People Group Thinking: Complaints

August 27, 2011

3:38pm Minor update below to straighten out the point numbering. Sorry about that.

Following in the vein of E. Goodman and E. Arthur, Simon Cozens, a missionary to Japan, has now written a long post entitled “Rethinking people groups.” He says it is essentially a rant in response to Paul Eshleman’s “truly extraordinary paper” for the Lausanne Global Conversation. He’s clearly very passionate on the subject. He makes a number of points which I’ve heard before, so I’ll address each in this as a kind of reference point for the future.

Before starting on specific points, let’s focus on a common misconception highlighted by Cozens’ section titles. With each, Cozens alleges “people group theory does not —x—”.

People group thinking is a broad collection of ideas. This collection is inanimate: it is not alive. Of itself, it cannot do anything. I might as well say people group thinking does not sit up straight or eat proper food. We know what Cozens means: that this body of thinking does not, in his view, encompass certain ideas or accomplish specific goals. But that allegation is hard to hold up.

Here’s why: there is a very wide range of theory, opinion, and application of people group theory by thinkers, strategists, leaders and administrators–people who think these thoughts, share them, and develop and implement strategies. Two other similar examples are creationism and eschatology. There are many views within those wide umbrellas, too. Creationism, for example, encompasses Young Earth, Old Earth, Intelligent Design, Theistic Evolution, and probably numerous other ideas I’m not familiar with as well. Eschatology encompasses pre-Trib, post-Trib, pre-Mill, post-Mill, a-Mill (and as one old pastor of mine used to say, pan-Mill: it will all pan out in the end). Each of these individual subdivisions of the broad theory tends to think of itself as the only legitimate theory—but in fact each has arguments (some strong, some weak) for it.

So to say people group theory as a whole is “—x—“ (and Cozens’ rant tends unfortunately to highlight caricatured extremes) is to do a vast disservice to the debate. Cozens unfortunately sets up straw men and torches them. So, I guess I’m wading in to the defense of the straw.

1. “People group thinking is not biblically sound.”

2.1 “All” doesn’t mean “all”.

I’m not being sarcastic. There are different ways to think of the statement “go into all the world.”

Here’s what Matthew 28:18-20 says:

“All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,  and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”

Let’s “rewrite” this in our own words to emphasize one way of looking at it:

All authority has been given to me, and I’m giving it all to you. So go! Get out there! Get into the world! I’m not just concerned with the Jews, I want them all! So go out into the nations and find people in them and make disciples of them, just as I did with you. Baptize them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit. Teach them to obey all I’ve taught you to obey. And—don’t worry. I am with you, in all ways, in all places, and in all times—even to the very end of time.

Or, here’s another way to look at it:

All authority has been given to me. I’m giving it to you. Go to every single nation, every last tribe, every last ethne, every last city. Make sure none are left out. I want them all—every place on Earth that the enemy is occupying, take it back. As I discipled you, you are to disciple the nations. Baptize them all in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Teach them to obey all that I’ve taught you to obey. I’ll be with you, to the very ends of the earth, to the very end of time.

One way is to say that “go to all nations” emphasizes action—“get out there, into the world!” Another way to say it is it emphasizes completion—“reach every last one of them”. I think it means both. The Bible clearly shows us God’s heart is for the whole world.

I don’t think we should be legalistic about people group lists: lists are imperfect. And, we know new peoples start, and old people groups die off. We know there will be some lost and some that fall into the cracks. It’s unfortunate, terrible, awful, and when I am melancholy I cry over that.  But if a people group dies out before we get to them, I don’t think Jesus would say, “Oh, sorry, you missed one. I can’t come back now.”

Lists of people groups are a tool to help us do our part to ensure “the whole earth is filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord as the waters cover the sea.” There should be no ethnic group with cultural or linguistic dams holding back the flood of the Good News. We must see that they are all covered.

1.2 The Great Commission can’t be completed because the process of making disciples never ends.

(Or other variants of the “it can’t be finished” argument.) I understand that the process of discipling an individual person is something that is life long. But we can establish the processes in every people group. That’s what the church, among other things, does. By planting a church in every ethne capable of evangelizing and discipling that ethnic group to its borders in an ongoing basis, the goal will be seen achieved—for this generation, and every generation to come—assuming that the church does its job. I think we just have to read the Scripture and assume that if Jesus said go and make disciples of all nations, there’s a way to achieve it. (See this article in which I delve deeper into this topic.)

