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Author Archives: judge525

Dubai and back

07 Monday Mar 2016

Posted by judge525 in Missions Today, Thrive Ministry

≈ 2 Comments

As a volunteer who went to Dubai, UAE to serve 80 global workers at a Thrive retreat, I am back home with a full heart to share some things I observed about the women I met. You’ve heard me talk about Thive before. I went to Tanzania in 2013 on one of these  retreats for women serving in Africa. (You can learn more about Thrive from my blog here as well). Ministering to women in Dubai was somewhat different since the Mideast is so unique. So many of these women were so incredibly commited to the hard places and hard people that they live among and want to reach out to. Many of these women were young moms who were raising their families in a land of sand and grey buildings… sacrificing not only green spaces and modern conveniences, but friends and fellowship.

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The first evening I met my small group of women and I soon realized that they work within the stress of young families and traveling husbands.That may seem common in the suburbs, but remember they live with few supportive friends, hostile neighborhoods, abusive social practices, and many strict cultural restraints on women. Some had seen co-workers killed. Yet in the midst of  this these women understand a calling from God to love and reach their neighbors with the good news.

Over the many years that I have personally observed those going to serve overseas, I am more optomistic and impressed by this generation and their desire to work in difficult places for the sake of bringing God’s love than ever.  It is very difficult in their world to step out and create a homebase for their families while trying to serve the needs of those hurting and in need of hope in such bleak circumstances. In my group there were two Physicians Assistants, a nurse practitioner, a family doing translation, church planters and they were all moms with little kids. One had adopted two of her Ugandan neighbors’ orphaned children. These women became my new heros.

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Besides Bible messages, small group processing, singing in meaningful worship, and precious time spent in prayer, the women also had the option to make various kinds of appointments. Some options were counseling with a professional, getting a massage, a haircut, a pedicure (by a non-professional like me), a health consultation with a nurse, or even to have their “colors” done. The troup of volunteers served for long hours each day. Each appointment ended with prayer. Our evenings were filled with laughter telling stories and playing games. One game was called “Taste of Home”, which involved a white elephant gift exchange of things that global workers crave and cannot find in their countries. The fights over Cheezits and marshmallows were hilarious.

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I will add that as the new chairman of the Board of Directors of Thrive Ministries, I am proud of the effectiveness of this ministry in providing retreats that create a safe place for global women to come and be renewed. Our desire is to serve their needs and keep them doing what they are doing in their roles in the “great commission”. During the days together, I watched God meet their unique needs. The burdens they were carrying seemed to lighten as they were shared and were surrendered to Jesus in new ways.

I enjoyed being a part of the 30 volunteers who poured out a formidable gift of love and attention on these servants who deserved it so much. It was my great privilege to meet these women and pray for their needs.

You may want to consider serving these global women on one of the 4 annual retreats…encouraging and empowering them and being their advocate. Check out the opportunities on the Thrive webpage. 

 

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Sharing thoughts on our black brothers and sisters

20 Wednesday Jan 2016

Posted by judge525 in Uncategorized

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To me it is a very good thing that the U.S. remembers Martin Luther King, Jr. on the 3rd Monday of January each year. It seems good that it launches us into a time in February called Black History Month.

A very special church service at Willow Creek Community Church on Martin Luther King weekend is something you may want to see. The interview with James Meeks from Chicago’s famous Salem Baptist Church of Chicago is fantasic.

May we learn more about this people group with whom we share our path. And in the learning, may it hopefully result in deeper understanding, compassion, and action.

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Here is a good piece from a blog that I follow called, Tip of the Iceberg. Has anyone seen my old friend Martin?

I would love to have you share good articles with me that move us to understanding and about what it means to be black in a majority white culture in America.

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The told and untold stories

13 Wednesday Jan 2016

Posted by judge525 in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

I would like to share a little known, tangential story to the one you may already know about the Auca Indian missionary martyr story.  As you may have seen on social media last week, this is the 60th anniversary of the story of the 5 young martyrs in Ecuador’s jungle that many of us have been marked by.

For a reminder of the details, read more of their remarkable story here.

Here is the little known story of Jim Elliot’s brother.

It’s from the Gospel Coalition published on October 9, 2013.

