Great Commission Sunday-2013

Great Commission Sunday-2013

from Alliance News by Marvin Harrell

His Light is Freely Available

For many, the world is a place of pain and despair. But Jesus illuminates the dark areas of our lives, and His strength is made perfect in our weakness. Through Him, we go and make disciples of all nations, pointing lost people to the One who gives eternal life.

Great Commission Sunday: It’s a Family Thing

We have been set apart for an important task. It’s called the Great Commission. Jesus invites us to bear the light that will release people from the bondage of sin, the curse of oppression, and the sting of death.

Popout

The Task at Hand

The Alliance family is embracing this sacred task. In His Name and by His power we are:

  • Sharing the gospel with those who haven’t heard
  • Discipling new believers in the Christ-life
  • Training and equipping future church leaders
  • Planting churches in the United States and throughout the world
  • Providing life-saving medical care to the poor and afflicted
  • Visiting prisoners who have lost hope
  • Restoring broken marriages
  • Reaching out to our hurting neighbors as they face trials and adversities

Why are we doing these things?

Because we remember what it’s like to be in the dark. We ache for those who remain there. And we long to introduce them to the One who turns their darkness into light. This is what Great Commission Sunday is all about.

Great Commission Sunday is our opportunity to come together as the U.S. Alliance family and extend the light of Jesus further into the darkened areas of our communities and the world.

Past responses to Great Commission Sunday have enabled us to:

  • Send workers to new fields, like RussiaMongolia, an

    Give joyfully. Give generously. Give light.

    Your gift will help introduce lost, suffering, and displaced people to Jesus Christ—the only One who can turn their darkness into light. A generous response to this offering will enable us to send new workers to parts of the world where less than one percent of the population follow Jesus.

    Your Great Commission Sunday Offering is administered through the Great Commission Fund (GCF), which supports and equips 650 Alliance workers in 66 countries. The GCF also helps fund U.S. church planting,Alliance higher education, and a variety of U.S.-based support ministries.

    Senegal

  • Create access points to the gospel in North Africa, North and Central Asia, and the Middle East
  • Expand our work in EuropeAfrica, and Asia
  • Plant churches in communities throughout the United States

 

Praying Without Sleeping

Praying Without Sleeping

March 1, 2013

By an international worker serving in the Alliance North and Central Asia region

For months Abid* had observed his brother, Boulos, growing in his new faith in Jesus. Impressed by the changes Abid witnessed, he began attending Boulos’ house church, which is hosted by an Alliance worker couple.

Abid began participating in discussion times and bowing for prayer at the meetings. (Everyone sits on mats that surround a long, low makeshift table in the couple’s living room.) He even began helping to prepare for the group’s worship together.

But something held Abid back from committing his life to Jesus.

Pressed to Pray

“I had been praying that Abid would come to Christ in repentance and faith,” says the house church host, who is learning the language of Abid and Boulous’ people.

“And I felt a pressing urgency to pray fervently for him,” she says, recalling the night recently when the two brothers arrived early for the house meeting.

That night, Za’in, the group leader, shared from John 3.

“I continued to pray for Abid,” says the host. “But trying to understand a language you don’t know well can be tiring! I just wanted to close my eyes and fall asleep!

“But, my living room was full of people, and I knew that the deep impression in my heart to pray for Abid was God’s love for him.”

As the study in the Word neared its end, Abid was visibly moved.

Za’in, also sensing the Spirit’s moving, asked Abid if he wanted to become a Jesus follower.

Questions

That’s when Abid revealed why he was hesitant to commit his life to Jesus: “But what if I fall away after a few years? Can I ever come back?”

One of the women in the group shared that God would give His Spirit to Abid to protect him. She also told him that the group would help him stay strong.

Za’in asked again: “Abid, are you ready to repent?””

“Yes.”

Right then and there, Abid gave his heart to the Lord.

“What a joy it was to hear Abid repent of his sin and open his heart to Christ with all of us present,” says the host.

“What joy will be ours, when one day around the throne we hear our Savior’s great grace proclaimed. May He be pleased to add many more to that number!”

*Names changed for security reasons

What You Can Do

Pray

  • Praise God that Abid has come to new faith in Christ! Pray for him to grow daily, firmly grounded in his faith and filled with the Holy Spirit.
  • Pray also that Alliance international workers in the North and Central Asia region will know how to make disciples here in obedience to the Great Commission, a worker requests.
  • Join the Alliance family to pray for our international workers worldwide, who daily minister in challenging circumstances among people with great needs. Use our Alliance Weekly Prayer Requests to assist you.

Give

  • Give to the Great Commission Fund (GCF) and support Alliance workers who are engaged in strategic ministries that open doors to introduce people to Jesus.
  • Give now

Learn More

  • Watch the encouraging news how the gospel is spreading through North and Central Asia.

Answered Prayer Draws Widow to Jesus

Answered Prayer Draws Widow to Jesus

from Alliance News by Julie Daube

By Mark Edwards, serving in Taiwan

“A-Zhen,” a middle-aged widow with two teenage daughters, was barely able to make ends meet. We first encountered her three years ago when her younger daughter came to us for free math tutoring that our church provides. Some of our team members have been meeting with A-Zhen weekly for caregiving and discipleship. She is preparing for baptism and has given glory to God for several answers to prayer:

When I was under great financial pressure, two Alliance international workers from the Four Lakes Alliance Church, Rachel Kramer and Hannah Hwang, came to my house to pray for my needs. A few minutes after they left, I received a telephone call asking if I was interested in accepting an offer for a regular cleaning job! This helped relieve our family’s dire financial straits.

