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

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Remembering Billy Graham on this All Saints Day

I tell you the truth, anyone who has faith in me will do what I have been doing. He will do even greater things than these, because I am going to the Father.   John 14:12 

Tomorrow, November 1, is a day that is often overlooked by many Christians in America...often being overshadowed by Halloween. Yet, it is a day that can bring us hope and remind us of those who have gone before us. It is called All Saints Day.  

There are so many Christians we can remember and talk about with our families on this day, and every day. One, who is not an official saint of the Catholic Church but who has truly touched the world for Christ is Billy Graham. 

At the Lausanne Congress 2010 two weeks ago in Cape Town, South Africa, a wonderful video was shown about Billy Graham. It led me to tears at the end. What a magnificent example of a man, truly sold out to the Lord and filled with the joy and compassion of Jesus. I hope the below video encourages you! 

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

North Koreans need our prayers

He changes times and seasons; 
he sets up kings and deposes them. 
He gives wisdom to the wise 
and knowledge to the discerning.
Daniel 2:21


I continue to be burdened for the people of North Korea. Their life is one of starvation, fear, intimidation and loss. They are the most persecuted nation on earth, where cannibalism is common.

Yet even in this modern-day hell on earth, God's Spirit is moving and bringing people to Jesus against incredible odds. 

We need to pray, daily, for North Korea! Allow God to burden your heart for them. 

Emergency Prayer Alert - NORTH KOREA
PRAY for North Korean Transfer of Power

WIN PRAYER ALERT
North Korean leader, Kim Jong-Il recently announced that his son, Kim Jong-un will succeed him. As the transfer of power approaches, the North Korean regime is working to build a new personality cult around Jong-un.
North Korean FlagAt the age of 69, with reportedly failing health (including rumors of a stroke), North Korean dictator Kim Jong-Il has chosen a successor to carry on his regime - his son, Kim Jong-un. 

Jong-Il is revered by some in North Korea as a god and is referred to as Supreme Leader, Dear Leader, Father, and the General. He took power from his father, Kim Il-sung, who also had a personality cult centered around him and was worshiped and feared. Jong-Il currently commands the fourth largest standing army in the world.

Jong-Il's third son, Kim Jong-un is a four-star general in the Korean People's Army. He is believed to be 27 years old (his date of birth is unknown) and speaks four languages. He will become the leader of North Korea when his father steps down from power. 

As one of Kim Jong-Il's personal staff noted, "If power is to be handed over then Jong-un is the best for it. He has superb gifts, is a big drinker and never admits defeat."

Kim Jong-Il's oldest son has a different opinion. He stated in October 2010 that when power is transferred to his younger brother, the regime will crumble. "North Korea will collapse soon. How long can this regime last?"

Some analysts are also concerned about the transfer of power. They foresee a struggle and a possible leadership crisis. If Kim Jong-un does manage to take control, they say, he will need to make serious reforms in order to maintain control.

North Korea is number 1 on the Open Doors World Watch List 2010 of the world's worst persecutors of Christians. WIN partners pray for North Korea on Day 27 of the Window International Network Praying Through The Window 9: Global Terrorism and World Religions prayer calendar.
PRAY FOR:
  • the Lord to raise up the leader of His choice to guide North Korea out from Communism. (The Bible, Daniel 2:21)
  • the man or woman who takes power to be compassionate and sensitive to the needs of the people. Pray for an end to the vicious tyranny and abuse that has characterized the regime since 1948. (The Bible, Psalm 103:2-5)
  • the Lord to relieve the people of North Korea from hunger, poverty, and political and spiritual oppression. (The Bible, Psalm 18:2)
  • the hearts of all leaders in this dark nation to be softened by the work of the Holy Spirit and open to the Gospel. Pray for the salvation of Kim Jong-Il and his entire family. (The Bible, I Timothy 2:4)
  • the Lord to protect, strengthen and encourage Christian Believers as they face intense persecution for their decision to follow Jesus Christ. (The Bible, I Peter 4:13)
  • peace throughout East Asia - especially between North and South Korea. Ask the Lord to station His mighty, warring angels around North Korea and keep the government from acting on threats of war. (The Bible, Psalm 4:8)
  • the Kingdom of God to come to North Korea in power and for multitudes to put their faith in Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord. (The Bible, I Corinthians 4:20)

Sources: BBC News, Korea Times
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Tuesday, October 26, 2010

More from Auntie Katie in Uganda


God has brought me to the awareness of an incredible servant of His living in Uganda. Her name is Katie. She is a young American woman who has adopted more than 13 Ugandan children and lives with them. She reaches out to a huge number of people daily with the love and care of Christ. She is modeling what it means to be the hands and feet of Jesus. I stand in awe at what the Lord can do with a life that is totally sold out to Him.

I blogged about her earlier this year at Katie in Uganda. When I first was referred to her website by a friend, I spent the next three nights reading every single one of her blogs. It was a journey of emotion, ending in a greater love for the Lord and what He is doing in the world.

Here is her latest blog entry...it can be found at Amazima blog


In May I stood in front of a crowd of 500 people and spoke of our sweet adopted grandmother, Grace:
“Grace is an 80 year old woman, blind and all alone. The cold rain drips through her grass thatched roof and onto her face which she covers with a plastic bag. AIDS makes it impossible for her body to fight off any illness, including the tuberculosis that is wreaking havock on her already-emaciated frame. Malnutrition makes it impossible for her to even sit, let alone walk.

Today, Grace is an 80 year old woman loved by many, and loving the Lord with her whole heart. She is warm in her hospital bed. With the help of medicine and Jesus, Grace has gained weight, partially regained her sight, and is able to stand up to greet me. Today, Grace is still dying. But today Grace is dying with dignity, with love surrounding her, and with a place prepared for her in Heaven.”

In June, just a week after I came home from my time in the states, Grace went to that place prepared for her. Though still warm in her hospital bed, she had once again deteriorated to being unable to even hold up her head. She could barely speak, but rather just groaned or moaned to let you know she could hear you, that she was still here. I was able to be with her just hours before she went to be with Jesus. Her poor little body simply could not fight anymore. As I held her hand in those last hours, I whispered to her not to be afraid. That even though she was in immense pain, Jesus had not forgotten, He was preparing her place and soon she would be with Him forever. As I spoke the words into her ear, my heart said a silent prayer, “Soon Lord. Quickly Lord. Please. Please, please.”

Selfishly, I was devastated by her death. Selfishly, I hated having to tell me sweet little girls that there beloved grandmother was no longer here. Selfishly, I miss her sweet, hilarious personality and her kisses and her whispers in my ear. But more than I am sad, I am so thankful for our time with her. I am thankful for what we learned from her and what she learned from us. I am so thankful that God brought her into our family. And I am beyond thankful that she is now safe with Him.