1.3 Finish it to bring Jesus back—NOT!

Cozens doesn’t bring this up, but I will. There have been many unfortunate statements made—statements which I think are theologically and Biblically incorrect—to the effect that if we just finish the Great Commission, we can “bring back the King.” This is, to me, ridiculous. He is God, sovereign, and there is nothing we can do to force his hand. I think if He wants to come back, He will, and it doesn’t matter whether the Commission is complete or not.

The way I read Matthew 24 is a statement of hope. It wasn’t a statement to say “this is what you can do to bring about the end.” Jesus was looking forward and making a statement to reassure his disciples and us. He was saying, “Don’t worry—all of this will happen. And, by the way (in a foreshadowing of the GC), the Good News will go out to the entire world—and then the end will come.” Jesus knew what would happen and gave us a picture. All we have to do is step into the picture. Maybe ours is the time, and maybe not—but one day the time will come for the fulfillment of his words.

2. People group thinking and prioritization judges my calling to be irrelevant.

2.1 No mission mobilizer should judge a person’s individual calling on the basis of a formula of prioritization.

Cozens’ argues those who prioritize people groups where no one engages do a disservice to those called to engaged people groups:

When I taught a class on UPG theory, I decided to take a different approach. I played the class a video from Lausanne, and asked what they felt about it. Challenged? Excited? Those were the kinds of words I was expecting. I was quite surprised by the first answer I got from one of the students: “Really rather angry actually.” Why, I asked? I’m paraphrasing slightly but the answer was not far from this: “I feel that God has called me to be a missionary in Spain, and I’m being meant to feel that this calling is invalid because according to some statistic that someone’s cooked up, Spain is a reached country.”

This appears to me to be a “straw man” argument. Regardless of how an individual might feel after watching a short presentation, no mission mobilizer, administrator or team leader would tell someone their calling is invalid because they aren’t called to an unreached place. (Or at least, they shouldn’t.) My agency—as well as many others—have recruiters trained to interact with potential candidates, exploring and discovering with them what their calling is, and helping them find the place where they best fit. We never tell someone their calling is invalid. That is not ours to judge. We might say their calling doesn’t fit our organization. For example, we don’t go to Latin America. But in that case, we would recommend other organizations that do—not tell them they haven’t heard God.

It’s true, I’ve encountered people who say priority disproves perceived calling—but the statement was made in the heat of passion and later regretted and retracted. If ever an individual strategist uses a people group formula to evaluate the worth or validity of a person’s calling, take the blunt instrument of their writing and beat them over the head with it. But don’t move from the particular individual situation to a universal statement about people group theory.

2.2 Missions research tells us a fair number of people are either ignorant of or actively disobeying their calling.

On the other hand, we must speak up and prophetically challenge the church to reach out to the unengaged! Why? Because we have people volunteering for places like Spain—but we don’t have people volunteering for places like Saudi Arabia. Does that mean God doesn’t care about Saudi Arabia? I doubt it. Some people are called there, but are not obeying the calling.

Here’s what should be said:

a) if you are called east to Nineveh, you better not go west or you might encounter storms and whales.

b) there are a whole lot of people called to Spain, and that’s great.

c) where are the people called to Saudi Arabia? to Afghanistan? to Iran? Either: i) God doesn’t care about the least reached or ii) there are a ton of deaf or disobedient people.

As for Cozens’ statement:

And before UPG folks get all pearl-clutchy and declare that they would never judge people like that, here’s Paul Eshleman again: “If we know what the priorities are, we can “stimulate one another to love and good deeds” (Hebrews 10:24) – to do what hasn’t been done thus far.”

I think Cozens is reading a lot of judgment into this statement. I know Paul and others who have said similar things. They would never judge a person’s individual calling. There’s only so much that can be said in a brief presentation. You cannot get from “let’s challenge the whole church to do the whole task” to “God must have got it wrong when He told you to go to Spain; there’s more important things you should be doing instead.”

3. People group thinking—lists, checklists, goals, speed, efficiency—is the product of the American manager and not godly.

Cozens writes: “There is a fundamental clash between the manager of the American enterprise and the God of the Christian Bible. The American manager is interested in achieving goals as quickly and efficiently as possible; God is not.”

3.1 The manager of the American enterprise dehumanizes the task into a series of lists.

I don’t recognize this—it’s a caricature. I know many “American mission managers”—I have spent time with them, ate meals with them, prayed with them, wept with them, defended them, supported them. Mission managers are not like this. They cajole, challenge, coach. They rejoice with those who rejoice and weep with those who weep. They make do on little and strive to see more people hear the Good News.

