NORTH AMERICA: The Native American Battle to Survive

Source: Mission Network News, November 29, 2016

The United States just celebrated Thanksgiving, almost four centuries after that first meal was shared. In the backdrop are the ones we shared it with—the first Americans.

Ron Hutchcraft Ministries is one Christian ministry working to bring hope to Native American Tribes. We spoke with Ron Hutchcraft, who recently wrote about The Thanksgiving Guests We Forgot. Hutchcraft says, “It’s like we invited them to dinner and forgot them for 400 years.”

“Today, Native Americans are in a monumental battle to survive, and it’s not even on our radar. And ‘Exhibit A’ would be that here is one people group in the country whose suicide rate is at minimum three times, and, depending on the part of the country, ten times greater than the rest of the people in America.”

In addition, Hutchcraft says, they struggle with sexual crimes and abuse, as well as drug and alcohol addictions. There is a common theme of despair and hopelessness. According to Native American Aid, the 22 percent of Native Americans living on reservations face conditions comparable to the third world.

» Read full story.

» Editor’s note: Recently, representatives of “First Nations” from all over North America gathered for a special ceremony on the Mall in Washington D.C. to forgive the U.S. Government for broken treaties. A pastor from upstate New York (my neck of the woods) made a powerful public declaration as part of this event, which one Christian leader described as “one of the most noble acts of true Christian charity that I have ever heard of by any people group.”

As you prepare for Christmas you might like to read about or listen to the first contextualized song written for the Hurons in the 17th century.

SYRIA: Seeking a Million Voices to Support Vulnerable Church

Source: World Watch Monitor, November 8, 2016

A Syrian Christian now living in the UK is helping to bring hope for the future to his native land as part of a worldwide advocacy campaign.

“Rami” coordinates “Hope for the Middle East,” a seven-year advocacy campaign from charity Open Doors, which works with the persecuted Church. It seeks to maintain a presence in the Middle East for the Church and to show that it has an active role to play in the future of Syria and the region as a whole.

“Through extensive series of consultations with Christian leaders in Syria and Iraq we were able to identify three main problems that cause despair. Let me explain what these are and the recommendations we give to the UN and to governments.”

a. Discrimination from government and other communities. “We try to ensure a legal framework that guarantees equal citizenship for Christians and other numerical minorities.”

b. Dignity in accommodation, work, and education. “Lots of refugees and internally displaced people received food parcels. Of course they are very grateful, but they would much rather provide for themselves.”

c. Recognition for the role of the Church in rebuilding and reconciliation. “As I said before, the Church belongs in the Middle East and needs to play a vital role in rebuilding.”

The way that Open Doors is tackling these issues, says Rami, involves working with indigenous church leaders in the Middle East, engaging with governments and decision makers across the globe, alongside the goal of collecting a million signatures in support of the campaign.

» Read full story.

» WWM also reports updates to events in Ethiopia, where several teenage Christian girls have been imprisoned for inciting religious violence, and Pakistan, where a 16-year-old Christian boy was accused of blasphemy.

INDIA: Christmas Parties Prove Popular in Hindu Communities

Source: Christian Aid Mission, November 17, 2017

Pastor Philip Zacharia had been praying for four years about how to bring together his staunchly Hindu neighbors in Bihar state, “graveyard of missionaries,” to hear the gospel. When he learned of the gospel potential of Christmas parties from a Danish friend at an evangelists’ conference convoked by Billy Graham in Amsterdam in August 2000, it seemed to be the answer to his prayers.

Up to that point, his efforts to proclaim Christ had met with scant success. Rather, it had stirred the ire of Hindu extremists, who in October of that year summoned him to a meeting.

“They were accusing me of trying to convert people,” Pastor Zacharia said, “and one of the men said, ‘We’ve tried to kill you many times, but somehow you escaped. We’ve called you today to give you the last warning. If you continue to preach, your children will become orphans, and you will be responsible for that.’”

The strapping men towered above him, and he began to pray. He tried to engage them in conversation, but they only told him to leave and to stop preaching the God of Christianity.

“So I was coming back home and thinking, ‘Lord what to do?’” he said. “I was excited about this idea of Christmas parties, and now these guys are telling me, ‘If you preach anymore, you’ll be killed.’ I didn’t want to share those things with my wife, I didn’t want to share those things with the church. I was keeping it in my heart and praying, ‘Lord what to do?’ and the Lord said, ‘Go forward.’”

