Thursday, November 17, 2011

MISsionUNDERSTANDING : Partnership

If I were to sum up Latin America Mission's history, purpose and focus, it would be the word "partnership". Over the years we've tried defining LAM by listing the multiple focuses of these partnerships such as evangelism, children at risk, theological education, women's rescue missions, medical ministry, discipleship… and the list goes on and on. It's been hard to concisely explain what LAM does, because unlike other organizations, we don't have one specific target group However, what we have done for nearly 100 years is work with, and alongsideLatin ministries, allowing them to identify the need and helping them accomplish a specific goal. I've come to realize that the "what" we do is encompassed in knowing the "how to" of partnering well with the Latin Church.

More recently we've been using the word "alliance" to express how we unite various partners to accomplish gospel driven goals. My previous assignment was as LAM's Director of International Alliances, or overseeing and coordinating with our multiple and varied partners throughout Latin America. My currentposition as Director of North American Alliances is more of a development position but with a similar focus in assisting North American Churches and Ministries in thinking through and then accomplishing their missions efforts in partnership with our international Alliance members.

Again, the word partnership is the key, and something I believe needs to be re-defined in the North American Church's understanding of international missions, especially when it comes to our perception of the Latin American church's current and future contribution toward "making disciples of all nations…".

Too often there is the perception that North American Missions to Latin America consists of: "us going to help them because they need our help", or the other extreme: "Latin America is now evangelized so we should focus elsewhere". If we approach missions to Latin America from either of these perspectives we fail to recognize what God has accomplished through generations of missionaries and that the Gospel has not returned void but produced much fruit and new partners in the Great Commission. The Church in Latin America is strong, continues to grow and is fervently evangelizing their own, yet thisdoes not therefore mean that the second perspective holds true either. There remain pockets of extreme need be that regional needs such as localized tribes that still do not have the Gospel in their own language or needed church plants in a particular country, or types of global needs such as equipping churches' to respond to child sex trafficking, rescuing women at risk or providing further education to pastors and ley leaders in theology, counseling, servant leadership etc. The needs still exist, and the Latin Church is beginning to meet them, but using an outdated missions paradigm, or abandoning the region all together are not options.

Aside from the waning focus on going to Latin America, I am hearing even less conversation about partnership with the Latin Americans. A partnership with the Latin Church to fulfill the Great Commission in Latin America itself, throughout the world, or even dare I say, Latin Americans coming to North America to equip us in reaching the rapidly growing Latin communities within our own boarders. As North Americans, our tendency is to want to accomplish the task alone, but sometimes that is simply not God's strategy.

Consider King David. Despite his faults, scripture speaks of David as a man after God's heart (Acts 13:22). Late in his life, his greatest desire was to construct a focal point of worship and build the "House of God", the temple in Jerusalem. God's response was not what he anticipated:

"David said to Solomon, "My son, I had it in my heart to build a house to the name of the LORD my God. But the word of the LORD came to me, saying, 'You have shed much blood and have waged greatwars. You shall not build a house to my name, because you have shed so muchblood before me on the earth. Behold, a son shall be born to you who shall be a man of rest. I will give him rest from all his surrounding enemies. For his name shall be Solomon, and I will give peace and quiet to Israel in hisdays. He shall build a house for my name. He shall be my son, and I will be his father, and I will establish his royal throne in Israel forever.'…" (1 Chron. 22).

Reading on, we see that David did everything he could to assure that Solomon would be successful in the work God had called him to. He equipped him with materials, provided him with plans and commissioned all the leaders of Israel to assist Solomon in this endeavor. David trusted his son Solomon to accomplish the task he assumed would be his, and provided the means to make his calling successful.

In many ways I believe this exemplifies what partnership with the Latin Church should looklike. I find great encouragement in this passage but also correlations that are painful to consider. In many ways the Latin Church of today is the result of God guiding generations of missionaries to planted seeds, many of which He has grown to maturity and are now bearing fruit, just as David trained his own son to bear fruit in the work before him. But there are other, more painfulsimilarities: "'You have shed much blood and have waged great wars. You shall not build a house to my name, because you have shed so much blood before me on the earth." I have no interest in drawing a correlation between the wars that David fought and our modern wars, nor am I addressing the reasoning behind these wars, however as an unintended result of our modern wars, those carrying a US Passport are currently seen (right or wrong) as part of an aggressive collective group, and encounter unprecedented resistance or closed doors simply due to our nationality. Right or wrong, we are not seen as heralds of peace but as aggressors, baggage that the Latin population does not carry with them to foreign lands.

However, what the North American Church does have are generations and centuries of our successes and failures to draw from. Like the preparations David made for Solomon, we can provide experience and "plans", as well as a wealth of resources (Bible teachers, cultural studies, mobilization programs, literature, translations and an unsurpassed mix of cultures) to the Latin Church. (You may notice that I intentionally left finances out of this picture as that has often been another knee jerk response to simply throw money at a problem rather than take the time and energy to learn what true partnership looks like before responding with the wallet.)

