Hey everybody! This week I interview Tim O’Toole. He and his wife Kristina are missionaries with Foursquare Missions to the beautiful country of Ireland. When God put Ireland on their hearts, they were not sure where they would be going. On a visit to Ireland, God directed them to Galway, the third largest city in Ireland and God is doing amazing things. They are using Serve the City to love on the people of Galway and meet the needs of their city.
Europe: Just say the word and it invokes a mixed array of images:
Some think of luxurious vacations in the Swiss Alps, unencumbered days under the Tuscan sun, supple and sublime Boudreaux with the perfect balance of tannins and oak, and young backpackers trekking between hostels.
Others think of the continent that gave us two world wars and introduced death on an industrial scale, unheard of before in human history.
Still others think of an old continent with aging nations meandering along, untethered from former empires of greatness and world domination.
Whatever people think of when they think of Europe, rarely do they think of it like I do: I think of Europe as a mission field.
Once the citadel of Christianity, it has become a graveyard of cathedral tombs echoing days of life long past.
Europe has become “The New Dark Continent.”
The 10 most Gospel resistant people groups in the world are all located in Europe.
This is my field.
From the vast Russian steppe in the East to the rugged Portuguese coastline in the West; From the Mediterranean sun that baths Athens to the cold harsh rain and winds that clothe Scotland, this is my field, though I am a stranger here. Yet, I am not alone.
I work with some of the finest missionaries and nationals I have ever met. They are among my dearest friends and ministry partners. I feel a kindred heart with them unlike anything I have ever experienced in my own homeland.
We share a deep love and calling for Europe. And we share some common challenges in reaching this continent we love so much.
All missionaries face language, culture, and political challenges. Beyond these universal challenges each nation or people group present unique challenges for the missionary. Working in Europe, I have observed at least 5 Challenges in Reaching the New Dark Continent:
Europe is “Post” Everything.
Europe is Post-Political, Post-Modern, and Post-Christian. It is beyond the scope of this article to unpack what each of these mean. Indulge me a little and let us leave it at Europe has lost all faith in political systems and ideologies; Europe has lost all faith in rationalisms ability to explain the world; And Europe has lost all faith in religion to be of any relevance.
Certainty is gone. Truth is questionable. Knowledge is limited. Meaning is up for grabs.
In spite of being “Post Christian,” many Europeans still find cultural and ethnic identity in their national religion.
To be Irish, Polish, or Italian is to be Catholic. You may be an atheist, but you are still Catholic.
To be Russian, Serbian, or Greek is to be Orthodox.
To be Albanian or Bosnian is generally to be Muslim.
If you give up your religion you give up your ethnic and national identity.
Reaching them with the Gospel entails reaching them within their culture, against all cultural prejudice, because God “made from one man every nation of mankind to live on all the face of the earth, having determined allotted periods and the boundaries of their dwelling place, that they should seek God, and perhaps feel their way toward him and find him. Yet he is actually not far from each one of us,” (Acts 17:26–27, ESV)
In Europe, we must overcome the abusive relationship Europeans have experienced with religion. Their reference point to Jesus and His Church is seen as an abusive relationship – We must Re-Present Jesus to them.
European history is scared with religious wars. Families and nations have been torn apart because of religion. After hundreds of years Europe has had enough. Religion is not only irrelevant: it is the problem.
When we tell them about Jesus they think we are trying to bring them back into that abusive relationship. We have to overcome their experience with religion in order to introduce them to Jesus Christ: The Jesus they think about is not the Jesus we are talking about.
We must overcome prejudices about Europe.
Want to derail an American politician? Accuse him or her of being a soft European-styled liberal politician. That can be as damaging as a very questionable selfie.
Want to make eyes roll? Tell someone you are a missionary to Europe.
You can be a missionary Central America, South America, Asia, Africa, or the Middle East, and wow, you are a true missionary. But go to Europe and you are not a missionary, you are a “vacationary.”
