“If only I had gotten this before going!” You can, at GO Equipped! Oct. 21-25, Pasadena, CA

In a comedy movie, Chevy Chase plays a spy who is forced to hide his identity as a famous surgeon. Naturally, he gets trapped into performing a delicate surgery on a patient while a room full of doctors is looking on. If you’ve not seen it, you can image how humorous this could be. 

        But how would you feel if such a “surgeon” was about to operate on you? Even more, imagine being called upon to operate on someone yourself without training. It would be terrifying and ludicrous. No one practices surgery without years of serving as an apprentice under skilled surgeons. The same thing applies to airline pilots, firemen, plumbers, etc. You would never accept a pilot flying for you who had only read books on flying, nor a fireman who had only read manuals. To a lesser degree, this applies to all professions. Academic training is never enough, especially when it involves complex, high-risk tasks. 

        Does this apply to tentmaking? You bet it does. In spades. Integrating all of life-work, family, neighbors, community, ministry, etc.-under Christ’s Lordship is challenging. So is leading people to Christ, discipling them, and nurturing them into simple house churches. Sadly, many tentmakers and missionaries are not very effective because they weren’t effective before going; they had inadequate godliness and ministry skills. We find the biggest need of prospective tentmakers is to become equipped and effective before going into another culture. They need to learn under a skilled surgeon before operating on people, before going as tentmakers.

        Jesus understood this. So he chose twelve “to be with him and to be sent out to preach.” (Mk. 3:14) These men never received Bible school or seminary training. He trained them by taking them “with him” on-the-job as he loved, healed, proclaimed, and discipled. They watched him and copied him. Only later did Jesus send them out to “preach.” When he did, they did what they had seen him do and were tremendously effective. They were so effective that a huge crowd followed them in order to hear Jesus-a crowd of 5000 men plus thousands of women and children whom he miraculously fed. After Jesus’ resurrection, these men turned the ancient world upside down. 

         Jesus’ apprenticeship model worked because imitating others is the way humans really learn. Paul understood this, so he told the Corinthians, “Be imitators of me, as I am of Christ.” (1 Co. 11:1) This was his discipling “strategy,” not classroom lectures, not handouts, etc. He demonstrated what he taught-he lived it. He knew that godliness is more “caught than taught,” that people copy what they see, not what they hear. In Paul, people saw joy in the midst of suffering, faith in the face of mortal danger, unflagging love for failing, even hurtful people, passionate zeal for God, exemplary work practices, compelling preaching and teaching, effective discipling, wise, Christ-like leading, etc. And they saw Paul do all this as a full-time worker supporting himself. 

        They saw the same example in Paul’s co-workers-Barnabas, Silas, Timothy, and the rest. They were all tentmakers who worked for their living. The early converts saw everyday working Christians living lives of powerful godliness and ministry. Paul and his team showed the supernatural power of God, and made serious discipleship and disciple-making normal for regular Christians. Early Christians found it easy to believe God worked like this through ordinary disciples because they saw it with their own eyes. To them, this was normal Christianity. 

        These stories tell us exactly what training is ideal to make us effective tentmakers-working as apprentices to a master tentmaker. This is what Timothy and Titus did. This is what early church leaders did. Unfortunately, it’s very hard to do today because there are few master tentmakers. 

        This model of making disciples through exhibiting the gospel, working personally with a few, and leading by example and word, is very simple and powerful. It works. Regular workplace Christians can do it. In fact, God is using workplace Christians as effective tentmakers around the world. But this model has been largely replaced by an organizational, impersonal, program-oriented, and academic model. And this has become our mental model of church and ministry. And we do what we see. What we need is to replace the old mental model with the simpler, more powerful New Testament model. This is why we need effective tentmakers to show us how to do it. This is also why there are few master tentmakers for us to work with as apprentices. 

        So is there an alternative? What about bringing some effective tentmakers together to share stories of how they were effective? Their stories enable us to “watch” them after the fact. They let us “see” and grasp a model of effectiveness we’ve never seen before, especially as they explain the Biblical principles of why it works. 

        If we could gather these leaders for a concentrated, 4-5 day course, built around the core principles of tentmaking, then any motivated potential tentmaker can get this powerful training by simply taking a few days off. We have done this with the GO Equipped! Tentmaking Course. We created a course built around the core Biblical principles of tentmaking using stories told by effective tentmakers. 

        Ari Rocklin is one of the tentmakers who will share his story. But he learned it the hard way, through much questioning and work. When he joined Global Opportunities and first helped with our course, he said, “If only I had gotten this before going!” Other tentmakers have expressed the same thing. 