3.2 Checklists are bad.

If you are going to reach all nations—as Jesus commanded us to do—then you need to make sure all nations are reached. You need to know which ones are covered and which ones are not. This demands lists. I don’t think checklists are ungodly. I use checklists every day for tasks that need to be accomplished.

3.3 Speed is bad.

Would we say this to a paramedic or an ambulance or a fire truck heading to a fire? People are dying. Without the Gospel. They are separated from God for all eternity. Are we to go slowly to them? Waste money due to inadequate controls, lack of accountability, and lack of innovation? Speed is not bad.

3.4 God moves slowly.

I think it is more accurate to say God moves on a time scale that is not ours. But in the case of the unreached, there is a ton of stuff that could be done if people were obedient. The lack of evangelistic activity among the unreached has less to do with God’s timing and far more to do with a rebellious, disobedient church.

3.5 Slow is the language of love.

Tell that to anyone when the task is disaster relief. Or what about the father of the prodigal, who ran to his son on the horizon? Or what about the child flying home to a dying parent? You just can’t make a universal application of statements like “efficiency, hurry and haste do not effectively communicate love.”

4. Missions should be a process, not a goal.

Cozens writes:

Following on from the last point, I think it is clear from the process of the unfolding of mission in the Bible that God is more interested in mission as a process than as a goal. If we accept that God is a missional God, then the idea that mission could somehow one day be “done” (leaving aside the obvious fact that people keep making more people) is equivalent to stating that God will one day no longer be God.

This is roughly the same argument Goodman made. I’ve dealt with this argument before: “God wants it done.” Briefly, there I argue that the task can be finished by putting into place missional structures which reach future generations. And if so, the task would be “complete” both now and on an ongoing basis, and God would still be god.

But I think Cozens is generally wrong in this statement, because the simple fact is that one day mission will be done (Revelation 7:9, etc). One day we will be in heaven, and everything that could be done in terms of the unreached will be done.

And God will still be God.

5. On resistant peoples.

I’m not sure of Cozens’ point. Here he seems to be writing from his passion for Japan:

God made the people that we are trying to reach. Also, He loves them. As a missionary in Japan, I have always fought against the idea that the Japanese people are “resistant” or “difficult” or any of the other negative words that missionaries love to throw around when they don’t get their own way. It is not the Japanese people’s fault that they don’t want to buy what we’re selling. The Holy Spirit is responsible for changing hearts, so if it’s anyone’s fault, it’s His, although I dare say that the praxis of missionaries could welcome a little bit more scrutiny as well.

Generally, I agree with him here, and I don’t think he’d find any argument from people-group thinkers on the whole. There is a huge range of thinking on the idea of resistant or difficult peoples. I, for one, have argued against the idea any people group is resistant. In fact there has been research which indicates one of the most responsive groups are the Saudi Arabs. The challenge is not resistance but the lack of opportunity. I personally have a theory that Japan is right near a tipping point.

6. Lists, goals and objectives dehumanize people:

More on lists! Cozens writes:

I have the same problem with UPG theory. To talk about closure, to talk about finishing the task, to talk about unreached peoples, is to reduce the objects of God’s love to a set of goals and objectives. They become little boxes for us to tick on our merry way to bringing Jesus back. It dehumanizes people and, to borrow Buber’s categories, places us in an “I-it” relationship with them rather than an “I-thou” relationship. Koyama believed that dehumanizing and mechanising the work of God is to reduce it to demonic idolatry, and I’m not far behind him on that.

If you talk about the Pashto, Tajiks and Hazara of Afghanistan, you’re most likely thinking in terms of a list of individual people groups, not individual people—because you don’t know personally any Pashto, Tajiks or Hazara. It’s thus hard to think personally about people when you don’t know any of them. In fact, I tend to think more about the people I’m mobilizing to reach them and less about the people groups themselves. That doesn’t mean I’m dehumanizing them. But you can’t try to mobilize hundreds of new workers without thinking in terms of lists.

We pray for these people. We read profiles of about these people groups. We pray personally for more workers to reach them. When we know of potential workers, we pray for them by name. When we know of individual people among the group, we pray for them by name. This is just a caricature of “mission managers” that is not in any way reflective of the many mission managers that I know.

