Myanmar: Kachin Bible School Shelled by Burmese Army

Source: International Christian Concern, November 4, 2022

[On November 3] a Baptist seminary in northern Myanmar was attacked by the Tatmadaw (Burmese Army), injuring four men in the dormitory.

One local resident said that this kind of attack by the military threatens the Christian Bible School and the entire Kachin nation.“They (Military Council) hate our Kachin people so much,” he told 72 Media. “This is why we are being targeted and attacked. This looks like a planned shooting. My heart hurts so much. Since this happened, we Kachin people must be careful.”

More than 90 percent of the ethnic Kachin in Myanmar adhere to the Christian faith. They also have one of the most robust militaries among the ethnic armed organizations in Myanmar, making them a constant target of the Tatmadaw.

Ever since the junta mounted a coup d’état in February 2021, the brutal military regime has continued a reign of terror against civilians with indiscriminate shelling and burning of villages, schools, and religious buildings. More than 2,400 people have been killed, and over 16,000 people have been jailed and tortured by the Tatmadaw.

Read the full story.

See also Myanmar’s Christians Fight for Peace (Christianity Today).

In other news from this region, a pastor in Laos was tortured and killed for spreading the gospel amid rapid church growth in the country. He leaves behind a wife and eight children (Morning Star News). Pray for them!

USA: One Student Leads Arkansas Church to Reach Uzbeks Diaspora

Source: International Mission Board, November 10, 2022

[A] mission team from Immanuel Baptist Church [in] Magnolia, Arkansas, expected things in Brooklyn, New York, to be different from their small southern Arkansas town. Nothing, however, prepared them for culture shock once they surfaced from the subway into this Brighton Beach community known as “Little Odessa” — the U.S. hub for Central Asian immigrants. It was as if they had just entered another country.

Ben Coulter breathed in the unfamiliar spices from food stalls and broke out in a wide grin. The pastor watched the mission team made up of college students and families from his church mingle along the boardwalk and beach. Their goal was to meet people from Uzbekistan and provide gospel access that knows no geographic or social boundary. This is diaspora missions at its core.

“What started out as reaching an Uzbek student in our backyard, turned into a burden for an entire nation,” Coulter explained.

See the full story with pictures. It’s worth reading.

Speaking of diaspora, the percentage of people in Canada who are immigrants has reached a new record high (Reuters).

Making Thanksgiving Count for the Kingdom | Practical Mobilization

In this edition:

  1. Thankful Habits: 30 Thankful Prayers
  2. Get in on a Great Giving Tuesday Giveaway
  3. From the Archives: Making Thanksgiving Count for the Kingdom

Read or share the email edition, or scroll on for more.

Dear friends,

Ever feel like you don’t have enough? Enough time, enough money, enough energy for all you want to do or think others expect from you? It can be so overwhelming. If you’re like me, you might easily fall into a mindset of scarcity, focusing on losses, limitations, and all that you may lack.

A recent sermon reminded me of God’s abundance. He always has more than enough, more than we will ever need. And scripture suggests that when God throws the party there are going to be leftovers, too—an overflow of provision (see 2 Kings 4:42-44, Psalm 23:5 John 7:37-38, John 10:10, and John 15:5).

Let’s live in light of that abundance, full of gratitude and hope for the days to come, and ready to invite others to the table.

This edition includes several tools and ideas that may help.

Blessings,
Marti Wade

Thankful Habits: 30 Thankful Prayers

Source: Navigators

Could you use some help turning your heart toward gratitude?

“At the beginning of your day or at the end of your day, start the habit of thanking God for your blessings and praying these verses out loud. Invite a friend or your family to join you for 30 days of thankful prayers.”

Read 30 Thankful Prayers and download a PDF that includes both the prayers and the scriptures. It’s a simple tool. Who could you share it with?

You might also be interested in a 30-day Biblical Basis for Missions reading plan from the Center for Mission Mobilization. Too daunting? The same document includes a seven-day plan.

Get in on a Great Giving Tuesday Giveaway

Source: Pioneers-USA

Our October 26 edition of Missions Catalyst included a review of Steve Richardson’s new book, Is the Commission Still Great? It explores eight perceptions of missions and missionaries that discourage many Christians from embracing and engaging with God’s global purposes.

Leading up to November 29, also known as Giving Tuesday, Pioneers is giving it away for free. Get a copy for yourself or a friend.

See also 12 Great Gifts for Great Commission Lovers, all currently on sale from William Carey Publishing.

Making Thanksgiving Count for the Kingdom

From the Archives

By Shane Bennett

Here in the US, our most American holiday is right around the corner. Thanksgiving presents a chance not only to re-calibrate our own gratitude meter but also to reach out to people we’ve considered connecting with but haven’t been able to trip the trigger.

Thanksgiving is innocuous, non-partisan, and safe. Even the most mild-mannered can break the social ice with, “What are we thankful for?” The more intrepid can follow up, “Who are we thankful to?” It’s a ready-made opportunity to get more comfortable talking about God. And should a sermon threaten to break out, there’s football, board games, and more pie.

