All God’s Children | World News Briefs

Missions-Catalyst-no-tagline_largeMissions Catalyst News Briefs 05.16.18

  1. WORLD: Celebrate Cultural Diversity Day
  2. PAKISTAN: Top Judge to Hear Asia Bibi’s Appeal
  3. INDONESIA: Family Launches Suicide Attacks
  4. BURKINA FASO: Patriarch Banned from Village, Comes to Christ
  5. WEST AFRICA: “God, We Need Rain Today”

2018 global christian pop

This edition includes several stories from Africa—now, for the first time, home to more Christians than any other continent. Full infographic from Gordon-Conwell’s Center for the Study of Global Christianity looks at the global status of Christianity in 2018.

WORLD: Celebrate Cultural Diversity Day

Source: Wycliffe Bible Translators, May 10, 2018

Did you know that May 21 is World Day of Cultural Diversity? It’s a day set aside to celebrate and appreciate the beauty of cultural diversity around the world.

God made all of us and he loves us all so much—no matter where we live or what language we speak! Teach your kids the importance of valuing diversity—and all God’s children around the world—with these fun ideas on experiencing another culture right from your own community (PDF).

» Full story. Want to start celebrating cultural diversity in your kitchen? Download Wycliffe’s new international cookbook for kids. When you sign up, you’ll also get their monthly email with free activities and lessons for kids.

» Also read Saying Yes First, the story of one Texas church transformed into a multicultural community (AG News). Encouraging. This issue of News Briefs ends with another story from the Assemblies of God. See below.

PAKISTAN: Top Judge to Hear Asia Bibi’s Appeal

Source: World Watch Monitor, April 26, 2018

Pakistan’s chief justice says he will decide, “soon,” the fate of Aasiya Noreen, a Christian woman whose 2009 conviction on blasphemy charges has fixated world attention on the country’s treatment of religious minorities.

Chief Justice Saqib Nisar told Noreen’s lawyer, Saif-ul-Malook, on April 21 that he would hear the woman’s appeal. Noreen, popularly known as Asia Bibi, has been imprisoned since 2009.

“Be ready, Saif-ul-Malook. I am going to fix your case soon and I myself will preside over the bench,” the Catholic news service UCAN reported Nisar as saying.

“Bibi’s family and everyone else who understands her ordeal [is] ecstatic at the news that her appeal will be heard soon,” Malook told UCAN. According to Pakistan Today, the Chief Justice also said that all criminal appeals before the Supreme Court will be decided by July. The report did not explicitly mention Noreen’s case, but it is a criminal matter.

Noreen, a Catholic mother of five children, was arrested for allegedly making derogatory comments about Islam’s prophet, Muhammad, during an argument with a Muslim woman. She has been in prison ever since and was sentenced to death for blasphemy a year later.

» See full story with links and pictures.

» Grieved about levels of religious conflict in today’s world? Read Four Simple Ways to Love your Muslim Friends this Ramadan (Crescent Project).

INDONESIA: Family Launches Suicide Attacks

Source: Open Doors, May 13, 2018

As we [were celebrating] Mother’s Day in the US, it’s almost unconscionable to think about a mother who would prepare a suicide bomb—alongside her two young daughters (aged 9 and 12)—and detonate the bomb inside a church. And a father who would drive a truck bomb in front of a church and do the same—and direct his young sons to suit up in suicide vests on motorcycles to attack yet another church.

But this is what happened in Indonesia on Sunday.

Three bombs exploded across three churches in Indonesia’s Surabaya, capital of East Java province, on Sunday morning (May 13) while Christians gathered to worship.

At least ten people were killed in the attack—including worshippers, a suicide bomber, and several police officers. Over 40 others were injured.

CNN reported that the attacks were planned and executed by one family—including a husband, wife, and four children. The investigation reported that the family was involved in a terrorist group with ties to ISIS.

The explosions took place at a Catholic church (Santa Maria), a Protestant church (GKI Diponegoro), and a Pentecostal church (GPPS). CNN also reported that the blasts occurred one after another between 7:30 and 8 a.m. Three other explosives were later found at two of the church premises but were successfully defused by the bomb squad.

» Read full story. Note that later reports say the youngest daughter of this family, who survived, was eight years old, not nine.

» For more context and local commentary, see Indonesia on Maximum Security Alert Following a String of Explosions in East Java (Global Voices). Also read a more encouraging story from Indonesia, about a Christian worker now serving there. God began planting seeds for gospel ministry in her heart when she was younger than these children (Weave).

