Business leaders to be mobilized by IMB, churches to ‘carry the light’

The Baptist Courier

Within every Southern Baptist church there are people who can take the gospel around the world – business professionals, IMB president Tom Elliff said.

IMB president Tom Elliff stands in front of a graphic representing people groups across the globe as he addresses the mission board’s trustees at Trinity Baptist Church in Lake Charles, La. Elliff said there is “a sense of incredible excitement” as IMB embarks on an initiative to partner with businesspeople in Southern Baptist congregations.

Elliff announced a new component to the International Mission Board’s partnership with Southern Baptist churches during the March 20-21 trustee meeting at Trinity Baptist Church in Lake Charles, La.: “A global, strategic mobilization of businessmen and women, corporate leaders across the [Southern Baptist] Convention.”

Through global strategic mobilization (GSM), IMB will offer business leaders and their organizations training and equipping to be “active, effective sowers of the seed of the gospel across the world.”

The goal is to multiply Great Commission impact by mobilizing business leaders as well as other leaders in their professions across the SBC to “carry the light” of the gospel into their arenas, Elliff said, noting that the GSM concept is an acknowledgement of the first-century practice of believers carrying the gospel along Roman roads of commerce.

“Through the addition of this component, missionaries and business leaders will work together toward the vision of a multitude from every language, people, tribe and nation knowing and worshipping our Lord Jesus Christ,” Elliff said.

In May 2011, IMB initiated a marketplace initiatives task force that has been studying scriptural practices and contemporary possibilities throughout the business world. This May, a team of business leaders will meet in Dallas to provide an additional “think tank” as GSM is developed.

 

Stories from the Field

Gordon Fort, IMB global strategy vice president, shared with trustees examples of this affinity approach, where a common bond ties people together.

In North Africa, for example, a Southern Baptist worker is sharing the gospel with a group of 31 deaf people living together in a remote spot, hidden away from a society that rejects and discounts them.

The worker shared the story of the rich, young ruler (Matthew 19, Mark 10, Luke 18) with the group to illustrate how God values spiritual earnestness rather than external superficiality. A 12-year-old girl responded by praying in sign language, “Oh, God, I will never be like the rich, young ruler who kept his wealth. I will give my life so others can know you.”

IMB estimates there are 35 million deaf in the world classified as an affinity group, and most of them have never seen the “sign” for Jesus, Fort said.

 

Hands On Experience

Ken Winter, IMB vice president for church and partner services, gave trustees an update on Hands On, an initiative to give college students and young adults opportunities to serve alongside IMB personnel for a semester on the international mission field.

In 2011, 216 students served with 87 field teams worldwide, Winter said. The majority of their work took place among unreached people groups.

“God is using these students and young adults for kingdom impact through their semester on the field and preparing them for a lifetime of service wherever he may lead,” Winter said.

Five former Hands On missionaries currently are completing training to return overseas, three as journeyman missionaries and two as career missionaries.

“We pray that the financial resources would be unleashed for 1,000 students per year to be sent as Hands On workers,” Winter said. – IMB