Saturday, February 25, 2006

Mission Mississippi 1

So this will be an interesting journal, because it’s going to serve two purposes.  The first is that in lieu of taking a final exam I am going on this mission trip to Mississippi to do hurricane relief work with Presbyterian Disaster Assistance.  But the second is to keep people back home up to date on what I’m doing and what we’re experiencing.  Too often mission trips are so overwhelming to be summed up easily when one returns home and you end up basically telling people “It was quite an experience.”  So I hope that by blogging/journaling during the trip I can prevent that from happening.  

So what are my expectations and understandings of this trip?  Well as far as expectations go I’m not sure really.  The group is a mixed group of people from Shadyside Presbyterian, Bidwell Presbyterian, and the seminary.  We’ve got a few young people in the group with the youngest being a teenage girls who’s way-cool mom (who’s also on the trip) allowed to take a week off from school in order to take part in the trip (talk about having your priorities in the right order!).  There are four seminary students, three of us in our 20’s, along with a girl who is a sophomore in college.

Right now as I write this we’re on Interstate 81 in Tennessee heading for Chattanooga where we’ll spend the night tonight before finishing our trip to Mississippi.  Because of the advent of modern technology, I am able to be online via my cell phone in the van.  So really we’ve got two days before we get down to business really.  

So why mission?  And why Mississippi?  This is really my third mission trip. The first one was with Habitat for Humanity in conjunction with my housing group in college, and the second to the Dominican Republic my first year of seminary.  Both were interesting and very different experiences to say the least, and I really enjoyed both of them.  But looking back on them, I don’t know why I did them really.  I guess it just seemed like it was the “right” thing to do and I was a Christian, so that’s what I did.  

Reflecting on it now, in light of having taken Missiology I want to argue that we do mission work not primarily because it’s good for us (although the value of pilgrimages are well known) and its not because we’ve got something good that we can share (although there is an element of charity involved in the work).  I believe that the church is called to do mission work because we are called to participate in the mission of God in redeeming the world.  In Jesus Christ God was reconciling the world to himself (according to the Confession of 1967) and that works continues through the church.  We believe that God is at work in the world and the church’s role is to put hands and feet on that work, which is you think about it is a pretty awesome job.  But mission is primarily eschatological – we do things that we know God is doing/will do in bringing to fullness the new heavens and the new earth.  

So here’s an example.  Rev 21 tells us that God will wipe away every tear and there will be no more mourning, crying or pain in the end.  If this is how things will be at the end, the church can better discern God’s lead by looking for opportunities to where God is doing that here and now.  This is where I see this mission trip fitting in.  We’re going to Mississippi not because we’re “super-Christians” who are earning brownie points by doing this.  We’ve doing this because we know that this is where God is at work, making right what is wrong.  In essence mission work is a living example of the Kingdom of God coming near because as the body of Christ we are Kingdom people.  We recognize that the rulers of this day, while useful and ordained by God, are not the real rulers of the universe and that it is only God and God’s work that will make the world right.  

We also read in Philippians that there will be a day when every knee shall bow and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is LORD to the Glory of the Father.  This is our basis for evangelism.  Because we know as Christians that this is an “objective reality” (to use Karl Barth’s language) we seek to bear witness to this and be apart of God’s work in showing this to the rest of the world.  We don’t do evangelism (primarily) to increase the size of our church or to help others find eternal life (because the work of salvation is God’s alone) but because we as Christians are aware of and acknowledge the Lordship of Christ as the true ruler over all the universe and realize that by following him we can be exactly what we are intended to be.  

All of this can sound very self-glorifying because after all, “Look at us!  We’re being Kingdom People!  We’re acting for God, look at how right we are in what we’re doing!”  But I hope that’s not my attitude.  I believe the call to participate in God’s service is a high one and one that must be taken with all seriousness and therefore with a great deal of humanity.  I almost didn’t write the sentence above about the Kingdom of God coming near in mission work because even our work will be sadly imperfect, despite our best intentions.  We just can’t get past our broken and sinful selves.  I almost wonder whether mission trips shouldn’t begin with a prayer of confession first, acknowledging our own inability to be completely faithful in that which God has called us to, but also recognizing that God has called us to this task in spite and precisely because of who we are.

5:54 PM, from somewhere on the road in Northeastern Tennessee.

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