I have a friend who enjoys gambling, and I have continuously prayed for him to be able to stop. One day he went out again to gamble. Just then he felt as if there was a person pulling on the corner of his clothing and telling him to stop gambling. My friend told me that he didn’t understand how something like this could happen. Then he departed from the gambling den to go fishing. Afterward, he never gambled again!

This same friend enjoys fishing. When his fishing pole broke recently, he couldn’t afford to buy a new one. So I prayed about this matter and asked acquaintances if they had an old fishing pole they were willing to part with. Three days after I prayed, my cousin called me. While we were chatting, he mentioned he had a fishing pole but doesn’t have any time to fish. He was willing to give the pole to my friend. Not long after, I received the fishing pole in the mail and delivered it to my friend. He was so happy!

I have two daughters, but we have only one bicycle. Due to the remote location of our home, a second bike was a necessity. I prayed about this matter. Not long after, a friend used the points he collected by filling up at the gas station to give our family a brand new bicycle. Praise God for hanging His head down to listen to my prayer!

What You Can Do

Pray!

Pray for A-Zhen and others like her in South-Central Taiwan. Pray that through answered prayers to the God of Jesus Christ, dreams, visions, and other supernatural encounters, they will decide to follow Jesus and be baptized.

  • Use the weekly Alliance Prayer Requests to pray for Alliance workers like Rachel Kramer who are pointing the way to Christ.

Learn More

Give

  • Give to the Great Commission Fund (GCF). In doing so, you make it possible for people like A-Zhen to come to know Jesus through the ministry of Alliance workers.
  • Give now

Piper on Tongues

Shel- I agree with most of what he’s saying here. He barely scratches the surface on the community and liberation aspects of tongues-prayer. Oh and most global pentecostals would say you are filled/indwelt by the Spirit when you receive Jesus AND there is an additional/ongoing subsequent to salvation (subsequence) experience of the Baptism of the Holy Spirit that is evidenced by tongues (and most except a few denominations, will add OR other gifts).

He does miss the point by a MILE that tongues in part does the bidding of God because it is “strange” and outside our language control in the usual sense.

Pray for Mali

Pray for Mali

from Alliance News by Janet Root

A report from our Alliance team in Mali

On Friday, France began military intervention to halt the advance of rebels toward Mali’s capital, Bamako, from bases in the north and east, the BBC reported Monday. The following is an adapted excerpt from Alliance workers in Mali.

Many of you are aware of the events taking place in Mali and have already been praying about it. Thank you!

We are all fine, but things are tense in Mali and much prayer is needed. We are watching developments closely, and our respective embassies are keeping us informed and giving guidance as needed. We will keep you updated as the situation develops.

What You Can Do

Pray!

“We need your help to ask God to intervene on behalf of the country, the church here, and our work, and to guard against any additional lives being lost—no matter which side they are on,” requests an Alliance worker in Mali.

Give

  • Give to the Great Commission Fund (GCF) to support Alliance workers in West Arica and around the world who are extending the hope of Christ to the lost and discipling new believers.
  • Give now

Learn More

What Would Jesus Make of “Passion” (Conferences)? Guest Blog by Austin Fischer

A repost from Roger’s Blog January 9, 2013: http://www.patheos.com/blogs/rogereolson/2013/01/what-would-jesus-make-of-passion-conferences-guest-blog-by-austin-fischer

What Would Jesus Make of Passion? by Austin Fischer (Teaching Pastor, The Vista Community Church, Belton/Temple, Texas)

 Hooray Excellence!

 At the moment I’m writing this, there are 60,000 college students gathered inside the Georgia Dome in Atlanta. They are singing worship songs, listening to sermons, and gathering what will no doubt be a massive offering that will go towards combating human trafficking. It’s pretty unbelievable stuff, but the Passion conferences specialize in the unbelievable.

Cutting edge media, excellent musicians, famous speakers. If we’re going to be candid, it’s refreshing to see something “Christian” also be something of such exceptional quality. You could invite an agnostic friend to it and not blush at the prospects of asking him to pay a couple hundred bucks to attend something that feels like a home-school prom. I like excellence, you like excellence, we all like excellence, and I think Jesus does too. Hooray excellence!

That said, as I was reading the tweets of a number of my students who are at Passion, a question kept bouncing around inside my head. Maybe I was asking it of God or maybe God was asking it of me—I often can’t tell the difference. But either way, the question was, “What would Jesus make of Passion?”

Now I know, I know. The question is both loaded and brutally anachronistic, but it just kept asking itself to me. Spoiler alert: I have no idea what Jesus would make of Passion. But here’s some stuff I threw up against the wall. Maybe some of it sticks.

Thought #1…Temple = Georgia Dome

I remember the first time I went to a Passion conference. I was a senior in high school and together with my youth pastor and a few friends, we made the trek to Sherman, Texas. And from the beginning, the trip had a certain vibe to it, a vibe I’ve since learned is the anticipation of pilgrimage.

