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Deputation “How To’s” – Making Calls

February 14, 2016 by Patrick Leave a Comment

Deputation really works. As a missionary friend said, “Deputation works as hard as the missionary works.” I agree with that statement. Deputation is not broken, but it does take a lot of work. What does this work entail? Making calls…all day…every day! Well, maybe not every day, you get to be in church on Sundays, but you can call between services.

I know it is monotonous, but it is absolutely necessary. Churches will normally not partner with a missionary if they don’t have them in, and they normally don’t have missionaries in if they have not ever heard of them. Therefore a missionary must call church, after church, after church, after church. Call for 10-12 hours a day (Sundays won’t be 10 hour call days). Call every like-minded church you can find. You must take good records (this deserves more attention, but it will have to be another post). Call the churches that you may know. Call the churches you may have family and friends in. Call churches that may have a relationship with your home church. All of those will run out quick. Very soon, you will be calling churches you are not familiar with, churches that you do not have some sort of “in” with. Call, call, call, and then call some more. The goal of calling churches is to fill you calendar with churches to present you missionary burden in. You should have scheduled meetings for every Sunday morning, Sunday evening, and Wednesday evening. You can also shoot to have some meetings on other nights (for mission conferences, etc.). The goal to calling is sharing your burden with as many churches as you possibly can. Once you have filled your calendar totally full for at least 2 years, then you are done, you don’t have to make any more calls, unless your deputation takes longer than 2 years.

Here are a few questions and answers about calling on deputation…

  • Why call churches? To set up meetings where you can share your heart with like-minded churches. To build your support to get to the mission field.
  • How many calls should I make? As many as you can within the 10-12 hour span every day. Some churches will not be able to have you in. Some churches will be closed down. Some churches will be endless voicemails. Still make the calls.
  • How many meetings should I work toward each day? As many as possible, but 3 meetings a day is a good goal. That being said, if you get 3, don’t quit for the day, shoot for 4, then 5, then 6, and so on.
  • What if I have days where I don’t schedule any meetings? First, you will have those days. I have. You most likely will to. The answer is to keep calling. Don’t quit. Be faithful at calling. My mentor consistently reminds me to focus on the process, not the product. In other words, you may have days where you call 12 hours and you don’t schedule one meeting. Focus on making 10-12 hours of calls, not on how many meetings you make. It will all work out.
  • What if it seems like every Pastor I talk to is telling me they cannot have me in? Keep calling, churches will schedule you.

Different missionaries on deputation do things differently. The calls must be made, but there are different thoughts as to the “secondary issues” of making calls. Here is my advice for calling.

  1. Find somewhere away from home (if possible) where you can go to call every day. Make it your job. Most men have jobs they go to, it is good for you and your family to see you go to work too. If your Pastor allows, you can go to your home church and use an empty office or Sunday School room. There is something about going to work and working.
  2. Have a mentor or friend help keep you accountable. It can be your pastor or another missionary. There is something about having to report to someone that may keep you calling when you really would like to stop.
  3. Eliminate as many distractions as possible. If you use social network platforms, turn it off and keep it off (maybe use it at lunch and dinner). Help those around you understand that you are working. Try to be somewhere quiet (in my opinion, Starbucks is not the best place to call. Even when you get a Pastor on the phone, it can be hard to hear you over the customers and the baristas. Also Starbucks may be distracting you from making the calls).
  4. Keep a good attitude. It is really your choice whether you enjoy making calls. I know it is not fun, but the truth is, other people are working 40-60 hour weeks outside in the freezing cold or the 90 degree heat. I often told myself that while I am inside a room making calls other people are outside digging holes (something I have done and hated). I’ve got a friend who has encouraged me to “enjoy the process”. Making calls is monotonous but it is your choice as to what attitude you have.
  5. Don’t lose sight of the goal. The goal is getting to the mission field, to proclaim the Gospel, plant churches, and train men. Deputation is a step toward that goal. You will still have more to do (like learning the language and cultural acquisition).

Many “professions” come with work that must be done before being able to actually do the work of the profession. Doctors and lawyers must go to years of school before they are ever able to perform a surgery or work a case. Policeman must go through training. Truck drivers must first obtain their CDL license before they can get behind the wheel of an 18 wheeler. Teachers must go through years of schooling. Many of these jobs and others require certification in addition to schooling. Most “professions” come with preparatory work. A missionary is much more than a “profession”, it is a calling from the Almighty God. Make your calls all day, every day. Be faithful at it. God will give you the meetings He wants you to have. God will build your support.

Making calls is only one part of deputation. It is really the easiest part of deputation. More posts on deputation how to’s are coming. Check back soon for more.

For more information on deputation, buy the Deputation Manual by Austin Gardner and Tony Howeth. It is the greatest book I know of.

Filed Under: Blog

What is on your mind? Our Daughters

February 11, 2016 by Patrick 1 Comment

We are 43 days away from moving to Argentina. This move is not for a couple of months or a few years. We are moving down to Argentina to spread the Gospel, plant churches, and train men. With this change in our lives, there are a lot of things on my mind. This post is about our daughters.

We have three girls, Lily (10 years old), Piper (6 years old), and Ivy (4 years old). These girls will grow up (or continue to grow up) in Argentina. We have been asked about our girls occasionally while on deputation. Some people feel pity for our daughters, they will be missing out or are being shorted by being taken away from the United States and being raised in another country. Some may think our daughters would greater benefit from staying here in the States.

