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Title: TRAINING LATIN AMERICAN MISSIONARIES:


1
TRAINING LATIN AMERICAN MISSIONARIES
  • Missions Mobilization and Missionary Formation in
    Latin America

2
Introduction
  • Missions mobilization should inspire, educate,
    and move to commitment every follower of Jesus to
    become what they are by faith, Gods Missionary
    People.
  • Missions education seeks to mobilize the church
    to the mandate and equip the called.
  • Trends in Latin American Missions

3
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4
Misiones en Conjunto 2005
  • International Missionaries 369
  • Cross-Cultural Workers 287
  • Total Number of Missionaries 656
  • Serving in 59 countries of the world

5
Where L.A. Missionaries are serving
  • Central Africa (1) (2), Germany, Antigua,
    Argentina, Central Asia (1) (2) (3), North Asia,
    South Asia (1) (2) (3), Asia Minor, Belgium,
    Belize, Bolivia, Brazil, Burkina Faso, Cabo
    Verde, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Belgium Congo,
    Cuba, Ecuador, USA, Spain, Georgia, Guatemala,
    Guinea Bissau, Guinea Equatorial,

6
Where L.A. Missionaries are serving
  • Haiti, Honduras, Indonesia, England, Canary
    Islands, Israel, Italia, Japan, Middle East,
    México, Nicaragua, Ruanda, Rumania, Lithuania,
    Mozambique, North Africa, Nueva Guinea, Paraguay,
    Panamá, Peru, Czech Republic, Dominican Republic,
    Democratic Republic of Congo, Senegal,
    Switzerland, Ukraine, Uruguay, Venezuela

7
Missions is born in the Heart of God and are
realized by The feet of those who go, The
knees of those who stay, and The hands of those
who give
8
The Feet of those who go 50 Missionaries from
Latin America
9
The knees of those who stay One million
intercessors
10
The hands of those who give Two million
dollars
11
Trends
  • 1. Increasing numbers of missionaries are being
    sent out from emerging cultures. (e.g. in Spanish
    speaking Latin America in 1994 there were 60
    appointed missionaries, 1996- 140, in 2000-305,
    in 2002- 334 serving in 53 countries, in 2005 656
    in 59.). The question is will our national
    churches create the structures, networks,
    training opportunities and the support base
    necessary to send out the called or will the
    called, seek out and serve other agencies?

12
Trends
  • 2. Increasing numbers of local churches are
    sending and supporting missionaries, but the
    majority of potential is still unrealized (e.g.
    in El Salvador church participation has increased
    from 0.1 in 1987 to over 70 in 2005, Costa
    Rica, which has a strong missions agency, reports
    only 20 participation.)
  • The transition from emotional assent to concrete
    commitment is slow but steady requiring continual
    promotional and educational activities.

13
Trends
  • 3. Increasing numbers of national churches are
    developing sending agencies and structures. All
    of the Spanish speaking countries of Latin
    America have an agency/department but the
    majority is in the early development stages with
    no missionaries or just one or two and a national
    leadership of limited missionary experience. The
    majority of AG agencies in Latin America and the
    Caribbean have yet to reach critical mass.

14
Trends
  • 4. Increasing numbers of nations are
    participating in a global network of Assemblies
    of God missionaries and agencies. Missions in the
    majority world is more relationally based than
    conceptual.

15
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16
Trends
  • 5. Increasing numbers of Latin Americans,
    especially young people, are participating in
    short term missions activities.

17
Trends
  • 6. Increasing levels of cooperation must develop
    between AGWM missionaries and other AG
    missionaries. We must learn how to effectively
    serve with Latin American and other majority
    world missionaries under the authority of
    national leadership.

