MYANMAR: An Open Door for the Gospel

Source: God Reports, March 13, 2018

Since Burma achieved independence from the British in 1948, the country now called Myanmar has been embroiled in civil war, as various ethnic groups have waged bitter battles against the military-led government.

Yet behind the disturbing headlines, God is on the move, as confirmed by interviews with pastors at a recent conference organized by Global Disciples in Myanmar.

“In the last three years, God has opened the door wide to the gospel in Myanmar. But we don’t know how long it will be open,” says one of the organizers of the conference.

He has been involved in street ministry since he was in his teens and is currently overseeing an effort to plant churches among unreached people groups throughout South Asia. “We want to nurture what is growing and multiplying,” he says. “Not just addition, but multiplication.”

Pastor Imo is one of the pastors multiplying the church by going to tribal groups in southern Myanmar that have never heard the name of Jesus. “By the grace of God we went from village to village and many accepted Jesus as their Savior. We went to some places not reachable by boat or motorbike. So we went on foot,” he reports.

» Full story reports on miraculous healings and ministry to the drug-addicted. You might also be interested in more stories from Myanmar from Global Disciples.

TURKEY: Andrew Brunson May Face a Life Sentence

Source: Mission Network News, March 19, 2018

Last week, American Pastor Andrew Brunson was given a new indictment in Turkish court. This time he was charged with “leadership in a terrorist organization.” Prosecutors are seeking a possible life sentence. The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) condemns the indictment and calls on the US government to deal with the issue.

According to USCIRF, Brunson’s charges have been brought based on so-called secret evidence and a secret witness. However, the charges seem baseless.

David Curry of Open Doors USA reminds us that BrunsoAn served as a pastor in Turkey for more than two decades before his arrest. He’s been in prison since October of 2016.

In this situation, Curry says that prayer is really the very best (and perhaps only) action we can take. And as you pray for Brunson—for his release, courage, and perseverance—Curry says to remember others who are also facing persecution for their faith:

“The thing to remember is when we hear about an American pastor who is held prisoner somewhere, whether it’s in North Korea or in Turkey, there are many, many, many other pastors who are in prison or Christians who are in prison for their faith around the world. This is just one, it’s public knowledge here in America because he is an American citizen. But we don’t pray for him because he is an American citizen, we pray for him because he’s a follower of Jesus, in my mind. He’s a citizen first of the Kingdom, and so we support our brother or sister in the Lord.”

» Read full story. Note that March 13 reports that prosecutors had submitted an official indictment demanding life imprisonment were premature, though evidently an indictment was drafted.

According to his daughter Jacqueline, early this month Brunson wrote the following: “Let it be clear, I am in prison not for anything I have done wrong, but because of who I am—a Christian pastor. I desperately miss my wife and children. Yet, I believe this to be true, it is an honor to suffer for Jesus Christ, as many have before me. My deepest thanks to all those around the world who are standing with and praying for me.”

Learning from Those Who’ve Gone Before…

header for historyFive things mobilizers can learn from old, dead white guys. And women. And an African American.

By Shane Bennett

I’m really not much of a historian. I know that things, important things, happened, but I’m sadly not much more sophisticated than that. If you ask when some particular event took place, I can say with reasonable confidence, “Before now.”

So it’s a risky move for me to teach mission history, like lesson eight of the Perspectives on the World Christian Movement course. It’s all history, with significant events happening in a particular order that matters, and important people saying and doing landmark things under the influence of God and their contemporary cultures. Whew! If my instructor evaluations are any indication, my students and I survived my recent go at this lesson, but barely.

What I did walk away with (in addition to a bruised ego and growing admiration for our editor/publisher who also kills at teaching history) was a set of five lessons from missionary heroes that mobilizers like us should keep in mind.

1. Advocating new directions will raise old-guard hackles.

It is the nature of mobilization to say, “Hey, how about we do this thing we haven’t done yet?” For some, that type of thinking is all fun and unicorns. Others, however, particularly those who are in charge of “what we’re currently doing,” might not be so enthusiastic.

This is what Hudson Taylor, pioneer of the effort to continue from initial coastal missions outposts to reach yet untouched inland peoples, found when began to advocate for unreached Chinese provinces. I suppose it didn’t help his cause that he’d begun to dress like a person from an unreached Chinese province! (Read more.)

To their credit, though, the guardians of the “current” had something of a case: Things are going well here. Join in with where God is moving. Maybe even, “bloom where you’re planted,” though that might be a stretch.

But we have to move forward, don’t we? For example, the 1100 unengaged, unreached Muslim people groups are off the radar of all except themselves and a Father who loves them dearly. As we advocate for such as these, let’s honor the custodians of now, while gently, persuasively calling forth the new things God has in mind.

2. Do what you can with what you have.

One of the old, dead white guys who figures prominently in this lesson, and in missions history, is Count Zinzendorf. He was a Christian who happened to have an estate. When some refugees from Bohemia came by, he allowed them to set up house there.

Hit pause for just second: Would you have done this? Are you having a hard time imagining having an estate? Me, too. But if I did, I’m afraid I’d say, “You’re good camping here for the weekend, but I’ve got company coming after that.” He did become their bishop; maybe that was part of the deal.

