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Today thousands of
people, inspired by tentmaking pioneers like J. Christy Wilson and Ruth
Siemens, are using their professional skills as a vehicle for
cross-cultural evangelism.
It is no longer uncommon to hear of
missiological breakthroughs that resulted from people becoming more
strategic and intentional about using their profession to fulfill the
Great Commission. However, there have also been many examples of failure
and attrition which have not received the same publicity. Derek
Christensen (1997, 133) compares the first wave of tentmakers to a
“resistance army hastily thrown together to stop the spread of an
oppressive regime.” He adds:
Sometimes these guerrilla
forces achieve great things, catch the oppressors by surprise and drive
them out of a region. Too often though, our global telecasts carry
pictures of broken bodies . . . cut down by superior weapons, training
and discipline.
There are as many reasons
for these problems as there are definitions of “tentmaker.” But they
generally fall into one of three basic categories.
- The first blames inadequate training
in Bible, theology and cross-cultural evangelism. Those who identify
this as the main problem view tentmakers mainly as people who have
strong professional skills but who frequently have gaps in their
ministry skills.
- Another commonly discussed problem
is the ambivalence many tentmakers have about their “secular” job, and
the perceived tradeoff between work and ministry. This mindset gives
rise to what Gibson (1997) calls “ministry schizophrenia,” in which
tentmakers find themselves struggling with their own identity and
integrity, which ultimately jeopardizes the credibility of the gospel.
Those who view this as the main problem see tentmakers as having
strong ministry training, often a degree from a seminary or Bible
college, but who have weaknesses in their professional training or
experience.2
- The third category has received much
less attention and is specifically related to the business platform.
It points out that Western-trained business professionals of all
stripes—Christian and non-Christian—are having trouble adapting their
know-how to countries that have little experience with free market
capitalism. This suggests that tentmaker attrition cannot be blamed
entirely on a distorted theology of work, or to inadequate training in
Bible and cross-cultural evangelism.3
In this essay I focus on
the ministry implications of one’s attitude about profit, which relates
most closely to the second issue but also has implications for the
third. Many tentmaking entrepreneurs handicap themselves from the start
with a confused attitude about profit. I have found that when asked
directly about the profitability of their business, many seem
embarrassed or even ashamed to admit that they have ever thought about
it. One tentmaker admitted that if he ever started to make money, he
would never let his home church know, fearing that his financial support
would drop.
One of tentmaking’s
often-mentioned advantages is how it can extend limited mission
resources. However, tentmaking businesses that lose money actually add
to the cost of missionary work. One could try to justify this as an
extra cost of evangelizing difficult-to-reach people groups. It stands
to reason that more difficult-to-reach peoples require more costly
evangelistic platforms. However, in addition to the extra cost, an
antiprofit mentality is a poor witness and is unethical, given its
context. Ruth Siemens (1997, p. 5) is even more critical, claiming that
“phantom businesses [those that have little intention of actually doing
business] sooner or later bring shame to the name of Christ.”
This is simply the “work versus ministry” problem in a different form.
Because of scriptural warnings about earthly treasures, many
missionaries are ambivalent, to say the least, about any attempt to make
money.
Ironically, many of them
use an ostensibly for-profit business as their mission platform. They
fail to understand that a successful business can both be a ministry and
pay for the cost of other ministry. An unsuccessful business does
neither.
I am not claiming that
evangelism should become subordinate to profit, but in a
tentmaking-business context, they are intimately related. Having a
servant spirit in business is not only biblical, it makes good economic
sense. Likewise, looking after the interests of the business ensures
that the ministry, and others like it, can continue (1 Tim. 6:17-18).
Ignoring profits, however, is counterproductive because it often leads
to a ministry that is even more distracted by economic pressures. A
struggling business has a shorter life expectancy, which burdens the
family as well as the entire ministry. In short, although there can be
tension between the goals of ministry and profit, they work better
together than apart.
A strained
relationship.
Not long ago, the leader of a nonprofit, donor-supported mission
organization told me about some financial problems facing his
organization, which had launched a number of highly effective ministries
in the 10/40 Window. One of its subsidiaries clearly had the potential
to generate a positive cash flow which, in turn, could subsidize the
losses of its other operations. When I asked him about this, to my
surprise, he told me that profit was not one of the organization’s
goals, although breaking even “would be nice.” He stated that the
business aims to employ Muslims and teach “Christian business
principles.” Yet how many people will be attracted to these principles
if they are perceived to be incompatible with economic success?