Religious pilgrimages—as far as I can tell—stretch back to the beginning of human history. There’s something primeval and elemental about the act of going on a journey to a place where we believe we will encounter something transcendent. In the Hebrew Bible, we see God commanding the Jews to make yearly pilgrimages to “appear before the Lord God” (Exodus 34:18-23). Once the Temple was built, these pilgrimages would culminate there, the place where heaven and earth came together. Indeed for a Jew, the Temple was the holiest place in the whole universe. They traveled there because God was uniquely there.

And by way of crude parallelism, it would appear that what the Temple was for an ancient Jew, the Georgia Dome is now for many young-adult, American evangelicals. They take a yearly pilgrimage to the Dome because they feel it is a place where God is uniquely present.

“Cleansing” the Temple?

So what do we make of this? The first thing that came to my mind was Matthew 21 and Jesus’ “cleansing” of the Temple. I put cleansing in quotations because contra popular belief, NT scholars point out that Jesus is not cleansing the Temple so much as he is shutting it down. Flipping over the tables of the money-changers and seats of the dove-sellers (21:12)—these are not acts of purification but condemnation. The exchanging of pagan coins for Jewish coins and the selling of animals for sacrifice were both essential for Temple worship. The Temple didn’t need rehabilitation. It needed to die.

But not because God hates buildings; rather, the Temple needed to die because Jesus was replacing it. Jesus was a one-man, walking Temple; the place where heaven and earth came together and God was uniquely present to his people. As N.T. Wright says, “What the gospels offer us is a God who is in the midst [of us] in and as Jesus the Messiah…Jesus himself is the new Temple at the heart of the new creation…And so this Temple, like the wilderness tabernacle, is a temple on the move, as Jesus’ people go out, in the energy of the Spirit, to be the dwelling of God…”[1]

Now from one angle it’s tempting to connect these dots. Jesus shut down the Temple because he was replacing it. The Georgia Dome has become a new Temple. Jesus would walk into the Georgia Dome and flip over the merch tables and slam Chris Tomlin’s guitar, Garth Brooks style. And while that sort of simplistic reasoning certainly won’t do, I do think it raises some interesting questions regarding the pilgrimage/Temple mentality that so clearly permeates the Passion ethos. So here go a few thoughts…

(c)hurch

Jesus didn’t shut down the Temple because it was evil. He shut it down because it was obsolete and no longer needed. God was doing a new thing, was making himself present to his world and his people in a new way, and the Temple didn’t have a place in this new creation. God was now present to his people through the Spirit and was present to the whole world through his Spirit-filled community = the church. And I put church in lower case on purpose. Local churches made up of normal people doing normal things…this is the God-appointed medium of God’s presence and grace to the world. Not a Temple. Not a yearly pilgrimage. And dare I say, not a trip to the Georgia Dome.

To be sure, many Passion attendees love their local church and their pilgrimage to the Dome is a noble period of spiritual refreshment. But I don’t mind going out on a limb and suggesting that for a great many attendees—perhaps the majority—Passion is the most spiritual moment of the year. It is the standard by which all other spiritual moments will be judged. They’ll have to wait a year to feel this close to God again because it’ll be a year before they’re back here, singing the resounding chorus to an awesome song, having just listened to a sermon from their favorite celebrity pastor, all while their eyes are dazzled by the glitz and glamour of it all. It will be a chore to wade through the ordinariness of actual church life for another year.

As I once told a college student, if Passion is the most spiritual moment of your year, a.) I feel bad for you…b.) you’re not going to be able to love and serve your actual church.

And that’s because your actual church actually has to be the church. It has to deal with crying babies, botched song transitions, average sermons by not-famous people, and a budget for the year that is half that for 4 days of Passion. It’ll never measure up and so you’ll probably bail and look for a church that will feed your Passion addiction (if only Passion could be a church…or wait…it is ;) or you’ll stay and complain and never put down any real roots.

I inhabit and am thus aware of a rather small sliver of reality that I know as my life, and speaking from here, this is not hypothetical. I work with college students, I watch it happen, and I deal with the aforementioned phenomena. For the longest time, I didn’t quite know what to call it and I still don’t. But I know it involves a skewed understanding of the spiritual life in which a streamlined, hyper-spiritualized gathering has replaced the gritty reality of incarnation, of learning to be a human, among other humans, through whom God is reconciling the world to himself. It invigorates the spiritual life to be sure, but it does so by immersing them in something that just doesn’t seem to bear much resemblance to the real world.

And so as ironic as it may sound, maybe what Passion is doing is not progressive or ground-breaking so much as it is, well, antiquated. That’s hyperbolic to be sure but maybe, just maybe, Passion needs to make sure it doesn’t build something that Jesus already tore down. And I really hope it doesn’t build it on top of the church.

Thought #2…Going Vegan in a Steakhouse

Maybe you don’t buy the “Passion or church” thought above. Maybe you think you can have your cake and eat it too. I’m not so convinced most people can, but moving on, thought #2 is something I hope we can all agree on, even though it is uncomfortable.

So I’m told that at the beginning of this year’s Passion conference, Louie Giglio got up, surveyed the energy and buzz of 60,000 students packed into the Dome and said, “Is this not incredible?” He went on to talk about how Passion has become a global movement, impacting millions of lives and followed that up by telling the story of a student who had been addicted to drugs, but as a result of last year’s conference is a year clean. Louie then said, “The testimony of these days in the Dome will be, ‘I know that He is the Lord,’ and ‘I know He can do immeasurably more because He did it in my life,’ and ‘I don’t need an event, I don’t need a Dome, I need Jesus’.”

