Thanksgiving Eve One Year Later: Sean

Sean, Laura and Lizzy, Megan, Michael and Heather--their stories last Thanksgiving Eve moved us to tears and moved us to worship our good and gracious Father. OneWord Journal followed up with these grace-filled people to find out what God has been doing in their lives one year later.

First, Sean.

"Sometimes a light surprises the Christian while he prays; it is the Lord who rises with healing in his wings.

I used to think that years and years of maturity as a strong believer resulted in great, perpetual clarity of understanding, not only with one's theology, but also with life itself. Now I see that this side of eternity often remains painfully mysterious even to a strong believer. When I read those lyrics (above) from a great hymn, I recognize the word "sometimes."

Rather than having arrived at some kind of utter clarity at this stage of maturity as a believer, I'm learning instead simply to appreciate the "sometimes." The glimpses of joy in all of life that sneak up unexpectedly . . . the simple goodness found in the "daily"ness of life or worshiping at church with family and friends.

This leads to another quote from 1 Corinthians 13:12, "Now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face." I appreciate the honesty of this verse--acknowledging that even in close fellowship with the Lord as believers, our view of eternity is often dim in our journey. But in this verse is a subtle twist that gives me great joy. Though we now see dimly, we at least see something.

Through Scripture, I have the joyful clarity of the gospel.

All Is Safely Gathered In . . .

I am a gardener, not a farmer, but I get that you have to wait for the harvest. It's a time of gathering after the season has ended.

In gospel work, we might not even be around for the harvest. That was true for the 2014 World Impact team to Italy, who served with College Church missionaries Marc and Ruth Brucato and national ministry and church leaders at English camps in Bologna, Italy.

Ester, a colleague of Marc and Ruth in Italy, sent this email about Rania, a young woman who lives in a foster care community for teenagers. Rania's journey of faith started in May before the team even arrived. Another girl in the foster care community had died from cancer, and Rania was angry and full of doubts about God. When she came to English camp last summer and heard the testimonies of faith from the World Impact team, Rania was deeply touched.

The school year began and Rania showed up for Sunday church services as well as prayer meeting on Tuesday nights. Ester knew God was working in her heart, but still hadn't heard from her.

Rania is on the left with Rachel, one of the World Impact team members.

Rania is on the left with Rachel, one of the World Impact team members.

Then Rania came to Ester's house for dinner. "We had an amazing conversation," emailed Ester. "When I asked her what was going on, she said that everything had changed after the English camp.

"She told me: 'At one point I just believed that all this was true and at the very moment I believed, I sensed it. Life was different, everything was different.' Rania went on about how Jesus is making sense of all her troubles in life, how he is teaching her to forgive those who hurt her, how she has found true friends and a family among us, how she wants to stop going out with all these guys and wait for the right one. I had a hard time finding words to comment because I was in absolute awe of the work that the Holy Spirit is doing in this girl!"

Ester ended her email with these amazing words, "I want to thank you for being part of this great work last summer. Our work for the gospel is never in vain, even when we don't hear such stories, but hearing them gives all our sweating, fatigue and anxieties a totally different taste. Let's glorify God for inviting us into this amazing redeeming work."

 

 

 

 

Collateral Damage

The fragile ceasefire between Ukraine and Russian was shaken by the so-called election of pro-Russian separatists to power in Luhansk and Donetsk in eastern Ukraine. The ceasefire took another blow when 30 trucks and 32 tanks crossed into eastern Ukraine from Russia on Friday, November 7.

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The greatest fallout from this conflict is the thousands of refugees who have fled eastern Ukraine for safety and shelter in western Ukraine. For Christians in western Ukraine, however, these men, women and children are a harvest to be safely gathered in for the gospel.

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In October, Jill Nelson, a reporter with WORLD magazine, traveled with our longtime partner Mission Eurasia (formerly Russian Ministries) and College Church missionary Mark Papierski in Ukraine. She saw firsthand the crisis and the response of the church in western Ukraine through the nationally-led "I Care" Refugee  Assistance Program in Ukraine. Read Jill's report, "Cold Realities."

The Thanksgiving Eve offering will help the "I Care" Refugee Assistance Program in Ukraine as well as helping lepers in Nepal previously unreached by the gospel and refugee children right here in Wheaton.

Big C, little c: An Interview with Dr. Niel Nielson

OneWord Journal talks one-on-one with Dr. Niel Nielson

Niel Nielson

OneWord: Niel, thanks, for letting us follow up with some questions we had after you spoke at College Church last month. First, would you comment on your big “C”/little “c” callings in light of Christ saying the harvest is plentiful but the workers are few? (See Luke 10:2.)