Without telling anyone about the death threats, he began preparing for the Christmas program, going house-to-house to extend the invitations. Unknowingly, he knocked on the door of the Hindu extremist who had threatened to kill him.

» Read what happened next. It’s encouraging!

» See also Christianity Continuing to Grow in Nepal Despite Persecution (Open Doors/Christian Today).

World News Briefs

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elam-baptism-photoImage: ELAM Ministries. See a related article about ministry in Iran, Rapid Church Growth: How Is It Happening? This edition of News Briefs includes stories of God doing what Gracia Burnham (see below) describes as “what only he can do.”

  1. SYRIA: Refugee Finds Light in Ongoing Nightmare
  2. USA: Gracia Burnham Reflects after Captivity in Philippines
  3. SOUTH ASIA: From North Carolina to Bhutan and Nepal
  4. IRAQ: A Monastery among the Refugees
  5. BURUNDI: Wishing the Best for Those You Hate

SYRIA: Refugee Finds Light in Ongoing Nightmare

Source: Christian Aid Mission, September 29, 2016

Even as civil war rages on in Syria after another failed cease-fire, those who remain in the country are finding the light of God, including one mother who benefited from dreams amid the ongoing nightmare.

The director of a ministry based in Syria said the woman dreamt repeatedly of a man who told her that three people would come and bring her good news.

“She continued to have this dream for six days in a row,” said the director, who granted Christian Aid Mission permission to publish his comments. “On the seventh day, one of our teams was doing home visits and decided to visit a new house. The three of them sat down in this woman’s house to have a short visit, but when they opened their Bible, she instantly fell to her knees.”

When her husband and children came in later, she could not contain her excitement.

“These are the people that the man in my dream told me to meet!” she told them.

» Read full story. Readers might also be interested in news from another country in this region: See God Bringing Momentous Growth to Iranian Church (ASSIST News Service).

USA: Gracia Burnham Reflects after Captivity in Philippines

Source: Mission Network News, November 8, 2016

If you’ve read In the Presence of My Enemies, you know the story of Martin and Gracia Burnham. They were missionaries in the Philippines who were kidnapped from a resort in 2001 with several others by the Abu Sayyaf, a Jihadist terror group. They were kept hostage for a year. The Philippine army attack that rescued Gracia also killed her husband, Martin.

There have been miraculous developments in Burnham’s story. “I have found some of the guys who held us captive, [who are] in a maximum security prison in Manila, and I’ve been able to work with them in a small way through a missionary couple who works in the prison. So far, four former Abu Sayyaf have come to know Jesus as their Savior.”

“God writes really good stories. All of that could be happening in the Philippines, and I wouldn’t even know about it. But the Lord let me even be in on some of it, and I’m just very grateful to him.”

Coming off the heels of the International Day of Prayer and the focus on the worldwide Church, we asked Gracia how her life experience has influenced her thoughts on missions.

“I think my philosophy on missions is you just love people and you invite them into your circumstances. You tell them your story and what God did for you—and how God can work in their hearts and lives as well.”

Ultimately, says Burnham, “It’s an honor to tell my story… I just try to love people and do what I can do, and watch God do what only he can do.”

» Read full story. And check out Gracia Burnham’s second book, To Fly Again: Surviving the Tailspins of Life.

SOUTH ASIA: From North Carolina to Bhutan and Nepal

Source: Mobile Ministry Forum, October 18, 2016

Three years ago I met Pastor Naina, a Bhutanese Nepali pastor who was a refugee relocated to Charlotte, North Carolina. Naina speaks nine languages. The day I met him, I showed him the JESUS Film mobile app and helped him install it on his mobile phone. Naina knew lots of people who spoke different mother tongues, and they spoke many other languages too. A lot of them had a mobile phone.

Two weeks later I had a chance to stop by and see him again. After I’d left earlier, he emailed or texted 142 different people the app in their appropriate language. Then he put it on Facebook for 550 friends to see. All in one day.

The first afternoon he sent it to Ruben, a young relative near Washington DC, who was also a refugee. Ruben downloaded it and played it for some buddies who’d been playing soccer together. After watching, three of the four received Christ. People also opened the app and watched the film in Bhutan, India, Nepal, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and several states in the US. Comments and stories started flowing back.

Kumar, a pastor still near the refugee camp in Nepal, opened it, and downloaded it. Every evening over the next two weeks he showed it to 14 families near his home. Four of the families (22 people) received Christ. Kumar’s church was growing. Over the next six months, Kumar, using his mobile phone, planted five more churches in five nearby villages.

