Why You Should Support the IMB
Posted by Strider in Baptist Life, Church & Missions
Facebook is a funny thing. Not only do you get to get back in touch with old friends that you had hoped to leave behind but you also get to see the weird conversations they are having with their other old friends. The other day a conversation popped up on my screen from a friend of mine who pastors a church. He is also a trustee for our International Mission Board and had requested prayer for the meeting he was about to go to. One guy (obviously not a Christian) commented that the very idea of a ‘mission’ agency was deceptive and evil and we should ‘help’ ‘those’ people instead of cramming religion down their throats. Ok, well I expect this from those outside the Kingdom. But then a person who was apparently a church member commented that we should not spend any money overseas and that all of our money should be spent right here on the poor at ‘home’. Wow. I forget the battles you guys face at home. I am sorry that I forget and so, to make amends I am posting the ammunition you need to face such battles as these as we approach our Lottie Moon Christmas Offering- or is that the Lottie Moon ‘Holiday’ Offering? I am so behind the times.
First of all, let me say that your response to non-Christian guy should be the Gospel. In the context of what he was saying about being ‘deceptive’ and ‘cramming’ religion down other people’s throats I plead not guilty. I understand where he is coming from and I know the guys he is talking about but we is not them. Back in the early 1990′s we escalated greatly the accessing of what was called ‘closed’ countries. I know facts and figures are boring but to be blunt we used to work in around 90 countries and now we work in them all. No, I am not speaking in hyperbole. We are now accessing all the countries of the world with the Gospel in one way or another. Your money is paying for some pretty darn creative, brave, and obedient people to get the Gospel everywhere the Lord has commanded us to go- which is everywhere. We have done this in many ways. One way has been to do what I do; set up a humanitarian aid agency in order to get a visa. Fifteen years ago that sometimes meant that guys would go out, say they were helping poor people and then just pass out tracts. Some of us (me included) thought that was deceptive and wrong. Today the situation is very different. Many of you are thinking that perhaps if you fund a secular agency, or a christian agency that just focuses on relief and not church planting then your money will be more effective in relieving poverty. You would be wrong.
Major concept to get your head around: People are not poor because they don’t have money. People are poor because they have broken relationships and people have broken relationships because they have a broken relationship with God. (That is a slight paraphrase from Brent Meyers’ excellent book, ‘Walking with the Poor’). For 15 years I have been learning about indigenous church planting, avoiding dependency issues, being culturally appropriate and relevant, doing things in a reproducible way, letting the locals have ownership, etc etc. A couple of years ago I went to a big humanitarian aid meeting sponsored by the UN. All these secular guys got together and started talking about all the same concepts for their humanitarian work. The upshot of the downside was that they all agreed these concepts were essential but they couldn’t implement half of them. Why? Because they have to impress the donors. Look guys, you don’t hear alot from me about all the great work that I have done and now the funds for my work are drying up. I am sorry for the lack of communication here but it is essential. I can’t take credit for the work I do because we are giving the credit to everyone else. So here is the deal for Mister Athiest who thinks we should be doing good. We are. People are being fed, getting fresh drinking water and even getting housing. I have built seven villages since I have been out here- except, I haven’t. They built their own villages and even provided much of the materials. I taught them to work together, to trust each other. I gave them a few things they didn’t have but mostly they did it themselves and I am proud of that. They didn’t need money as much as they needed forgiveness and a right understanding of who God is. The Gospel makes all the difference.
Secondly, for Mister Atheist who thinks we shouldn’t be shoving religion down people’s throats, tell him I agree. I have no interest in going to a Muslim people and telling them that my set of rules is better than their set of rules. I never criticize Mohamed or Islam. There is no point and no need. The people we work with are fed up with the status quo which keeps them in bondage and brokenness and are looking for something else. They are excited to find out that God is not some powerful vindictive spirit who is out to get them. We present Jesus and that is always received well even by those who do not ultimately accept Christ. Persecution comes and it is vicious. It comes to the new believers who are persecuted by a community that does not understand. I have more to say on this but that is for another post.
