A Case for Short Term Missions (Guest Post: Seth Barnes)

by Editor on January 30, 2013

I am a progeny of the short-term missions movement. My life was shaped by trips I took as a teenager to Guatemala and Peru. And here’s the ripple effect: in addition to sending tens of thousands to the field, my family has been profoundly affected. My daughter Estie just left with her college group to Ecuador, my son Seth Jr. has spent a year in Nicaragua, and for the last 17 years, my parents have spent three months doing medical ministry in Kenya.

From www.sethbarnes.comBuilding on that early experience as a teenager, I’ve spent 25 years doing short-term trips and it seems that my blog “Are short-term missions becoming faddish?” has made me something of an “authority.” Over 60,000 people have looked at it since I wrote it a year ago. And the tide of emails in my in-box like the one I just received made me realize that perhaps it’s time for a considered response.

So, be warned, this is gonna get long – hang in there!

A random person recently wrote me saying, “Hey, I am doing a speech opposing short term missions [STMs] today, I was wondering if you have any data or statistics that would work for this?”

I’m afraid my response wasn’t too encouraging: “You may have mis-read my perspective.” I wrote. “I believe your position is unbiblical. Luke 9 and 10 is a clear biblical precedent. My issue is not STMs, but STMs done poorly, which is most of the time these days. If you’re ‘opposing STMs’ then you’re opposing Jesus.”

What’s going on here? Is this a tempest in a teapot, or do we need to trash short-term missions and start over?

On the one hand, STMs have become over-the-top faddish when you can now sign up for a “missions cruise,” – I wonder whose “have-your-cake-and eat-it-too” thinking produced that? On the other hand, when you go to a bad restaurant, do you give up on eating food? Many of us attend dull churches, but believe in the concept of church. Everywhere in life there are examples of excellence contrasted with poverty of imagination and execution.

STMs are a necessary part of discipleship. The people who would do away with them are missing a big chunk of Jesus’ pedagogy. Jesus was big on faith – asking us to do a trust-fall with the Father. How else are you going to learn faith if not by being thrust into unfamiliar territory with an overwhelming assignment? You can study diving all you want, but until you jump off that high dive, you don’t know diving.

STMs are also a necessary part of missions. Paul went on a series of STMs and jump-started the long-term mission movement. Usually when planting a long-term work in a community, those planning it are going to begin to establish relationships in a series of forays that culminate in a long-term commitment.

STM teams work – sometimes spectacularly. The uneven results they can produce open the door to criticism. Here are the most prevalent criticisms:

*They cost too much.

*Short-term missionaries can’t do a missionary’s job.

*Short-term missionaries should help the needy people in the U.S. first.

Jesus tells us, “Go into all the world spreading the good news.” The passive approach to faith is an oxymoron – we can’t sit still and practice the kind of risky faith steps that Jesus advocated. Christ sounded a clarion call to battle. Religion for couch potatoes placing a premium on safety or formulas doesn’t sit well with our Lord. We’ve been commanded to get out of the malls and into the streets. The question before the court then is not one of a mandate. The questions are: What we should do with the mandate we’ve been given? And, just how far should short-term missionaries go with their mandate? Are there any limits?

Sometimes, the critics score a bullseye. Mission trips too frequently are costly. By definition they can’t incorporate the follow-up work that only someone with a long-term commitment to a particular mission field can. Often they are overly ambitious, aspiring to pierce the darkness in a place like Romania, when the light may be dimmer next door in Philadelphia.

Other criticisms are more easily countered. Some critics dismiss short-term missionaries out of hand with the comment that “They’re not really missionaries.” To which I say, if being a missionary means something other than sharing the love of Jesus cross-culturally, then it is true, short-term missionaries may not measure up. Yes, often they do have a quick-fix mentality in a world where change may be measured at a glacial rate. However, I suggest that labels are a peripheral issue. Jesus called us all to be missionaries. He sent his disciples out in pairs as the first short-term missionaries (Mark 6:7-13). To judge the validity of the STM movement, we need to dispense with old preconceptions and look at the fruit, not the duration of the term or even the commitment of those involved.