 

JIM ELLIOT’S BROTHER, BERT: THE HERO YOU DON’T KNOW

by Trevin Wax

Last month, I had a conversation with Michael Kelley about his book, Boring: Finding an Extraordinary God in an Ordinary Life. Michael tells the story of Bert Elliot, brother to missionary Jim, as an example of what faithfulness over a lifetime looks like. For those of us who are not “meteors streaking across the sky,” it serves as a reminder of how we can be a steady light for the gospel no matter where God has placed us.

 

Have You Heard of Jim’s Brother, Bert?

Jim Elliot’s story is a familiar one, but have you heard of Bert? I had not. But by God’s grace, I have now, thanks to a message given by Randy Alcorn fifty years after the men died on the beach in Ecuador. Bert is Jim Elliot’s older brother. He’s the one who isn’t famous.

He was a student at Multnomah Bible College in 1949, and he and his young wife were invited by a missionary to come to Peru and join the work there. Other than an occasional furlough, there they have stayed. Now in their eighties, they are still there.

According to Alcorn, if you Google Bert, you find less than seventy entries. But over the years, Bert and Colleen have planted more than 170 churches. And when asked to reflect on his brother, Jim, Bert’s response is stirring: “My brother Jim and I took different paths. He was a great meteor, streaking through the sky.”

Bert was not. He did not go streaking through the sky. Nobody lined up with their telescopes to watch his life. Instead, as Alcorn puts it, he was the faint star in the distance that faithfully rises night after night, always there. Always faithful. Always doing the same, boring thing.

Streaking Meteors and Faithful Stars

In the kingdom of God, there is a great need for streaking meteors, but most of us won’t be that. We will instead be faint stars—husbands and fathers, wives and mothers. We will be accountants and teachers, business people, and students. We will go through life, day after day, doing very much the same thing tomorrow that we did today.

The important thing for us to remember is that we are needed. There is a great need for people willing to chase the little donkeys of life, not because it’s exciting but because they believe in the constant presence and purpose of God. There is a great need for people willing to stand in the midst of the boring, convinced that there is no such thing as ordinary when you follow an extraordinary God.

Rise and stand. Then tomorrow, do it again.

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‘Tis the season for Conferences

02 Saturday Jan 2016

Posted by judge525 in Uncategorized

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In my humble opinion there are 3 of the best  Christian conferences created just for college students in these winter months. I still have a keen interest in college kids that dates back to my roots with Cru back in the 70’s. College kids are the future. My own kids were affected by these conferences.

There is nothing like challenging a college kid to give his/her life to something big. God uses these getaways to transform lives and He has great things for these kids to do in this world. I’m sure we all know students who we can encourage to attend or even check out the wealth of incredible talks given at these conferences, either by attending or listening online.

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Urbana (over this post-Christmas break, which just concluded in St. Louis) and Passion (happening right now) ( one that you can watch Jan. 2nd and 3rd), which is streamed live and then a conference in February called  Jubilee in Pittsburg. Each one speaks to college kids in its own style. These three are my favorites.

Check out what’s happening with these conferences in the lives of thousands of our university and liberal arts college kids online. Don’t take it from me….check out their websites.

Urbana – InterVarsity’s tri-ennial Conference begun at Champaign/Urbana U of IL campus and now held in St. Louis…a place where students were and are challenged to commit everything to the Lord and follow Jesus anywhere. Exploring hundreds of mission organizations’ opportunities is a highlight. It was my first conference in 1967 and God used it mightily. Check out the speakers. 

Passion – is described like this, “20 million college students across the globe awaken to the reality of an omnipotent and glorious Creator. For the past 19 years, Passion (begun by Lou Giglio in Atlanta) has hosted over 50 gatherings in more than 16 countries, and millions of students have united across ministry and denominational lines to seek the face of God in worship and prayer. Passion’s core Bible verse, Isaiah 26:8 states, “Yes, LORD, walking in the way of your truth, we wait for you; your name and renown are the desire of our souls.”

Jubilee – a Pittsburg linked conference put on by the Coalition for Christian Outreach (CCO). This ministry reaches particularly mid-Atlantic campuses and this conference challenges students to consider their marketplace futures as a place of great potential ministry. Jim and I have done a workshop a few years ago at Jubilee when our daughter and son-in-law were on their staff. The roster of speakers was exceptional.

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Do Muslims and Christians worship the same God?

29 Tuesday Dec 2015

Posted by judge525 in Uncategorized

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This controversy has been around a long time. The recent Wheaton College professor debate has brought it the front this month. Here is a very good article by Ravi Zacharias associate. Click here.