Now, for Miss Shouldn’t We Just Stay Here I have this to say. No we should not. First of all, and most of you reading this blog are up on this, Christ commanded us to go so, we should go. End of story. But more than that can you not see how inconsistent that is? Most of our Church members are Republicans who think that our going to Iraq was a great thing. They think that going out and interacting with the world directly benefits us at home. Well? Does it not make sense then to send me? Who is more effective at changing society and relieving poverty the Gospel or a gun? All right, I had better answer the question because in recent years some of you have gotten confused. The Gospel! I have a friend who when he speaks at churches back home apologizes to our military for them having to shed their blood in Afghanistan and Iraq because we were too lazy to go there fifty years ago. I have not decided if he is right but he goes on to point out that all of our places of greatest conflict today are places we have failed to take the Gospel. He says we should have gone fifty years ago and lost a couple hundred martyrs so that today thousands would not be dying. Again, I don’t know if I agree completely or not but you see his point.
Secondly, for Miss Shouldn’t We Just Stay Here we also need to address her further concerns- and these many of you might also have. Are we not wasting our time? The Muslims are hard soil, should we not put our resources into the harvest fields and wait till later for these difficult places? We need so much here at home should we not spend more at home and get ‘over there’ later when we have more? I consider these questions a slap in the face to the Spirit of God. God is not poor. His resources are not limited and neither are ours. I know, I can hear you “But, But but, but, but…’ But nothing. Is the soil hard? Yes it is. It has hurt my family for us to stay here for 15 years and the vast majority don’t last nearly that long. Is hard soil of any consequence to Almighty God? Not one bit.
When we first came out we had to learn about security. We had to learn that there were groups, organizations, and whole countries who wanted to stop what we were doing so we had to be secretive. Our media folks back at the home office threw a fit. How could we not tell the most exciting story to happen in the last 2000 years of mission work? Well, we haven’t. Even I don’t know everything that has happened over the last 20 years. I have thought long and hard about just telling you what I know and name the countries and all in this post but I can’t do it. As far as you are concerned I am Strider in Middle Earth and it has to stay that way. So, let me be as general as I can and still be helpful. Here where I live there were two known Muslim Backround Believers (MBB’s). We use MBB’s to differentiate majority population people from the local minority traditional Christians that you find so many places. For instance, the Coptic Church is there in Egypt and Ethiopia and such places but when we are looking to reach Egyptians and Ethiopians with the Gospel we are trying to do something new and we use MBB to differentiate this new work from those Churches that have been there for centuries. So, as I was saying there were two known MBB’s in Gondor in 1990. By the year 2000 there were over 2500. In a couple of Countries to the north of me they went from two to over 12,000 and two to 30,000. Rohan, a brutal Christian persecuting dictatorship next to me has seen the church go from zero to untold thousands. But this is not the whole story- not even a small part of the story. I wish we would stop counting baptisms and count numbers of alcoholics who have stopped drinking, numbers of wife beaters and child abusers who are now loving fathers and husbands. I wish we could count on our forms the number of fearful and oppressed who now stand up bravely in the face of certain persecution. I wish I could tell you about the martyrs who have given their lives willingly for the cause of Christ. There are many and you don’t know about them. I am truly sorry about that. But the story of what God is doing goes on and on. To the south and east of me are some of the most hostile areas to the Gospel in the world and you know what? Not thousands but millions are coming to faith in Christ. I am just talking about the Muslim world here!
But some of you might say, ‘Hang on Strider we didn’t do all that! There were lots of different agencies involved.’ Yes, but what is your point? Lots of different agencies have not done any of this. God has done it all and what I am telling you is that in every case there has been an IMB worker who has been faithful and has pulled together with lots of people from all over the world. We have been the primary catalyst to see all of this happen and I don’t think you will find many who will disagree with me on this. When you start talking about defunding the IMB and sending your own teams you are- in my opinion- talking about leaving behind the most important organization for unified mission on the planet. I know the word cooperation terrifies some of you but believe me, we have led the way in many places around the world and the Kingdom of God has been greatly expanded by this.
