Friday, June 12, 2020

Cross-Cultural Talks #8

 

Video #8: Closing Thoughts... for now


  • How should you treat your neighbors both in the local and global context?
  • How do you walk through tension instead of going around it? 
  • Look up koinonia and agape in a Greek lexicon or Bible dictionary. 
  • How are koinonia and agape love illustrated in partnerships?

Cross-Cultural Talks #7

Video #7: Generosity




  • Respond to this quote, "Without listening, there is only selfish giving." 
  • How have you seen this in your mission partnerships?
  • Can you give without loving? 
  • Can you love without giving?
  • What is the role of money in missions?
  • How much time do you spend on raising money for missions, than on learning the biblical understanding of God’s global mission?

Cross-Cultural Talks #6

 

Video #6: Worship




  • Reflect on worship services in various countries. How is this different from your worship services?
  • Define worship in relationship to missions?
  • Is worship an event you attend on Sunday? If not, how do we live lives of worship? 
  • How does worship affect partnership?

  • Cross-Cultural Talks #5

    Video #5: Prayer




    Recite the Lord's Prayer from Matthew 6:9-13. 
    • How do you see the Lord's Prayer lived out in your partnership? 
    • How is prayer relational?
    • How does prayer unite your partnership?
    • How do you cover your friends and partners in prayer? 
    • What is the role of prayer in the formation of friendship and partnerships?


    Cross-Cultural Talks #4

     Video #4: Assumptions




    Americans tend to assume all physical needs must be met with donated contributions. In Haiti specifically, if a Western hand is offering support, in terms of a water system, school building, or a herd of goats, culture and worldview prohibits the leader from saying “no.” Instead he will say “yes” and agree, even if his community has no use for the product or project or a clear understanding of the underlying need for the project.

    • What do you assume about your partner?
    • Have you ever started a sentence, "You know what Haiti needs?" or "You know what Robert needs" before truly asking and listening to the needs?
    • Do you treat people as projects or friends?
    • When you interact with your partners, do they experience respect, gentleness & an awareness of their dignity?


    Cross-Cultural Talks #3

     

    Video #3: Mission According to the Gospel



    • What is missions? What does the word mean to you? What does it mean to your future partner?
    • How does the Gospel impact missions?
    • What is the difference between transactional mission and transformational mission? 
    • Do we really need each other?
    • What guidance do you receive from Philippians 2?

    Cross-Cultural Talks #2

    Video #2: What is Faithful Friendship & Interdependent Partnership




    Here we unpack this alternative phrase for traditional mission partnerships. Christian community depends on personal relationships. In today’s world of instant communication, short attention spans, and material development mistaken as mission, the sacrificial practices of friendship stand as evidence of God’s love for all people. Despite the dangers of unreflective paternalism, friendship remains the proof and the promise of Christianity as a multicultural, worldwide religion.

    • Describe dependency in your own words. 
    • What are the signs of unhealthy dependency?
    • What is the difference between self-induced and other-induced-dependency?
    • How do you guard against dependency?
    • How are partnership and friendship different?


    Cross-Cultural Talks #1

    Video #1: Introducing Faithful Friendship & Interdependent Partnerships



    ​**Please note: Throughout the series, we used the word "American" to identify those from the United States of America. We did this for ease of conversation, as "U.S.-American's" or "Westerners" can be cumbersome and/or confusing. When discussing with your team, please know that the term "American" can indicate those in North, Central, and South America.


    • How might the Good News guide friendships and partnerships? 
    • Does Scripture, in general, offer Biblical principles for friendships and partnerships?
    • Take a look at Philemon 1:6-7. How does Paul describe partnership?

    Thursday, June 11, 2020

    These Are People I Love: South Pacific Christian Fellowship


     

    Have you met my friend, Dr. John Woodward with South Pacific Christian Fellowship?

    Read John's testimony here:

    I feel most closely akin to Jonah, the reluctant prophet. I have had a lifetime of being called by God to do that which I perceived to be beyond my ability and outside my area of interest. This has resulted in my hesitancy to act until God wrestles me down to the point where I am finally willing to go. That process of God calling, God persuading and God’s presence along this journey has left me in awe. It began with my conversion through a friend in Jr. High. That same summer, the man overseeing the youth at my family’s ultra-liberal church also came to Christ, and within weeks of my newfound faith, he began Bible studies for our youth group. Serious study of the Bible would continue to grow and nurture my faith all through high school. God had prepared the way.

