so we can engage in this dynamic environment. For those inside the city, we must come to grips with our sphere of influence and ask God what new part of our city He wants us to bless.

Participation: Because this is one of the Advance Papers, we really need your input and comments in order to craft the document that will finally go to the congress. Will you take time to read the entire paper and share your thoughts, additions and changes? Click HERE to go to the Advance Paper.

Engagement: Identify the closest city to where you live (you might be right in it!) and ask yourself what you should do over the next few months to have a greater impact on that city.

Ownership: Take an urban ministry you are a part of or one that you have now identified and ask yourself how you can help share the vision within your sphere of influence. Pick a very specific activity (short-term mission trip, a fundraising event, etc.) to make this cause something that those you know can begin to understand.


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Talking Together about Money PDF Versão para impressão Enviar por E-mail

As we work together around the globe to do evangelism and ministry projects, the two words that will come up most often are “partnership” and “money.” These two words take up huge amounts of time in restaurants, on long dirt road journeys and in conference rooms.

The strange thing is that for all the time spent on these two little words, they seem to create more confusion than clarity. Why is that? Well, Global Conversation participant Carlos Scott (Argentina) recently uploaded an excellent paper on these two words that was presented by Paul Davies who works with All Nations-UK.

In this paper Paul challenges us to consider what these two words mean in different cultures and contexts and then he takes us back to the Bible to see how we can understand these two concepts in a more Biblical way.

What I was struck with was the realization that my own understandings were full of assumptions. I assume that people view money the way that I do in America. I imagine that someone from Thailand would assume that I view it the way that they do.

What surprised me more was to see all the assumptions surrounding the word partnership. In the West those words are so overused that I even my small children have heard them and have some idea of what they mean. But other cultures will bring an entirely different understanding of working together in the Kingdom of God. What does that understanding look like?

The bigger question is, “What does the fact that we so often miscommunicate about partnership and money, do to the work of global evangelism?” Well, you can be sure that it slows down our efforts because we have failed to do our homework and understand these key cultural issues. It also hurts our witness as unbelievers see us fighting over relationships gone wrong and money spent. As we come together around the Lausanne Global Conversation and the Congress on Global Evangelization, we must speak openly and honestly about these issues and share our perceptions. Only in humble learning together will we overcome our different assumptions and be able to move forward as God leads.

Participation: Pick one of these words and begin exploring it with the people around you. Ask them what they understand about the concept and the assumptions they make. Discuss the different perspectives and learn together.

Engagement: Commit that next time you begin a partnership or recieve/give money related to a project that you will do the due diligence ahead of those commitments to understand how people view you and your efforts.

Ownership: Hold your fellow Christian workers accountable for how they approach partnership and money. Ask them the questions you have asked of those you work with and challenge them to broaden their thinking.


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