More formally trained pastors at Together for the Gospel than 10/40 Window

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Pergamum

Ordinary Guy (TM)
A shocking statistic to remember when you go to those big-name conferences - "There are more formally trained pastors at Together for the Gospel than in the entire 10-40 window."

This has huge implications for wiser stewardship in the allocation of ministry resources. Are we hoarding the gold of the Gospel or sending it abroad to the nations?

--------- (Info from Training Leaders International).

http://t4g.org/resources/photos/
 
Are we hoarding the gold of the Gospel or sending it abroad to the nations?

Churches have a mission field in their own locality. An increasing number of missionaries (ministers) in Australia preach the gospel and work with their own hands to support themselves and their families. And that is while both they and their churches continue to give to overseas missions.
 
Both are important insights. What struck me about the quote wasn't the financial resources involved in a conference like that, but the desperate need for "people" resources on the field in the 10/40 window. I live and work in the 10/40 window; we are in Bangladesh. It is a country the size of iowa but well surpasses the population of Russia. And it claims the largest unreached people group in the world. We live in a city the size of NY city; it is the second largest city here; and there are zero reformed churches in our city (let alone reformed and covenantal, which is our conviction as Presbyterians). We desperately need more people.
 
Are we hoarding the gold of the Gospel or sending it abroad to the nations?

You are failing to see the big picture. Due to policies over the last few decades in the US, Australia and Europe, there are plenty of 'the nations' to evangelize without going half way around the world. Indeed, the whole 19th century mindset of foreign missions and the White Man's Burden may well be outdated.

Since you have raised the stewardship question, is it better stewardship to to send missionaries to Richardson, Texas, and Dearborn, Michigan to reach 10s of thousands, or to set up the support infrastructure to send them half way around the world to reach dozens?

On a more direct level, how does the cost of a pastor going to "Together for the Gospel" compare to a missionary flying to the US and itenerating for 3 months?
 
You are failing to see the big picture. Due to policies over the last few decades in the US, Australia and Europe, there are plenty of 'the nations' to evangelize without going half way around the world. Indeed, the whole 19th century mindset of foreign missions and the White Man's Burden may well be outdated.

Since you have raised the stewardship question, is it better stewardship to to send missionaries to Richardson, Texas, and Dearborn, Michigan to reach 10s of thousands, or to set up the support infrastructure to send them half way around the world to reach dozens?

On a more direct level, how does the cost of a pastor going to "Together for the Gospel" compare to a missionary flying to the US and itenerating for 3 months?

Edward,

I don't see it as either/or, but as both/and. There may be 500,000 Bengalis living in the US, but there are 160 million living here. Even if you reach a few in the US, the vast majority of them stay in the US; so you're not really having much of an impact on the whole of the nation residing here in Asia. No one should feel guilt for a calling to be in America or anywhere else in the west. But it seems we should be sending more people where there is greater need. Forgive the bad illustration, but if there were no doctors or hospitals in Texas, but there were Texans living elsewhere in the States where there was hospitals, you'd still be left asking: "Wait--why is it that there aren't any hospitals in Texas? Shouldn't we have hospitals in Texas too?"
 
I don't see it as either/or, but as both/and.

The original post presents an either/or situation. " hoarding the gold ... or sending it abroad"

Rather than picking either of those, I chose "None of the above".

The only unqualified success for traditional foreign missions has been Korea. China looks pretty good now, but most of the success seems to have come after the Westerners largely went away. Some portions of Africa also were successfully reached. So depending on how you want to draw geographic divisions, I'll cede you a significant portion of Africa, as well. The Mayan peninsula is a qualified success.
 
Read Ralph Winter's article, "A Re-consecration to a War-time Lifestyle" here: https://joshuaproject.net/assets/media/articles/a-wartime-lifestyle.pdf

The statistics are always embarrassing: We spend as much on chewing gum annually as we do on missions; our annual giving to foreign missions is equal to the amount we spend in a 52-day period on pet food.

Also see this article, "
Who gives two cents for missions?
We do, to our shame"

https://world.wng.org/2005/10/who_gives_two_cents_for_missions
Of every dollar given to a Protestant church, the average amount that goes to overseas missions is two cents. In contrast, of every dollar Antioch Presbyterian Church in Chonju, Korea, takes in, 70 cents goes to missions.