18
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19
NIGER AFRICA
20
MISSIONARY COLABORATION
  • BURKINA FASO NIGERIA
  • U.S.A FRANCE
  • TOGO IVORY COAST
  • SWEDEN EL SALVADOR

21
Missionary Education for
  • Laity Missionary Formation in the Local Church
  • Ministers - Ministerial Formation in Missiology
    (National Church)
  • Short-term Missionaries and Missions Promoters
  • Career Missionaries
  • Missionary Trainers

22
Plan Básico de Misiones en Conjunto de las
Asambleas de Dios
  • CAPÍTULO 1 PREMISAS TEOLÓGICAS Y EDUCATIVAS DE
    LA FORMACIÓN MISIONERA
  • CAPÍTULO 2 LOS PROCESOS DE FORMACIÓN MISIONERA
    EN LA IGLESIA LOCAL
  • CAPÍTULO 3 LOS PROCESOS DE FORMACIÓN MISIONERA
    EN LA IGLESIA NACIONAL

23
  • CAPÍTULO 4 LOS PROCESOS DE FORMACIÓN MISIONERA
    DE EQUIPOS Y MISIONEROS A CORTO Y MEDIANO PLAZO
  • CAPÍTULO 5 LA FORMACIÓN DE MISIONEROS DE CARRERA
  • CAPÍTULO 6 PROGRAMAS DE FORMACIÓN MISIONERA
  • CAPÍTULO 7 RECURSOS PARA LA FORMACIÓN MISIONERA

24
Introducción a las Áreas Esenciales de la
Formación Misionera
  • Se identifica cuatro áreas esenciales de la
    formación misionera
  • La formación espiritual y relacional
    (identificada como categoría A),
  • La formación bíblica, teológica, ministerial (B),
  • La formación general (C)
  • La formación misiológica (D). Esta última esta
    subdivida en las siguientes categorías de
    misiología teología de las misiones (D1),
    dimensiones estratégicas (D2), y aspectos
    trans-culturales (D3).

25
La Formación Espiritual y Relacional (A)
  • La formación misionera fundamental (corresponde a
    la etapa de discipulado) es la relación de
    misionero con Dios, con el cuerpo de Cristo y con
    la sociedad. Para establecer una base de
    autoridad espiritual en la vida y ministerio del
    misionero y profundizar estas relaciones
    espirituales e interhumanas se recomienda
    estudios sobre los siguientes temas

26
La Formación Espiritual y Relacional (A)
  • Las Disciplinas Espirituales y Misioneras, Las
    Relaciones Humanas, La Vida en Comunidad, El
    Trabajar en Equipo, El Cuido de la Familia
    Misionera, Como superar el Conflicto Relacional,
    La Guerra Espiritual, La Vida de Fe, Logística
    Misionera, Servicio y Liderazgo. La estructura
    principal más efectiva para desarrollar esta
    formación es la iglesia local como un centro de
    adiestramiento misionero.

27
La Formación Bíblica, Teológica y Ministerial (B)
  • La formación bíblica, teológica y ministerial se
    resume y se presenta en el Plan Básico del SEC.
    Sin embargo, entre las destrezas y estudios
    están La Hermenéutica, El Hacer Teología,
    Homilética, Cultura Bíblica, Apologética,
    Teología Ministerial, Ética Personal y
    Ministerial, Desarrollo de Liderazgo,
    Pentecostalismo, y Los Procesos de Credenciales
    Ministeriales de AD.

28
La Formación General (C)
  • Para poder identificar con la sociedad general,
    mejorar la comunicación y responder a ciertas
    necesidades misioneras, una formación general es
    requerida. Entre los estudios recomendados están
    -Informática, Contabilidad, Publicidad, Primeros
    Auxilios, Pedagogía, Lingüística, Ingles,
    Antropología, Construcción Básica, Métodos de la
    Investigación y Administración

29
La Formación Misiológica (D)
  • La formación misiológica incluye
  • La teología de misiones (D1),
  • Las dimensiones estratégicas (D2),
  • Los aspectos trans-culturales (D3).
  • El estudio de la teología de misiones (D1)
    abarca La Reflexión Teológica, Teología y las
    Misiones, Pneumatología y las Misiones, La
    Contextualización Teológica y Temas
    Contemporáneos Misiológicos.

