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GFA's Renewing Your Passion Conference is not your typical spiritual retreat. It's a place to hear about God's miracles in Asia and increase your own faith. Bring your family, your friends, your Bible study group or your entire congregation.
Register now!
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Frequently Asked Questions
- What are the qualifications of GFA missionaries?
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We are looking for those who have a definite call upon
their lives to go to the most unreached areas for evangelism
and church planting. It is not a job. A hireling quits when
the going gets tough. Our commitment is to train and send out
men and women who seek only God's approval and God's
glory-those who will not be bought with money or seek their
own, not even in the work of the Lord.
They must also be people of integrity in the area of
commitment to the Word of God and correct doctrine, willing
to obey the Scripture in all matters without question. They
must maintain a testimony above reproach, both in their walks
with the Lord and also with their families. We look for those
who are willing to work hard to reach the lost in and around
the mission fields where they are placed. Each missionary is
also a shepherd of the flock that the Lord raises up. He will
protect these new believers and lead them into maturity in
Christ, through teaching God's Word and equipping them to win
the lost in these regions.
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- To whom are native missionary evangelists accountable?
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We take several steps to ensure that our accountability
systems work without failure. In each area, the missionaries
meet at least once a month for a few days of fasting and
prayer and sharing together as they build the kingdom in
their part of the field. In all cases, native missionaries
are supervised by local indigenous elders under whom they
work. In turn these field leaders spend much time meeting
with godly senior leaders. The leaders who oversee the
ministry are men of integrity and have had a good testimony
in life and ministry for many years.
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- Are the financial records of native missionaries audited on
the field?
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Yes, financial records are inspected by our field
administrative offices to ensure that funds are used
according to the purposes intended. A detailed accounting in
writing is required for projects such as village crusades,
training conferences and special programs. Missionary support
funds are signed for and received both by the leaders and the
missionaries involved, and these receipts are checked. All
financial records on the field are also audited annually by
independent certified public accountants.
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- The 10/40 Window seems to be the focus of many mission
organizations. What is Gospel for Asia's perspective?
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An old proverb says that no cow in a picture book is going
to go out and eat any grass. There has been a tremendous
amount of talk and tons of information pumped out regarding
the 10/40 Window and the 2.7 billion people waiting to hear
the Gospel. We need to move on from information to
implementation if we want to see these people reached with
the Gospel.
Ninety-seven percent of the world's unreached people lives in
the 10/40 Window, also known as the "Resistant Belt." A
closer look at the 10/40 Window reveals that there are more
unreached people groups in northern India than in any other
part of the world.
Now over 25 years old, Gospel for Asia supports more than
16,500 missionaries working in some of the
neediest Asian countries-primarily in the 10/40 Window.
Although we have been working among the unreached since the
ministry began, it has only been in the last 15 years that we
have honed our strategy to reach the most
unreached.
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- How are native missionary evangelists trained?
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Gospel for Asia has established 54 Bible colleges in the
heart of the 10/40 Window. Currently more than 10,000
students are going through the three-year training program,
after which they will go to unreached areas to plant
churches.
The training is intense. Their day begins at 5 a.m. The first
hour is spent in prayer and meditation on God's Word.
Teaching and practical training take place throughout the
remainder of the day. Around 11 p.m. their day ends.
Each Friday evening is set apart for fasting and over two
hours of prayer. Every weekend the students go to nearby
unreached villages for evangelism. Before the school year
ends they will have started dozens of house churches and
mission stations through these weekend outreaches. Before
they finish their three-year training, each student will have
carefully read through the entire Bible at least three
times.
The students spend the first Friday of every month in
all-night prayer, praying especially for unreached people
groups and other nations. Through these times of prayer, the
reality of the lost world becomes very close to their hearts.
Throughout the three years at the Bible school, each student
is given the opportunity to pray for dozens of totally
unreached people groups. At the same time each one seeks the
Lord's face as to where He will have them serve after
graduation.
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- Is GFA just concentrating on evangelism, or are you a
church-planting organization?
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Reaching the most unreached in our generation-this
powerful vision is the single purpose God gave to Gospel for
Asia from its very inception.
How could we possibly fulfill such a calling? Most unreached
people groups live in the 10/40 Window, in nations that
severely restrict or are closed to foreign missionaries. The
Lord clearly directed us to use the most effective approach
under these circumstances: helping nationals to reach their
own people and fulfill the Great Commission as commanded in
Matthew 28:19-20. They do this interculturally,
near-culturally, and cross-culturally as well.