It is clearly valid when
presenting the gospel to teach virtues such as integrity and diligence.
However, just as Christians are not guaranteed financial success,
neither should the gospel be presented as a guarantee of business
failure or lifelong dependence on donors.
The apostle Paul’s
ministry team, which consisted of mission-minded professionals, or
profit centers, was almost entirely self-supporting. At a minimum we
know that Paul himself worked in Corinth (1 Cor. 9), Ephesus (Acts
20:34-35), and Thessalonica (1 Thess. 2:9, 2 Thess. 3:8). We can also
infer from passages such as Acts 4:32, 6:1-6 and 18:5 (especially clear
in the NIV) that these early missionary teams combined their resources
and skills however they could to be most effective in advancing the
gospel. Although the team occasionally received donor support (Phil.
4:15-16), Paul’s vigorous denials of donor support in 1 Cor. 9:12 and 15
suggest that this was not his standard practice. In 1 Cor. 9:16-18 Paul
boasted that he was not a professional missionary, preaching out of
financial necessity, but one who preached the gospel “without charge.” A
self-supporting missionary team is mathematically impossible unless at
least one of the team members generates a positive cash flow sufficient
to offset the losses of the others.
Despite Paul’s apparent
endorsement of ”secular” occupations (see also 2 Thess. 3:7-9),
Christians have always struggled with the morality of business and
profit. Many historians credit Protestantism, and its emphasis on hard
work and thrift, which enlarged the investable pool of capital, for
creating the critical mass necessary for the Industrial Revolution.
However, the problems of unrestrained capitalism soon followed,
prompting many Christians to reject capitalism as fundamentally
un-Christian. In the 20th century, opposition to business and profit
gained momentum, especially among clergy and academics, following the
apparent failure of capitalism in the 1930s and the rise of the
seemingly more egalitarian (and stable) alternative of socialism.
Throughout most of the
20th century, Christians have debated the compatibility of Christianity
and capitalism, and whether Christians should be in business. Some see
the pursuit of profit as antithetical to good corporate citizenship.
According to this view, a business can either serve society or make
money, but not both. This perception has been reinforced by the fact
that, for most of this century, activities which have the highest moral
callings, such as education, health care, and other social work, have
been conducted mainly by nonprofit organizations. Thus, many believe
that the higher the social or spiritual value of an activity, the lower
its compatibility with a profit motive. It follows therefore that out of
all possible activities, world evangelism is the least compatible with a
desire to earn profit.
The other side argues that society’s needs are generally met better and
faster when the profit motive is permitted to operate. Profits are not
possible unless the entrepreneur first identifies a need, develops a
solution, and charges a price that consumers are willing to pay. When
the profit motive is absent, there are fewer guarantees that needs will
be met.
Scholars such as Novak
(1996) and Chewning, Eby, and Roels (1990) have forcefully argued that
business is itself a calling, a legitimate mission field, indeed an
arena that needs Christians who will stem the corrosive economic effects
of an unchecked sin nature. After much initial resistance and
ambivalence, most Christian colleges and universities now offer business
degrees that are based on free market economic principles.
The emerging role of
“business as mission.”
With that issue largely settled, some people within business and mission
circles are beginning to ask how business—meaning a real business with a
genuine intention to make money as well as disciples—can become a more
integral part of mission. The term “business as mission” has entered the
mission lexicon to distinguish this agenda from the more commonly
practiced Christian business career.
Perhaps the best way to do
this is to use the E-scale first introduced by Ralph Winter of the U.S.
Center for World Mission. E-l evangelism is “near neighbor evangelism,”
what takes place between two people who share a common language and
cultural background. As the similarities decrease, the inherent
difficulties in sharing the gospel increase. In E-2 evangelism, the
languages are closely related, but the cultural differences have become
more significant. An example would be the white, middle-class
suburbanite doing evangelistic work among inner-city gangs. For E-3
evangelism there are both language and culture barriers, which the
gospel does not generally cross without deliberate effort, and ideally
some formal training, on the part of the evangelist.
