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Transformation
Aug 3, 2011
Taking a group of people on a short term missions trip, is one of the most transformational steps a leader can take. A
short term missions trip, short term mission tripsshort term mission trip yields long-term results both in passion gained and blessings acquired. And here are four reasons why:
1. A short term missions trip brings growth and life change. There are many reasons for this. First, by being removed from our comfort zone of familiar surroundings, new layers of character development can happen in our lives. Meeting people from other cultures, eating different food, communicating across language barriers: all of these things present a huge opportunity for growth. Youth mission trips provide a fertile growth environment!
2. A short term missions trip builds faith. Think about it: short term mission trips require faith at every phase. From the moment the decision is made “we will go,” until we step down out of the plane from the return flight, our faith is tested and grown. Hebrews 11:1 says “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.” In a short term mission trip, there is a great deal of hope in the hearts and minds of everybody. Hope, by nature, invests a lot of emotion and energy in what is not seen. We hope things will turn out the way we envision them. We hope we can raise all the money we need to go. We hope we can connect with the people in another country. Kids who go on youth mission trips grow in faith!
Faith is the substantiation of our hope. It puts meet on the bones of our vision casting sessions. As faith grows, these bones come alive and awesome things happen. Short term mission trips afford the opportunity for faith to thrive and for awesome things to happen.
3. A short term missions trip opens our eyes. Few of us are aware of the depth of our blindness. It is impossible to stay in one culture for an extended period of time without succumbing to its illusions and blind spots. Conversely, when we are exposed to new cultures, new people, and new ways of seeing and doing things, our eyes are opened, we experience a paradigm shift, and our world is expanded. Teens who participate in youth mission trips gain intelligence!
4. A short term missions trip builds teamwork. Do you want to see your team work together, love together, pray together, and grow together? The best way to do that is to take them on a short term mission trip together! This is a model that has been around a long time. In the Old Testament, the “schools of the prophets” would go from village to village and proclaim the word and works of God. When Jesus ministered, he used this model, traveling from village to village with his disciples. When the Apostle Paul m launched into ministry, he used the same model. His teams were international, had both men and women, were interdenominational (people from both sides of the circumcision issue), were inter=racial (different skin colors), and were all interested in making an impact. Being on a team places our interests in the success and fulfillment of others and not just ourselves. This is where synergy comes in: “The whole is greater than the sum of its parts.” Teamwork! Having led many short term mission trips over the years, I can attest that all the above is true. Short term mission trips rock! And youth mission trips are the best investment a parent can make!
Two More Reasons To Take Your Team On A Short Term Missions Trip
In my last blog I pointed out that short term mission trips are a catalyst for life change, a sure-fire way to build
teamwork, and can be real eye openers. Below I want to give a couple of more very important reasons for short term mission trips…
A short term missions trip blesses the receiving culture. The whole purpose of missions and the whole purpose of God on this earth can be found in the covenant He made with Abraham, the father of our faith. We find this covenant in Genesis 12: 1-3: GOD told Abram:
“Leave your country, your family, and your father’s home for a land that I will show you. I’ll make you a great nation and bless you. I’ll make you famous; you’ll be a blessing. I’ll bless those who bless you; those who curse you I’ll curse. All the families of the Earth will be blessed through you.”
We see some interesting elements in this passage that find fruition in a short term mission trip.
“Leave your country, your family, and your father’s home for a land that I will show you.”
First, we leave our culture and embark on a short term mission trip to a land God shows us. What a dynamic! We simply pack up and make the trip and He operates as our tour guide! Youth mission trips are a golden opportunity to see God work!
“I’ll make you a great nation and bless you. I’ll make you famous”
Did it ever occur to us that by investing the time and money to go and bless people in another culture, we are bringing greatness to our nation in God’s eyes, and we are also bringing to ourselves godly renown in the eyes of those who receive us?
“you’ll be a blessing. I’ll bless those who bless you; those who curse you I’ll curse”
This is missions in a nutshell: to be a blessing. Youth missions trips are blessings in motion. But maybe God is using our short term mission trip in ways that serve His sovereign purposes as well. He wants to give the people we minister to the opportunity to share in the grace of being a blessing, and bring them to the crossroads of either receiving or rejecting the gospel of grace. Either way, God is glorified. No culture, having experienced and yet rejected the sweet gesture of people coming on a short term mission trip to love and serve them, can stand before God and accuse Him of not loving them.