7. “People group theory does not take the present situation seriously”

Cozens writes:

With that in mind, the whole UPG project strikes me as thoroughly fundamentalist, in two senses. The first sense is that it is an extremely modern approach to mission, reducing God’s mission to a matter of achieving goals and objectives and focusing on ends rather than means. That just isn’t how we do things any more. It is an attempt to establish the ultimate metanarrative for mission, and we’re just not that keen on ultimate metanarratives these days, and are likely to question the motives of those pushing them.

That may be the case for you—and I’m not sure who “we” is—but it’s not for me and not for a large number of people. I believe the task can be done if only the church were obedient. I’m focused on mobilizing workers for all of the remaining people groups. We need a lot more workers to engage those who presently have no opportunity to hear.

Cozens writes:

This is because it is fundamentalist in a second sense, in that it is an essentially top-down approach. Eshleman’s paper is an attempt to sign up the global church to agree on one particular set of objectives and actions, and more broadly each organisation pushing the idea of finishing the task generally has its own (mutually incompatible) set of estimates about which people groups are most in need of reaching and which are done – which they want the global church to sign up. That just isn’t how we do things any more either, and even if it were, it would be a very obvious power play. One key feature of networked organisations in a postmodern world is that a network is not a pyramid; command and control is no longer an effective mechanism for leadership in networks, which often use diverse strategies to achieve common goals, and thus “priorities” cannot be imposed upon the network from one part to another.

I’m sorry, Simon, I’m laughing about this. There is nothing (well, perhaps very little) about reaching unreached peoples that happens in a hierarchical fashion! Paul, myself, and most organizations work in an extremely decentralized—not hierarchical—fashion. We do push for standards and agreements but no one has to agree to them. We try to build networks and partnerships and swarms.

Further, to say we have mutually incompatible sets of estimates about which people groups are most in need is in my view incorrect. There are several major lists which are 90% or more in complete agreement. As a missions researcher I network monthly (and sometimes weekly) with all of the major lists that are in use, and one of my tasks is to figure out where lists don’t agree and help resolve it.

8. “People group theory does not take anthropology seriously”

Well, I’m not going to address this very much except in passing.

8.1 The goal is not to be anthropologists but to be Gospel-bringers and Gospel-doers.

Probably not the best statement, but the best I can do at the moment. The point of the lists is not to be completely anthropologically correct. The point is to try to ensure that everyone in the world has access to the Gospel in a language they can understand, in a context they can understand. The missionary anthropology may indeed be very simple. We are mostly simple people.

8.2 The whole argument on the deaf—I know the guys doing research work on the Deaf. There are reasons why they say “Deaf Americans” and not “deaf Koreans in America.” The area is in debate. There are good reasons for why things are organized the way they are right now. Most if not all Deaf Americans in the United States do, indeed, use the American Deaf Sign Language.

8.3 Reachedness doesn’t mean someone has heard the Gospel or has accepted it.

Cozens’ comments on the unreached nature of a particular area are a misrepresentation (or a misunderstanding) of the idea of reachedness. Reachedness isn’t about whether a particular people group has heard the Gospel, or whether it is discipled, or whatever. Reachedness is about whether the resources are in place to reach the group without cross-cultural assistance. Is the US reached? Definitely. Why? Because the church within the United States is fully capable of reaching everyone in the US without needing Chinese or Nigerian or Korean missionaries to come help. Would they do good if they came? Of course. Can the US church do it without them? Definitely. Should we? Maybe not. Could we? Yes. Are they reached? Yes.

Reached is probably not the best word, but it’s the one we have, and it is precisely defined.

9. “People group theory does not even take itself seriously”

It appears that I agree with most of what’s said here.

In conclusion

I hope that this little article can serve as a reference piece and perhaps a jumping off point to discuss some of these issues. These seem to be common complaints—I’ve heard the issue of the dehumanization of lists and prioritization vs calling so many times—that it seems wise to have this post as a kind of “Frequently Asked Questions on People Group Thinking.” If you disagree with me or have a better clarification, comment below. Obviously, I don’t mind debate!

{ 6 comments… read them below or add one }

E. Goodman August 29, 2011 at 3:09 pm

As long as I don’t have to pay to comment here, I’ll post my thoughts.

I’m happy to have the discussion. Thanks for continuing to interact. I’m a bit disappointed that you’d start what seems to be a thoughtful dialog around Simon’s post with an absurdly childish “this collection of ideas is inanimate.” You know perfectly well what Simon means. Don’t be obtuse.

