Thursday, September 23, 2010

Why we do Short-term

Jen, Serge and kids in Rwanda
Jen Kamari writes:
These thoughts have been rolling around in my mind for well over a month. They started when I received an email from someone who reads my blog wanting to know my thoughts.
Is short-term mission really worth it? 
Do short-term teams and individuals really make a difference? 
Isn't better to just send the money? 
She was confused. She has been on short-term mission experiences before and believes that God is calling her and her family to do it again. She had some correspondence from someone else here in Rwanda giving some negative feedback on short-term... What were my thoughts she asked?
WELL... time to get up on my little soapbox again :-) 
There is so much to say about this, but in brief - maybe... :-) 
- If short-term teams and individuals are prepared, orientated and hosted well... they are amazing opportunities.

- Hosts need to believe that short-term teams or individuals will and can impact the ongoing ministry in the location. If hosts feel like short-term is just something they should be doing and not something they are passionate about, of course they are going to feel like short-term takes too much time away from 'real' ministry and that they cost money AND they should NOT be hosting short-termers!
- How else does a long-term missionary have a chance to recruit other long-term workers? Best they come and see and give God the space to allow their passion to grow for a certain country or people group.
- Spend the money to come! Sure you could send us your $4000 and get a tax receipt but then what? That would most likely be it. If you come, I know we have gained an ambassador for the ministry here. 

We've gained prayer partners, financial partners because someone has come to minister alongside of us. We've gained lifelong friends.. not just us, but fellow Rwandans as well. This would not have happened if you had not come.

We are just coming out of summer where we hosted four interns and two short-term teams, over three months. All a bit wild and crazy for sure - we didn't sleep enough, spent more money than we had to live a bit more conveniently so we could function in sanity, we forgot to pick Prince (our son) from school more than once, we didn't have much family time... but oh, the benefits!

Our kids still pray for interns and individuals on teams that were here last year, they talk all the time about the new friends they made this summer, again we've had SO many email from this years 'batch' of short-termers of how their lives were changed because of their time with us... and how it continues to challenge them in their day to day life (gosh we're privileged that God entrusts us with his children!), but most of all... they loved on Rwandans, they gave more than what they thought they had and they learned from their brothers and sisters here.

SO... if anyone out there is thinking that all this short-term stuff just isn't worth it... just give me a few minutes of your time.

I'll tell you what has been my experience for over 15 years .... lives changed! lives transformed! lives being lived with a greater sense of the world that God has created.

What more could you want!?

1 comment:

Michael Lueck said...

This is something I struggle with... my heart desires long term. straight line, consistent... yet over and over I see the Lord working in short spurts of time, never again to be repeated.

To me, this struggle between the powers of Light and darkness is sort of like watching the movie "The Sting". Lots of prep work, make a move, then clean up the prep work... over and over...

Like our heart's desire to be working in my wife's homeland of Estonia. We have been planning since somewhere around March of 2000... still waiting! Back in 2004 or 2005, we hosted a dinner for Missionaries. We asked that we could host some from Europe somewhere. A group of Romanian's were coming and we were able to serve them. Them being in our home, I was able to tell the Lord, "All right, if not home to Estonia, then Romania would be acceptable." The Missionaries from Romania had a daughter going to university in Chicago, so she came for the dinner as well. To see photos of their smiling faces... a pre-shadow of the banquet table in Heaven! Shortly after the parent's return to Romania, the husband/father was diagnosed with advanced cancer, painful cancer that would soon end his stay here on Earth. Those pictures of the meal with their daughter... priceless... Yet my selfish heart grumbles that merely serving one meal is not enough, not good enough, "gotta be more!" I remind myself... look at the photos... look at the smiles...

This world is not our home... It will never be enough... My heart aches for eternity...