Fall 2014, Vol. 2, Issue 5
Transcription
Fall 2014, Vol. 2, Issue 5
Fall 2014 Volume Two | Issue 1 Five Ministries in Africa Missionaries | Go and Tell Villages of HOPE | Mwangaza Choir Kipepeo Project | Nursing StikYard Drum Group Seeks God in Growth GirlDefined: Sisters Relaunch Blog 1 Year Anniversary Issue Creed of Gold: God Behind the Scenes Faith Family Clinic Serves Texas Families 2 TOC In this issue... Feature: Ministries in Africa 15 Word A missionary helping in a pregnancy care center, digging wells and building self-sustaining communities, sharing the Gospel, encouraging and providing for orphanages--how God is working through several ministries in Africa. Sisters relaunch blog for girls and women. Heroic Media spreads awareness and statistics in the pro-life movement. Testify 7 Recent high school graduate, Roxanne Hanna, shares about her experience in Uganda and the calling she feels God has given her. Jams 10 4 Southbound Fearing shares about their beginnings. Stikyard follows God’s leading for the future. Youngsters 31 Faith Family Clinic provides medical care for families in Jesus’ name. Flip to Grateful Acres for a delightful lesson and coloring sheet for the kids, straight from the farm and real life from Andy and Miss Kay. Cover photo courtesty of Villages of HOPE Africa 5 33 Info 3 From the editor... A Difficult Question to Answer God posed a difficult question to me tonight: If no one read Embolden, if no one volunteered, would I still be willing to continue this ministry He has given me in faith? It was a question that resulted from talking to my husband about my expectations and discouragements. With the expected arrival of our first child in September, I contemplated not having a winter issue, and instead taking some time off. My husband and I prayed over this decision. After struggling to get this issue together I was ready for a break regardless of the fact that God revealed the winter cover to my husband (which he has never done before) and regardless of the fact that I’m pretty sure I heard ‘no’ when I asked for it. So this question from the Lord may seem strange. Why would someone continue publishing a magazine if no one is reading it? Why would I continue to give my time, energy and skills to a ministry that appears to be stagnant, going nowhere? My husband reminded me of some facts we learned at youth summer camp in June about a very common man and account in Scripture. I must give credit to Afshin Ziafat for this, and you should check him out, he is a great man of God with a wonderful ministry. Noah. He built a big ship. We read about God telling him that this new thing called rain was coming and that it would flood the whole earth with water. As Noah, in great faith, built the ark his neighbors and friends thought he was crazy. I can imagine they told him too. I can imagine the humiliation and persecution Noah endured as he spent his resources and time building this huge ark, all the while expecting water to fall from the sky for the first time in history. Did you know that Noah spent 100 years building the ark? One hundred years. One hundred years Noah took the brunt of his peers’ attack. For 100 years Noah continued to build, in faith that God would do what He said He would. For 100 years Noah continued a ministry to his family, not only building an ark, but also building faith. I’m going to be honest. I would have given up. I think I would have anyway. Here I am struggling after just a year and a half. I can’t imagine 100 years. But this account gives me hope. This account reminds me of truth. This account encourages me. Maybe all this is for one ministry, one person, one missionary or one reader. And that would be totally and completely OK with me. Maybe Embolden never circulates past Texas or San Antonio. That’s OK, as long as that is God’s perfect plan. One thing is clear: my timing is not God’s. That’s OK too, because the truth is that God’s timing is better, perfect and significant. Who knows why God waited 100 years to send the floods. Maybe Noah’s family needed faith. Maybe it was all about Noah’s faith. Maybe it was to encourage believers in their faith throughout time as it does for me now. Regardless of the reason, I know it was perfect. So I’m here to say, keep building your ark. I don’t know what it is, maybe you don’t quite yet know either. Maybe it is witnessing to co-workers or families. Maybe it is beginning a ministry or non-profit. Maybe it is something so crazy you fear what others will think. Maybe it doesn’t make sense, but you know God is asking you do it. Build it. Build your ark and build your faith. Build the faith of those around you, watching you obey the Lord. There is an excitement when a believer hears of people being saved, healed and delivered. There is a passion that passes from testimony-sharer to listener, a fire is ignited or reignited, power is transferred from Spirit to heart. I feel this every time I interview someone for an article. I feel this every time I proofread what my volunteers have written. It is near the end of a long two months as I read through it all that I realize God is big, God is at work and I’m right where I’m supposed to be. I hope and I pray that we have readers who are blessed and ignited. I hope and I pray that these testimonies reach those God wants them to reach. I hope and I pray that when you are discouraged in your ministry, whether a full time one or as a disciple of Christ at work, school or the grocery store, you will find His encouragement. As always, Embolden is available to you the missionary, to you the individual believer, to you the church, the pastor, the teenager, the grandmother. Use our blog, use our pages, use our Facebook to encourage and embolden the faith of the church all around the world! To send in your testimony, e-mail [email protected]. In His glorious name, April Lynn Newell [email protected] Speaking of Noah’s Ark, check out the story on the blog for more about a modern day Ark in the Netherlands. 4 Word Word Heroic Media 5 Company Creates Awareness for Pro-Life By Teresa Hall Sisters Relaunch Blog for Girls By Kristen Clark We are a pair of sisters from the southern state of Texas who are passionate about spreading God’s truth. Being less than 2 years apart in age, we have been best friends our entire lives. As we grew older, our family grew larger in number and we grew taller in height. We truly are the land of the giants, with eight out of the ten family members measuring over six feet tall. Our parents are first generation Christians and have done an amazing job of teaching us God’s truth. Once we hit adulthood, we both came to the realization that being a girl in this modern world can be a really confusing thing. Most girls, even Christian girls, have no idea why they were created, what their purpose is, what it means to be a wife and mother, and the value of sexual purity. As a result, we felt called to launch a ministry geared toward encouraging young Christian women in all of these areas. The name of our ministry is GirlDefined and we are passionate about fighting feminism, embracing gender distinctions and empowering girls to live out their God-defined purpose. We do this through publishing biblically grounded articles, speaking at young women’s events and encouraging girls through one-on-one mentoring relationships. We originally launched the ministry in 2010, but recently relaunched it with a new vision in the spring of 2014. Once relaunched, we quickly saw God at work in the lives of hundreds of young women as they responded to our message. We receive many e-mails each week from girls, moms, dads and even pastors expressing how needed this message is for young Christian women. Many churches, including several in Brazil, have reached out to us about partnering to do conferences, retreats and ministry events. Our journey has not always been easy as we have faced opposition from groups who fiercely disagree with our message. Many women who claim to be feminists, atheists, homosexuals, etc. have made contact with us through our website expressing how angry they are about our message. Our goal is to respond in truth and love. Our prayer is that God’s truth about biblical womanhood would shine through and change the hearts of everyone we meet. Regardless of a person’s background, we know God’s Word has the power to change lives. If you would like to help spread the message of GirlDefined Ministries, please share our website information with the young women you know. If you would like to partner with us for an event, we would love to come speak at your church or girl’s group. Please visit our website at: www.girldefined.com for more info. Prayer is the most powerful way to spread God’s truth, so please pray for the hearts of young women around the world to be turned back to God’s design for their lives. Visit GirlDefined for more from Kristen and her sister, Bethany. Or visit their Facebook page. In a day and age where the voice of abortion is everywhere and women are taught to do what “feels right” to them, the Lord is raising up men and women with compassionate hearts to show a different way – a higher and better way. Heroic Media, a nonprofit organization reaching out to mothers with unplanned pregnancies, uses the power of media to build a culture of life. With their national headquarters in Austin, Texas, Heroic Media spans across 15 states and Latin America. God is a God of hope – there is no situation too desperate for Him to intervene in and create something beautiful. Where there is life, there is hope, and Heroic Media exists to broadcast that hope to soon-to-be mothers struggling with fear and despair and connect those mothers to others in their community who can help and encourage them. Marissa Cope, Heroic Media’s Director of Marketing, Research and Communications, shared with Embolden how this vision is carried out. decade. Heroic Media brought that concept of pro-life media to Austin, Texas and conducted a test, running research-based media including billboards, television and radio commercials as well as Internet advertising. Over a 4-year period from 2004-2008, Heroic Media ran $2 million worth of media advertising in Austin, Texas and over that same period, the state of Texas reported a 20 percent decrease kingdom-focused work is completely dependent upon God and His power. It could easily be a daunting mission to reach so many women in need, especially when we are competing with such strong voices from a culture that does not value life or offer hope in the midst of an unplanned pregnancy. I love seeing how God uses our work at Heroic Media to reach women who often feel alone and afraid and connect them with loving, life-affirming resources. Through our Internet advertising campaigns, women often contact local pregnancy centers directly through our helpline websites. I get to see firsthand the process of a woman searching for help, reaching out to a center in a time of great need, and being served and loved by the pregnancy center staff. I’m grateful to get to see God at work so clearly in the lives of women and families every day! What could be a sad reminder of the hurt in so many peoples’ lives is instead a view of God working clearly to bring hope and healing. What could be a sad reminder of the hurt in so many peoples’ lives is instead a view of God working clearly to bring hope and healing. “ Embolden: When was Heroic Media started and for what purpose/mission? Cope: Heroic Media was founded as a faith-based nonprofit in 2004, with the aim to use media advertising to reach women with life-affirming messages and connect them directly with local pregnancy resource centers to receive help. Our founder, Brian Follett, had seen the impact of prolife media in Wisconsin, where our partners have