KENYA: How Can You Socially Distance in a Slum?

Source: Compassion International, April 23, 2020

Guadencia carefully steps across her brothers’ outstretched legs, weaving her way between family members until she reaches the doorway. Thrusting aside the floral curtain, she pokes her head outside. Fresh air cools her face, tainted by acrid smoke and the eye-watering smell of open drains. Still, it is sweet relief to escape from the stifling tin room her family of seven call home.

Her neighbors are just yards away, separated by only a few sheets of rusting corrugated iron. Around her, thousands of shacks are packed together so tightly they are accessible only by foot. Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, a steady stream of people walks past.

To curb the growing number of cases of the highly contagious virus, the Kenyan government has instructed citizens to maintain social distance and practice good hygiene. But in Kibera, a slum in Kenya’s capital city of Nairobi, physical distancing is a luxury few can afford.

Half of Kibera’s residents are unemployed. The rest work mostly as casual laborers, earning just enough each day to survive. If they don’t go out to work, their family may not eat that day. The pandemic has already left 10-year-old Guadencia’s family on the verge of homelessness.

“It has been a difficult two weeks,” says her mother Dorcas, who works as a cleaner in a Nairobi factory. Her sweet face, usually quick to smile, creases with worry. “We have not been paid this month since the boss had traveled to India and has been unable to come back.”

» Full story includes similar stories and reports from slums in Nicaragua and the Philippines. Also from Compassion’s blog, read Compassion Fatigue in the Time of Coronavirus.

» See also Are Slums More Vulnerable to the COVID-19 Pandemic? Evidence from Mumbai (Brookings).

CHAD: Believers Reach Neighbors for Christ

Source: Missions Network News, April 21, 2020

A small cluster of about 22 denominations and organizations in Chad have been gathering and praying together for a number of years. They felt the Holy Spirit was laying on their heart that they needed to be the ones to reach these unreached people groups in their own country, David Reeves of unfoldingWord tells MNN.

Surrounded by unreached people groups, Chadian believers feel the Lord calling them to make his name known among their neighbors. However, Reeves explains, they don’t have the resources or training they need to fuel community outreach. That’s when global ministries, including unfoldingWord, came alongside to help.

First, unfoldingWord taught Chadian believers how to use their open-source material to translate 50 Bible stories into the language of a neighboring unreached community. “Our Open Bible Stories project is a set of 50 stories released in Creative Commons,” Reeves explains, “so they’re free to take and translate without having to have additional permissions from us. The stories cover the metanarrative from Genesis to Revelation.”

Chadian believers collaborated with JESUS Film and World Mission to create additional evangelistic materials and load them onto solar-powered devices. Once everything was finished, Chadian church planters and evangelists immediately put the resources to use. In a three-day outreach event, believers shared the gospel with over 8,300 people.

» Read full story.

» See also Chad Is Not an Easy Location (SIM USA).

WORLD: A Different Kind of Ramadan

Source: INcontext International, April 22, 2020

Most of this year’s Ramadan celebrations have been canceled or moved online due to the ongoing COVID-19 outbreak. Egypt—along with Malaysia, Singapore, and others—has banned all prayer gatherings and encouraged those celebrating to end the daily fasts alone, or only with those in their household. In an effort to keep the community aspect of Ramadan celebrations, many mosques and Islamic groups are holding online prayer services, sermons, and Quranic recitations. Ramadan usually also provides an economic boost for many communities as the feasts lead to increased food sales in local markets. The inability to buy and sell at markets could have a long-term economic effect.

From a Christian perspective, we have seen how the coronavirus outbreak has caused many people to seek answers, and how many of them have joined online Christian services, dramatically increasing [church] attendance. As Muslims are forced in this season to conduct many of their activities in isolation, perhaps they too will search for answers in these uncertain times and find some of these many Christian resources online.

» Read full story with prayer points. INcontext also reports, “We have not seen a single event give birth to so many conspiracy theories, hoaxes, and fake news as we have seen with the coronavirus.” Read their response to some end-time theories related to the virus (and Bill Gates).

» See also In Shadow of Coronavirus, Muslims Face a Ramadan Like Never Before (Reuters).

USA: When COVID Changes Your Overseas Plans

Source: Go.Serve.Love, March 27, 2020

You planned for so many eventualities in going overseas. What if we can’t raise all our support? What if my dad goes into the hospital? What if we can’t get visas? But it was pretty hard to see COVID coming.

Now maybe you’re wondering if you’ll be able to go at all.

And the gravity of this feels real. You’ve made tremendous personal sacrifices already, upending your life like a junk drawer.

What do all these sacrifices mean if they don’t result in you going? Isn’t the need still as great, or even greater?

» Read more.

» Calling off that mission trip? Tune in to the May 26 webinar You Don’t Have to Go to Give from the Standards of Excellence in Short-Term Mission. It will feature Steve Corbett (of When Helping Hurts) and others.

