Why You Should Consider Long-Term Missions over Short-Term Missions
by Darren Carlson
I have seen with my own eyes or know of houses in Latin America that
have been painted 20 times by 20 different short-term teams; fake
orphanages in Uganda erected to get Westerners to give money; internet
centers in India whose primary purpose is to ask Westerners for money;
children in African countries purposefully mutilated by their parents so
they would solicit sympathy while they beg; a New England-style church
built by a Western team in Cameroon that is never used except when the
team comes to visit; and slums filled with big-screen TVs and cell phone
towers.
I have seen or know of teams of grandmothers who go to African
countries and hold baby orphans for a week every year but don't send a
dime to help them otherwise; teams who build houses that never get used;
teams that bring the best vacation Bible school material for evangelism
when the national church can never bring people back to church unless
they have the expensive Western material; teams that lead evangelistic
crusades claiming commitments to Christ topping 5,000 every year in the
same location with the same people attending.
Short-term missions is fraught with problems, and many wish such trips did not exist, at least in the common form today. Writing in his book Toxic Charity, Robert Lupton says, "Contrary to popular belief, most missions trips and service projects do not:
empower those being served, engender healthy cross-cultural
relationships, improve quality of live, relieve poverty, change the
lives of participants [or] increase support for long-term missions
work."
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