consistently run over $500,000 worth of pro-life media each year and the abortion rate there has been on a steady decline for more than a in abortion in Austin. ” E: What is your main goal in working for HM? C: My goal in working at Heroic Media is to use the gifts and experience God has given me to glorify Him. It’s a privilege for me to see how God is using my professional experience as well as my unique life experience as a child of adoption in my work. It’s humbling to know that He’s called me to this particular ministry and prepared good works in advance for me to do. E: How have you experienced God as you have worked with HM? C: I am constantly reminded that all E: How can the church and individuals get involved? C: We need partners in prayer and in financial support. We have ongoing prayer needs for wisdom in using the resources God provides for us, as well as for opportunities to partner with more local pregnancy centers. Individuals can help us by hosting small events to introduce friends and family to our mission so that they might support us in prayer and with financial support. Every gift enables us to serve more women who might be considering abortion by connecting them with cont. on page 6 6 life-affirming alternatives. E: How can the church better support HM? C: Join us in prayer - “like” us on Facebook to keep updated on prayer needs and consider financially supporting Heroic Media’s life-saving work. E: Is there anything else you would like to share? C: We focus on three things that really embody our mission - Research, Partnership and Measurement. Research: We seek to produce and place media messages that speak to women in crisis and invite them to call a local pregnancy medical clinic. That means our messages need to speak to the actual needs and emotions a woman facing an unexpected pregnancy Word is experiencing. We conduct focus groups and other research to test messages. Partnership: We seek to partner with local pregnancy centers and organizations that are life affirming, loving and professional. Measurement: We constantly measure the direct response to all media campaigns in order to track the number of contacts to a pregnancy center in response to our campaigns. So we use unique phone numbers and web addresses on each type of media within a campaign to measure responses and track which types of ads are most effective in a particular area. We do all of this because we are committed to working with excellence in all we do, for the glory of God. For more information or to get involved with Heroic Media, you can visit their website. Also, “like” their Facebook page to be updated on prayer requests and success stories! Testify Testify! Roxanne Hanna 7 Developing a Heart for Missions and Uganda My trips to Uganda, Africa have had a big impact on my life as a growing teenager in America. We as Americans are so very blessed to have running water, shelter and food on the table. We have the advantage of using resources, such as education, to help build ourselves into successful individuals if we have the interest to do so. On both my trips to Uganda, it was as if God was telling me to wake up and see how blessed I am with all that I have back in America. Uganda’s people don’t have a lot, but I will say this—I love the people there very much. We visited children from several schools and villages, and also a boy’s home founded by an organization called African Hearts, and all of the people were very upbeat and friendly. Just walking down the streets of Kampala, I found people were welcoming and kind. In America, I can walk through a park, grocery store or mall and everyone is so caught up in materialism. But in Uganda, most people value meeting new people, talking about interesting topics and seem thirsty for knowledge and individuality. To see so many people thirsting after the same things was so wonderful and was one of the main reasons I fell so deeply in love with the people. My first trip to Uganda, in 2012, I went with a team from my home church in Boerne, Texas. A woman of God, Christina McAllen, had been to Uganda with her daughter, Taylor, and son, Justin, several times before and felt called by God to lead a mission trip to Uganda that July. I’ve always wanted to do something with missions work. To have an opportunity to go overseas was very exciting and not something that comes along very often. I asked for my mother’s advice and help on the topic of going to Uganda. At first she let me know how nervous she would be if I were to go and the dangers that come with traveling to foreign countries. But her concerns just made me more excited about going to Uganda. My mother and I agreed that the right thing to do was to pray about it before making a final decision. The answer became a ‘yes’ in about a week and I was so thrilled and excited to be going. My main struggle in preparing for the trip was financial, but my mother and I worked very hard to earn the money I needed to go. Time was not on our side, but God came through and blessed me with all of the money. I was set to go to Uganda for the first time in my life that July of 2012. It turned out to be the best and most wonderful experience that has ever happened to me. God was leading my heart to reach out to the children and to give them hope. This is exactly what I felt I did. Returning home was definitely the hardest part. Heading home, I cried the whole first eight-hour flight. I knew that leaving would be hard, but I believed that God was telling me Uganda is where I belong, and that I would come back again. I did return to Uganda that next summer, in 2013, and I look forward to hopefully returning in the summer of 2015. To other teens who are interested in the mission field—don’t be scared. God has plans for you and if you don’t know where to go yet, pray about it. My preacher, Pastor Jeremy, always says the mission field is right outside the front doors and walls of our church. So who knows, maybe God is calling you to reach out and help people in your own country? Missions are exciting, adventurous and full of beautiful experiences that will be treasured for the rest of your life. Be open and aware of the opportunities God puts around you. Pray and let God lead you to the places He has in store for you. He will give you the desire to reach out and give people more of yourself. Telling people about Christ is a wonderful thing, so don’t be afraid—God will help you—financially and emotionally. Your part is to just work hard and pray about it. I look forward to returning to Uganda soon and hope to live there one day to continue serving the people there. My church was such a blessing, sending up prayers and helping with our fund raisers, showing pictures to the church and giving them updates throughout our time in Uganda. Our team couldn’t have done it without them, and we are very thankful for their support. I’m also thankful I am able to share my heart for Uganda, and I can’t wait to one day return! 8 Flicks Flicks 9 Creed of Gold: How God Worked Behind the Scenes By Penne Jaster An economic thriller of power players manipulating the market and free trade that side-swipes prosperity in the name of entitlement, new film Creed of Gold asks the questions, “Is there a group at the top of the economic markets or government that is manipulating the financial world,” “Do we need more transparency in the Federal Reserve,” and “Who, truly, controls the money supply?” Born out of a historical reflection of a meltdown on Wall Street and the foreign economic collapse in the former Soviet Union, Crystal Creek Media presents a film that asks riveting questions about transparency in the banking industry and government policy. Do we have the transparency and accountability in our economy that promotes success in the free market? Or does it reward those who can use their financial power to manipulate it into personal gain? What becomes of a society whose economy is based on entitlement? What is the end result of the lack of motivation to work hard for a living? Does the government have an adequate system of accountability to maintain a true free market? Is there place for and value in absolute truth? And what is the cost to the individual who stands up for what is right? Father-son duo, Mark and Daniel Knudsen, have produced a full feature-length film to honor and glorify God. Each scene began with prayer as they directed the cast and crew. A menagerie of registered historical landmarks and over 100 people, primarily college students, participated in this production to bring together a work of history and art that asks core societal questions. Visual effects specialist, Gabriel Everson, describes the film as taking in “all the different arts and bringing them all together for one comprehensive experience.” The experience in making Creed of Gold was described by cast and crew as a life-changing, hard but worthy endeavor. The number and diversity of the cast and crew are testimonies of how God moved them into participating in this film. Lorraine Knox, actress, recalls, “The variety and efficiency in which the cast and crew worked together was an amazing experience.” Mark A. Knudsen, executive producer, describes, “One thing in life that involves teamwork more than anything else is making a feature length film.” Director Daniel Knudsen, describes the process as, “capture[ing] simple, complex, beautiful moments all together.” The resounding sound of a scene well done was his “Cut, Print, Perfect!” The cast describes the experience as encouraging and uplifting. “Making a film is like running a marathon,” Daniel Knudsen says. “It is a very intense race but there is also a long distance traveled. The relationships that are built and memories made are there for a long time afterwards.” Daniel Knudsen expresses the theme woven through Creed of Gold in quoting G.K. Chesterton, “Fairytales do not just teach us that dragons are real but that dragons can be defeated.” The film challenges the viewer to summon the moral courage to overcome the walls that are in their society and government with a theme encouraging viewers to fight for what is right, no matter what sphere they are in. “There is real value in truth; it makes us stronger and better as people,” says one crew member. Creed of Gold is centered on the need for absolute standards and absolute truths. In the war against success and God, do you have the courage to fight? Creed of Gold released in limited theaters on Aug. 1, 2014 and to DVD on Aug. 12, 2014. Opposite page: Shooting scenes in the studio. Above: Ellen Lawrence during a scene. Above right: Director Daniel Knudsen and actor Jason McCray. Right: Actor Taylor Lindsey. For more information visit Creed of Gold on Facebook and Twitter. 