Another criticism in the same vein is that the ministry on a mission trip is more to the short-termer than it is to those to whom they’re ministering. To which I say, “So what?” It’s true that STM leaders may seem more focused on the needs of their group than they are on the ministry they’ve undertaken. Often the changes that occur in their lives are profound. It may frequently be the case that short-term missionaries are the primary beneficiaries of their trip; however, the most successful models of STMs emphasize a partnership in which both participants and nationals benefit equally as they develop relationships with one another.

These kinds of criticisms persist and confusion flourishes when STM leaders embrace questionable models of STMs. Because there are so many flawed models floating around, they inevitably tarnish those models of STMs whose fruit has stood the test of time.

When STM groups come in for criticism, most often it is because they have adopted one or more of the following flawed models of short-term missions. Let’s look at the six worst:

QUESTIONABLE MODELS

1. No Preparation

2. No Prayer

3. No Jerusalem

4. No “Ends of the earth”

5. No Stewardship

6. No Perspective

Some critics see STM groups as being on a kind of philanthropic sightseeing tour. An STM team can be a negative experience for both long-term missionary and participant alike if the team is inadequately prepared and is seen as a necessary inconvenience. The same team can have an incredible impact if they are trained and come to the field with the right attitudes.

****

The above article was used with permission from Seth Barnes, President of Adventures.org. Since 1989, they have taken over 100,000 young people overseas on short term missions trips. You can check him out at his blog, SethBarnes.com or on twitter @sethbarnes

****

What are your thoughts on Short Term Missions? How have you seen them positively affect people, help your long-term ministry, or impact the culture where you are living?

Long-termers: What do you want short-termers to know before they start their trip? Advice for them? 

  • http://www.facebook.com/alana.blase Alana Blase

    i think short term missions are a great idea and I totally believe that God uses them to change lives. I have lived for 6 months in Uganda (which to some would probably still be considered short term) and I have also done a short term trip to India. I saw God move in both trips, he changed my life and gave me a dream for the future. The thing about our trips that was maybe different to some i have heard of was that we were thrown into the deep end. Sleeping in mud houses, eating only local food, literally joining their culture and their way of life. We have now started a ministry in India and actually run it from our home country while we do short trips there. For us, it is the cheaper option. Short term trips definitely have their place, as do long term!

    • http://www.lauraparkerblog.com/ Laura Parker

      Alana,

      Neat to see how God has used STM to radically affect your entire lives and careers. Love that.
      Thanks for stopping in today.

  • http://www.lauraparkerblog.com/ Laura Parker

    Seth, Thanks for letting us share this today! I love the distinction you give here:

    “My issue is not STMs, but STMs done poorly, which is most of the time these days.”

    I think this IS important because so often we “throw the baby out with the bathwater” bc we see so many examples of the “STMS done poorly”. I have seen so often, leading overseas STM trips, the value in the life of the STMissionary. The global classroom is a powerful one, for sure, and often sparks interest/passion for lifelong humanitarian work/mission work.

    My question for those of you readers who are on the field long-term– How can STM teams be MOST HELPFUL to you in your work?

    • http://www.facebook.com/richelle.wright Richelle Wright

      we find the most helpful teams are those who come with a desire to share – to both give and receive, to minister and also allow others to minister to them, to learn and to teach, who have a clear and well-defined plan but are also flexible and can go with the flow, who long to experience God and hear His voice in a different way but also expect to be His voice, His hands, His feet to the people they meet in ways that they may have never imagined. when people come with that attitude, our experience has been that, although not without bumps and detours, what happens is missos, nationals, and team members leave the experience encouraged, energized and excited about what God is doing.