BURKINA FASO: Patriarch Banned from Village, Comes to Christ

Source: Christian Aid, April 26, 2018

A six-year-old girl had mysteriously died and Bwaba tribal leaders [performed] a divination ritual to determine what had provoked local spirits to commit such an outrage. A shadow fell on [90-year-old] Adama [whom] they accused of employing witchcraft to bring a deadly disease on the girl.

The traditions of the animist village called for him to be expelled for two years to verify his guilt; if he managed to survive in the wilds, he would be declared innocent and could return.

For more than a month he managed to survive on leaves and grass along with meat that a daring granddaughter snuck to him, and for shelter, he’d attached a blanket to tree branches. But the solitude, the elements and the psychological trauma soon took their toll. Gaunt and broken, he was cursing some rocks when indigenous missionaries spied him.

“He learned about the love of God… and decided to follow that God of love who gave his life for the salvation of humanity,” the [ministry] director said. “All our missionary training centers were praying God would completely restore his dignity. Two months later, the villagers discovered the real reasons for the death of the girl, and that it had nothing to do with him.”

Village leaders admitted they were mistaken in putting blind trust in occult practices and invited Adama to return. He began leading a house church, and three village leaders put their faith in Christ.

“They were baptized four months ago,” the director said. “The leaders of the village decided to abandon the divination practices, which had made so many victims. Now four families, including the family of the village chief, praise the Lord.”

» Full story with picture.

» You might want to take a look at a photo essay about animism in nearby Ghana, Power in the Blood: Animal Sacrifice in West Africa (International Mission Board). The images are compelling and not too graphic.

WEST AFRICA: “God, We Need Rain Today”

Source: AG News, May 2, 2018

Every weekend that I am able, I visit my friend’s farm, buried deep in the West African brush. This simple place is the perfect place to build our relationship. Each time we are together, I intentionally move our conversation closer to the gospel. It’s not easy, though, because my friend and I do not speak the same language. I speak English and he speaks the African language of our target unreached people group. I am trying hard to learn his language and am getting better every week.

My goal one particular week was to pray next to him. He is Muslim and prays five times a day. This time, as he was getting ready to pray, I asked him if I could pray with him. He said yes. So, while he went through all his motions, I stood next to him in a very respectful form that he would recognize as prayer and then proceeded to pray (in his language) just loud enough for him to hear the words, “Our Heavenly Father… In the name of Jesus the Messiah. Amen.”

Later that day my friend and I visited a neighboring village. It was miles further into the bush with no electricity, no running water, and no paved roads to get there. While we were there, we sat with the village chief for some time. My friend and the chief were enjoying the visit; I listened in as much as I could but was essentially lost in the flow of conversation.

Soon though, the village chief said, “We need rain badly.” My Muslim friend pointed to me and announced, “He can pray to God.” So, the village chief proceeded to ask me to pray for rain—in his language—and for it to rain today. Despite the obvious pressure of being asked to pray for immediate rain in a language I barely know, that is what I did. My friend, the chief, and others listening all seemed grateful for my prayer.

As we returned to the farm, I prayed all the way. “God, we need rain today!” I kept praying for rain while I was at the farm. I looked to the sky and saw clouds. I prayed again, “God, we need more clouds up there. We need rain today!” Later, I heard thunder and started to get very excited. Then came more thunder, and then came the rain—lots and lots of rain! Thank God for his goodness! I can’t wait to visit that village again soon.

» Read full story.

» Heading to Africa? Check out Acclimated to Africa: Cultural Competence for Westerners (SIL). It looks helpful.

Practical Mobilization: George Verwer’s Messiology

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verwer image

George Verwer image: Facebook.

Messiology: Five practical principles for mission mobilizers from OM’s George Verwer

By Shane Bennett

You know those people you really wish you could hang out with? Heroes beyond your reach? Maybe you’ll shake their hand or get a picture with them, but there’s no way they’re going to be weekly-get-together, maybe-go-camping-in-the-fall kind of friends. George Verwer, founder of Operation Mobilization, is like that for me. We go way back: I can literally remember stuff he told me (and 17,000 others) at Urbana in 1983. Later talks and books of his have shaped me in significant ways.

Right now I’m really jealous of the guy. I just read a book he wrote called Messiology, and I so wish I’d come up with that term! I love it! I wonder if I was sleeping or deep in a must-watch episode of The Office when God was handing out “messiology” and I missed it. More likely he knew George would hit it out of the park. And so he has.

