viernes, 31 de julio de 2009

Christmas Tears


Why not make this blog a little more personal, a place to let you see what God is doing here? I am thinking of last Christmas.

We appreciate so much the responses from those of you who are praying for Ishmael from Darfur. I believe that God is answering positively the specific request that I made, that he will be more interested in the Kingdom of God than in making money.

But to give you the full picture, I need to tell you more about the other man who was with us for a while, Milton from Ecuador. The 4 of us, Sharon and I and Ishmael and Milton, were eating Christmas dinner together. Milton had been telling us about his difficulties from the time he was a baby. One day his father, working out in the fields heard 3 shots from the direction of the house. Running back, he found his wife (in her 20’s) dead from gunshots, with signs of a struggle. Baby Milton had been rolled into some blankets so his crying wouldn’t be heard. His older brother, about 10 years old, had disappeared and was never found. Apparently bandits had come downriver on a boat and stolen what they could, and took off.

Growing up with a series of stepmothers, Milton determined that if he had children, they would always have a mother. Then he told us how his wife preceded him to Spain because of a job offer. He came later, leaving the children with relatives. When he arrived, he discovered that the 3000 Euros that he had borrowed to pay for paperwork for a job offer had gone to an illegal outfit, and that he had no job. He also discovered that his wife had left him for someone else and even though she was working, she wasn’t sending money to the children. At this point he just put his head down and sobbed, forgetting about the Christmas meal. Because now his children are without father or mother. When we hear him talking to them on the phone we can tell how desperately he is trying to fulfill both roles from a distance. I think he cries for them every day. (This story has been corroborated by Christian friends of ours from Ecuador who know Milton’s family)

Milton (interesting that a man who is illiterate should have a poet’s name) has shared with us his dream. He would like to scrape together enough money to pay his way back to Ecuador and have enough left over to put a corrugated tin roof on his house, and also take some tools back in his suitcase. He is no longer with us because he was offered what looked like a good summer job.

I think that God has big plans, huge plans. Working on memorizing Psalm 16, I noticed that David starts out asking for refuge. He takes refuge in God. That makes him a refugee. Turns out he has made a good choice because later he says, Psalms 16:5-6, The LORD is my chosen portion and my cup; you hold my lot. The lines have fallen for me in pleasant places; indeed, I have a beautiful inheritance.

If we are here representing the Lord and these people are asking for refuge, we can expect him to do far more abundantly than all that we ask or think (Ephesians 3:20). That gives us much reason to be grateful for you who are asking and thinking along with us.

After I requested your prayers for Ishmael, that he would not be carried away by materialism, I got to thinking. He’s 21 years old and has practically had no money except what he begged during 4 years on the streets of Morocco, trying to save enough to pay the boat people to bring him to Europe. No allowance as a kid, no Christmas gifts. Just the food that his widowed mother was able to scrape together and the pittance he occasionally earned as a child, laboring in the fields around the refugee camps of Niger, one of the poorest countries in the world. So it’s only right to pay him for his work. I will explain how we hope to do this.

The project that we are working on is supposed to eventually provide income for national workers who will join us in our outreach ministry. We are preparing land and, in the future, buildings, for a miniature model farm where children can be sent by their schools in the city to experience country life. You can see in the picture above some children outside the henhouse with their collection of eggs, making notes in English, in a little pilot project we did last June, where an English Academy asked for the use of the place for a week. This farm is operated under a non-profit organization that we have formed among a little group of Christians in different parts of Spain. The finances and the work of setting it up have been coming in gradually as people have picked up on the idea.