“I don’t need an event. I don’t need a Dome. I need Jesus.” Amen! See, Louie and company know it’s about Jesus and not an event. But let’s allow ourselves to sit with the irony for a moment. Louie stands before a crowd of 60,000 people, in the Georgia Dome, talking about how this is a global movement, telling a story about how this event helped a guy be sober for a year…and he says, “I don’t need an event, I don’t need a Dome…” But Louie, you’re in the Dome, at an event, hyping the event. We hear you saying something about not needing a Dome, but it’s hard for us to take you seriously when your face is being projected on that 5-story tall LED screen suspended in the middle of the Dome.

Perhaps it’s something like taking a group of people to the best steakhouse in town, providing them with a buffet of the finest cuts available, all the while telling them that eating meat is wrong and we should all go vegan. You can talk to people about the virtues of going vegan all day long, but as long as you’re feeding them steak, I doubt they’re really listening to you. And perhaps even more importantly, I question whether you really want them to listen to you.

Means = Message

There is a more technical way to say all of this: your means is your message. When delivering a message, our words are not the only things that communicate. Everything communicates, and in particular, the “way you do things” communicates, perhaps the loudest. I’ll borrow an example from an excellent book.

Kent Carlson and Mike Lueken were the pastors at one of those suburban, fast-growing, soon to be mega-churches. Fearing they were bordering on becoming a “seeker-sensitive” church, they started really emphasizing discipleship from the pulpit. But they noticed it wasn’t changing the culture of their church. It was still trending towards consumerism and impotent discipleship. What was the problem? In their own words, “We couldn’t merely change the words we used to communicate the gospel because there were too many other messages ingrained in the Oak Hills culture that would contradict our words.”[2]

In other words, you want to make sure you’re creating disciples and not voyeuristic consumers? Then you’re going to need more than words spoken in a context that contradicts everything you’re saying. It’s naïve to think we can hook people with a massive, consumer experience, and then not expect them to act like consumers. As Carlson and Lueken say, “Our attractional methods are not neutral. We are training people as we attract them.”[3]

Some Conclusions

So what would Jesus make of Passion? I don’t know. I think he’d enjoy hearing 60,000 people singing to him. I think he’d love a massive offering taken up to combat human trafficking. I think he’d rejoice in the refreshment and repentance taking place. And as mentioned earlier, I think he’d enjoy the excellence of it all. These are—in and of themselves—indisputably good things. But I’m not sure what he would think about the new Temple we’ve constructed, the celeb-pastor cults, or the Passion fever. But deconstruction is easy, so how about a little reconstruction.

I suggest this: Do some massive downsizing for Passion next year. Minimal media, no celeb-pastors or musicians. Get people who are good, just not famous…they’ll cost less. Maybe just leave the regular lights on. Maybe you could charge $50 instead of $200. By my calculations, that’s somewhere around $10 million dollars you’ll save the attendees. Then, challenge everyone who attends to put that $150 they saved at Passion towards their local church’s budget. Or if they really hate their local church and don’t believe in it enough to give $150, then give it to Compassion, International Justice Mission, etc. And then maybe Louie could stand up in the Dome in front of 60,000 people and say, “I don’t need a dome, I don’t need an event, I just need Jesus”, and we’d actually be able to hear him.

And one more thing. We Christians do have an unfortunate tendency to be cynical towards things that are doing well—especially when it’s not “our” thing. Whatever the psychology behind it, it’s all too easy to be swept away by some latent notion that if it’s Christian and successful/excellent than there must be something wrong with it. The success and excellence of Passion should be something we rejoice in. But success and excellence—from a truly kingdom perspective—are things only achieved through ruthless self-evaluation and continual repentance. Like most things, I don’t think the Passion conferences are all black or all white. Like most of us, they do some good things and bad things. So here’s to exposing the hype and nourishing the good.

 

 


[1] N.T. Wright, How God Became King, 239.

[2] Carlson and Lueken, Renovation of the Church, 57.

[3] Ibid., 67.

A First Noel

A First Noel from Alliance News by Janet Root

Mally’s First Christmas

Watch Mally’s remarkable testimony as he reflects on the ghosts of Christmases past. Surrounded by celebrities with more money than he needed, Mally knew something was missing.

Popout

Yao’s First Christmas

By Douglas and Karen Conkle, serving in Burkina Faso

Doug and Karen serve in southern Burkina Faso among the agrarian Dogose, an animist people group that has had little gospel influence. In partnership with national Alliance pastor Pierre Palanfo, the Conkles are planting a church in the town of Mangodara, a primary Dogose population center.  

Farmer Yao had “lost his mind.” He had become almost comatose, refusing to speak or leave his home.

Yao’s wife and friends were so concerned about him that they took him to Pastor Pierre. They’d heard that the Christians’ Jesus could heal people like Yao.

Evil Spirits

When Yao was asked what had happened, he was able to slowly tell his story. He recalled working in his field when he came across a group of “genies” (evil spirits) eating together. When they offered him food, he refused.

But at the moment he took a drink that the genies offered him, Yao lost his mental faculties. He removed his clothing and began wandering the countryside.

“This illness cannot be healed with medicine,” the pastor was told when he took Yao to the local medical clinic. So Pastor Pierre gathered the elders of the church, and they began praying earnestly for Yao.