A few weeks after we lost our sweet Jja jja, another friend joined us in our home. Napongo was a severely malnourished, HIV positive, beautiful 4 year old little girl. She had huge, infected wounds on her stomach that was swollen and distended from malnutrition and parasites. It is a common belief here that if you make many small incisions on a child’s stomach and rub local herbs and salt in them, that the swelling will reduce. Obviously this doesn’t work and had left Napongo covered in nasty, oozing cuts. At first, I tried giving her 14 year old Auntie (who also happened to be Napongo’s primary care giver while her mother had gone to the big city to look for work) the medicine Napongo needed, clean bandages for her jigger infested feet and infected belly, and nutritious food. When I came back a week later to check on her though, I only found her condition worse. I think I don’t really need to tell you what happened next – we took her home, along with her 9 year old sister Alapea to be our translator since none of us speak Karimojong. (we are learning though!)

Napongo’s is a beautiful story of redemption, healing, and God’s incredible grace. I spent hours upon hours digging the jiggers out that had burrowed deep into the girls’ feet. My sweet children welcomed Napongo and Alapea with open arms and we fed them and loved them just as much as we could. Napongo was put on medicine and began gaining weight rapidly, turning into a healthy, happy 4 year old. Unfortunately, she never quite learned to use the toilet, and I am forever indebted to my children for helping me clean up all the poop left in all corners of the house. Today, Napongo is back at home. Her mother has returned from Kampala and is surprised to see how well she is doing. So far, she seems to be doing a great job of maintaining her care, which is such an answered prayer.

During the time we were caring for Napongo, my sweet friend Ashley lost her daughter to a sudden and unexpected bout with pneumonia. Just days later, my good friend Santina gave birth to a beautiful baby and as I sat on her dirt floor, covered in afterbirth and cradling this precious little life, she announced that she would like to name her daughter Katie. A few days later, my friend Kodette also had a baby, but the baby was almost 3 months early, and after being refused treatment at three different hospitals because of her tribe, this baby girl also went to be with Jesus.

Suffering. Rejoicing. Squalor. Beauty. Love. Pain.

If you have been keeping up with my blog you read about 23 year old Nabakosa, who my friend Renee was nursing and who I promptly fell in love with. Her death just 12 days later was far more devataing that the death of Jja Jja Grace. Of course, I was still rejoicing that Nabakosa, who had lived such a life of neglect and despair was once again with her maker, dancing with angel. But I was also infuriated at how preventable her situation was. She was in her awful state ONLY because no one had cared for her. No one had loved her. No one had even given her a second thought. Just typing it causes me to weep – to have no human interaction, touch or love for almost 23 years is simply unfathomable. My precious children spent hours sitting on our kitchen floor praying for Nabukosa when we were not at Renee’s loving on her. She had such a special place in her heart. When she died, I looked at God and plainly told Him that I was tired of this. Tired of telling telling my children that another one of their friends had died of something preventable. Tired of witnessing the suffering of these precious innocent people and wondering why God didn’t bring them to us sooner so we could do more to help. Trusting in His perfect plan but still wondering.

Today 20 year-old Maria and her 6 pound, 2 year old, beautiful baby girl Agnes are staying with us. Maria brought Agnes to me on death’s doorstep a month and a half ago and asked if I had any medicine that could help her because the baby she had before Agnes died a few years ago. I knew this baby needed a whole lot more than medicine, so we brought them home where I could monitor baby Agnes and teach Maria to make high fat milk and other things that are nutritious for her baby. Our whole family absolutely adores Agnes and Maria and Agnes has gained almost 4 pounds since being here. Most exciting is that Maria has been listening to the Bible read in Karimojong! She carries her “proclaimer” (a little radio-like device that proclaims the Bible in different remote languages) around with her everywhere – there is constantly a man’s voices shouting the Gospel in Karimojong through my house at maximum volume. I cannot wait to see what the Lord will do in her heart.

Today I drove into Masese with my van full of singing children only to find that my dear friend Mary had lost the baby she has been carrying for 7 months. Jja Jja Ruth passed away after she was sent home from the hospital where they said there was nothing more to do. Patricia’s biological sister Shariwa is about to lose her baby to the worst case of malnutrition I have ever seen because she stopped prostituting her self when she came to know Jesus 6 months ago, and now has no money for food. They will live with us now while we nurse the baby back to health and look for a job for momma.

I would like to tell you that as I become more and more surrounded with sorrow and squalor, it gets easier or less painful. But it doesn’t. The brokenness of this world does not become any less sad. Each and every time, it is overwhelmingly devastating that people have to live, and die, like this. While it does not get easier, I have found that I am able to face each one with a little more hope. I always hope that my friends will live here on earth with me, but I tell them all with a new sense of urgency about Jesus because mostly, I want them to live with HIM, whether here or in heaven. I see the sadness, but I also see the redemption.

If we are really following Jesus, we will go to the hard places. Being a Christ follower means being acquainted with sorrow. Because we must know sorrow to be able to fully appreciate Joy. Joy costs pain, but the pain is worth it.

So we go. This is where our family is today and where I hope to stay – loving, because He first loved us. Going into the pit, entering into the sorrow because He entered for us first and because by His grace, redemption is on the other side - again, and again, and again.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

India - 7 to 10 churches planted a day!

This is what the Sovereign Lord says: "See, I will beckon to the Gentiles, I will lift up my banner to the peoples; they will bring your sons in their arms and carry your daughters on their shoulders.
Isaiah 49:22

India...it will soon have more people than any other country on earth. It is hurtling rapidly forward in its globalization, yet much of it is trapped in a centuries-old caste system. Hindu is the predominant religion, and its worship of millions of gods holds captive millions of people. 

But, praise the Lord that the Gospel is shedding its light to the farthest corners of India. The Church is growing by leaps and bounds in this nation. One example...Gospel for Asia, a wonderful organization which I am privileged to be a speaker for, plants between 7 and 10 churches A DAY, in India! That is incredible! 

At the Lausanne Congress 2010, which was held this past week in Cape Town, South Africa, there were many delegates from India. Two of them gave a wonderful glimpse into what is happening in this nation. 
I encourage you to watch this short video. 

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Chilean miners give praise to God for their survival and rescue

It has been exciting to learn about how God moved so tremendously in the lives of the miners trapped in Chile. During and after their recent rescue, many have given all the glory to God.

Media are talking about it! Here is a story (4 min) that was on Fox News Faith and below is a story from Christian Post.

When the 33 trapped miners in Chile emerged from underground, at least two dozen of them were wearing T-shirts that proclaimed "Gracias Senor," or "Thank you Lord."

In this photo released by the Chilean government, miner Alex Vega draws attention to his shirt that reads "Thank you Lord" after being rescued from the collapsed San Jose gold and copper mine where he had been trapped with 32 other miners for over two months near Copiapo, Chile, Wednesday Oct. 13, 2010.

Christian Maureira, national director of Campus Crusade for Christ in Chile, who helped provide the shirts, said the miners wanted to recognize and thank God publicly as the world watched the anticipated rescue this (past) week.

