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Educating
MK's
Trinity Christian Academy is now helping
missionaries educate their children. This accredited, online
program is designed to meet the needs of pre-field and field
missionaries, both at home and abroad, who need high quality
education services for their children.
See the brochure links below for more
information.
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Myopic
Churches
Every year in high school, my children are required to complete
a science project. This year, my youngest daughter studied and
wrote about three common ailments of the human eye. Before she
turned her paper in, she asked me to proofread it. As I did,
something caught my eye - myopia.
Myopia is "a defect of the eye that causes light to focus in
front of the retina instead of directly on it, resulting in an
inability to see distant objects clearly. An elongated eyeball
or a misshapen lens often causes myopia. Myopia is also called
nearsightedness."
Unfortunately, the human eye does not hold exclusive claim to
this malady. I think churches can contract myopia; and I
believe many have.
Myopia
is an "I" problem. A church has myopia when it is unable to see
distant objects clearly (i.e., people outside the church). It is
one which suffers from nearsightedness (i.e., too self-absorbed to
notice the neighbors or the nations). A myopic church expends the
greater part of its time, effort, and funds on itself. Symptoms
of myopic churches are evident on the weekly church calendar, the
income/expense report, and in the attitude of its people.
Suggestions for self-diagnosis may begin with some of the
following questions: "How much of what the church does in the
course of a week is for its members?" "How much of a church's
overall giving is expended on itself?" "How much of what the
church does, is being done to "keep" people from running off to
the church down the street?" Obviously, every church needs a
nursery to care for the new arrivals, and new converts will have
special needs and require special attention; but if the majority
of what a church does is self-focused and
self-congratulatory, there is an eye ("I") problem. Churches
should not be telling one another, "Look what we did." Instead,
they should be telling outsiders, "Look what God did!" Myopic
churches are not mighty missions churches (neither at home
nor abroad).
Does
the main segment of your congregation want to give or receive?
Generationally speaking, older people who were raised by
God-fearing parents and experienced a level of hardship, know how
to give and give and give and to make sacrifices. They are
contributors and producers. But this is foreign to many of the
younger generations. They still have their hands out expecting to
receive. Some churches feel that catering to the whims of selfish
adherents is a necessary evil while the leadership pursues a
biblical teaching agenda, which they believe, will countermand the
tide of selfishness. However, statistics say differently. Such
churches inadvertently contradict their own preaching by their
practice. Churches operating their calendar primarily to cater to
"club members" find that they have to continue to do so for the
long haul. Every parent knows that he teaches his children by his
actions (i.e., deeds not words). Parents who raise their
children, giving them everything they want, communicate to their
children that everything is about them (the children). Children
experiencing this philosophy of child rearing grow up to be
selfish adults believing that everybody owes them something. By
the way, when selfish children do not get their way, they throw a
fit. If you want unselfish children, you do not focus on them all
the time; and if you want unselfish churches, you do not focus on
the "club members" all the time. Preaching the right message is
important, but practicing behavior consistent with that message is
equally critical. As one of my college leaders so often said,
"Your walk talks and your talk talks, but your walk talks louder
than your talk talks." What does your church "walk" say?
Churches that want to keep the world in view (evangelistically
speaking), need to walk the "others" walk not just talk the
"others" talk; otherwise, the church that they want to be will not
be the church that they are. What is the remedy for a church
suffering from myopia? First, a church must be willing to "pay"
for the cure, and the payment is the realization that some of the
people will want to remain selfish, and they will leave when the
church no longer serves their needs. This will hurt.
Nevertheless, is the goal a big church or is the goal a big
reach? Is the goal a church, functioning as the body of the
selfless Savior? A church must ask, "Who do we want to please?"
Second, a church must be patient. Few things are like Jack
and the Beanstalk, changing overnight. Radical shifts would
do more harm than good. Finally, a church must begin taking
gradual steps toward focusing some of its activities and more of
its funds on people and projects that benefit people outside
the church.
Truly,
a New Testament church has the eyes of the risen Savior. May
every local church pray for eyes to see the way the Lord sees and
then to talk and walk to that end.
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Missions
Music
Missionary Aretta Loving recently shared the following extra
verse to the hymn, "How Great Thou Art." Give it to your church's
music leader and encourage it to be sung at your next missions
conference.
And when I think 2,000 tribes are lying
Out in the night and never have heard,
2,000 tribes are in the darkness waiting,
Ne'er having seen or held Thy holy Word.
Then cries my soul, O Lord, O Lord, how long
Before they hear Thy holy Word?
Then cries my soul, O Lord, O Lord, how long
Before they hear how great Thou art?
We pray Thee, Lord, that we may bear the burden
To give those souls Thine own most precious Word.
Grant us, O Lord, the love that will constrain us,
The steadfastness of Thy beloved Son.
Then souls will sing, O Lord, how great Thou art,
For they have heard Thy holy Word.
Then souls will sing, O Lord, how great Thou art,
For they have read how great Thou art.
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Must Read!

"No other book I know of presents the overarching challenge of the
unfinished task so concisely, so comprehensively and so readably.
Here is something you can trust and use and recommend. Superb
job!" (Ralph D. Winter, founder USCWM).
"Every leader interested in world evangelization needs to read
this book" (Dr. John C. Maxwell, author, speaker, founder of INJOY
and EQUIP).
The author presents ten essential characteristics for churches
who want to change the world and finish the Great Commission.
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There are only two basic requirements for missionaries:
A poor sense of smell
A good sense of direction
But there are other beneficial
qualities. See
Ed's List
for some good stuff on this subject.
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