Egypt: President Affirms Building Churches in Every New City

Source: International Christian Concern, March 14, 2022

President Abdel Fattah al Sisi confirmed Egypt’s initiative for constructing a church in every newly built city, saying, “Where there is a mosque, there must also be a church. And if the church to be built will be attended by even only 100 people, it must be built anyway.” The country’s urban development program includes regulations that a church must be constructed as part of city planning.

These churches are not subject to the 2016 law that regulates non-Muslim worship and mandates that all churches receive permission for renovations, building, and demolition. Though the presidential announcement and commitment to church building was celebrated by the Orthodox and evangelical communities across the country, the new church construction has one major downfall.

Whether intended or not, the new regulation severely limits and poses threats to Egypt’s Muslim-background believers (MBBs). Al-Sisi continued his statements above adding, “so no one will have to meet in an apartment and present that private house as a church.”

MBBs are generally unable to enter clearly identified churches for fear of persecution from their Muslim community or families. Instead, MBBs and those seeking to share the gospel with their Muslim neighbors utilize house churches, meeting in homes.

Read the full story.

See also a story about combating persecution in Niger which explains some of the challenges and strategies for overcoming them in another majority-Muslim country (Words of Hope).

Shifting our eyes to Europe, the next story reminds us that the refugees from Ukraine may have a variety backgrounds and beliefs.

Ukraine: 48 Hours and a Journey to a New Life

Source: WorldVenture, March 5, 2022

Donna and Mark McDonnel are WorldVenture global workers to Ukraine temporarily evacuated to Poland. And they just spent 48 hours straight helping Ukrainian refugees. Because sometimes, that’s what it means to serve.

Donna received a call from her friend and Arabic-language teacher, a Jordanian man teaching in Kyiv.

Donna’s teacher managed to escape with his Ukrainian wife—who was very distressed—and their two kids in their car. “That little suburb, across the street from Kyiv Christian Academy was home to a good-sized Tatar community, and he was teaching Quranic Arabic at a school there,” [she says]. It was recently shelled by the Russian military.

This man and his family traveled with different caravans of people of different nationalities and spent over 48 hours waiting to cross the border into Poland. Donna and the teacher spoke throughout this time of escape, and she helped him think through where to find a new home.

Donna [and others] arranged for lodging to house them on their trip through Poland—an adventure all its own. Eventually, the teacher and his large group made their way to Berlin, Germany, en route to their hoped-for destination of Switzerland. But the start of their new lives has begun with a new challenge: All 11 have tested positive for COVID-19. They are now quarantined. It’s a rough way to start a new life after a harrowing experience fleeing their former lives.

“They are not going back to Ukraine,” Donna reports of her friends. “He sees this as starting a whole new life. His biggest concerns were being received as a Muslim and the rumors of prejudice.”

Read the full story with prayer points.

See also Russian Evangelical Leader Apologizes to Ukrainian Christians and The Wartime Prayers of Ukraine’s Evangelicals (Christianity Today) as well as How the Ukraine War Is Dividing Orthodox Christians (The Conversation).

As the man in the next article found, sometimes having your life turned upside down can be a tremendous blessing.

Philippines: The Blessing of the Pandemic—God’s Deconstruction of My Ministry

Source: Asian Access, March 8, 2022

God has used the pandemic to dismantle the ministry construct under which I had been working. The pandemic forced me to embrace undoing ministry. I had no choice because pandemic rules and restrictions grounded me at home. Slowly, the restrictions created by the pandemic became God’s instrument to deconstruct my ministry practices and perspective.

Deconstruction made it clear that what I had prioritized and pursued in life and ministry needed radical review and revision. The time and space created by the pandemic provided needed time to lazily linger in Bible reading and reflection, writing, and prayer. I grappled with the truth that ministry is all about participation in the work of God, not performance in the ministry.

God deconstructed my ministry so that he could do the spiritual reconstruction needed to help me to focus on what really matters as defined by the values and vision of the kingdom of God. God let me see that many things I had considered as success were not really significant in the kingdom of God. In the eyes of God, small works of love in the obscurity of the ordinary are significant and rewarded (see Matthew 25:34-40).

Read the full story. The author leads the A2’s ministry in the Philippines.

