Editorial: The Scorecard Mentality
I see our missions enterprise moving inexorably toward what I call the scorecard mentality.
I see our missions enterprise moving inexorably toward what I call the scorecard mentality.
1. Effective partnerships are built on trust, openness, and mutual concern. Partnerships are more than coordination, planning, strategies, and tactics. The heart of the Gospel is restored in relationships.
Some suggestions from my experience to help your mission partnerships take shape and function effectively.
To answer the question, “How well do the children of missionaries do in different dimensions of their lives as adults?,” MK CART/CORE undertook a multimission research project entitled “AMK Study.”
I’m glad our Shepherd doesn’t work by percentages. If he did, I’d still be in the bushes.
Nine recommendations on how we can use short-term counselors more effectively in providing much-needed therapy to missionaries overseas.
It is time to bring the same compelling message of hope to an outwardly prosperous, yet increasingly pessimistic, continent.
Jesus saw trials awaiting human society as a combination of political, cultural, environmental, and religious elements. That’s what we witnessed in Rwanda.
Let me share my observations about “Evangelicals and Catholics Together: The Christian Mission in the Third Millennium.” It is tragic when evangelicals begin to aim their “polemical rifles” at each other rather than the enemy. In this instance, the target is not the persons but the issues.
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