For 15 years, the mission research and advocacy organization Empty Tomb, of Champaign, Ill., has analyzed the contributions and spending patterns of American churches. The latest report, "The State of Church Giving through 2003" (available at emptytomb.org), crunches the numbers for 41 Protestant denominations and surveys giving trends going back almost a century. In doing so, the study gives a not-too-flattering snapshot of the priorities of American Christians today.

The study also gives membership data. We learn, for example, that the "mainline" denominations of liberal Protestantism-defined in this study as those belonging to the National Council of Churches (NCC)-are not mainline anymore. In 1968, those denominations had as members 13.2 percent of the country's population (26,508,288 total members). By 2003, that percentage shrank to only 6.8 percent. Within those 35 years, as the U.S. population grew 45 percent, churches affiliated with the NCC (with nearly 20 million members) declined as a percentage of the population by nearly half.

Members of a group of 15 evangelical denominations (22,269,608) now outnumber "mainline Protestants," and so should be considered the true mainline of American Christianity. Conservatives actually passed the liberals in 1993, growing 47 percent between 1968 and 2003. That is not quite as good as it sounds, with growth only 2 percent more than the overall population growth. These evangelical denominations reached a peak in the mid-1980s, numbering 8.23 percent of the population, but by 2003 declined to 7.65 percent.

The theological modernists had maintained that the church must conform to the culture in order to be relevant. In the 20th century, that meant downplaying the supernatural, focusing on this world rather than the next, and jettisoning the authority of the Bible. Evidently, cultural conformity as a way to grow the church does not work. And yet, ironically, some evangelicals today are trying to revive that approach, which, if followed, may herald an evangelical decline.

Giving to the church is already in decline-even among evangelicals. Back in 1968, members of eight evangelical denominations profiled by Empty Tomb gave 6.2 percent of their incomes. By 2003, that had declined to 4.4 percent, even as incomes had grown dramatically. In the 11 mainline denominations profiled, per capita giving was less in 2003 (2.5 percent of income) than it had been in 1933, during the Great Depression (3.3 percent of income).

And what do churches do with their money? In 1920, the percentage of giving to missions from the total offering was 10.09 percent, just over a dime out of every dollar. In 2003, conservative and evangelical denominations gave 2.6 percent (about three cents per dollar), with the liberals giving only 0.9 percent (one cent). The combined average for overseas work is about two pennies per dollar.

Where is the money going? For buildings? Not really, since churches spent proportionally more for new buildings in 1965 ($29 per capita) than in 2003 ($27). But the sprawling church "campuses" that have become the norm today are expensive to operate. Congregations today typically run an abundance of internal programs. The number of staff members and the amount of salaries have risen. All of this is for the good, but, as the authors of the report conclude, "the numbers demonstrate an increased emphasis on internal operations over the broader mission of the church."

Noticeably missing in this study of church giving is tithing. Though some Christians do give 10 percent of their incomes, many more do not, resulting in these low averages. Nor do churches tithe their incomes, giving 10 percent to foreign missions, as they once did.

If church members were to tithe 10 percent of their income, churches would reap an additional $156 billion. And, according to calculations in the study, if 60 percent of that extra income were designated for overseas missions, that would come to $94 billion-enough to feed, medicate, and evangelize the underdeveloped world.


And also see this::

Disturbing Statistics About the Church in the USA:
  • 85% Of all Funding Goes Towards Internal Operations
    • 50% to pay the salary of pastors and church staff.
    • 22% to pay for upkeep and expansion of buildings.
    • 13% for church expenses such as electricity and supplies.
    • 15% Outreach includes 3% for local missions.
    • 2% for overseas missions (both evangelistic and charitable) In the end, if you only give to your local church, odds are that only 2% of 2.58%, or 0.05% of your income is going towards “preaching the gospel to every nation” and helping the “poorest of the poor” combined. To put that in perspective, if you make $50,000 a year, that is only $25.80 per year.
American Christians spend 95% of offerings on home-based ministry, 4.5% on cross-cultural efforts in already reached people groups, and .5% to reach the unreached. (The Traveling Team)



 
If you saw ten people trying to lift a huge log and wanted to help them, and nine of the people were lifting at one end and one on the other, which end would you go to?
 
If you saw ten people trying to lift a huge log and wanted to help them, and nine of the people were lifting at one end and one on the other, which end would you go to?

If the ends of the logs were thousands of miles apart, I'd probably try to lift the end that was in the place where God had providentially placed me. As far as the statistics you posted, most churches are rather small and so these type of breakdowns cannot be avoided. In my church for example, our yearly income is around 90,000. Once we pay for our building, utilities, expenses, and my salary, how much do you suppose is left? Should we forego our building or pay me only a part time salary so that we can spend more on overseas missions? Or maybe we are doing exactly what we are called to do in reaching the unreached people group in our own backyard.
 