The miners were rescued on (last) Tuesday and Wednesday after being trapped in the San Jose mine in Chile since the Aug. 5 cave-in.

During the 10-week stint some 2,000 feet underground, Jose Henriquez, 55, stepped up as a spiritual leader in the group, leading prayer services at noon and 6 p.m. each day.

He wrote a letter to Maureira after MP3s of the "JESUS" film and the New Testament were delivered to the miners through a 4-inch-wide tube.

"Thank you for this tremendous blessing for me and my coworkers. It will be good for our spiritual edification. I am fine because Christ lives in me," Henriquez, who is part of a Pentecostal church, wrote.

He also quoted the Old Testament passage Psalms 95:4 – "In His hand are the depths of the earth, and the mountain peaks belong to Him."

That passage was printed on the back of the T-shirts that a majority of the miners wore as they were pulled out to safety this week.

Berry Fiess, director of Field Information Services of The JESUS Film Project, made it clear that the miners decided on their own to ask for shirts that essentially give glory to God. The shirts also have the JESUS Film Project logo on the sleeve.

"They requested – after we sent the MP3s – that we get these shirts for them. They told us what they wanted on the front and back sides," Fiess explained. "There appears to be this strong desire to honor God and I think that this situation must have brought them close to their Maker."

Maureira worked with a designer to produce the shirts and they were delivered to the miners on Monday, just a day before they began hopping into the "Phoenix" escape capsule to reach the surface.

According to Maureira, who had initiated delivering audio Scripture to the miners, several of the men gave testimonies about meeting God while trapped.

Responding to those who wonder where God was during other cave-ins where miners died, the CCC Chile director commented, "I believe that God is sovereign and all miners – either those that have survived or those who have died – accomplish the will of God."

Another collapse could have happened during the rescue process in Chile, or the instruments might not have worked, Fiess noted.

"And like the shirt said on the back, 'In His hand are the depths of the earth, and the mountain peaks belong to Him,'" he said.

Fiess also noted that there have been many Christians who were saved miraculously and those who suffered and died. But he cited three biblical figures, Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego in the Old Testament book of Daniel, who were prepared to give glory to God whether they were delivered from a blazing furnace or not.

In the case of the miners in Chile, Fiess said, "I think it's valid to give God the honor and the glory here because God is the one who can provide His grace and mercy at any time that He wants."

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

What do they see when they look at me?

"A new command I give you: Love one another. 
As I have loved you, so you must love one another.
By this all men will know that you are my disciples, 
if you love one another."
John 13:34-35


What sets me apart? What in my life will draw others to Christ? What will cause people that know me to want to know the One I worship? 

Will it be the fact that I homeschool my children? The fact that I don't celebrate Halloween or Santa at Christmas? Will it be my political views..pro-life, pro-family, pro-Constitution? Will it be that we have five children, one adopted from China? 

None of these. The things I mentioned may set me apart from my neighbors, may cause them to think we're a little strange, but none of these things will, most likely, cause them to seek God and ask me about my relationship with Jesus Christ. 

The thing that will cause them to sit up and take notice is the way that I treat them...my kindness, my interest in their lives, my words, my actions. Do I really know them? Do I keep up with their lives, asking them how they are doing and genuinely caring? Do I offer to help out whenever I can? Do I seek their company? 

Another thing that may cause them to notice and ask questions is our family. How do our children behave? How do I speak to my children and other children? Are our kids respectful of adults, kind to other children and kind to each other? Does our family show others that living for Christ makes all the difference in a family? 

I am sad to say that I have not done a very good job in this area. I tend to live much of my life shut up in my home, away from my neighbors. Our conversations are pleasant but short. And it's the same way at church. I have failed in the area of really caring about other people, especially my neighbors. 

I could blame it on busyness, having a bunch of children, etc., but honestly, it's a heart problem. If I'm not loving the people who cross my path every day, how can I love those millions of miles away, through missions? Once again, I am reminded of my weaknesses, my sins and my desperate need for the Holy Spirit to change me. 

These are just some thoughts, for what they are worth. God continues to change me. I pray that in Hungary I will do better than I did in Charleston. May I love others as Christ loves me. 

Why do we share Christ?

And this gospel of the kingdom will be preached 
in the whole world 
as a testimony to all nations, 
and then the end will come.
Matthew 24:14

Right now, in Cape Town, South Africa, more than 4,000 Christian pastors, missionaries, teachers, researchers and others, from 198 countries, are meeting together to discuss the future of the Church in the world and how to best share the Gospel of Christ with those who have yet to hear His name. The Lausanne 2010 Congress will last throughout the week. In all of history, there has never been a gathering with Christians from more countries than what is taking place right now in Cape Town. Of course, it is receiving little media attention, but that is not surprising. 

For those of us who would have loved to have been there, but can't go in person, the internet is proving to be very helpful with much coverage of what is going on. Lausanne 2010

I've read much already and am just getting started. It is so exciting to learn about what God is doing in this world and to see how I can be a part of it! 

I wanted to share parts of a blog, written by Justin Long who is attending Lausanne 2010. It has to do with why we should be engaged in missions. You can access it at The Long View 

A meditation: Can Doug Birdsall’s prayer at Cape Town be answered? (#capetown2010, #lcwe)
OCTOBER 18, 2010

On the first night of the Lausanne Cape Town 2010 meetings, during the opening address, Doug Birdsall reflected on the how the idea of unreached people groups was first presented at the first Lausanne Congress in the early 1970s. Since then, enormous efforts have pushed the number of unreached peoples down—yet there are still unreached peoples with us today (depending on the estimate you use, somewhere between 4,000 and perhaps 8,000 or so). He said, “We pray that by the next Lausanne Congress, the number of unreached people groups will be zero.”

This is a noble and admirable prayer, of course, and one that I join heartily in praying with him. But it wouldn’t be me writing if we didn’t pause for a moment and ask—can this prayer be answered? and is it likely that it will be?

1. When learning about praying a prayer, and how prayers get answered, we find motivation is as important as the prayer itself. We are praying for God’s will to be done. So when we pray, “Let the number of unreached groups fall to zero,” what are we actually praying for? Are we praying, for example, “God, proclaim your divine word to the nations” or are we praying, “God, send sufficient workers to proclaim your word? perhaps, God, send me?”

When Jesus looked on the fields “white unto harvest,” he neither set out to preach to them nor did he pray for God to divinely show them the truth. Instead, he instructed his disciples to pray for workers. (And then, shortly later, he sent the disciples out as workers).

With God all things are possible—as the many dreams of Jesus in the Middle East presently being seen attest—but at the same time we must also remember that God requires human interaction too. God could instantaneously present himself to all unreached peoples worldwide: but this would immediately relieve his Church, his lovely bride, of the responsibility that he gave us. If we are to obey the Great Commandment (to love God with all our heart, soul, strength, mind and to love our neighbor as our self) then we must obey the Great Commission (to proclaim the good news to all the ethne). But there’s a catch: obedience to the Great Commission isn’t a one time event.