        You can get his training for a fairly small investment of time and money. And you can sit and talk with tentmakers who have done it and who keep on learning from working with tentmakers. Sign up now to take advantage of this crucial training before you attempt to perform tentmaking surgery! 

Let God use your profession overseas – free seminar shows how

http://globalopps.org/tmbriefs/TM%20group.jpg

Free Tentmaking Seminars are coming to North Bay, Ontario (Aug. 4), and to Lake Avenue Congregational Church in Pasadena, California (Sept. 18 & 19 – Friday evening at 7:00 pm or Saturday morning 8:30 am).

Alan” and “Rachel” opened their home to people they met in China and invited new friends to an English language Bible study. They sang Christian songs, discussed a specific passage of the Bible, mostly about Jesus, prayed together, ate refreshments, and enjoyed each other. Within a few months a couple of people became Christians. Friend brought friends, the group grew, and more came to Jesus. They baptized the new believers and discipled them as they grew, working together with and mentoring leaders within the group. Even before they left, the group sent one member to Tibet to reach people. After two years, “Alan” and “Rachel” left the group as a small house church in the hands of the leaders they had been developing. That church reproduced at least six more house churches over the next five years!

        Were “Alan” and “Rachel” full-time missionaries? No! They were everyday working Christians. They both worked as teachers. But they were determined to call Chinese people to Christ. The people in their Bible study came mostly from people they met at work. They simply integrated work and witness, and God used them powerfully.

        Ruth Siemens did the same thing while teaching in international schools in Peru and Brazil. She reached colleagues, students, and school service staff through natural on-the-job contact. As her life and words awakened spiritual hunger, she invited them into her home and into Bible studies. She geared these studies just for them to investigate Jesus. In her spare time she did similar things at the nearby university, and started the Christian university student movements in Peru and Brazil. These were student-run, and Ruth coached the students in reaching other and discipling them.

        This story is being repeated over and over by Christians who are dedicating their professional skills to work overseas in order to reach the local people. “Mark” worked with a company in Central Asia to arrange for new sites to operate their business. He quietly demonstrated his faith and shared when people asked. And they did ask. He repeatedly met Muslim warlords and tribal leaders. One of them demanded that he tell a religious story as a “holy man.” With trembling, he told the story of Jesus. It moved the leader and his men and he invited him to tell more about Jesus every time he returned. Out of this a new church sprang up among this unreached people group.

        God is using workplace Christians willing to give their professional skills and their hearts to reaching lost people around the world. He can use you, and he will, if you are willing.

        Have you wondered if you could do more for Christ’s global mission? Longed to see more people come to Jesus? And be transformed into his image? Wondered if God could use you more powerfully without switching to full-time ministry?

        Do you want to know more? To find out how you might do the things these Christians did? Then Global Opportunities’ free Tentmaking Seminar is designed especially for you. In three to four fast-moving hours you can learn all you need to know to start down this path:

  • Why tentmaking is so powerful Biblically and globally
  • How to integrate work and witness naturally
  • How to find a job in the global job market
  • What steps to take to pursue tentmaking

Light in the Darkness

“You are the light of the world. A city on a hill cannot be hidden. Neither do people light a lamp and put it under a bowl. Instead they put it on its stand, and it gives light to everyone in the house.  In the same way, let your light shine before men, that they may see your good deeds and praise your Father in heaven.” ~Matthew 5:14-16

In the 1960s, Jackie Pullinger, a young British woman, felt called by God to the Far East. With a degree in music, she wrote the Hong Kong government seeking a teaching post. They replied that they had no positions. So she tried a mission agency, but they said she was “too young.” Acting in faith, with no job, Jackie boarded a ship for Hong Kong.  

Upon arriving, she met Auntie Donnie, who showed her a primary school she ran in “The Walled City,” an area overrun by every imaginable crime. Also named “Hak Nam,” meaning darkness, Jackie learned it was “a place of terrible darkness, both physical and spiritual.” On that first visit, Auntie Donnie asked her to teach there. “Before I had fully realized what I was letting myself in for, I had agreed to teach percussion band, singing, and English conversation three afternoons a week.” Jackie also picked up another “regular job teaching in a primary school in the mornings.”