Bill,
Foregoing a building or engaging in purposeful simplicity is a real possibility. I am supported by several groups that do just that (meet in homes, or rent a venue once a week, or double-up with another church to share the building, or use a very old and cheap wooden building).

Because the needs in many unreached regions of the world are harder to reach, the intentionality and effort ought to be greater instead of lesser to reach them. We plan harder for a trip far away than we do a simple drive to the local store, after all. Therefore, missions ought to be more intentionally focused on unreached areas of the world so that these groups will, in fact, be reached.

Out of sight, out of mind is a poor excuse when ignoring that part of Christ's commands about the uttermost part of the earth.

If we were an army and knew that part of our job was to strike a blow faraway many thousands of miles, and that this would be a difficult task, wouldn't we budget and train our soldiers for it. If we know that our marching orders included all nations and the uttermost parts of the earth, then we wouldn't spend 90% of our budget on the bases back home or the peacetime housing.
 
Of course, there are qualifiers and asterisks to a lot of the details, but the essence of the research in studies like those cited is valid.

The longer we live in the Majority World, the more disturbed we are when we return to the US and see many (of course, not all) professing Christians living such comfortable - even lavish - lives. The same is true with many (again, not all) churches: I am not even comparing the expense of reaching the community vs. foreign missions, but I am comparing the new "coffee shop" or the new sound system or the new stadium seating (because the pews weren't comfy enough) or the new carpet, etc., etc. vs. fulfilling Christ's Commission to reach the nations with the gospel. Has the widow's mite simply become a cliche - or should that mindset govern our financial/stewardship perspective?

While it may be less true of (some) Reformed congregations than of broadly evangelical ones, neither are immune to the appeal of seeking their "best life now" rather than living as strangers and pilgrims in this world with their vision fixated on the prize of eternal life. The purchase of every luxury sedan, every big screen TV, and even every trendy (but costly!) gift for a child needs to be weighed in light of eternity.

This is not a call for monastic minimalism, but simply for an honest, biblical assessment of how and why we (as individuals and/or churches) allocate the monies with which God has blessed us. If you honestly, absolutely must spend 98 cents out of every dollar before looking to the Great Commission, so be it. Perhaps, though, a sincere, prayerful evaluation of priorities would reveal a way to spend two pennies per dollar less on other things, which would double your contribution!

The need for gospel proclamation is great, to be sure, in many cities in the West. However, there are still vast spaces in the Majority World where the people have no idea about who Jesus really is, because they have never even heard of Him - or have never heard sound, biblical preaching about His person and work because it isn't available to them (unlike in the West, where the truth can be easily attained if the search is earnest and sincere). However much we give to meet that need, it is never enough.

Even though there may be a Christian presence in these places, the men leading the church know little about the Bible - they preach, instead, a syncretistic, hybrid "message" that confuses more than it liberates. I have "pastors" in dozens of nations crying out to learn more about God's Word, but lack of funding forces me to tell them, "Not yet." Where should that be on the Western church's priority list? Where should it be relative to that new sound system? Are we really content with what we allocate - as individuals and as churches - to reaching these people?
 
Of course, there are qualifiers and asterisks to a lot of the details, but the essence of the research in studies like those cited is valid.

The longer we live in the Majority World, the more disturbed we are when we return to the US and see many (of course, not all) professing Christians living such comfortable - even lavish - lives. The same is true with many (again, not all) churches: I am not even comparing the expense of reaching the community vs. foreign missions, but I am comparing the new "coffee shop" or the new sound system or the new stadium seating (because the pews weren't comfy enough) or the new carpet, etc., etc. vs. fulfilling Christ's Commission to reach the nations with the gospel. Has the widow's mite simply become a cliche - or should that mindset govern our financial/stewardship perspective?

While it may be less true of (some) Reformed congregations than of broadly evangelical ones, neither are immune to the appeal of seeking their "best life now" rather than living as strangers and pilgrims in this world with their vision fixated on the prize of eternal life. The purchase of every luxury sedan, every big screen TV, and even every trendy (but costly!) gift for a child needs to be weighed in light of eternity.