I hear comments like, “Boy, I wish I could be a missionary in France, or Italy, or England, or…” add any European nation you want. As if these men and women are on permanent vacation.
Let me give you a glimpse of what people serving in Europe deal with: Go to Africa, Asia, Central or South America, get a crowd, take a picture and you are a hero. Supporters love the big crowds.
In Europe, we don’t get the crowds. We celebrate the ones and the twos. Everyone else gets to celebrate the hundreds and thousands. We are plowing hard, fallow ground here. We get to celebrate the ones and the twos knowing that someday Europe will be a fertile field again. We are plowing and planting for that day.
Sure, we have Wi-Fi, mobile phones, and good food. But we did not go on the mission field for those things. We could have stayed in America if we wanted that. We went because Jesus called us. We went to reach souls. We are broken over the hardness of this continent we love so deeply. We serve it in hope that someday others will get to enjoy the fruit of our labors just as those in Africa are now standing on the buried shoulders of those who came before them.
Europe is hard and expensive.
Back when Africa was the Dark Continent, missionaries were sent out with living supplies and a casket. After an average of two years they died on the field and were shipped back home. We rightfully hail them as heroes. They have earned the martyr’s crown. We esteem them as, “those for whom the world was not worthy.” They gave the last, greatest sacrifice.
Now, in Europe, our missionaries do not face death for the most part: they face years of plowing fallow ground and being assessed by supporters back home who wish they would get their act together like the folks in Brazil, Mexico, and the South Pacific.
Yet, we labor with the call that 750 million deserve to hear the Gospel of Jesus Christ just as all the other peoples of the world.
I cringe when I hear someone say, “We can support three missionaries in the juggle for the cost of one missionary in Europe.” I cringe because I wonder what it will be like on the Day of Judgment when we give an account and we look at the millions of Europeans who have never heard the Gospel and we have to tell them, “Sorry, we made a financial decision. You were just too expensive and not worth the cost. It’s not personal, it’s just business.”
Yes, being a missionary in Europe has its challenges, but I would not trade places with anyone anywhere for any reason.
I have this hope, “The wilderness and the dry land shall be glad; the desert shall rejoice and blossom like the crocus; it shall blossom abundantly and rejoice with joy and singing. The glory of Lebanon shall be given to it, the majesty of Carmel and Sharon. They shall see the glory of the Lord, the majesty of our God.” (Isaiah 35:1–2, ESV)
This is my hope. My conscious is bound.
Here are Some Ways You Can Help Our Missionaries in Europe:
Cover us: Pray for the Missionaries and Leaders Serving Throughout the New Dark Continent. Support us in every way. We get discouraged and tired because the ground is hard and filled with rocks. Protect us from accusations of the enemy and the self-defeating doubts we all struggle with.
Connect with us to celebrate and encourage. Facebook, email, and Skype are great ways to keep us connected to the life source of the local church. Solomon said in Proverbs 25:25,
“Like cold water to a thirsty soul, so is good news from a far country.”
Partner with us financially. All of us who serve in Europe have more opportunities than we can keep up with. You can help us meet the overwhelming need.
Here is a list of our missionaries serving in Europe. Pray about connecting with them. Click HERE.
Here is one example of an opportunity to reach a city with less than 1% evangelical Christians:
Thank you for your partnership in the Gospel.
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“What is the one thing our church can do that will have the greatest impact on global missions?”
I have been asked variations of this question many times over the years. Based on my experience as a pastor, missionary, and missionary leader, I have come to the conclusion that there is one practice every church can do that will have the greatest impact on global missions.
It is a simple action that exponentially increases the advancement of the Gospel around the world.
But first, remember: “Big doors swing on small hinges.”
The door of global missions hangs on three hinges:
The Word of God
The Prayers of the Church
The Sending of Missionaries
These three “hinges” are expressed in what I like to call the “7 Minutes to Change the World.” It goes like this:
Once a month set aside 7 Minutes of a Church Service to:
Share the Word of God and the Witness of missionaries regarding Global Missions. This will plant the Mission of God deep into the heart of the congregation.