Not too long back I was telling one of our kids that he needed to go and clean his room. “But dad,” he said, “I cleaned it already.” When pressed for when he cleaned it, he said, “I cleaned it on Monday!” I then had to explain to him that a room needed to be cleaned more than once. Picking up needed to be done on a daily basis.

It could have gone differently. I could have told him to clean his room—and then, when he failed to get it done in an appropriate time, I could have gone and done it for him. It would have gotten the job done yet taught him nothing. The job, in effect, wasn’t about cleaning the room so much as it was about teaching the skills and habits of cleaning which he will use the rest of his life.

And how are we doing on our own task? This news, despite the wonderful visuals of the opening night in Cape Town, is not good. The number of people who have no access to Christ, Christianity or the Gospel is presently increasing by an estimated 19 million per year. The reason is simple: not enough people are working among these groups to make a sustainable difference in the long run.

It is the long run that is important. It is not enough to engage a group with a few missionaries. We must engage them with sufficient missionaries—but even that is not enough, because that’s like cleaning our room once. We need to to pioneer a church planting movement which will plant churches capable of evangelizing the group to its cultural borders and sustaining that evangelism through future generations. That’s cleaning a room and keeping it clean. That’s learning the habits that are necessary—the habit of passing on to future generations what has been passed on to us, as Paul instructed Timothy to do.

In other words “completion” of the Great Commission is a task that is not done once and then forgotten. We must have sufficient resources to complete it every day. It’s possible for rooms to become messy, and possible for a group to become unevangelized. For a live fire demonstration of this, look at Europe. It’s very simple, really: if all a group has are missionaries, then when the missionaries go home – and they will, folks, as ReMAP I and II so ably investigated – then future generations will not be evangelized. A non-christian home will not evangelize its children. If a growing church is not planted then in 20 or 25 years the seeds of the Gospel will be scorched, die and wither away.

To reach a group sustainably over time requires people willing to be long-term servants, humble older brothers and sisters and fathers and mothers in the faith. Otherwise it’s all for naught. Short-term workers can be useful, but they’re less like parents and more like doctors, dropping in when they’re desperately needed but not there for the day-in and day-out growth that keep them from being needed in the first place. Short term is useful but not the answer to the long-term inculturation of the gospel, translation of the Word, and discipling of first believers necessary for a church to be pioneered.

You can point to a place like China where the Gospel grew without outside missionaries, but don’t forget that missionaries like Hudson Taylor and many others pioneered it there first. They endured long enough to plant a church which could withstand persecution.

2. Another cautionary note we must have about praying this prayer: let us pray it with the right attitude. We pray, “Let the number of unreached groups fall to zero!” But let us pause to reflect on why we are asking for this to happen. I could tell my sons and daughters that once their room is clean we’ll go get ice cream. I know what will happen: they will think, hey, maybe “cleaning room = getting ice cream.” A week from now they’ll come back to me and say, “Dad, we cleaned our room—let’s go get ice cream!” When ice cream is no longer a part of the equation, will they still clean their room?

Sometimes I think we tend to emphasize Matthew 24:14 (the gospel will be preached to all the nations, and then the end shall come) a little bit more than we should. Jesus listed off a bunch of things and called them “birth pangs.” Yet we seem to approach this final “birth pang” as the “blastoff timer”—when this one is done, some morning, at 12:05 am, when the last group is “reached” (whatever that means in God’s terms), then suddenly the timer will click over, and Jesus will appear in the sky. In other words a=b. Do this and immediately Jesus comes back. If we clean our room, we get ice cream. But when we reach a goal and Jesus doesn’t immediately appear—will we sustain that same effort over the long run? Will we continue to clean our room, even when there’s no ice cream, cake or soda in the picture—just because we should?

Yes, I do believe that Christ’s return is in some fashion tied to world evangelization. But at the same time I don’t think that we can evangelize the world and “force Christ’s return.” He is the sovereign one, not us. Jesus may not have known the precise hour of his return but there is a precise hour already set – God knows it – and Jesus knew that precise hour would fall after the evangelization of the world.

I don’t think we’ll ever have sufficient missionary workers to evangelize the whole world at one point, and at that point Christ will return. So we need to build up a church capable of sustaining that effort over time so that at some future point the task is accomplished and will continue to be accomplished. It is “after” the task is accomplished (and sustainably so, I think) that Jesus will return.

Let’s treat the Great Commission as less of a countdown timer and more of a pilgrimage of obedience to a destination. Let’s think of ourselves as the wise virgins who were prepared for the groom’s appearance, as the stewards who “did business and made a profit and occupied ourselves” until the return of the King. We are not obeying the Great Commission to force Christ’s return. We are obeying it because He gave it to us. Because it is our form of preparation for Christ’s return.

3. Yes, I do think the prayer can be answered. But I think it will be a challenge and it will not be the easy path. It requires us to think eternally rather than in terms of the short-term. In terms of my earlier analogy, we need to think less about cleaning up our room once and more about forming habits of ongoing cleaning.

I wish we could abandon “end times” thinking. I think it’s a bit of a oxymoron. For Christians there are no “end times” or “last days” in the long view. This age may end, but we will continue on. For people who will live eternally, “last days” is a bit of tunnel thinking.

What will happen after Jesus’ returns? We will worship him forever, enjoy him forever, and rule and reign with him. Thus, worship continues. Learning about him and his nature continues. Caring for his creation continues. Love never fails. Obedience to Christ never stops. A million years from now, I’ll still be alive, still loving my wife and children, still worshipping my king, and—I hope!—exploring this wonderful universe He has created. I’ll be laughing over this 70 years and the trials I endure. A billion years from now, I may not even remember this period.

What does not continue? Fame. Fortune. Power. Hunger. Sickness. Sin. Death. (and possibly many more things.)

So as was noted last night, let’s not consider the church to be the waiting room for eternity, but rather be about the business of the Kingdom now. Let’s do the things that will last for eternity. Ok, I know I just said missionary effort wouldn’t continue, but it is a form of worship and it has direct eternal significance (unlike the storing up of wealth). And besides missions is a form of obedience.

I for one do believe it’s possible for the unreached to be reached. But let’s not do it as a countdown clock in which we mobilize enough workers to “do it once.” Let’s do it as a pilgrimage to obedience where we disciple enough followers of Jesus to see the whole world discipled, and stay discipled, forever.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Halloween...why I don't celebrate it

Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable-if anything is excellent or praiseworthy-think about such things.  Philippines 4:8


It's that uncomfortable time of year again...Halloween. I say uncomfortable because our family does not celebrate it. I used to celebrate Halloween. I saw no problem with the costumes, decorations, candy...just innocent fun, right? I was a Christian and didn't believe in the occult, witches or anything like that. I saw Halloween as just a fun time to dress up and be with my friends. 

