At its absolute core, a missionary is simply someone who is sent . Specifically, someone sent to love people who are not like them.
That core is still beautiful. It is the doctor who leaves a comfortable city practice to treat river blindness in a remote village. It is the teacher who learns a difficult language just to read stories to children who have never held a book. It is the engineer who digs wells not for a contract, but for the quiet joy of clean water.
If we are going to use the term today, we have to check that backpack at the door. Strip away the colonialism. Strip away the judgement. What’s left? Missionary
The new model is subtractive: You take away my comfort. You take away my agenda. You take away my assumption that I am the hero of this story.
The best missionaries in history weren't the ones who built the biggest churches. They were the ones who learned the local word for "pain" before they learned the local word for "sin." Here is my proposal for the 21st-century missionary mindset. I call it The Law of Subtraction . At its absolute core, a missionary is simply
And that, I think, is a mission worth keeping.
A missionary is not someone who brings something to a community, but someone who is willing to have something taken away . It is the doctor who leaves a comfortable
The pith helmet is gone. The pocket watch is broken. What remains is the quiet, terrifying, glorious call to simply show up and love.
We have to let go of the idea that being a missionary is about changing people, and embrace the idea that it is about accompanying people. It is not a title of honor; it is a posture of humility.
The old model was additive: We bring Jesus. We bring medicine. We bring schools. We bring civilization.
Yes. But only if we let it be broken.