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Welcoming the Stranger

14 Monday Dec 2015

Posted by judge525 in Missions Today

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It’s the season for compassion and lifting others’ spirits. We give a bit more thought and energy towards those in need during the Christmas season…and I believe we are looking for ways to make Christmas special for those who don’t understand the reason for the season.

I hope that I am that person and you are too. I know I get very caught up in my own family and friends. I want to be one who reaches out.

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Because of the rare period of history we are experiencing right now, there are ways to welcome those in need, to take a stand for those who are desperate and in extreme circumstances.

One way is to use our Christian voice to affirm taking in the stranger and loving the unlovely. As for refugees, we have no other option than to do as Jesus told us, to welcome the stranger. We are not to live in fear. We are to trust in what He has told us in His word.  If you have questions or doubts about this subject, be an active learner, not one lives in reluctance to think about it and get perspective.  Here are just a few of the many places in scripture that inspire and direct us.

  • Deuteronomy 10: 19 You shall also love the stranger, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt.
  • Leviticus 19:34 The alien who resides with you shall be to you as the citizen among you; you shall love the alien as yourself, for you were aliens in the land of Egypt: I am the Lord your God.
  • Matthew 5:43-44 You have heard that it was said, ‘you shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy’. But I say to you, love your enemy and pray for those who persecute you.
  • Matthew 25:40 Truly I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of my brethren you did it to me.
  • Romans 13:10 Love does no wrong to a neighbor, therefore love is the fulfilling of the law.
  • Acts 10:34 Then Peter began to speak to them: “I truly understand that God shows no partiality, but in every nation anyone who fears him and does what is right is acceptable to him.
  • Revelation 21:3 And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “See the home of God is among mortals. He will dwell with them as their God; they will be his peoples, and God himself will be with them.”
  • Luke 10:27 You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and all your soul, and with all your strength, and with all your mind; and your neighbor as yourself.
  • Hebrews 13: 1 Let mutual love continue. Do not neglect to show hospitality to strangers for by doing that some have entertained angels without knowing it.
  • Colossians 3:11 In that renewal there is no longer Greek and Jew, circumcised and uncircumcised, barbarian, Scythian, slave and free; but Christ is all and in all.
  • Matthew 25: 35 I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me.
  • Romans 12:13 Contribute to the needs of the saints; extend hospitality to strangers.

We all can be an advocate and a volunteer. Women can stand for women in vulnerable places around the world. There are things we can do.

There are also good things we can share about God moving in this world that will bring encouragement and praise to the Christ we love and honor in this season. God is moving in mighty ways in the Muslim world.

Let us rejoice in that fact as much as we can and share it with those who only feel discouragement, as if God has abondoned this world. He has not. Praise to His glorious mercy and grace on all of us.

Check out some of these links….they will fill you with hope and new perspective this Christmas season.

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Christmas Gift Catalog for Ugandan friend

29 Sunday Nov 2015

Posted by judge525 in Robert Sityo Uganda

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Here is a follow-up on my previous blog entry. As you read Robert Sityo’s wife, Sarah, is expecting triplets in Uganda, (the date was originally on Dec. 20). The babies came on Nov. 30, dad flew home on Dec. 1st and all went well. Two baby girls and a boy…went home with mom and dad on Dec. 3rd…all doing well. Babies weighed 3-4 lbs…and now the fun begins. Read below to see how you can help this couple.
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Some of you might want to help with the hospital expenses of $2500+ as her delivery will be in a big, professional hospital in the capital. Click here if you want to help. 

Besides the babies coming I want to add a link to a Christmas Gift Catalog for the Sityo’s ministry, Fountain of Hope. As you may be familiar with these catalogs, you or your child may choose an animal or another interesting item to be given to a child or someone in the ministry of Fountain of Hope in Bukeeka, Uganda.  

Just click the link below to see the catalog choices and directions. Consider choosing something that you can give in someone’s name (like a teacher, grandparent, aunts and uncles, a co-worker, etc.) Children can cut out the picture of the item from these pages and make a Christmas card for whoever they are buying for with the picture. It’s a great way to instill the joy of giving in children, as well as help them grow a bigger heart for the world.

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Just click this link to the catalog…
Gift Catalog for Fountain of Hope final pdf

May your giving this Christmas reflect a heart for those under-resourced sisters and brothers in the world and may your heart grow.