10 Jams Southbound Fearing 11 Jams Q&A One Church’s Christmas Program Becomes Full Show by God’s Will By Leanna Foreman It is hard to find good Christian rock. Either the rockers do not sound great, or they are afraid to utter the name of Jesus. Southbound Fearing is not one of those bands. With songs titled after Scripture verses and deep, lyrical roots, they deliver heartfelt truths to which we can all relate. We sat down with their lead singer, Brady Leonard, to find out a little more about the group and how they got where they are. Embolden: Who is in the band, and what are their roles? Brady Leonard: I’m Brady Leonard, and I sing and play guitar. On lead guitar, we’ve got Eric Ade; on drums, we’ve got “The Baller” Nathan Ball, and on bass we have Nelson Wheatley. E: When and how did you come together? BL: I started the band in early 2006 when I was still in high school; started off playing shows on the weekends, and before we knew it, we were traveling all around, recording records, signing contracts, the whole nine yards. E: Where is the group from? BL: Toledo, OH. E: How did you see God working as you began as a band? BL: I started the band when I was 17, so I literally grew up in this band. God was always using the band to teach me and help me grow as a person. E: Do you write your own music? Where do you draw inspiration or how do you choose songs? BL: Yes. We write about everything, the good and bad in life, not just the church-friendly stuff. E: How have you seen God work through you recently? BL: We have people come up to us a lot at shows and tell us how our lyrics helped them through a tough time; that means the world to us. E: What advice would you give someone trying to make it in music ministry? BL: Work hard...seriously work hard. There are 24 hours in a day and if you seriously want to succeed, you better be using every one of them. Work your hands to the bone, and never ask for a handout. Clearly, hard work is not something Southbound Fearing has shied away from. They have three completed albums and are going on tour this fall. On May 27, they released their third album, “Undefeated,” available on iTunes. If you are interested in tour dates or learning more, check out Southbound Fearing online and Facebook. By April Lynn Newell The way God decides to begin a ministry often uniquely points to His glory and what only He can do. In 2001, when Mark Miller, house drummer of Grace Church in St. Louis, Missouri, was asked to create an original 12-minute Christmas performance of “Little Drummer Boy” he had no idea just what God had in store. Within five years, StikYard was born and standing alone as a show and ministry under Mark, and the divine purposes of God. “It kind of organically started at Grace Church in St. Louis. Each year the drums would take a larger portion of the service until 2009 when it became a full-fledged show,” says Mark. By 2011, the show had grown to 30,000 audience members. Mark, now director of the show, explains that if it were not for the support of his church during those beginning years, and even up to this point, StikYard would not be what it is today. “God certainly used the support of the church to be able to do this. I’d never be able to creatively develop and do the concepts without them,” Mark says. “He certainly used the church to support us and the wisdom of the people who were there.” Before StikYard began traveling, performances at Grace Church were more like outreach events drawing in friends of members and even ministering to longtime believers. “What is really cool about the show is that not only can you bring your unchurched friends but we have lifelong Christians say, ‘This moved us in a way that nothing has for a long time’,” recalls Sharon Reilly, assistant to the director. Not only have Mark and Sharon heard numerous testimonies about how StikYard has worked in the lives of audience members, but they have even experienced God working in themselves and in the drummers. “I was unmoved by things as well, as a musician,” Mark says. “I tried to come up with a program for what would inspire me and it just kept developing. [StikYard] is always evolving. I feel like we’re taking one step at a time, what God shows us next.” Sharon explains that what she sees in StikYard are a number of talented young men able to use their gifts outside the church body. “StikYard is also a story about how God uses it, not just in the audience, but also how He uses it in the lives of those who are involved in it,” Sharon explains. “In 2001, it was really a handful of people who were using their gifting. Every year we’ve done the show, more people have fallen into place in terms of using their gifting to help. Like for me, I work behind the scenes which is so my niche. Now we’ve got a drum builder in his niche building these fantastic custom-made drums.” cont. on page 12 12 Over the years StikYard has matured into more than a performance and into a customizable show for churches and even corporations. With unique equipment like water drums and the ability to adapt each show to accommodate local church volunteers, StikYard provides an experience unlike a normal concert. Even the performers themselves are unique. “It is a small mold, you don’t find many drummers that fit it. You’ve got to come out of yourself,” Mark explains. “I would say that singers are one brand of personality and drummers are another. It’s almost like we are expected to be something else and engaging the audience. Plus it takes a lot of physical know-how to pull off the choreography.” God has worked through social media and modern technology to grow StikYard to what it is today—a newly stand-alone show that Mark never saw coming, but is blessed to be a part of and continue to see grow. Jams “I’m seeing God work within StikYard and taking it to another level, prepping us to be able to be on tour, whether it is maturing the infrastructure or myself to figure out how to take it out to more people,” Mark says. Sharon and Mark are both grateful for and humbled by the support of Grace Church over the years which has enabled StikYard to be what it is today— bigger than they foresaw and growing still by God’s will. Although a performance drum group, StikYard is definitely a ministry and Mark and his crew seek the Lord in each step they take. They have been offered spots in renowned tours like WinterJam, but, because of their intricate set up and theatrical necessities, have been unable to figure out how to accommodate for big tours. “I’m praying to understand the infrastructure and how it should look in order to take the show out, whether that’s going to be tour or theater, praying for the right contacts and for wisdom,” Mark says. To help further the ministry of StikYard, contact Mark Miller at [email protected] to find out how you can partner with this fascinating and unique ministry. You can find videos of StikYard on YouTube and Facebook. Purchase DVDs of live performances on their website. Above: Mark Miller, director of Stikyard. Below: Stikyard crew performs. Reads The Infinite Gospel 13 By Greg Leininger Truth versus lies—this is the greatest battle in the universe. There are two main players in this war: God of the universe, who is truth, and Satan, the father of lies. The battleground is not up in Heaven or out in the distant cosmos. The battle is in our mind. And the battle is for our mind. This is not a battle of people, but a battle of ideas, thoughts and beliefs. Because what we believe determines how we think and feel. How we think and feel determines how we behave and make decisions. Ultimately, our beliefs and decisions have unavoidable consequences with eternal implications. So, the many deadly schemes and deceptions of Satan war against the singular, life-giving truth of God over our mind towards an end that leads to infinite death or infinite life. There is so much at stake! Because lies are always changing and adapting, there are a lot of ideas in the world about who God is, who we are, why we exist, and how we are to behave. We must understand that every idea outside of God’s absolute, unchanging truth is a destructive lie. The truth always matters, because there is always a consequence for missing its mark. The truth lights up the answers for life, bringing us the understanding and wisdom that fully equip us for a joy-filled eternal life, starting where we are, here and now. If you pay attention to it, you can see this battle play itself out in your own life and in the world all around you. If you really consider the source of brokenness in our society, you can clearly see the source of this devastation is belief in lies—many compounding lies. On the other hand, the reason for those who have abundant life is knowledge and obedience to the truth. Truth has one path, and it leads to life. Lies can take us all over the place—anywhere off the path of truth in any direction—and they always rob us of the life of God. Satan’s purpose is to steal, kill and destroy. He accomplishes his mission not by taking our possessions or killing our flesh, but through cunning deception, distracting us with false enticements, blurring the truth as much as he can. He’s going for our eternal mind, not our temporal body and belongings. We battle against these lies by standing firm in the truth. The core message of God’s amazing truth is the Gospel of Jesus Christ. It is the most powerful message in the world. It is the most important message to get right. The consequence of receiving or rejecting this essential message is infinite life or infinite death. So ask yourself, what is your understanding of the Gospel? Really, what is the Gospel? Is it just that simple and familiar story of the path to salvation? Something you mastered long ago in Sunday School—already figured out? Or is it something that always blows you away with its mind-numbing infinite nature—its life-giving, life-directing and illuminating knowledge and instruction? Is it the heart of your attitude and decision making in everyday life, guiding and directing where you go with your thoughts and behavior? See, God is a God of infinite knowledge. And every bit of that knowledge that we need for our lives is available and freely accessible to us through His written word (2 Timothy 3:15-17). I’ll tell you I am a man of very limited knowledge—just a micro seed of understanding. Oh, but I’m glad to be in my position, even knowing that my knowledge is limited. Yes, I sure couldn’t get very far without knowing the truth of where I am. It’s the fool who believes he has it all figured out as he wanders in a sea cont. on page 14 14 Reads Feature Two Worlds Embrace 15 Nursing and Medical Missions in Africa By Penne Jaster Author, Greg Leininger, with his wife, Kristin. of lies. Before you can start growing into the infinite truth, you have to know where you are. You need that “You Are Here” dot on the map to properly orient yourself and head the right way. As you read the Bible, ask many, many questions before the God of infinite knowledge. Get the true meaning of the text. Consider its implications in your life. Let your mind delight in the treasure you have found in God’s Word. There is so much to explore and discover! The more you grow, the more you develop an insatiable appetite for wisdom and knowledge. The Bible is a portal to the one true perspective that completely contrasts the views of this world and our own inclinations. It’s fascinating! To diagnose our brokenness, we have to identify the lies that brought us to that situation. We have to dig into the truth of God in His written word and ask ourselves, “What lies am I believing right now that have led me here?” Let the truth expose and destroy those lies. This is the heart of biblical counseling. The more you know the truth, the easier it becomes to identify the lies and correct the problem by aligning yourself with the truth. Yes, we grow in life by learning and obeying the truth. Jesus said it plainly when He said to the Father, “Sanctify them by the truth; your word is truth.” (John 17:17 ESV). For this purpose, I have written a short book titled, The Infinite Gospel: A Foundational Primer to the Truth. It was written from the conviction that the Gospel has been tragically neglected in our lives as we, the church, are increasingly susceptible to the lies this world has bought into, rather than focusing steadfastly on the Word of God—the source of His abundant life in which we are invited to partake. The consequences are self-evident. The Infinite Gospel uses the power of God’s Word through the heavy use of Scripture in footnotes to bring the light of the knowledge of the fundamental truths of life. It is a thorough, yet concise Gospel presentation in book format; far more substantial than a tract, yet still accessible and easy to understand. Let The Infinite Gospel reframe your perspective of God and