Why Most Mission Trips Are
a Waste of Time 
(And how to make sure yours isn't)
By Noel Becchetti, President, Center for Student Missions
The text of this article can be found on The Center for Student Missions webpage as well as a lot of other pertinent information. The red-colored words are our emphasis.
"We're going to Ecuador!"
The words
ring out in a dimly-lit sanctuary. As music pulses, more lights come on and
more voices ring out: "We'll be working with our denominational missionaries!"
"We're going to repair the roof of their mission house!" "We're going to put
on a Bible club for the village children!"
The voices? Members of a
youth group in a large church in the Pacific Northwest. They were presenting
their upcoming mission trip to members of their congregation. Me? I was the
guest speaker, brought in to inspire the adults to support their students' summer
mission plans. No problem--except that I was in a quandary. What can I honestly
say to these people, I thought, when I know that this trip is mostly
a waste of everyone's time and money?
Say What?
Those words
may read strangely, coming from the keyboard of someone who is dedicated to
advancing short-term mission and service opportunities for young people and
adults. But I'm concerned that many (if not most) of our well-intentioned mission
and service efforts are misguided. And as the world of youth-ministry mission
and service continues to grow (and time, energy, and financial costs continue
to rise), it's imperative that we make the most of the precious resources that
God has given to us to work with. Since the key to solving any dilemma is to
first identify the root causes, let's take a look at how we get ourselves off
course.
THE ROOT OF THE PROBLEM (Mirror, Please)
"We have
met the enemy," the saying goes, "and it is us." Afraid so--the first place
to look when trying to figure out why we're wasting our time is in the mirror
(me too, so don't feel too bad). There are three common errors we North-American,
Western-Culture types make that can torpedo our best efforts:
We want
to control the situation. This is understandable, given the responsibility
we carry in taking a group of kids into a strange and potentially dangerous
location. The problem is, missions by its very nature
is a cross-cultural experience. We're choosing to go into a situation where
the values, norms, cultural rules, and methods are radically different from
ours. If we continue to insist on control--which means imposing our cultural
and methodological framework onto our ministry partners--we create two
wasteful byproducts:
Our
ministry partners divert us to meaningless (in their framework) tasks that fit
our control grid. A friend of mine has coordinated mission and service trips
into northern Mexico for years. One of his sites is an orphanage, full of boys
and girls dying for love and attention. And The Wall. "I've got this wall,"
he told me. "When a group comes that can't handle what's required to build relationships
with Mexican kids, or insists on completing a task so they can 'accomplish'
something, I put them to work on The Wall. They feel like they're a big help,
and it keeps them out of everyone's hair so the ministry isn't compromised."
We
pull our ministry partners away from more meaningful work. "People need
to remember," an inner-city friend from Chicago told me recently, "that a
ministry pays a price to accommodate volunteers. It takes a lot of time and
energy to set up an environment that can effectively handle volunteer help."
While there are a number of legitimate reasons why a ministry partner may choose
to allow volunteer groups to come in on a "make-work" basis (expose kids to
the mission field, build awareness of the ministry, generate financial support),
it's a waste of their distinctive gifts and skills to force them to accommodate
our control issues. Remember the high school group headed for Ecuador? The missionaries
really didn't need their roof repaired; they figured that it was what the kids
could handle. But for two weeks, it took them away from their core ministry--an
outreach to the adult men of their village.
We want
to define what is 'ministry'. The 'ministry' that God calls our mission
partners to pursue may be (and often is) the exact opposite of what we would
do. The point isn't to decide whose definition of ministry is "right"; the point
is that as we insist on defining what ministry is in a context we know little
about, we head down the garden path. Ever wonder why so many other cultures
don't maintain their homes and buildings up to our standards? Maybe other things
are more important to them.
One of the most common cultural
collisions occurs between linear cultures (like ours) and nonlinear cultures
(like Latin). Our culture is task-oriented; Latin culture is people-oriented.
Our culture is time-sensitive; Latin culture is situation-sensitive. Glen Kehrein,
co-author (with Raleigh Washington) of a terrific book on racial reconciliation
entitled Breaking Down Walls (1993, Moody Press), relates an incident that illustrates
how these basic differences can collide:
"While visiting missionary
friends in Mexico City, [his wife] Lonni and I decided to go sight-seeing. On
the way to the pyramids outside the city, our friends dropped off a package
for a friend of theirs. In the U.S. the encounter would have lasted thirty seconds--tops.
In Mexico it involved extended conversation and refreshments. Our friends, Rick
and Diane, had never met the recipient and would, most likely, never see him
again. Two hours later we were back on the road."
