What God is Saying

Sing to the LORD; praise his name. Each day proclaim the good news that he saves. Publish his glorious deeds among the nations. Tell everyone about the amazing things he does. — Psalm 96:2-3

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Korea and the awesome move of God

But now, this is what the Lord says-- he who created you... He who formed you..."Fear not, for I have redeemed you; I have summoned you by name; you are mine."  Isaiah 43:1

How to describe Korea? For those who have never been there, you may not give the country much thought. Yes, we know they make good appliances and you may have heard of their spicy cabbage called kimchi. And yes, a war was fought there, though the details are a bit fuzzy as it rarely garners much interest or instruction time in America's high schools.

But for those who have been to Korea, you will never leave the same. At least I didn't. Our family was stationed there for two years, from 2006 until 2008. After those two, all too short, years, I left that country fully convinced that God is alive and well in Korea, and doing incredible things through its people, both in their own country and throughout the world!

Korea has, unfortunately, had a 2,000-year history of frequent invasions and interference from surrounding nations. In the recent past, the Japanese occupation (1910-1945), the Russian-engineered division of Korea (1945-48) and the devastating Korean War (1950-53) have molded the attitudes and politics of Koreans. They have been mistreated horribly by others (Korean "comfort women" for the Japanese soldiers during WWII, current starvation and horrific slaughter of people in North Korea) and have seen their country almost destroyed following the Korean War. 

"The South Korea that Ed Faltin (U.S. military member who fought in the Korean War) left behind in 1952 was a bleak place. 'I left the front lines and went across the country to Pusan and Seoul and there was nothing there,' he said. 'That country was bombed out rubble. No trees. It was just so pulverized by artillery and mortars. There was nothing left.'

(Upon his return to South Korea in 2002), Faltin was surprised by what he saw. In place of rubble, he saw what looked like New York City, complete with high-rise buildings. 'It's unbelievable what they did,' he said. 'They're the largest ship-makers in the world, (the 11th largest economy) and the people are so gracious.'"

South Korea has indeed climbed out of the rubble a strong, committed Christian nation. In Asia, which is primarily Hindu, Buddhist and Muslim, Korea's Christianity stands out, like the red crosses you see on so many buildings throughout the Seoul city skyline. The first Protestant church was planted in 1884. By 1984 there were over 30,000 churches, and by 2000 over 60,000. The 2005 census of South Korea showed 29.2 percent of the population as Christian, up from 26.3 percent ten years previously.

The Korean Church grew strong through early morning prayer meetings, prayer mountains for seeking God (to read more on this go to Prayer-It begins and ends there), church-based Bible study, evangelism programs, fellowship in home meetings and at Sunday meals. 

Surveys have shown that South Korean Christians are very active. Seoul contains eleven of the world's twelve largest Christian congregations. I've been to the largest Protestant Church in the world, Yoido Full Gospel Church, and it is incredible! To be amongst thousands upon thousands of Christians, all singing praises to God...it gave me just a small idea of what Heaven will be like...worshipping the Lord with brothers and sisters from around the world. 

Praise God for the unique Korean Church! It was founded on sound indigenous principles, blessed with a succession of revivals, refined by persecution and is now one of the foremost in the world for missions vision. South Korea provides the world's second largest number of Christian missionaries, surpassed only by the United States. South Korean missionaries are particularly prevalent in 10/40 Window nations that are hostile to Westerners. In 1979, the official figure for Korean missionaries was 93, yet by 2009, that number had grown incredibly to more than 16,000 South Korean missionaries in 168 countries!


"Koreans have a fervent passion to proclaim the Gospel, a family-centered lifestyle and are highly educated. Korean missionaries are often well received by unreached people in the Chinese, Muslim and Buddhist blocks due to their relative cultural proximity. Increasing numbers of marketplace missionaries are able to enter restricted access countries where ordained missionaries cannot go," (Chul Ho Han, Director of Mission Korea.

One important contributing factor to South Korea being the second largest mission sending country in the world, has been the mission movement among college students led by Mission Korea, a coalition of 11 campus ministries and 24 overseas mission agencies working together for the common goal of mobilizing students into cross-cultural missions. Mission Korea's conference, which was first held in 1988, has grown to be the largest mission-focused conference in Asia, attracting over 5,000 students every two years.

This incredible missional movement among young people was very visible at the church we attended while living in Seoul. Jubilee Church was like no other church I have ever attended! The sense of the Holy Spirit's presence was so strong there that even my father commented on it after attending church with us one Sunday. After only four years of existence, their heart for missions is incredible. The church, mostly young professionals and students in their 20s, envisions itself as a mission-sending and mission-supporting church, with a heart especially for North Korea and China. It was amazing to be part of them. Our family still speaks of them fondly and prays that the Lord will lead us back to Seoul to once again worship and serve with them. 

There is so much more I could say about Korea, yet I know that my words can not do justice to what God is doing in this country through its incredible people. No matter hold strong of a hold Satan may have on Asia, God is breaking that hold and He is using the people of Korea on the front lines! 


