Hi,
I wasn’t quite sure where this topic should go - but anyways. . please let me know if it should be elsewhere.
Having just come back from a short term mission trip to a closed country, it was only afterwards that i was really confronted with the issue of whether doing mission in a closed country is ethical and appropriate for a Christian to be involved in.
We were encouraged on the event of being questioned by authorities we should only give vague brief answers such as “i am here travelling”. We were told not to bring any unwanted attention to the rest of the party and in effect ‘play stupid’ by saying “i’m not sure where i’m staying because i dont know this area well”. Whilst all those are in effect true - i was travelling and i didnt know the area. . .there is some level at which conscience wise i believe this to be deception and 2 Cor 4 says this is inappropriate (albeit not prescriptively).
There were a few other incidents that occurred that made things difficult, but at the end of the day it was the underlying issue that i felt i was not being truthful to the government and to people i met.
Security wise, i can understand the need for such caution. However I’m not so sure I can justify this with “people need to hear the Gospel”. . .it sounds awfully like a “the ends justify the means” reasoning and furthermore, it does not reflect well on Christian integrity.
In a nutshell, 1 Peter 2 exhorts us to obey authorities - to what extent should this be applied to seeking to mission work in closed countries?
Thanks everyone.




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