 

 

 

 

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Often God blesses those who wait patiently for Him

04 Wednesday Nov 2015

Posted by judge525 in Missions Today, Robert Sityo Uganda

≈ 2 Comments

Robert S. is studying at Wheaton Graduate School with a Billy Graham Scholarship for international students. He is from central Uganda and lives in a village that is predominantly Muslim. His dear friend and ours, Emmanuel N. was here for the two previous years and is now back in Rwanda serving his many churches.

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Robert and his wife were praying about how they could start a church. God spoke to his wife, Sarah through a dream and told her that they should start a school. Now many years later, the school has 1000 students, mostly Muslim kids. Their Christian school is such high quality that the parents pay to have their kids study there even while knowing that the kids will hear about Christ. About half of the school kids are Christians now. Sarah is the headmaster and Robert oversees many church plants. Their church is booming with new Christians.

They always wanted to have their own children but after 11 years of marriage, they still did not have any of their own, but God gave them a huge family.  Many years ago they began adopting orphans. Once Pastor Robert read someone’s Last Will and Testament after he had done a couple’s funeral service. The will said, ”We leave our 5 children to our pastor”. Instant family! Those 5 and 13 more have been adopted. They now have 18 adopted children….and quite a darling family it is. Here are a few of them.

Robert's Family

Last year while Robert was studying at Wheaton, he prayed that Sarah would get pregnant even though she never had been and was now 38 years old. Last spring Robert went home for the summer break and to everyone’s surprise, God answered Robert’s prayer, as Sarah is now pregnant… and expecting triplets. They are so thrilled. Praise the Lord that Robert finishes at Wheaton this semester. It is hard to keep his mind on his finals work this last month. Please pray for him.

But as you can imagine, Sarah needs prayer. They could use some help with the cost of the c­-section that she is scheduled to have on Dec. 12. Pray that Robert can get home in time and pray for a safe delivery.

Robert has a ministry/medical account in which you can give online with a click. This account with a not-­for­-profit organization in Wheaton will also take checks. The check should be written out to Faith and Learning International  and can be mailed to: Faith and Learning International 209 E Liberty Wheaton, IL 60187 Include a message that it is for Project: Fountain of Hope

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They’re just kids wanting to go to school

02 Friday Oct 2015

Posted by judge525 in AIDS in Africa, Hope for Life Kenya, Orphans

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Throwback Thursday: They’re just kids

In 2004, I began to develop a heart for those suffering from HIV/AIDS. I am reminded of that fact in two ways today. I am thinking of some teenagers at Hope for Life- Kenya who are AIDS orphans and I am wondering if they all had the funds to start school this fall as school started for them, as it does here.

hish school students at Hope for Life

What would it be like to not have parents who can support you as you head into your teens… and your future… with no means to go to high school? The fees are high, but all these kids have tested well and qualify. These kids know what that insecurity is like. My heart breaks for those who have such an unsure future. We can do something to help. Are you able to help one of these kids?

The other reminder about how God developed my heart for those affected by AIDS in Africa comes from my dear friend and former boss at Willow Creek, Steve Haas published a piece for World Vision, where he now works as Chief Catalyst. He traces his own journey with AIDS in sub-Sahara Africa. In the early years of this millenium when mission agencies and relief organizations were first waking up to the pandemic that was infecting and affecting about 30% of all folks in sub-Sahara Africa, the church in America was barely awake. In the next eleven years, that fact changed. And the face of AIDS is changing every day. There is so much more hope.

Steve puts it this way.

Rather than attempting to charge up the mountain of Christian ignorance and stigma head-on, a sure recipe for short discussions and abbreviated advocacy engagement, we plotted a course that took the Church on a journey: passing along the story of the AIDS affected and infected children and the young families we serve. In private conversations and public presentations, and with aggressive invitations we opened up the Scripture to what has always been our call to reach out to the vulnerable and in solidarity place ourselves underneath their burden. –

Reading this article made me recall how hard it was for me, a new missions pastor at Wheaton Bible Church, to take on this challenge. We started down the information track by telling our church the facts and people listened and God opened their hearts.

There was good news by 2005 as the church gave generously and blessed our new Heart for AIDS ministry. We created a new partnership with a fledgling group of pastors and orphan care workers in Nakuru, Kenya. I could go on and on about what happened there. Revisit some former posts.  Some of you know personally as you have been there with one of the teams we have taken. Hope for Life-Kenya is still one of the healthiest ministries I know…working on behalf of its impoverished community and seeing great strides in caring for orphans, widow, and in community development.