  • http://twitter.com/MrsMandiM Mandi

    I love short term missions! I went on two myself before I became a long-term missionary (first stateside and now overseas). I love seeing the group completely changed because they came out of their comfortable American bubble for a few weeks. And I love how the locals are excited to see that Americans care enough about them to spend money to VISIT them and not simply throw money their way because that is better “stewardship”… I love it when the same church sends a team every year developing on-going relationships with the churches in the country. I love the support it brings to my family because many of the short term trips we now have a connection with… they “get” it on deeper level… and they regularly pray for us, send us care packages and are genuinely concerned to keep up with us. I know the trips can be done poorly, for the 6 reasons stated in the article… and I completely agree. The best trips come when the group is humble and is willing to work under our leadership. The worst ones happen when the group is only concerned about what THEY want to do and we are more of a “host” than a leader. In such a case, we usually blame ourselves because we saw warning flags but ignored them… we should have communicated better… and we should have the guts to say “no” to such teams. Short term teams are greatly beneficial and are biblical. I am so glad people are talking about this because I would hate for the American church to abandon short term trips… it would be a detriment for sure.

    • http://www.lauraparkerblog.com/ Laura Parker

      Mandi,

      Thanks for your positive comment! I love that you love STMs, both as a goer and a hoster.
      I think the point you made is a great one about teams being humble and willing to help, rather than coming with their own agendas.
      Thanks for your work in the field. :)

  • http://annkroeker.com Ann Kroeker

    My husband is a missionary kid from Belgium. Their ministry? A publishing house, printing quality Christian literature (Bible, Sunday school material, Christian growth and training books) in French at low cost to serve French-speaking nations of the world, especially francophone Africa. In the ’80s, the American board decided to start promoting short-term teams to help with publishing. The Belgian workers would have to plan weeks in advance ways to organize the work of printing, assembly, binding and boxing so that the easiest steps could be performed by untrained short-term volunteers. The locals had to clean the places that the teams would stay. Several would have to take time off from the work to take the team on sightseeing trips on the weekends. They had to feed the teams and visit with them. All of that time would have otherwise been spent ministering to Belgians or making the books themselves.

    My husband says one can’t know for certain, but that he suspects far more actual printing work would have gotten done without those short-term teams coming in. Then again, the Belgian workers were able to share their vision, hoping that the team would carry that home in their hearts and become involved as supporters or long-term missionaries.

    Was it worth it? I don’t know.

    Recently, my teen girls asked to go on a trip to Nicaragua to help out at an orphanage. I talked with some people who went on the same trip the previous year, and they said that they planted tons of bushes and trees, played with the kids, and in the evenings, had a great time playing games and dancing and connecting with their own team (the Americans). The interaction between locals and the missionary team sounded minimal. They had a great time and want to go back, but I question how much those who went were deeply changed and whether or not they provided anything truly helpful to the orphanage. But maybe that’s okay?

    When I ask those who attended previously, this is what they say, “But the Nicaraguans said, ‘It means so much to us that you would spend all that money and time to come all the way over here to be with us.’ So they felt blessed that we went.”

    I ended up telling my daughters that if they can raise the money themselves without asking for donations, we could consider it. That way the trip can be whatever it will be–and if it is not much more life-changing than a super-fun trip with their friends to another country, it will be on their tab, not that of well-meaning friends making financial sacrifices to donate.

    The girls have not asked me about it since.

    I hope I did not hinder the Holy Spirit’s work in their life.

    • http://www.lauraparkerblog.com/ Laura Parker

      Wow, Ann . . . there’s a lot to unpack in this comment on so many levels.
      First off, how cool that your husband is an MK– didn’t know that about you! And what a neat ministry his family had, and I can totally see the tension of the STM teams to the Belgians. Interfering in a way. It is true that hosting STM takes ALOT of work and often interrupts the normal groove for the long-term worker. It’s challenging to even figure out sometimes how to use the STM team effectively.
      Like the people you spoke with, we would have teams do manual labor kind of jobs–painting walls, etc– but there’s a tension b/c a local could do the same job in half the time for such a small amount . . . and be provided with work for the day.
      YET, those teams did foster hearts for the ministry long term and I see that time and again, too. And it is deeply good to foster a love for the world. I guess for me, sometimes it feels like the “poor people” are being used by the Westerner to grow spiritually, and that seems wrong.
      It’s just both, and, isn’t? I love what you told your girls about raising funds themselves, though– that seems like it could really highlight motivation and make the trip REALLY count for something, if they’ve really had to sacrifice to go on it.
      I feel your tension, and i don’t really have answers, either . . . .