30
Las Dimensiones Estratégicas (D2)
  • Las dimensiones estratégicas incluye Los Grupos
    No-alcanzados, Urbanización y Movimientos
    Sociológicos, Logística, Promoción misionera,
    Tramites Legales, Tramites Eclesiásticos, Asuntos
    Familiares, Relaciones Humanas, Teorías de
    Comunicación, Contabilidad, Trabajar en Equipo,
    La Iglesia Autóctona, La Plantación de Iglesias
    en Contextos Misioneros, El Desarrollo de
    Comunidad, Iglecrecimiento, Estrategias para
    Evangelismo Mundial, Logística Misionera,
    Historia de la Expansión de la Iglesia, Modelo de
    Capacitación Misionera.

31
Aspectos Trans-culturales (D3)
  • Los aspectos trans-culturales enfocan estudios
    como Antropología Cultural, La Comunicación
    Transcultural, La Identificación Misionera, La
    Contextualización Misiológica, Las Religiones,
    Etno-litúrgica y Musicología, Contabilidad
    Misionera

32
Laity Missionary Formation in the Local Church
  • Missions is not a department! It is a way of
    life!
  • The Spiritual Disciplines Opens the door to
    discernment/empowerment.
  • Learning is relational. It takes place in
    community the local church.
  • EVERY LOCAL CHURCH SHOULD BE A MISSIONARY
    TRAINING CENTER!
  • Age specific formation- Kids are Key!
  • The power of narrative.

33
Missionary Formation in the Local Church Key
Activities
  • The Missionary Disciplines pray, give, commit
    to serve.
  • Missionary Visit
  • Missions Convention
  • Prayer groups
  • Short-term teams

34
Ministerial Formation in Missiology (National
Church)
  • All ministerial formation should be missiological
    in worldview for the Bible defines ministry in
    missiological terms.
  • All ministers need missiological tools to
    exegete/contextualize the Word, the church and
    the world (their community).
  • Missiological Courses- Basic courses should be
    taught by impassioned missionary educators and
    introduced early in the students formation.

35
Ministerial Formation in Missiology (National
Church)
  • Space must be intentionally provided not only in
    the classroom but in every aspect of student
    life, in order to hear and obey the voice of the
    Spirit. Critical are chapel services, spiritual
    retreats, mentoring relationships, small covenant
    groups and crisis moments in the lives of
    student. Institute personnel must model
    humility, surrender and obedience to Spirit
    direction and empowerment both natural and
    supernatural.

36
Ministerial Formation in Missiology (National
Church)
  • Short term missions practicums should be a
    requirement for all students and faculty but
    particularly those sensing a call to missions.
  • The earlier the student can be exposed to
    missions and the more he/she is exposed to
    missionaries and their stories, the more likely
    that they will surrender to the Spirits guidance
    related to missions.

37
Short-term Missionaries and Missions Promoters
  • Short-term missionaries and missions promoters
    need additional training, particularly
    cross-cultural training which is case specific.
    This formation is primarily non-formal training
    in seminars and small group studies which utilize
    interactive teaching methodologies.

38
Short-term Missionaries and Missions Promoters
  • The content should include not only equipping for
    cross-cultural encounter but training for
    missionary promotional activities in the sending
    church (e.g., dramas, promotional materials, fund
    raising, financial accountability, group dynamics
    and teamwork).

39
Career Missionaries
  • Informal, non-formal, formal education models
    need to be integrated in a holistic training
    process.
  • Missionaries and their families need pre-service
    and in-service training, both non-formal and
    formal in the areas of cross-cultural
    communication, missions theology, and missiology
    including practical logistical concerns (e.g.,
    visas, transportation, childrens schooling,
    housing, fund raising, and publicity).

40
Career Missionaries
  • Effective methodologies at this level in Latin
    America include role playing, culture
    assimilators, apprenticeship, being mentored by
    veteran missionaries, open discussions,
    simulation games, case studies, practice of
    language and culture learning skills, and
    independent studies.
  • Holistic integration is sought between theory and
    practice, Word and experience, and worship and
    service.