    At college, I joined InterVarsity, a small and dying ministry on our campus.  As a new member, I was asked into leadership immediately.  It was well beyond my training or aptitude, which was the perfect place for me, because it caused me to get serious about my faith and to learn how--out of necessity--to rely on God.  Serious prayer and Bible study followed.  However, this position also allowed me to oversee the death of this ministry as our staff left at the end of my Sophomore year.  Not being able to find another ministry that provided the hands on ministry that InterVarsity had, I began to lead Bible studies in the dorms.  In no time, we had over twenty students involved, leading to the rebirth of the chapter in the next year.  These four years of responsibility, leadership and discipling college students was God’s way of pushing me forward in my faith and giving me tools for my future ministry.  It also illustrated how God could accomplish great things in spite of me.

    At Urbana ’79, my future wife and I committed to giving two years of our lives to mission work before we settled down.  Not sure what this commitment would look like, we continue to pray and watch for two years.  At the small church we had joined in Illinois after graduation, a missionary came and reported on their work in Eastern Europe helping the oppressed church behind the Iron Curtain. We knew immediately this is where we were supposed to be. A year later, we were stationed in Vienna and began a two-year ministry to the suffering saints in Iron Curtain countries.  Two things happened from this experience.  First, I was humbled and ashamed about my lax Christian life.  Here were people who were suffering under the regular threat of imprisonment and even torture for their faith, and I - with so much freedom--did so little for the Kingdom.  I was truly challenged by these saints and learned from their example of faithfulness and passion for the Lord.  I desired to know and serve God in a deeper and more committed way.  Second, God was finally able to opened my stubborn heart.  I had been told by godly friends and leaders that I should be in campus ministry.  I had discounted any such suggestions.  I was now excited to pursue ministry as a vocation.  Now, I had a clear hunger and calling to return to kind of ministry I had been involved in in college.  Again, God was preparing the way, as a couple we had worked in Vienna called us on our return to the USA to say there was an opening for a campus minister at Iowa State University. 

    As a campus minister for twenty-three years, God place me in the perfect place for me to continue to grow and develop my faith.  My shortcoming is - on my own - I am not very good at growing my dependency on or purity in God.  However, with deep sense of concern and responsibility for the spiritual and emotional lives of the young people God had  given me, challenged me to be the best for God and for the students.  Through service and the heavy weight of responsibility to the college students, I continued to study, to pray, and learn reliance on the Lord to live a humble life of purity that I might be an example and encouragement. 

    Due to a lack of formal training in ministry and theology, I have relied heavily on personal Bible study.   I am very aware of my lack of knowledge and do all I can to learn from the Bible and to make applications to my life.  Through teaching, preaching and discipling programs, I have been greatly challenged to grow more in my understanding.  This has resulted in two important conclusions about God and His Word: The first is God’s deep concerned for the orphans and widows - the least among us - which lead me to my work with For God’s Children.  I desire more than ever to be at the center of God’s heartfelt concern.  Second, I have learned to test all theologies with my initial and simple reading of Scripture, which has led me to a strong appreciation of Arminian interpretation of Scripture and for Anabaptist and Wesleyan traditions.  

    I am a passionate but slow learner.  I know a lot about what I don’t know!  And I am the most blessed because I see God’s hand guiding me to places He clearly has prepared for me.  I am like Habakkuk who was told by God to “Look at the nations and watch - and be utterly amazed.  “For I am going to do something in your days that you would not believe even if you were told.” (Hab. 1:5).  I am more often “utterly amazed” as I get to be a witness to the wonderful work that God is doing, which I find myself somehow privileged to be a part. How I got here, only God knows, as He has (and continues to) prepared the way. 

    These Are People I Love: Costa Rica




     


     