We need to think in a radically different manner about "accomplishing the task". We need to think proactively but remain sober and humble, taking stock of what we have in our grasp and how best to use it. Asking our partners how best to work with them as opposed to assuming that we only serve them. We need to give glory to God who has worked through us, yet not assume that the labor of the future will follow the same pattern of that of the past. I'm excited about where we may be ten years from now, but I'm even more excited to see where Latin missions will be ten years from now, and what kind of partnership theLord has in store for His bride (be that Latin or North American or other) in this next phase of His Great Commission Plan.


In His Hands / En Sus manos;
Kevin S. Abegg

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Pruning and Plans for the Future

I like grapes. I also like what we get from grapes: juice, jam, raisins and good Californian or Chilean wine. (I don’t hide my bias). Anyway, what does this have to do with a family update? No, we’re not starting a vineyard (though Claudia dreams of doing just that), but the Lord used a recent sermon on John 15 to give me a better understanding of what He has been doing in “our” life over the past few years.


If you’ve been following the Abegg chronicles you know that up to a month ago we anticipated stepping away from LAM and parachurch missions (missions through a non-church organization). In short we were lead to seriously and is some ways painfully analyze our belief and theology of missions. (See my previous entry to this Blog.) I thought that based on our convictions, the best option was to step out of parachurch missions and continue in missions from our local church while supporting the family through a secular job. As the year wore on though, and I didn’t sense direction from the Lord as to what occupation I should step into, I began to grow weary and feel more and more barren even as I continued with the ministry projects at hand. I was torn in not being able to see how my theology and my daily work in ministry matched up, and wondered why the Lord (and I do believe it was His hand) would apear to strip something away from me yet not provide something new to serve Him in.


Here’s where the grapes come in. Living near wine country in CA didn’t make my dad a vinedresser, yet his impressive pruning techniques, akin to current “slasher” horror movies, proved to be exactly what our one and only grapevine needed. Every fall, the yard plants would tremble in fear as my dad got out his preferred pruning instrument, an 18” gas powered chain saw, in order to “clean things up a bit”. Nothing green was spared be that oak trees or berry bushes. Guava plants and even the hedge dared not resist his onslaught. Some plants actually survived, their limbs removed, hauled off and burned in our fireplace. But it was the grapevine that always amazed me. Every summer that vine would foolishly send 40 feet of twisting greenery along our fence. And every fall it would stand defiantly before my father only to be hacked back to a pitiful, miserable looking brown stick. Each year I thought, “well, that’s the end of that”, but each spring it would rise again, stretch its limbs far and amazingly produce clusters of grapes.


In the recent sermon, I learned that true vinedressers do actually prune back each years growth to what looks like a dead stick (though I doubt they use a chain saw). In his own special way, what my dad was doing actually provided the care that the vine needed, and prepared it for the next year’s growth and fruit.


What the Lord was doing in Claudia and my hearts over the past “season” is very similar:


“I am the true vine, and my Father is the gardener. 2 He cuts off every branch in me that bears no fruit, while every branch that does bear fruit he prunes so that it will be even more fruitful... 4 Remain in me, and I will remain in you. No branch can bear fruit by itself; it must remain in the vine. Neither can you bear fruit unless you remain in me.
5 “I am the vine; you are the branches. If a man remains in me and I in him, he will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing...  8 This is to my Father’s glory, that you bear much fruit, showing yourselves to be my disciples… 16 You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you to go and bear fruit—fruit that will last.”
John 15:1-17



Less than a month ago, LAM president Steve Johnson asked me to assist in developing what may grow into a “Department of North American Church Missions”. The idea is to help mission minded churches to strengthen relationships with their missionaries as well as the ministries they partner with throughout Latin America or the world. One of my concerns this past year was in seeing churches essentially “outsource” missions and let the parachurch (i.e. LAM) handle the care and feeding of their missionaries instead of assuming the role of pastoral care and being a full partner in fulfilling the Great Commission thus receiving the rich returns and benefits that accompany that involvement. Over the past year the Lord, in His mercy, has lead me through a course in missiology and church-missionary relationships even though I wasn’t aware of the purpose.


I’ll share more on what this new work will look like as I am able, but needless to say we are VERY excited about the possibilities and ask for your prayers as we step into this new area of growth and by faith…fruit. Cuba will remain in our scope of ministry and we are excited about some new possibilities to help meet the incredible lack of literature and resources that Cuban pastors have to draw from, but again...stay tuned!


Thank you so much for your partnership over the years. We look forward to what the Lord will be doing as our new branches grow and He produces fruit that will last in our lives, the churches we are involved with and in you, our partners in the Great Commission.