I don’t think our daughters will in any way suffer any disservice by growing up in Argentina. These girls will become fluent in Spanish, will learn how to adapt in a foreign culture, will make friends that they would not have met otherwise. They will serve in churches we plant on the mission field. If God does not keep them on the mission field, being able to speak fluently as well as being able to understand both American and Latin American cultures may aid them greatly as adults.

In short, our girls are not being “shorted” at all. They are actually getting a great advantage. I believe our daughters are blessed to grow up in Argentina as a part of a missionary family. This is how we believe, and this is how we present what God is leading our family to do to our daughters. They are excited about moving down to Argentina, about helping plant churches, and about making new friends. We are very blessed to have Lily, Piper, and Ivy. They are incredible girls. I believe God is going to use them mightily. I believe God is using deputation and will use life and experiences in Argentina to mold them into the servants He desires them each to be. A lot is on my mind, my daughters growing up in Argentina is one of the blessings that are on my mind.

Filed Under: Blog

My Favorite Things – Soul Winning

February 10, 2016 by Patrick Leave a Comment

We have been on deputation for 23 months to go to Argentina as church planting missionaries. We will be leaving for the field on March 24, 2016. We have seen incredible things on deputation. I have narrowed my favorite things to a list of seven. This post is about the personal soul winning of a pastor.

My family and I arrived at the church early. We set our display up, talked with people, and met Pastor and talked with him. We had prayer time with the church. Pastor gave me the opportunity to present what God is doing in our hearts and to preach a message from the Bible. After the service, he asked us to go out to eat with he and his family. We followed the Pastor, not knowing where we would go eat. We drove to a gas station that had a small sandwich shop inside. Up to this point, the events of the night were not very much out of the ordinary. When we entered the gas station, Pastor introduced me to the owner. He said, “This is_____, I led him to Jesus a few month back. He was a Muslim, now he is a Christian.” Over the course of the meal, Pastor told me the story of how this man believed on Jesus, and how his wife was still lost, but how he was praying for her and hoped to see her believe on Jesus soon. I was so excited to see how Pastor personally went after that man with the Gospel of Jesus. I was looking at the fruit of his ministry.

Being a witness is a privilege for every believer. The message of the Gospel, that man may be forgiven of his sins and become a child of God through Jesus, is the most freeing message the world can hear! The Bible says in 1 Corinthians 15:34, “Awake to righteousness, and sin not; for some have not the knowledge of God: I speak this to your shame.” It is not just the privilege, but also the obligation of every believer to share the Gospel. Jesus gave the Great Commission to the church, and the church is made up of believers. It is our obligation to take the Gospel to the world, and that means we should share the message of the Gospel with those around us!

I was challenged by this Pastor to tell more people about Jesus. It has been one of my favorite things I have seen on deputation.

Filed Under: Blog

An Introduction To Deputation

February 8, 2016 by Patrick Leave a Comment

Deputation is not broken. It works. I know it works. God has used deputation to build our support in two years and one week. Deputation is the process of selecting missionaries who will be sent as their substitute or agent to preach the Gospel on the foreign field. It is the process in which independent Baptist Churches send missionaries to the nations around the world. To a family sent out from their church, it is the process in which they travel to like-minded churches to share what God has called them to do, to raise support in order to reach the people God has put on their heart. Deputation seems to be something of a sore subject for some. I have heard from some men who say things like,  “Deputation is broken”, “Deputation doesn’t work”, or “There has to be a better way to get missionaries to the mission field.” I disagree with these statements. The truth is that deputation works as hard as the missionary does. I have a friend who is a missionary to Peru. He said the only people who complain about deputation are the ones who are not doing the work. Deputation not only works, it is also beneficial. Here are a few of the benefits I see in the deputation process that supports my proposal (deputation works).

  • Deputation gets missionaries to the field. This is proven. We have Baptist missionaries in countries around the world that are proclaiming the Gospel, planting churches, and training men. Many of them got to the field through the deputation process.
  • Deputation emphasizes the need around the world in local churches. There are churches in other denominations who do not have missionaries in. I have spoken to some Christians who say that they have never had a missionary in their church. They have never even seen a missionary before! This is tragic, because having missionaries in local churches allows followers of Jesus to see the need, it also gives them an opportunity to answer the missionaries plea, in helping get the Gospel to all people! I cannot state that only churches that have missionaries in on a regular basis send out their own missionaries, but I do believe a church that is consistently exposed to missionaries, world evangelism, and the need around the world as a whole and in specific places, will more likely see their own men called to the field.
  • Deputation builds the missionary. On deputation, the missionary will be in some 250-300 churches. He and his family will see God move in wonderful ways. God’s moving and providing will build the missionary family’s faith. They will see God move in many churches. The missionary family will build up a network of praying brothers and sisters in Christ from churches around the country. The missionary will see God work in the hearts of believers who respond to God’s call to the mission field. This is no substitution for experience in serving in their own local church, but I do believe it helps the missionary family.

Please understand that I am not saying that deputation is the only way for missionaries to get to the mission field. I do believe deputation to be best way for missionaries to build their support and to effectively reach people, plant churches, and train men.

In the coming weeks, I will be posting on the subject of deputation. It is going to be a “How to” series. In the meantime, I recommend that you read “The Deputation Manual” by Austin Gardner and Tony Howeth. Here is a link.

Filed Under: Blog

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