Pray for missionaries serving around the world.
Receive a missions offering.
This monthly action will
Sustain missionaries around the world.
Expand your church’s vision.
Open doors of opportunity for your local church.
If you put “The 7 Minutes” into practice, you will discover it is your entry point to global missions, not your end point. You never know where this journey will take you once you open the door.
It’s like Bilbo told Frodo,
“It’s a dangerous business, Frodo, going out your door. You step onto the road, and if you don’t keep your feet, there’s no knowing where you might be swept off to.”
Now, about the money…
It is not my place to tell you how to spend the money God entrusts to your church to fulfill His mission. That is up to the leadership of the local church under the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
That being said, pastors and leaders often ask me,
What do you recommend we do as a local church to financially support Foursquare Missions?
Should we give it all to the Global Missions Fund?
Should we designate it to a specific missionary?
Should we support a specific project, place, or person?
What is the best way we can use the limited resources we have for maximum effectiveness?”
When asked this, I recommend as a starting point for discussion the local leadership consider doing the following (note: I am writing within the context of the Foursquare Church family, apply accordingly):
Set aside part of your general budget to support the people, projects, or places the Lord has laid on your heart as part of your church’s specificassignment in the Great Commission.
Fund catalytic leaders who open new church planting movements in unreached cities, nations, and people groups.
Equip global leaders and missionaries for the expansion of the Gospel through the Foursquare Church.
Cultivate church planting movements among new nations and people groups in partnership with national churches.
Coach national leaders through the four stages of national development.
Care for Foursquare missionaries.
Network with the Global Foursquare Church to advance the Gospel.
Facilitate missionary deployment to maximize their ministry fruitfulness.
You and your church may come up with even better ideas than what I have offered. That is great. I encourage you to do this. Like I said, I offer this as a way to get the conversation started.
Why I am writing this…
I offering these suggestions as one who lives out and lives with the consequences of every U.S. Foursquare church’s decision about global missions. My goal is for us to make wise well-informed, missiologically sound, and field-driven choices.
As the Area Missionary to Europe, I am responsible for the U.S. Foursquare Church’s mission work in the dozens of nations in my region and the nearly two-dozen missionary families serving throughout Europe. As Foursquare missionaries, we are not only sent to a people, we are sent from a people: The Foursquare Church. The only way we as missionaries can serve the field is because we have churches that stand with us: covering us in prayer and sending us with the financial resources necessary to reach the harvest.
Let’s start opening some big doors together.
Taking 7 Minutes to Change the World is a great place to start.
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• Mutual ministryconnects the missionary to the life-flow of the local church,
• Material supportprovides for the missionary by resourcing their calling.
• Prayerenables the missionary to advance the Gospel on all fronts.
In Romans 15:30 Paul pleads with the Roman churches
“Dear friends, I urge you in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ to join me in my struggle by praying to God for me. Do this because of your love for me, given you by the Holy Spirit.” (NLT)
He made a similar appeal to the churches in Corinth and Thessaloniki,
“He will rescue us because you are helping by praying for us. As a result, many will give thanks to God because so many peoples’ prayers for our safety have been answered.” (2 Cor. 1:11, NLT)
“Dear brothers and sisters, pray for us.” (1 Thessalonians 5:25, NLT)
I know when people are praying for me. I sense the presence and the protection of God though the prayers of the Church. I can see fruitfulness in hard places because of the prayers of the Church.
And I know when I’m not covered in prayer: it feels like I am a rusty, worn out machine plodding through dirt, rocks, and mud in my own strength and wisdom.
Prayer will open the portals of heaven and nullify the plans of hell.
Prayer strengthens those who serve and it softens the hearts of those who hear.