Obviously, Simon comes at this from a different perspective than I do. While I agree with him that “people group thinking” is a bad way to discern God’s direction for mission, I do find it helpful once we’ve received instructions from the Holy Spirit. That said, here are my thoughts regarding the points you’ve made here. (Remember, you invited it!)

1. It’s not that “all” doesn’t mean “all,” it’s that “nations” doesn’t mean “nations.” The anthropological approach to missions (people group thinking) has defined the word nations to mean “ethnolinguistic people groups.” This is not explicit in scripture, and there is no evidence that Jesus or Paul (or any other missionary in the Bible) had this in mind when they used the term “all nations.”

2. You write: “But we can establish the processes in every people group.”
Yes, but this isn’t the Biblical mandate. It’s “make disciples,” not “establish a process for disciple-making.” The difference is more than semantics; many mission organizations close down their efforts in certain parts of the world and move on to others simply because they’ve reached their “goal” of “establishing a process of disciple-making.” If you don’t presuppose “the establishment of a process” as a goal of mission, these sorts of decisions are made using entirely different criteria.

“-assuming that the church does its job…”
Western Europe (and the American coasts) are examples of how we cannot assume this. Tying the viability (and faithfulness) of national churches to our calling to mission among them is making an assumption that is detrimental to our obedience to the Holy Spirit. It’s as if we’re saying, “Well, God couldn’t possibly want us to continue the work here- there’s a viable church! It’s their responsibility now!” Where is this reflected in scripture?

2.2 Your organization (and others) may not come out and say, “There’s no way God is calling you to Argentina,” but much of the mobilization rhetoric essentially does say this. You’ve heard it: “It’s not fair for anyone to hear the gospel twice until everyone has heard it once.” Terms like “the least-reached” and “strategic prioritization” reinforce this. Having served in Western Europe, I can attest to the widespread sense among workers there that their calling and work is somehow less important than that in the “10/40 Window.”

One function of missions mobilizers and champions is to help prospective missionaries work out their calling to missions. Lots of people who hear you speak or meet you at a conference and as for more information are really sensing that God is calling them, but they need help in understanding, working through the implications, and applying that calling. When you constantly talk about the value of work among some peoples at the expense of work among other peoples, you’re helping to shape their calling (or, at least their understanding of that calling). That is a dangerous thing to do (if you ask me), and has been the cause of much conflict on the field.

3.1 Simon wasn’t attacking managers personally, nor was he questioning their commitment. He does point out (as I repeatedly have) that “efficiency,” “speed,” and “practicality” are not kingdom values, they’re human ones.

3.2 No, Jesus did not command us to “reach all nations.” He commanded us to “make disciples of all nations.” He knows (much better than we, despite our best efforts,) which ones are “covered” and which ones are not. Why not just follow where He leads rather than create and entire industry around the “science” of people group research, study, and measurement? Checklists aren’t ungodly. Organizing the church on mission around a humanistic pseudoscientific logic that produces those lists, that’s ungodly.

3.3 You’re right: speed isn’t bad. Unless, of course, it’s at the expense of appropriate contextualization, and a solid Biblical foundation. In the rush to “reach” the people groups, missionaries sometimes (inadvertantly) end up changing the gospel in order to speed up the process.

3.4 Well said. God moves in His own “time.” Nevertheless, be careful about contradicting your belief in God’s sovereignty. Be sure to check out John Piper’s recent post rebuking Alan Hirsch and Michael Frost for what he perceives as a human-dependent view of mission. I really like Frost and Hirsch, but I agree with Piper that God’s mission does not depend on human obedience.

4. I’m not sure who’s arguing the point that “God will still be God,” but the point is that God has only revealed Himself to be a missionary God. The only role He’s revealed for His followers is that of missionary. There’s (yet) no such thing as Christianity apart from missions. He gives us glimpses of that in the Revelation, but there’s no Biblical definition of the end of mission.

5. Resistance is a Biblical concept, one that is encountered throughout the Old Testament and that Jesus acknowledges in Luke 10. It sounds like you’re saying, “Nobody’s resistant to the gospel, we just haven’t found the right way to present it to them yet.” This is very human-centered missiology. God uses human means, and we will never be able to perfectly share the message. Besides, if the eternal fate of “the nations” depends on us, they have no hope at all.