Sunday, September 26, 2010

Hungary living

He said to them,
 "Go into all the world 
and preach the good news to all creation."
Mark 16:15

As our family's move to Hungary gets closer, the Lord has been speaking to my heart about some aspects of it. I share this as insight but also as prayer points for our family. If you read this, please lift these areas up in prayer for us. We will be eternally grateful for your prayers.  

I have lived overseas twice before and am anticipating a third move overseas in the next few months. I would like to do things differently this third time around, especially based on the Brewster’s advice. 

I spent 1 1/2 years on Okinawa, Japan and another 2 years in Seoul, South Korea. In both locations, I lived on a U.S. military base...little America. While I did not stay cloistered on the base but got out into the community for recreation and, in the case of Seoul, for church, the vast majority of my time was spent with other Americans. I rarely took public transportation, my shopping was usually at the base commissary and I learned very little of the language. 

Despite my lack of immersion into the culture, God did develop within me a great love and affection for both the Okinawans and Koreans. I did have one close Okinawan friend who introduced me to some aspects of her culture and had several Korean friends who did the same. One of the most rewarding experiences of my time in Korea was worshipping Christ with fellow Korean believers. 

Since returning to the U.S., my desire has been that we would do things differently next time we live overseas. God has now given us another chance as He has called us, via the U.S. Air Force, to a small town named Papa, in the country of Hungary. This time things will be a bit different from the outset. There is no U.S. military base nearby. We will live, shop, eat and play within the local community. There are few English speakers so our family will, of necessity, need to learn the Hungarian language...which we are already doing.

My desire is to become bi-cultural; to maintain my first culture but become bonded to other Hungarians in my new culture. My plan is that we would immerse ourselves in the culture immediately. While the temptation will be there to rent a house near other military members and associate with them, I am asking the Lord to lead us to a home where we can form relationships with the local Hungarians instead. 

I also plan to follow some of the Brewster’s advice: limit our personal belongings, use public transportation or walk as much as possible, shop in the local markets and begin to use the products that the Hungarians use (rather than stocking up at the U.S. military commissary 7 hours away in Italy) and recreate with the local population. I also want myself and my family to really carry out language learning with the people around us. 

I am also praying for opportunities for us to share the love and Gospel of Christ with those we meet. We will have the unique opportunity to not only meet Hungarians, but military members and their families, who will be stationed with us, from ten other countries: Bulgaria, Estonia, Finland, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Romania, Slovenia, and Sweden. Prior to our departure in January, and while we are there, we will be learning, as part of our homeschool, about these countries and the countries that border Hungary. My desire is that, just like with Koreans and Okinawans, God would grow a love in myself, my husband, and our children for Hungarians, as well as the people from the other nations we will be meeting. 

This desire and mindset needs to be nurtured in us from the very beginning. Our first few weeks and months in Hungary need to be deliberate. I am asking the Lord to help us do all we can to immerse ourselves in the Hungarian lives around us, and build strong bonds within the community of Papa. 

“Newcomers need to be encouraged to totally immerse themselves in the life of the new community from day one...A bi-cultural person is developing a new outlet for his or her God-given personality...For the Christian missionary, the process of becoming bi-cultural begins with the recognition that God in His sovereignty does not make mistakes in creating us within our first culture; yet in His sovereignty He taps some of us on the shoulder and calls us to belong to people of a different culture so that we can be good news to them,” (pg. 469).  

We are excited and thankful for this new opportunity to go out into the world and share the love of Christ with others. 

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

What is revival?

Therefore tell the people: This is what the Lord Almighty says: 
'Return to me,' declares the Lord Almighty, 
'and I will return to you,' says the Lord Almighty.
Zechariah 1:3

Praying for revival...it sounds like a good thing. Many of us have been in churches where the pastor prayed for revival. We might have asked for it ourselves. But do we really know what it is we are asking for? It's not something that just happens magically, all of a sudden. It won't be ushered in by the great words of some preacher or the passionate words of a song. Instead, it will come when we get rid of all the extra things within the Christian religion and desire God alone. 

Revival is basically, a "return to God." People begin to desire God alone. A vital and fervent relationship with God is restored or ignited in the hearts of many. Suddenly, the cares of yesterday are not as important because people have, in mass, turned their attention to God.

One can identify six major "Awakenings" or revivals in the church worldwide — from 1727, 1792, 1830, 1857, 1882 and 1904. More recently there were the revivals of 1906 Azusa Street, 1930s Balokole, and the 1970s Jesus movement, which spread in the Americas, Africa, and Asia among Protestants and Catholics.

I'd like to highlight one of these revivals which Jim Cymbala talks about in his book Fresh Wind, Fresh Fire. Try to imagine what it must have been like to be a part of this. 

"Revivals have never been dominated by eloquent or clever preaching. If you had timed the meetings with a stopwatch, you would have found far more minutes give to prayer, weeping, and repentance than to sermons. In the 'Prayer Meeting Revival' of 1857-59 there was virtually no preaching at all. Yet it apparently produced the greatest harvest of any spiritual awakening in American history: estimates run to 1,000,000 converts across the United States, out of a national population at that time of only 30,000,000. That would be proportionate to 9,000,000 Americans today falling on their knees in repentance!

