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Responding to Redefining the "Regions Beyond"

Author: Sadiri "Joy" Tira
Date: 27.02.2012
Category: Diasporas

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Originally Posted in English

Since posting my article Redefining the "Regions Beyond", I have actually been “on the move.”  From January 23-27, I was meeting with Filipino Kingdom Workers in the Arabian Gulf; January 30 - February 3, I was teaching Diaspora Missiology in the Philippine Context at the Alliance Graduate School (Manila); February 13-18, I was in Johannesburg, South Africa for the Korean Diaspora Forum and Global Diaspora Network. So pardon me for not responding early on.

To all five diaspora writers: thank you for your gracious comments. Your brief articles pushed the diaspora missions discourses further into the global arena and onto the radar of many "reflective practitioners"; both those in the academic centers and on the mission fields. I hope that our initial conversations on this issue will continue to reverberate to all four corners of the globe with intensity that will produce creative strategies for world evangelization.  My response is in point.

Specifically to:

Miyon Chung, you are correct in your assessment that I am not trying to dismantle the traditional missions strategy but I am again, as I did at Cape Town 2010, arguing that Diaspora Missiology should be complementary with the "old ways." I appreciate your comments that there are multitudes of people who simply cannot move because of their extreme conditions. Hence we must continue to GO there and do all we can to minister to them and usher them into the Kingdom. Your gentle exhortation "we must not forget” is well taken. Thank you again Dr. Chung.

Atul Aghamkar, your Regions Around concept should be pursued. I agree that in our globalized and fast becoming borderless world, increasingly mobile population, and technological age, we really do not need to go far beyond to look for the subjects of evangelism.  We must simply look around. The problem is that church members in general have not caught up with the idea of missions around, because they have been taught (from Sunday School and from pulpits) for years and years that missions is only to “go there”, as if it is more noble to be missionaries out there than to do Kingdom work "across the street" among the people who we are also trying to reach "over there."  One practical example, many (but not all) overseas missionaries receive allowances (e.g. pre-departure allowances, language school allowances, childrens’ allowances, housing allowances, car allowances, vacation allowances, medical and dental allowances, etc.). But how much resources are invested in training and mobilizing home "missionaries" trying to reach the same UUPGs  (Unengaged Unreached People Groups) at home?  I am sure that the figures do not match. Of course there are many factors in determining the missions budget such as the expenses and living standards in every country. The point is:  there is a huge gap left in missions funding, by simply having a dichotomized approached to missions i.e. Foreign vs. Home. I wonder what missions funding would look like if we employed the idea of “missions around” as you suggest.  The words "beyond" and "around" have far-reaching implications not only in our missions strategy but in how we manage our missions. So I would encouraged you, Dr. Aghamkar, to write more about "around" and its implications specifically to Managerial-Missiology. I hope many missions strategists and missions administrators, particularly from missions boards and denominations are reading this conversation. I truly hope that they will join the discussions, but perhaps a face-to-face consultations as Dr. McClung is suggesting is the proper place. For now, I hope many minds are stirred up!

Keywords: diaspora, redefining regions beyond, Chung, Aghamkar, Roberts, McClung, Kemp, Hieber

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Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down dg8074 (0)
United States

It was refreshing here to see the diversity with which the diaspora missions community is engaging for positive results instead of for tearing apart each other and their ideas.  We indeed must recognize the vast number of cultures that are around us, and respond to them in the name of Christ.  With all the efforts that are placed on "going" into the mission field, we often fail to see the enormous potential in meeting the spiritual needs of those who are "coming" to us in the form of diaspora communities.  We must continue promoting these efforts as a necessary part of fulfilling the Great Commission.


20.11.2012
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Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down Raaj_Mondol (0)
India

Thank you Dr. Sadiri for a very timely and relevant article seking to reevaluate some of the dominant mission paradigms of last few centuries. In the new world of 21st century we need to look at our reality and frame responses accordingly. Apart from the geographical frontiers in terms of the mission approach that you have suggested we also need to challenge the concept of mission seen only in terms of "proclamation" to an unreached group. When we respond to the needs of the people around us in the way Jesus responded without making the dichotomized distinction between proclamation and demonstration then there are sufficient ministry opportunities everywhere from Honolulu to Honduras and Miami to Madras. The need of the hour is to question and reformulate some of our mission paradigms according to our new realities. 


29.02.2012

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PhContributeBy Sadiri ’Joy’ Tira 
 
Location: Edmonton
Country: Canada

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