      • http://annkroeker.com Ann Kroeker

        Thank you for taking time to reply, Laura. I value your perspective so much (and Seth’s).

  • http://www.nosuperheroes.com Chris Lautsbaugh

    As a veteran of multiple short term trips which turned into a long term calling, I think Seth has expressed it as well as I have ever seen. I work with lots of short term teams as well. They sometimes make you cringe, but more often then not they make you proud.

  • http://www.facebook.com/richelle.wright Richelle Wright

    In our experience, short term trips are a lot of work and sometimes less efficient than other methods but worth it on so many levels. i know our negative experiences had much to do with a lack of effort or knowledge to prepare those coming and prepare ourselves for them than with anything else. and like mandi said, long-term folks need to be able to say “i’m sorry, what your team is available to do doesn’t fit with our present ministry opportunities,” or “this isn’t a good time for team to come, but we would love to partner with you… are there alternative dates?” i think sometimes we get into a mindset that we automatically have to say yes to any and every one who wants to come and see/be a part of what we are doing, after all we’d hate to offend – instead of discerning whether or not a short term team is part of God’s plan for our region/ministry at that point in time.

    i’ve also found, as misso, that serving a short term team or group that is here puts the shoe on the other foot. all along i’ve been dependent on our partners holding the ropes back in the states – this gives me the chance to, in a sense “hold the ropes” for them and facilitate ministry opportunities for them.

    i do feel it is the responsibility of the long term or on site folks, working together with local church leaders, to make sure that stm interact responsibly and graciously with the local church/believers/ etc., as they minister.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Tara-Porter-Livesay/669810602 Tara Porter-Livesay

    Well, since you asked, I find the vast majority of STM to be poorly planned, poorly executed, and poorly led. I don’t believe they have been helpful or had a positive impact on the culture. (Because of that I really don’t support STM at all.) I happen to live way too close to the USA so the country I live in sees about 200,000 STMissionaries a year … yet it remains one of the poorest countries on earth. Those of us that host these groups are responsible to either fix it or say no. (So please don’t hear me placing blame on the STMs alone.) I don’t hold that power within the organization I represent but if I did I would only allow very small groups very infrequently – those groups would do a lot of group reading and preperation before they arrived. http://livesayhaiti.blogspot.com/2011/03/thinking-through-stm.html

    • http://www.lauraparkerblog.com/ Laura Parker

      Tara,

      HEY! I visited your link and just spent some good time on your blog, and I love it! What a great writer and storyteller you are. Truly. Loved reading of your family’s journey.
      Thanks for being honest– loved your article b/c I thought it was honest. I wrote an article earlier that speaks to the money of STMs . . . . http://www.alifeoverseas.com/short-term-missions-is-the-price-tag-worth-it/
      Wowsers– 200,000 STM and still one of the poorest countries. A good reminder of the waste (should I say “waste”?) of the money spent to travel and see/serve Haiti. Ouch in a major way.
      We lived in a place where people would go to vacation in Asia, so I think that country gets lots of STMs, too, like the closeness of Haiti to the States might draw a larger number there, too.
      Thanks for your thoughts here– I think they are really valid.

      I think the dangerous place for a long-termer to be is when they get handed a STM and don’t really have a heart/focus on them, then end up hosting poorly or resenting the STM worker unintentionally.
      In some ways, I think it can be really less than . . . .

      Thanks, again, Tara . . . excited to hear more from you in the future. :)

  • http://twitter.com/AlisonJoyful Alison Lam

    Good stuff. I concur!