Niel: A Christian’s big C calling is, of course, all about being a faithful gospel-driven worker in God’s harvest, in response to his saving grace toward us. Right now, I’m grateful that God’s little “c” callings are taking me where there are huge openings for me—as the person that I am—to be a gospel-harvest worker in places like Indonesia, the largest Muslim-population country in the world as well as in education, health care, business and media enterprises. These are places where there are opportunities to bear witness, in both subtle and overt ways, to the glory and goodness of God in Jesus Christ. These little ‘c” callings have brought me new friendships with people from different backgrounds and perspectives, many of whom have never had a meaningful relationship with a Christian.

OneWord:  But aren’t missionaries and pastors “called” to a specific field or ministry? Would you explain a bit more of how you define the big “C” and little “c” callings, and what difference does that make in my life?

Niel: Yes, of course, pastors and missionaries are called—but so is every Christian called to follow Christ in the particular pathways of his or her gifts and passions and opportunities. Part of our problem is that we often think of calling only in terms of ministry or missions rather than how God purposefully deals with every believer in light of the big “C” calling of the gospel.

One of the first questions I ask a person in a job interview is, “What is your calling?” in the little “c” sense. I want to know how that person understands him or herself as created by  God in specific ways, placed into specific circumstances, given certain experiences and invited to see all aspects of life as specific ways to respond worshipfully to God’s big “C” gospel calling.

OneWord: To be honest, we at OneWord Journal are pretty comfortable with the subtle ways of gospel witness, but you emphasized proclamation—actually speaking the gospel. How can I actually tell someone about God’s big “C” gospel calling if my work environment is openly hostile to that?

Niel: Welcome to gospel witness! One of the great encouragements for me right now is the opportunity to walk alongside brothers and sisters in Christ who are doing just that—proclaiming Christ in hostile environments at work but even more intensely in their communities. Of course, we are instructed in Scripture to be as sly as foxes—reading contexts and situations wisely, asking probing questions, sharing our personal stories warmly and showing genuine love and kindness and hospitality toward those with whom we work and near whom we live.

OneWord: From what we’ve observed, it can appear as if Christians are more afraid of the “marketplace” than they are of engaging it. Any words of encouragement you can give?

Niel: First, what is “the marketplace?” And what would it mean to engage “it?” It’s simply a word for the multiple contexts where people interact on many levels as they live out their lives. In that sense, we all are already, all the time in “the marketplace”—engaging other people at the grocery store or the fitness club or the office or our children’s school or across the back fence.

My encouragement would be to aim for gospel engagement with others by first, learning simple forms of gospel evangelism, and second, practicing under the mentoring oversight of someone more experienced. Ask for help from one of the pastors or someone you know who is a faithful, fruitful gospel witness.

OneWord: You have faced a lot of changes over the years: jobs, careers, relocating to name a few, how have you managed to keep God’s big “C” calling in your life? Has it ever been more difficult or challenging in one place than another?

Niel: Above all else, it’s important to believe—really believe—that the gospel truly is the most important, foundational, motivating thing in your life. Without that, it will always be a struggle to connect work to witness. With it, you won’t be able to avoid it.

I’d say that it hasn’t primarily been a matter of more or less difficult or challenging, but rather a matter of becoming discerning about different contexts, and what path the big “C” gospel witness looks like in those contexts.

For example, in southeast Asia, there is very little secular thinking. Everyone is religious and religious faith is openly acknowledge and discussed. So gospel witness often happens quite normally in casual conversations as I tell people about my faith in Jesus Christ or pray with or for them, using phrases of my faith in Jesus.

It’s helpful to continually remind myself that all the particular events and episodes of my life are both pointers to and parts of the one big story of God’s redemption in and through Jesus Christ.

I recently preached in a service in Jakarta from the Book of Ruth—what a great example of how a particular story (a worthy, faithful man who shows kindness to a needy woman, and according to Jewish law, “redeems” her) points to the big story of God showing kindness to and redeeming sinners. But this story not only points to God’s big story it is also part of the big story. Boaz and Ruth marry and have children, and lo and behold, their great-grandson is David, and we know where the story goes from there!

My final words of encouragement are to seek relentlessly to understand how every event or situation or job points to and is part of God’s big story, and then to live out the particulars intentionally as part of God’s big story, God’s big “C” calling.

OneWord: Thanks, Niel, for your passionate commitment to God’s little “c” callings and his big “C” calling. And, if you missed Niel in October, watch or listen to him.

A Pastor Prays for the Persecuted

Dr. Wendell Hawley shares with us a prayer for the persecuted church

Sovereign Lord,

We are overcome by the awful persecution of Christians in various places.

This Satanic activity against our brothers and sisters in the household of faith

would overwhelm us were it not for the fact that you know

every dear child of yours,

every detail,

every situation!

To the church at Smyrna you said: "I know your tribulations."*

and to the faithful in Pergamum: "I know where you live."*

We take solace in this--you know!

But still we would be dismayed for the persecuted ones

Were it not that you have said: "He that is in us is greater than he that is in the world!"*

You know, oh Lord, that every believer lives in a non-believing world

a world at times demonstrating its hatred of you and yours.

But your will and your purposes will be accomplished!

You are greater!