Asian Access also shared A Call to End the War and Pray for Peace, with prayers and statements about Russia and Ukraine from ministry leaders across Asia.

To Dodge or Not to Dodge

Hearing & Heeding Hard-hitting Words from John the Baptist & Ralph D. Winter

By Shane Bennett

Turns out my seven-year-old son has a superpower. Not the “power of hyperspeed” he imagines but the power of dodging. Yes, dodging. I’ve seen it in action.

Months ago, while we were enjoying some family time on the front porch, his 12-year-old sister inadvertently dribbled the basketball off her foot. It caromed directly toward the boy’s face, who, though not watching, tipped his head out of the way with scary-good timing. The ball sailed by instead of giving him a bloody nose.

Then, two weeks ago at dinner, I failed to account for Colorado’s extreme barometric pressure swings when I opened the ranch dressing. This resulted in a thumb-sized glob of dressing rocketing across the table. Again, with uncanny timing, the boy leaned to the side, allowing the dressing to hit and subsequently drip down the chair right behind where his little, lithe body had been. I know not what this superpower portends!

Similarly, I seem to also have a gift for dodging, though it’s less a superpower and more a refined avoidance. Prepping to preach on John the Baptist this past week brought this home for me. Some listeners wanted to dodge John’s message: the Pharisees and Sadducees desired the virtue-signaling points of getting dunked but not the hassle of changed behavior.

As for Herod, he dodged by tossing John the Peskiest into prison.

The Radical Message of John the Baptist

It seems that the crowd, some tax-gatherers, and the soldiers honestly wanted to feel the full weight of John’s message. I was stunned by their questions and John’s answers. And I don’t want to dodge them.

If you’ve read through the Gospel of Luke a few times in your Christian walk you may find it easy to breeze by what John tells them. I think, at least for me, it might be worth a non-dodging pause:

Crowd: What should we do then?
John: Anyone who has two shirts should share with the one who has none, and anyone who has food should do the same.

Tax collectors: Teacher, what should we do?
John: Don’t collect any more than you are required to.

Soldiers: And what should we do?
John: Don’t extort money and don’t accuse people falsely—be content with your pay.

In each case, John is saying, “Do right regarding your resources and do right to others who lack your resources.” One commentator says, “Luke possesses a sensitive, compassionate theology of the poor.”

I wonder: Do I?

Choosing a Wartime Lifestyle

As that question rolled around in my head, I remembered a scary, provocative article that might have made John the Baptist proud, A Reconsecration to a Wartime, Not a Peacetime, Lifestyle by Dr. Ralph Winter. If you’ve taken the Perspectives course you’ve probably seen it. Maybe like me, you dodged it or tried to dismiss it.

Basically, Dr. Winter said to live on the minimum amount of money and stuff you need so that you can direct the excess toward the best kingdom use.

What I inadvertently heard was, “The poorest among you is the holiest.” While that may sometimes be the case, it’s not what Winter was advocating. He clarified this in 1983 in a family profile in Missions Frontiers:

“A wartime lifestyle may be more expensive or less expensive than simple,” Winter explained. “If a man is out in a trench and he’s eating K-rations, he’s not using up much money, but a guy who’s flying a fighter plane may be using up $40,000 a month of technology. In other words, during wartime one doesn’t judge according to the same model of lifestyle. What’s important is getting the job done.”

Two Key Questions

With John the Baptist on one hand and Ralph Winter on the other, I have a couple of questions. I’m asking them of myself and invite you to consider them as well.

1. Do our baptized, repentant lives reflect a “sensitive, compassionate theology of the poor”?

Do you find that in your life, your church? Generally in the Church throughout your country? In the U.S. these issues seem to have taken on partisan shadows in recent (or maybe not so recent) days. But what would it look like to view them less politically and more biblically?

I wonder if there are Christian responses to the poor and marginalized that transcend party affiliation? Surely many believers are doing many amazing things that would make Luke say, “Yes, that’s exactly what I was thinking when I wrote that!”

But for others of us, me included, we may need to keep thinking and take the risk of asking God to shape and direct our thinking. We need to pause before slipping into popular tropes and cliches about why things are the way they are and what is and isn’t being done.