We are not asking for people to simply donate. For their time and money they will receive credit toward a "time-share". This will make them part owners of the property with a right to a one-week vacation every year at the place. Those who don't want to come can pass their privilege on to someone else, who will pay them, and they will begin to recover what they put in. In this way, you don't have to live in Spain in order to participate. As the participation increases we will be able to pay people like Ishmael and Milton and others. We recently heard of a young man from another African country who would like to prepare for Christian ministry and needs a place like this. This is what we are here for. Get in touch with us if you would like to participate.

sábado, 3 de enero de 2009

God is doing something

Reading about an interesting Christian community in Tasmania, I came upon this quote from someone who visited them. (http://christianity.org.nz/blogs/john/evangelicals-and-plain-folk.php) This kind of goes along with the feeling that I want to express on this blog. John writes: to my way of thinking there are only two kinds of Christians in the world - the wheat and the tares. Both seem to be found through most denominations. The tares are all coming together; building the apostate Christian kingdom on earth and it is on my heart that the wheat should not be isolated by them, but also come together to fight the spiritual battle ahead. If there are Christ’s children in the evangelical movement and in the various groups of Anabaptist origin, then I would love to see them forming connections with each other. To do so will require love, patience, and a view of what makes a genuine Christian that goes beyond adherence to overly specific doctrinal or lifestyle distinctives.

I would add that, here in our little rural town, those of us who are loyal to Jesus must be doing things together, sharing and being God's kingdom, being the church that Jesus said he would build. In other words, it doesn't take high-level hierarchical decisions to get us to start practicing genuine fellowship, communion, koinonia, "Gemeinshaft". The same goes for your neighborhood.

miércoles, 24 de diciembre de 2008

Christmas Greetings in Spanish

The title of this blog, Let's Go For it, refers to Christians being family in their own neighborhood. If you live in the city there probably are many Christians near you, those whom Jesus called "My mother and my brothers" (Luke 8:21). Even here in a rural town we are an international family. Last Sunday our little group represented 10 nations, Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Ecuador, Holland, Mexico, Morocco, Spain, Sudan, and the US. Hey, that's 4 continents.
We share with you our singing of Silent Night:

domingo, 6 de abril de 2008

The Essence of Christianity

Every Christian is a child of God

Our Father in heaven

How do we become children of God?

John 1:12 But to all who did receive him, who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God

This means that we are family. All Christians are brothers and sisters.

As family we are God’s representatives in the world.

hallowed be your name

Christians have a responsibility

Your kingdom come

Our prayers and our actions are directed toward the fulfillment of Jesus’ plan for this world.

Where do we carry out this responsibility?

your will be done on earth as it is in heaven

We introduce God’s reign wherever we find ourselves on this earth.

How can we describe the essence of the Kingdom of Jesus?

It is all about the poor in spirit, the meek, the merciful, the peacemakers and the complete description of Christian Community in the world which we find in Matthew chapters 5 to 7.

Christians have huge resources for carrying out this responsibility

Give us this day our daily bread

We are taught to be directly dependent on God for everything we need. He has never been known to disappoint those who depend on him.

and forgive us our debts as we also have forgiven our debtors

When God applies his forgiveness to us (1 John 1:7), our enemy, Satan, cannot hold us back from powerfully carrying out God’s will

What is our source of power as children of God?

We have the Holy Spirit, who raised up Jesus from the dead, we have the Word of God which never fails and we have the right to make direct requests to God, an especially powerful resource when Christians join together to pray (Matthew 18:19). We have the power of love.

Jesus demonstrated this power, establishing his rule without the need for the world’s financial resources, military support or political intrigue. When we depend on these factors, we correspondingly relinquish our dependence on God.

We recognize the existence of a powerful enemy, but our Father is always superior in every way.

and lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil

We have a guarantee of success

For yours is the kingdom and the power and the glory, forever. Amen

Death did not stop Jesus. Empty pockets did not stop Peter and the apostles. In a divided world, the unity of genuine followers of Jesus is one of the greatest attractions that there is. We love one another. We speak well of each other. We help each other through our difficult moments.