I love this little book and want to do just two things in today’s Practical Mobilization:

  1. Point out some ways the book speaks particularly to mobilizers.
  2. Convince you to get a copy or five.

Celebrity crush alert: I emailed George to ask for a deal on the book for you all and he wrote me back! Read on, or really, (since this isn’t your first-ever email!), skip down to the end for the deal.

What Is Messiology?

George says, “Put simply, messiology is the idea that God in His patience, mercy, and passion to bring men and women to Himself often does great things in the midst of a mess… Over the course of 57 years in over 90 countries and thousands of churches and other organizations, I have often observed some kind of mess with them. Sometimes clear sin is involved that needs to be repented of. Other times it’s just silly stuff. I have said, and I feel it strongly, that no matter how filled we are with the Holy Spirit, we are still human. Our humanness has its beautiful side and its messy side.”

Pause for a second. Any messes your life and work right now? If you’re at all like me, this probably doesn’t require a lot of mulling over. Likely a few popped into your head instantly. George is right when he says, “Where two or three are gathered together in His Name, sooner or later there will be a mess.”

Here are five things from this little book that I think are particularly helpful for us as we advocate for God’s purposes among the nations, work in the roles he has given us, and deal with the messes we—and sometimes others—have made.

1. We’ll never fully “get” God.

That God works in spite of and sometimes by means of the messes in our lives rests on the mystery and mercy of a great God. Verwer says, “The last verses of Romans 11 have helped me again and again: Oh, the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgments and unfathomable his ways.”

The stamp of God on creation, on every bit of life we’re connected to, is both broader, deeper, and more subtle than we imagine. In a way that is both stunning and uncomfortable, I’m reminded that I comprehend only the tiniest slice of the great work of God at any moment. I pray for grace to be duly humble.

2. God didn’t ask me to sign off on who he uses.

Joel Osteen? Pope Francis? Nigerians? Hard-core Calvinists? Americans? Apparently, God doesn’t feel the need to have me vet everyone he chooses to work in and through. I don’t get this: How can perhaps-mistaken people be used by a good God to raise up honest disciples? It boggles the mind!

But clearly, the circle God draws and labels, “these are building my kingdom” is bigger than the one I’d draw, and I tend to think I’m pretty open in this area. I once nearly lost a long-term worker I was recruiting because I was not strong enough on some beliefs. (You’ll have to guess or ask which ones!)

Is it possible we can become so enamored with our view, our dogma, or our history that we assume God does not work outside of it? Is it possible that we waste valuable time writing papers, making videos, holding meetings all primarily designed to point out how other people are wrong? All the while many of those “wrong” people and “wrong” methods are tools in the hands of a wise and powerful God, so intent on accomplishing his purposes of gathering people to himself, that he can and does use them! And we don’t see it.

Neither George nor I advocate that we abandon truth, but rather rejoice in the deeper truth, the mystery of a powerful God who accomplishes his purposes through a more diverse set of humanity than we might be comfortable with.

3. Critical people annoy me to no end.

Seems wherever you look, Facebook, online and print publications, public forums, pulpits and stages, people are constantly being critical. “This ministry isn’t committed to the Bible.” “That church is too extreme.” Really, what is wrong with people? Do they not own a Bible? Maybe they never open it. Don’t they have anything better to do than complain and criticize?

Oh, hang on: “Let there be peace on earth, and let it begin with me…!”

It is so easy for me to snip and bite, casually pointing out the shortcomings of some and the extravagances of others. In my younger days, I wasn’t even subtle: “No Christian should own a Range Rover. It’s just a ridiculous status symbol.” As I’ve gotten older and put childish ways behind me, I’ve sadly gotten more sophisticated in my criticism. Dang it! But God has mercifully reminded me through the valiant Verwer to ease up on knocking people down.

No church is perfect, few supporters respond as quickly as we like, every agency drops the ball, all of us fall short of what we might be. Thank God his grace abounds.

4. I should say “I’m sorry” much more often.

Want to join me in this? Honestly. Not in an “I’m sorry you felt bad when I did that” kind of way. More of an “I dropped the ball; I failed to respond in on time; I lied to you because I was embarrassed about my mistake” kind of way.

There are times when, in an effort to be funny, I say things that are not honoring. Other times I’m arrogant and self-aggrandizing because I want to be looked at and liked. And sadly, I sometimes overlook or demean people because I don’t see how they serve my purpose.