5. (the second number five, that is) Justin, surely you can see a distinction between those involved in the missions world (mobilizers, missionaries, missions ministers, etc. who attend all manner of missions conferences and summits and read all manner of mission books, journals, etc.) and, well, everyone else. The distinction is made even greater by the use of acronyms and insider-speak. The missions world (this conversation included) has, for the last couple generations, effectively defined missions for the evangelical church. We’ve raised ourselves up to to be “professionals” when it comes to mission, and the church has deferred to our “expertise.” This puts one side above the other, handing down thoroughly-developed missiologies and strategies and telling churches “this is mission.” It’s a hierarchy, and one you’re very much a part of.

6. If the goal is to “gospel-bringers” and gospel-doers,” and not anthropologists, then why have we commandeered (out-of-date) anthropological terminologies and definitions and applied them to mission?

6.3 “Reached” simply isn’t a Biblical concept. Simon is right, though. A people can be considered “reached” (according to the anthropological definition) without having heard the gospel in a way that they can understand. Furthermore, I’d point you to J.D. Payne’s posts about how statistics for “Americans” are a gross generalization. Most American urban centers qualify, by any definition, as “unreached.”

Justin, you’ve made it clear that you’re a fan of what I call the anthropological approach to mission. I appreciate the dialog, but in order for it to be of much value, I think we need to be honest about its values as well of its shortcomings. If it has outlived (and I mean that figuratively, of course) its usefulness to us, or if we see its limitations, we should explore better ways of thinking. Those of us who question the approach are not attacking you or your perspective, we’re all in this together, and looking for ways to mobilize and equip the church for mission.
Thanks again for the dialog. I’m curious to read Simon’s response.

Reply

Justin Long August 29, 2011 at 5:01 pm

I’m mostly going to sit on this a bit and let others chime in, but I did want to say just one thing: I’m sorry you thought the initial comment about inanimate collections of ideas was childish. I certainly didn’t mean to be childish in making it. I still think it is an important point, though perhaps poorly stated. I can’t count the number of times that I have encountered the idea that “people group thinking is _x_”. There’s lots of thinking on strategies related to reaching unreached peoples and I think it’s a big mistake to say categorically what people group thinking is. I would rather deal with specific ideas, theories and memes within the idea of reaching people groups. I don’t really think I was being obtuse, as I did say we all know what Simon meant by what he said–I simply wanted to close that particular gate.

Reply

Simon Cozens August 29, 2011 at 6:03 pm

Ernest, I’m afraid I may leave you waiting indefinitely; I’ve said my piece, Justin’s said his, and I’m prepared to leave it there, I think.

Reply

Justin Long August 31, 2011 at 9:38 am

Kent Parks (President of Mission to Unreached Peoples & my boss) reminded me of an article had also written some time ago which addresses many of these same issues: “Whatever happened to people group thinking,” on the web at http://www.joshuaproject.net/people-group-thinking.php.

Reply

E. Goodman August 31, 2011 at 2:14 pm

Justin,
Thanks for linking to Kent Parks’ article. The article, and the fact that either of you thought it relevant to post it here, tells me that we are not communicating very well. I’ll try to clarify, but I think maybe Simon had a point in his comment above; we may have reached the limits of the profitability of this conversation.

The objection that many of us (or, at least Simon, Eddie and I) have to “People Group Thinking” is not that it’s well, publicized, unbalanced, ill-defined, or misunderstood. The problem is that they (the philosophies that fall under the “people group thinking” category) are extrabiblical and inadequate to us on mission today. Parks’ article misses the point (though it was written several years ago) in several areas:

1. It isn’t that we think the job is “getting done,” it’s that “the job” according to people group thinking (in its various forms) isn’t “the job” according to scripture. “Reaching people” is a people group thinking concept, and it is not the same thing as “making disciples.”

2. I don’t hear anyone calling for “balance.” This, too, is a PGT value (along with the “fairness,” that Parks calls for under this point). In fact, I’m calling for radical, impractical, reckless imbalance in faithful obedience to the missionary leadership of the Holy Spirit. Where He’s calling us, we should invest all of our time, effort, and resources. Even if it means focusing on what seem to us to be “reached” people. God orchestrates the church on His mission.

3. I’ve not heard anyone referring to a population segment as a “people group.” I have, however, seen a growing number of missiologists recognizing that people do not organize and identify themselves strictly according to ethnolinguistic people groups (especially in urban centers). We do need to identify the significant barriers to the spread of the gospel. We do need to devote ourselves to research that will help us contextualize, incarnate, and insure indigeneity. But the problem with “people group thinking” isn’t that it’s too broad a concept, but too narrow.

