Long-term Sending Resources

Most churches that send a member oversees as a missionary only send one missionary during any generation of that church’s life. If every church sent one missionary to an unreached people group during each generation of its life, we could see the term “unreached people group” become obsolete.

But only doing something once presents at least two challenges: (1) there is no opportunity to learn from past experience, and (2) the plan for assessing, training, sending, and supporting the missionary is put together on the fly.

The result can be: (a) a subpar preparation for being a missionary and, thereby, less church-planting effectiveness, and (b) an over-reliance on parachurch organizations that can leave the missionary on the field feeling isolated from the church that was a vital part of their calling.

This project is an effort to fill that gap. It contains the sending strategy of The Summit Church, which was compiled in consultation with other churches that have the opportunity to send hundreds of individuals to serve as missionaries in unreached people groups.

Our goal is to provide a resource—and commentary on how to use that resource—so that every church can effectively walk with every member willing to take the gospel to an unreached people group before (assessing and training), during (sending and supporting), and after (receiving) their time as a missionary.

Phase One

Assessment

The first part of caring for a missionary is helping them assess their calling, competency, and spiritual-emotional-relational health. We serve (a) each potential missionary and (b) entire mission teams well by carefully vetting candidates. Our passion for the idea of missions cannot cause us to take shortcuts in the assessment phase. At The Summit Church, we use The Five C's.

Assessment for being a cross-cultural missionary cannot be a point-in-time measure. The qualities above need to be evidenced (a) across an extended period of time, (b) in a variety of settings, and (c) with different types of people.

This assessment should also not be done by one person, or one type of person (e.g., pastors-elders). That is why The Summit Church’s assessment phase is done in four steps, over an extended period of time, and includes the voices of several different groups of people.

  1. Small Group Participation (sample: small group leader reference form)
  2. Serve Through Your Campus (sample: campus pastor reference form)
  3. Short-term Trip(s) (always have easy access to upcoming trips)
  4. Self-assessment, Application, and Interview (sample: self-assessment form)
The Five C's

The first part of assessment is knowing the qualities that are essential to be an effective missionary and the key indicators that a given individual does (or does not) possess these qualities.

Conviction (PDF Overview)
Calling (PDF Overview)
Character (PDF Overview)
Chemistry (PDF Overview)
Competence (PDF Overview)

Phase Two

Training

It is important for a church to train more people than it sends (at least, than it sends in a long-term capacity). If a church is going to send and support a missionary well, it needs to be filled with members who passionately understand what it means to be a missionary. For this reason, the first two segments of training listed below are recommended to be open to the congregation as a part of your general discipleship ministries.

3 to 4 Years From Departure

These are resources we “leak” into as many discipleship and membership settings as possible to continually reinforce the message that to be a Christian is to live on mission.

  • “Explore Missions” - This is a six-week study created by the IMB for churches to use in their various discipleship context.

1 to 2 Years From Departure

These nine lessons are taught as part of a missions cohort that church members who want to explore the possibility of being a missionary can join. When a member of your church is considering a calling to the mission field you can each watch these and debrief them together. Here are the PDF notes for each of these presentations.

6 to 12 Months From Departure

This is a six-month daily reading plan recommended by the IMB for those who are preparing to move overseas in their immediate future.

Phase Three

Sending

This is the briefest phase by duration of any of the five phases. It is the celebration of and commitment to, both by the missionary and congregation, the missions endeavor ahead.

This is another moment to catalyze a missions culture in your congregation and to remind the church-at-large of our commitment to hold the rope for those being sent. Below you will find key resources we use at The Summit Church in a sending service.

Phase Four

Supporting

This is the phase where the missionary leaves your geographical proximity, meaning (a) you no longer have ease-of-contact, (b) culture shock moves from a concept to an experience, (c) there is a much larger possibility of having an expectation gap, and (d) there is a greater opportunity to neglect care because physical closeness does not prompt your memory.

Below we outline three key people/groups involved in supporting a missionary overseas. Each person or group needs to review their job description with the missionary before anyone gets on a plane.

Phase Five

Receiving

This may be the most neglected aspect of missionary care. When we neglect receiving a missionary as well as we sent them, it can easily result in the missionary feeling used and create a myriad of hardships and temptations for them.

We easily forget our church has been incrementally changing as our missionary friend has been away. This means we often fail to see how different the church our missionary friend will be returning to actually is.

Receiving Strategy

Below is the process document for Summit’s receiving strategy that your church can implement: