Editor’s Note: A Day of Atonement

Yom Kippur starts a few minutes before sunset on September 15. For nearly 26 hours, Jews everywhere will gather and pray for forgiveness. (Image: Chabad-Lubavitch Media Center)

Greetings!

Before we get into other stories from around the world, I want to point out that The Day of Atonement or Yom Kippur starts just before sunset tonight (September 15). For practicing Jews everywhere, this is the holiest day of the year. Many will be earnestly seeking God today.

Want to pray for them? The book of Hebrews is a good place to start.

Poke around Chabad.org to learn more about Yom Kippur observances and other Jewish practices.

I also found the following articles on the topic of atonement helpful, though admittedly they might be more useful for reaching secular Jews.

Blessings as you pray,
Pat

Afghanistan: Has the Taliban Opened a Back Door for Chinese Missionaries?

Source: Back to Jerusalem, August 2021

The Taliban is turning to China for help after taking over Afghanistan last month, according to the Taliban Spokesman for International Media (English), Suhail Shaheen. The Taliban is excited about China’s potential economic “One Belt One Road” investment, without realizing the spiritual implication of the Silk Road strategy of the underground house church missionaries.

As Chinese businessmen and contractors begin to flood into Afghanistan by the thousands, laced in those numbers will be [Chinese] missionaries armed with the gospel of Jesus Christ.

Could a back door to Afghanistan be opening up for the first time in our lifetime? Could the nightmare of the rise of the Taliban today, like the rise of Mao Zedong in 1949, be the beginning of the largest house church movement ever experienced in Afghanistan’s history?

Read the full story.

Another article asks the question, “What if the next Billy Graham is currently part of the Taliban?” See also Pray for the Taliban (SAT-7).

Philippines: Rival Factions Sow Seeds of the Kingdom

Source: Christian Aid Mission, September 9, 2021

Tribal factions in an area of the Philippines were hostile toward each other until native missionaries brought bananas, corn, and gospel seeds.

Members of the tribe lived in isolation from each other due to decades of conflict that at times flared into war. At first, native missionaries arrived not with a message of eternal life but with the suggestion of community farming.

For the local missionaries, the suggestion was based on the biblical tenets of inter-dependent community, fruitfulness, and creativity as people made in the image of a triune, fruitful, and creative God. For the tribal villagers, it was just a necessary evil; persuading the factions to work common lands was not easy, but the villagers knew they were in desperate need of income.

As they began to work toward the common goal of providing food that could be marketed with enough left over to feed themselves, they began to live together more closely and formed new hubs of community, the leader of the native ministry said.

“With the missionaries facilitating, they planted corn and bananas for sources of livelihood,” the leader said. “But coupled with this was the missionaries’ promise that they had a more important matter to share with them besides the development of their community.”

Having already experienced a measure of reconciliation, the villagers were primed to learn of the one God who reconciles wrongdoers to Himself by sacrificing the Holy One.

The workers began teaching villagers about Christ, and within a year most of them had put their faith in Him. A local church emerged, he said, and the community has also flourished; harvest profits have enabled people to meet the costs of the education for their children.

Read the full story.

Japan: The Surprising Appointment of a Minister of Loneliness

Source: OMF USA, August 7, 2021

February 12, 2021, the media announced the surprise appointment of Tetsushi Sakamoto to fill a newly created cabinet position in response to recent troubling trends. In an attempt to reduce widespread loneliness, social isolation, and increased suicide rates accelerated by the restrictions of COVID-19, Mr. Sakamoto now serves as the official Minister of Loneliness.

Loneliness had already been identified as a growing problem among the Japanese populace in previous years, but the serious measures recently taken to curb the spread of COVID-19 only served to hasten this harmful trend.

For the first time in eleven years, there has been a rise in the number of suicides in Japan after several years of decline due to various public campaigns. In fact, in 2020 in Japan, more people died from suicide in one month than the total number of deaths associated with COVID-19 in the whole country.

Loneliness has been linked to other serious health issues such as heart disease, eating disorders, and mental illness. Women and the elderly have been particularly affected by recent job losses and the implementation of social limitations. The prolonged depression of the Japanese economy and an alarming but steady decline in birthrate is symptomatic of related social dysfunctions that seem to be eating away at the heart of the country.