41
Career Missionaries
  • Ultimately, the key competency for the career
    missionary and any servant in the kingdom of God
    is the ability to discern Spirit direction and
    empowerment in order to fulfill the missionary
    call and accomplish Gods purposes.

42
Missionary Trainers
  • The trainer must not only be able to assist
    missionaries in the practical aspects of
    missions, but must be able to integrate
    philosophy of mission and practice.
  • Of utmost importance is the missionary educators
    ability to model and facilitate Spirit direction
    and empowerment.

43
Recommendations
  • A new theory and paradigm for missionary
    formation must be developed which is guided and
    shaped by the reality that it is the Spirit that
    calls and empowers for missionary service. In
    this paradigm, various models can and should be
    used in missionary formation.

44
  • Diverse contexts require Holy Spirit direction to
    implement the appropriate model. Missionary
    educators and mobilizers must seek to integrate
    Word and experience theory and practice
    pre-field, on field, post-field training, and
    continuing education and formal, non-formal, and
    informal processes of education and formation in
    order to create a context in which the Spirit
    calls and empowers missionaries for service.

45
  • To open the door to the Spirits call, direction,
    and empowerment in the new paradigm, missionary
    educators and mobilizers from Latin America need
    to take into account the following observations
    related to missionary formation

46
  • 1. There are no limitations in terms of age,
    gender, education, ethnicity, culture, marital,
    or socio-economic status as to whom the Spirit
    will call, but those who are called must be
    willing to surrender all in order to fulfill the
    call. Often, this surrender requires a change of
    context, the removal of cultural distraction, and
    the stepping out of normal routines.

47
  • Missions educators must take care not to develop
    a formula for the missionary call because there
    is no single means by which the Spirit calls,
    rather the call is as unique as each individual.
  • He/she must also take care to recognize not all
    who are called, experience an identifiable crisis
    event, but that the missionary call must be
    confirmed individually and corporately.

48
  • 2. As relationships are important to a sense of
    spiritual empowerment, the missionary educator
    must emphasize the corporate nature of the body
    of Christ and provide the missionary with
    relational tools. Missionary formation is
    directly related to ministry and missionary
    experience as the most important lessons for
    missionary service are often discovered in the
    context of the local church and missionary
    ministry.

49
  • As the Spirit often calls and equips those who
    are already active in ministry, every local
    church needs to be a missionary training center
    which offers direct contact and interaction with
    missionaries celebrates missionary services,
    missions conventions, and missionary seminars
    disciples each member in the spiritual and
    missionary disciplines and organizes short-term
    missionary experiences which can be effective
    processes of missionary formation and
    concientization.

50
  • All ministerial training should be missiological
    in order to equip the pastor to develop the local
    church as a missionary training center.

51
  • 3. Even though education will not cause a
    believer to respond to the missionary mandate,
    early exposure in the life of the individual to
    missions education and activities and to bi- and
    multi-cultural contexts increases the probability
    of and commitment to missions, and of being
    called to be a missionary.

52
  • The most influential people related to
    understanding and obeying the missionary call are
    missionaries. Therefore, the processes of
    missionary formation must seek to continually
    expose the student to missiology and to
    encounters and interaction with missionaries and
    people from other cultures.

53
  • 4. The Spirit empowers both supernaturally and
    naturally through gifts, experience, and
    education. Equipping for missionary service is
    both biblical and congruent with Spirit
    empowerment.

54
  • The activities of the missionary are diverse,
    limited only by the creativity of divine
    direction and the empowerment of the Holy Spirit.
    The processes of missionary formation must
    create an environment which allows missionary
    candidates to experiment and discover giftedness.

55
  • 5. All missional and missionary formation
    structures in terms of development, use, and
    renewal must be guided and shaped by the reality
    that it is the Spirit that calls and empowers the
    missionary for service. Missional structures and
    processes of missionary formation (people,
    programs, and institutions) must continually seek
    to be sensitive and obedient to the Spirits
    direction, to the call, the gifts, and the needs
    of the missionary, and to the needs of the
    missionary enterprise.