How did this happen? A quiet businessman named Jeremiah Lanphier started a Wednesday noon 
prayer meeting in a Dutch Reformed church here in New York City, no more than a quarter mile from Wall Street. The first week, six people showed up. The next week, twenty came. The next week, forty...and they decided to have daily meetings instead. 

'There was no fanaticism, no hysteria, just an incredible movement of people to pray,' reports J. Edwin Orr. 'The services were not given over to preaching. Instead, anyone was free to pray.'

During the fourth week, the financial Panic of 1857 hit; the bond market crashed, and the first banks failed. (Within a month more than 1,400 banks had collapsed.) People began calling out to God more seriously than ever. Lanphier's church started having three noontime prayer meetings in different rooms. 
John Street Methodist Church, a few doors east of Broadway, was packed out as well. Soon Burton's Theater on Chambers Street was jammed with 3,000 people each noon. 

The scene was soon replicated in Boston, New Haven, Philadelphia, Washington and the South. By the next spring 2,000 Chicagoans were gathering each day in the Metropolitan Theater to pray. A young 21-year-old in those meetings, newly arrived in the city, felt his first call to do Christian work...Dwight L. Moody.

Does anyone really think that America today is lacking preachers, books, Bible translations, and neat doctrinal statements? What we really lack is the passion to call upon the Lord until He opens the heavens and shows Himself powerful."   

It began with and will begin with prayer

Monday, September 20, 2010

Prayer- it begins and ends there

"You do not have because
You do not ask God."
James 4:2

It's Monday. What was yesterday morning like for you? When you went to church, did you walk away thinking about the cleverness of the sermon,  or about the things you needed to get done during the rest of the day or did you walk away thinking about God Himself? Unfortunately, in America today, I think a lot of us walk away with one of the first two thoughts. If so, we are missing the mark. 

God has so much power that He wants to give to His Church but we don't have it because we don't ask for it. We are content with a sermon that makes us feel good or gets us to agree with the pastor about some point. We go home and maybe discuss a few points of the sermon.

We are content with a few moments of feeling close to Him as we sing the worship songs. We agree with others that the praise and worship was great today, but that's all. 

God is standing with arms open wide and so desires to fill us with His presence. He has power to give, mercy to bestow, His own special presence to be felt, but we don't ask. 

"When we get serious about drawing upon God's power, remarkable things will happen. Even if we grow listless and lukewarm, still Christ says, 'Here I am! I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come and eat with him, and he with Me...He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches' (Revelation 3:20-22). 

Those gentle words, quoted often by evangelists to those who do not know Christ, were addressed to the Laodicean Christians whom Jesus had just scolded. Although He was grieved by their lethargy, He nevertheless offered His renewing love and power to any who would open the door. Will we?" (Fresh Wind, Fresh Fire by Jim Cymbala). 

"Come near to God and He will come near to you." James 4:8

"Over the last 30 years, more books have been written about marriage than all the preceding 2,000 years of church history. But ask any pastor in America if there aren't proportionally more troubled marriages today than in any other era. We have all the how-to's, but homes are still falling apart. 

The couple that prays together stays together. I don't mean to be simplistic; there will be difficult moments in any union. But God's Word is true when it says, 'Call upon Me, and I will help you. Just give me a chance.'

The same holds true for parenting. We may own stacks of good books on child rearing and spending 'quality time' with our children. Yet we have more problems per 100 young people in the church today than at any previous time. This is not because we lack knowledge or how-to; it is because we have not cried out for the power and grace of God. 

What if, in the last 25 years, we had invested only half the time and energy in writing, publishing, reading and discussing books on the Christian family...and put the other half into praying for our marriages and our children? I am certain we would be in far better shape today.

That is why the writer of Hebrews nails down the most central activity of all for Christians: 'Let us then approach the throne of grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need' (Heb. 4:16). It doesn't say, 'Let us come to the sermon.' We in America have made the sermon the centerpiece of the church, something God never intended. Preachers who are really doing their job get people to come to the throne of grace. That's the true source of grace and mercy.

To every preacher and every singer, God will someday ask, 'Did you bring people to where the action could be found...at the throne of grace? If you just entertained them, if you just tickled their ears and gave them a warm, fuzzy moment, woe unto you. At the throne of grace, I could have changed their lives. Jim Cymbala, did you just dazzle people with your cleverness, or did you make them hungry to come to me?'

If a meeting doesn't end with people touching God, what kind of a meeting is it? We haven't really encountered God. We haven't met with the only One powerful and loving enough to change our lives.

God has chosen prayer as His channel of blessing. He has spread a table for us with every kind of wisdom, grace, and strength because He knows exactly what we need. But the only way we can get it is to pull up to the table and taste and see that the Lord is good.

God says to us, 'Pray because I have all kinds of things for you; and when you ask, you will receive. I have all this grace, and you live with scarcity. Come unto Me, all you who labor. Why are you so rushed? Where are you running now? Everything you need, I have.'

