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Short-term Missions: Who Decides What the Needs Are?

David A. Livermore

Global Learning Center

One of the things that drove me to write a book was my concern that short-term missions just might continue to operate on the same mistakes that have been true about our mission work in the past. The assumption that we know what is most needed by people in another place is the assumption that allowed Rome, England, and Spain to say their colonialist domination was not purely self-centered. Our financial wealth, and all the amenities that accompany that, easily inclines us to think we know what these people need.

I’m often at national conventions where short-term mission organizations are exhibiting. When I walk up to talk to ministry reps from these organizations, I ask them how the national church is engaged in what they’re doing. Consistently I hear, “Oh yes, we’re very committed to working with the national churches there. We ask them if they want to be involved.” Did you catch that? We ask them if they want to be involved. Maybe we should start by asking if we should be involved at all, and if so, how? What might it look like if nationals helped us open our eyes to the real needs? Not only is it colonialist to invite nationals’ input on the back end of planning, but we often end up doing irrelevant and costly work. Local ownership means more than inviting participation or asking for input. It means letting the local churches actually direct and shape what we do in our cross-cultural efforts; they ask us if we want to be involved rather than vice versa.

Building projects are one of the most popular kinds of short-term mission endeavors—building churches, rebuilding homes after a natural disaster, building ministry centers, and so on. I’ve done my share of mixing cement, painting walls, and nailing in studs. Believe me, if you knew my total ineptness at any kind of “home-improvement project,” you’d get a good laugh thinking about me trying to put a roof on a church building in South America.

How do the locals feel about our building pursuits on “their” behalf? As with most of these issues, the reviews are mixed. Many nationals express gratitude for seeing fair-skinned kids give up two weeks of vacation to sweat it out as they mix cement all day long, a world away from their backyard swimming pools. We’ve all watched the video testimonials about how life is completely different now because of the homes built, the hospital maintenance that took place, and the brand-new roof on the church.

As you would imagine, others struggle with the thought of how many locals could be employed by investing the money spent on a typical short-term building project. Local ministries see short-term groups raise money for a one-week trip that exceeds the national ministries’ annual budgets. Jo Ann VanEngen, a missionary in Honduras, contends, “Short-term mission groups almost always do work that could be done (and usually done better) by people of the country they visit. The spring-break group spent their time and money painting and cleaning the orphanage in Honduras. That money could have paid two Honduran painters who desperately needed the work, with enough left over to hire four new teachers, build a new dormitory, and provide each child with new clothes.”5

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Most Recent User Comments
chris.bowser
4/15/2008 1:51 AM
Hi My name is Chris Bowser and I have been a missionary in El Salvador since shortly after the two earthquakes devistated the country in 2001.I agree with you completely regarding the feeling that many have the "we are going to show these people how to build" mentality". I have hosted hundreds of short term teams in construction, evangelism and Medical teams.I have had to deal with it on many teams but not all. Leaders, a good pre-trip orientation does wonders!I have had to be a liazon between the north american teams and the National workers for seven years now. I can actually say that with the right orientation most teams will do it the way we do it here so to speak but it requires being a middle man between the two cultures to make it work. It is not always easy but it works.As a short term team if you will keep the word "flexability" at the forefront no matter where you go it will take you a long way.I agree with the young lady, taking Christ should ALWAYS be the focus. Blessings!
missionarykid15
4/14/2008 5:03 PM
Hi my name is Naomi,i'm 15 years old.I have been going on short term missions trips since I was 9 years old.When I was 13 Iwent on my first out of country missions trip. Oradea,Romania is where I went.It was one month. Sir, what you are talking about only speaks of what we do and you said maybe giving the job to two nationals and that they would know more than some teenagers. You may be right but your only looking at what we do, not what we bring. And that is Jesus Christ. Our only goal is not to just rebulid things and give out stuff. Our MAIN goal is to bring Jesus Christ to these people. I think you need to look at it from a diffrent view,in your article you never speak once about talking about Christ, but only what we do. All in all we're bringing them Christ. That is the main goal.You have to know that the trips have changed my life,and you cant tell me what God has called me to do is not effective.I've seen lives changed.Maybe you should go on a TeenMania trip.Then get back to me
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