"As whites we often see such
encounters as a 'waste of time', rushing to judgment rather than attempting
to understand the culture. The Mexican value of relationships is often viewed
as laziness." When we give in to our task orientation and define "doing" as
ministry (one of our most common mistakes), we create more wasteful repercussions:
We spend an inordinate
amount of time, energy and money to do 'ministry' that is a low priority to
those we're attempting to serve. A few years ago, a friend of mine went
with a group of other adult men from his church to a jungle village in Brazil.
They were there to build a new meeting room for the mission compound. "The only
problem was," he told me, "the weather was horrible the whole time--driving
rain 24 hours a day. It was the worst possible time to build a building; but
we'd come to accomplish a task, and by George, we were going to do it!" He went
on: "It got to be ludicrous. The villagers were laughing their heads off. They
couldn't figure out why the gringos were so loco that they'd slop around in
the rain and mud when anyone with half a brain was inside."
We tempt our ministry
partners to tell us only what we want to hear. I've got another friend who
also works in northern Mexico. He's built a network of relationships with Mexican
pastors all over the region. There's just one problem, he says: "Some of the
pastors have learned how to make a good living telling Americans what they want
to hear. They'll tug their heartstrings with some cute children, then tell them
how, if they could only build a new wing on their church, they could do so much
more for the kids. It's not that these pastors have such bad intentions; they've
been overwhelmed by the amount of money and material resources that Americans
can pour into a situation." Buildings are not automatically bad. But these Mexican
pastors have become sidetracked from the ministry that is most effective in
their culture (relationships) because of the overwhelming influence (and its
attending temptations) of well-meaning but ignorant groups.
We want
to see certain kinds of results. After all, we're investing a lot of time,
energy and money into this mission trip. Surely God (not to mention the church
board) wants to see some results from our efforts! True enough--but in rural
Ecuador or inner-city Cleveland, "results" can be tough to pin down. This pitfall
can be especially treacherous when we're ministering in difficult, complicated
situations. It would be great if homeless crack addicts
could meet Jesus, get clean, and land a job in a week; unfortunately, it rarely
happens that way. Results like "We got to know some homeless men and
women and told them that God loves them", or "We helped the missionaries hand
out information for an upcoming service to the village men as they came out
of the cantina" can be tough to quantify. But insisting on attaining results
that fit our criterion for effective use of resources creates still more wasteful
ripple effects:
We run the risk of seeing
'results' that aren't really there. "What a great day!" one group leader
told me after his group spent the afternoon at a Washington D.C. homeless shelter.
"We handed out tracts and witnessed to dozens of guys. At least ten men accepted
Christ!" Well, maybe...but homeless shelter residents are (unfortunately) familiar
with evangelistic blitzkriegs and know how to go through the motions so they
can get some peace and quiet.
We could do real damage
to our ministry partners' long-term work. When the Iron Curtain fell, there
was an explosion of evangelistic outreach from the West into the countries of
the former Soviet bloc. Huge stadium rallies brought together thousands of people,
virtually all whom, it seemed, raised their hands to accept Jesus. Unfortunately,
the organizers of most of these events forgot to consider how they were going
to follow up these respondents. Guess who absorbed the blow created by this
phenomenon? The men and women who had patiently worked over the years to smuggle
in Bibles and Christian literature, connect with believers behind the Iron Curtain,
and support clandestine youth camps and other outreaches. One friend of mine
who has worked in the Eastern Bloc for more than a quarter-century recounted
how he was approached by an American group that had held a crusade in Romania.
"We've got over 2,000 decision cards that were filled out by people who attended
our crusade," they told him. "Can you follow them up?" His ministry was staggering
under the weight of trying to meet such needs while continuing the work he'd
been called to for decades. (In 1993, the head of a respected mission agency
reaching a former Iron Curtain country concluded that the results achieved from
all the evangelistic efforts made into his country were essentially zilch.)
WASTE NOT, WANT NOT
Take heart--your
mission and service trip can be a wise and effective investment of your time,
energy, and resources. All you've got to do is keep three principles in mind
as you prepare yourself and your students:
Let Go
and Let God. Several years ago, a friend of mine and I were able to gain
an invitation from the Romanian government to bring a group of baseball coaches
to their country to conduct instructional clinics for their youth baseball program.
(We were also given complete freedom to share with the kids about our faith.)
I was in charge of the previsit; so, in the dead of winter, I headed over to
Bucharest for my first meeting with Cristian Costescu, the Secretary-General
of the Romanian Baseball Federation.