Winter argues that E-1 is the most effective and potent form of
evangelism. So it is not surprising when a local pastor is more
fruitful, in terms of commitments for Christ, than the typical foreign
missionary. However, “E-1 evangelism is literally impossible where there
are no witnesses within a given language or cultural group” (Winter,
1999, p. 345).
The distinction between
missionary and local pastor is similar to the distinction between
“business as mission” and the more typical Christian business career.
The typical Christian business degree program has focused primarily on
E-1 and E-2 evangelism. When put into practice, these business
professionals establish a reputation for integrity and high ethical
standards. They also distinguish themselves by having high quality
products or services, employees with high morale, and loyal customers.
In the course of doing business, the gospel is preached in both word and
deed, and lives are changed. It is not uncommon for these servant-minded
business people to also be financially successful in the long run.
The term “business as
mission” simply means being more intentional about using business for
E-3 evangelism. Unfortunately, current tentmakers are either graduates
of a seminary or Bible college, or have received an E-1 to E-2-oriented
business education. Almost nothing has been available, until recently,
that adequately prepares the student in both business and E-3 evangelism
skills.4
Yet the increasingly globalized nature of the modern economy is making
it easier, in fact, often necessary, for a business person to maintain a
variety of relationships, from E-1 to E-3. The implications for world
evangelism and the mission-minded business professional are still being
fleshed out.5
The business person’s
sphere of influence includes some combination of customers, suppliers,
employees, community leaders, government officials, and so on. Often
these people cannot be reached effectively by more traditional
tentmaking platforms. In fact, in unreached parts of the world they may
represent entirely separate unreached people groups. By maintaining
links in different parts of the world, a business can become an integral
part of a frontier mission strategy without necessarily relocating.
Invariably, when the words
“business” and “mission” are spoken in the same sentence, some people
automatically think of microenterprise development, microbanking, and
the business educational and consulting programs that have been so
successful. However, these initiatives represent only a small subset of
the ways business can become a more effective mission strategy. It is a
basic fact of human nature that not all humans are cut out to be
entrepreneurs. Most people do not have the self-confidence,
self-initiative, or the extraordinary tolerance for risk required. Some
people, indeed, probably most people, function better as an employee
than as an employer. To focus entirely on microenterprise development is
to miss other significant opportunities for ministry.
Generally, the conflict
over ministry and profit is sharpest for those I have called elsewhere
“tentmaking entrepreneurs,” those who relocate to a strategic, unreached
part of the world to start businesses. Amazingly, their business visas
represent official government permission to create the largest spheres
of influence possible. Why do so many tentmakers, upon receiving their
visas, feel compelled to neglect the business in order to focus on
“ministry”? It is hard to imagine that Paul, who exhorted his followers
to “imitate me” (1 Cor. 4:16) or to “follow us” (2 Thess. 3:7-9), was a
negligent businessman.
Why profit matters for
mission.
The Bible clearly warns against trusting in wealth (1 Tim. 6:9-10; Prov.
11:28). However, it does not prohibit wealth (1 Tim. 6:17-19). Nor do
money-losing businesses bring glory to God. Indeed, a business that
loses money is in effect a destroyer of all sorts of
resources—financial, intellectual, and otherwise—which is almost
certainly contrary to what God intended when he instructed mankind to
manage the earth’s resources (Gen. 1:28-30).6
To the contrary, the
parable of the talents (Matt. 25:14-30) reveals that God is pleased when
we use the resources entrusted to us wisely and in a manner that creates
more resources and thus makes more ministry possible. (See also Prov.
11:24-26.) Proverbs 11:26 suggests that this may occasionally involve
selling at a loss, but as a general rule, we are expected to be
productive, that is, to use resources to benefit society and create more
resources. This is precisely God’s calling for business—to manage the
earth’s resources, create wealth, and thus to bless the ever-increasing
population (Gen. 1:28). Moreover, he has called and gifted many within
the church to serve this function in society.
In a free market economy,
this calling can only be fulfilled by producing something people need
and are willing to pay for. Thus, a successful business person
identifies a need and pulls together the resources necessary to meet it.
Someone led and empowered by the Holy Spirit will, all things equal, be
the most successful in fulfilling this purpose.