My views changed dramatically after watching a video of a former priestess of the Satanic Church. She shared the origins of Halloween and how it is celebrated and revered today among Satan worshippers and witches. I realized, for the first time, that there is much evil associated with the history, symbols and practices of Halloween. You can read more about it at Halloween: A Convenant with Death

Now that I had this information, what was I going to do with it? Was Halloween just a holiday about candy and costumes as I had always believed or was there more to the picture? Was I going to participate with others in a holiday that is looked at by Satanists as one of "holiest" holidays of the year. Was I going to allow my children to trick-or-treat on the same night that Satanists, the world over, have been praying for increased demonic activity? Was I going to decorate my house with images of death, horror and evil? 

This may seem crazy thinking to many. You see, in America we tend to view the demonic world as something entertaining. The huge increase in occult related TV shows and movies and the incredible popularity of Harry Potter is proof of this. But, if you begin to do any sort of research into other countries and other religions, you will quickly see the demonic world is not about entertainment. It is about absolute control of people's lives. It stands in direct opposition to Christ and the Church. It is real and it is  not something we Christians should take lightly. I wrote more about this at Are Harry Potter and Twilight for real?

But my choice to not celebrate Halloween isn't just about my desire to not associate myself and my family with a holiday with evil origins and symbols. It has even more to do with my desire to honor Jesus Christ in everything I do. I just read an email concerning this very heart issue, written by "Daryl" at the website Christian Living. He was talking about whether or not a Christian should play games such as Dungeons and Dragons or Yu-Gi-Oh...games that have to do with witchcraft, sorcery, demonic images, etc. But I think it can apply to Halloween as well. 


Question
Hey I’m John and I have a question. Before that I want to let you know Jesus IS in my heart. I have one problem though. I play a card game called yu-gi-oh! I want to know if it’s against good to play it, I mean I'm not obsessed with it, I just like it as a hobby. I play sports and other things also. Please tell me if it’s against God or not, I do not believe in any of the cards or anything like dark magic or nothing. I worship Jesus Christ. So is it a sin to play yugioh??? 

Answer
Expert: Daryl - 9/12/2006

Great to hear that Jesus is your Lord! He is mine too! If Jesus is our Lord, then we need to make sure that we do everything here on earth for His glory, which means that when people look into our lives, and see the way we live, they will see Jesus! I’m glad that you are doing everything that you can to make sure that this is the case in your life.

I asked the same question that you are asking many years ago. Instead of Yu-Gi-Oh, we had Dungeons and Dragons and Masters of the Universe. I often argued with my mom and dad when they told me not to watch those programs or play those games. They said that it was evil, but I couldn’t see what was wrong with them. After all, everyone was doing it and nothing bad was happening to them. I listened to my parents though because the Bible says that we should honor our parents. I knew that I wouldn’t be honoring them if I did what they told me not to do.

I have grown up quite a bit and that was a long time ago, but I can see now that my parents were trying to protect me. Have a look at this scripture in the Bible:

Deuteronomy 18:9-11 (Contemporary English Version)
9Soon you will go into the land that the LORD your God is giving you. The nations that live there do things that are disgusting to the LORD, and you must not follow their example. 10-11Don't sacrifice your son or daughter. And don't try to use any kind of magic or witchcraft to tell fortunes or to cast spells or to talk with spirits of the dead. 

Why did God say this? He sounds a bit like my parents when I was younger - “Don’t do that!” I’m not sure if you have read Deuteronomy, but if you have, you will know the story about the Israelites and their journey through the wilderness after God had brought them out of Egypt. God told the Israelites that they were His people and that He would take care of them. He was going to take them to a place called Canaan that had everything they could ever dream of: lots of food, plenty of sheep and cattle, and the land was beautiful. The one problem with Canaan is that it already had a whole lot of people living there. Those people did not follow God. In fact, they worshipped all sorts of other gods. 

Let me give you an example similar to this story: Let’s say there is a married man named George who loves his wife and wants to spend the rest of his life loving her. George and his wife have a good life together and look forward a happy future. One day George’s wife leaves him and goes to live with another man, but she comes home every now-and-then for dinner and to pick up some more clothes. Could you imagine how that would hurt George? Everyday up until then George had tried his very best to make sure that his wife knew he loved her. He gave her all the things that she needed to be happy when she was with him, and all he asked of her was to love him back. For her to go and live with another man would really hurt him because he had given her so much.

This is what happened with God and the Israelites. He had given them everything that they needed to be happy and He was always willing to help them. He did all of that and all that He asked of them was to love and obey Him. God told the Israelites that when they entered Canaan, they mustn’t do what the Canaanite people did. They mustn’t practice the things the Canaanites practiced, and most of all, they mustn’t worship the Canaanite gods. 

Unfortunately the Israelites didn’t listen and did exactly what God told them not to do.

Can you imagine how God felt? He had given them so much. He helped them to get out of Egypt where they were slaves for over 400 years. He gave them food and water every day while they were in the desert, and then gave them a beautiful land to rebuild their lives in. After all that God had done, they still disobeyed Him.

It hurts God’s feeling when we disobey Him, because that means that He isn’t our Lord - something else is. 

What does that have to do with playing Yu-Gi-Oh? I went and had a look at what Yu-Gi-Oh is about. I saw that it has been made into games and movies and came across a couple of descriptions of these. Here is one of them:

“Yu-Gi-Oh tells the tale of Yuugi Mutou, a shorter-than-normal high school student who was given an ancient Egyptian artifact known as the Millennium Puzzle in pieces by his grandfather. Upon completing the Puzzle, he is possessed by another personality which is later discovered to be the spirit of a 3000-year-old (5000-year-old, in the English anime) Pharaoh, who forgot everything from his time.”

It goes on to say that Yuugi Mutou has to help the Pharaoh to get his memories back. I read quite a bit more, but this particular piece was what grabbed my attention. There may be very slight variations, but one thing is still the same. This game has to do with wizards, magic, and being possessed by spirits. If you look at Deuteronomy 18:9-11, you will see that God warned the Israelites not to have anything to do with these things. Why? Because these things have to do with other gods. Things that take us away from God, like worshipping the gods the Canaanites worshipped, come from one person - Satan. Take a look at what Jesus said about the subject: 

Luke 11:23 (The Message)
23"This is war, and there is no neutral ground. If you're not on my side, you're the enemy; if you're not helping, you're making things worse.