Changes

When we arrived on a following Sunday for the worship service, I joined the pastor and the elders in praying that God would cast out the evil spirits that had taken control of Yao. We were led to ask Yao if we could burn the fetishes he had in his home. He agreed.

After they were burned, we began to see a change. Yao began going to church with his children and publicly testified of his deliverance by Jesus Christ. His wife committed her life to Christ.

When I visited him recently, I saw a jovial man with an outgoing personality following Jesus. This Christmas will be the first time Yao celebrates being a follower of Jesus—His Savior and Deliverer. Who is like our God?

What You Can Do

Give

  • Give to the Great Commission Fund (GCF). When you do, you partner with Alliance workers around the world who proclaim the good news of the One who entered this world for lost people, like Yao and his family, and are in desperate need of a Savior and Deliverer.
  • Give now

 Pray

The prayers of the Alliance family empower Alliance workers to live and serve all over the world. Pray with the rest of the Alliance family using our weekly Alliance Prayer requests.

Learn

Other West Africans are also experiencing their first Christmas, read ”Advent Marks New Beginnings for 2,000-plus War-Weary Ivoirians.”

Jesus among the Syrian Refugees

closer-Jesus-among-the-refugees

The delivery truck rumbles down dusty streets past rows of brown concrete shops and apartments, each crowned with rebar stretching to the sky.

Jesus among the Refugees

The debris and mounds of earth on the side of the road provide the feeling you have entered a massive construction site. But there is no construction crew, no heavy machinery. Instead, men in long, flowing robes stand and talk in open storefronts.

Women in black burkas rush by with bags of produce, hurrying to get out of the midday sun. A group of laughing boys runs past waving sticks like swords. This is the scene of everyday life in a small Arab town.

I’m riding with the local Arab Alliance pastor in the truck used to deliver supplies to more than a thousand refugee families served by the church. Word gets around quickly in this small town, and it isn’t long before newcomers learn the church wants to help them.

Every time the truck stops we are approached by refugees bringing words of thanks, asking for a visit in their home or telling of a new family in need.

The church connects with 12 new families every day and still manages, along with Alliance international workers, to make follow-up visits to care for the newcomers’ emotional needs and to pray.

This care for the whole person stands out and has resulted in newly opened doors and opportunities for the church.

Today we are not only delivering food but also spending time in fellowship and prayer. We’ve already visited two families whose stories of escape and survival are harrowing. Our last stop is to call on a man who has invited us to his home so we can hear about the miracle he experienced.

As we park in front of the nondescript apartment building, a man in his late 30s comes out of the narrow alleyway. He beams as he reaches for each hand, welcoming his guests.

The apartment is very small, but typical of what we have already seen. Mattresses for both sleeping and sitting line the living room walls, and to the left is a small kitchen and bathroom. Only the man, his wife and their baby are there right now, but I count seven beds, making me think there are at least two families sharing this home.

Mahmoud* invites us to sit as his wife makes a pot of Turkish coffee. The scalding drink is served in miniature glass cups, making it a challenge to drink without burning both hands and mouth.

Mahmoud greets us through our translator. “Thank you for visiting me in my home. I’m sorry that you can’t take any pictures; you have to understand that I have a lot at risk right now. I left a successful business, my house and cars back in Syria. If anyone discovers that I’ve fled the country, I’m sure to lose everything.”

The sad reality is that, because he fled the country almost six months ago, Mahmoud’s belongings have likely already been looted or destroyed. Most Syrians fled with only the clothes on their backs to give the appearance that they weren’t really leaving. Many have since heard from friends and family that their possessions in Syria are gone.

Photo Gallery

Young refugee • <a style="font-size:0.8em;" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/77091090@N06/8230923152/" target="_blank">View on Flickr</a>
Family ties are strong in the Middle East • <a style="font-size:0.8em;" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/77091090@N06/8230924388/" target="_blank">View on Flickr</a>
Children have been traumatized by what they have seen • <a style="font-size:0.8em;" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/77091090@N06/8229860975/" target="_blank">View on Flickr</a>
Mattresses, stoves, and other necessities at the distribution center • <a style="font-size:0.8em;" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/77091090@N06/8229859281/" target="_blank">View on Flickr</a>
The Alliance church is becoming well-known in the small town • <a style="font-size:0.8em;" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/77091090@N06/8229859123/" target="_blank">View on Flickr</a>

Escape from War

The man pulls up his pant leg to show us a scar, then proceeds to unbutton his shirt, showing the place where a bullet entered his chest.

“I’m not a rebel. I’m not a soldier, either. I’m just an ordinary man.”

“How did you get shot?” I ask.

“I was driving through a busy intersection, when all of a sudden a firefight broke out between rebels and the military.” Mahmoud points to signify bullets coming from all directions. “I saw people in their cars getting shot, others fleeing or falling to the ground playing dead. As soon as I stepped out of my car I was hit twice—here in my leg and in my chest. I don’t remember anything after that.”

Mahmoud passed out and remained unconscious for four days. Rebels picked him up in the street and treated him in their hospital.

“But I wasn’t there long. A few days later there was a military raid, and everyone in the hospital was taken to prison. When I told them I was innocent, the soldiers demanded to know why I was with the rebels. ‘I had no choice—I was unconscious!’ I told them.”