Prayer is a mighty weapon in the arsenal of the church in advancing the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Here are 5 Prayer Needs of Every Missionary:
1. Pray for divine guidance and opportunity, 2 Thess 3:1; Phil 22
2. Pray for open doors, Colossians 4:3
3. Pray for protection, Romans 15:31; Phil 1:19
4. Pray for workers, Matthew 9:37-38
5. Pray for greater fruitfulness, 2 Corinthians 1:11
When the body of Christ fully embraces its apostolic and pastoral mission we will move forward as one body in full harmony, living in the beautiful tension of being “called into” and “called out of” this world; We will joyfully embrace our calling to “go out” and to ”build up;” Together we will reach the nations for whom Christ died and build up the Church which Christ purchased with his own blood; So that on the day when a glorious multitude whom no one can number from every nation, tribe, and language, gathers around the throne of God we will sing the Song of the Lamb.
I look forward to that day. Until then let us work because the harvest is ripe.
Links to all articles in “The Four Things Every Missionary Needs”:
Of the “Four Things Every Missionary Needs,” this is the touchiest of them all. It is sad really. Rather than see funding as something we have to pry from the cold, dead hands of reluctant supporters, we should see it as a joyful opportunity to engage in life giving and spiritual ministry.
“Fundraising is as spiritual as giving a sermon, entering a time of prayer, visiting the sick, or feeding the hungry! … Fundraising is proclaiming what we believe in such a way that we offer other people an opportunity to participate with us in our vision and mission.” (Henri Nouwen, A Spirituality of Fundraising)
As missionaries, we focus on the harvest fields of those not yet reached with the Gospel. Consequently, we are dependent on those who have been reached by the Gospel to help us reach others with the Gospel. This is nothing to be ashamed of or embarrassed about.
Missionaries need financial support and it is a joy to support them. There, I said it.
Paul was upfront about his desire for churches to support him. Look at Romans 15:24, “I hope to see you in passing as I go to Spain, and to be helped on my journey there by you, once I have enjoyed your company for a while.” (ESV)
The word translated, “to be helped on my journey” is a Greek word used to describe the outfitting of an expedition. Paul was hoping the Romans would provide material support for his mission to the barbarians in Spain.
I know. I know. Talking about money is delicate. In Revelation we read of a book that no one can open. Some pastors believe that book is the pocketbook.
As uncomfortable as we may be in talking about money, we need to be very clear on this one point:
“It is impossible to have Spiritual Renewal without financial reform.”
The Bible mentions faith about 270 times, hope around 166 times, love about 551 times, prayer around 375 times, praise and worship are mentioned about 662 times in the Bible. Money is mentioned more than 2,000 times.
The Gospels contain more warnings about money and its misuse than any other subject. One verse in four of Matthew, Mark, and Luke deals with money. One verse in six of the New Testament deals with money. Almost half the parables of Jesus deal with money. The first sin in Israel to cause a national defeat was over money. The first sin recorded in early church was over money.
It is like Billy Graham said,
“If a person gets his attitude toward money straight, it will help straighten out almost every other area in his life.”
In a previous post I wrote about Luke 15-16 showing us the heart of God by telling us about lost sheep (15:1-7), lost coins (15:8-10), lost sons (15:11-32), and lost priorities (Luke 16:1-13). Reaching the lost matters. Making disciples of all nations matters. Going to the frontiers matters. That is why we celebrate financial partnership rather than apologize for it. We are engaged in something of eternal worth.
We go to the mission field in obedience to the Word of God and the call of God. We go to reach the nations by making disciples, developing leaders, and cultivating church planting movements. We go to express the love and compassion of God. We go because the harvest is ripe and the laborers are few.
We give to missions for the very same reasons. We long for that day when we behold a great multitude that no one can number, from every nation, from all tribes and peoples and languages, standing before the throne and before the Lamb.
We cannot do this alone.
“How then will they call on him in whom they have not believed? And how are they to believe in him of whom they have never heard? And how are they to hear without someone preaching? And how are they to preach unless they are sent? As it is written, “How beautiful are the feet of those who preach the good news!”” (Romans 10:14–15, ESV)
Debbie and I serve as the FMI Global Associate Director for MENACA and Europe. We focus on cultivating disciples, leaders, and church planting movements.