man. Reset the foundation of your worldview on the core truths of the Word of God. Discover the power that the Gospel offers you every day to bring you life and bring it more abundantly! The relevance of the Gospel in your mind determines how powerful it is in your life. To the degree you believe it, you will live it. The Gospel then becomes an increasingly greater treasure in your life, as you cling to and grow into its infinite truth. Read and think. Search for wisdom. Share the Gospel. Share The Infinite Gospel. The Infinite Gospel is available at LifeWay.com, Amazon.com, Barnesandnoble.com and many other booksellers. For more information visit The Infinite Gospel website and Facebook. Rhonda King recalls her plea to God during a very difficult time when her life was full of strain and sadness. “Lord, whatever it is that You need from me, you have my attention! You show me and I will go,” Rhonda repeats. Years ago, her heart heard His very call to “go.” She was as certain as the sun was light. Her spirit longed to see the time when “go” transformed from calling to action. Oceans away, a similar cry was heard in a language the Sovereign One knew intimately. Someone needed to hear the Gospel, someone needed medical care, and someone needed dental work. They all needed hope. “Then I heard the voice of the Lord, saying, ‘Whom shall I send, and who will go for Us?’” (Isaiah 6:8). Simultaneously, God, in His great wisdom, began to stir hearts in Ethiopia and Texas. He would begin the journey to bring them faceto-face. Rhonda King, a paramedic/firefighter for 20 years, was disabled from the work that she loved. Her back injured, her family fractured, and material provisions evaporating like the morning dew, she cried out to God. Little did she know that this place of desolation would be her meeting place with the enormous God of mercy. “I knew changes were coming. Once I was stripped of everything that had been first in my life, my eyes were opened to what the Word says, ‘Thou shall have no graven images before me.’ All of this stuff [money, material items] was my graven images. Image was more important to me than Jesus. Jesus, who suffered and sacrificed EVERYTHING,” Rhonda confesses. Her journey toward Him had just begun. God, rich in mercy and love, drew Rhonda and her husband, Barry, to Texas. God’s provision kept Barry in work and provided for their needs through family and acquaintances. When she saw a television show about missions, God began to tug on Rhonda’s heart to consider serving on a mission trip. Haiti seemed a place to start, and encouragement from a sister in Christ affirmed God’s call to serve on the mission field somewhere. Haiti remained on her heart, but as Rhonda submitted to the leadership of God, He began to bring Ethiopia to her mind. Ethiopia, however, was not a logical decision. It was more expensive, especially on Rhonda’s tight budget. But He spoke, “Rhonda, you are going to Ethiopia.” God confirmed His request to her in several ways, including complete financing for the trip across the world. Rhonda had committed to serving God where He asked her to go. Meanwhile, Marisa Barber, a nurse of nine years, passionate about helping people, still wondered when it would be time to complete her calling of five years earlier to go on a mission trip to Africa. God had blessed her family with three children, and for the first time in years, she was neither pregnant nor breastfeeding. She and her husband, Nate, lifted her request to God about the opportunity for Marisa to serve in Africa. In less than a week, an announcement called forth from the pulpit at her church: A medical mission trip to Ethiopia! Marisa’s eyes filled with tears! “A mission trip to Ethiopia! I was in shock, there were tears and I knew this was cont. on page 16 16 Feature God's answer to my prayers!” Marisa remembers. “It was Africa AND it was for medical missions! I would get to use my RN training! My husband was very supportive and ready to take time off work while I was away to care for our kids and continue homeschooling our new kindergartener while I was away. God raised all funds for the trip very quickly.” The time came to draw these two servants together with others to minister in Ethiopia. Two worlds would embrace through Crossway International. Marisa and Rhonda prepared with a team for weeks to meet the unknown. Many questions were still unanswered even once they arrived. Even the placement of the clinics and who would be working in them were fluid until God placed them. Marisa was able to use her RN skills in two medical clinics for children—one in Addis Ababa (the capital city of Ethiopia) and another in Meki (a small town about 130 kilometers south of Addis). They worked with Melaku, a native Ethiopian missionary of Crossway Ministries, his family and his church while there. The missionaries were able to provide medical care to hundreds of people that would otherwise have had none. Rhonda, who volunteered to serve in any capacity, found herself serving as a dental assistant. “I knew that the Lord was in control, and my time with the dentist, Dr. Aboush, was amazing,” Rhonda recalls. “I watched this gentle man tell the Gospel to every single patient who walked through our door. His mannerism, his charm, his passion about the Christ who has prepared a place for us all, was more than I could take at times. It brought tears to my eyes many times to see this man of God on his knees, sharing the love of Christ time and time again, for hours each day to over 40 patients a day.” Rhonda and Marisa’s willingness to serve God in a foreign country touched hundreds of lives in Ethiopia. God used their faith journeys to share the good news of the Gospel of Christ with individuals in their clinics thousands of miles from home. The church can reach out and impact the people of Ethiopia by praying. Physically, there is very little clean water in Ethiopia and most standing water contains raw sewage. Spiritually, there is a great need for Jesus—many of the individuals are Muslim and under harsh government control. “The church can pray for workers, both native Ethiopians and those who can go there on long or short-term missions!” Marisa explains. “Like many places, ‘The harvest truly is plentiful, but the laborers are few. Therefore pray the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into His harvest’ (Matthew 9:37-38). “It is so easy for everyone, myself included, to get caught up in our busy, comfortable, ‘important’ lives here and forget that we are a very rich nation, full of resources and opportunities that most people know nothing of. Let's use the resources and opportunities that God has given us to bring Him glory and to be a blessing to others, both locally and around the world! Pray Previous page: Rhonda King meets a little girl in Ethiopia. Above top: for a spiritual awakening in Ethiopia, that all would come to Teaching children. Above: Marisa Barber hands out goodies. know Jesus.” Photos courtesy of Marisa Barber. Feature 17 > > > Villages of HOPE Africa > > > Villages of Hope Africa was founded by David and Dana Mann after following God’s call and serving in Africa since 1992. After years of experience in the African culture, they knew that they were being called to Northern Uganda. In 2009, they founded Villages of Hope Africa, a 501(c) (3) non-profit organization, based out of Gulu, Uganda. David and Dana were raised in Texas and married in 1983. They are typical middle class people who worked hard to build a local homebuilding company in San Antonio, Texas. In 1992, God led them to commit to follow His call. Within a year of that prayer, the Manns met a young pastor from Eastern Uganda who was following his own vision, to share the story of his people in the United States. Through this meeting, their vision for service changed from provisionary to hands-on service in Uganda. Villages of Hope Africa (VOHA) is based on Isaiah 58:612, which has given us a clear vision: to Return, Rebuild, and Restore the lives of the Acholi people of Gulu—a war-torn, confused, harsh area in which two decades of Joseph Kony’s rebel activity had destroyed the people, their land and their spirits. VOHA exists to honor God by demonstrating love, just as Christ loves us, to the most vulnerable people of Northern Uganda. We seek to network with others by providing basic elements to establish sustainable villages that will reflect a new hope for the future. Today, it is humbling to see individual villages restored as they become self-sustaining. As we walk where God is leading, He has opened the door to many individuals who have the desire to learn more about Christ and pastor their own villages. VOHA has started pastoral training that includes over 100 pastors in 74 different villages, which represents approximately 30,000 people. Their spiritual growth has become the foundation, allowing them to trust and rely on God in all facets of their lives. As you visit the villages that VOHA partners with, you will see hope displayed through new crops planted, children educated and people learning about proper sanitation. We have now completed over 60 water wells, aiding in overall wellness of each village. cont. on page 18 18 Feature 19 Feature > > > > Villages of HOPE Africa cont. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Testimony: Recent Team Member Isaiah 61 I do not believe I will ever be able to articulate how remarkable my time spent in Uganda with VOHA and the Acholi people was. Every moment was saturated with God’s presence, from the bus rides to once barren desolate villages, to the rice and bean dinners filled with life and laughter... God was there. When I was in Africa, there was an unfathomable recurrence in me that could not keep from sharing the Gospel. I am not sure if it was the infectious love that the Acholi people displayed or the urgency I felt because my time there was so short, but I, along with my team, was determined to make Christ famous. There is something about being halfway around the world where I felt so out of my comfort zone yet at peace, that I stepped out in confidence and spoke of Christ so boldly. The Acholi people have taken up residence in my heart forever. -Ashley Jo Get Involved: Churches, groups and individuals can be involved with VOHA in various ways. First and foremost, we need prayer support. Please pray for the villagers—for restoration that only God can bring to their lives. In addition to prayer, we welcome your financial gifts. We use these gifts to equip local villagers to sustain themselves, their families and the local economy. Supplies are purchased directly in Uganda, which saves money and supports more people. In addition, VOHA partners with local leadership to access where funds are needed most. We encourage you to contact VOHA to come speak/present a presentation and share how you can become a voice for the people of Uganda and possibly go and serve. VOHA feels that it is an honor to train and lead teams to experience the people of Gulu, Uganda. For more information visit VOHA online. For recent updates visit their Facebook page. Testimony: Our International Team Leader “You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you” (John 15:16). Abandoned. Surrendered. Called. God broke my heart, turned my world upside down and saved my life when He first called me to Uganda with VOHA in 2011. Growing up with a heart for missions and having gone on multiple mission trips, I thought I knew what to expect as I traveled to Africa. I knew that I wouldn’t just be serving the Acholi people in Uganda, but that I too would likely walk away having been impacted. I just had no clue to what effect. When my feet touched that orange dirt and I began to meet the Acholi people, it was different than any other trip I had been