Eventually Mahmoud was released and was able to reunite with his wife and baby girl. Outside their compound walls, the fighting increased. Innocents were shot, killed or kidnapped. Mahmoud knew that the only choice for his young family was to flee.

“It was very expensive, but we had no choice but to pay someone to smuggle us across the border. I went first, and my wife and daughter came shortly after.”

More than Survival

Arriving in a new country, they were able to live without constant fear for their lives. But a new set of challenges awaited them. With very little cash, no clothing, no home and no food in one of the most water-poor countries on earth, how does one survive?

“We hadn’t been here long before we heard that the church was here to help us; that they would really care for us. So we met the pastor and his friends. They helped us to get everything we needed.”

The mattresses we are sitting on, the diapers his daughter wears, the food in the kitchen—all have come through the church.

Alliance church members intentionally minister to people in their homes. In this culture, coming into someone’s home shows respect and honor. It gives them dignity to not have to walk across town with arms full of handouts. The home is a natural place to drink coffee and to talk. And that’s just what happens.

Church members and Alliance international workers listen as refugees process their horrific stories. Most worry about their children who, traumatized by what they have seen, develop stress-induced bedwetting, hair loss and skin conditions.

The church is making intentional efforts to reach these families. The members have organized VBS-style outreaches where hundreds of children and their parents come to play games, laugh and eat a hot meal. The tiny church is filled to capacity.

Whether reaching out to children or adults, the Christ followers always spend time praying with the refugees. The Syrians come from a religion where prayer is only a ritual. When believers ask to pray with them, this is a new experience, but they never refuse.

Even if they don’t have any further physical needs, many will ask for church members to return to pray with them again and again. They feel peace. And they have questions about this God we pray to.

One Step Closer

Mahmoud stands to his feet and bends his left knee. “Jesus healed me, you know? When I got here, I had so much pain in my leg from the bullet wound that I couldn’t bend my knee or sit. I couldn’t walk without a cane. But the church—they came and prayed with me and left me with a Bible.”

Mahmoud began reading the Book of Matthew. He explains that at night when he would wake up from the pain, he read his new Bible. One night while reading, he asked Jesus to heal his leg. God answered.

“We pray with them, and we see the Lord answering them,” explains the pastor. “This shows them that our God is alive and that He answers prayer.”

As we sit in a semicircle on the floor, we talk about things of God. The translator is so engaged in the conversation that he has stopped relaying the message in English.

Mahmoud has been blessed by God’s people and healed in His name. Every night he reads from His Word. All of this is new and wonderful, but Mahmoud has many questions.

“Nothing is an accident,” says the pastor. “The Lord is moving people from area to area for His purposes; . . . things we are doing are moving these people one step closer in terms of knowing our God. . . . When we visit them for the first time and give them their basic needs, . . . they are closer. Answered prayer from God, reading from God’s Word—closer.”

Mahmoud hasn’t accepted Jesus as his Savior yet—but he’s closer. Pray for Mahmoud and other refugees who are seeing Jesus for the first time.

*name changed

By J.: an Alliance international worker who travels throughout the Middle East.

What You Can Do

Pray

The prayers of the Alliance family allow Alliance workers to live and serve all over the world. Pray with the rest of the Alliance family using our weekly Alliance Prayer requests.

Read

Read this and other articles in the December 2012 online edition of alife magazine.

Hurricane Sandy Relief

Church-members-pray-with-homeowners-after-cleanupI have such gratitude for you guys. All I can say is thank you—thank you so much.

Editor’s Note: Jordan Christopher, managing producer for Alliance Video Magazine, experienced firsthand the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy during a recent visit to the hurricane-ravaged Metropolitan District. He shares here his thoughts about the visit.

Hurricane Sandy is not over. The effects of the superstorm are foremost in the thoughts of residents on Long Island, Jersey Shore, and Staten Island. So many have lost so much. It is devastating to see. But what is encouraging to witness is the outpouring of generosity and service, especially the work being done in Jesus’ name.

Watch the Video

Watch as Jordan Christopher, a managing producer of the Alliance Video office, describes firsthand his observations of the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy.

Long Island

At CenterPoint (Alliance) Church in Bellmore, flood waters destroyed recent renovations completed after Hurricane Irene’s damage a year ago. Pastor Brian McMillan says, “This is the most spiritually significant thing to happen in our area. Before the storm, the church was just a building. Now suddenly, people see Jesus through the lives of the Church body.

CenterPoint church members and Pastor McMillan, whose home next door to the church also was damaged, are reaching out to their neighbors to help with clean up and to encourage them. “People are in awe of the generosity,” he says. “They let us pray with them, saying they have to rethink who God is. Some are saying, ‘Your church is now my church.’”

New Jersey

In Manahawkin, King of Kings (Alliance) Community Church serves as a relief distribution center for other organizations, churches, and work teams. The church is set up with “stores” of food, supplies, and clothing. Volunteers take orders, fill shopping carts, and provide basic needs for grateful people.

“The storm washed the physical and spiritual foundation of our community clean,” says Bob Riconda, site coordinator. “This was once a place rich with strife between churches. Pastors have put aside differences and are working together as the Body of Christ, bringing people together in a way that hasn’t been seen in a long time. The storm has created a starting point for fresh healing and restoration.”