Finally, there is one last criticism to be dealt with. Is not our IMB a huge and expensive organization? Are we not wasting thousands of dollars on this dinosaur? With respect, no. Our recent reorganizion has been an unmitigated disaster. We have 17 vice-presidents. Nuff said. But even with all of that we are more efficient than any agency I know about. The Trustees just voted on next year’s budget, 308 million dollars. If you divide that out by 5000 missionaries on the field (we have more still but by the end of 2011 that is where we are meant to be) that comes to around 62 thousand dollars per missionary. My salary and benefits comes to about 42 thousand dollars. So, that leaves about $20,000 per missionary to cover medical expenses, pay home office salaries and expenses, do actual ministry like print Bibles and such, and a host of travel, not mention the ever increasing platform budgets to pay for humanitarian and business offices all over the world. For all our faults we are doing pretty well.
If you kept reading this far you deserve something special. All I have to offer you is what you should already know. God is on the move in this world. He is opening doors that have been closed for centuries. He is bringing people to faith in places that even if I named them you would not know where they were. I have gone places with nothing but a New Testament where are US Military are not willing to go even with air support and many of my colleagues have gone to really dangerous places and what we find when we get there is that God has already been and is bringing a people to himself. I urge you in the strongest possible terms to be a part of that.



Brother Strider,
Thanks for these relevant words. Your analysis of the number of M’s vs. the size of the recently adopted budget certainly brings things home. Keep spreading the Gospel. And so you will know that I have not fallen off a building and hit my head and all of this is someone rambling out of their mind–Spread the Gospel but don’t use the Camel Method.
Blessings,
Tim
Strider,
Thanks for the testimony. Your pleading and urging are not falling on deaf ears. We will keep praying and giving on our end!
God bless you strider. This was SO refreshing after following a couple “cultural imperialism” threads and despairing of the state of missions in today’s world.
Strider,
Thanks for your collaboration in the gospel in Middle Earth, and thanks for your collaboration here at SBC Impact in getting the word out. It is my hope and prayer that what you have to say here can circulate far and wide and penetrate the hearts of many. I, for one, am planning to read it to my Sunday School class this Sunday.
Thanks guys, and welcome back Tim. I have not seen you in a long time. No, I don’t use the Camel method.
Keep spreading the word about what God is doing. To be very clear, I am not pleading for the ministry that God has for me, I am pleading for yours. We all must be about what He is up to. When we do that we will see our lives changed, our churches changed, our society changed, and the whole world impacted.
Good stuff. May you receive the support you need from those of us safe here in Rivendell.
(Actually, growing up in Arkansas, there’s a, well, the polite term is “behavioral health center” that is named Rivendell. Just connected the two.)
My mother and father-in-law are with the IMB, and they are in a Muslim nation, but one that allows them to be there openly as guests of the Baptist Society of that nation. They say much of the same: look past the rest of the stuff and realize that real ministry is going on here, and we need the help and support.
It may be time to let the IMB fade away. As outraged as I have been about the fundamentalist takeover of the SBC until recently I thought with all the trapeze acts missionaries of conscience have to make to stay on the field in the SBC even in the wake of the tract of 2001 or so, Stand With Christ, there was enough good work there to let it go on.
I’m having serious doubts, even with testimonies of good friends who remained in the SBC and on the Mission field.
Rob Nash of the CBF had a strong sermon October 24 at FBC Greenville, SC. I hope some of you will turn up the transcript. It may be time for Christians of conscience, even Baptists to go a different route now that the SBC controversy has fouled that wing of Baptists witness irreparably.