This is not a call for monastic minimalism, but simply for an honest, biblical assessment of how and why we (as individuals and/or churches) allocate the monies with which God has blessed us. If you honestly, absolutely must spend 98 cents out of every dollar before looking to the Great Commission, so be it. Perhaps, though, a sincere, prayerful evaluation of priorities would reveal a way to spend two pennies per dollar less on other things, which would double your contribution!

The need for gospel proclamation is great, to be sure, in many cities in the West. However, there are still vast spaces in the Majority World where the people have no idea about who Jesus really is, because they have never even heard of Him - or have never heard sound, biblical preaching about His person and work because it isn't available to them (unlike in the West, where the truth can be easily attained if the search is earnest and sincere). However much we give to meet that need, it is never enough.

Even though there may be a Christian presence in these places, the men leading the church know little about the Bible - they preach, instead, a syncretistic, hybrid "message" that confuses more than it liberates. I have "pastors" in dozens of nations crying out to learn more about God's Word, but lack of funding forces me to tell them, "Not yet." Where should that be on the Western church's priority list? Where should it be relative to that new sound system? Are we really content with what we allocate - as individuals and as churches - to reaching these people?

I'm sympathetic to some of your frustrations and I have the same, but I think you are, to some extent, missing your own point. When you correctly describe much of "evangelicalism" as engaging in a "best life now" style of living, you are implying that most of Christianity in the West also is dominated by a "syncretistic, hybrid message that confuses more than it liberates." In other words, if you look beyond the self-reporting surveys and gaudy conferences and crystal cathedrals, America is little better off than the third world--it's just that its dominant syncretism is of a different sort.

As confessionally Reformed Christians, our duty is to our own church and to the faith once delivered to the saints as summarized in our churchly confessions. Most confessional churches I know have a single "staff" member (the pastor), many don't have a building of their own unless they inherited it from decades past, and many struggle just to meet those meager financial responsibilities. My previous church was in the 4th largest city in the country and often required denominational support to meet its budget despite renting a facility under a very favorable lease and having a single pastor. I now live in a city of over a million with only two or three churches that would identify as being "Reformed" and yet are all far towards the "missional" end of the spectrum of confessional fidelity. Reformed church plants in the US fail frequently for lack of funding. Confessional seminaries are often underfunded. I'm moving in a year or so and as I've looked at potential locations I've been shocked with how much of the country I have to rule out for lack of a confessionally Reformed church for my family. And while we often focus on that 10/40 window for missions, it can be harder to find a confessional church in Europe than it is in some parts of that region.

Generic evangelical megachurches will answer for their financial stewardship, but as a Reformed Christian, America looks to me like Pergamum's 9 person side of the log has one Reformed minister trying to lift it and 8 other people sitting on top of it.
 
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If the support isn't there for a work, one probably should evaluate whether the Lord is really calling one to that work, or whether it is where the missionary wants to work.

but I am comparing the new "coffee shop" or the new sound system or the new stadium seating (because the pews weren't comfy enough) or the new carpet, etc., etc. vs. fulfilling Christ's Commission to reach the nations with the gospel.

I dare say that a handful of churches with nice carpet and good sound systems probably give more to world missions than do some entire TR denominations.

Foregoing a building or engaging in purposeful simplicity is a real possibility.

While small may be considered a virtue by many here, the fact is that a healthy, wealthy church is going to have a lot more resources free for foreign missions than will a couple of dozen folks meeting in a living room. I don't begrudge folks that can make a six figure contribution a cup of coffee on Sunday morning.

I would posit under your model, giving for missions would drop, not increase.
 
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At the end of the day, we all need to abide in Jesus, pray for the advance of the gospel, and serve Him in the local place where he calls us. It's easy to forget about missions; but it's just as easy to make an idol of missions. Also, giving isn't the only way to participate. We can pray for the nations too. But we all need to examine our own hearts. Maybe we're becoming puffed up and proud, Pharisee-like in our insistence of living "radical" Christian lives and going to unreached people groups (Not saying anyone is). May God humble us. Or maybe we're becoming apathetic to the "unreached" (Not saying anyone is). May God prick us. Here's one for you: I'm living the "missions dream", serving the Lord among unreached peoples in Asia--and yet--and yet--I still find my own heart cold and apathetic. I think there's plenty of room for repentance for all of us.
 
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On a side note, I'm pretty sure there were pastors from the 10/40 window present at T4G last year. Matt Chandler introduced a Syrian pastor (associated with A29) during one of the breakout sessions, and encouraged us to pray for his safety. I may be mistaken, but I think there was a special discount for overseas missionaries/pastors.
 
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