A short term missions trip glorifies God. God receives glory when the nations come to know him and worship at His throne. God is glorified when teenagers mobilize on youth mission trips!
“All the families of the Earth will be blessed through you.” This is the culmination, the apex of mission enterprise. And by engaging in a short term mission trip, we get to be a part God’s awesome plan!
It is summed up in Revelation 7:9
“I looked again. I saw a huge crowd, too huge to count. Everyone was there—all nations and tribes, all races and languages. And they were standing, dressed in white robes and waving palm branches, standing before the Throne and the Lamb and heartily singing: Salvation to our God on his Throne! Salvation to the Lamb!
Short term mission trips bring glory to God and they are a lot of fun. Leading youth mission trips, while taxing at times, is worth it! To quote NIKE: just do it!
What Is An Evangelist?
How beautiful are the feet of those who bring good news! But what do they do when they get there? What is an evangelist, whether it be in the context of a mission trip to Mexico or missions in general? Here is a great little video produced by a young lady we had the privilege of mentoring so many years ago, and who continues to let her light shine. We stumbled across her blog. Thanks, Melinda, for the pleasant reminder of what evangelism is all about!!!
To find out more about Melinda’s work, go to her blog at:
Connecting the Dots
It just occurred to me this evening that life is like a big canvas and the people we come across are like dots—people in particular points in time and place who give us the opportunity to connect, to love, and to color God’s world with smidgen of His glory. Every encounter is an opportunity to love, and every situation is unique. Every pain tells its own story. Every act of kindness performs a certain kind of rescue and provides a comfort and a support that only the person on the receiving end can fully appreciate. Each act of kindness may seem isolated and insignificant at the time, but only as we begin connect the dots we can see God’s tapestry emerge—the big picture of His purpose. Each event where God grace flowed through our lives to touch another creates one pixel, and each pixel contributes to the whole picture. AWESOME!
Left alone we are trapped in a spiritual cubicle, unable to see or appreciate the big picture—the color and design of which we are only a small part. Certainly this is what Paul was getting at when he wrote:
“that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith; that you, being rooted and grounded in love, may be able to comprehend with all the saints what is the width and length and depth and height—to know the love of Christ which passes knowledge; that you may be filled with all the fullness of God.” Ephesians 3:18
Our mission in life is to stay at our post, eyes wide open to the needs around us, and ears nestled close to the beating heart of the God we serve. Our prayer is that as you consider a missions trip to Mexico or to Australia, you will seek God’s leading for you and your team.
Sow The Seed and Watch It Grow
Short Term Missions Trip Strategy
…and Sowing Seeds
The kingdom of God is all about sowing seeds and watching them grow. Maybe this is why Jesus talked about seeds so much. Jesus was the SEED of Abraham, the fulfillment-in-person of God’s stated purpose to “bless all the families of the earth.”
Jesus referred to Himself, using the seed analogy, when He stated in John 12:24
“I tell you the truth, unless a kernel of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains only a single seed. But if it dies, it produces many seeds.”
The fist time I read that and the penny dropped, I realized that the death of Jesus was not simply a one time event that would be recorded in history and forgotten, but a springboard to action for millions of Christ followers who would step out and sow their lives as seeds—to “throw down”a and commit to be a blessing at whatever the cost.
Think about it. A seed is is a tiny thing loaded with potential–and finds fruition only as it is sown in faith. Once that happens, God goes work and brings life out of darkness. In time what is hidden below the surface, known only to us and God, burgeons for all to see.
Jesus described this incredible kingdom phenomenon in Mark 4:26-28
“This is what the kingdom of God is like. A man scatters seed on the ground. Night and day, whether he sleeps or gets up, the seed sprouts and grows, though he does not know how. All by itself the soil produces grain—first the stalk, then the head, then the full kernel in the head. As soon as the grain is ripe, he puts the sickle to it, because the harvest has come.”
