IMB의 한국 침례교와의 파트너십에 반영된 세계화의 강점
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Strength of globalization reflected in IMB’s partnership with Korean Baptists
RICHMOND, Va. (BP) – IMB staff welcomed 12 representatives of the Korea Foreign Mission Board to their home office in Richmond Aug. 22. The visit was an opportunity for Korean leaders to tour the facility and hear more about current operations and advancements at the International Mission Board. Discussion was built around sharing ideas and learning from each other as the partnership between the two mission boards grows.
The meeting comes on the heels of IMB President Paul Chitwood’s visit to Seoul in July to take part in the Korea Baptist Mission Summit 2023. The summit in Seoul gathered leaders of the Korea Baptist Convention, the Foreign Mission Board of Korea, the IMB and the Council of Korean Baptist Churches in America.
Discussions in Seoul and in Richmond included times of learning from each other, reflecting on the strong history of cooperation, and reaching the more than 3,000 people groups around the world who still do not have Gospel access.
Min Ho Chu, president of the Korea Foreign Mission Board, said that 35 years ago, Korean Baptist churches were not sending missionaries. He credited IMB missionaries who encouraged them to organize efforts and prioritize reaching the lost outside of their home country for a shift. South Korea is currently the second-largest missionary-sending country, behind only the U.S.
Korean Baptists support more than 730 missionaries serving in 60 countries. Most of those missionaries are serving long term and raising their families on the mission field. The Korean FMB has processes for training and sending missionaries, including age-level mission opportunities, short and long-term missions and their own missionary training facility.
While in Richmond, leaders learned how they could duplicate and strengthen areas such as member care, church mobilization, research and deployment.
Amanda Dimperio Davis, IMB’s director of globalization, said these meetings are strengthening partnerships and reflecting the need for cooperative work to reach the lost. Davis explained her role to the visiting Korean Baptists as helping other nations work with the IMB to send and receive missionaries.
She described globalization as “working with national partners, helping them to embrace their role in the Great Commission, and seeking to encourage and expand their capacity to send and receive cross-cultural missionaries.”
No one country or agency will be able to fulfill the task alone, Davis emphasized.
She noted that Koreans are setting strong examples for the benefit of globalization. Thirty of IMB’s 113 Global Missionary Partners (GMP) have been sent from Korea as Hands On students, Journeymen who serve two- or three-year terms, and long-term missionaries. IMB personnel and Korean leaders have also jointly conducted an Eight Steps Consultation, assessing current approaches to enhance efficiency and effectiveness as they cooperate for the sake of impacting lostness.
IMB is providing teams in other countries to receive Korean foreign missionaries. By being a GMP on an IMB team, the missionaries have the fellowship of the team on the field. They will also receive cross-cultural training that IMB provides and access to logistics services, education consultations and strategies, until the sending organization can provide their own services to their missionaries.
Korean Baptist visitors included trustees and their wives:
●Jong Sung Kim and Soon Wha Jung;
●Joong Sig Kim and Hyung Kim;
●Gi Tae Moon, trustee chair, and Sea Young Kwon;
●Ho Chul Song and Yun Ja Lee;
●Kwan Jae Yoo and Mi Hyang Kim;
●Min Ho Chu and Myoung Sook Ro.
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- 제5회 FMB 선교포럼
- 23.09.15
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- 선교지 재산 문제 해결을 위한 교단 선교실무 대표자 모임
- 23.08.23
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