on, and to be completely honest, my life has never been and will never be quite the same. I knew without question that I was tired of the lip service and half-hearted commitment—it was time to completely surrender and fully abandon my life to Christ. Even after returning home, God was using Uganda to work in and through me, and I began to change. I was ready to follow wherever and however God called me, but I wasn’t quite sure what this looked like in my life. I turned to God in prayer knowing that if I listen and trust in the Lord, He will direct my paths (Proverbs 3:5-6). Every ounce of my being desires to live a life that glorifies God, and I feel so blessed and completely humbled that God called me to serve Him in Uganda as part of VOHA. Today, I am honored to bring teams to Gulu, to not only experience the place I consider a home and meet the people that I consider family, but to also deepen their relationship with Christ as they see the amazing things that He is doing in the villages of Uganda. I have learned that there is no greater place to be than to be walking in the will of God. The joyful hearts of the Acholi people is something that has changed my heart and will always be a part of who I am today. -Kacie Kripner 20 Feature Mwangaza Children’s Choir The Fruit of Hope By Penne Jaster When is hope first learned? Is it taught? Or is it experienced? Children remarkably show a resiliency and hope in life. How is it that they come into contact with hope in well-to-do and profoundly impoverished cultures? And how does the one true source of hope, Jesus, reach the individual grasping for help? The Mwangaza Children’s Choir is a vessel of hope for a hurting world. Twenty Ugandan children are chosen from between 6000-7000 sponsored children annually to participate in a six-month tour to the United States and/or United Kingdom to bring their musical talents and share the heart of Africa Renewal Minsitries (ARM). ARM, the parent ministry of Mwangaza, is a sponsorship and leadership development program out of Uganda. A full child sponsorship through ARM provides for children from the time they are born through college. ARM raises awareness of the needs in churches, orphanages, medical clinics and child sponsorship programs in poverty-stricken Uganda. The choir is an outreach of the ministry for fundraising, increasing sponsorships and sharing God’s work through the ministry. The Mwangaza Children’s Choir began in 2004 to increase awareness of the ministries of ARM to the western world. The choir consists of 20 children ages 8-12 years old who have shown musical talent. The children represent the orphaned and poverty-stricken youth of Uganda and are chosen based on talent and leadership capabilities. The choir members and volunteer leaders are hosted by local churches for housing, meals and performances. Each child in the choir brings an inspiring testimony of their life’s exchange with Jesus Christ and awareness of the resources that are needed. Since its beginning, ARM has sent out nine different choir tours. Each choir has a majority of newly chosen individuals with the occasional return of one or two children from a previous tour. Neil Clements, current manager of the choir, first became involved while partic- 21 Feature ipating in his “normal” daily business of landscaping. He was approached by one of his clients about becoming the manager of the choir and offered the opportunity through an ARM board member. Clements states that one of the greatest opportunities that the choir has is to share the Gospel of Jesus Christ. One of the most memorable experiences he shared in a recent interview with Embolden was from a small church in Houston, Texas. During the service provided by the Mwangaza Children’s Choir, there was a Gospel presentation, and over 20 people exchanged their lives for the life of Christ in that one evening alone! The children receive blessings for being involved in the choir through consistent meals, shelter, clothing and supervision in a consistent culturally relevant environment for six months. When the children return from the choir tour, they are provided with assistance for their families, clothing and reinstated into Ugandan culture. Each of the performers brings with them a story of their culture and their family or lack thereof. Each of them tells a story of where they started and being found by Jesus Christ. Their stories are inspiring. From children left by tragedy without parents, children abandoned or working to bring some sort of financial support to their family system, these children show a hope and resiliency as their lives have intersected with Jesus through ARM. Their testimonies are profound and joyful. Their music captivating. The concert is a mix of familiar and patriotic tunes as well as tremendously energetic and inspiring worship Ugandan-style. The costumes bring the western world into the colorful world of Ugandan native dress and expression. The inspiring name of the choir, Mwangaza (m-whan-GAH-zah), is a Swahili word for “shining light”. The contrast of beautifully dark skin, colorful native dress, the light they omit from their eyes and the music and testimonies brings a moving experience to local churches who host the touring group. Ways that individuals and churches can assist and support the ministry of the Mwangaza Children’s Choir and Africa Renewal Ministries are: • Participate in Child Sponsorship • Donate financially to the needs of the Ugandan ministry in equipping churches, orphanages and medical clinics • Participate in internships in Uganda to serve the local communities in their efforts to share the Gospel and provide basic needs to their families Clements encourages local church staff members to become more receptive and open to hosting the choir into their church. The blessings received by both the church and the choir are of eternal value. The reach of the local church extends exponentially through hosting and sharing with the choir. Clements shares of one girl’s choice to help support the choir. She and her family attended a choir concert and participated in hosting a leader and a few of the choir members. Several months after leaving their home, Clements received testimony about the young girl. For her sixth birth- day, she asked to NOT receive any birthday presents for her party. Instead, she requested her gifts to be money to send to the Mwangaza Children’s Choir. She raised over $200 for her celebration in support of the ministry that impacted her. Anyone can choose to give in a way that the Holy Spirit moves them to do so. Here’s to hope in Jesus in breaking the cycle of poverty and abuse, in raising young leaders that will help impact the world for Christ and speak for the country of Uganda. Here’s to an inspiring relationship between peoples of multiple cultures in Africa, the United Kingdom and the United States of America. Here’s to hope for our hurting world through the Gospel-based ministry of Africa Renewal Ministries and the Mwangaza Children’s Choir! For more information visit Mwangaza online or Facebook. 22 Feature The Kipepeo Project A s we walked through the blue, rusted gate of the orphanage we saw nothing but dirt and grime. We heard children laughing and crying. We smelled smoke mingled with trash and human waste. Then we saw her—a child about 6 years old. She was grunting, sitting alone on a bench and hitting her head against a brick wall. As we walked over to her, we could see that her clothes were covered in filth and excrement and her head had healed scars and open sores that were bleeding from hitting her head on the wall all day. All she wanted to do was play with the beach balls we had brought. All she wanted to do was be held and helped to move around. All she wanted was love. This was Lucy Abbas. She has Cerebral Palsy and was left alone to sit all day; it was deplorable and it broke our hearts. We heard about an infant who was found in a pit latrine in the slums of Nairobi. We heard about others who were left for dead on the side of the road or near train tracks. We heard of those whose parents abandoned them to pursue drugs, drinking or prostitution. These children had no hope, they had no dignity and they had no love. They were brought to this Rescue Facility, not a long-term solution; however, it becomes home to many orphaned and abandoned children. We saw eight cribs, four with no mattresses only slat boards, and the leaky roof. We smelled the urine and filth and saw that there were not enough beds to accommodate their needs. We also saw how beautiful their tiny faces were and how their eyes smiled through the dirt and filth. We saw how they loved to play ball, throw Frisbees, jump rope, laugh, run and play. We saw joy in the midst of suffering and we felt a desire to give them hope. So began The Kipepeo Project, from a small spark that God placed in our hearts to provide better living conditions and bring hope and dignity to these beautiful children. The Lord continues to bless The Kipepeo Project with generous donors, benefactors, friends and those who wish to serve the least of these. We are only a vessel; we have chosen to say, “Yes Lord” and words cannot describe how God has used Kipepeo for His glory. By Hannah Popp “Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world” (James 1:27). To say that God’s heart is for the orphaned and fatherless would be an understatement. Throughout Scripture, He is described as a defender of the fatherless, one whose heart and eyes are inclined towards the defenseless and innocent. Followers of Jesus Christ are called to live in the exact same way, asked to see those who have been overlooked and care for them as their Heavenly Father does. After a 2009 trip to Murang’a, Kenya, Erika O’Connor and Mojo Cornelius heard this call and decided to respond, marking the beginning of The Kipepeo Project. While visiting the Murang'a Children's Rescue Center, they saw that many of the facilities were unfit to meet the needs of the children who were living there. Many of the children left abandoned and alone seemed to have lost a sense of hope because of that. They share this desire to help on their website stating, “Dignity is not being found abandoned in a pit latrine. Dignity is not having cerebral palsy and sitting on a bench all day with open sores unable to move around by yourself. Dignity is not living in a rundown house that leaks when it rains.” “Kipepeo is Swahili for butterfly. We desire our projects to nurture a metamorphosis of dignity and hope in the lives of the orphans that we work with,” Erika says. “We want to facilitate a dramatic change in the lives of those who we reach like that of a caterpillar changing to a beautiful butterfly.” Erika and Mojo say the main inspiration behind their decision to start The Kipepeo Project was “the smiles on the kids’ faces – oh my goodness those smiles! And our hearts were broken after seeing the deplorable conditions they live in. We saw the desperate needs of the children, and we wanted to help them any way we could; we wanted to bring them hope and dignity. “When we came home in July 2009, we raised the money to complete the first round of renovations, which included: a new roof, re-plastering and painting the walls, repairing the ceilings and floors, etc. We were able to return in the summer of 2011 to check progress and see the renovations first hand.” By simply saying yes to what He was asking them to do, Erika and Mojo have seen the Lord work in remarkable ways. “We are constantly reminded of the miracle of loaves and fishes and how resources have multiplied. Time and time again, it was as if the money needed for the first round of renovations Feature 23 just kept coming. The Lord continues to place people in our path to encourage us and stay focused and not lose hope for the vision He had placed on our hearts,” Erika says. The Kipepeo Project has been able to provide shoes, clothing, toys and other necessary materials each time they visit. Erika and Mojo find it remarkable that they have been able to witness many of the infants grow and now attend school. In fact, they have been able to witness many miracles and testimonies of God’s work over the years. “One story of God working happened a few weeks ago,” Erka says. “We were working on the kitchen/dining/dorm construction. We wanted to give the facility a nice stove. We found a place in Nairobi that custom makes industrial stoves. The gentleman who makes the stoves came out to the facility to measure the space and speak to the cooks. We budgeted $3,500 for the stove; these stoves he described and that he makes are so wonderful and we were concerned that the quote was going to be way over budget, but God worked through the gentleman and the quote was exactly $3,500; that is what God does!” Erika and Mojo hope to finish restoring the facilities at Rescue within the next few years, but their vision does not stop there. Erika explains the long-term goal of The Kipepeo Project is “to purchase land (or partner with someone who already owns land) and build our own orphanage or larger foster home. We would like to have our own or partner with another ministry to provide a transition and training for those children about to age out. This would include a technical/trade school offering classes in welding, sewing or some other type of training.” As the opportunity to take on more care for these children increases, so does the need for support for this ministry. In order for others to get involved, Erika and Mojo suggest to “first and foremost - pray! Help us spread the word. Financial donations or helping to organize a fundraiser would be helpful. Occasionally, we need help gathering supplies and extra suitcases. We also need financial sponsors for the extra suitcases (usually about $200 each). This amount may seem high; however, it is more reliable and affordable than mailing. If we are able to purchase needed items in Kenya, then we request monies for such. If everyone did a little – no one would have to do a lot.” As followers of Jesus Christ, the mission is clear: love people the same way that He has loved us. To live out the calling to love the overlooked and abandoned, followers should take every opportunity to pray for, financially support, or physically go serve in ministries like The Kipepeo Project. For more information about The Kipepeo Project, visit their website or join them on Facebook to learn more about what is currently going on with their ministry. 24 Feature Go and Tell Ministries By April Lynn Newell Walking unharmed through an angry mob, feeding 850 people with very little food, delivering a young girl from demon possession, saving a Muslim man who came to murder the very people who led him to Christ, healing a man from cancer and allowing him to witness all these things— God is at work. God is at work in Go and Tell Ministries and has been since before the ministry was ever established or thought of in Greg Lewis’ mind. It began in 1982 when Greg, a highly successful and influential building designer in San Antonio, Texas, USA, accepted Christ at a friend’s house. But it wasn’t until years later, volunteering at a youth camp that his relationship with the Lord became deep and real. “My business was failing, I had a guy wanting to sue me and I had always been able to handle things in my own strength, but I could not solve this problem and all the other problems had built up,” Greg recalls. “I remember during a student camp service, all the students were worshiping and I got caught up in the music, and I say, ‘Lord, Lord I give up.’ And I’m just crying. I open my eyes and my hands are raised and I don’t care because I was talking to God and He was talking to me and His presence was thick like never before. It was like a fountain flowing in front of me and filling me up. People have all kinds of names for this [feeling] but I call it the day I fell in love with Jesus. I knew Him and He knew me and I was going to heaven, but this was the day I fell in love with Jesus. I haven’t taken the smile off my face since that day.” In 2003, Greg was invited to Uganda on what would be his very first mission trip. He immediately replied he would go and God spoke to his wife, Amy, giving her peace in the calling for Greg to go to Uganda as well. On this first mission trip to a continent and country that Greg, unbeknownst to him, would one day know very well, he was sent out in a remote area to speak the Gospel door-to-door with a translator. Each hut in this area was spread far from the previous one. Nervous, with Gospel script in-hand he walked to knock on a door. Inside this first hut was a very sick man. His family had laid him on a pallet on the floor and the illness was so dire it was obvious they were merely awaiting his death. Greg knelt beside the dying man and began to read his scripted Gospel message. When he finished, Greg asked the man if he would like prayer. The man said yes but asked if Greg would examine him first—he thought the white man who had entered his hut in the middle of nowhere was a doctor. Death is common in this area and in homes, Greg explains, but nobody ever touches a dying person. However, Greg did not think about dos and don’ts, he just did what he felt led to do and began to touch him starting at his wrist. Power flowed through Greg to the man and the Holy Spirit was evident to both men. “God had me touch him and it wasn’t a healing touch it was the love of Jesus,” Greg explained. “It was Jesus Christ touching the man and I got to be his hands and feet.” The man accepted Christ and Greg saw a completely different person than who he saw walking into the hut. His fear, Greg says, had changed to a peaceful smile. “Hut after hut people were coming to the Lord just through the power of His living Word, simply reading parables from the New Testament,” Greg recalls. “That’s when I knew I wanted to do this for the rest of my life and now I do. I’ll go to the ends of the world; I’ll go anywhere.” After coming home from that first trip, Greg continued to dive deep into Scripture and hear from God in prayer. A year after his return, Greg was diagnosed with stage 4 cancer. An operation was scheduled the day after he was diagnosed. However, both Greg and Amy had peace and were able to testify to God’s power and love to their doctor and friends when the Lord healed Greg completely. Feature It soon became clear, to both Greg and Amy, that in order to depend solely on God, He was calling them to give away all they had. “We sold our million-dollar home and now we live moment by moment, month by month and see Him supply,” Greg says. “I was in Africa [the first trip] and like Moses was tending sheep and he saw a burning bush, I saw the dying man and I saw people coming to God. When I got home it was so profound, I was so near to God that I overheard Him saying, ‘Who will go for us? Whom shall I send?’ and I said, ‘Here I am Lord, send me.’ My wife was behind me 100 percent in that decision, knowing we won’t be able to buy things the way we used to. But we are so happy now because it is Him providing for us. He is the way, the truth and the life.” Today, Greg leads many teams to Africa, and occasionally Asia, through Go and Tell Ministries. God has given a threefold mission to Go and Tell Ministries: 1) Take people and teams on mission trips and bring them back as missionaries 2) Pour into missionaries and encourage them in their ministries 3) Teach pastors the truth from the Bible to dispel mixed religions 25 Greg loves to tell about the many villages they have visited and the numerous miracles they have seen God perform. Testimony after testimony flows from him and with each one he becomes more and more excited, more and more on fire for what God is doing around him. One of Greg’s favorite testimonies to share is of a young girl who was demon possessed. As Greg and his team were finishing up showing the Jesus Film to a village, screams issued from a nearby hut. One of Greg’s translators told him to come quick. What Greg saw as he walked into the hut was like nothing he had seen or encountered before. The young girl was thrashing and uncontrollable. At one point she flew across the room away from the three people of God who had come to help her. As they were finally able to hold onto her, Greg began rebuking the spirit and telling the girl about Jesus. He asked her to say His name, to accept Him explaining the peace she would know in Jesus Christ. Finally the girl was able to say the Lord’s name and the spirit left her. Greg and the two other team members with him hugged her and sang praises to the Lord for some time after. Recently, three to four years later, Greg visited the village to find Miriam, the same young girl, preaching to her peers, leading prayer and cont. on page 26 26 Bible studies and desiring to be a pastor. Greg knew God had caused his path to cross with Miriam’s. One clear thing about Go and Tell Ministries is that God is at work. Greg and Amy are merely being obedient, and God is working. God is saving lives. God is providing for the Lewis’ to continue His ministry. God is delivering men and women and children. God is inspiring Greg to keep going. There are several ways for the church to support Go and Tell Ministries. Churches, groups and ministries can invite Greg to speak and share with them. This can be for 15 minutes or an entire service where you can see photos and videos from their many trips. You can visit www.goandtellministries.net to make a monetary donation. You can even send a group on mission from your church or ministry. However, the number one way Greg asks for support is prayer. He rests in the fact that God will provide everything else. “Where I go is hard,” he explains. “Satan attacks my family. I can feel when they [supporters] are praying for me.” For more information visit the Go and Tell Ministries website and Greg Lewis’ Facebook page. Feature Feature From the Field: 27 Uganda April Mulcahy’s path was not always directed to missions. Not until she dove into the Experiencing God Bible study at the end of her college years did she realize the adventure God was planning. “It talked about the kingdom of God and that it includes the world,” April recalls about the study. “I noticed for the first time it said ‘go and disciple the nations’ and that it was plural. It was a light bulb to me—we’re supposed to be part of discipling the world.” She started with short-term missions and afterwards God led her to be a missionary in China for three years. Then after some time in the U.S., God moved her to live and serve in Jinja, Uganda full time with Commission to Every Nation. With a heart for discipleship, God made this a perfect fit as she soon learned discipleship is something many Ugandans desire. After living in Uganda for two years she has learned the importance for people to know their identity in Christ, including herself. Psalm 63:3 is a verse that once struck her, “Because Your love is better than life, my lips will praise You.” She learned through Bill Loveless’ teachings from Christ is Life Ministries that God never intended us to live the Christian life that only Christ can live—our part is depen- dence, and He will live His life through us. He wants our heart, not our performance. As God is transforming her, she invites others to journey along and be transformed as well. She focuses on these Christ is Life concepts in her small groups, classes, counseling and one-onone sessions with Ugandans. April explains that she “encourages (others) to enjoy intimacy with Christ; to love the Bible and to know the