Staten Island

The rubble on Staten Island is indescribable. Stacks of debris stand 4–6 feet high in front of most houses. Homeowners and volunteers are gutting houses, tearing out sheet rock and insulation and dumping the ruins on curbs for city trucks to eventually pick up.

New Hope (Alliance) Church’s Pastor Dave Beidel preached an abbreviated sermon in work boots and blue jeans. He was ready to resume relief efforts immediately after the service. New Hope is the center of ministry where many organizations meet to discuss strategy for how to mobilize the hundreds of volunteers.

Pastor Beidel’s mandate to his congregation is clear: “Your primary responsibility is to be the light of Christ. You have been given an opportunity to minister to your neighbors. Pray with them, bless them, and grieve with them in their loss.”

Faces of people returning to their homes for first time are etched in shock. City health inspectors have condemned many houses. Some people have lost all their possessions; either they have no insurance, or hurricane and flood insurance are not included in their coverage.

“They are left to salvage what they can,” says Yeathus Johnson, coordinator of urban relief. “Some stay, even with no power, because they fear looters will vandalize what’s left of their homes. There are reports of copper wiring being ripped from walls of abandoned homes. Fires have burned several houses because of exposed gas lines.”

It is amazing to see how church members are received from house to house; they are welcomed with open arms. Homeowners talk about how the church groups were first to come and the last to leave. It’s touching a lot of people.

“I’ve cried buckets of tears,” says one man, “I have no more tears to shed, but I know one thing; I am going to church next week with my wife.”

Another resident says. “Everybody here lost everything. Some lost family, friends, and pets. It’s really sad. But the shining light in all of this is to see these good people here to help. I’m really so happy and so thankful. I have such gratitude for you guys. Keep up the good work. All I can say is thank you—thank you so much.”

One woman choked back tears. Astonished by the outpouring of love from Alliance workers who showed up at her house, she says, “I’m so touched, so grateful for the people helping us! God bless them all. I’ll be forever grateful.”

Not Finished

Truckloads of supplies have been donated to King of Kings, New Hope, and CenterPoint—so many provisions that organizers are unsure where to put them. I am reminded of Exodus 36 when the workers told Moses, “The people are bringing more than enough for doing the work the Lord commanded to be done.”

But the work is not finished. Alliance people, whether skilled or unskilled, are needed to serve in whatever ways they can. All that is required are open hands and open heart. Find out how you can help atwww.metrocmarelief.org. These hurting people need our love, our prayers, and our support. Let’s not forget them.

What you can do

Read The Latest News

We are posting updates as we receive them. Read the latest updates.

Tell Your Story

If you have a story, please consider posting it on our Facebook page or email Joan, one of our staff writers, atphillipsj@cmalliance.org today.

Make an Online Donation

A special fund has been created to gather funds to spearhead immediate relief efforts. Give to the Hurricane Sandy Relief Fund and help CAMA, the relief and development arm of The Alliance, support these needs.

Give Online Now

Give by Mail

Make your check out to “CAMA” and write “Hurricane Sandy Relief Fund” on the memo line. Then mail your gift to Compassion and Mercy Associates, P.O. Box 35000, Colorado Springs, CO, 80935-3500

Give by Phone

Use your credit card and call toll-free (866) 443-8262 between 8:30 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. (MST) to make your donation.

Tortured by fire, refined by God

Tortured by fire, refined by God

By Dr. David Thompson

In late January 2011, I drove to Bilengui—a 90-minute drive through a “tunnel road” that the encroaching brush and trees are doing their best to overwhelm. Through a break in the trees, the village suddenly appeared on the next hill, its white church building shining in the morning sun.
It was hard to believe that four months earlier, the pastor of that church and two other Christians from the village had been subjected to a literal “trial by fire” at the hands of a group of people caught up in the frenzy of a traditional initiation rite.

The Trial

On September 14, 2010, about 20 men and boys aged 14 to 30 drank diboga, a hallucinogenic drugmade from the root of a well-known plant. The next morning several claimed that while under its influence, they had seen a phantom roaming through the village causing people to become ill and die.

One of the youth said that the phantom was coming from the local Alliance church. Someone else reported that he had seen a skull in “a deep hole” near a door of the church. Alarmed, everyone clamored for the young men to dig it up.

Popout

The gang of men and boys began digging around the front entrance of the church. They cut down a palm tree and dug in its roots but found nothing. Then they dug in front of the side door of the church and found something they claimed was a human skull. With that, they stormed into the house, broke down the gate and dragged him outside. By this time it was late in the afternoon.

The men demanded that the pastor explain how the skull had come to be where they found it. He replied that he had no idea, and they shouted, “That proves that you did it! Now tell us whose skull it is so we can stop the phantom!” Pastor Moukingui continued to insist that he was completely innocent and did not know how the bone came to be there.

The Attack

When a church elder (Jean Daniel Myangui) and an older Catholic man (Mbembo Nimi) tried to defend the pastor, the men tied the hands and feet of all three Christians with electrical wire. Then they dragged them across the road to a cleared area and sat the prisoners down on the ground. When villagers gathered to see what would happen, some young women said they had dreamed that the person who had called the phantom was Pastor Moukingui.

Around 8 p.m. one of the young men got five liters of kerosene and began sloshing it onto the three men. Pastor Moukingui and the two others shouted with alarm, and some of the people urged the young men not to pour the fuel on their clothes. But the three men were soaked with it. Then the captors lit their prisoners’ feet.