While innovative government initiatives to reverse this destructive trend of loneliness are commendable, a sustainable and truly effective solution to such a deep-rooted problem lies well beyond the authority and power of political leaders.

From the very beginning of time, when God created man in His own image as a relational being, He declared that “it is not good for the man to be alone” (Genesis 2:18).

Read the full story.

Also from OMF, read an article from an Australian missionary to Japan on Lonely Missionaries: Why and What Can We Do About It.

South Africa: God Sends Christian Leaders on Mission of Healing

Source: Gateway News, August 26, 2021

Gateway News received reports from two Christian leaders who were both led by the Holy Spirit to carry out healing missions in KwaZulu-Natal in the wake of the looting and unrest in South Africa that started in the province in July.

Pastor John Mathuhle, who is from Senekal in the Free State, was dispatched to Phoenix, north of Durban, to build bridges of hope and healing in an area where communities were torn apart as the July unrest led to violence that claimed about 36 lives there and fanned racial tensions in the area.

Reporting on his mission, Pastor John said that watching media coverage in July of malls burning as thousands of people looted all they could get their hands on was like watch apocalyptic movies of the end of the world. It also brought back memories of October 16 last year where a tense standoff between angry farmers and armed EFF supporters in Senekal nearly turned into a bloody civil war.

“Had the Lord not intervened through His Church across the nation, it only had to take one bullet or one throw of a stone for the whole situation to break into a blood bath—that’s how close it was,” he wrote.

But, in response to the prayers of many believers throughout South Africa and beyond, God intervened, miraculously turning people’s hearts from conflict to reconciliation and community rebuilding. The experience left him and others in the Eastern Free State town feeling indebted to the nation and the world for standing with them in prayer, said John.

Read the full story.

For a report on the events of July read Sparked by Zuma’s Arrest, Unrest in South Africa Escalates (Christian Science Monitor).

Travel Posters in a Prison Cell

10 Traps & Distractions that Keep Us from Full Impact in God’s Global Purposes

By Shane Bennett

[You can also read or share the email edition of this article.]

In the past week, I’ve been privileged to watch two women I know do remarkable things. One bought a one-way ticket and hopped on a plane to Faroffistan. She’s going to live there, learn the language, and love and help the people. She raised support and launched during a pandemic. I’m impressed.

Another friend prayed, cried, schemed, called, cajoled, pressured and otherwise worked her tail off to get her Muslim-background-believer friends and a bunch of others out of Afghanistan. She has a way to go to reach her goal, but several people are breathing the air of freedom and security because of her efforts.

Do you want to have an impact like that? I do. I want to do every good deed God has laid out for me. I want to accomplish great things for a great God. I don’t want to miss the full impact God has in mind for my life.

But there are traps. There are distractions. There are things that look good, but only give the illusion of life, like what songwriter T Bone Burnett called “a travel poster in a prison cell.”

Let me be clear: I don’t know what “full impact” means for you. I don’t really know what it means for me. But I believe we want to pursue it and I know there are traps and pitfalls between here and there. Join me in asking which ones you’re prone to.

1. Sometime’s gonna be the right time.

There’s never a totally good time to move to Pakistan! Some times are slightly worse (eight months pregnant) or slightly better (marriage is solid and you’re independently wealthy), but no time’s perfect. I wonder if it’s possible that we fib to ourselves by saying, “We’ll seriously consider going when whatever happens.” Could it be this is an application point for the Proverb:

Do not withhold good from those to whom it is due,
    when it is in your power to act.
Do not say to your neighbor,
    “Come back tomorrow and I’ll give it to you”—
    when you already have it with you.

2. I’ve been there, done that, got the fridge magnet.

It’s cool when global impact is on our bucket list, but we miss our best impact when having done something, we put a big fat checkmark by it! I wonder how much more effective Mormon missionaries would be if 20-30% of them went back for a second pair of years. (Let’s keep this idea to ourselves, eh?)

Like many things, we can expect our involvement in missions to compound in effectiveness over time. Your best contribution might be 25 years down the road.