Look at Dave Miller’s SBC Voices Blog and his agenda there; his tete a tete with Ken Ezell. Look how Louis is free to name me but I have been moderated to oblivion there and can’t respond.
Look at Moody’s answer to Greg Willis history of SBTS, Moody review in the Sept 2009 Baptists Today pages 24-27.
Look at Howell Scott’s FromLaw2grace blog and the remarks of Paul Skousen in reply to the Resolution of BGAV on church state issues.
The SBC is imploding. Time to let it go and reconfigurate in a more honorable manner.
Complex Institutions fail in complex ways, to paraphrase a NASA analogist.
I have come to believe there is some virtue and intelligence to David Rogers and some SBC fundamentalists like him, maybe Howell Scott and a few others. Maybe they will take the challenge to look closely at Diarmaid MacCulloch’s Christianity, and the PBS Series God in America.
The SBC is irreparably flawwed. Time for some of you of conscience to Reconfigure, to walk away.
Thank you Stider for this well written piece on the IMB. You have a way of presenting many of my own thoughts and feelings. It is especially appropriate at this time of year when many of us are promoting the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering and trying to help churches and people understand “Why you should support the IMB.”
Your response to the non-Christian guy who says we should not be forcing our religion down other peoples’ throats was that he needs the gospel is correct. However, I read a poll recently that said a surprising number of people who call themselves Christian also say that we should not force our religion on other peoples since it didn’t matter what religion they believed because they all were good. It seems many so called Christians need the Gospel also.
As far as meeting humanitarian needs, you are right in saying Southern Baptists are meeting those needs. In fact we as good a job as any group I am aware of while keeping evangelism at the forefront. That is true in the USA as well as internationally. I have been part of 4 major disaster relief projects in 3 different countries, one that I helped direct. Two were in closed countries where we were forced to keep a low profile. In each case the needs were met and the Gospel was shared. I was amazed at the support system that responded from our churches and our own IMB organization. In each case we worked alongside and gave support to national co-workers without co-opting their own efforts.
Another aspect of the “should we just stay here” movement that I hear more and more is the idea that we should just send money and not people. We have talked about the dangers of that at SBCImpact before, so I won’t repeat it but that is a dangerous move in an open country where there is a national church and an almost impossible route in a closed country with few believers. Your statement that we are commanded to GO, still holds true. There is no substitute for the field missionary who has taken the time to learn as much as possible the language, culture and world view of the target population.
I spent most of my career in an open country where we can present the gospel freely. This weekend my wife and I will be in a mission conference at a church along with two other missionary families from Muslim countries. They are old friends. I have told them before that they are presenting the gospel to a religious group that is very exclusive and resist accepting Jesus Christ as Lord. I am presenting the gospel in a culture that is very syncretistic and will readily accept Jesus as a god along with their other gods. Both situations are difficult in different ways.
I have spent some time living in closed countries. One was a Muslim country and one, for a longer period, was a politically closed country. I got a small taste of what it is like to live under that constant stress. I have great appreciation and thanks for those such as you who face that stress day after day and year after year.
You said, “When you start talking about defunding the IMB and sending your own teams, you are- in my opinion- talking about leaving behind the most important organization for unified mission on the planet.” That is my belief also. That statement has been true for the over 30 years I have served with the IMB and I suspect for long before that. I am thankful for churches that get personally involved and send teams to work alongside our missionaries. Again, there is no substitute for the field missionary who has taken the time to learn as much as possible the language, culture and world view of the target population.
I have found it interesting that if you go by the rhetoric we hear from some SBC leaders and on the internet, the IMB has a better reputation among many non-Southern Baptists around the world than we do among some of our own denominational leaders, including some IMB trustees.
Doug Hibbard, it is good to hear there is another Arkansan on this site to help me add some sophistication and class.
Ron West
Good to here from you Strider, and I hope I will be able to catch up with you in February while we are in your neck of the woods.