No doubt the Lord has had His hand on each stage of GFA's
growth from our small beginning of supporting a few workers
on the field, to providing tools such as literature and
bicycles, then vans, films, projectors and generators. We
then began adding thousands of native missionaries in seven
nations to our support list and set up a network of leaders,
coordinators and accountability systems.
The Lord enabled GFA to start one radio broadcast in an
Indian language and create a listener follow-up system. Today
broadcasts in more than 103 languages are heard daily by
millions of people. As part of the follow-up, GFA began
producing and distributing books, tracts and other Gospel
literature.
To mobilize hundreds of new workers for the pioneer mission
fields of Asia, GFA began a three-month intensive missionary
training course. This later expanded to a three-year Bible
college and has now exploded into 54 schools and a three-year
seminary.
These schools annually produce thousands of new workers to go
to the unreached mission fields. As a direct result, GFA has
begun a church-planting ministry called Believers Church.
This ministry is specifically set up to care for the new
believers won by the workers who were sent out from our
schools.
In the past all these different developments within Gospel
for Asia looked like seemingly unrelated puzzle pieces. But
now we see th at each phase of GFA's growth and expansion was
part of a strategic plan. It was the Lord's preparation to
bring this ministry to a point where He could commission us
to train and send out thousands of workers and plant churches
in the most unreached areas of the 10/40 Window.
You see, in the past, we sought only to identify and support
existing indigenous groups who were reaching the unreached in
their own culture or nearby culture. We assisted them as much
as we could by providing financial help and ministry
tools.
The new direction for our ministry came during a pivotal GFA
leaders meeting in India in 1988. Twenty-five of our leaders
met together for a time of serious evaluation and
soul-searching, to discern if our efforts were indeed
reaching the unreached.
Our research revealed a sobering reality: The existing
missionary force was not effectively targeting those who had
never heard the Gospel. That day, after much prayer, we
sensed the Lord calling us to start a new phase of ministry.
As a result, we made a very deliberate decision to train
native missionaries and send them out to plant local churches
among the most unreached.
This is how the 54 Bible colleges came into existence.
That is why, in villages where no one had ever gone with the
name of Jesus, our graduates and workers have now planted
more than 29,793 Believers Churches and mission stations in
the last few years.
We never imagined that we would come full circle: from a
supporting and funding organization to a training and church
planting movement!
But so much work is yet to be done! Millions are desperately
waiting to hear the Gospel. We are determined to move
forward, believing the Lord will indeed enable us to send out
workers into the ripe harvest fields of Asia.
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- What methods do native missionaries use?
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While films, radio, television and video are becoming more
common in Asia, the most effective methods are still those
that we find in the New Testament book of Acts!
The most effective evangelism happens face-to-face in the
streets. Most native missionaries walk or ride bicycles
between villages much like the Methodist circuit riders did
in America's frontier days.
Street preaching and open-air evangelism, often using
megaphones, is the most common way to proclaim the Gospel.
Sometimes evangelists arrange witnessing parades and/or tent
campaigns and distribute simple Gospel tracts during the
week-long village crusades.
Since the majority of the world's one billion illiterates
live in Asia, the Gospel must be proclaimed to them without
using literature. This is done through showing the Man of
Mercy film on the life of Jesus and also by using
cassettes, flip charts and other visual aids to communicate
the Gospel.
Trucks, vans, simple loudspeaker systems, bicycles, leaflets,
pamphlets, books, banners and flags are the most important
tools for our missionaries. Easy to use and train with, they
are now being supplemented with radio broadcasting, cassette
players, film projectors and television. These types of
communication tools are available in Asia at low cost and can
be purchased locally without import duties. In addition,
native evangelists are familiar with them, and they do not
shock the culture.
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- With your emphasis on the native missionary movement, do
you feel there is still a place for Western missionaries in
Asia?
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Yes, there is still a place for Western missionaries.
First, there are still countries like Morocco, Afghanistan
and the Maldive Islands, where there is no existing Church
from which to draw missionaries. In these places,
missionaries from the outside-whether from the West, Africa
or Asia-are a good way for the Gospel to be spread.
Second, Christians in the West have technical skills which
may be needed by their brothers and sisters in Third-World
churches. The work of Wycliffe Bible Translators is a good
example. Their translation efforts in the 4,000+ languages
still without a Bible is invaluable. So when Third-World
churches invite Westerners to come and help them, and the
Lord is in it, the Westerners obviously should respond.