If the times are indeed as bad as we say they are...if the darkness in our world is growing heavier by the moment...if we are facing spiritual battles right in our own homes and churches...then we are foolish not to turn to the One who supplies unlimited grace and power. He is our only source. We are crazy to ignore Him." (Fresh Wind, Fresh Fire by Jim Cymbala)

Korea - following the Korean War it was devastated. According to reports, there was not one tree standing in the entire country. Yet today, 60 years later, it is a thriving nation with influence felt internationally and with one of the strongest missionary-sending mentalities of any country. How did this happen?

Early America - Plymouth and Salem faced huge loss of life (over half in each settlement died the first couple of years). Yet from austerity were forged the beginnings of the most prosperous nation in the world. How did this happen?

PRAYER

"Prayer Mountain is a Christian retreat in South Korea, operated by the Yoido Full Gospel Church, Korea's largest church. It is located in Jori-myeon, Paju, in northern Gyeonggi province near the Demilitarized Zone. It has facilities for 10,000 people.

The Prayer Mountain Movement in Korea sprang from a practice of the pioneering Christians during the latter days of the Korean church in the 1800s. Faced by strong opposition from the home religions and philosophies, i.e. Buddhism and Confucianism, as well as the mandatory practice of Shinto imposed by the invading forces from Japan, many Christians who resisted the imposition on their freedom of worship were persecuted and even killed.

In desperation, the Christians who could not practice their faith openly adopted the practice of waking up as early as four in the morning to ascend the nearby mountains where they could freely pray until the first ray of sunrise. At the end of the day, before going home, the Christians would again ascend the mountains to pray and fast and ask God to intervene on their behalf.

It is said that anyone who passed by those mountains would hear the cries and weeping of the men and women who were storming heaven with their sad plight and asking God to change their situation. From then on, prayer and fasting have been the hallmarks of the strong South Korean Church." (Prayer Mountain)

Of their landing, Governor William Bradford wrote:

"Being thus arrived in a good harbor, and brought safe to land, they
fell upon their knees and blessed the God of Heaven who had brought
them over the vast and furious ocean, and delivered them from all the perils 
and miseries thereof, again to set their feet on the firm and stable earth."

In Plymouth and in Salem, following death and near starvation, the people didn't turn to their pastors for wonderful sermons or to their choirs for beautiful songs. No, they fell on their faces before God and with prayer and fasting, asked Him what to do, asked Him for His help, for His protection, asked Him for conviction of sin. And they did this time and time again. 

Our churches used to be houses of prayer, first and foremost. But are they today? Think about it...how much time in a typical service is spent in prayer? How many people attend your church's weekly prayer service...if your church even has one? Is prayer the priority, you communicating with God, coming to His throne of grace or are the pastor's words, the eloquence of his speech, the priority? Do you feel closer to God when you walk out of your church or are your thoughts focused on your pastor, for good or bad? 

Prayer is missing in our church and thus in our nation. 

Following 9/11, President Bush said: 

"America was targeted...because we're the brightest beacon for
freedom and opportunity in the world...I ask for your prayers for all
those who grieve...I pray they will be comforted by a power greater
than any of us spoken through the ages in Psalm 23: 

'Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I fear
no evil for you are with me.'" 

On September 13, 2001, President Bush stated: 

"Scripture says: 'Blessed are those who mourn for they shall be
comforted.' I call on every American...to observe a National Day of
Prayer and Remembrance...In the face of all this evil, 
we remain strong and united, 'One Nation Under God.'" 

But what happened after that? Did 9/11 bring us back to the Lord? Yes, but only for a short time. There must be sustained prayer once again, the way the church in America used to pray, the way the church in Korea still prays today, at places like Prayer Mountain, and it must begin in our lives, our homes and our churches. 












Thursday, September 16, 2010

Brazilian Sending

Brazilians marching to show their support of Israel

Jesus said, "Peace be with you! 
As the Father has sent me, 
I am sending you."
John 20:21

Yesterday, I spoke about the sending of God and what that means for the believer. Over the next couple of days, I will share God's sending of His people in many different parts of the world. A few months back, I spoke of God's movement in Africa in African Sending. Today, I would like to highlight Brazil. 

"That the evangelical and pentecostal churches in Brazil are strong is immediately evident to any visitor. Compared to other Latin American countries where non-Catholic congregations are often small, hidden away on back streets and decidedly not influential, the church in Brazil is almost brazen in its visibility and self-promotion. 

From one or more churches on every block in some sectors of Rio de Janeiro to billboards for a Christian bookstore overlooking downtown Sao Paulo’s popular central square; from numerous radio and television stations broadcasting fiery sermons around the clock to two teenaged sisters unashamedly singing Christian hymns and choruses on an extended bus trip; from glaring neon signs proclaiming “Assemblies of God” atop the largest buildings in some rural towns to evangelicals in the president’s cabinet and a strong evangelical bloc in the nation’s congress, Brazilians are filling churches as fast as they can open and sharing their faith in a way that would put fellow believers in other countries to shame. 

“There are 40 churches opening in Rio every week,” says Roberto Inacio, the Director of an Assemblies of God Bible institute in Rio de Janeiro and writer of Sunday school material used throughout the country. “In particular, there has been an explosion of pentecostalism in the country in the past decade,” he says. 

While the pentecostal expression of faith is most obvious, other evangelical churches are experiencing rapid growth as well. “The Presbyterian church in the central area of the country is growing,” says missionary Alan Mullins who has served in the country for 30 years. “The churches are very alive, the churches are full and the people are excited about what is going on in the church.” 

While Alan says that Presbyterian growth has slowed in large cities such as Sao Paulo, with its metropolitan population pushing 20 million, Baptists are encouraged by their 900 congregations in Sao Paulo state. And, while this denomination has traditionally worked with lower and middle class groups, it is now reaching out to more affluent, harder-to reach residents of the big cities. But, such a ministry takes time says Danny Rollins, a Southern Baptist missionary in Sao Paulo. “You don’t just set up the Jesus film on the street corner like you do in a poor community and think that they’ll come, because they won’t,” he explains. 

Even youth in Brazil are openly active in witnessing to their faith. In Campinas, a city of one million people located an hour and a half west of Sao Paulo, the teenage youth group from a 3,000 member-strong charismatic Nazarene church spends every Saturday giving concerts, plays and puppet shows in city parks. “Our goal is to lead one-thousand people to make professions of faith for Christ this year,” says Beth Kinas, the group’s adult leader."  (Kenneth D. MacHarg, Former LAM Missionary)

It is encouraging to see the explosive growth of the church in Brazil! With that growth has been an accompanying growth in missions. "The number of evangelical missionaries from Brazil has increased significantly since the 1970s. There were 595 missionaries in 1972; 791 missionaries in 1980; 2,040 missionaries in 1988; 2,755 missionaries in 1992; and 4,754 missionaries in 2,000. Today, Brazilian missionaries are working on every continent," (Bertil Ekstrom, Exec. Dir. of the Mission Commission of World Evangelical Alliance). 

God is doing great things in South America (from 1900 to 2000, evagelicals grew from about 700,000 to over 55 million) and in particular, Brazil! 


Wednesday, September 15, 2010

The sending of God

"The Spirit of the Lord is on me, 
because he has anointed me to preach good news to the poor. 
He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners 
and recovery of sight for the blind, 
to release the oppressed,
to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor." 
Luke 4:18-19


A few days ago as I was walking out to the car with my 8-yr-old daughter Grace, she said to me, "Mommy, I really sense that God wants me to do something for Him, something outside America." I told her that I understand exactly what she is hearing from God. I too have felt that call, that tugging, that urge to go out of the comforts of my American lifestyle and share the Gospel.

It happens every day, all over the world...God draws a person out, out of their comfort zone, into something new...something He is asking them to join, for His sake. It may be overseas or it may be across the street. But the call is unmistakable and the initiative is all God's.

We can't make missions happen. It is not up to us to lead. Instead, as each of us spends time with the Lord, He begins to reveal His plans, His purposes, His pathways, and He asks us to follow. It is the sending of God.

That's what missions is...the sending of God. He tells us to go, and we follow.

And how does one prepare for mission - one step at a time. The key is hearing God's voice. You see, God doesn't need our money. God doesn't need our ability. God doesn't need us, period. He could reveal Himself to every person in the world through visions and dreams, and draw them to Him. He could make the "stones cry out" as a witness to Himself Luke 19:40.

Because He can do anything, He doesn't need us to proclaim the gospel. He wants us to participate in His work for our benefit. What, in all the world, could be more rewarding than knowing that you had a part to play in the salvation of another person?

I'm reminded of the words to one of my favorite songs that talks about this very thing.

Thank You for Giving To The Lord
Music & Lyrics by Ray Boltz 

I dreamed I went to Heaven, you were there with me.
We walked upon the streets of gold beside the Crystal Sea.
We heard the angels singing, then someone called your name.
You turned and saw this young man, and he was smiling as he came.
He said, "Friend you may not know me now," and then he said, "But wait -
You used to teach my Sunday School, when I was only eight.
And every week you would say a prayer before the class would start.
And one day when you said that prayer,
I asked Jesus in my heart." 

Thank you for giving to the Lord,
I am a life that was changed.
Thank you for giving to the Lord,
I am so glad you gave.

Then another man stood before you, he said "Remember the time,
A missionary came to your church, His pictures made you cry.
You didn't have much money but you gave it anyway.
Jesus took that gift you gave
And that's why I'm in Heaven today" 

Thank you for giving to the Lord,
I am a life that was changed.
Thank you for giving to the Lord,
I am so glad you gave.

One by one they came, far as your eyes could see.
Each life somehow touched by your generosity.
Little things that you had done, sacrifices that you made,
They were unnoticed on this earth
In Heaven now proclaimed. 

Thank you for giving to the Lord,
I am a life that was changed.
Thank you for giving to the Lord,
I am so glad you gave.
And I know up in Heaven you're not supposed to cry
But I am almost sure there were tears in your eyes
As Jesus took your hand and you stood before the Lord
He said "My child look around you,
Great is your reward." 