The Essence of Christianity is more than a carefully crafted creed. It is the fact that we are one family, the body of Jesus, co-ordinated by our Head, to demonstrate to all the world what he is like and thereby become irresistibly attractive to those observing and as a result, those who are appointed by God will believe (Acts 13:48)

viernes, 29 de febrero de 2008

Christian Neighbors

Today I would like to share some thoughts about our neighbors. Probably most of you have neighbors nearby. In our case, our closest permanent neighbor is an elderly goatherd who lives about a 15 minute walk away. If our neighbors are Christians, no, let me restate that, if our neighbors say they are Christians, then we have a special responsibility to them, and they to us. Even if they don’t attend "our church". I really would like some feedback on the following statement: if your neighbor is a Christian then he is a child of God and is your brother and therefore you need to help each other to grow spiritually even if you don’t attend the same church. You also need to serve God together in your neighborhood.

Yesterday Sharon (who is American) went into town to shop, and after having coffee with two Spanish ladies, María and Vicenta, met with Kelly (Brazilian), the only (?) Christian lady in town. While praying with Kelly, Sharon mentioned the Argentinian neighbor upstairs. As she was praying for Eloisa, there was a knock on the door, and there was Eloisa. She knew that they were meeting, and wanted to join. So a Brazilian Pentecostal and an American rather conservative Evangelical can work together to evangelize an Argentinian neighbor in Spain.

We have seen where Christians of different backgrounds are willing to work together until there are enough of each kind, so they can form separate groups. Why? The question I am trying to raise here is, what right do we have to fellowship mainly in our comfort zone? Isn’t God calling us to serve him together with his children that he has placed alongside us? In the case of Israel in the Old Testament, God protected people by placing boundaries. My own Mennonite people have sometimes chosen or been forced to establish colonies within certain boundaries: in the Ukraine, Latin America, etc. But this is 2008. Most of us know Christians of different persuasions who, unless we happen to be together in some type of "parachurch" ministry, say to each other, "Hi, how ya doin’" and continue on our way.

The reason I changed my phrasing earlier to include those who say they are Christians, is because of what we learn from Paul. Certain actions are to be taken when someone claims to be our brother. In determining whom to separate from, we are told that in the case of "anyone who bears the name of brother" (1 Corinthians 5:11) their personal conduct has to be dealt with. We’re talking about neighbors in this discussion, people whom we see on a regular basis. Maybe we’ve already decided that they aren’t Christians because they belong to a certain group. Maybe we shouldn’t judge that quickly. Maybe we should take time to get to know them. Maybe we should continue this blog some other time.

martes, 12 de febrero de 2008

7 reasons why we should be seen as one body

  1. Jesus prayed "that they may be one"
  2. We are members of his body. It should be the most co-ordinated body in the universe
  3. This being one body is what it will take for non-Christians to recognize that we really belong to Christ
  4. It seems that one of the highest priorities for Christians is to love one another. We are told,
    let us not love in word or talk but in deed and in truth. If this happens, we will be a brilliant light to the world
  5. We have the Spirit of God. Therefore we should be eager to maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.
  6. We will be happier and healthier all around if we promote one another's well being in a maximum way
  7. Being united here on earth is good practice for eternity

Of course, we need to arrive at the difficulties which have kept Christians from really being one. Everything in its time. But how about if you aim at loving someone today.

lunes, 7 de enero de 2008

Did this man have to die?

This past week (January 5) was the anniversary, noted in Wikipedia's "On this Day", of the death of Felix Manz. I think it is appropriate that most Christians who enjoy the things he died for do not know who he was. His name is written where it really counts. At the same time, we can be strengthened and encouraged by knowing about key people. I have been encouraged in recent years, for example, by re-reading about Hudson Taylor, 50 years after being introduced to "Spiritual Secret"

Manz, along with a few friends, was a pioneer in standing for separation of church and state, baptism of believers (in contrast to Martin Luther and John Calvin). He actually was baptized 3 times, first as an infant, then as a believer, and finally as a martyr in Lake Zurich. Killed by Protestants because he practiced believers' baptism. As part of his defense he said that he wished "to bring together those who were willing to accept Christ, obey the Word, and follow in His footsteps, to unite with these by baptism." Pretty serious offence huh? Definitely worthy of capital punishment.