I believe in these two verses we find the key to a successful missions trip to Mexico, Australia, or anywhere. Missionaries, whether serving long term or on short term missions trip, go as harvest workers. As such, they will sow seed, they will work and water the ground, they will watch and pray, they will trust God for increase, and when the time is ripe they will harvest. That’s it. That is what missions is all about.
How do we sow seed? We can speak God’s word (proclamation), do acts of kindness (demonstration), plant ourselves into a community of people and ask God to shine through us (incarnation), and sow prayers in the dark, private closet-moments as we lift those we love before God’s throne (intercession), banking on the promise that
“the Father who sees in secret, will reward you openly.” Matt. 6:4
I once heard a remarkable analogy from a remarkable Christian missionary by the name of Danny Lehmann that I would like to pass on to you. According to Danny, every missionary is a “harvest worker” who goes out into God’s harvest field wearing a workman’s belt.On this belt is strapped a bag of seed, a trowel, a watering can, and a sickle. Each of these tools are vital to his work, but which tool is used at any given tome depends upon the stage of work at hand.
Seed sowing is the initial stage, and is of course absolutely vital if there is going to be any life or growth at all. How people to need to hear God’s words spoken and see His love demonstrated! A short term missions trip is an opportunity to sow seeds that will grow for eternity. Youth missions trips, by and large, are seed sowing enterprises! Missions in Mexico are seed-beds that are bursting with the fruit that comes from the love and passion of young seed sowers!
But in many cases the tool most necessary may be the watering can. How people need the refreshing water of encouragement and understanding! Perhaps the trowel is most needed, to dig deeper and open the ground up to receive the seed and the water!
Ultimately, the sickle will be used to harvest the crop. In evangelistic terms, this is generally viewed in evangelical circles as the point of “conversion,” never to be under estimated or neglected. And yet, certainly only one aspect of harvest work! As someone who served a minister of evangelism for many years in the local church and has led missions in Mexico, Asia. Australia and Europe, I can say I have a strong belief in the power of a God encounter via the simple proclamation and demonstration of the gospel. Youth missions trips provide such an opportunity. But over the years I have come to appreciate the fact that conversion is process that is in motion long before the sickle is employed. Think about it: “first the stalk, then the head, then the full kernel in the head” ALL happens before the harvest! This should be a sobering parable for all missionaries—and should open up a whole new understanding to us as to what kingdom work is really all about.
On Tip-toes With God
If I thought God wasn’t the most exciting and interesting person in the universe, I would probably look elsewhere for another God. After all, that is what worship is all about: finding someone worth giving your all and “throwing down” all you have and putting it all on the line for Him.
Life’s too short to waste time doing anything else.
One of my favorite words in the English language is enthusiasm. I like the way it rolls off the tongue. I also like what it communicates. When you break this delicious word down into bite sized pieces, it yields its root meaning: “en” means “in,” and “thusiasm” comes from the root “theos.” So basically “enthusiasm” is the state of being “in God”!
God is the most enthusiastic person in the universe! Every moment of His existence is infused with love, discovery and the joy of being alive. If this is true of Him, how much more should it be true of us?
Isaac Newton once wrote:
“I was like a boy playing on the sea-shore, and diverting myself now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me.”
Here is one of the greatest scientists of all time sharing his secret to life–he was a boy playing on the seashore diverting himself now and then! And all the while the great ocean of truth lay undiscovered before him!
Youth missions trips to Mexico, Australia, or anywhere we have not been before offers an opportunity to learn something new, engage in interesting relationships, find dimensions of your personal faith you didn’t realize even existed, experience new dimensions of God’s grace, and discover how big and beautiful our world really is.
We serve a Mighty God who says to us:
“Are you tired? Worn out? Burned out on religion? Come to me. Get away with me and you’ll recover your life. I’ll show you how to take a real rest. Walk with me and work with me—watch how I do it. Learn the unforced rhythms of grace. I won’t lay anything heavy or ill-fitting on you. Keep company with me and you’ll learn to live freely and lightly.” (Matthew 11:28-29 TMSG)
I want to learn those unforced rhythms of grace! Like Isaac Newton, I want to run free on the seashore of God’s country and see yet another dimension of His love for me!
