Grayson Marshall’s passion for the nations ignited after a mission trip to Nicaragua. But during his first trip to Japan, “I felt the lostness and brokenness of a people who needed a Savior and felt drawn to go back,” he says.
Abby Marshall grew up feeling inspired by missionary biographies. As a senior in high school, she connected with a missionary who worked in the Middle East. Through that interaction, she felt God calling her to missions.
After they were married, they took a trip to assist a church plant in Japan, and they both felt the calling to go to the Japanese people.
The Marshalls are two of the 34 IMB missionaries recognized during the Sending Celebration on Sept. 29, 2021, at Staples Mill Road Baptist Church in Richmond, Virginia. Thirty-six missionaries were approved for appointment by International Mission Board trustees earlier that day during their meeting. One couple approved for appointment was not able to attend the celebration.
“Standing in the busiest intersection (Shibuya Crossing) in the world, God opened our eyes to the vast need for His name to be proclaimed in Japan,” Grayson said. “There God pierced our hearts to carry His name and bring hope found in Jesus.”
The Marshalls, along with their nine-month-old daughter, Margot, will move to Yokohama in January. They’ll work alongside national churches to reach, train and equip the Japanese people to help fulfill the Great Commission.
The Marshalls’ sending church is First Baptist Church Hendersonville, North Carolina.
They’re asking for prayers as they learn the language and for the Japanese people’s hearts to be soft and receptive.
Southern Baptists are ‘a sending people’
Southern Baptist Convention President Ed Litton brought greetings from Southern Baptists, “a sending people,” before encouraging attendees from Philippians 2. He reminded all Southern Baptists that it is the responsibility of the Church to bathe these missionaries in prayer.
IMB President Paul Chitwood introduced the new missionaries, who gave brief testimonies of their calling.
“We gather here tonight because we can’t be in heaven yet. Why can’t we be in heaven yet? Because heaven is not yet what heaven will someday be, and God has left the Church here and commissioned it to be used by the Spirit of God to make heaven what heaven will someday be,” Chitwood said, reminding attendees of the IMB’s Revelation 7:9 vision.
“If God is calling you to go, then go. If not, God is calling you to send. So, send. How do you send? You send by praying for those who are going. You send by giving generously so those called to go, can go. You send by becoming an advocate, inviting others to pray and give and go,” Chitwood added.
Guidestone President-Elect Hance Dilbeck spoke to the new missionaries and attendees from Psalm 2 and Acts 4:23-29.
He encouraged them to:
- Be prepared for hostility from this world that’s in rebellion.
- Don’t despair. The opposition is real, but it’s empty.
- Serve Jesus with boldness.
Just as the church in Acts prayed, quoting Psalm 2, Dilbeck said, “My prayer for this group going out to the nations is that you would not despair, but that you would depend on Jesus and continue to serve Him with boldness, no matter the opposition that comes.”
Understanding that God sits on the throne, sovereignly, in heaven, makes all the difference in following the Great Commission, he said.
Chuck Pourciau, lead pastor of Broadmoor Baptist Church and chairman of the board of trustees, led in prayer for the missionaries and encouraged congregants to gather around them for prayer.
“We thank God for you, first and foremost, and we commit ourselves to praying for you every night and day.”
Pourciau prayed over the missionaries, specifically for them to have boldness – a theme repeated throughout the service.
Trusting God’s timing
The day after Alli McCarty graduated college, she went on her first mission trip. She wasn’t a believer yet, but a few weeks after that life-changing experience, she put her faith in Christ. From that day forward, a desire for missions was ignited in her, she said.
“Going overseas to serve was something that shaped me, grew me and taught me the urgency of needing to share Christ,” McCarty said.
During her last semester of graduate school, she felt God calling her to missions, but she also felt it wasn’t time for her to go yet.
As she entered her career, that desire to be overseas never waned, but she learned to wait patiently on God to fulfil His plans for her life.
“This period of not going has grown me in my walk with Christ and led me to pray daily that God would help me to be content in His ways and rely on Him,” McCarty said.
She added, “The fact that there are more than 2 billion people across the world who don’t know Christ continues to challenge me to ask how I can stay here and not go.”
McCarty is moving to Budapest to reach students through teaching business skills in a collegiate setting. She leaves in January.
McCarty’s sending church is Immanuel Baptist Church in Louisville, Kentucky.
She’s asking for prayers as she learns Hungarian.
The next Sending Celebration will be held on Nov. 8 in Columbia, South Carolina.
If you’re feeling called to missions, visit imb.org/go for more information. For options to give, visit imb.org/generosity.
Editor’s Note — This article was written by Myriah Snyder, senior writer/editor for the IMB.
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