Jesus is very straight-forward about this. We cannot be on both Satan’s side, and Jesus’ side, and we can’t be in between. As He said; there is no neutral ground

What I have tried to show you is that the games and programs of my time; Dungeons and Dragons and Masters of the Universe, all had one thing in common. They all had witches, wizards, magic, spells, and spirit possession. God is clear about what He thinks of these things. He doesn’t like them because they are from Satan. Have a look at the scripture to see how much dislikes these things:

Deuteronomy 12:29-31 (The Message)
29-31 When GOD, your God, cuts off the nations whose land you are invading, shoves them out of your way so that you displace them and settle in their land, be careful that you don't get curious about them after they've been destroyed before you. Don't get fascinated with their gods, thinking, "I wonder what it was like for them, worshiping their gods. I'd like to try that myself." Don't do this to GOD, your God. They commit every imaginable abomination with their gods. (Witchcraft, wizardry, talking to the dead, etc.) GOD hates it all with a passion. Why, they even set their children on fire as offerings to their gods! 

John, Jesus loves you so much and He wants you to have the best He has to offer. Satan knows that and is trying everything He can to get people to do things that take them away from God. But Satan is clever. He doesn’t just go to people and tell them to leave God. They would see what he is trying to do straight away. This is what the Bible says about Satan:

1 Corinthians 11: 14b
…Even Satan tries to make himself look like an angel of light.

Satan will trick people into thinking that there is nothing wrong with something he has made by making it look soooo good. Like an “angel of light” He will do that by making it extremely fun. He makes the characters look harmless, and they are even on the ‘good’ side. The problem is that they are using Satan’s tools to fight evil. Tools like magic and wizardry.

If Satan can hurt God, he can get Him back for kicking him out of Heaven. When my parents told me not to watch Masters of the Universe and play Dungeons and Dragons, they weren’t doing it to be mean. They were helping me to love Jesus as much as I can. So now that I am older and understand more, I know that everything that I do should say “I love you Jesus!”, and that includes the programs I watch and games I play.

John, I don’t want to make your mind up for you, but I do want to make sure that you have all the facts so that when you make a decision, you make the best one that you know to make.

So whatever you do, whether it is eating, sleeping, watching TV, or playing games, make sure that you are doing it so that when people look at you, they can say “Wow! John really loves Jesus!”



If you have read this far, I encourage you to read the website I mentioned previously. Halloween: A Convenant with Death  Whether or not to celebrate Halloween is an issue I believe each of us needs to seriously consider. I've shared my convictions...now it's up to you to make a decision.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Chinese leaders blocked from largest missions conference

This Sunday will kick-off the largest missions conference in the world...Laussane 2010. It will be held in Cape Town, South Africa and is expected to gather over 4,000 Christians who are committed to the Great Commission.

Chinese delegates, more than 200 of them, were invited to attend. Unfortunately, the Chinese government is doing all it can to block their attendance. Please read the below article and pray for our brothers and sisters in Christ. Please pray that God would intervene and open the doors for them to attend.


 
China Church Leaders Blocked from Attending Major Int'l Christian Gathering
Fri, Oct. 15, 2010 Posted: 03:12 PM EDT

China’s government is preventing Christian leaders in the country from attending a major international gathering of mission-minded leaders by stopping them as they reach the airport and confiscating their passports.

While it’s unclear how many Chinese Christian leaders have been stopped so far, more than 230 were invited to go to the Third Lausanne Congress on World Evangelization in Cape Town, South Africa.

And with delegates scheduled to arrive over the weekend, reports are trickling in of how adamant the Chinese government is about preventing delegates from China from attending.

On Sunday, five members of China’s "underground" church in Beijing were blocked from leaving the country from Beijing International Airport and at least one was detained.

Liu Guan, one of the five, told major Hong Kong-based newspaper Ming Pao News that border inspectors refused to let them go through after seeing information about the Lausanne Congress on their passport visas. Shortly after, five or six government security officers arrived along with other authorities who seized their luggage and confiscated their passports.

Though Liu reported that the law enforcement officers were polite and that there were no conflicts between the two sides, he was not allowed to board the plane and was sent home about three hours later. Liu’s passport and those of his colleagues will not be returned to them until Oct. 25 – the last day of the Lausanne Congress.

In another report, Texas-based ChinaAid Association said one house church Christian was blocked from flying out of Shanghai International Airport, though another was cleared and is en route to South Africa.

According to the Christian persecution watchdog group, which has been monitoring the situation closely, around 1,000 law enforcement officers have been assigned to restrain would-be Lausanne delegates from China and prevent them from boarding the planes.

Furthermore, efforts to prevent underground church representatives from going to Cape Town have been ongoing over the past few months.

According to ChinaAid sources, all of the 200 or so house church representatives who were invited to attend the Lausanne Congress – whether Uyghur Christians from Xinjiang or Han Christians from Beijing – have been contacted by authorities for questioning.

“Chinese house church Christians who have been invited to the Lausanne Congress are under much pressure from authorities who are using different means in order to prevent them from attending the congress,” reported the Shouwang Church in Beijing in a statement.

Shouwang, which planned to send eight formal representatives and four volunteers to Cape Town, also noted that one Congress invitee – Liu Jintao of Baotou, Inner Mongolia – was placed on a 15-day administration detention on Oct. 9. By the time he is released, Liu Jintao will have missed the Congress.

When asked the reason behind the government effort, Ma Zhaoxu, spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said Congress organizers failed to formally invite the legal representatives of China’s Christians – leaders of the Three-Self Patriotic Movement and the China Christian Council, the network of state-registered Protestant churches in China.

Ma accused Lausanne leaders of having “secretly extended multiple invitations to Christians who privately set up meeting points,” namely members of China's underground churches, which refuse to register because of conflicting beliefs.

“This action publicly challenges the principle of independent, autonomous, domestically organized, and therefore represents a rude interference in Chinese religious affairs,” Ma expressed in a statement Friday.

Leaders of the Lausanne Movement, which is spearheading the Congress, however, say TSPM/CCC representatives were invited but had turned down the invitation.

The likely reason the invitations were turned down is because on-site participants of the Congress are required to affirm The Lausanne Covenant and commit to Lausanne’s vision, integral parts of which center on global evangelization.

TSPM/CCC, in keeping in line with the Chinese government, approves only of evangelism in state-approved religious venues and private settings. Public evangelism is prohibited. Furthermore, critics have accused the organization’s leaders of placing submission to the state's authority above submission to Christ's authority.

The Lausanne Covenant, on the other hand, clearly states under its section on “Freedom and Persecution” that “[i]t is the God-appointed duty of every government to secure conditions of peace, justice and liberty in which the Church may obey God, serve the Lord Jesus Christ, and preach the gospel without interference.”

“We also express our deep concern for all who have been unjustly imprisoned, and especially for those who are suffering for their testimony to the Lord Jesus. We promise to pray and work for their freedom,” it adds.

With the Lausanne Congress set to officially commence Sunday, it is unclear how many of the 200 or so invitees from China will be able to get out of the country in time.

A number of groups, including the U.S.-based National Association of Evangelicals (NAE), have called upon the Chinese government to lift its restrictions and uphold religious freedom and the right to travel.

The travel ban, NAE noted in a statement Friday, violates the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights, which states that "every person has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country."

