• Our hope-filled future is bound up in sharing the story of Jesus, in discipling others, in bringing those disciples together into communities of believers, and in developing and releasing those believers to create other communities... till Jesus the King comes again!

Learning to adapt

A most pressing struggle when one “crosses into” or enters a culture different from one’s passport culture is learning to adapt.  What was natural, “normal” or innate for us in our own culture, now stands out as very different in another culture. For example, in North American culture, we are taught, when at the table, to hold the fork in our right hand and the knife in our left hand.  In France (and perhaps other European contexts), it is the opposite.  Changing what is “normal” from one’s own culture and adapting to one’s new adopted culture is not easy. And with this example, we are just scratching the surface of the kind of adaptation one is called upon to make when crossing cultures.

As more and more workers are launched and sent from the Global South – places such as Cameroon, Guatemala, Senegal and Indonesia , for example – the work of learning to adapt to one another will significantly increase. How do others, with whom we are called to work, make decisions, hold crucial conversations, or express agreement to mutually shared guiding principles?

Having crossed from one culture to another certainly gives tools for learning to adapt. However, that does not mean working from one’s home or passport culture excludes one from being able to learn to adapt. Either way, it will take time, effort, and gospel humility to learn.

And there is the key word for all of us: taking the stance of a “learner”. Rather than being a teller or a doer, we must work with others from a learning posture. Taking the stance of a “learner” will go against the grain of our nature.  We would prefer to be the one helping others rather than asking for help from others. In our heart of hearts, we often think we just know better what to do.

There is a good deal of difference between saying: “This is what we should do and the decision that needs to be made. What do you think?” And saying: “What would the decision-making process look like in your context?  And what will we need to do to best adapt to that process?

Taking the stance of a “learner” is to be willing to ask others for help. It sounds so simple, but it takes humility infused by the Gospel to allow us to honestly ask and listen to help from others.

What are you learning?

We have often said to participants in the Leader cohort or Leader intensive trainings that most cross-cultural workers stop learning at age 40.  J. Robert Clinton insisted in his work on leadership that most leaders, from age 40 on, rely on what they have learned up to that point in their life and ministry.

In the global WT community, we talk a good deal about lifelong learning. However, I would guess that most of us are “sporadic” lifelong learners at best. We lack consistency and direction.

To get us started again towards consistent and regular growth, might I suggest the following ideas?

  1. List 1-3 books, articles, podcasts, or training videos you would like to read, listen to or do in the coming month. Ask some trusted friends for their advice. Then prioritize your list.
  2. Make a plan. Many of us resist this part, yet we do this most days of our lives. We make a plan for how to visit our supporters and supporting churches. We make a plan for our outreach events this coming year. We make a plan for going away on vacation. We should be able to the same with our lifelong learning.
  3. Share with another an insight you gain from any of the materials you read or listen to.  Tell the person what you learned and how you see it applying to your life or ministry. This is an under-rated part of the learning process.  Capturing in your own words what you have learned from a book or a podcast will reinforce the principle or insight you gained.
  4. If the book, article, podcast or training video caused you to grow, share it with another person and tell them why you think it would be helpful to them and their lifelong learning and growth.

If you are looking for an example of how this might look, drop me a note and I’ll share a recent personal example from my read of the book, Insight, by Tasha Eurich.

If you have other thoughts or ideas, feel free to share them by commenting on this post.

Read outside your comfort zone

On the recommendation of a coach, I picked up a book on listening prayer.  It’s not a book that I would have necessarily selected on my own, but since someone I respect suggested it to me, I thought I would give it a read.

Just mentioning the topic may have already evoked positive or negative responses in your heart. And that’s perfectly normal as most of us prefer to read in our ‘comfort zone’.  There’s nothing wrong with that.  It is beneficial to our faith to deepen our roots in the main biblical or theological framework that we know, and which allows us to know and experience Christ and His love more deeply.

However, we need the challenge to re-examine once and awhile our framework in order to discern if there are not other ways or means (the “means of grace” as the Reformers described it) by which we can grow more in love with Christ.  And which might lead to more fruitfulness in our spiritual journey and ministry with Christ.

The act of ‘listening prayer’ is not natural to me, but I am learning new elements through this book that are helping me to re-align my prayer life with God’s will and direction.

Now, I’m talking only about a book at this point.  However, this could also apply to a discussion, a podcast or some other means of being challenged to think more deeply about the biblical and theological framework that drives our life and ministry.

Paul rightly said to the brothers and sisters in Thessalonica: “We ask and urge you in the Lord Jesus, that as you received from us how you ought to walk and to please God, just as you are doing, that you do so more and more.” (1 Thessalonians 4:1)

By the way, I will also be asking a WT colleague to read and discuss the book with me.  Another way to grow: by learning together with another, what the Lord might be wanting to teach me, to teach us.

