Language is Critical to the Missionary Calling

One of the interesting things about training students from around the world to be missionaries is how different some of their underlying assumptions are. I noticed this recently when visiting our students in Taichung, Taiwan, at the Radius Asia campus.

While we often have to build a case for our North American students as to why achieving language fluency is critical, the same cannot be said about their counterparts in Asia.  

Most of our Asian students have seen the results of missionaries trying to carry on ministry while being only “market fluent” (the ability to carry on surface-level conversations). It is quite easy to convince them of the value of gaining “worldview fluency.” The gospel messenger should be able to speak at a high level on subjects like imputed sin, justification by faith alone, substitutionary atonement, and the triune God.

Good hearts and motives, combined with a pixie-dust-like theology of the Holy Spirit, are woefully insufficient for foreign missionaries. This is a fairly easy sell for those who have grown up in non-English-speaking countries and had Hudson Taylor as the assumed standard. Taylor was famous for being excellent in four dialects of Chinese and holding all China Inland Mission missionaries to high standards in language fluency. 

But is this just a “Radius thing,” or do we see the primacy of language in Scripture as well? Let me lay times we see language as central to the plans of our God and His desire to communicate clearly. 

Four Times God Uses Language For His Purposes

1. The Tower of Babel

The Tower of Babel is the first instance in Scripture where God uses language as a primary tool for his purposes. God could have used a variety of ways to disperse humanity across the earth, but his chosen instrument was language. 

“Come, let us go down and there confuse their language, so that they may not understand one another’s speech.” So the Lord dispersed them from there over the face of all the earth, and they left off building the city. (Genesis 11:7–8)  

In this instance, the one and only tool used to force people further from each other was language. As Randy Alcorn puts it so well: “Because the people weren’t united around their God-designed purpose to rule the earth for his glory, God removed a source of their destructive unity and power, their shared language.”[3]

God could have used race, occupation, physical traits of some sort, but employed none of them. Language ability, or lack thereof, has the unique capacity for making people outsiders, or insiders, to a people group. 

2. Pentecost

 In Acts 2 we see the coming of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost—and the believers speaking in languages they had not learned. This miraculous sign was evidence to the gathered crowd of the truth of the gathered believers’ claims about Jesus. 

And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues as the Spirit gave them utterance.  Now there were dwelling in Jerusalem Jews, devout men from every nation under heaven. And at this sound the multitude came together, and they were bewildered, because each one was hearing them speak in his own language. (Acts 2:4–6) 

Jews from all across the far-flung Roman world clearly heard the gathered believers speaking powerfully the various languages of their native lands. The overwhelming proof of something that was unseen, was something that was clearly heard.

God chose the power to communicate in the native language of a person as the initial primary tool to prove the authenticity of the message of the Christ.

3. Paul in Corinthians 14

Paul knew the value of language and how God uses it to bring about understanding—and the lack of it, horrible heresy.[4] In I Corinthians 14, he uses the understanding of languages to make a point:  

So with yourselves, if with your tongue you utter speech that is not intelligible, how will anyone know what is said? For you will be speaking into the air.  There are doubtless many different languages in the world, and none is without meaning, but if I do not know the meaning of the language, I will be a foreigner to the speaker and the speaker a foreigner to me. (1 Corinthians 14:9–11) 

The point that Paul is so incisively making is that language brings meaning. When we don’t know the language, we don’t communicate our intended meaning, no matter how great the heart behind it. In Paul Schlehlein’s excellent book on John Paton, he recounts Paton’s words on fluency.  

No one can penetrate very deeply into the minds and hearts of the people till he has learned to speak to them in their own mother tongue. A missionary is incapable of knowing the thoughts, ambitions and deepest throbbing of the native heart without first knowing his manner of speech.[5]  

People can only grasp the meaning when they are proficient at the medium being used. Otherwise, the speaker is a foreigner and, more importantly, the gospel and the God of the speaker remain a foreigner as well. 

4. The End Days

Finally, we look to the end of days and the glory of what awaits in heaven. John writes in Revelation 7 of this incredible scene:  

After this I looked, and behold, a great multitude that no one could number, from every nation, from all tribes and peoples and languages, standing before the throne and before the Lamb, clothed in white robes, with palm branches in their hands, and crying out with a loud voice, “Salvation belongs to our God who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb! (Revelation 7:9–10)  

Here we see again, every nation, tribe, people and . . . language. While there is an ongoing discussion as to what constitutes a people group, a language group is much easier to quantify.

And here we see the scene of God’s people once again speaking the same language, as it was in the beginning. The very thing that still separates people today will unify the people of God on that day. 

The intrinsic value of language is not a “Radius thing,” it’s a God-ordained barrier and tool to see the spread of His gospel. To the missionary’s peril, he minimizes the primacy of language. Without it, he risks misunderstanding at best, and false converts at worst. With it, he dramatically increases the credibility and understanding of his message.

May God grant his messengers the perseverance to overcome this barrier and become messengers worthy of the message entrusted to them.

Brooks and his wife, Nina, planted a church among the Yembiyembi people in Papua New Guinea. In 2016, they returned to San Diego. Brooks now serves as president of Radius International.

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