But the good news is that, though we haven’t done it like World Vision through child sponsorships, we actually started teen school sponsorships….as of last summer, we have found 15 sponsors for kids’ high school fees. There are 15 others who need your help. Click here to learn how. 

We have taken a holistic approach to the needs of orphans and widows since 2004. And the children who came to the center we built to host after school programs and lunch time meal programs in 2006 are now teenagers doing well in school. Year after year, Hope for Life is launching committed followers for Jesus Christ into the communities who know responsibility, who know how to minister to others, who take care of their younger siblings, and who serve in their churches and communities. They are learning about God’s ways and life skills at Hope for Life that give them the courage to make good decisions and refrain from risky behavior. They are loved and cared for by adults who are committed to them. But they need our financial assistance. Please consider supporting one of these kids by clicking here. Tell a friend about supporting one of these kids. Read their stories in past pages on this blog.

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My banquet of stories this summer.

22 Saturday Aug 2015

Posted by judge525 in Missions Today, Personal Stories

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When I used to sit at my desk at my church job where I helped oversee the care and support of about 90 global workers, I never became accustomed to the incredible people I met or the stories I heard. I was amazed and amazed again for those 10 years. I enjoyed a steady diet of stories from those global ambassadors.

As I got reaquainted after not seeing them for a few years, I often took them out to lunch. They often poured over the menu of American dishes that were new since their last time back and then they enjoyed the meal. But I was the one having the feast as I took in their stories. What I heard about the things God was doing in and through them aound the world left me speechless hungry for more.

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This summer I met with 5 of these friends as they came through town. Since this is no longer my steady diet… it was truly a glorious banquet. Let me share a few stories from the last few weeks… without the names or some details, as many must remain secure.

The first is a graphic designer who works with at least one hundred local workers with the Egyptian Bible Society. This guy is amazing. He loves to create and teach others how to design. This friend explained how the beheading of 21 Christians in Libya last February prompted writing a tract that has made its way around northern Africa and beyond. It has opened the way for Christians to converse with Muslims, often very ashamed of what happened at the hands of radicalized Muslims. He talked about the many responses to the tract and printing over a million copies to supply the demand.

My graphic designer friend was asked to take the following poem written in Arabic for the tract and interpret its beauty into English….I think he did a wonderful job. Pray for its effectiveness around the world, as it has been translated into at least 8 languages.

(Just click this photo and read the poem.)

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Next is a couple who have planted themselves in the farthest reaches of northeast Asia (get geographical). They are working as medical personnel and tour director to reach into a hostile and closed country closeby. The creativity and caution they must exercise to do this work absolutely raises goosebumps on all who listen to their stories. Their commitment and love for Jesus motivate their every dangerous step.

Another couple are working in a mideast closed  country teaching English with the goal of helping to put into words an unwritten language, so eventually there will be a Bible available. They live and work in an Islamic state that raises the stress of everyday. A trip to the grocery store is a major ordeal.

Another couple are teaching theology and Bible to 1100 national staff who minister with CRU in 20 countries of Europe. Taking seminary classes to these staffers in regular education installments allow these workers to continue ministering and not disrupt them for a foreign seminary experience that would move them from their communities, churches or campuses. Taking seminary on the road…how strategic.

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Valerie Elliot Shepard

The last thing I would like to tell you about was attending the Memorial Service for Elisabeth Elliot who passed away this summer. She was a personal hero of mine as I have shared on this blog earlier this summer. The passion in her convictions didn’t always make her popular, but to those of us who followed her life as a fervent missionary in the 1950’s to a woman spokesperson about a life of following Jesus regardless of suffering, I am forever marked by her conviction and her commitment.  If you are new to her, check out her website, www.elisabethelliot.org

This first link is the entire 2 hour service, well worth an afternoon.

Seated in Edman Chapel at her alma mater, Wheaton College some of my dear friends and myself were mesmerized by the beautiful tributes, ten in all. Her lovely daughter, Valerie was my favorite. But the most meaningful of all was a video tribute that we watched made with Elisabeth’s own words. Enjoy this You Tube recordings as we did. Her humor and contagious love for Jesus will mark you all over again…as it did me. CBN also did a memorial that is linked here. CBN also did a memorial that is linked here.

This summer has been rich and deep. If you have an opportunity to meet a missionary in your area, don’t miss the privilege. Just ask an open-ended question like, tell me a highlight of your work.

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