52nd Annual Missions Conference


Live Like a Missionary


Proclaim Good News and make disciples from every nation. Until all nations hear and Jesus returns, this is still our purpose as followers of Christ. Some believers will go vocationally as missionaries in intercultural ministry. Many will go on short-term trips and some will go to multiple places around the world. However, the nations are not just “over there,” they are all around us. So every serious disciple must live purposely and redemptively in order to make disciples of those around us. Live like you are on mission!

These were the themes of Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary’s 52nd annual Missions Conference, held on February 15 and 16, 2013, at the Seminary’s Northern California campus. Dr. Jeff Iorg, seminary president, was this year’s keynote speaker. His three addresses followed the theme from his recent book, Live Like a Missionary.

On Friday evening he spoke to a crowd of nearly 200 about understanding a call to missions and the responsibility all Christians have to be on mission with the gospel. Iorg challenged everyone, “to come to grips with this reality: your missionary responsibility began in the moment of your conversion.

“It’s hard these days to talk about what it means to be a missionary without thinking of it as a vocational responsibility that involves international travel,” Iorg said. “Because we’ve so stereotyped that word, sometimes I speak instead of being an on-mission Christian, or a missional Christian, or living a missionary lifestyle. Oftentimes, those three choices result in a missionary assignment to a job in another place. But I’m speaking more broadly tonight than just that last application. I’m speaking of your responsibility to be on mission Christians, missional believers, and to live a missionary lifestyle.”

On Saturday morning Iorg spoke about the role and power of the Holy Spirit in the life of a missional person. On Saturday evening he concluded with the challenge of vocational missions and the responsibility every believer has to consider that option for future service.
In addition to Jeff Iorg’s three messages, the two-day conference included nine seminars on topics including human trafficking, reaching youth in San Francisco, meeting the needs of the urban poor, businesses and the Great Commission, and discerning the call to missions.

Saturday afternoon about 100 people participated in several Urban Excursions in San Francisco. Because Justice Matters, an organization reaching women who are victims of sexual exploitation, organized a hands-on outreach project. CityTeam International, an organization serving the poor and homeless, took a group to several areas of the city to prayer walk, hand out sandwiches, and engage people. First Baptist Church San Francisco, the oldest protestant church in the state of California and located in the heart of the city, convened a prayer walk in their urban neighborhood.

“A strength of the conference was the trip to San Francisco where we were able to really see the people that need to be reached by God’s love,” noted one conference goer. “The emphasis on getting people out into the streets was a highlight,” seconded another. “The city ministries gave me the chance to apply what we were learning in the seminars and keynotes,” wrote an attendee in his event evaluation.

Dr. Don Dent, Director of Golden Gate’s David and Faith Kim School of Global Missions, explained the importance of this two-day gathering. “The conference meets the needs of three different groups. For our students the conference is a focused event that challenges them to think missionally about their own calling and ministry. It is a reminder of what their study is all about in the midst of demanding work and school schedules. For college students from across the Western U.S. it is an opportunity to fellowship and worship with like-minded believers while considering missions in their future. For Bay Area Christians the conference is an opportunity to learn more about missions in general and consider how their own churches can engage their neighbors.”




The attendees included a college group from Idaho, two church groups from Utah, youth groups and others from Oregon and Washington, as well as Golden Gate students and locals from the San Francisco Bay Area.

  

Golden Gate student Garrett Barber and his wife, Amanda, commented on the seminar taught by Dr. Dent, The Call to Missions. “This was an encouraging seminar as it explained how to bring clarity to the decision of where God is calling us.” Garrett explained, “You go to seminary and sit in class and get the knowledge. We have to remember why God called us here and how God is working in our lives through our seminary experience.”

Amanda agreed that the conference is “a refreshing reminder of what we’re called to do. This was a confirmation for us.”



Watch excerpts from the Missions Conference
Day 1, Session 1
Day 2, Session 2
Day 2, Session 3