3. I’m waiting for the big assignment.

My friend who’s getting people out of Afghanistan was in a position to make a difference because she’d been discipling Afghans for a while via Facebook. She was able to do that because she had taken the trouble to go out and meet Afghans in her city. Going to a public event with the hope (and prayer) to meet and make friends with Muslims is a relatively small step. Taking that step, however, can lead to amazing possibilities.

I hope God has huge things in store for you and for me. Maybe you’re up to your ears in one right now! If you’re not, trust God for the results of the small steps you’re taking and continue to exercise the faithfulness in little that qualifies you for big.

4. I’m truckin’ to Tarshish.

I want to soft-pedal this in some way, but I’m just going to ask: Is it possible you’re not having the full impact God has for you because you’ve boarded a boat to Tarshish? Would you be fish bait right now, were not God demonstrating his amazing patience? Maybe you found a good thing to do in order to avoid the scary thing Jesus was asking of you.

I certainly don’t know this about you. But I do know this: It’s never too early to get off the wrong road.

5. God doesn’t (or maybe can’t) use people like me.

The depth to which this notion has been pressed into our psyches is matched by its absurdity. The most cursory look at the Bible will show God specializes in partnering with buffoons! An equally cursory look at the humans around you (and perhaps your own heart) will show that most of us assume we are the sole exception to this rule.

God can use you. In fact, he probably already is. And it’s scary cool what he might do through you as you turn your face to the wind and begin to walk.

6. I’m living the American/Dutch/Kiwi/Indian dream.

All cultures are broken, right? They’re packed full of presents for God waiting to be opened, but yeah, they’re broken. In America, it may be the dream of owning more and better and bigger stuff. Maybe, where you’re from, it’s honoring your family or community above all, submitting to its every direction for your life. I don’t know, but I bet there are aspects of your culture that effectively raise up mindsets and pressure against giving your life to God’s global purposes.

I like a lot of things about my culture, and I don’t like the feeling of bucking it (usually), but I really don’t want to meet Jesus and have him say, “High five, Buddy, you pretty much nailed the American Dream. You could have 10x’d your impact on the world, but, hey, you got to drive a Tesla.”

7. Blessed be the ties that bind (well, not all of them).

I feel like such an old man saying this, but watch out! Entangling alliances can cause you to miss your full impact! A wife or husband is such a gift. The Bible says so. But with four feet instead of two, it’s harder to jump into something new! Add a baby and you square the challenge. Buy a puppy and you might as well forget it! None of those things are bad. You may even want to get a mortgage and buy a house. But do the calculus. Consider the ramifications. Don’t let the vines of normal life keep you from the radical impact God wants to give you and give the world through you.

8. I don’t know which way to walk.

Have you ever tried to plan a trip and been paralyzed by the options? A gazillion flights at different times and prices and do you have to pay for bags? Forty different rental car companies plus secret ones you won’t know until you commit. Hotels with high prices and bad reviews, low prices and mostly good reviews except for the one just three days ago that says this place has gone to the dogs! Ack! So it can be with a world in need. With so many options, how do you know?

For starters, at least, go where the glow is low. Point yourself toward the places or peoples where the least amount of Jesus seems present. There are around 422 Muslim peoples where no one has yet shown up and said, “Wanna hear a story Jesus told?” Give yourself to one of them! 

9. Say no to plateau.

Ask God for the grace and strength to run all the way to the tape. I know people whose gospel effectiveness is stunning, even though they’ve more than earned a rocking chair and an afternoon of watching baseball. To be sure, “full impact” looks different when you’re 25 than it will (does?) when you’re 75. But may God make us all like scrappy old Caleb, “I am still as strong today as the day Moses sent me out; I’m just as vigorous to go out to battle now as I was then. Now give me this hill country that the Lord promised me that day.”

10. We’re all going to be OK, aren’t we?

True confession: I’ve been a mission mobilizer for 35 years and for most of them I’ve wanted to be a universalist. I just don’t think the Bible allows it. Tolerant pluralism may be the current zeitgeist, but God says he’s bringing his kingdom to bear on the earth and Jesus is the king. I want to die inviting people to their rightful place in that kingdom. Join me?

Globe image by Prawny from Pixabay.