56
  • Missionary educators must provide missionaries
    with tools to assess the state of structure, the
    means for renewal, and how to successfully
    negotiate conflict through the guidance of the
    Spirit. The significant structures with which
    the missionary interacts include the family,
    local churches, national churches, missions
    agencies, educational institutions, and societal
    structures.

57
  • 6. Missions educators must recognize their own
    need for continual Spirit direction and
    empowerment, modeling Spirit dependence in their
    lives, ministry, and missions theologies and
    theories. The greatest asset the missions
    educator can provide is to facilitate the
    missionarys ability to discern and obey the
    voice of the Spirit.

58
  • Missionary educators must seek to intentionally,
    but not legalistically, create space in the
    processes and programs of missionary formation in
    order to discern the Spirit direction allowing
    the future to become present. Space
    facilitators include the spiritual disciplines of
    prayer, Bible reading, community, the
    proclamation of the Word, and shared narratives.

59
  • 7. The formation of the missionary must always
    prioritize the realization of the spiritual
    disciplines as a significant though not exclusive
    means of call, divine direction and confirmation.
  • Missionary training should emphasize the
    spiritual disciplines, biblical studies, missions
    theology, and intercultural studies but the
    specifics of study should focus on the individual
    missionarys needs.

60
  • As obstacles and trails are a part of the calling
    process, the educator must take care not to
    remove all the obstacles from the path of the
    missionary candidate, nor is it a process of the
    survival of the fittest. Therefore, it is not
    the educators task to create obstacles but to
    facilitate Spirit direction and empowerment in
    the life of the missionary

61
Areas of Cooperation
  • Missions Mobilization and Promotion
  • Missions Education and Missionary Training
  • Missionary Logistics and Technical Support

62
Missions Mobilization and Promotion
  • Preach and teach missions and the baptism of the
    Holy Spirit when given opportunity. Give altar
    calls believing God is going to call
    missionaries, missions mobilizers and missions
    supporters. Our responsibility is to prepare the
    way it is the Spirit who will do the work. Every
    promotional activity should inspire, educate and
    move to concrete expressions of commitment. The
    Latin American church can do missions in the
    power of the Spirit.

63
Missions Education andMissionary Training
  • We can assist in missionary formation in many
    ways and at various levels. Our local churches
    need to be educated in their responsibility to
    become missions training centers in which every
    member can participate in the missionary task.
    Every new church plant should be a missionary
    church from its inception.

64
Missions Education andMissionary Training
  • Pastors, missions leadership, missions promoters
    and national executives need formation in
    missiology, missionary administration and in the
    selection, formation and supervision of
    missionaries.
  • Latin American missionaries need to be exposed to
    an entire gamut of spiritual formation,
    leadership, missiology (missions philosophy,
    theology, and strategy), cross-cultural
    communication, inter-personal relationships etc.
    AGWM missionaries are often not only the most
    academically qualified but more importantly,
    their teaching is modeled practically and
    experientially.

65
Missionary Logistics andTechnical Support
  • Organization is sorely lacking in the majority of
    our countries both at the local and national
    level. We can facilitate the development of
    contextual models for the selection, training and
    sending of missionaries. Practical items such as
    how to set up a missions agency, how to have a
    missions convention in the local church, how to
    write newsletters and build a relational support
    base, how to organize a short term missions trip,
    how to network with other AG missionaries, how to
    get visas and support to the field etc.

66
Missionary Logistics andTechnical Support
  • Please, let us not just replicate our U.S. model
    nor create a paternalistic missions program
    dependent on the U.S. missionary, but let us be
    an encouragement by humbly offering and sharing
    our passion, our experience and our resources.

67
Conclusion
  • The future of missions lies in missionaries being
    sent from the churches of every nation to the
    peoples of every nation. Latin America will do
    missions with or without us, but their
    effectiveness and ours will increase
    exponentially as we partner together in the power
    of the Spirit.
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