A mission executive
recently upbraided his organization’s tentmakers for spending too much
time with the business and not enough time “evangelizing.” This reflects
a deeply ingrained view in the church that some forms of work are more
effective for “getting people saved” than others.
However, according to 1 Peter 3:1-2 our conduct is often more effective
at winning the lost than our words. What message is sent about
Christianity when the tentmaker, contrary to the implied promises given
when applying for a business visa, puts only a minimal amount of effort
into the business? We can show the “Jesus” film all day long, but if our
conduct is not consistent with a life of service and obedience, our
verbal testimony is worthless.
A profitable business can
use its newly created wealth either directly or indirectly to develop
more products, and create more jobs. In contrast, phony businesses
squander the resources they've been given and do little to meet the
physical needs of the community. In short, only a successful business
can truly claim to be involved in ministry. And indeed, this is a
significant ministry, especially in parts of the world where
unemployment rates in the range of 60 to 80 percent are not uncommon.
Speaking of the “Jesus” film, which tentmaker is more likely to be
expelled for these sorts of activities—the one running an expanding,
job-creating business or the one who is little more than a “missionary
in disguise”?
Finally, a more balanced
view of business and profit will significantly increase the financial
resources available for frontier mission. Until recently, the tentmaking
community has relied almost exclusively on the generosity of donors for
financial resources. As a consequence, the most common business
“platforms” have been projects which require little capital, such as
import-export, tourism, consulting, and the like. There are
straightforward economic reasons why these sorts of businesses usually
struggle, even in the most friendly environments. When transplanted to
an underdeveloped and unstable part of the world, the prospects for
success are almost nil. It is no wonder that many tentmakers are
dependent on donor support their entire careers.
A truly credible,
influential, and successful business requires what is referred to in
economics as a “barrier to entry,” that is, something that makes
head-to-head competition more difficult, such as a unique technology,
brand loyalty, or large-scale operations. These require significantly
more capital than what has generally been available to tentmakers. To
address this need, there is an emerging network of mission-minded “angel
investors,” or high net-worth individuals who provide financing, often
on generous terms.
However, even these angel
investors represent only the tip of the iceberg. There are countless
other wealthy Christians who have the passion for the unreached and the
tolerance for risk to invest in, rather than simply donate to, this
Great Commission work. Risk is easier to tolerate when it is diversified
among several projects at once. To accomplish this we can borrow a page
from the secular capital markets and create a venture capital fund,
which invests in and oversees a diversified portfolio of business
ventures on behalf of the investors.7
As the probability of
getting money out of the fund increases, so will the probability of
getting more money into the fund. Capital preservation obviously
requires that the “kingdom companies” chosen for such financial
assistance have an honest intention (and plan) for achieving the twin
goals of making money as well as disciples.
Conclusion.
Almost 30 years ago, in his book Profit for the Lord, William Danker
(1971, 13) claimed that: Protestant overseas missions in recent times
have often demonstrated massive opposition to economic activities,
particularly if these were intended to produce income.
This statement is no
longer entirely true. Economic activities such as microenterprise
development and microbanking, which empower the world’s poor to develop
their own businesses, are now commonly accepted as worthwhile
mission-related activities. One reason is because those who profit are
the poorest of the world’s poor, and those administering the programs
are nonprofit organizations. The same socioeconomic results achieved by
a for-profit firm would be viewed much more skeptically. Attempting to
make money in this context would be viewed by many as opportunistic,
even immoral. At the very least, it would be viewed as a distraction
from true ministry. This reflects a widely held perception that
nonprofit corporations are more trustworthy servants of society than
for-profit firms. More generally it reflects the deep-seated dichotomy
in the church between things sacred and secular, eternal and temporal.
This ambivalence about
income-producing activities handicaps the tentmaking movement in several
ways. It creates an erroneous distinction between sacred and secular
activities, as if God is more interested in the soul than in the body.8
This apparent conflict creates a sense of guilt in the tentmaker, which
strains the family and the entire ministry. It also leads to a
struggling business, which adds more pressure on the tentmaker.
There inevitably will be
some weaknesses in every tentmaker’s training. However, the attrition
problem identified by Christensen and others cannot be blamed entirely
on the tentmaker. Also to blame is a schizophrenic church that is more
confused than ever about the role of work, business, and profits in the
kingdom of God, and how to appropriately mobilize, train, and support
tentmakers.