Let me share one story that illustrates the sending of God. "Before 1991 the Gospel had managed to attract very few converts in a particular district in Central India. Seven years later, hundreds of newly baptized believers from at least 24 different people groups are learning to follow Jesus...How did so many people suddenly turn to hope in Christ from centuries of practicing animistic spiritism blended with Hinduism?" 

God sent local and international missionaries to tell them the good news of Jesus, and at the same time, prepared their hearts, through His Holy Spirit, to hear that good news. One way He prepared them for the Gospel is truly remarkable, as He sent a short-term mission team, from Scandinavia, into one of the Indian villages of the Poharis tribe.

"The Poharis are highly transient hungers who engage in animistic rituals while honoring Hindu brahminical priestcraft. They had asked for someone to come and teach them about Christ, too. But the only ones available were a short-term team of young Scandinavian women who could not have been further removed from them in almost every way.

While discussing Christ with these young women with pale skin, bright blond hair and blue eyes, the Poharis began telling them about a particular priest in their village. Five years prior he had passed through a period when most of the people thought he was crazy. He often seemed tormented by spirits.

They brought him repeatedly before various gods and goddesses for healing. All the while he kept saying, 'People who look like angels will come from around the world to our village. They will tell us about the real God. We should follow Him.'

The team asked the priest what he saw in his vision. He said, 'I saw people like you, white kind of people - they were angels. They will come and tell us about God.' When they asked, 'Do you think we are those people?,' he responded, 'I don't know yet.' 

But after four days of listening, he trusted the Lord Jesus Christ and received Him as his Savior. In the end, most of those residing in that particular village were baptized."  (from A Movement of Christ Worshippers in India by Dean Hubbard). 

God calls us and sends us out as we obey Him. Just as He sent Jesus, so He is sending us. I pray that each of us will be eager to hear His call, and when we do, step out in obedience and faith. 



Sunday, September 12, 2010

Strength and gentleness - an approach to Islam

"because of the tender mercy of our God, 
by which the rising sun will come to us from heaven
to shine on those living in darkness 
and in the shadow of death, 
to guide our feet into the path of peace."
Luke 1:78-79

I pray also that the eyes of your heart may be enlightened
 in order that you may know the hope to which he has called you, 
the riches of his glorious inheritance in the saints,
and his incomparably great power for us who believe. 
That power is like the working of his mighty strength,
which he exerted in Christ when he raised him from the dead
and seated him at his right hand in the heavenly realms"
Ephesians 1:18-20




During this past week, there has been much talk within my own family, on Facebook amongst friends and in the news, about Muslims and what our response should be. There is controversy stirring around the proposed building of a mosque, the burning of Korans as a show of strength, and the sadness and anger that is stirred up by our remembrances of September 11th. 

How should we respond as Christians and Americans? What response would glorify God? 

I believe we can find the right response if we look to our Lord Jesus as an example. He modeled for us both tenderness and strength. These two qualities, living within us and working in agreement, are what we need to respond to the Muslim question. 

"Christ Jesus is the artist. He created the world with colors and textures human artists have tried for thousands of years to imitate. Christ Jesus is the musician. He gave the angels their voices. Christ Jesus is the tenderhearted, ministering to our every need.

Christ Jesus is also the warrior, forever leading us in triumphant procession, if only we will follow 
(2 Corinthians 2:14). In our great weakness, He is strong. Christ Jesus is the blessed embodiment of both characteristics. He has set an example before us of true manhood and true womanhood," (from A Heart Like His by Beth Moore).

We must model the tenderness of Christ toward the Muslims. Each Muslim was created in God's image, tenderly and lovingly by His own hand. He desires their salvation. He loves them and asks each of us to love them, to desire good for them, to befriend them and share with them the good news of salvation. 

Ultimately, the battle is not for freedom in America or anywhere else on this earth. It is ultimately for the freedom of each soul. Hatred and anger will only close doors to the Muslim world that need to be left open if they will ever have the hope of finding Christ as their Savior.

We must also model the strength of Christ toward the threat of an Islamic take-over of our nation and the world. When I survey the evil that is done in the name of this religion, it chills me. Two nights ago, I was viewing this website (Islamic honor killings). The evil that would cause a father to not only rape his own daughter but than brutally murder her is straight from the devil. And for a religion to say that this is okay, speaks volumes about the danger that lies inherent in the Islamic faith. 

I believe that Satan knows his time is short. Christ will return in triumph and strength, but in the mean time, the devil is throwing every kind of evil and stronghold he can at the human race, and much of it is embodied in Islam. We must, as a nation, recognize this evil and do all we can to stop the spread of this religion to our own land and the other nations. 

Yet, how do we show the strength to stop this evil? Is is ultimately through our military might? I don't think so. Take Afghanistan and Iraq for an example. Has our military presence in these two nations truly stopped the spread of Islamic fundamentalism? Are the people any more free to choose Christ as their Savior or do they still live under the fear of honor killings and other such violence, if they leave Islam? 