Inspiring Leadership = Mission Accomplished
Our ability as leaders in any field hinges on the style of leadership we employ. Leadership that inspires and motivates, whether it be in the context of the local church, an organization, the classroom or a mission trip to Mexico, is the elusive butterfly of success for every one of us in the position of working with people. While it is obvious that lack of leadership poses a problem, what is often overlooked is that wrong models of leadership can do more harm than good–dwarfing long term efforts and in many cases soiling the reputation of your organization.
I cannot tell you the number of people I have crossed paths with over the years who were bruised and battered by leaders they worked with. Some of these people have dropped out of ministry. Others have fallen from the faith. All of them have a story to tell of leadership that operated from a wrong model: men or women who thought they were doing the right thing but in fact were doing more harm than good.
In this article I want to focus on two contrasting styles of leadership and demonstrate how one style is detrimental while the other is radically effective. Whether you are leading a team on a mission trip to Mexico, leading a family or running a business, leadership style counts!
T R A N S A C T I O N A L L E A D E R S H I P M O D E L
I will start with transactional leadership. This is a model of leadership that sets out to get people motivated to do what the leader wants by employing methods that are leader-centric and , frankly, rooted in the principles of the power and coercion. (Avoiding a “power trip” while on a missions trip to Mexico is vital!) Here are some of the marks of transactional leadership:
Old, traditional type of leadership. A point could be made that this is an “old school” leadership approach, because it is giving way, in many circles, to a new way of doing things. (I use that term advisedly, however, because the original pattern Jesus laid out for us is NOT a transactional leadership model, and the argument could be made that “old school” is to do things Jesus’ way.)
Based on power—“a power trip.” This is a key feature of transactional style leadership. The transactional leader has one thing in mind: to get his followers to do what he wants them to do. The vision he has in his mind is the ultimate arbiter of right and wrong. And since he is the leader, it is his job to protect that vision at all costs. People he leads are either part of the solution or a part of the problem—and he approaches them accordingly. Needless to say, there are serious problems to this line of thinking. If a leader views people as pawns on a chessboard, they will begin to feel like pawns on a chessboard.
Works through coercion. The question always on the mind of the transactional leader is: “How can I get the follower to do what I want them to do to meet my goal?” And the inevitable answer always comes down to some form of manipulation or coercion. Bribes and threats come into play, though these words would never be used, of course. Which exposes another problem that arises with this style of leadership: dishonesty and duplicity. Not good!
Leader gives direction and you are expected to follow it. On the surface, this doesn’t sound like a bad idea. After all, knowing how to follow orders is essential to teamwork, isn’t it? But what if the leader asks you to do something you know is wrong? Or what if, in asking for clarification, you are denied a hearing and told to “shut up and submit?” While the leader might have the upper hand and get her way, at the end of the day YOU will not feel like you want to keep following this leader, which begs the question: is this person really leading?
The mission of every leader should be to multiply himself–and that is a risky, but rewarding, exercise! What often trips a leader up in the process is the erroneous assumption that if he gives his power away, he loses something. The reverse is true: power that is clung to evaporates–and power invested expands!
Factory model. This paradigm is what drives the transactional leader. He sees himself as the owner of a factory exists with one thing in mind: to produce the end result that he envisions. Everything that happens in the factory exists to serve this leader’s vision. People are like workers in the factory who each have their part t play in producing that end result. Their work must be done in a certain way, as prescribed by the leader, and their output must be acceptable to the leader or they will risk being replaced. In return for a “job well done” the leader will give perks: money, security, recognition, a place in a society, a pat on the back, etc. Underlying everything that goes on in a transactional environment is the unspoken understanding of a contract between the leader and the “follower.”
Very authoritarian. This style of leadership tends to be very authoritarian. Unwillingness to submit to the leader is viewed as rebellion against God. There tends to be an over-emphasis on “what the leader says.” This may sound cultic, and indeed it is at it’s root. But it is a common style of leadership that has permeated all sectors of ministry and business. Even if this style operates in a civilized. controlled way, it will not be effective in the long run because at the end of the day leadership that is based on centralized power will eventually break down.
Abundance of Rules and Regulations. To keep a transactional model on track, there must be an abundance of rules and relations. Otherwise, how could the actions of “followers” be controlled by the leader?