I like what you said here….”Major concept to get your head around: People are not poor because they don’t have money. People are poor because they have broken relationships and people have broken relationships because they have a broken relationship with God. (That is a slight paraphrase from Brent Meyers’ excellent book, ‘Walking with the Poor’).”
Very true,
Blessings,
Chris
here…hear, you know what I mean
Chris, I think your original ‘here’ was correct. Thanks for commenting and supporting though. Write me about February, where are you going?
Ron, Thanks, I can always count on you to back the M cause! We have to meet someday.
Stephen, I hear you brother. I have been very discouraged myself. When I focus on what men do it is always discouraging. But when I back up and look at what God is doing it is all worth it. From your comments I know that you have lost hope for the SBC and that you are really angry about what some men have done to damage it. Fair enough. But every time I get discouraged and think, man it is time to bail out I go back home and I visit the churches. I talk to people and what I find is that the SBC is only defined by a few leaders if I choose to let them define. The SBC I know is better defined by a large majority of people and churches who love Jesus and want to see the Great Commission carried out. I don’t believe God is done with us by a long shot. Time will tell which of us is right but I really believe that God will yet use us to reach the nations and that in doing so He will save us from ourselves as well.
Sorry Chris, I was looking at the wrong ‘here’ Your first ‘here’ should in fact have been ‘hear’. I am with you now.
Strider and Stephen,
I want to echo what Strider has said. I too have been discouraged and at times disappointed in our SBC leadership. I still go back to my call and the fact that the churches and laypeople I talk to support what we are doing. Despite the controversy there was never a time I couldn’t carry out the call God gave me to take the Gospel to those who have never heard or have not had a chance to understand and respond. I always felt privileged to serve alongside the other missionaries sent out by the IMB. I have always believed as Strider said that the IMB is, “the most important organization for unified mission on the planet. “
I have friends who serve with CBF. I understand why they felt betrayed and abandoned. I praise God that they have found an avenue to continue their calling. I chose to stay with the IMB and the missionaries and churches that supported me. One of the greatest evidences of the strength of the IMB and our missionaries and the theological soundness both before the CR and after is that we have come through the attacks and remained strong and that the vast majority of churches continue to support us.
I never hear the CR mentioned when I go to churches. 95% of the church members I share with don’t know there was a CR. The don’t know who the president of the SBC is either. That is even true of our younger missionaries. Here is a true story. About 5 years ago I was in a big GIC in Florida. We missionaries were in a bus going to an event. Two younger career missionaries were sitting behind me. One was a Mid-America graduate and was carrying the conversation. He talked on and on about the how wonderful the changes in the SBC were and mentioned those who had brought it about. Several times he mentioned Adrian Rogers. The other missionary who was probably in his late 20s looked at him and said, “Who is Adrian Rogers?” I thought the guy from Mid-American was going to choke or have a heart attack. (No offense David Rogers) My point is that the young people in the SBC today do not want to keep hearing about the wonders of the CR and or how terrible the SBC was in the 70s. They want to take the gospel to the world. The IMB is still the best hope for doing that we Southern Baptists have.
Stider, I would love to meet you and hear in person about your ministry someday. We have just started emeritus status in Arkansas. We have obligations here for the time being but still get to RVA every once in a while and hope to go back to the field for some short term opportunities in the future. Hope we bump into each other.
Ron, My dad lives in Maumelle, AR and we will do STAS there next Fall. If we both live that long we can meet at the Purple Cow and have a malt.
Anybody at the state convention office can tell you how to find me. I will look forward to it. I have been to the Purple Cow. Not bad. There is a good catfish place there also. Love to buy your family a meal. My son lives in LR.
Strider, I’m also in LR and would love to connect with you on STAS to try and encourage and help any way my people can.
We’ll be praying for you, although I’ll pray by your real name. Aragorn.
Thanks Ron and Doug. We will make a point to connect for sure. I usually stay at the Park Hill BC M house. Anybody play golf?