More for kids | webinars & podcasts | online courses

Missions-Catalyst-no-tagline_largeIn this issue:

  1. CURRICULUM: A Children’s Introduction to Missions
  2. WEBINARS & PODCASTS: Responding to Coronavirus
  3. PRAYER: Praying for the Muslim World
  4. COURSES: Training for Cross-Cultural Ministry
  5. EVENTS: Happening Online in May

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CURRICULUM: A Children’s Introduction to Missions

Source: Pioneers USA

School’s out or gone online, same with church activities, and play dates and parks are off limits. Looking for something fun you can do as a family? Check out the WorldViews curriculum. You may remember this one. It was designed several years ago in partnership with Sonlight Curriculum, then revised and re-released by Pioneers. The idea is to give kids a global perspective with a biblical foundation and help them learn to share God’s love with people all around the world.

Each WorldViews lesson includes crafts, games, coloring pages, recipes, videos, etc. While activity booklets are still available print-on-demand format, Pioneers decided this was a good time to also give away the curriculum as a download. Check it out.

» Learn more, download materials, and watch short videos teaching kids about world religions. Note that this material is based around the THUMB acronym, describing tribal, Hindu, unreligious, Muslim, and Buddhist people in age-appropriate ways for kids aged 4-7 and 7-10.

» By the way, did you read our recent Missions Catalyst article on things you can do as a family to stay sane and love the world? We’d love to hear if you’ve put any of those ideas to use.

WEBINARS & PODCASTS: Responding to Coronavirus

Sources: Various

Having a hard time keeping up with the onslaught of new media content now available to instruct, encourage, inspire, or entertain? Sometimes it stays online so you can watch or listen at your own convenience. Consider these offerings from the missions world.

From Sixteen:Fifteen

From Support Raising Solutions

Wondering about how to adapt your fundraising and ministry partner development strategies during the COVID-19 crisis? SRS did a 7-part series of podcasts on the topic. Each features a different guest and runs about half an hour.

From Missions Pulse

PRAYER: Praying for the Muslim World

Sources: Various

You probably know this by now, but Ramadan starts this week, and with it, 30 days of prayer for the Muslim world (April 24 to May 23). Several organizations have produced material you can easily download and share with your friends, family, and church even when so many of us are unable to meet face to face. Would one of these strategies work for you?

  • Purchase and download PDF booklets from the 30 Days website.
  • Subscribe to emails and watch prayer videos from across the Muslim world from Prayercast. See their calendar of topics.
  • Sign up for That All May Know, a 30-day prayer series from Frontiers.
  • Use the time to focus prayers on one people group, country, or ministry in the Muslim world which God has put on your heart.

» Ramadan and the Eid Al Fitr holiday that follows will sure be different this year. Let’s ask God to use this time to draw many to himself.

ONLINE COURSES: Training for Cross-Cultural Ministry

Source: Grow2Serve

Maybe you’re preparing for cross-cultural ministry or are responsible for people who are, and you see how many conferences and training events are being called off or postponed. But many training programs are already built for distance learning. A growing number of mission agencies are offering inexpensive, online training courses through Grow2Serve.

In addition to the kinds of training cross-cultural workers will always need, like culture and language acquisition courses, they have several new ones that seem particularly relevant at this time:

  • Sustainable Resilience was developed in partnership with the Center for Intercultural Training. It’s a two-week course that requires a time commitment of nine hours.
  • Living on Mission in Times of Crisis is a new course developed in partnership with Multiply. It’s a 12-day course that requires ten hours to complete. Several mission agencies are now offering the course.

» See the Grow2Serve Calendar.

» Need training to serve among Muslims? See several options below, and note that The Zwemer Center is offering 50% off non-credit seminar courses for the next 30 days. Check their social media channels for the discount code.

EVENTS: Happening Online in May

Source: Missions Catalyst Missions Events Calendar

Event organizers canceled or postponed the face-to-face event on our May events calendar, but online events go on and have multiplied. For your convenience, this list includes upcoming events described above.

May 1, Global Missions Amidst a Pandemic: A Live Prayercast (online). YouTube event from Missions Pulse and partners.

May 4 to August 2, Encountering the World of Islam (online). Embracing Muslims with the love of Christ. Classes start several times a year.

May 4 to September 6, Perspectives on the World Christian Movement (online). New classes launch regularly.

May 7, National Day of Prayer (USA). An annual event.

May 12, Leveraging Youth Mission Trips for Long-Term Spiritual Growth (online). Webinar from the Standards of Excellence in Short-Term Mission.

May 14, Keeping the Missions Flame Burning During a Pandemic: God, Germs and Missions Part II (online). Webinar from Sixteen:Fifteen.

May 14, From City to Shore: Jesus Film Project is Seeking to Equip the Global Church (online). Webinar from Missio Nexus.

May 18-19, Prayer ConneXion (online). An annual event and ministry of Mission ConneXion, based in Portland, Oregon. Now moved online.

May 20-27, Parenting Third Culture Kids (online). Distance-learning course provided by the Center for Intercultural Training.

May 26 to June 5, Summer Institute on Islam (online). Learn to share your faith effectively with Muslims; intensive course now moved online.

May 28, Pathways for Women in Leadership (online). Webinar from Missio Nexus.

May 30 to June 1, Together: Making Disciples Among the Nations (online). Annual conference of the Association of Christians Ministering Among International Students (ACMI), now moved online.

May 31, International Day for the Unreached (global). An annual event.

» View complete calendar. Submissions and corrections welcome. We will continue to make updates about canceled and postponed events.