END NOTES
- See, for example, Hamilton (1987),
Reapsome (1996), and Taylor (1997).
- Gary Taylor (1998) would add work
ethic to the list of weaknesses. In his attempt to establish a
“kingdom company” in a “creative-access” country, he “found few in the
missions industry who could work in the normal secular sense of the
term. It seemed very few cues remained from pre-missionary work-life
to guide them into producing for their living and witnessing for their
calling” (p. 24).
- See my own paper in the Journal of
Biblical Integration in Business for a discussion of this issue.
- The notable exceptions are YWAM’s
CEED (Centre for Entrepreneurship and Economic Development) program,
Regent University’s M.B.A. in Entrepreneurial Tentmaking, and Biola
University’s M.A. in Intercultural Studies-International Business.
Other closely related programs focusing primarily on relief and/or
development include Wheaton College’s HNGR (Human Needs and Global
Resources) and Eastern College’s M.B.A. in Economic Development
programs.
- Recent consultations focusing
specifically on this topic have been held by the Centre of
Entrepreneurship and Economic Development (August, 1999), Interdev’s
Central Asia Business Consultation (October, 1998, and 1999) and the
Business Professional Network of AD2000 & Beyond (November, 1999).
Many more are sure to follow.
- See Flow (1997) for an elaboration
of this point.
- For more information about efforts
being made to create such a fund, contact me at steve_rundle@peter.
biola.edu.
- See Sherman and Hendricks (1987) and
Volf (1991) for more discussion of this topic.
REFERENCES
Chewning, Richard C., John W. Eby, and
Shirley J. Roels. 1990. Business Through the Eyes of Faith. San
Francisco: Harper and Row, Publishers, Inc.
Christensen, Derek. 1997. “Training: Endurance Food for Serious
Tentmakers.” International Journal of Frontier Missions, 14(3):
133-138.
Danker, William. 1971. Profit for the Lord. Grand Rapids, Mich.:
Eerdmans Publishing Co.
Flow, Donald. 1997. “Profit.” in R. Paul Stevens, et. al. (eds.) The
Complete Book of Everyday Christianity. Downers Grove, Ill.:
InterVarsity Press, pp. 809-813.
Gibson, D. 1997. Avoiding the Tentmaker Trap. Ontario, Canada:
WEC International.
Hamilton, Don. 1987. Tentmakers Speak: Practical Advice from Over 400
Missionary Tentmakers. Duarte, Calif.: TMQ Research.
Novak, Michael. 1996. Business as a Calling: Work and the Examined
Life. New York: The Free Press.
Reapsome, Jim. 1996. “Tentmakers: Strengths and Weaknesses.”
Evangelical Missions Quarterly, October: 420.
Rundle, Steven. 2000. “The Christian Business Scholar and the Great
Commission: A Proposal for Expanding the Agenda.” Journal of Biblical
Integration in Business (Forthcoming).
Sherman, Doug and William Hendricks. 1987. Your Work Matters to God.
Colorado Springs, Colo.: NavPress.
Siemens, Ruth E. 1997. “The Tentmaker’s Preparation for Work and
Witness.” Global Opportunities Paper A-6, Pasadena, CA.
Taylor, William. 1997. “Challenging the Missions Stakeholders:
Conclusions and Implications; Further Research,” in W.D. Taylor, (ed.)
Too Valuable to Lose: Exploring the Causes and Cures of Missionary
Attrition. Pasadena, Calif.: William Carey Library.
Taylor, Gary. 1998. “Don’t Call Me a Tentmaker.” International
Journal of Frontier Missions, 15(1): 23-26.
Volf, Miroslav. 1991. Work in the Spirit: Toward a Theology of Work.
New York: Oxford University Press.
Winter, Ralph. 1999. “The New Macedonia: A Revolutionary New Era in
Mission Begins.” in Winter, R.
D. and S. C. Hawthorne (eds.) Perspectives on the World Christian
Movement. Third Edition. Pasadena, Calif.: William Carey Library,
pp. 339-353.
The author wishes to thank Neal Johnson
for his
comments on an earlier draft.
COPYRIGHT © 2000 Evangelism and
Missions Information Service. All rights reserved. This article
originally appeared in the July, 2000 issue of EMQ.
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