Romania is a Latin culture.
It's people-centered, situation-sensitive, and they don't sweat the details.
As Cristian, my taxi-driver/translator friend, and I sat in a Bucharest restaurant
for the first of what were many hours-long meals together, sweat began to pour
down my forehead as I realized that there was no way that we could nail down
the logistics of our trip ahead of time. Where we would stay, what the schedule
would be, who we'd interface with--every query was met with the reply, "You
will be our guests. It is not a problem."
I had two options: I could
pull the plug on the trip, or I could place our group in Cristian and his associates'
hands and trust them to do right by us. I decided on the latter. The orientation
meeting with my guys when I returned home was, let's say, brief. "How's it look?"
they asked. "It's going to be great," I replied. "How are things going to work?"
they asked. "I have no idea," I replied. "But we can trust them--they'll work
it all out."
Which they did--in Romanian,
roundabout, by-our-standards-last-minute fashion. It was a fantastic trip. The
clinics went great; the kids were responsive; God put us in touch with local
Romanian Christians who were willing to follow up with interested players after
we departed. Most importantly, my wife and I established friendships that we've
maintained over the years, friends we've gone back to see several times since
then. And interestingly (and appropriately) enough, we've 'done' more ministry
just sitting around visiting with our Romanian friends than we ever accomplished
during our mission trip.
Most
of the control issues that hover around a mission and service trip concern method
rather than goal. We're all after the same things; it's in considering how to
get there that our differences emerge. As we allow our methods to be adjusted
to fit the situation we're entering, we communicate a powerful message of trust
and respect to our ministry partners that will ensure our time will be well
spent.
A ministry
by any other name would smell as sweet. In 1992, my wife Kyle and I started
the Chicago branch of the Center for Student Missions. As we began to learn
our way around, we made friends with a number of African-American Christians
who attended a church on Chicago's South Side.
One Saturday, I headed down
to their church to get my car hand-washed at the facility they'd set up in a
warehouse next door to their sanctuary. Kirk Bell, one of my new friends, came
by. As we chatted, I looked across the street to the new sanctuary they were
building out of what had been a burned-out grocery store. "Kirk, we could bring
all kinds of work groups to help you with your church building," I said (in
a dazzling display of Anglo task-oriented linear brilliance). "That would be
great," Kirk (diplomatically) replied, "but what we'd really like to do is to
train teams of Christians to go back with us into the projects where we grew
up and share Jesus with the folks who live there."
Their ministry goals looked
nothing like mine--and, as I was to discover, it took some real selling to convince
our groups that traipsing into housing projects (where 100% of the residents
were African-American) with a team of black evangelists was a good idea. But
sharing Jesus with people in the Stateway Gardens housing project with Kirk
and his friends has become one of the most powerful ministries our groups experience
during their times in Chicago. By deep-sixing our focus on task and redefining
our understanding of ministry, we were able to see God work in ways we couldn't
have otherwise imagined.
Leave
the driving to Him. Have you read Matthew 25:31-40 lately? It's one
of Jesus' most significant discourses. After all, he's articulating the actions
by which God decides who's going to heaven and who's headed You Know Where.
What's fascinates me in this passage is what he doesn't say. Do you notice
what he leaves out in his charge to feed the hungry, clothe the naked, and minister
to the sick? He says nothing about what results are supposed to be achieved
through these actions. There's no talk about ending hunger, defeating poverty,
or seeing the prisoner go straight. He says simply to Do It, because when we
do, we're somehow ministering directly to Our Lord.
Jesus gives us the freedom
to go into our mission and service trips with the goal of just plain ministering.
We don't have to achieve certain "results" to justify our investment. Frankly,
we might not recognize some of God's divine results when we see them! But as
we can remove our cultural blinders, discard the limitations we place on God's
definition of ministry, and "leave the driving" to Him, we can begin to understand
what it means to be Jesus' hands and feet to a hurting world.
JUST CALL ME-CHICKEN
So what did
I say to the congregation that was sending their students to Ecuador? To be
honest, I wasn't very bold. I played it safe and affirmed what was praiseworthy
about their trip--their willingness to move out of their comfort zone, their
desire to serve God, their heart for the children they were looking forward
to meeting. But I took comfort in the knowledge that they were under the guidance
of a solid youth leader whom I knew would learn from the experience (he did)
and approach future mission and service trips with more flexibility and sensitivity
(he has). The "result" has been healthy relationships with ministry partners
all over the world, and students whose lives have been changed forever.
That's what we want our kids
to experience. And that's mission and service that's worth anyone's time.
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