Through her work, Jackie started a youth club, especially because of the influence of one of her young male students. Teaching gave her natural contact with young people, out of which her ministry grew. Her work gained credibility and identification with the people. One student dialoged with her like this:


“Poon Siu Jeh (Jackie’s name “Pullinger” in Chinese), I haven’t got a job and I’ve run out of money.”
“But I’m afraid I haven’t got any money.”
“Oh, but you have–you’re terribly rich.”
“No, no, really I haven’t got any money.”
“Oh yes you have, because you’ve got a church in America like the rest of them.”
“No really I haven’t got a church in America. Actually I am from England, but no church sent me.”
A plane flew over head. “Huh, one day I expect you’ll get into one of those and fly back to where you came from.”
“No, there’s no danger of that because I haven’t got enough money to get on one,” I replied honestly.
“Well, your parents can send you the money anyway–there is plenty of money where you came from–we’ve seen how all those English people live up the peak.”
“No,” I said, “you’re wrong about that. My parents haven’t got any money either.”

Pullinger wrote, “This kind of conversation took place many times; it was an indictment of those evangelists who flew into Hong Kong, sang sweet songs about the love of Jesus on stage and on Hong Kong TV, then jumped back into their planes and flew away again.”

Slowly Jackie gained credibility because she lived and worked like the people did, and stayed long term. It took years. In fact, for years, as hard as she tried, nobody paid any attention because they had heard it before–from people who never stayed or lived like they did. But as Jackie continued to work among the people year after year, they began to trust the Jesus she told them about both on and off the job.

Jackie shined Christ’s light into the darkness by working for her living among the people. Through her persevering work, they saw “her good deeds and praised [her] Father in heaven.” God enlarged her ministry far beyond anything she had ever imagined. Without working, the light would never have shown so clearly. Will you use your profession to bring the Light to a dark part of the world?

The Ultimate Goal of Tentmaking

Tentmaking in Scripture

“Paul, Silas, and Timothy, to the church of the Thessalonians…You yourselves know how you ought to follow our example. We were not idle when we were with you, nor did we eat anyone’s food without paying for it. On the contrary, we worked night and day, laboring and toiling so that we would not be a burden to any of you. We did this, not because we do not have the right to such help, but in order to make ourselves a model for you to follow.” – 2 Th 1:1;3:7-9

The Ultimate Goal of Missions

When “Robert” first went to the “Yanyin” region of China in 1991, he found 3 house churches and 85 Han Chinese Christians in a region of among 7 million people and 5 people groups. After surveying the region, he began mobilizing Chinese co-laborers and planting churches with them in 1994. Just three year later, the number of churches had grown to 195 in number and spread throughout the region, taking root in all five people groups. Robert describes his church planting strategy as POUCHParticipative Bible study/worship groups; Obedience to God’s word as a the measure of success; Unpaid and multiple lay or bi-vocational church leaders; Cell churches rarely exceeding 15 members before starting new groups; and Homes or store-fronts as primary meeting places for these cell churches. Robert would first model “doing church” with new believers using the POUCH approach. Then he would assist them to plant a daughter church. Third, he’d watch to see that they started a third-generation church without his involvement. Then he would leave–the crucial final step to ensure an indigenous, self-propagating movement.


The ultimate goal of missions is to plant self-multiplying, self-nurturing, self-led, self-supporting (Great Commission) churches of genuine disciples capable of evangelizing their own people and also reaching other peoples. Where an indigenous church already exists, our task is to integrate new believers into it, and to help it be the kind of church just described. Why is this the ultimate goal? Because Jesus commands us to “make disciples…[who] obey everything I have commanded.” As soon as two or more turn to Christ, they are transformed and called to love each other as Christ has loved them. (Jn. 15:12) God is building a new family. This means simple house churches, not complex, organizational churches. This is something that committed, everyday, workplace Christians can do, with a little preparation.Many think that tentmakers only play a complimentary role of assisting “real” missionaries as if tentmakers are not full-fledged mission workers. As a result, Many tentmakers don’t plant churches because they don’t aim to. Paul, the apostle, and his co-workers, proved this by planting many churches as self-supporting, everyday Christians. In fact, Paul deliberately chose “lay” strategy of working for his living to set a pattern of every Christian being a disciple-maker and of everyday Christians giving leadership and planting churches. This is why the early church spread so fast. This was no super feat of a spiritual superman. 

Everyday, workplace Christians (tentmakers) did it then; they are doing it today! The full Commission belongs to every Christian, not just to “full-time” missionaries. God does not relegate any Christian to second-class status, nor to any reduction of their God-given role! As Jesus left for heaven, he said, “All power in heaven and on earth has been given unto me. Go therefore…” With the command, he promised his power. Tentmakers can! They just need training and experience to develop skill. This is a core component of Global Opportunities’