4. “Unreached” (which, according to PGT is not the same as “unbelieving”) is not a biblical concept. The idea that an unbelieving person who is a member of a “reached” people group is therefore “reached” is misguided and has no place in a biblical missiology.

5. That PGT has been understood as a proposed “end goal” is that it has been propagated as just that: the end goal of the church, the end goal of mission, the end goal of God Himself. Matthew 24:14 as a command is an interesting interpretation, but the a passive wording and context don’t seem to support that. Either way, it’s not the command to “go into all nations” that any of us have a problem with, it’s the anthropological definition of “nations” that we’re pushing back against.

6. I’m not sure how you can be “over-balanced” in returning to God’s prescribed organization for mission, the church. In light of Jesus’ prayer in the Garden of Gethsemane, there’s really no way to be too extreme here, unless we’re talking about isolation and disunity. Are Western churches perfectly designed for international missions? Most are not. Are Western churches U.S.-centric and ignorant about global need and opportunity? Yes. But that’s why we do what we do, isn’t it?

The question of “which is the missionary’s ‘local’ church?” is a great one. I’m of the opinion that the sending church is the ‘local’ church to which the missionary should be held accountable, but I do think mission should be done in unified partnership with national churches.

7. I haven’t heard this perspective from anyone involved in the conversation. Many Western churches are indeed looking for cheaper ways to “finish the task” (another PGT concept). Wary of reproducing what we have in the West and frustrated with perceived waste and laziness on the part of Western missionaries, many churches have turned to sending and supporting nationals as missionaries. This, of course, isn’t always the wisest strategy, as it is neither safe nor wise to outsource missions to anyone else.

Finally, the most telling part of the article is this statement: “This last 28% of the world will only be truly reached as representatives from all “reached” peoples join together to speak and act out the Gospel among these least served peoples.” This is indicative of the human-centeredness of PGT. Again, “reachedness” is not a biblical goal, but the truth is that unbelieving people have no hope apart from the grace of God. Their hope is not in our obedience, unity, or action. Our part is not to go out and “reach” them, it’s to walk in step-by-step obedience to the Holy Spirit wherever He leads (even if it’s to the “reached”).

I have an interest in moving the missions conversation beyond overly simplistic, modernistic, and extrabiblical “people group thinking.” I think it’s done damage to the church’s ability to think and act like missionaries, and I want to develop a missiology that is firmly rooted in scripture.

The reason I took the time to write all this is that truly want to engage in dialog with you. I’m not trying to be argumentative or pedantic. But the conversation requires that we be willing to make efforts to understand one another. I’m willing.

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Justin Long August 31, 2011 at 3:44 pm

I, too, will try to clarify some more! I am feeling rather inadequate to this task. Again, there are many people who think different things within the UPG strategy. I’ll write from my point of view, which I would say is shared by most if not all UPG strategists with whom I am familiar.

1. I—and many others I could name—would completely agree: the job is making disciples—but not just that. Or, rather, to clarify: making disciples who make disciples. Mature disciples who will make disciples of others. We can’t just mass-evangelize everyone in a group once and call the job done for all time: I don’t believe that, and to my knowledge: no one I work with believes that, no one who works with those I work with believes that. And at any rate I would argue heartily against such an idea.

2a. I agree and do call for people to obey the missionary leadership of the Holy Spirit. There doesn’t seem to be a problem with people obeying Christ and going to places like the UK, Spain or Colombia. There DOES seem to be a problem with those who are called to Saudi Arabia, Iran and Afghanistan obeying. I—and everyone else I know—would completely agree that where God calls us, there we should invest all our time, effort and resources—even if it’s a reached group or area. I help people ALL THE TIME who are going to “reached” areas. I have friends in Latin America, Subsaharan Africa, and reached parts of India.

2b. That said, my organization (MUP) is called by God to put our focus passionately and unapologetically on the least-reached areas of the world. There are other organizations that go to other places. Anyone with a calling to, say, Mexico or Colombia or France or whatever, can find plenty of organizations that will take them there. (In fact, you, dear reader, can email me—justinlong@gmail.com—and I’ll be happy to refer you to some.) In the words of a blog post I am working on: our job is to prod, not to sway. If someone has a missionary calling to Nation X I am not going to try and sway them elsewhere, and I’d argue against anyone trying.