» Read full story. See also Make the Case: Why Mobile Ministry? and a story from India about church planting with MicroSD cards.

» You might check out a curated list of sites and apps to help you share scripture (and more) with Arabic-speaking friends (Arab World Media).

IRAQ: A Monastery among the Refugees

Source: Joel News International, October 31, 2016

In 2001, Raeed answered a call from God to become a monk and joined four others in a small monastery in Iraq. But life changed dramatically when the US-led coalition moved into Iraq. He was in a taxi with another monk on his way to Baghdad when they unexpectedly collided with a tank. There was a horrible crash and the awful sound of crunching metal as the tank drove over part of the taxi. The accident killed the other monk in the car and left Raeed in a coma.

When he emerged from the coma and realized he was the only survivor from the accident, it challenged and deepened his faith. “It brought me back to my calling. I’d promised to obey Jesus, and he said, ‘Whoever follows me should not look back.’”

On August 6, 2014, Raeed found himself caught up in another invasion: ISIS was entering Qaraqosh. While he and several others were gathered for prayer, suddenly the sound of honking horns and explosions shattered the silence. He ran to the window and was startled to see cars lining up to evacuate the city. Raeed quickly gathered his belongings and prepared to abandon the monastery. The drive to Erbil took them all night.

Over the next several months Erbil became a safe haven for thousands of refugees fleeing ISIS, including many Christians escaping the atrocities. Raeed found a new calling in this crisis. He established a monastery in the middle of a refugee camp. The temporary church is usually filled to capacity on Sunday mornings, with people standing in the doorway, overflowing the service.

“God needs me to be here,” he says. “It is all about Jesus, the rock we build on. And whatever might happen, our rock will never disappear. He will always be here.”

» Read the original story (as it first appeared in WorldWatch Monitor) and pray for the people of Qaraqosh, reportedly Iraq’s largest Christian community. Christians have also been interceding for breakthrough in Erbil, praying and fasting for 50 days leading up to what they’re calling ChristDay, November 18-19.

BURUNDI: Wishing the Best for Those You Hate

Source: Simon Guillebaud, November 9, 2016

Cris Rwakasisi spoke at our Burundian National Prayer Breakfast [November 8]. Cris was Ugandan President Milton Obote’s main man back in the early 1980s. Obote gave him the choice of any post he wanted, and he ended up as Minister of Defense. He was young, powerful, rich, and arrogant. His caviar lifestyle and attitude alienated the opposition and many within his own party. He got things done, and created many enemies.

In earlier times, he and (now President) Museveni had been friends. In fact Museveni had worked under him. But their relationship had long soured, and when Obote was kicked out and Museveni came to power, they truly hated each other. Cris was imprisoned and condemned to death. When he was taken to solitary confinement, he wanted to kill himself, but there were no sharp objects in his cell. In the dark, in the corner, he thought he saw a stone. It was in fact a Bible. He used it as a pillow to begin with, but eventually began reading it.

He hated God. He picked out all the perceived contradictions and inconsistencies as he read it from cover to cover. By his third reading, however, his heart softened. This proud man was being humbled and broken. He surrendered his life to Christ in that cell. In his immature faith, he initially took Psalms in which David cursed his enemies, asking God to kill them, their children, etc. But the opposite happened, as they continued to prosper. When he changed his prayers to blessing his enemies, it was then that Museveni’s attitude softened towards him. In 2009, Musveni had signed execution orders for 28 people, and Cris was on that list, but Museveni later said to him that God spoke to him and forbade him to sign that decree. The others were all killed, whilst Cris survived.

When released out of solitary confinement into the main condemned section of the prison, he started a fellowship there which continues to this day. In total he spent a staggering 24 years in jail! Six years ago, Museveni formally pardoned him and invited him to join the cabinet. When he’d gone to prison, his children were in primary school; now they were in jobs or at university. Yet he has no bitterness. The old enemies are totally reconciled. Cris is a trophy of grace and, now 75 years old, serves as Special Advisor to the President.

Cris’s winsome manner and humor were thoroughly disarming in a room in which all Burundi’s key players sat. It was a message of reconciliation and humility we needed to hear. There was plenty of hatred between enemies in the meeting. But the strength of the [National Prayer Breakfast] movement is that our agenda is simply to get people to gather together around the teachings of Jesus, and leave politics at the door for a few hours.

» Read the rest of Simon’s story. Blessed are the peacemakers.