  • Jenny

    Wow, great topic. And a hot one for me, too. Let me start by saying that I am someone who benefited greatly from STM trips — in high school (when I became a Christian) it was more local in the inner city working with minority groups (SE Asian refugees in our city, Chinese & Korean immigrants, Hispanic neighborhoods) doing VBS, backyard Bible clubs, “tent revival” type events…. seeing the world right in our own backyard so to speak, but still getting a cross-cultural experience (perhaps something the local church should consider doing more often?). I had youth leaders who were very intentional and diligent about training us in evangelism and exposing us to world missions regularly — not as an afterthought, or part of some isolated weekend on the calendar when it was “Missions Weekend.” I later went on STM trips to Honduras, Papua New Guinea, and Japan (3 very different trips!). I strongly believe it is because of what they poured into me as a youth that I asked the question throughout college and beyond, “Lord, HOW are you calling me to be involved in your plan for the world… for the long-term?” STMs have HUGE value for someone who is thoughtfully asking that question of the Lord whether the answer has to do with sending (praying & giving) or going.

    Herein lies my beef with STMs these days. I have been sick hearing the expression, “Vacation with a Purpose.” How offensive that actually is to the long-term workers in the world who are suffering for the sake of the gospel. And I do see how missions emphasis is indeed just a weekend, or at best a week, on the calendar of many churches (I’m speaking of the N. American church) rather than being the fiber that runs throughout everything the church does all year long. Not all churches are this way (I happen to be a member of a vibrant missions-minded church). But I do see the American church falling down on its job of “equipping the saints” in such a way that when we talk about STMs, there is little fruit by way of encouraging people to consider LONG-TERM missions (again, going or sending). I love how a STM can enlarge a person’s vision for the world when there is lots of preparation (of the heart, not of the luggage) and prayer, but so many times, it’s just “a great experience,” the warm fuzzy feeling lasts for a few weeks, then it’s life as usual, there is no follow-up and the impact is lost. There is also the issue of having a grand 2-week missions experience where I have seen people (young or old) say “Yes! I want to be a missionary!” and there again, with little guidance and involvement from the church, that passion and impulsive response to missions can have disastrous results.

    The missionary population around the world is declining. Many missions agencies are working hard to re-brand themselves to draw more people into missions. I see large (even affluent) churches in my area who are discontinuing support of long-term missionaries in favor of sending out short-term teams each year, OR they are becoming the “missions agency” unto themselves which can be a good thing, but if it’s a church with little experience on the field, not so good. Millions of dollars are being spent on STMs, but how many people are catching a vision for participating in God’s work around the world by being a go-er or a send-er?

    I’m kind of all over the place here, but as someone who is raising support to go back to Japan, I’m astounded as my husband and I talk to people, there are many who have been on ST trips in the past, but have given little consideration to their role in the Great Commission since. I suppose the problem goes both ways, though. We support missionaries who have very little communication with us, and I’ve been a part of churches who really don’t hear from their missionaries until… yes, the missions emphasis weekend. Though the primary ministry of the missionary is to the field they have been called to, there is still huge ministry opportunity to educate and equip the church back home. How are WE helping STMs to be a good thing? Good grief. I am all over the place.

    HAVING SAID ALL THAT, STMs can be a GREAT thing in Japan. Americans are a huge draw for the Japanese to even consider attending a church-sponsored event where the gospel is shared. Unlike many places in the world, evangelism is more effectively done by foreign missionaries than nationals. The biggest thing a STM needs to understand is that they are there to help the long-term missionary in progressing the existing ministry that is already going on. There is a wonderful place for that where the STM and LTM and the ministry benefit.