Bible; and to equip them to be agents of change in their own community, because the best people to reach out to Ugandans are Ugandans.” April partners with several ministries in Uganda including Jinja Pregnancy Crisis Center, Heal Ministries and pastor conferences. She teaches life skills, facilitates small groups with young professional men and women and teenage moms, spends time counseling and teaches at ministry leadership trainings. In these formal forums and through casual conversations she shares the principles of the Christ is Life Ministries curriculum. She is amazed to see God transform people’s lives through it. She loves to partner alongside Ugandan brothers and sisters in Christ who have a fervent love for the Lord, many of whom she has had the privilege to befriend and encourage. “Uganda is not new to the Gospel,” April says, “but (there are still) many (who) don’t really know what a relationship with Christ is. It is very common for them to say they are born again but don’t know what Jesus is doing or what He has done for them—that it’s not just about meeting physical needs but about the eternal and your whole heart.” She loves to work in Uganda because, as she explains, “there is a thirst and hunger for more and that is what is amazing—unlike other places that are familiar with the Gospel, they’re not burnt out on it or jaded. They want to know more. They crave it actually.” April points out that a performance-based teaching is often ingrained in our upbringing. The same is in Uganda. Communities in Uganda also experience various hardships. For example, 50 percent of Uganda’s population of 37 cont. on page 28 28 million is under the age of 14. Many families suffer from the difficulties of corruption, domestic abuse, poverty, unemployment and sexually transmitted diseases. Whether they are of high income/high education status or low income and illiterate, the whole country feels the affects, so they love to learn more about the power of the Living Word and Christ living His abundant life through them. Through the various activities she has been involved in, April has seen her friends become empowered and living testimonies of God’s power. At Heal Ministries, April met Abraham. Through the ministry he has been empowered to teach and is currently embracing God’s ministry of leading Muslim women to the saving power of Jesus. At the ministry leadership training she hears leaders say, “Ever since I’ve learned these things, my life has changed, it has really changed.” At the pregnancy center, April sees more change take place as she meets with young girls who have been cast out from their families because of their unplanned pregnancies. The center seeks to help them in Christ-centered ways. “Auntie April,” as the girls affectionately refer to her, has recently seen God work in mighty ways in two of her disciples’ lives at the pregnancy center. “Sandra wanted an abortion when she came because she was kicked out of school and her family shunned her. Mary told her to come to the care center and then Sandra wanted to learn more about the Bible and about Jesus so we started meeting Monday afternoons in a small group,” April says. “Over time as they were learning life skills they were being so active in the small group. A month ago I saw them changing as they started counseling the other girls and quoting back Scripture that we studied. Mary’s prayer request changed from ‘pray for me’ to ‘pray for my community; they need to know the Gospel’. She has no doubt about God. Sandra had her baby and is the gentlest mom and loves her baby dearly. She counsels the other girls with their problems. She invited me to a Bible study group she started and there were 15 women, all older than her. The Spirit is working and they just absorb it and immediately apply it. “‘My life has transformed,’ I love hearing those words,” April says of the many testimonies she hears through the various small groups and classes. “I love my job, because I don’t feel like I’m doing anything. I just feel like I’m there, and people are praying, and God is moving, and Feature Devo Remote Control Issues 29 A Devotional By Josie Barone I have the privilege of just being there.” April’s needs are the same as any other missionary, both for financial support and prayer. “I believe in prayer,” April says. “I have financial needs and I have things I need for my ministry, but I think that we don’t really get the power of prayer. A friend of mine once said, ‘Bottom line, nothing supernatural is going to happen unless we pray.’ I hold onto that because as people pray then people will be led to give and come and visit. Everything will be taken care of when we’re on our knees first.” To connect with April about financially and prayerfully partnering with God’s work in Uganda, e-mail april.mulcahy@ gmail.com. He enters the room a few steps before me, knowing if he doesn’t, there is a possibility I will take hold of it before him—and the results will be catastrophic. You see, if this item happens to end up in my possession, the lineup will look entirely different than he envisions. Home improvements, cooking contests and reality TV, with perhaps a nice romance in between, will highlight the evening. Instead of sports, sports, sports and did I say sports? By now, you may have guessed I refer to the coveted item known as the remote control. Whoever has possession of this little, dark device ultimately rules the television world. We all have our ways to manage the remote control. For me, I usually like to land on one show and stay on it the entire duration, with the exception of commercials. At that point, I will journey a few stations away from the channel, making sure I do not travel too far, or I’ll forget what I am watching. Now hubby is more adventurous than me. Channels breeze by with a blur, until—I am not sure how he notices—something will catch his interest. Then, he will land there just long enough for me to become emotionally attached, before quickly moving onto another channel. Let’s just say we have remote control issues. On a serious note though, is it possible to have remote control issues when it comes to my relationship with Jesus Christ? To be honest, there are times I am remote with Him. Far-removed and detached, I keep a safe distance away from emotional attachment. Never fully embracing Him, nor allowing Him complete access to the depth of my soul. You see, it is because I desire control—I want to be the authority of my life. I want to watch what I want to watch, and do what I want to do. I want the final say on my decisions, and ultimately, my destiny. The problem is, when I do this, I miss out on so much more than I am experiencing. The story of my life becomes a low quality ‘B’ movie at best with me as the central character, instead of an on-the-edge-of-your-seat epic saga it was destined to be with Jesus Christ as the central focus. I have decided it is time to let go of the remote control once and for all. You can read more from Josie Barone on her blog, Yellow Brick Identity and receive a free digital copy of her book “Stereotypical Hearing Loss”. In the Word: Hebrews 11:6 (ESV) And without faith, it is impossible to please him, for whoever would draw near to God must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who seek him. Notes: 30 POV How to Hug a Vampire Pt. II By Nigel Ruiz Rejoice Always We all have to engage in human interaction at some point during the week. Whether you enjoy going out or staying home—there will be a time when putting off grocery shopping leaves you with butter and Taco Bell fire sauce in the fridge, a movie you wanted to see comes out or you finally make the decision to use that dusty old gym membership card that has been sitting on the dresser. Whatever the reason, other humans will attempt to communicate with you, some more hostile than others. So how do we show Jesus to the people we just want to go away? Why do we even have to? Last time I said the first step was identifying that we ourselves can be that most annoying person to someone else, that we all need a Savior and understanding our own depravity will help us learn to see others as simply needing Jesus, like the rest of us. This time, I will touch on a more proactive attitude. If you like looking at problems and doing something about them, then this might be helpful to you. If we look to 1 Thessalonians 5:17 we see it states a simple charge –“pray without ceasing”. The verses before and after all point to this command. Verse 15, “See that no one repays evil for evil…”. How do we do that? Pray without ceasing. Verse 18, “In everything give thanks…”. How do we do that? Pray without ceasing. Verse 16, “Rejoice always.” How do we do that? I think it’s clear that Paul meant for us to fill our days with prayer and when we do that, we will find strength renewed. A filling of fight. A heart of humility. Word Grateful Acres 31 Always Looking for the Best in Others Not long ago, I was talking to a man at my church about how angry I get when I drive. Many can probably relate, however, not many drive as much as I do during a day. Putting close to 4,000 miles a month on my car, I find myself sharing the road with less-than-safe people often. Being “alone” in my car gives me the “freedom” to express my frustrations a little more openly. Lately, God has convicted me in this area, and what my friend told me to do was immediately after someone cuts you off or does something mean or dumb on the road, begin praying for them. Pray their lives are blessed, that if circumstances are dictating that they drive speedily, pray for safe driving. This wasn’t what I wanted to do at all, but that day, someone squeezed his little sports car in between me and a large truck in front of me, and instead of thinking how many ways I could run him off the road, I prayed for that person. I didn’t stop until we parted ways and, before I realized it, my anger subsided, and I was filled with a desire to love him. Needless to say, we will all have these encounters, and more often than not, it will be off the road where we will be given the opportunity to make passive-aggressive protests or snide remarks in front of the offender. A prayer-filled life is a proactive answer to the call to love our brothers and sisters. I would even go as far as to say if you are praying BEFORE the malevolence, it will be that much more natural to respond in the Spirit with love. To read Part I of this series visit www.emboldenzine.com/issues. Part I can be found in the Summer issue. Ms. Kay and I try to see the best in others and in situations. One way that seems to work best is to think about how God might see things. As an example, some people might see how Zeke, our miniature donkey, handles the small flock of sheep we have (see the previous issue for more about Zeke and the sheep). Zeke leads the group to and from the fields in which they feed. So if I open the gate to allow the group to move to the front pasture, Zeke comes out first and waits at the gate until all the others have passed through. She then pushes them in a tight group down to the front to graze. If one from the group runs to the right or left, Zeke chases after it. All the while biting and kicking at the runaway until it rejoins the group. The behavior might seem too much, but think about why Zeke might behave in such a manner. Ranchers use donkeys to protect herds of goats and flocks of sheep. The maternal and protective instincts of the donkey serve the more docile animals well. If a coyote or bobcat approaches the group the donkeys instinctively start moving the group away from danger as well as run in between the group and the predator. We have observed the same behavior with Zeke even when friends bring their dogs over to play and swim. Have you ever seen protective