Do we kill them all? Does that really stop Islam? No...more and more young men, angered by loss and brainwashed by Imams, will step forward to fill the shoes of those who died in jihad. And ultimately, is that victory in Christ...killing human enemies? That was the mistake made by the Crusades. 

The only way to truly stop the spread of Islam is to follow in the footsteps of Jesus, showing strength toward Satan and gentleness toward the Muslims. We must win them with the love of Christ. 

That is how the Romans, Vikings, Goths, African and Asian tribes, Irish Druids and so many others were turned from their murderous ways. It was with strength toward Satan and tenderness toward the individuals. They were stopped with the love of Christ. 

We must model gentleness and strength toward any enemy in this world. It is not the way of weakness but the way of victory.  

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Mongols under the leadership of the "Khan of Khans"

Mongolian women and child

See, I am doing a new thing! 
Now it springs up; do you not perceive it? 
I am making a way in the desert 
and streams in the wasteland.
Isaiah 43:19


This is the second part of the story about the growth of the Mongolian Church. One neat thing is that I have a friend named Christine who is a missionary in Mongolia. I asked her to share her thoughts about the growing church in Mongolia. This is what she said:

"What I'm sensing, as I am here, I feel the Lord is doing a purifying work. Because He is a holy God, and requires us to be holy, I feel that the Lord is coming in His holiness into the church. He is purifying the church and wanting to take them "deep." 

As 1st generation believers, they've gone through a lot. As the Lord purifies the church, I see Him wanting to heal, restore, renew, and revive the church...esp. the leaders of the church. The Lord is exposing darkness, so that the church can truly be light. In so doing, He wants to take the church deeper. 

Personally, I see myself as a "wounded healer." and I wonder if the Lord is using Mongolian believers to be that...

Mongolian believers DO have such a heart for evangelism. And I agree that I can see Mongolians being such strategic people to be sent to the world. You can't help but to pray that the Lord use these people to conquer nations for the Lord. In the past they may have conquered nations by killing and attacking them, but this time, that they would conquer nations with life in Christ...with the love of Christ. 

I can see their potential. We need more people who have hearts to disciple and mentor these leaders...to walk through character formation, take them deeper into HIs presence, His will." 


Here is the second half of Brian Hogan's story about the Church in Mongolia. I pray it will encourage and excite you to see what God is doing in our world! If you have not read the first part, I encourage you to read it at Mongolia, from darkness to light in our generation



"The second factor in the sudden acceptability of the good news by the traditional Mongols was the decision by our team and the “elders-in-training” to begin using the Mongolian term “Borkhan” to refer to the God of the Bible. 

Many centuries before, when Tibetan Buddhist missionaries arrived in Mongolia, they adopted “Borkhan,” the generic Mongolian term for “god,” for their purposes. In the early ‘90s, nearly all the believers in Mongolia used another term for God, Yertontsin Ezen, which was a brand new term composed by a translator in an attempt to avoid any potential confusion or syncretism with the beliefs of Buddhism. 

But the new term, which can be translated “Master of the Universe,” sounded unfamiliar and unreal to Mongolian ears. It had no intrinsic meaning for them and was essentially a foreign word made up of Mongolian elements. Although the Erdenet elders-in-training were used to using the term Yertontsin Ezen, they decided that the traditional term Borkhan would be more appropriate and acceptable and was capable of being filled with biblical meaning. 

This change came just in time for the suddenly open crowds who witnessed healings and deliverances. The God who was working these wonders had a name that didn’t sound like science fiction."

I wrote about this very thing in Is Allah God? and Eternity in their hearts

"During this period of explosive growth our team was careful to stay “behind the scenes,” giving on-the-job training for the emerging leaders. Care was taken to do everything in ways that could easily be imitated—baptisms were in bathtubs, worship songs were not imported, etc.

We made sure Jesus’ basic commands were taught in such a way that disciples could immediately respond in obedience. The house churches enabled, supported and encouraged these practical responses to the teaching from God’s Word. Believers helped one another to do the Word and not just hear it, often finding corporate ways to obey together.

Yet there were serious problems from our point of view where the cultural norms of Mongolian society conflicted with some of the moral teaching of the Scriptures. The elders-in-training were encouraged to search the Scriptures to find solutions for sin problems in the emerging church. Cultural blind spots in the areas of sexual purity and courtship were dealt with by defining principles, then teaching and enforcing them. The solutions these Mongol leaders crafted were both biblically and culturally correct—much better than solutions we missionaries might have crafted.

The emerging Mongolian church looked far different from any of our team’s home churches in Sweden, Russia or America. Dramas and testimonies quickly became prominent features of the large celebration meetings (which went from once to twice a month and eventually weekly). The “drama team” wrote and produced their own skits, plays and dramatic dances from Bible stories and everyday Mongolian life. This became a powerful teaching and evangelistic tool. 

