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I don't think it's a matter of people actually being needed Stateside. But once you have become a member of NTM, and you remain a member in good standing, then you are safe to do (or not do) pretty much whatever you want, and live wherever you wish.
The thing that keeps you safe is not the fact that you are an effective missionary, carrying out your mission work by laboring diligently, or making great sacrifices. It's not that you need to be a good language learner, or a successful cross-cultural message-bearer. No, you just need to be a "member in good standing".
A member in good standing does not question their leadership. A member in good standing is loyal and supportive and does not make waves. A member in good standing may never have ventured out of their own country, or learned another language, or even have a relationship with a person whose skin is not the same color as theirs. That is not what makes a good New Triber. A good New Triber is simply a compliant person who stays out of trouble.
If you are a member in good standing you will not have to worry about your future with the mission. You can stay in it as long as you like. You can live in Baan Ngam, Thailand, or San Diego, California, Sanford, Florida, or Roach, Missouri, and that is okay. There will always be something for you to do, even if it's answering phones, scrubbing floors, or keeping the exterior of that beautiful headquarters building looking sharp.
Everything a New Tribes "missionary" does, is viewed as being part of the support team of the ones who are actually living out in the villages, telling tribal people about God. As a former tribal missionary myself, I am not saying that I am unaware of the fact that a tribal worker does need the help of others. I am grateful for the people in the Philippines who ran the guest home, did the supply buying, kept our paperwork in order, flew the mission plane, and carried out other "non-tribal" ministries so that we could concentrate on our work in the village.
However, as the years have passed, I have watched the number of "support" personnel grow and grow, while the number of people who actually live in indigenous locations and do the true face-to-face evangelism and church planting as envisioned by Paul Fleming has dwindled down to such a small percentage it is appalling. We will NEVER get a straight answer from Sanford on this, so only God knows the statistics, but I am very curious and wish I could ask, "Out of the vast number of people you say are missionaries with your mission, at this very moment, how many are actually located in a remote jungle or tribal location, right now, today? Actually living and working with tribal people at 4 pm on Saturday, Sept. 21, 2013?" Is it 100? 200? 300? My guess is the number would not be much larger than that. That is just a wild guess though. But it is based on real-life information of what I do know is going on around the world. A majority of NTM missionaries in good standing do not actually live with tribal people. Even among those who are doing things like Bible translation, many do not live in remote locations anymore. Some even continue their translation work in the United States, living in a cozy Stateside house, buying their groceries at Wal Mart, and driving around in a nice shiny car.
As long as you stay out of trouble, you will not be asked to leave New Tribes Mission. People are asked to leave for insubordination, for not fitting in, for not toeing the line, for having the wrong doctrine. But they are not asked to leave because they aren't needed or being used to reach tribal people. There is always a job that can be done in the mission. God can use anybody. That's what they always said.
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