Through cross-cultural and interracial contact, such
ministries are especially helpful because they give
Westerners a better understanding of the situation in Asia.
Alumni of these programs are helping others in the West
understand the real needs of the Third World.
And, there is the simple fact that the Holy Spirit does call
individuals from one culture to witness to another. When He
calls, we should by all means respond.
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- Why don't indigenous churches support their own
missionaries in the Third World?
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They do. In fact, we believe that most Christians in Asia
give a greater portion of their income to missions than
Westerners. But the churches in Asia are primarily made up of
the poor-those among the one-fourth of the world's population
living on just a few dollars a week. Since they frequently
lack cash, they tend to give things like chicken eggs, rice,
mangoes, or tapioca roots.
Many times we find that a successful missionary evangelist
will be almost crippled by his ministry's rapid growth. When
a great move of the Holy Spirit occurs in a village, the
successful missionary may find he has several trained and
gifted coworkers as Timothys who are ready to establish
sister congregations. However, the rapid growth almost always
outstrips the original congregation's ability to support
additional workers. This is where outside help is vitally
needed.
As God's Spirit continues to move, many new mission boards
are being formed. Some of the largest missionary societies in
the world are now located in Asia. For example, at this time
Gospel for Asia alone is supporting over 16,500
native missionaries and this number is increasing at an
astonishing rate. But in light of the need, we literally need
hundreds of thousands of additional missionaries who will, in
turn, require more outside support.
Regrettably, there are some indigenous churches which do not
support native evangelists for the same reason some Western
congregations do not give: lack of vision in the lives of the
pastors and congregations. But this doesn't mean Western
Christians have to sit back and miss out on one of the
greatest opportunities they will have to make an eternal
impact and help win a lost world for Christ.
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- Will native missionary sponsorships cause native
evangelists to depend on the West for support rather than local
churches?
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It is not outside money that weakens a growing church, but
outside control. Funds from the West actually liberate the
evangelists and frees them to follow the call of God.
After generations of domination by Western colonialists, most
Asians are acutely conscious of the potential problem of
foreign control through outside funding. The issue is
frequently raised in discussions by native missionary
leaders, and most native missionary boards have developed
policies and practices to provide for accountability without
foreign control.
At Gospel for Asia, we have taken several steps to make sure
funds get to the local missionary evangelist in a responsible
way without destroying valuable local autonomy.
First, our selection and training process is designed to
favor men and women who begin with a right
attitude-missionaries who are dependent on God for their
support rather than on man.
Second, there is no direct or indirect supervision of the
work by Western supporters. The donor gives the Lord's money
to the missionary through Gospel for Asia and we, in turn,
send the money to indigenous leaders who oversee the
financial affairs on each field. Therefore, the native
evangelist is twice-removed from the source of the funds.
This procedure is being followed by several other
organizations that are collecting funds in the West for
native support, and it seems to work very well.
Finally, as soon as a new work is established, the native
missionary is able to begin branching out to evangelize
nearby unreached villages as well. The new congregations he
establishes will eventually gain enough financial stability
to fully support him while still giving sacrificially to
support evangelism. Eventually, native churches will be able
to support most pioneer evangelism, but the job is too big
now without Western aid.
The quickest way to help Asian churches become
self-supporting is to support a growing native missionary
movement. As new churches are planted, the blessings of the
Gospel will abound, and the new Asian believers will be able
to support greater outreach.
Sponsorship monies are like investment capital in the work of
God. The best thing we can do to help make the Asian church
independent now is to support as many native missionaries as
possible.
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- How can Gospel for Asia support a native missionary
evangelist for so much less per year than a Western
missionary?
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There is a vast difference between living at the same
level as an Asian family, as native evangelists do, and
living at even a modest Western standard. In most of the
nations where we support local missionaries, they are able to
survive on two to four dollars a day. In most cases, this is
approximately the same per capita income of the people to
whom they minister.
A Western missionary, however, is faced with many additional
costs. These include international air transportation, the
cost of shipping possessions to the field, language schools,
special English-language schools for children, and
Western-style housing. Native missionaries, on the other
hand, live in villages on the same economic level as others
in the community whom they are seeking to reach for
Christ.
The Western missionary is also faced with passport,visa and
other legal expenses, donor-communication costs, extra
medical care, import duties, and requirements to pay taxes in
his home country. The cost of food can be very high,
especially if the missionary entertains other Westerners,
employs servants to cook and eats imported foods.