"This is surprising and disappointing," said NAE President Leith Anderson, who will be attending the gathering in Cape Town. "The People's Republic of China has recently welcomed dialogue with international Christians. I expected the Chinese to celebrate their presence and influence at Cape Town 2010 with delegations from 200 countries. I hope this is just a bureaucratic misunderstanding that will quickly be resolved so that China won't be the only country left out."

Starting Sunday, the Lausanne Congress will bring together 4,000 Christian leaders from around the world to discuss the future of the Church and world evangelization.

The Congress in Cape Town is the third major one to be held by the Lausanne Movement since 1974, when a committee headed by world renowned evangelist Billy Graham called for the first gathering.

The Third Congress, also referred to as Cape Town 2010, will be held Oct. 16 -25 at the Cape Town International Convention Centre.

Eric Young
Christian Post Reporter

Copyright © 2010 Christianpost.com. All rights reserved.


 

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Reconciliation - healing the wounds of the past

But you will be called the priests of the Lord; 
you will be spoken of as ministers of our God.
Isaiah 61:6

All this is from God, who reconciled us to himself through Christ 
and gave us the ministry of reconciliation:
that God was reconciling the world to himself in Christ, 

not counting men's sins against them. 

And he has committed to us the message of reconciliation.

We are therefore Christ's ambassadors, 

as though God were making his appeal through us. 

We implore you on Christ's behalf: Be reconciled to God.

2 Corinthians 5:18-20


Last year, my children and I studied the Crusades of European Christians to the Middle East and the horror that ensued...wholesale slaughter of Muslims and Jews under the banner of Christ, called for by Church leaders. This year we studied the history of the Native Americans, learning about their forced removal from their lands to the desolate reservations...the promises made by our American government and then revoked time and again. In addition, I live in Charleston, South Carolina, a city of much beauty but also, of much historical ugliness. At one time there were four African slaves for every one white person. Here, much of the land was darkened by the blood, sweat and tears of men, women and children, forced into incredibly hard labor because of the color of their skin. The realization of what was done by my ancestors and by the leaders of my country, has grieved me and my daughters. 

"How do we respond to such deep, gaping, sometimes ancient wounds? The simple answer lies in the humility of Jesus expressed through His Body, the Church," (Healing the Wounds of the World by John Dawson). 

It was 1993 and I was watching a video called The Hard Truth about the atrocities of abortion. Since Jr. High, I had always been outspokenly pro life. I knew the truth about abortion and it grieved me. But after watching this 9-minute video, I found myself suddenly, unexpectedly, on my face before God, wailing in grief over the sins of abortion, asking God to forgive "us." 

Why "us?" I have never had an abortion? I have never encouraged a friend to have an abortion. I have, in fact, worked in three different crisis pregnancy centers, encouraging women not to have abortions. But at that moment, in light of the horrible truth of the mass slaughter of babies, something deep inside me identified with the sin...with the sin of the human race that I am a part of. The Holy Spirit allowed me to open myself to godly sorrow and confess before Him the sins of the land. This is what Christian reconciliation is all about. 

"In responding to the broken heart of God, we need to identify with the sins of the nation in personal and corporate repentance. Even though Nehemiah was apparently a very righteous man and innocent of the specific sins that the nation of Israel had committed, when he prayed for the restoration of Israel he prayed as a member of the guilty nation, identifying with their sins, saying, "I and my father's house have sinned" (Nehemiah 1:6-7). Ezra went even further when he said, "Oh my God: I am too ashamed and humiliated to lift up my face to You, my God; for our iniquities have risen higher than our heads, and our guilt has grown up to the heavens" (Ezra 9:6).

Both Ezra and Nehemiah were righteous men, but they so identified with the people that they were interceding for that they considered themselves guilty with them. You may be a righteous person who is not involved in any direct way with the vices present in your nation, but there is no temptation which is not common to humanity (1 Corinthians 10:13). We can all identify with the roots of any given sin, "For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God" (Romans 3:23)," (Dawson).

Today we live in a wounded world. Many of those wounds have strong, historical roots. These wounds often prevent the Gospel of Christ from healing a person's heart. As Christians, we can take two approaches to this problem. We can look at a situation, like the Crusades, or the Native American land grab or the forced slavery of Africans and say to ourselves, "I didn't do this." "I had nothing to do with it." If we take this stand, nothing will ever change. 

Or we can take another approach. An approach that I was privileged to be part of after watching The Hard TruthWe can seek forgiveness for ancestral sins. While we honor our righteous ancestors (through remembering and teaching ourselves and our children about the history of America...the wonderful things done by this country), honesty dictates that we embrace both the grandeur and the guilt. 

"Have you ever attempted reconciliation (with someone) while the painful memories still tormented you? There will be no reconciliation with anybody until we bring our broken hearts to Jesus first. Healing begins when we honestly confront the past. Before we can even contemplate forgiveness, we need to face what really happened and bring it to the foot of the cross," (Dawson). That is what Christian-led reconciliation is. That is what it means to be the "priesthood of Christ." 

"God does not put guilt on the intercessor. We are not individually guilty for what our group did or our (nation) did, but He is waiting for the 'royal priesthood,' which is the redeemed in Christ, to openly confess the truth of the matter before Him and before people, just as the ancient Hebrew priests once did over the sins of Israel.

You see, it is very difficult to forgive if you have never heard an open acknowledgment of the injustices that wounded you or your people. On the other hand, such grace for forgiveness is released when we are asked for forgiveness by those who identify themselves in some way with the identity of those who contributed to our suffering," (Dawson). 

So what does reconciliation on the part of the Christian Church look like? How do we go about doing this? Here is one Welsh Christian woman's story.

"Rhiannon Lloyd holds trauma recovery classes for both Hutu and Tutsi survivors of the Rwanda genocide. If you were in her shoes, what would you say to these devastated people? Many have experienced rape or maiming or witnessed the murder of their family members.

This is what she does: in the shelter of a church house they meet for three days. Dr. Lloyd first persuades her grieving flock to write down on a piece of paper the worst experience that they had. When the awful facts have been confronted in this way, she has them come together in small groups to tell each other their stories. This is often the first trembling step towards trusting other people

Finally the terrible atrocities are listed on a large sheet of paper for all to see and the group is asked "What does God feel about this?" She then draws a big red cross through the list of hurts, symbolizing the cross of Christ. "This is the only place we can bring our sorrows," she tells them. "This is one of the reasons Jesus came to earth; not only to take upon Himself our sins, but also the sin of those who have sinned against us. Stand and tell God of the pain in your heart," she tells them. "What you saw, what it did to you. If you're angry, tell Him. If strong emotion comes, don't hold it back, because God will be weeping with you."