So we pray

that tested believers

persecuted saints

those who belong to you will know your presence

and your power

and your protection in fresh new ways

and that each one will experience

reassurance

and hope

and confidence in the Lord of Glory.

Jesus, we pray that you will make real to the persecuted ones

Your very words of promise:

"Fear not little flock,"* praying in

every instance fear will be replaced with the joy of the Lord,

"who loved us and gave himself for us."

Amen

*Scripture passages in the order they were quoted: Rev. 2:9; 2:13; 1 John 4:4; Luke 12:32; Gal 1:4.

 

When Ebola Invades Your Ministry

If October’s one word is salt, then perhaps we ought to take our cues for how to respond to the Ebola outbreak from Mercy Ships, and not Fox News.  

Brian Blackburn, the chief administrator of the Mercy Ships Academy, recalls that in January, the ship was in the Democratic Republic of Congo and planned to go to Guinea for its next medical outreach. “Ebola cases were coming in,” explains Brian, and the situation for Mercy Ships was changing month-by-month.

This spring, the ship decided to change course to Benin, West Africa.  After consulting with the  Africa Mercy chief medical officer on the ship and the Mercy Ships leadership team, plans changed again. “We don’t have the environment or isolation wards,” explains Brian. “We are not a first responder in this way. So at that time, the managing director of the ship explored a medical outreach in Madagascar.”

Brian is upfront about the crew’s reaction. “The crew is disappointed and feels as if we have disappointed people that we have spent years working with. A lot of people on the ship have ties to West Africa,” Brian points out. “I am keeping track with four friends about what’s going on. At first, they said it wasn’t as bad as what was being reported, but now they’re saying that people are dying, and the situation is horrible.”

Although Mercy Ships isn’t equipped to meet the needs of an outbreak such as Ebola, they are equipped to pray. “This has really gotten our whole crew to pray,” says Brian. “But if our ship had been there, it would have been quarantined, and then we wouldn’t have been able to go anywhere.

“The majority of our single people are ready to risk their lives and die, but the leaders of the organization are not prepared to make that decision for everyone else, remarks Brian. “ I’m encouraged to see individuals stepping up like at Samaritan’s Purse.  But when you’re the leader and you have to decide not just for yourselves but for the whole group, it is harder.  Some of our crew are torn and feel like they’re running away from the situation, so it is a struggle for those of us who have strong ties to West Africa.”

Once Mercy Ships received permission from the government of Madagascar, they took the three-week sail to Madagascar, where they were last in 1997. The ship will be there until May 2015.

“There are medical needs everywhere,” Brian points out.  “The United Nations has ranked the worst countries, and Madagascar is among the lowest. We are still meeting the need, just in a different country.”

Brian says that Mercy Ships could literally have ten ships in Africa and still not meet all of the needs. “We’re trying to keep our crew safe and, at the same time, do our best to meet some of the need.”

Mercy Ships has every intention of returning to port in West Africa “I think the people of Africa are the most creative people I’ve seen. They do things in a way that I would never think of doing things. There was a story of a young woman who used trash bags to make her own protective suit so she could care for her family.  When you lack things, you become creative.  Could you live on less than $2.00 a day?

“The media always shows the ugly and dirty, but Africa is beautiful,” Brian says. “Ten minutes outside of any city in Africa is beautiful. In fact, I feel safer in West Africa than I do in downtown Chicago.”

Looking down the road, Brian says that Mercy Ships will return to West Africa. “When it’s safe to go back in, we will to do training and rebuild medically.” Brian concludes with a request for prayer for wisdom for him and his wife, Warrie, and their two daughters as they rejoin the ship’s community.

Read Mercy Ships statement on the Ebola outbreak in West Africa

Young, Christian and Professional

As the Fall Missions Festival was about to begin last week, College Church missionary Mark Papierski left Wheaton for Moldova and Ukraine. He landed in Chisinau, Moldova, where he and the other arriving passengers were serenaded with traditional Moldovan folk music.

As the leadership development director at Mission Eurasia (formerly Russian Ministries), Mark's final destination in Moldova was the Young Professionals Forum on Missions. Some 400 young professional men and women from Belarus, Ukraine and Moldova participated in this one-day conference that echoed the theme of our Fall Missions Fest, "Marketplace Connections for Global Impact."

Here's a report from Mission Network News about the conference and the challenge to these young Christian professionals.

After the conference, Mark and his colleagues ventured to the city of Slavyansk, Ukraine, within 60 miles of areas that are under pro-Russian separatist control. Along the way, they met Pastor Grigoriy Pavlovic, who is meeting war-weary people's physical needs through Mission Eurasia's "I Care" program and meeting their spiritual needs with the gospel. Churches in cities such as Slavyansk are caring for the needs of refugee families all across eastern Ukraine. You'll hear more about the "I Care" program in the next few weeks leading up to Thanksgiving. 

Young professionals worship and reflect at the October' forum in Moldova.

Young professionals worship and reflect at the October' forum in Moldova.