Frequently, host governments require foreign missionaries to
meet special tax or reporting requirements, usually with
payments required. Clothing, such as shoes and imported
Western garments, is costly. Many native missionaries choose
to wear sandals and dress like the local people.
For a Western missionary family with children, the pressure
is intense to maintain a semblance of Western-style living.
Frequently this is increased by peer pressure at private
schools where other students are the sons and daughters of
international businessmen and diplomats.
Finally, vacations and in-country travel or tourism are not
considered essential by native missionaries, as they are by
most Westerners. The cost of imported English books,
periodicals, records, and tapes is also a considerable
expense not part of the native missionary's lifestyle. The
result of all this is that Western missi onaries often need
30 to 40 times more money for their support than do native
missionaries.
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- How can I know which ministries are genuine and in the
center of God's Will?
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Obviously, you cannot respond to all the appeals, so what
criteria should you use to make your decision? Here are a few
helpful guidelines for missions-giving:
Do those asking for money believe in the fundamental truths
of God's Word, or are they theologically liberal? Any mission
that seeks to carry out God's work must be committed to His
Word. Is the group asking for money affiliated with liberal
organizations which deny the truth of the Gospel while
keeping the name Christian? Do their members openly declare
their beliefs? Too many today walk in a gray area, taking no
stands and trying to offend as few as possible so they can
obtain money from all, whether friends or enemies of the
cross of Christ. The Word of God is being fulfilled in them:
"Having a form of godliness, but denying the power
thereof..." (2 Tim. 3:5).
Is the goal of their mission to win souls, or are they only
social-gospel oriented? One lie the devil uses to hinder
Gospel work and send people to hell is, How can we preach the
Gospel to a man with an empty stomach? Because of this lie,
for a hundred years much missions-designated funding has been
invested in social work rather than in spreading the
Word.
Ask before you give: Is this mission involved in preaching
the Gospel of Jesus Christ? The liberal person believes man
is basically good; therefore, all that is needed to solve his
problems is to change his environment. The Bible says that
all rich and poor alike must repent and come to Christ or be
lost. Which gospel is being preached by the mission group
asking for your support?
Is the mission organization financially accountable? Do they
use the money for the purpose for which it was given? At
Gospel for Asia every penny given for support of a missionary
is sent to the field for that purpose. Our home office is
supported with funds given for that purpose. Are their
finances audited by independent auditors according to
accepted procedures? Will they send an audited financial
statement to anyone upon reques t?
Do members of the mission group live by faith or man's
wisdom? God never changes His plan: The just shall live by
faith (Gal. 3:11). When a mission continually sends out
crisis appeals for its maintenance rather than for outreach,
something is wrong. They seem to say, God made a commitment,
but now He is in trouble, and we must help Him out of a tight
spot. God makes no promises He cannot keep. If an
organization constantly pleads for money, you need to
question if that group is doing what God wants them to do. We
believe we must wait upon God to discern His mind and do only
what He leads us to do, instead of taking foolish "steps of
faith" without His going before us. The end should never
justify the means.
Finally, a word of caution. Do not look for a reason for not
giving to the work of God. Remember, we must give all we can,
keeping only enough to meet our needs so the Gospel can be
preached before the night comes, when no man can work (John
9:4). For most of us, the problem is not that we give too
much but that we give too little. We live selfishly and store
up treasures on this earth that will soon be destroyed, while
precious souls die and go to hell.
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- How can I help sponsor a native missionary?
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Click here to help sponsor a
native missionary online through Gospel for Asia! You can
also call our office at 1-800-WIN-ASIA or
click here for more
information. You will receive an envelope and first-gift
card with the picture and testimony of the native
missionary you are helping. Each month as you continue
supporting your missionary, we will send you a receipt for
your gift. The lower portion of the receipt may be
returned in the envelope provided for mailing the
following month's support.
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- What is your refund / return policy?
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If for any reason you find an item you've received from us
less than satisfactory, please return it to us within 30 days
of receipt. We'll send you a replacement or refund check, or
credit your credit card, whichever you prefer. Shipping fees
to return the item(s) are not refundable unless incorrectly
shipped, received damaged or defective.
All orders will be processed within 1-3 business days of
receipt and shipped by ground unless otherwise requested.
Additional fees will be assessed for special handling or
international requests. Call 1-800-946-2742 for complete
details.
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