If this idea is intriguing but intimidating, check out my super-short Five-Step Plan for a Killer International Thanksgiving Dinner. This will get you going in the right direction. Fill in the details by ransacking this beautiful and ridiculously helpful site with ideas for cross-cultural hospitality, The Serviette. These guys give the body of Christ a wonderful gift. Enjoy it.

Also from our archives, see Five Reasons to Go Big on Gratefulness.

Man in White Calls Family to Follow Him | News Briefs

  1. Iran: Man in White Calls Family to Follow Him
  2. Mexico: The Cult of Santa Muerte, the Saint of Death
  3. North Korea: Rare Letters Smuggled Out
  4. Uganda: Prayer Transforms the Karamojong People
  5. Lebanon: Crises Open Hearts to Christ

Read or share the email edition.

Amin, a Persian pastor in Australia, shares how he began following Jesus after God answered his prayer and appeared to him and his mother and sister in a dream on the same night (Eternity News).

Iran: Man in White Calls Family to Follow Him

Source: Eternity News, October 14, 2022

Growing up in Iran, Amin prayed five times a day like other Muslims, repeating verses in Arabic in an attempt to talk to Allah.

“One day I started to think about, why, if Allah is God, he should know that I am not an Arab— I’m Persian, I’m Iranian, and I speak Farsi, so why would he expect me to talk to him in another language, which is Arabic?” he recalls.

“That moment was a revelation…I said, ‘God, if you are alive, show yourself to me. I want to talk to you from the bottom of my heart and it doesn’t make sense to me anymore to speak to you in another language.’”

For seven days, Amin stopped praying and put thoughts of God aside.

“And on the seventh night, I had a dream of Jesus Christ of Nazareth. He came into my dream and he didn’t come to only my dream—he came to my sister and my mother and myself in the same night.”

[The next morning] a family friend knocked at the door and when he came into the house, he put a New Testament on the table and said, “I want to talk to you about Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ is not only a prophet. He’s the son of God. He died on [a] cross and he rose on the third day.”

As he gave them the life-changing news, they felt filled with the Holy Spirit even though they didn’t know who that was at the time.

“We couldn’t deny it, you know? It was very hard to forget about what has happened. We all gave our heart to the Lord Jesus Christ, and we accepted him as our God and our Savior.”

See the full story with pictures. Amin and his wife later immigrated to Australia where he pastors Grace Persian Church in Brisbane.

Mexico: The Cult of Santa Muerte, the Saint of Death

Source: International Mission Board, October 31, 2022

Casting a long shadow across one of Mexico City’s poorest and most crime-ridden neighborhoods stands a seven-story image of Santa Muerte—the Saint of Death. She takes the form of a human skeleton clad in black plastic sheeting with arms outstretched, inviting residents in from the streets to make offerings of flowers, fruit, burned cigarettes, and alcoholic drinks.

The Catholic church denounces devotion to the folk saint as a cult, but for her many worshipers, the city’s poorest-of-the-poor, Santa Muerte promises prosperity, healing, protection, and vengeance in criminal gang battles. “The bony lady,” as her followers call her, is believed to be the one who will come to collect us when it’s our time to die.

The cult of Santa Muerte was popularized by Jonathan Legaría, the ambitious son of a middle-class family in Mexico City. Always fascinated by magic and the occult, Legaría convinced many that he had healing powers. After his violent death in a hail of bullets in 2008, at just 26, the cult grew rapidly under the organization of his now-deceased mother, Enriqueta Vargas.

There are now an estimated 10 million followers—not just in Mexico, but across the Americas.

The full story includes pictures and prayer points.

North Korea: Rare Letters Smuggled Out

Source: Open Doors, October 26, 2022

Between 300,000 and 500,000 North Koreans secretly follow Jesus inside the country but because of the danger involved, we often don’t have direct contact. These secret believers want to share with you how much your prayers mean to them. Read [an excerpt from one of] two letters below.

“I would like to give you an update on how we are doing. Right now trade is severely restricted because of the pandemic. As a result, there are far too few goods to obtain.

“All the tribulations we face, such as the pandemic and persecution, remind us of a time of war.

“Despite these difficulties, we remain faithful to the work of Jesus Christ. Our hearts cling to Him. The North Korean church has been saved by the blood of Christ. The future of our church depends on our faith, our families, and the next generation.

“We thank Father God for His protection and heavenly mercy He sends us every time. We pray desperately that we may hear His voice.

“We want to thank all brothers and sisters for their love and support from the underground network of the North Korean church. We pray for you that God will protect your body and soul with His infinite grace and blessing.”

Read the full story and pray.

Please also pray for South Koreans following a tragedy in Seoul (Reuters).

Interested in hearing more from the Church in neighboring China? Listen to Hannah Nation discuss Lessons from Chinese House Churches (Global Missions Podcast) or read Faith in the Wilderness: Words of Exhortation from the Chinese Church (Kirkdale Press).