Turns out a revival broke out in the midst of these Moravian refugees and sparked what ended up being a 100-year-long, 24/7 prayer initiative and one of the most remarkable sending efforts in missions history. (Read more.)

Bishop Nick’s lesson for us? Well, there are a few, but since I’m all obsessed with the estate idea, here’s one: When you offer what you have, though it might not seem that great in your eyes, you never know what God might bring forth. An encouraging text. A bed to crash in. Thirty minutes of looking someone in the eye and saying in 18 different ways, “You were made for this.” You really never know what might happen.

3. It’s possible you might have blind spots.

The first time I ever taught this lesson, I made the mistake of asking if there were any questions. I’d pretty much already said everything I knew about the topic and a few things I’d guessed at. Someone raised their hand and said, “What about William Carey as a family man?”

What indeed? As you may be aware, William’s first wife did not want to accompany him to India. I don’t know all the subtle and overt pressure that was brought to bear on dear Dorothy, but I can guess. She eventually went along, hated India (especially the part where one of her children died), and eventually pretty much broke with reality. (Read more.)

Did Carey have a blind spot where caring for his family was concerned? The accuracy of hindsight makes judging in this instance seem unsporting.

This much seems clear, though: If Carey, as brilliant and hard after God as he was, could miss something like this, perhaps I have blind spots as well. Maybe you, too. It’s hard to know your blind spots (hence the name), but what you can do, what I need to do better, is to get people close enough to you to see them and gutsy enough to say what they see when they do.

4. Plodding is often the pace of God.

I want things to happen fast. I delight in the rapid movements to Jesus we increasingly hear about. But I know one of God’s basic units of work is the transformation of the human heart and that usually takes time. As do learning a language, shifting the missional direction of a church, or opening eyes that have by years of habit been closed to certain works of God. We need determination over time.

William Carey, when asked late in life how he accomplished so much, replied, “I can plod. I can persevere in any definite pursuit. To this I owe everything.” (Read more.)

It’s that grit, that determination, that helped Carey and so many others live lives that qualify them to be on the “of whom the world was not worthy” list in Hebrews 11. Don’t grow weary of doing good (Galatians 6:9), and don’t give up praying (Luke 18). God will bring about his results through you.

5. Consider how much we owe pioneering women.

The Perspectives lesson I just taught emphasizes the men who pioneered modern mission efforts but also highlights the women who were behind, alongside, and not infrequently in front of them. We’re reminded they did the same work as the men, but against prevailing social norms. As they said of Ginger Rogers, she did everything Fred Astaire did, but backwards and in high heels!

And, let’s be frank here, a lot of them also gave birth, no easy task in your home culture and rife with challenges when done in another. Sadly, they also buried many of the children they bore. I can’t even imagine that pain.

My hat is off to poor, broken Dorothy, to Hannah Marshman, Lottie Moon, to countless others, and to the contemporary missionary women Marti Wade illuminates in Through Her Eyes, a book you should probably get right now! To whatever degree it’s in my power, I want to cheer on such women and say thanks for leading us forward.

Subversive Mobilization: Who Was First?

LieleMaybe you already know this, but I just found out and am amazed. We often say that Adoniram Judson was the first foreign missionary from America. Turns out George Liele beat him by nearly twenty years.

George was a slave, then not a slave, one of the first African Americans ordained in America, convened the first black church in America, and went to Jamaica to preach to slaves there in 1783, becoming (arguably) the first missionary to go out from America. Amazing.

Read more of George’s story and look for a chance to tell one person about him this week.

— Shane Bennett

Responding to sticky situations | World News Briefs

Missions-Catalyst-no-tagline_largePatrick_stained-glass“…Many were trying to prevent this mission. They were talking among themselves behind my back, and saying: Why is this fellow throwing himself into danger among enemies who know not God?’ Not from malice, but having no liking for it…” — The Confession of St. Patrick, 46.

See also: St. Patrick’s Passion for Missions (International Mission Board).

In this issue:

  1. NEPAL: Next Door to a Living Goddess
  2. VIETNAM: Why One Christian Wants to Preach to His Persecutors
  3. FINLAND: I Want to Change My Religion
  4. NIGER: A Family Changed by the Gospel
  5. JAPAN: Carrying the Local Shrine

NEPAL: Next Door to a Living Goddess

Source: International Mission Board, February 26, 2018

A living goddess sat in a room just above me. I wasn’t allowed to go inside because I’m a foreigner and not Hindu or Buddhist. But I imagined what her childhood will look like now that she has been chosen by a council from her people to be the next in a long line of “living goddesses.”

She’s three, you guys. Three. Years. Old. Skipping, plucking wildflowers, and going down to the corner store for sweets are now all out of the question. Seeing her family—that’s now only on festival days.

She’s known as a kumari, and she is worshipped as what Nepali Hindus believe to be a manifestation of the goddess Durga and Nepali Buddhists believe to be a manifestation of the goddess Vajradevi.

Once installed as a kumari, the weight of her people’s spiritual needs is placed squarely on her small shoulders. She’ll live in isolation, except when people come to worship her, pay their respects, and ask for healing.