I’m sorry.

5. Let’s love more, even when it hurts.

I cannot imagine the criticism and abuse George Verwer and his wife Drena have dealt with over the years. One of my favorite leadership quotes is, “If you want to be a leader, you’d better get used to the sight of your own blood.” I suppose the Verwers know it well.

May God give us the grace to love people when they fail us. When they impugn our motives. When they relentlessly attack, causing pain to us or worse, to ones we hold dear.

This mobilization stuff, this completing the Great Commission, it’s messy. We know that, don’t we? Thank you, George, for the happy reminder that God is big enough, good enough, and intent enough to work out his purposes for us and the world, in spite of—even through—the messes.

About the Book

About the Book

Messiology cover outlined

In my best George Verwer impersonation, “I beg of you, I implore you, get five copies of this book. Read one, give four away. If you’ll just write me, I’ll send them to you for free, that’s how much I love literature!”

Really though, get this book. If you don’t have any money, ask for a free copy. If you have some money, pay a dollar a copy (10% of the Amazon price). If you have a ton of money, bless George!

» Email your book request (with a shipping address) and transfer funds here (attn: Special Projects). Or get the Kindle edition for US$.99 from Amazon.

 

No longer a foreigner | World News Briefs

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SFC/ CBM in Bori, South Sudan
SFC/ CBM in Bori, South Sudan

A young boy smiles for the pho­tog­ra­pher in the mar­ket in Bori, South Sudan (Wycliffe Bible Translators; related story below). Today’s edition features stories about breakthroughs and barriers in scripture translation and distribution. Read and pray.

Missions Catalyst News Briefs 05.02.18

  1. SOUTH SUDAN: “God Is Not a Foreigner Anymore”
  2. NORTH AFRICA: Taxi Rides with Tarek
  3. MOZAMBIQUE: Tewe People Celebrate New Audio Bible Materials
  4. CHINA: Ban on Online Bible Sales
  5. BOLIVIA: Sharing the Gospel in Isolated Villages

SOUTH SUDAN: “God Is Not a Foreigner Anymore”

Source: Wycliffe Bible Translators, April 25, 2018

The people of South Sudan have rarely known peace. The decades since Sudan’s independence from Britain and then South Sudan’s independence from Sudan have been marked by turmoil and war.

Despite the turbulence, Bible translation has been taking place. The Baka translation began in 1980 in southern Sudan. The team endured civil war, violence, having to flee as refugees, and a kidnapping. Through it all, translation continued, and in March 2017, the Baka community celebrated the launch of the New Testament.

Now that the Baka have God’s Word, “God is not a foreigner anymore. Jesus is one of us. He can talk [our] dialect,” says Pastor Bennett Marona, the translation project manager.

» Read full story or watch a video about the Baka translation.

» See also The Bible in Uzbek, the story of the 22-year process of completing the translation of the Bible into this Central Asian language. In a surprising turn, it was publically launched in the capital with official approval by the country’s government (United Bible Societies).

NORTH AFRICA: Taxi Rides with Tarek

Source: Frontiers USA, April 4, 2016

I hustled our children into the back seat of the taxi as Kevin climbed in the front seat. “Where are you from?” the driver asked.

“America,” Kevin said. “How about you?”

“I’m from Syria,” the driver responded.

“Oh. I prayed for your country this morning!” Kevin blurted out.

I cringed a little in the back seat at Kevin’s response. What was that emotion in me? Embarrassment? Shame? What did it matter if this taxi driver knew Kevin prayed? Why did I feel like hiding?

It was true after all. Kevin had spent a couple hours that morning, as he often did, in our team’s prayer room. And he had prayed for Syria.

Although I felt sheepish and not very brave about sharing our spiritual lives with this taxi driver, I look back and see that all it took was Kevin’s casual comment, and Tarek, the taxi driver, was hooked. We didn’t know it at the time, but that was the day Tarek’s pursuit of Jesus shifted into high gear…

» Full story is worth reading. Here’s my favorite line: “That first night with his new Bible, Tarek devoured a hundred pages of the Gospels.”

» See also another story about a taxi driver, Listener in Mongolia Becomes Volunteer Broadcaster (FEBC). And don’t forget to pray for the work of God in the Muslim world during Ramadan this year. It begins May 15. Check out resources from Frontiers, Prayercast, and of course 30 Days of Prayer.