World News Briefs

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In this Issue:

  1. WORLD: Window into Our Current Soul
  2. CENTRAL ASIA: Through Mountain Darkness
  3. PAKISTAN: Christian Slum Dwellers Fight Eviction
  4. ASIA: “We Need Your Voice,” The Call for Women in Leadership

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This issue features stories and links having to do with ministry to (and through) the world’s women. (UN Photo/Kibae Park)

Greetings!

Have you noticed how analysts love to make lists this time of year? It happens every New Year, but this year has more than ever. Take a look at just a few.

My favorite is a piece from INcontext with five steps to start the New Year and help us keep our focus on the Kingdom of God. They write:

“Just like preconceived notions prevented the religious rulers at the time of Jesus to recognize the Messiah, preconceived notions will prevent modern-day believers to identify the greatest opportunities of our generation. With millions seeking refuge, wars abounding, nations in turmoil, leaders fighting for power, the Muslim world at a cross roads, and the Christian center of gravity shifting to the East, there is no doubt that we now live in the ‘days of opportunities.’ How do we then transform from our religiously preconceived notions and theologies to being Kingdom-minded?”

Great questions to be asking.

This issue also features stories and links having to do with ministry to (and through) the world’s women.

Read on!

Pat

WORLD: Window into Our Current Soul

Source: INcontext Ministries, January 1, 2016

[Were] the Islamic State and the terror attacks in Iraq, Syria, and Paris really priority to most people during the past year? Were there dramatic changes in priorities after millions fled to Europe from North Africa? Did the looming economic crisis change perceptions and lifestyles? Apparently not!

There are a number of ways to recap the past year. But how do you really get a twelve-month snapshot of a culture’s zeitgeist? Dr. James Emery White writes as follows:

“I would argue for two words: ‘Google searches.’

“I’m not saying that this will be what historians will mark in 10, much less 100 years, even less what is most significant. But I will say that it may be the clearest window into our current soul.”

» Read full story including several “top 10” lists and find more data on Google Trends.

» See also an interesting infographic and analysis from Esquire and NBC looking at current events through the lens of what makes Americans mad.

CENTRAL ASIA: Through Mountain Darkness

Source: IMB Connecting, January 2016

Nan Kirby and her teammate Khorvash quickly hiked through a deep mountain gorge on the way to a remote Central Asian village. The autumn sun sank behind the mountains, leaving them in the dark for the last leg. Alternating between carefully watching the narrow mountainside path and looking up toward the faint glow of village fires in the distant darkness, they finally arrived at their friend Homid’s two-room home.

“You know, my friends,” Homid said, “I have been watching you and other followers of Jesus for over seven years now. You really believe in what your Holy Book says. You are different. You are hopeful. It’s real. I want this Jesus.”

Nan showed a short, evangelistic video on her phone, and Khorvash opened the Scripture and explained the gospel again. “Yes, I believe this,” exclaimed Homid.

As Homid prayed, he asked Jesus to forgive him for his sins and recognized Jesus as the Son of God and his Savior. Nan was in awe, amazed at the Holy Spirit’s work to bring about salvation in the hearts of the men and women in Central Asia.

During the evening meal of bread, yogurt, and tea, Nan asked Homid what he witnessed in Christians that made him realize the truth about Jesus…

» Read the rest of the story, with pictures and links to additional resources about praying for Central Asia.

» Readers might also be interested in the most recent edition of Mission Frontiers, which features a wealth of stories of women engaged in church-planting movements among the unreached.

PAKISTAN: Christian Slum Dwellers Fight Eviction

Source: Morning Star News, December 9, 2015

Yaqub Masih is one of thousands of impoverished Christians facing demolition of his makeshift home in Islamabad after a government agency last week stated that informal slum settlements of Christian migrants threatened the city’s Muslim-majority demographic.

“It is one thing being poor, but things are far worse if you are poor and Christian,” said the middle-aged man who ekes out a living as a mason. “Has the government even considered where I would take my family if they put us out on the street?”

In a statement that rights groups called bigoted, Pakistan’s Capital Development Authority (CDA) asserted on December 4 to the Supreme Court of Pakistan that “it is necessary to identify the fact that most katchi abadis [slum settlements] are under the occupation of the Christian community” from other parts of Pakistan, and “this pace of occupation of land may affect [the] Muslim majority of the capital.”

Not all of Islamabad’s slum dwellers are Christian, and initially the CDA had generated propaganda that the settlements housed Islamic terrorists as justification for the evictions, as many of the settlers in [this area] were from the Khyber Pakhtunkwa Province, a heavily radicalized area formerly known as North-West Frontier Province along the Afghanistan border. Islamabad’s settlements overall, however, are largely inhabited by Christians, estimated at nearly 80,000.

» Read full story.

» Also read 2016: The Global Punishment for Being a Woman and a Christian. Among other things it addresses how religious persecution plays out for Christian women in Pakistan (Women Without Borders).

ASIA: “We Need Your Voice,” The Call for Women in Leadership

Source: Mission Network News, January 4, 2016

Is there still a glass ceiling when it comes to women in ministry leadership? In the United States, the response may be “it’s being shattered.” Mary Jo Wilson, Vice President for Missional Engagement for Asian Access, believes the response should be the same for women around the world.

“I think it’s been difficult sometimes to capture those women and to find a place where we can engage them and develop them as leaders because they are in the background and often they’re more comfortable in the background.”

Mary Jo’s personal investment resulted in a white paper on women in leadership. “As I studied and prayed, the point of my paper was women and men serving together and how we can come together in the body of Christ and be all about the mission—not separating and not limiting anyone to serve and be about the Great Commission.”

Her studies are now being used by Asian Access to develop better methods to engage women in their servant leadership ministry.

» Read full story and a related story on the Asian Access website.

» Another story from Mission Network News also caught our eye: this one explains how Wycliffe Associates anticipates a record-setting 500 new Bible translation efforts starting in the year to come (thanks in part to some new technological solutions and strategies).