To gain some perspective on your personal food situation, just in case John asks you to give some away, ask yourself this question: If you only ate the food currently in your house, without going out to eat or buy more food (except for milk!) how long could you go? The couple from whom I poached this idea went for 147 meals!

2. What does it mean to live a wartime lifestyle and who should try to do so?

Second part first: If Winter had his way, every one of us would adopt this practice as soon as we toweled off after baptism!

He suggests in his article (written decades ago) that everyone in his denomination could live on what an average pastor or support-raising missionary makes. Pastors may be doing a little better these days, I don’t know. But what about that? What would that mean for your lifestyle? I wonder what would happen if I floated the idea out to the little church where I serve as associate pastor? Could be I wouldn’t have to preach anymore for a long while!

One of the reasons this is on my mind is that I’ve been scheming with a small band of brothers and sisters about how the remaining 1,600 or so unengaged people groups might get gospel workers on the ground among them. I’ve wondered aloud about the possibility (and wisdom) of hiring people to do it! We hire pastors, don’t we?

How many wartime lifestylers would it take to free up funds to hire 1,600 small teams of missionaries? How cool might that be?!

Subversive Mobilization: Conversations with Greg Livingstone at 82

During some gut-wrenching life circumstances a few years ago, I connected with my long-term hero, Greg Livingstone, in a new and personal way. We’ve stayed in touch and recently embarked on a project that’s been super fun for me. We’re recording a series of short videos in which I ask Greg things I’d like to know about his life, work, leadership, and thinking. 

This is pushed forward by the fun of it as well as a two-fold purpose:

  1. To preserve some cool things Greg thinks and has done in his life.
  2. To give him a chance, at 82 years old, to unleash his recruiting chops on a new generation of people.

I would flat out love for you to give these a look. Greg and I are not amazing YouTubers (even with my friend Jeremy’s great editing help)! Any advice you’d like to offer in terms of content, production, and distribution would be met with gratitude.

Watch the videos.

A Day of Prayer for Ukraine | World News Briefs

  1. Ukraine: Global Day of Prayer and Fasting for Peace
  2. Iran: Nine Christian Converts Cleared by Appeal Court
  3. World: Because They Stayed
  4. Uganda: Evangelist Beaten, Tied Up to Be Burned for Converting
  5. World: Fields Are Ripe for Harvest in 2022

Read or share the email edition or scroll down for more.

Greetings,

Today is Ash Wednesday, the start of the Lenten season. I’ve never been good at Lent but each year I hope to better prepare for Easter, and this year I’m reading some devotionals by Steven Laman.

Steven writes for a ministry called Words of Hope. You can read or listen to his story, My Journey, God’s Grace, available through their website. It’s free and I think you’d find it inspiring:

“Born without enough oxygen, Steven Laman has lived with cerebral palsy his whole life. Steven and his family had to learn and adjust to his disability, and a different life than the one they had planned. But Steven’s story is not a story of loss. It’s a story of God’s provision and abundant grace. In this book, Steven tells the funny, touching, and encouraging stories of God’s guidance on the journey of his life.”

Interested in disability and mission? Consider setting aside a few hours each Friday in March for a free, virtual Theology of Disability Workshop from Accessible Hope International.

Blessings,
Pat

Ukraine: Global Day of Prayer and Fasting for Peace

Source: 24-7 Prayer, March 1, 2022

We’re joining with a global call from Pope Francis and the Archbishops of Canterbury and York to pray and fast for peace in Ukraine, on Wednesday, March 2.

Join us as we seek God’s kingdom of righteousness and peace together.

We’ve created a free downloadable prayer guide that you can use personally, or with a group, to pray. There are also downloadable slides with prayer points for groups, either in person or online.

Download prayer guide and slides or find additional prayer resources from 24-7 Prayer including scripture-based lectio, some especially for families.

Editor’s Notes:

The many videos, prayer guides, and articles coming out to help us understand and pray for Ukraine are too numerous to include, but if you need a place to start, try Prayercast, and see what various ministries are doing and saying at Mission Network News.