More Than 1,000 Boko Haram Fighters Surrender and Repent

  1. Nigeria: More Than 1,000 Boko Haram Fighters Surrender and Repent
  2. Afghanistan: Christian Hackers Focus on Disarming New Taliban Biometric Program
  3. Haiti: Church Services Resume as Earthquake Aid Trickles in
  4. World: How COVID-19 Impacts the Future of Human Migration
  5. China: Saved by a Dream

Read or share the email edition or scroll down for individual stories.

In West Africa, more than 1,000 Boko Haram fighters have surrendered and expressed repentance for their actions following the death of a key leader in May. What next?

Nigeria: More Than 1,000 Boko Haram Fighters Surrender and Repent

Source: INcontext Ministries, August 2021

More than 1,000 Boko Haram fighters and their families have surrendered in the last several weeks in Nigeria, Cameroon, and Chad following the death of their leader Abubakar Shekau in May. Among those who have turned themselves in are two top commanders and one expert bomb maker. According to the Nigerian military, the surrenders are the result of a recent offensive operation aimed at dispelling the fighters from their strongholds.

The newest wave of defectors and their families took part in a ceremony in which several of them were seen holding signs that read, “Nigerians please forgive us” and “peace is the only way.” They and their families were given food rations and clothing by the military.

Civilians have criticized the military for its “humane” treatment of extremists while so many people in Nigeria are living without basic necessities, like food and clothing. However, the military says it is using the resources to persuade more fighters to surrender by showing them their families will be taken care of.

The full story provides a Christian perspective and prayer points. And it points out that other fighters joined different groups after leaving Boko Haram.

Note that rehabilitating extremists is not without risk or controversy. Some characterize it as “pampering,” says an article from Arise TV.

Haiti: Church Services Resume as Earthquake Aid Trickles in

Source: Mission Network News, August 26, 2021

Many Haitians have resumed church services inside church buildings damaged by the 7.2 magnitude earthquake on August 14. Christians are mourning the dead but also praising God for their own safety.

Meanwhile, relief efforts into the country have been hampered by gang violence. Various groups have blocked roads and even hijacked vehicles transporting food. One gang leader has offered a truce to allow aid into the damaged peninsula where the earthquake hit, but it’s not clear how much of an impact it would make unless more gangs commit as well.

As the aid trickles in, some politicians have begun supplying it themselves or even using their planes to transport injured patients. They are especially motivated to do so by the upcoming general elections.

The full story shares how one ministry is responding. See also additional MNN reports about ministry efforts in Haiti. Typically these articles include prayer points and other ways to respond.

See also Churches In Haiti Lie In Ruins After The Earthquake But Still Try To Comfort And Help (NPR)

Afghanistan: Christian Hackers Focus on Disarming New Taliban Biometric Program

Source: Back to Jerusalem, August 28, 2021

The Taliban is using sophisticated biometric equipment that they have captured from the military, to go door-to-door to hunt down Christians. Back to Jerusalem (BTJ) started working with our hackers over a week ago to develop a way to disable this equipment, but prayers are desperately needed.

Over a week ago, a BTJ partner with special connections on the ground in Afghanistan alerted BTJ that the Taliban captured special US-made hand-held scanners that were used by the US military to identify people in Afghanistan. Twelve years of photos and individual biometric data was stored on the military database, including information such as sex, age, marital status, and religion. Now the Taliban know exactly who the Christians are.

One of the Taliban brigade commanders, Nawazuddin Haqqani, has bragged about it during a recent interview with Zenger News, confirming that the Taliban does indeed have the US-made hand-held scanners and have gained access to the massive database of information to identify Christians.

The biometric units were used to scan faces, eyes, and fingerprints. The information was then stored in a central military database. This means the Taliban now has several thousand of these units that were left behind and complete control of the database.

  • Please pray for the BTJ hackers and team members who are working on this.
  • Please pray for the Christians whose information is on this database.
  • Please pray for the Christians who are still in Afghanistan and preaching the gospel.

The full story includes pictures and explains how Christian hackers can help.

Watch a video about praying for Kabul (Prayercast).

You can also sing a prayer for Afghans to the tune of “Away in a Manger” (Thanks to Global Worship and FPUC in upstate New York. The author even provides sheet music.)

Read and contribute to a conversation at Brigada Today: What’s Your Take on Extracting Christians from Afghanistan?