behavior in animals you have or live around? It is kind of cool to think how well God made animals to protect and depend on each other. When I see Zeke biting and kicking at one of the others, I must remember that such behavior might save a life one day. That is what I meant when I spoke about Ms. Kay and myself always trying to see the best in others. People are really the same, only smarter, right? Parents are to protect and provide for children, as a direct command from God. The Bible tells us that children are a blessing from God. They are like arrows in a quiver. I am sure there have been times when you thought your parents were a bit overprotective. As parents and grandparents, Ms. Kay and I have made the mistake as well. But I plead with you to see the good in the action of overprotection. Yes, there are some parents that overprotect as the norm. Then there are parents that do not seem to protect at all. As two people who try to please God the best we can, we suggest that children try and see the best in what their parents are doing and cont. on page 32 32 be thankful there are people who care enough to protect them. Such grace and goodness from the children to the parents is very pleasing to God. Children need to remember and sometimes be told that parents are responsible to God for the manner in which the children are raised. That is a heavy responsibility. Now, I end with this bit of seeing the best in others. How many of you have done something that you never thought you could have done? I hope that includes most of you. Maybe you learned a new song on the piano. Maybe you learned to ride a horse. I do not know what it might be, but seeing the best in others is a great encourager. If you ever have a chance to encourage someone please do. You might be the only ray of hope and sunshine they encounter during the day. Ms. Kay and I taught our granddaughter how to swim for survival. You might be thinking, “Survival, what in the world is he talking about?” Follow me please. Panic is a very bad behavior to practice when you find yourself in deep water and no one around. The more you panic the more chance you have of hurting yourself. So we taught our 6-yearold granddaughter to slow down her movements and trust her ability to swim slowly and float when needed. When we started the teaching she would scream and cry, but we knew she could do it. We kept encouraging her and by the end of our time in the pool she was swimming for survival without the initial panic. And guess what else? She was smiling ear to ear. She was so Word proud of herself and we were just as proud for her. In closing, I never thought Ms. Kay would be able to teach Fairybell how to sit. I did not see the best in Ms. Kay’s training abilities, nor did I see the best in Fairybell’s ability to learn tricks. Well, they say pictures do not lie. After many apologies to my wife and her fat little pig I give you the proof of their training. Ms. Kay taught Fairybell to sit just like Max our overweight dog. I am not sure what they will try next. I do know next time I will look for the best from both of them. It is our prayer that God continues to work in your life and give you the courage and hope to be and do more than you ever thought or dream. And may I add, please be an encourager each day. We have enough discouragement in the world. Your smile might be the only smile someone sees today. Until next time from Grateful Acres, this is Ms. Kay and Mr. Andy saying adios. 33 Word May God bless and keep you all, Andy and Ms. Kay PS: We thank you so much for hanging out with us and hearing about our little corner of joy, we affectionately call Grateful Acres. May we humbly ask a favor? If you have comments, good or bad, would you please email us and let us know. We have fun living here and truly desire to share our land and animals with all. Our best e-mail address is [email protected]. Thank you so much and God bless. Have fun coloring in Remie and Fairybell below! Print out this page and send your artwork to [email protected] or 6650 Prue Rd. #824, San Antonio, TX 78240. Faith Family Clinic By Gabriel Vaughan Healing in Jesus’ Name All over the country, healthcare facilities containing Christian denominational monikers in their names testify to their foundation as places of spiritual and physical healing. Unfortunately, despite the name, the care given by those facilities is now primarily focused on healing the body, with little regard to the health of the soul. Prayer and the name of Christ may be often heard in the waiting rooms but rarely in the treatment rooms. There is a non-profit organization in San Antonio, Texas, U.S. who has heeded a call from God to change that paradigm. Faith Family Clinic of San Antonio is working to reclaim medicine as an outreach of the body of Christ by providing lowcost healthcare to working people who are uninsured or underinsured. Jim Young, Faith Family Clinic CEO and founder, aims to give Christ center stage as healer and Savior. He believes God’s word and the biblical connection between health of the body and prosperity of the soul (3 John 1:2). Based on that biblical understanding, leaders from San Antonio healthcare organizations, led by Charles Martin, the CEO of Vanguard Health System, approached Jim Young to investigate the possibility of opening a new clinic on the west side of San Antonio. Their goal was to provide health and wellness services to people who fall into a gap in the healthcare system – a gap into which approximately 275,000 San Antonio citizens fall. For those who are unemployed or earn less than 150 percent of the poverty line, there are government and private programs to cover health and wellness services. Unfortunately, that leaves a significant population of working families with little to no ability to afford health insurance. For example, a working single mother of three who makes $36,000 per year would pay over $1,000 per month in health care insurance under the Affordable Health Care Act. More than one-third of her income would go to pay for healthcare, leavcont. on page 34 34 ing less than $2,000 per month for rent, food, childcare, gas and other expenses. This family is living in survival mode and health insurance would be a luxury they could not afford. People in this situation are most likely to use the hospital emergency room for any medical care they need. Emergency rooms are required by law to treat patients, regardless of their ability to pay, so low-income families with few other options use them as their family clinic. They receive services, but cannot pay for the high-priced emergency care, so the hospital takes a financial loss. Charlie Martin, Jim Young and others saw an opportunity to alleviate the burden on the hospitals, provide volunteer opportunities for Christians in the medical community and, more importantly, share the love of Christ to people in need. The philosophy of the Faith Family Clinic leadership is manifold but centers on the sharing of the Gospel of Christ by mobilizing the children of God to address the physical and emotional needs of hurting people. The clinic also provides a local place for believers with medical and administrative skills to invest them in the Kingdom of God and live out their faith. Another goal of the clinic is to cultivate the faith of the staff and volunteers as they work out their salvation in a practical way (Phil 2:12). The clinic leadership encourages prayer and testimony as an integral part of the treatment plan. Mr. Young believes that the underlying causes of a large majority of medical problems are behavioral and therefore influenced by the sin nature in all of us. By connecting the physical to the spiritual, Faith Family Clinic desires to address the core issues in a preventative manner, thus lessening the strain on the medical system and reconciling the patient to God and His plan for their life. Therefore, Mr. Young who is a minister, not a doctor, sees the clinic as a mission outreach of the body of Christ. He hopes that more churches and believers will come to see the Faith Family Clinic as such and invest their time, talents and treasures there. For any of our readers who are interested, there are many volunteer opportunities for both medical and non-medical believers. The clinic is in regular need of trained medical staff to assist in the day-to-day practice of medicine. Doctors, nurses, students and others in the medical field are all needed to keep the clinics running and expand services to other parts of the city. People with administrative or logistic skills are also welcome to volunteer with the clinic. Another opportunity the clinic provides is a live training environment for church groups who are planning medical missions. It is even possible for such a group to take over the entire operation of the clinic on a Saturday, providing valuable, real world experience to sharpen or maintain their skills. In October of 2009, Faith Family Clinic saw their first patient in a building donated by Dr. Robert Rice with all donated equipment. Since then God has expanded the ministry in a powerful way. The clinic has seen thousands of patients, opened a second clinic and is working to open two more within the next year. With this growth also comes a financial need. If you are interested in expressing your faith by giving of your finances to Faith Family Clinic, their website has various options to make it as convenient as possible. Visit Faith Family Clinic online and Facebook for more information. Word Info Who We Are Consider this the church newsletter. Not your church newsletter. Not my church newsletter. Not their church newsletter. But the church newsletter. Find within these pages what God is doing through His ministries in Europe, Asia, North America and the rest of the globe. You know there are missionaries in India, in Russia, in Canada, in Peru and even in South Dakota, but do you know what God is DOING? Do you know that God is working? Healing? Providing? Restoring? Do you know that He is not just doing these things through missionaries and pastors, but through believers like you? We are the church. It is time to come together in service, in prayer, in love, in Spirit. We are one church, unified in one spirit, by one Savior, symbolized by one baptism (Ephesians 4). One. Our hope is that this one magazine brings the church together to share, to encourage, to edi- 35 fy, to call to action! Our one world needs the hope that is in us. Let these true stories, these testimonies (written by volunteers given a gift and passion for the written word) embolden you, strengthen your faith and spur you to DO something for the Kingdom of God. When (and we do say when) God works through you and you see His miracles, let us know; let the church know (Revelation 12:11), so other believers can then be encouraged and DO something for the Kingdom. E-mail testimonies and/or contact information to [email protected]. Like, follow and share on Facebook and Twitter. To order a print copy of Embolden or for a free digital dowload, visit our website. Subscribe to our digital edition for FREE and be among the first to see each new issue the day it is published. Testify! “Likewise the Spirit helps us in our weakness. For we do not know what to pray for as we ought, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us with groanings too deep for words.” (Romans 8:26) Share about a time when you prayed for something only God could do. Send testimonies to: [email protected] or tag us on Twitter @EmboldenZine YOU could be featured in the next issue! It’s time to be emboldened... 36 View online for free: # embolden @EmboldenZine facebook.com/emboldenzine emboldenzine.com And they overcame him because of the blood of the Lamb and because of the word of their testimony... Revelation 12:11