» Full story describes the life of a kumari and reflects on the practice in light of the gospel as well as current events. See also this interesting story, How Religion Shapes Girls around the World.

VIETNAM: Why One Christian Wants to Preach to His Persecutors

Source: Open Doors, February 9, 2018

Vang Atu, a 28-year-old father to two kids, was the first Christian convert in his village in Vietnam. He comes from the Hmong tribe and once worshipped different spirits asking for luck, wealth, good health, and food; but when he surrendered his life to Jesus, he completely abandoned his animistic beliefs.

As a part of the body of Christ, Vang Atu evangelized to other villagers and saw at least four families come to follow Jesus. His house became their place of worship and fellowship.

One day in 2016, his house was destroyed by local authorities and villagers. He and his family were then forced to move out from their village.

This is Vang Atu’s prayer: “Pray with me that one day I’ll be able to go back to my hometown and testify to the people about my faith in the Lord.”

» Read full story and watch a three-minute video.

» Religious persecution can be very complex, with many roots and manifestations. See, for example, a recent story about tensions between evangelicals and the Ethiopian Orthodox Church that led to violence between the two groups (World Watch Monitor).

FINLAND: I Want to Change My Religion

Source: Operation Mobilization, January 19, 2018

Suliman, a refugee from Iran, first came to Markus’ church for Finnish classes. “After a while, he comes to me with his broken English and with Google translator,” Markus remembered. The translation app wasn’t enough to communicate his request, though, so Suliman fetched his Iranian interpreter, also a member of the church. “Markus, I want to change my religion,” he finally announced.

Markus said, “I thought this is not possible. With my experience that does not happen.” Somewhat suspicious of Suliman’s motives, Markus asked him what he knew about Christianity.

“I know the Christmas,” Suliman replied. “With the Christmas comes the Santa Claus.”

Realizing then that Suliman knew little about Christianity, Markus asked him what his family would think about him changing religions. “I’m an adult. I can change my religion if I want to,” Suliman retorted.

“OK, I can teach you,” Markus agreed. For almost six months, the two men met together to study Christianity. Soon, a few others joined. Although Suliman listened carefully, he rarely asked questions, and Markus sometimes wondered if he understood what was being said.

Two months in, they took a break for Christmas. During that time, Suliman had a dream. “In my dream, I was crucified, then a voice said, ‘It’s not enough.’ That happened again. Again the voice said, ‘It’s not enough.’ That happened many times. What does that mean?” he asked Markus.

Having never interpreted a dream before, Markus needed some time to pray and process. Eventually he recognized that the dream dealt with the difference between legalism and faith. “In Islam you need to pray, you need to fast, but it’s never enough,” he explained. “If we bring our deeds to God, it’s never enough.”

After Suliman’s dream, “he was a different man…I think that was what fully turned his heart to Christ,” Markus said.

» Read full story.

» Many from backgrounds like Suliman’s are afraid of how their familiies might respond to their interest in Jesus. Read more in this story from Arab World Media.

NIGER: A Family Changed by the Gospel

Source: Samaritan’s Purse, March 5, 2018

Moumouni had a major infection in his leg and also suffered from insomnia because he constantly heard inaudible voices. His mother, Maimouna, sought help from health centers in Niger, Muslim healers, and witch doctors, but nothing worked. Maimouna spent all her money trying to heal him. Family members expected him to die.

Maimouna shared her son’s situation with our staff and invited them to visit her son. Our staff prayed for Moumouni, shared the gospel, and he prayed to receive Jesus Christ as his Lord and Savior. Not long after, Moumouni stopped hearing the inaudible voices and his sleep improved. His leg gradually healed.

Maimouna was touched by the love demonstrated by Samaritan’s Purse staff. “The entire family has learned that the name of Jesus Christ can save and heal,” she said.

» Read full story.

» Friends, let’s keep neighboring Nigeria in our prayers after Christian-Muslim clashes in Kaduna state and a recent school attack that leaves more than 100 girls unaccounted for.

JAPAN: Carrying the Local Shrine

Source: OMF International, February 2018

The conversation was fine to begin with. They were okay that I am a Christian, that I tell Bible stories, and help people to follow Jesus. But when it came to allegiance to the local shrine—whether I would visit it to pray at New Year and help to carry it around the neighborhood—things got tense.

I told them that praying for blessing and protection is good and that I do it every day by praying to the God who made everything and wants to bless us. I shared that I’m happy to go with them to be part of the group but that I will only pray to the Creator God. I explained, “I won’t be able to join in carrying the shrine and worshipping the local god. I believe the Creator God is the source of all blessings and the place to search for safety.”

Nobody blinked an eye, but an awkward, dead silence seemed to continue forever and everybody stared at the floor. We waited for “Daddy” to speak. In a soft voice, he explained, “This is a problem. These Christians always disturb the harmony… their God is not as good as Japanese gods, who aren’t so envious and so stubborn.” He continued, “You live here now. You need to be willing to give your best to be part of the community. If you do that, it might work somehow.”

» Read full story with prayer points, and consider: What would you say? What would you do?