Time was always set aside for testimonies from “real Mongols” —often new believers in their ‘60s just come from the steppes. These long and, to Western ears, rambling stories of salvation gripped the fellowship in a state of rapt wonder and awe. God was on the move among their people— dressed in the most traditional of Mongolian clothing. Worship rose from their hearts as they sang new songs written by their own people in their own language and unique musical style. This was no foreign fad or import!

Our team of expatriates concentrated our efforts upon discipling, equipping and releasing Mongols to take the lead in building up the church and reaching the lost. A school of discipleship was formed and by the third class was entirely Mongol led. With the emphasis upon “learning by doing,” new leaders were trained locally in the ministry rather than being sent away. The leadership of the home gatherings had been placed into their hands almost immediately, and soon the Mongol believers also carried the majority of the responsibility for the weekly services.

All of this progress and growth was not overlooked by the Enemy. Beginning in November of 1994, our team and the fledgling church endured two solid months of unrelenting spiritual attacks: three cult groups targeted our city, the church was almost split, leaders fell into sin and some were demonized. Our team came close to despairing and pulling out.

Finally, two sudden and unexplainable deaths rocked the missionary team and the church. My only son, Jedidiah, had been born on November 2nd. On the morning of Christmas Eve our apartment rang with screams when Louise discovered Jedidiah’s cold and lifeless body—dead of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome at two months. We buried our boy and a piece of our hearts in the frozen soil on a cold windswept hillside outside of town. The next day a young girl in the church died from an unknown cause.

In response, the believers and our team came together for 24 hours of prayer and fasting. At three in the morning, a breakthrough occurred and everyone knew it. The church has never been overwhelmed by an onslaught of spiritual warfare like that since.

As encouraging as this start in Erdenet was, it still fell short of the vision God had given to our team. We knew the planting of a single church in one city would not be the break-through to reaching an entire nation and beyond. We were aiming for a movement of indigenous and spontaneously multiplying churches within the Mongolian peoples, and the Mongolian believers themselves needed to share this goal.

At the very first baptism, Magnus shared this vision with the newly born body of Christ: to reach all the families of Erdenet with the gospel, to plant a daughter church in the neighboring province and to reach other unreached peoples of the world. The young believers, blissfully clueless, responded very enthusiastically. We trained all of the disciples to view the church as a living organism rather than an organization—a healthy “mother church” that would reproduce into daughter and granddaughter churches. The leaders we trained kept the vision—“God wants to plant new churches though our church”—before the members.

During the church’s second year, the elders sent out teams and planted a daughter church in a town 60 kilometers away. Because they were of the same people group, planting another congregation was easy for the Mongolians. The leaders the Lord raised up for this daughter church soon began sending teams out to plant granddaughter churches in other towns even farther from Erdenet.

After just three years of work by our team in Erdenet, we came to the realization that our efforts had borne good fruit and we had “worked ourselves out of a job.” In the beginning of 1996, we had successfully modeled and passed on every ministry and function in the church movement to Mongolian disciples. The Mongols were doing everything and we were just watching. The bittersweet moment that had been our goal all along had come. It was time to say goodbye.

The Easter service was packed—standing room only. Nearly 800 filled the largest hall in Erdenet with many more turned away by the authorities, who closed the doors when they saw the crowds. Those who managed to get in gathered to worship Jesus and to witness the ceremony marking the passing of authority from our foreign church planting team to the local elders. We explained and acted out the analogy of a relay race to portray graphically what was taking place. A baton was handed from our family and Magnus, representing the church planters, to a group of Mongolian leaders in full national dress. They were so ready! 

The baton was passed. For the first time in history, a fully indigenous Mongolian church was in Mongolian hands—and they in turn were firmly in the nail-scarred hands of Jesus.

Our family left Mongolia that very day, and the rest of the team left in June when their English teaching commitments ended. In our absence, the Mongolian churches continued to grow and multiply. They started a number of mercy ministries as well. They began to feed and clothe street children, care for single mothers and prevent abortions and even planted a church among dump dwellers. All of these initiatives were completely from and by the Mongolian believers.

The movement continues. By 2008, the church in Erdenet had given birth to 15 daughter churches in towns scattered across the country. Some of their daughter churches have themselves reproduced from one to six granddaughter churches. A very satisfying report—considering we started with only teenage girls!

This movement has also been hard at work cross-culturally. Teams of Mongol church planters have been sent to Muslim peoples in two other countries, to an animistic forest tribal people, as well as already having launched church planting movements among several other Mongolian tribes. Five of the daughter churches and four granddaughter churches are missionary church plants among distinct ethnic groups. A missionary training school in Erdenet trains the Mongolian Church’s emerging mission force.

God seems to have made the spiritual soil of Mongolia especially fertile for church planting. The gospel continues to do its life giving and community-changing work. Churches continue to grow and reproduce. 

Conservative estimates state that the number of believers grew from just two in 1990 to over 50,000 believers in 2005. Mongolia has changed from a mission field to being a powerful mission force— sending out more missionaries per believer than any other nation on Earth. As in a pre- vious age, Mongols again thunder off to the nations beyond their barren hills—this time under the leadership of the “Khan of Khans”—King Jesus!