    Have you met my friends, Wil & Yolanda Bailey with Costa Rica Mission Projects?
    Wil Bailey is a North Carolina Conference Missionary.  He received his Master of Divinity degree from Duke University Divinity School in May of 2003 and has been commissioned as a United Methodist Volunteers in Mission Individual Volunteer.  His wife, Yolanda, is an active, life-long member of the Evangelical Methodist Church of Costa Rica.
    Wil went to Costa Rica for the first time when he was 15 years old with a United Methodist Volunteers in Missions youth work team.  He went back every chance he got, and by the time he moved to Costa Rica in 2003, he had been 14 times.  The majority of those trips were mission work teams.  Wil says, "I have known since that first trip that doing mission work in Central America would always be a part of my life."  Wil has also been on work teams to Honduras and Belize and spent the Summer of 2001 working with the Methodist Church of Southern Africa in Johannesburg, South Africa.
    Wil spent the Summer of 2002 back in Costa Rica living with a pastor and his family in San Isidro.  It was over the course of those three-and-a-half months that God showed Wil that there was a ministry for him in Costa Rica.  The week before he left to come back to the States to finish seminary, Wil met with Bishop Fernando Palomo in San Jose, and the Bishop invited him to come to work full-time as a part of the Evangelical Methodist Church of Costa Rica.  
    In March of 2014 Wil and Yolanda were overjoyed to welcome the newest member of the Costa Rica Mission Projects family, Isabella Caroline Bailey Ulloa.
    Wil and Yolanda believe that when Jesus washed the feet of His disciples, he taught us, in dramatic fashion, that if we claim to be His followers, we must be servants to one another. Christian service comes in many forms and they believe that they have been called to provide opportunities for churches in Costa Rica and churches from other countries to serve one another and explore what it means for us to be part of a body that extends far beyond the walls of our own individual churches. Their hope is that they might be able to help foster long lasting, fruitful relationships between the congregations who participate in this ministry. It is very important to them that they avoid establishing or reinforcing already existing relationships of dependency, but rather, that the churches involved will discover the benefits of interaction with one another.  They understand the communion that takes place across borders, cultures and languages as a glimpse of God's Kingdom and as a sign of the work of the Holy Spirit among us.
    Wil and Yolanda (and Isabella) are looking forward to seeing how, with your help and participation, this ministry and the Kingdom of God will continue to grow.

    These Are People I Love: Czech Republic


     


     
      Go Serve: Czech Republic from First Shreveport on Vimeo.

    Have you met my friend, Jessica Weaver?

    Read Jessica's biography here:

         I have been a Christian for most of my life, raised in a loving Christian home in Texarkana, Texas. I fell in love with Jesus at a very young age. I was baptized and confirmed at Williams Memorial United Methodist Church in Texarkana when I was in the Sixth Grade. I was very active in my youth group and choir. I followed Him faithfully until my first year of college until I became disillusioned with church. I didn’t give up on God completely, but I did walk away from the church for a couple of years.  
         God began calling me back to Him and to ministry so I joined a Christian music group with a missions focus called Celebrant Singers. For two and a half years, I traveled with them to 45 states and 7 countries, mostly in Latin America, ministering to people through music, personal testimonies and prayer. 
         After my time with the Celebrants, I moved to Arlington, Texas to finish my Theatre degree. I also took a lot of Education courses during this time thinking I might decide to teach later on. I worked full time at a bank while taking a full course-load. When I graduated, I decided to continue working at the bank where I was promoted several times.
         I eventually began became the office manager for a local law firm. I handled all the finances and HR responsibilities. During that time, I began to feel a strong pull back towards missions. I went on a short-term mission trip to Paris and really felt a confirmation to pursue long-term missions. Shortly after that, I was laid-off from my job. It was just the push I needed to take the leap into full-time ministry. I then joined a Christian organization called Educational Services International (ESI) and taught English as a Foreign Language in Cheb, Czech Republic for almost three years. 
         I returned to the states for four years and worked at the Dallas Zoo as the Cash and HR Manager for the retail and food services. Then, ESI asked me to return to the Czech Republic as the Program Director for Central Europe. I oversaw 49 teachers in three countries (Czech Republic, Hungary and Slovakia). Unfortunately, ESI had to close its doors due to financial reasons in June of 2014. ESI made an informal agreement with TeachBeyond to help teachers who wanted to stay on in their respective countries of service. TeachBeyond hired me to help with this transition and to develop a National Schools TEFL program for them. 
         I feel that I am called to train, mentor, and develop teachers so they can be effective teachers and be empowered to minister outside of the classroom.  This job is the perfect mixture of my past job skills and my calling.
         I am an avid reader. I enjoy classic literature, young adult books and non-fiction. I love to crochet gifts for my friends and family during the long, Czech winter nights. I occasionally sing on the Praise team at my church in Prague. I like attending theatre and visiting museums. I am very interested in learning about other cultures.  

    These are People I Love: Uganda

    Have you met my friends, Jeremy & Tamara Boone?

    Jeremy and Tamara Boone, with Equip International, working for the transformation of Masese Slum in Uganda.

    Masese Slum, near the source of the Nile, became a refugee camp for the Karimojong Tribe during times of war and famine in the inhospitable northern region of Uganda. The Karimojong are despised and treated as less than human by their countrymen.