FEBC is one of the ministries posting a stream of videos and stories from within Ukraine. On Monday, they wrote, “Igor and Sergey, who have sent several video updates, are walking the streets of Kyiv and sharing Christ with those they are with. Igor just reported leading 20 teens to Christ today. The Holy Spirit is giving them courage and boldness, and people’s openness to the gospel is unprecedented in this moment of extreme danger.”

You might have missed this story about a certain prayer meeting: The Ukrainian Needed Prayer. The Russian Volunteered (Christianity Today).

Iran: Nine Christian Converts Cleared by Appeal Court

Source: Middle East Concern, February 28, 2022

[On February 28] a verdict was issued by Branch 34 of Tehran’s Appeal Court overturning the convictions of nine Christian converts from Rasht.

The nine were initially arrested at their homes over several weeks in January and February 2019. On July 24, 2019, they were each convicted of endangering state security and promoting Zionism and sentenced to five years in prison.

In a surprise development, on November 2, 2021, the Supreme Court ordered a review of their sentences on the basis that promoting Christianity and “Zionist evangelism” in private homes is not an example of “gathering and collusion against internal or external security” as decided in the original verdict. Additionally, this case is not considered to meet the definition of the establishment of groups aiming to disrupt national security as defined by the penal code. Furthermore, according to this legal statement, promoting Christianity and establishing a house church are not considered crimes.

Read the full story. Note some serious charges remain.

World: Because They Stayed

Source: Beyond, February 18, 2022

When they arrived in their country of service, Joel and Becky started looking for people who would set aside tradition and focus on God’s Word as their guide for church planting. 

In the beginning, very few people were interested to hear what they had to say about God’s vision for his church. During the first four or five years, only one local believer joined them in pursuing a church planting movement.

Then, suddenly, more and more believers joined their team. Their influence grew among local believers who were pursuing evangelism and church planting. Consequently, they were able to train in increasingly larger spheres. Those local believers said they noticed that Joel and Becky stuck around. “Expat (foreign) workers come in and out of our country all the time,” Joel says. “Unsurprisingly, it seems many locals prefer to wait and see who sticks.” 

Additionally, while Joel and Becky were proving themselves to be invested long-term, they also gained experience working in local cultures and languages. “We can now serve our local brothers and sisters as trusted servants of God and help them catalyze movements in their own country,” Joel says. “We commonly ask, ‘What’s it going to take to see God’s Kingdom come to these people that God loves?’ Many times the answer is commitment and perseverance.

Read the full story

Up for a deeper dive into fruitful practices related to church planting? Take a look at Michael Cooper’s Reflections on the State of Church Planting in the US (Journal of the Evangelical Missiological Society).

Uganda: Evangelist Beaten, Tied Up to Be Burned for Converting

Source: Morning Star News, February 16, 2022

Malingumu Bruhan, 34, returned for his grandfather’s funeral in Muhira village, Nawaikoke, and then accepted his uncles’ request to stay and visit, as they said they had not seen him for a long time, he said. Other visitors had left when Bruhan’s uncle, Ndifakulya Musa, began rebuking him.

“My uncle accused me of embarrassing them by holding Christian evangelistic, open-air meetings and debates with Muslims,” Bruhan told Morning Star News. “He accused me of being an infidel by converting to Christianity, and that Allah will reward them in [paradise] if they kill me.”

As Bruhan [kept] silent, his uncles’ anger grew, he said.

“They started beating me up as others gathered firewood, while another was sent to go for petrol because they wanted to use it to burn me alive.”

As his uncles were waiting for the fuel, another convert from Islam who had accompanied Bruhan to the funeral came looking for him but was told he was nowhere in the vicinity, he said. The friend spied Bruhan’s shoe, which had come off as his uncles dragged him off for slaughter.

“My friend made several phone calls after finding my shoe, and they arrived and started searching for me,” he said. “They found me behind the house about 100 meters away, tied and with firewood around me. They tried calling the police, which scared the attackers, and they fled.”

Having sustained head injuries, Bruhan was taken to a clinic at Bulumba town, then later transferred to another area undisclosed for security reasons.

An evangelist well-known for his public debates with Muslims about Christianity and Islam, Bruhan has survived 11 murder attempts, he said.

Read the full story.

Also read about an evangelist from Tanzania who is planting churches in Muslim-majority Zanzibar (International Christian Concern).