At first there is silence, but sobbing and wailing soon overcomes the cultural reserve of the Rwandans as people pour out their grief, anger and hopelessness before the crucified Christ. A long time later, when quiet returns, they sing softly the old chorus "What a friend we have in Jesus, all our sins and griefs to bear." Eventually Rhiannon brings in a big, rough wooden cross and positions it on the floor with a pile of nails. One at a time, believers begin to slip forward and taking their tear-stained piece of paper with its record of horrors, they kneel and nail it to the cross of Jesus. All afternoon the hammer pounds, echoing the agony of Golgatha, a reminder of Jesus' complete identification with our sufferings.

On the third day an amazing thing happens. People begin to testify that in the midst of genocide, God was at work in the darkness. They talk of heroes, Christian reconcilers who were the first to die. Anger at God begins to turn to empathy for God as believers contemplate His heartbreak over the way we humans treat one another.

With grief now resting lighter upon many, talk of forgiveness begins to emerge. Jesus is seen, not only as the innocent and suffering Lamb of God, but also the resurrected and righteous Judge who will uncompromisingly administer justice. Even now His hand of vengeance is stretched out toward the wicked, the very persons haunting the memory of survivors.

"If they repent, is it all right with you if God forgives them?" Rhiannon asks. Each person contemplates this question, weighing their own testimony of cleansing against their grief, many finally concluding that if God forgave them, they must eventually forgive others. Truly this is "beauty for ashes", the promise of God.  Isaiah 61:1-4 " (Dawson)

Today, throughout the world, other such movements are taking place. And they are taking place amongst Christians. 

"Identificational repentance is proving to be the key to opening doors that have been closed for centuries. 
One of the most significant examples is the Reconciliation Walk, coinciding with the 900th anniversary of the Crusades. European intercessors have walked the routes of the Crusades from west to east, carrying proclamations of repentance to Muslim and Jewish communities for the slaughter done in Christ's name. The response has been mind boggling...I don't know why we waited 900 years to repent for the Crusades, but I'm glad the breakthrough among Islamic peoples is coming in our lifetime!

In the United States, people are taking prayer journeys where American Indians were oppressed or massacred. In addition, there are prayer journeys to the historical slave ports of West Africa where black and white Americans weep together, learn together and find an intimacy that has eluded less radical believers, (Dawson).

Listed below are some other examples of recent reconciliation movements: 

1. Re-enactments
In Sydney, Australia, united Christians dressed in period costume gathered near the Opera House to remember the violent mass rape of female convicts by male convicts shortly after the arrival of the first fleet. An account was read publicly, Christian men asked forgiveness of their countrywomen and then escorted them ashore with the affection and dignity that they should have experienced the first time. Now, whenever the first story is told the action of Christians in the "90's must be told with it, thus sowing a healing memory into the story of the land.

2. Conciliatory Giving Celebrations
In California, a large suburban church bussed its members over to a struggling African American church. They surrounded the building and surprised the Sunday morning worshipers when a delegation entered the service and presented a $25,000 gift for the building fund.

3. Solemn Assemblies
Common around the world, these events have multiplied alongside the vision for seasons of united prayer and fasting. In Hawaii, 27,000 people gathered in a stadium to worship God and to seek forgiveness and reconciliation over the way elements of society had wounded one another in the story of the Islands. At the end, a Japanese leader knelt before the crowd and asked forgiveness for the bombing of Pearl Harbor.

4. Commemorative Ceremonies
Significant dates related to such things as genocidal atrocities arc becoming reconciliation events when believers gather to memorialize these painful memories in annual observances. German Christians have led the way.

5. Interactive Citywide Musical Events
Heal Our Land, a contemporary musical written for united church choirs has toured American and UK cities. Repentance and reconciliation prayer dealing with the wounds of America is featured. Similar events using the arts have emerged in several countries.

6. Justice Action Forums
In New Zealand and Australia, Christians are beginning to work with government agencies dealing with injustices in land use and the tribal claims that have been ignored. If there are unjust laws in your nation that perpetuate division, Christians cannot remain silent.

7. Country to Country or Regional Student Exchanges
Christian families are using the student exchange organizations as a way of sending young ambassadors or hosting foreign children in order to build bridges of love between cultures.

8. Appreciation Tours
Korean, Japanese, North American and European Christians moving beyond the traditional tours to the Holy Land and exploring the cultures of other nations in order to empathize with and appreciate the diversity of God's redemptive gifts within the peoples of the world. Reconciliation is a featured part of many of these journeys.

9. Representative Leadership Forums
Around the world Christians are acting as peacemakers by bringing together the leaders of opposing sides. Private Christians have taken surprising initiative in doing the diplomatic work required to get factional leaders or even heads of state to talk to one another.

10. Contextualised Issues Forums
In Durban, South Africa there has been estrangement and fear between Zulu people and Asian Indians stemming from the politically inspired violence that occurred in 1949. In 1997 Christian leaders began to call together the leadership of both communities and healing is beginning to take place. Mapping the wounds of a city quickly leads to the need for forums in which we listen respectfully to the grievances of others.

11. Diversity in Unity Celebrations
Old wounds are eventually put behind us and unity can be celebrated as an accomplished fact. Recently a Los Angeles city councilman visited a block party put on by a neighborhood filled with believers. "If the city was like this block, LA would have no problems," said the amazed politician after observing the obvious harmony between a great diversity of cultures.

12. Receptions, Banquets and other Hospitality-Based Gatherings
Eating together remains one of the most effective ways of bringing together elements of society and Christians with a ministry of hospitality will always be at the forefront of the ministry of reconciliation. This is an activity that begins in the home and the church dining hall and extends all the way to the convention center.

13. Student Culture Exchange Programs
In post Apartheid South Africa 'African enterprise' takes students from one culture and visits another culture with a view to bring understanding, reduce fear and increase admiration for the 'otherness' of the other people group. In some countries Christian schools are seen as an agent of re-segregation so cross-cultural interaction programs are imperative.

14. Cross-cultural and Denominational Interchurch Hosting
It is increasingly common for pastors to exchange pulpits or for whole congregations to visit one another for combined services and fellowship. Congregations have specialty ministry gifts and the division of labor that God has created becomes evident when believers really begin to explore and 'see' one another in the life of the city.

15. Joining with Feast Days and Cultural Celebrations
Chinese, Mexicans, Filipinos and most other groups with an international Diaspora have special seasons of celebration on the calendar. Events often take place in city parks and are open to all. When an invitation is given to celebrate somebody else's unique gifts and good fortune, Christians should be the first to rejoice with them.


These are just some ways that reconciliation can begin; ways that we can be in obedience to the call of Christ to be ambassadors of reconciliation. To read more about this issue, you can visit John Dawson's Reconcile website.

"What an exciting time then to be a believer in Jesus, an intercessor involved in Christ's ministry of reconciliation! We have the answer! (See 2 Corinthians 5:18-20.) It is only when we are reconciled to God the Father that the "otherness" of another gender, race or culture becomes an attraction rather than a source of insecurity and division.

This is why Jesus gives the ministry of reconciliation to the redeemed in Christ, the living church. The pagans will never succeed as peacemakers. There is only one Prince of Peace." (Dawson)