
3 John is a short letter. You can read the whole thing in about two minutes. The Apostle John is writing to his dear friend Gaius. He says he loves him "in the truth." It's a warm letter. John has received a kind of ministry update — some itinerant missionaries had visited Gaius and his community, been received with unusual generosity, and then returned to John's church in Ephesus with a glowing report.
And John's reaction is joy. Not polite, dutiful joy, but the deep joy of a parent hearing that a child is walking in the truth. Look at verse 4: "I have no greater joy than to hear that my children are walking in the truth." That's the emotional register of the whole letter.
So what had Gaius done? He had hosted missionaries. Strangers, in fact. Look at verse 5:
Dear friend, you are faithful in what you are doing for the brothers and sisters, even though they are strangers to you.
These were not old friends. These were people Gaius did not know. And yet he opened his home to them. He fed them. He put his name and resources behind them simply because they carried the name of Jesus. These missionaries later testified — verse 6 — to the church about Gaius's love. What a thing to be known for!
Here is a lesson to draw out of this text, and it might not be what you expect: domestic ministry is the goal of frontier missions.
Think about what missions looks like from both sides. When a missionary goes to another country, it is international, cross-cultural, frontier work — from their perspective. But for the people they are serving, it is simply local ministry. It's people making disciples in their own language, culture, and context. The goal of sending someone abroad is to establish a beachhead of the kingdom of God — a local church — that then does local work.
Just imagine if someone came to where you live to do ministry and had to write a support letter about it. How would they describe their work as an outsider? What if they had to learn English and were operating outside of their normal experiences? Imagine how locals would describe what they are doing, and how the missionary would describe the same thing. Can you feel the difference?
There is certainly a missionary pulse to Christianity, but it does not mean everyone should leave their homeland. Missionary is a word that captures our imagination. Missions week. Missionaries. Missions committee. But the local church itself is a missionary enterprise. Paul doesn't shame the churches he planted for not all going somewhere else — but he does expect mission activity, specifically disciple-making, to happen within those churches.
This matters for how you think about your own life.
The Great Commission — Jesus's command to go and make disciples — is not a special assignment issued to a small spiritual elite who cross borders. It is issued to the whole church. Acts 17 tells us that God has determined the allotted times and boundaries of every person's dwelling, and that the purpose of those boundaries is that people should seek God, and perhaps feel their way toward him and find him. You live where you live to find God. That's it. And to help others find him.
Everyone is wired with particular gifts, temperaments, and capacities. Some of you are introverts; some are extroverts. Some are planners; some are entrepreneurs. Some work in law, some in medicine, some in construction, some in education. The point is not that everyone should leave their profession. The point is that every vocation is a theater for disciple-making.

I once met a guy who in 2008 went to Iran as an Afghan refugee. He then traveled to Turkey and became a Christian. Afterward, he went to Greece and then Norway. His asylum case was rejected in Norway, so he went to Germany where he was baptized. His asylum case was rejected again, so he returned to Norway.
Norway couldn't determine his country of origin because he was an Afghan in Iran. He asked them to deport him to Afghanistan. There, he started an underground church. Sadly, the Bible teacher from South Africa who served the church was killed by the Taliban.
He later fled to India to finish college and then returned to the EU. He was eventually granted asylum in Austria, where he now serves in a Baptist church.

A short book on missions with a lot of wisdom.
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