Little tolerance for Diversity: A transactional leader does not tolerate diversity simply because in her mind it does not contribute to efficiency. The “my way or the highway” mentality sets in. Diversity is seen as an obstacle to success.
Strong emphasis on hierarchy: Put simply, in a transactional environment the “lower downs” are treated differently than the “higher-ups.”
Information bottle-neck: The transactional leader guards information as a tool to get what he wants from his followers. Decisions are made by announcement, leaving the “followers” to feel out of the loop and disenfranchised. A big emphasis on departments and compartments marks the transactional environment—and people are punished for working outside their “department.” Innovation and teamwork are squelched.
Loyalty is the Highest Virtue: A transactional leader values loyalty above all else, including truthfulness. Tests of one’s loyalty abound. To fail to comply with the leader’s wishes is perceived as disloyalty and may result in demotion or being forced to leave the group. In a transactional environment, truth-tellers feel compelled to leave. In such cases, the transactional leader “makes an example of” those who leave, and a strong appeal for loyalty is given to those who remain.
Truth-tellers are the seeing eye of any team or organization and when they leave, the organization loses its way.
T R A N S F O R M A T I O NA L L E A D E R S H I P M O D E L
The transformational model is all about teamwork. Team members are seen as the most valuable asset to the organization. While the leader has a vision, his idea of how that vision can be accomplished is not set in stone. Others are invited to participate and add strength and value to the team. In the transformational leader’s mind developing people on the team IS the vision. What is accomplished through the team is gravy. Here are some of the marks of transactional leadership:
Emphasis on developing people versus promoting a program: In John chapter 17 Jesus told His Father “I have completed the work you gave me to do.” As Robert Coleman, author of The Master Plan of Evangelism writes: “His men were his work!”
Influence instead of Power: This is a very important distinction. Power implies force–shock and awe–to bring about a condition of obedience. Influence implies imparting an inward motivation to follow and emulate someone. The spirit that drives Christian mission is to renounce worldly power and promote godly influence! These words are worlds apart! Guess which one Jesus advocated?
Personal initiative is encouraged: To have team members who are thinking outside the box, working with others to find solutions, and coming up with new ideas is the GOAL of the transformational leader. While such activity might warrant punishment from a transactional leader, it will bring promotion and recognition in a transformational environment.
Liberating and Empowering: Believing that there is no one way to get a job done, the transformational leader frees team members to stop out, take ownership and and do things in a way that puts their signature on the work.
Encourages trust at all levels: The transformational leader has a goal that each person will be fulfilled and sees every team member as having a unique set of gifts and talents that should be encouraged and developed. The more teamwork and innovation thrives, the happier the leader.
Application of principles instead of rules to follow: While rules constrain and squelch innovation, the application of principles unleashes it. Jesus, the ultimate transformational leader, showed us in the Sermon on the Mount how principles supersede rules and regulations. “You have heard from Moses…but I say…” Principles provide inner motivation and energy to accomplish a task. When the principle is understood and applied, rules and regulations are unnecessary.
The leader is not the superior. Jesus threw down the gauntlet by say “He who is the greatest in God’s kingdom is the servant of all.” and “whoever desires to be first (chief) among you, let him be your slave–just as the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life a ransom for many.”(Matt. 20:27) But there is the clincher:
Jesus said to them, “The kings of the Gentiles lord it over them; and those who exercise authority over them call themselves Benefactors. But you are not to be like that. Instead, the greatest among you should be like the youngest, and the one who rules like the one who serves. For who is greater, the one who is at the table or the one who serves? Is it not the one who is at the table? But I am among you as one who serves.” (Luke 22:25-27)
In other words, the leader of the team serves the team members by providing them the opportunity to develop their skills and talents. That is the goal of transformational leadership! Other traits of transformational leadership are:
Accountability at all levels…
Truth telling is encouraged…
Everybody participates in the decisions…
Structure is very flexible and adaptable…
Great respect for the individual and openness toward entrepreneurs…
Always visionary in nature…
Need I write more? It is clear that transformational leadership is Biblical, inspires confidence, and in the long run will go much further in accomplishing the task before us!