Where is home?

It’s the blessing and the struggle of any cross-cultural worker.  The idea of ‘home’ seems elusive to our thoughts.  Where is home?  We know where our passport tells us we are from, but we feel at times caught between worlds.  We know how to ‘fit in’ in more than one culture, all the while sensing a certain aloofness or detachment at times to each one.

There are several common responses to living between worlds.  One response is to enjoy the blessings of a second culture, while pointing out regularly how our first culture is somewhat better.  Phrases like: “I just don’t understand the … [fill in the people of another culture]” or “We just wouldn’t do that in our culture”.  A second response is to seek to become a member of the second culture; to adopt all the ways of that culture without any questioning.  A third response is to ‘float’; to not fully adopt the new culture, nor hold tenaciously to one’s passport culture. 

One response is not better than another.  Living between cultures, living between worlds is just downright hard.  Nevertheless, God calls us to ‘excel still more’ (1 Thessalonians 4) in our walk with him; to learn how to navigate this life to which He has called us.

We affirm the fact that we are aliens and strangers in this world (1 Peter 1) and that God has reserved a ‘home’ for us elsewhere.  Yet, how do we live here and now?

That question often comes to mind when someone here asks me the proverbial question: “You’re not from here, so where is your home originally?”  It’s a reminder that I do live between worlds.  Yet, how do we live here and now?

A couple of suggestions for us to consider:

  • Learn to reason as one does in your adopted culture and appreciate that new perspective.
  • Ask the question: what does the Bible call me to do in this instance (rather than just my passport culture)?
  • Think on Christ who ‘lived between worlds’ and now lives in us, to show us how to live between worlds, and to give us the courage, grace and capacity to do so.

Why you should watch (read) this …

People regularly send me a large number of articles, books, videos or podcasts that they feel I should read or watch.  Usually, the short sentence in the email goes something like this: “Read this article and thought it might be of interest to you.” 

Now, I do appreciate the effort that people take to share important or helpful material with me, and perhaps you do as well when you receive notes like this.  The only difficulty though is that if I read or watched everything that was sent, it would probably fill my entire week. 

However, what I have come to appreciate even more are those people who share an article, book or video and do one or all of the following: 

  • They provide a brief summary of what was said or written in the article or video;
  • They explain why they believe it would be helpful for me to give the time to read or listen to what they sent;
  • They explain what possible application(s) there might be to my life and/or the ministry of World Team.

That’s what I would like to do with you in sharing the attached video that I believe would be worth taking the 15 minutes to watch it:

  • In this video, J.I. Packer (author of Knowing God) shares his ministry timeline and the critical influences in his life and ministry.
  • I believe it would be helpful to take the time to watch this video because J.I. Packer provides solid reasons for lifelong learning, and calls us to the ongoing work of reading and reflection in order to grow as a believer.
  • Possible application: Our training team will soon be proposing an app that will allow each WT member to identity growth areas and personal growth steps.  J.I. Packer gives solid motivation for engaging in that learning and growth process.

Lulled to sleep

Last week, I traveled west to North America to participate in the WT Americas leadership meetings.  On the way, I met up with my older brother, who took me out to dinner (midnight my time,18h00 his time).  Afterwards, he invited me to his place to watch a short video.  Sitting there in his living room after an 8 hour flight, dinner, and recognizing that it was now 02h30 for me, the video was all the ‘music’ needed to lull me to sleep. 

Ever happen to you? 

In the World Team Ministry Framework, we talk about ‘growing in character’ as a guiding feature of our organizational culture.  To grow implies that we have ‘progressed’ or changed from our current attitude, habit or practice to one that is more aligned with Christ and His calling on our lives.  However, if we are ‘lulled to sleep’, that growth is stagnant and we will continue to act, react and live in ways that are not ‘in line with the Gospel’ (Galatians 2:14)

The ministry, daily life, and all the ‘things’ we need to do in a day can easily cause us to forget, can easily ‘lull us to sleep’ in regards to our own inner spiritual life.  I believe it was Bobby C who said that most people stop growing before they hit 40 years of age. They simply ride the rest of the lives on what they have learned up to that point.

To wake ourselves out of our spiritual drowsiness, I would suggest the following step: begin to write a short paragraph in a journal each day.

Now I’m not the journal writer type, but I have found this to be a good way to start reflecting on where God desires growth in my life.  Summarizing briefly the main activity(or activities) of a day, allows me to begin to see links and focus on one specific area of growth.

You may have a better way, or further steps to suggest. The objective in the end though is to avoid being ‘lulled to sleep’.