3. I acknowledge this is a limitation. David Barrett, one of my mentors, used population segments—peoples, languages, religions, cities, provinces, countries, regions, etc. He applied his A/B/C trichotomy to each. We in MUP have geographical areas as some of our priority lists. I—and most UPG strategists I know of—are not hard and fast on the lists when the rubber meets the road. Our goal is not to be expert anthropologists.

4a. You’re right, “unreached” is not a Biblical concept. (Some in the UPG camp may argue with me on that, but I think I can pretty much stand by it.) However, I must also bring up the other side of that coin (which I’m pretty sure you agree with): “unreached” is not “unbiblical” either. It is extrabiblical, as you rightly note later. Rather like speed limits, I suppose. That doesn’t mean it’s not a useful albeit limited measuring stick.

4b. You’re right: the strict technical definition of “unreached” does not apply to individuals. (Can’t, by definition.)

4c. You’re right: you absolutely CAN have a non-believing and even an unevangelized individual within a reached segment. David Barrett used the World A/B/C trichotomy (although people argued about this too). In that one, A=a person who has never heard the Gospel, B=a person who has heard but is not a Christian, and C=a person who is Christian (of any tradition). We did an analysis at one point that showed the majority of World A individuals are actually in World B situations. Simply reaching all World A segments (e.g. any population segment—people group, city, or country—where over half are unevangelized) would not “solve the problem”. But evangelizing all of the people in World B countries (majority evangelized, minority Christian) would go a long way. Anyway, all this to say that you definitely can have the situation.

4d. And I’m not sure you said it in this post, but it’s also true that there’s debate over which segments are reached. This is one of the problems I have with the whole “reached” definition—it’s very subjective. Europe is a classic case in point: there are many churches there, both mainline and evangelical. But whether they have the capacity to reach the whole of Europe is another question. Certainly much of the obedience seems to be lacking. It’s difficult. But Europe is not in the same situation as, say, Afghanistan. There are at least enormous missionary resources devoted to Europe, whether you consider it “reached” or not.

4e. This is one reason why I really like the idea that is kind of circulating about “unengaged” groups. (At the same time I don’t want to ignore “underengaged” groups). The imbalance is not in whether the task is finished. In most instances the imbalance is in engagement. I have a list of 200+ Islamic groups, for example, with no known work and no known Christians among them. This is a vastly different situation.

5. If reaching the unreached is ever proposed as the penultimate goal of the church, it’s wrong. I might get into trouble with that flat statement, but so be it. Piper’s famous quote: mission exists because worship doesn’t. Re: “nations” – I don’t have a problem with the idea of “segments,” as covered above.

6. I think this part of Kent’s article was an answer to the idea that all mission-sending agencies ought to be abolished and missionaries should only be sent out by local churches.

7. Oh, there’s plenty of people who say this. It emerges a lot from the “let’s just send money” side.

8. The final comment you refer to is, I think, just a limitation of the article. I know Kent well, and he wouldn’t say that it’s all on us. God’s the one in charge, and he gives us a responsibility to fulfill. The 28% comment you refer to here is rather, I think, a plea for unity. One of Kent’s common illustrations is that God is sending us to the ends of the earth—together. We are to do the task in part by becoming family along the way. That we will fail at our task if we don’t do it together in love.

9. I hear what you’re saying about moving the conversation beyond people group thinking. I would be interested in other conversations. But I’m curious, WHERE would you like to see it moved to? I mean, I completely agree that those called to reached areas should go to reached areas, and those called to unreached areas should go to unreached areas. You’re preaching to the choir.

10. You note at the very start of your article that the people group thinking is extrabiblical and inadequate to mission today. I agree that it is perhaps extrabiblical, but I’m not sure where it’s inadequate. It has its limitations but I think it’s still useful enough. You say it’s done much damage to the ability of people to think and act like missionaries—but I know many people who are active in the field, who have been in the midst of enormous movements to Christ, and who were led to the field because they took on one specific people group. I’m not sure I agree that people group thinking itself has been the cause of much damage, but I admit to a limited view that is colored by my passion for the unreached.

11. To me, the biggest problem is the lack of workers among the unreached. People group thinking helps us see the stark lack of workers in certain parts of the world. Mobilization helps us present the case for them. We can always do our mobilization better—but I don’t see how we can stop holding up the challenge of the unreached/least-reached/unevangelized/whatever-we-call-them.

Blessings,
Justin

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