    Today, Masese is an overlooked slum of 4,000 men, women and children. The issues of poor sanitation, hygiene, communicable and tropical disease, hunger as well as economic and moral poverty have unnecessarily crippled this community.  

    We believe God wants to transform it from the inside-out, and we're working toward that end for His glory.






     

    These are People I Love: Romania

     

    Have you met my friend, Stefania Tarasut?

    Read Stefania's testimony here:

    I was born in Romania in 1979. My family immigrated to the United States in 1990 after the revolution. When communism fell, the borders were opened and my mom was quick to get us out before anything changed. Communism fell in December of 1989 and we were on a plane for Portland, Oregon in May of 1990. 
    We weren’t churchgoers, but because my parents needed a community, we joined the Romanian church. When I was a junior in High School, I had a friend who was fifteen years old. She went to a summer retreat and fainted in the shower. She drowned in a couple of inches of water. At her funeral, I was able to encounter Christ through the peace and calm that surrounded her family. I wanted what they had and understood that it was God’s love that allowed for that. I surrendered my life to Christ soon after that.
    As soon as I gave my life to Christ, I understood that God had called me to be a pastor, but Romanian women don’t become pastors so I tried and failed many things until I finally worked up the courage to embrace my calling my JR year of college.  I had resolved in my heart that I would be a children’s pastor, but God had other plans. I finished my undergrad work, followed by my MDiv at George Fox University. After serving as a children’s pastor for a few years, I became a youth pastor and today I serve as the English Ministry pastor at Eden Presbyterian Church, which is a first generation Korean church.  I’ve been serving at the church for about 12 years.
    A couple of years ago, my life took a completely different turn. I started working on my DMin at George Fox University. This program opened my eyes to a world that I could have never imagined.  Through a strange turn of events I had the opportunity to go back to Romania. Through that trip and a few more experiences I understood that God was calling me back to serve Romania. Never in my life did I think that I would ever go back to Romania, but here I am, 25 years after my family left, God has called me to go back and minister to my people. It is such a strange and fantastic opportunity. 
    So here I am today. I have over twelve years of intercultural experience under my belt, I’m half way done with my Doctor of Ministry, and ready to close one chapter and begin another.

    These Are People I Love: Haiti


    Haiti is never far from my mind, and these are sweet people I love.


     

    These Are People I Love: Australia

    Have you met my friends, Lynne & Rob Branham?

    Rob was born and raised in Moberly, MO and Lynne was born and raised in Newcastle, Australia. They married in 1986 we have three children - Andrew, Josh and Katie. Andrew is married to Amanda with one child Abe. Joshua is married to Shaina with one child Lily with another one on the way in November. They both live in Boise, ID and are pastors at the same Church called Hill City Church. Josh is the lead minister and Andrew is the Family minister. Katie recently started Bible College in Boise, ID, too!

    Lynne and Rob have been in ministry for over 30 years. They started serving while attending Central Christian College of the Bible. Lynne and Rob both served on Camp Teams, Weekend Outreach Teams, and Rob preached at small country Churches in the area. The first full time ministry was in Unionville, MO doing youth ministry. They learned so much pouring into the lives of young people and their families. They moved from there to Australia to be closer to Lynne’s family and Rob did a Full Time preaching ministry at her home Church for about 3 years. Then they moved back to the USA where Rob did some more education. Upon graduation, they moved to Fairbanks, Alaska where they ministered at Farewell Ave Christian Church. They lived there from 1995-2006. The Church grew and grew but it took a terrible toll on their family…..near the end of their time in Alaska, they were in need of a break and some redirection. They moved to Australia where Lynne’s parents had left her the family home. They took 2 years to regroup and see what God had in store for them. In 2008, they were asked to join another couple in planting a Church in a new subdivision called Northlakes….in Newcastle, Australia. Northlakes Christian Church was planted….the couple that asked them to join them has since moved back to the US and they are still there! :)

     

      Go Serve: Rob and Lynne Branham from First Shreveport on Vimeo.

    These Are People I Love: Russia


     

    Have you met my sweet friend, Olga Fateeva?

    These Are People I Love: New Zealand

    Have you met my friends Nate & Whitney Hutchison?

    In 2007, Nate & Whitney took a big risk and moved to New Zealand from the USA to help start new churches. Raising kids and starting churches internationally is a beautiful mess of a life, and they love it. All three of their kiddos were born in New Zealand. They're little kiwis! They desire to love God, to love each other, and to live in such a way that teaches their children to do the same.


     

    They started Church Northwest in 2019!

    Maundy Thursday: Give Me Those Feet