“It’s the miracle of God…,” Pastor Moukingui said later. “All [our] clothes were soaked with kerosene, and they burned us. But it’s God who protected us so that only our feet were burned.”

My God, forgive them.

For the next hour, the gang of young men and boys tormented their prisoners. When they ran out of kerosene, they held the torches to the Christians’ feet. “The third time is when I cried, ‘My God, forgive them. They don’t know what they do. Forgive them,’” Pastor Moukingui said.

“After that, the people in the village began to speak up and say, ‘Leave them alone, leave them.’

“They left us alone. But to get from there to my house took about an hour, because I could hardly walk at that point. When I arrived home, my wife gave me water to wash; I threw out my fuel-soaked clothes.”

Getting Treatment

The next day, Pastor Moukingui hired a vehicle to take him to Geveda for first aid, but the nurse there refused to help. The men’s wounds went untreated for four days; on Sunday, a brother from Moila transported two of the men to Lebamba, where Bongolo Hospital is located.

Both underwent surgery on their feet the next morning. I drove to Bilengui to bring Mbembo to Bongolo.

Pastor Jean Pierre Moukingui, Daniel and Mbembo, the three men who were burned, were waiting for me as I drove into the village in January. They are doing well and are tremendously grateful for the way they had been cared for at Bongolo Hospital during September, October and November 2010. As they recalled the loving and professional care they received, they claimed that our surgery residents, who checked on them every morning, were really “angels”!

Justice

In December police from the Mimongo district arrested two of the four ring leaders. The other two fled into the forest and are reported to be hiding in the coastal city of Port Gentil. The two that were arrested were taken to the Mouila prison, in our provincial capital, where they are awaiting trial. The chief prosecutor has told the Christians in Bilengui that the trial will not be held until those arrested have spent the same amount of time in the Mouila prison as the men who were burned spent in the hospital!

Several eye witnesses to the events have come forward since September and verified Pastor Moukingui’s story: there was no skull dug up next to the church. What the young men took as evidence of sorcery was a fingertip-sized piece of bone they dug out of the mud, a hand broom that was regularly used to sweep the church floors and two little rocks set under the pulpit to keep it steady on the uneven floor. These were the pieces that their accusers claimed as proof that the church leaders had called on evil spirits to cause mayhem in the village.

Pastor Moukingui, Daniel and Mbembo all had a good laugh with me and the other Christians who gathered to listen to them retell the story. It was a deep pleasure for me to see the joy on their faces, despite what they had suffered.

Their feet were completely healed, and they were able to walk on them, though gingerly. I brought them a 50-pound sack of rice as an expression of our continued support and concern for them, and they thanked me over and over on behalf of all those who had prayed for them and helped them.

Our Return

On February 2, I returned to the village with a video team from the U.S. C&MA National Office to document the men’s ordeal. As we drove up, a group of about 10 Christian women met us in front of Pastor Moukingui’s house, clapping, swaying and singing a song of welcome. The video crew spent the day filming interviews and scenes from the village that will help tell the story.

In between their work I talked with Pastor Moukingui and the 20 or so Christians who had gathered. “What effect has the attack had on the church in Bilengui?” I asked them.

Moukingui’s face clouded with sadness but then cleared as he explained. “About one third of those who came regularly to our church stopped coming after we were accused of sorcery and attacked,” he said.

“They have not come back. But the rest have become stronger in their faith than before. They are not afraid of anything, even if they are threatened with death!”

The others all murmured in agreement. “The saddest part for us is that many of the parents in the village have forbidden their children to come to church. They have told their children that we practice sorcery! Imagine—the very ones who did this to us while under the influence of diboga are accusing us of sorcery!” I could see that this weighed heavily on the heart of every Christian there.

When the videographers were packing up their equipment, Pastor Moukingui motioned us up to his house. “We have something for you,” he said with a wide smile. The entire church squeezed into the living room and sat in a circle along the mud brick walls. Then several women began bringing in plantain bananas, a bag of peanuts, ripe bananas and a heavy sack of manioc.

“It’s for you,” he said. “It’s not much, but after all that others have given to us we want to give something in return. God has blessed us through our own people at Bongolo and through people from all over the world. He has taken wonderful care of us, and now it’s our turn to bless others and pass on to others the love and kindness God has shown to us.” The lump in my throat made it hard for me to do more than nod and murmur my thanks.

The sun was blazing hot as we tied the bananas onto the roof. By the time we prayed together one last time and climbed into the car, we were drenched with sweat.

The last scene I have in my mind of that little church in the middle of the Gabonese rain forest is not one of fear and discouragement but of triumph and joy. For the first time ever, the Christians in Bilengui and Gevede understand that they are not alone and are not forgotten. They are part of a great and growing body of believers that covers the earth. That knowledge—proven by the gifts and prayers of people from all over the world—has given them a fresh and unshakable faith.

Special thanks to Lisa Nicky for translating some of the quotes from Pastor Moukingui and additional reporting by Josh Whiteman. Dr. David Thompson is an international medical worker serving at Bongolo Hospital in Gabon, Central Africa.

What You Can Do

Pray

The prayers of the Alliance family allow Alliance workers to live and serve all over the world. Pray with the rest of the Alliance family using our weekly Alliance Prayer requests.

Read

Read this and other articles in the online edition of alife magazine.