This is the third section on my reflections based on the content the Greenhouse Story 2 Training Weekend (Feb 19-21st).
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Take a look at the back of almost any Bible and you’ll see a map of the Middle East and the Mediterranean Sea. You’ll see four squiggly lines drawn in different colors and a little key at the bottom indicating that these lines are the apostle Paul’s missionary journeys.
As a kid, it always reminded me of those scenes out of Indiana Jones movies, where there would be a soft fade from a smirking Harrison Ford onto a parchment map, with a red line moving slowly over a map, indicating a plane’s path from Germany to Austria or some other beautiful locale. It helped convey the story’s progression and the vastness of the tale.
But merely showing each movie’s mapped journeys would no doubt strip the Indiana Jones tales of their richness – the time between journeys, the relationships built in each movie, the enemies defeated…and of course, the explosions!
As nice as it is to have a map of Paul’s journeys spanning 30 years smashed on top of each other, we need to carefully consider the lives and happenings of Paul throughout Acts and the New Testament Epistles to see what those journeys mean – and it might just reveal how God develops a leader in the harvest that finishes well. (As a side note, I highly recommend the 1981 TV movie Peter and Paul.)
First Journey
Paul’s first missionary journey (Acts 13:1-14:28) from 47-48 CE took place in Southeast Asia and was the start of the churches in the Galatian region. See Paul during this time as a learner, and not a teacher. A team covered 1500 miles as traveling evangelists leaving clusters of undeveloped disciples behind who were desperate for leadership.
The team felt that it was necessary that they revisit these churches several times to provide leadership, nevertheless, the churches suffered from immaturity and vulnerability, a weak understanding of the Truth, and was influenced at the hands of very strong and legalistic leaders. Even though the team saw fruitfulness, it did not see its churches multiply. The sickness of these churches and personality differences in the team seemingly caused frustration and division.
Lessons:
- The First Journey leader often tries to do it all himself, which leaves behind weak churches who are open to other “do-it-yourself” leaders who want to dominate others.
- The apprentice leader on his first journey beings to flex his own leadership muscles and become a leader in his own right, stepping away from his mentor.
- First Journey leaders are often in a hurry to move on.
- The First Journey leaders is where the leader gains the know-how to pass on to others – you cannot skip the first journey.
Second Journey
God begins the team’s second journey through the disagreement over John-Mark’s readiness for another mission trip. It can be read about from Acts 15:36-18:22. As it turns out, this spurs Paul to multiply his mission team and cover more ground. This time, Paul’s team is much bigger, dropping a member off in each city rather than leaving churches alone. This worked out well at first — Paul, Silas, Timothy and Luke…which became… Paul, Silas and Timothy…which became…Paul. Stuck again – alone and frustrated. One night in a dream, Jesus gives Paul the answer to his perpetual loneliness and frustrations with the finiteness of his mission teams.
In Acts 18:9-10 Jesus teaches Paul a valuable lesson in multiplication growth. Stay in Corinth and develop a team from the harvest!
Lessons:
- A Second Journey leader realizes that his plans are not God’s plans. Learning to listen to God makes him more flexible and prepared for producing spiritual fruit.
- Don’t be surprised if the Second Journey emerging leader steps out from under their mentor and starts doing things on his own – a seasoned, godly mentor will allow this “rebellion” and pray for the emerging leader’s success. Over time, they will be restored and their relationship will be even stronger than it was before.
- The lesson of the Second Journey is learned through aimless confusion, emptiness, pain, conflict, loneliness, and fear.
- You can’t skip the Second Journey either.
Third Journey
Paul’s third missionary journey (Acts 18:23-21:16) is very different from his first two. He is learning the role of an organic, catalytic missionary. This time no team is mentioned, and he doesn’t travel from Corinth for over 3 years! This time, he didn’t even start any churches – instead he recruited indigenous followers of Christ to start the churches, which kept them from being overly dependent on him. In 3 years, all of ASIA IS REACHED with the Gospel! (Acts 19:10,26) All this, and Paul does not even leave the school of Tyranus. How??
- Paul established a regional base for church planter development in a global city (Acts 19:8, Acts 20:18)
- Mentoring one-on-one became central to his strategy, by life example, and by formal teaching.
- Missions, evangelism, and discipleship became less ethereal and more “on-the-job” training. (Acts 20:21)
- Now the Holy Spirit was allowed to pick the teams and to call people to mission.
- Paul empowered leaders to connect directly with God, so that he was no longer necessary (Acts 20:32)
Lessons:
- Third Journey leaders attract more quality leaders. God gives his best to Third Journey leaders because they now give everything to the emerging leaders.
- Third Journey leaders have an ever-expanding influence as others take their message further than they could ever go themselves.
- Though they may do less work, Third Journey leaders are now more focused and the work they do is more fruitful and reproductive.
Fourth Journey
This is where things go really wacky. The Paul’s fourth missionary journey is as a prisoner from Jerusalem to Rome. (Acts 21:17-28:31) Its hard to think of this as a missionary journey, until you realize it was his intention from day one to make it to Rome, and that doing it this way all his expenses were paid by the Roman Government! As he was under house arrest for 2 years or longer, he spoke with church leaders and helped encourage the largest church network of the First Century. According to Paul, this was his most effective missionary journey (Phil 1:12-14)…yet he never left his apartment!
Using his influence as leverage to speak to new levels of human authority, he got the Gospel even into Nero’s household! He used set-backs like imprisonment and a shipwreck in Malta to start new churches! He even used his confinement to pump out FOUR letters that would carry his message throughout the world, and history.
Another less obvious blessing of the Fourth Journey leader is that they’ve been sidelined, yet their influence continues to grow. Like a former basketball player who became the coach – Paul’s being ‘locked up’ compelled others to take up his work.
Lessons:
- Most Christian leaders never make it to the Fourth Journey – they usually die or plateau on a previous journey.
- Daily provisions and preparing for the future is no longer a major concern. (Phil 4:10-19)
- Their influence now grows also in the eyes of secular world leaders, and they humbly find expansive, possibly international influence.
- Fourth Journey leaders write more than ever before – multiplying their message, wisdom, experiences, and maturity into countless lives.
- …And he’s not done yet.
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Stay tuned for the next part of the Greenhouse Story 2 Coverage!
Tunesntoons 4:00 pm on August 17, 2011 Permalink
Except, sometimes it IS hard. BUT it’s not as hard as you think