    Yikes. Sorry for the long response :)

  • Michelle

    Hi everyone. I loved this post from Seth Barnes. He truly has hit the proverbial nail on the head. We at @theseedofhope.org are very purposeful at HOW we do STMs. We do believe in them, because as Seth pointed out, it is often through these trips that the STMers are changed to have a heart for something/someone outside of their “walls.” And it is also how organizations, such as ours, build our donor base. BUT our short term teams have a training (including reading material – ie, When Helping Hurts) time that they have to do with their team leader prior to coming, and then approximately 1/4 to 1/2 of their time here is spent in learning opportunities, where they are learning from the long-term missionaries, from our local staff, and from the communities we serve.
    It is exciting to see how short term missions has affected people and how their mission trips have changed the direction of their lives. My husband and I are long term missioners… :-) serving now in our 6th year in South Africa – who both started as short term missionaries. There is FOR SURE a place, but NOT as vacation destinations! I have seen STM described as a holiday/mission! That can turn devastating, not just for the tourist/missionary but also for the people they are going to “serve.” BTW, loving “A Life Overseas!” Wish I had more time for online community, but my real life community takes SOOOO much time, that I don’t get on very often. But just want you to know, that when I do get on, I really enjoy reading the blogs and comments. Bless you all!!

  • PaulC1

    Here’s a good interview with Paul Washer around the pitfalls and the comedy that much of STMs has become:

    http://scottbrownonline.com/paul-washer-and-scott-brown-with-thoughts-on-short-term-mission-trips/

    Definitely worth weighing and considering.

    As a missionary myself, I have had my eyes opened through a couple trips (though they were trips made on my own as opposed to a planned adventure). But, on the whole, what goes on today in the name of missions seems a vast waste for the most part.

    • Janelle

      “Mission trips are not intended to fire up your young people.” I think that’s a great thought to chew on.

  • Janelle

    I would highly recommend this new book by one of my favorite anthropology profs from Wheaton College called “Short-Term Mission”. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LB_PuQSUB6g&feature=youtu.be

    I also participated in STMs as a teen and am now a social worker (I guess you could also say missionary) working for an NGO in Southern India for 2 years. I shudder to think of the “techniques” my youth group employed on the field on my first 2 STM trips. While in college, I went to Thailand to live at a girls’ shelter for six months as an immersion and learning experience. As a result of that experience, I grew to loathe short-term missions and most of what they stood for. I saw a couple short-term teams during my time there, and grew pretty bitter towards most of the STM community. Now, several years later, I’m somewhat more balanced in my views. However, I still think STMs need a lot of self-awareness, other-awareness and general education before attempting any projects overseas. There’s a lot of potential for good, but also a lot of potential for long-term harm.

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=527087281 Seth Barnes

      Janelle – That’s how I got my start too. STMs as a high schooler followed by a HNGR internship in rural Thailand thru Wheaton College (working with the refugees of Pol Pot in 1980). I was motivated to “do STMs right” because of all the flaws I saw in my own experience. God’s point, I think, with my STM experience was to just get me going and to allow me to depend on him in new ways and to get a vision for the kingdom and what he’s doing around the world.

      The irony is that STMs are what activate us to long-term missions, yet we see the flaws before we see their necessity, flaws and all, in activating us. Augustine said, “The church is a whore and she’s my mother.” I think those of us who have started with STMs and become long-termers can say that about STMs as well.

      Here’s how a young man I’m mentoring on an STM now puts it: http://jacobportillo.theworldrace.org/?filename=the-world-race-is-a-whore-and-shes-my-mother-suffering-for-christ

      At the end of the day, we can’t escape the model Jesus gave us in Luke 10. He inaugurated the use of STMs as a discipling tool. It’s up to us whether we’ll do as John enjoins us to and “walk as he walked.”

  • nathansalley.net

    good word seth. always love hearing your perspective.

  • foreigner

    Please read ‘When Helping Hurts”. I strongly believe that the fast majority of STM is more hurting then helping. Hand-outs ruin local economy, people being saved 10 times per year (for another free handout), working for free, building or painting a school takes away from local employment. I would welcome STM if and when their sole purpose is to teach something to the local people, share knowledge (without pushing our own culture) It is a very very difficult subject, but ultimately I believe that the biggest winner of all STM is the airline that brings them there

  • Pingback: Short Term Missions and a Church in Haiti

  • Pingback: Beyond Good Intentions

Previous post:

Next post: