AUGUST 2007
PRAYER & PRAISE

1. We rejoice in Warren Webster's promotion to heaven and extend our prayers and sympathy to the Webster family as they grieve his absence here.

2. Pray for Jonathan & Jennifer Davis (Uganda) as they prepare to leave for the field in Sept. Pray for provision of their remaining support and start up needs.

3. Praise the Lord for the 2500 who heard the Good News of Jesus Christ at a personal level through the Promifé outreach held in Miguelópolis, Brazil in July. Pray for Pastor Paulo and the church there as they follow up with the 593 teens and young adults and 100 children who made decisions for Christ.

  

 WARREN WEBSTER, Missionary Statesman 1928-2007

Dr. Warren Webster, missionary statesman and former General Director of WorldVenture, left this world on August 15, following a brief battle with cancer and pneumonia. Dr. Webster gave leadership to what was then CBFMS, now WorldVenture, from June 1971 to June 1993. Warren and his wife, Shirley, were well respected pioneering missionaries who helped initiate ministry in Pakistan, following their appointment in 1953. After 16 years of faithful work in Pakistan, the Websters returned to the States, where Warren assumed the leadership of the mission, a responsibility he held for 22 years. Warren is survived by his wife, Shirley, and their two daughters, Debby and Cindy, and their families. Read more >>


This month Dave brings a report from his own trip to the other side of the world.

I've just returned from a 3 week trip to Sri Lanka, Vietnam, and Cambodia. I would like to share with you some highlights from my trip.

I will start with Sri Lanka as it was my first stop. Sri Lanka remains embedded in a civil war that has been going on for over 20 years, with a brief 4-year interlude a few years ago. This makes travel very dangerous in many parts of Sri Lanka. This danger tempers but does not deter the work of the church in these areas. I spoke with seminary professors who travel into the more dangerous regions to train pastors through extension programs and to provide support to pastors and churches and those involved in relief and development work. They enter these unstable areas understanding the risks but fully confident of God’s call upon their lives to support and encourage these brothers and sisters in Christ who live in places plagued by war. It is hard for me to even describe my conversations with these professors. They told me their stories, completely devoid of any hunger for recognition or praise, but simply out of a desire to report the facts and with a sense of sacred calling to serve those in danger.

One has to remember that Sri Lanka is less than 1% evangelical Christian, so there is hardly a majority backing these efforts. The government of Sri Lanka is on the verge of possibly passing an anti-conversion bill into law. This bill has been repeatedly brought before the parliament and tabled each time for various reasons. The sense is that it now has enough votes to pass once further delays are circumvented. I asked several pastors what they will do when this bill passes, and without hesitation they answered in a sober and very direct manner, “We will continue to do what we have always done—preach the gospel and lead people to the Lord. What else can we do? This is our duty and privilege.” These people mark my life! Their commitment to the gospel is clear and unwavering.

Traveling in Vietnam is an awesome experience. The lush landscape, the madcap mob of motorbikes that swam the streets like a hive of bees on a hot summer day, the tremendous poverty, the markets, the crowded streets, the vendors constantly calling out for attention, children and mothers with outstretched hands hoping for a gift to buy bread for the day—all manner of people going about life in a way so different from my own. The walls of my memory are plastered with images and encounters from this trip. I had the tremendous privilege of speaking with the pastor of a government-recognized church. I asked him to share with me some of his joys and challenges in ministry. He rejoices that 106 adults and 50 children have recently come to the Lord. He is thankful that “every time we go out to share our faith in the community people come to Christ.” A third joy is to watch people in his congregation grow in the Lord. A fourth reason for joy is the recent birth of another church, and yet a fifth joy for him is the commitment of the church elders to evangelism and discipleship. In terms of challenges, he said that there are about one million Christians in Vietnam, where the total population is 83 million. He said that when the church does not grow there is peace, but when it grows there is trouble. They have faced “trouble” in recent days. His two recent stints in jail are evidence of that trouble. This pastor then talked about the need to train leaders for the growing church. This is a challenge.

As I visited many Vietnamese people living across the border in Cambodia, I was deeply moved by the terrible conditions in which they live. These people are not welcome in Cambodia, but neither can they return to their homeland. I visited Vietnamese who live along Cambodia’s Mekong River in very difficult circumstances. Recently they were visited by a group of Vietnamese Christians and 60 gave their hearts to Christ.

I also visited the Killing Fields and the Toul Sleng Genocide Museum, home of the   S-21 prison and interrogation facility. I entered the buildings where people had been tortured, the instruments on display. I was utterly overwhelmed by man’s ability to commit unspeakable acts of violence against other human beings, seemingly without any remorse or sorrow. I cannot understand how one human being can do such things to another. This place where men had committed acts of such evil stood in sharp contrast to the homes of people I had been visiting—people who give all they have to others in the name and love of Jesus. The difference stood in such stark contrast that I found it impossible to fathom the distance between the two acts.

I've returned home with the realization of the tremendous, often unrecognized, and sorely underappreciated, blessings of my life. I may go to church whenever I choose and can talk about my faith without fear of persecution. My trip caused me to realize anew that this is an awesome privilege. My trip also gave me a sense of what the larger church looks like in terms of its theology, culture, customs, and structures. The church is loved by God and it will stand, regardless of the forces that come against it.  - Dave

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THE GLOBAL SLAVE TRADE: DID YOU KNOW?
  • Slavery today is defined as forced labor without pay under threat of violence.
  • 600,000 to 800,000 people are trafficked internationally every year. Approximately 80% of them are women and children.
  • Slavery was officially abolished worldwide at the 1927 Slavery Convention, yet it continues to thrive thanks to the complicity of some governments and the ignorance of much of the world.
  • In the 2000 Refugee Report, "Trafficking in Women and Children: A Contemporary Manifestation of Slavery," former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright calls human trafficking "the fastest growing criminal enterprise in the world."
  • The four most common types of slavery are: chattel slavery, debt bondage, forced labor, and sexual slavery. (Facts provided by the American Anti-Slavery Group at iabolish.com)

Learn more about the global slave trade in the July-August issue of Mission Frontiers magazine, which features several articles highlighting the problem and what is being done about it. 

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The New Global Mission by Samuel Escobar
2003 InterVarsity Press
Reviewed by David Korb

I read this book a few years ago, but when I was looking for some reading material to take on my recent trip to Asia, I decided it was worth reading again. I’m glad I made this decision, for Escobar’s words remain timely for the church, mission agency, missionary, and everyone who has a heart for missions today.

Escobar’s thesis revolves around the shift taking place, in which the majority of Christians no longer live in the West, but in Africa and Asia. Escobar reminds the reader that as a result of this shift, we must be diligent in separating Western concepts from the gospel. For far too long, he says, aspect of Western culture have been intermingled with Biblical truth. The necessary separation presents a challenge to the Western church to be willing to hear our brothers and sisters from other parts of the world as they express the gospel in their local contexts.

Escobar also discusses pre-modern, modern, and postmodern issues. He sees the postmodern generation questioning the rational view held by the modern generation, and notes that postmoderns see the value of learning from other generations. The postmodern generation realizes that while we may not agree with other religions, we certainly must be willing to learn from them. Escobar’s purpose in discussing this topic is to point out another shift is taking place, and this time on our own turf and among our own children.

The author also discusses globalization. He tells the story of sitting in a cabin in the eastern jungles of Peru, attended to by a young man wearing a “Pepsi” T-shirt, while he accessed his email, where a pop-up window invited him to join an online dating service while he was reading a message from his son in Bosnia. Escobar concludes, “One aspect of the globalization process affecting the brave new world order in which mission takes place in the twenty-first century is that the media propagates around the world the signs of the deep culture change that has taken place in the West. There has been an erosion of Christian influence on forces that shape culture, such as legislation, education, the media or art….We live in a post-Christian, postmodern world, a stark reality that missionaries cannot afford to ignore” (pg 69).

Escobar finally calls the missionary, and the church, to a life of “service both of the spiritual in proclaiming the Word and of the physical meeting human needs, according to Jesus’ model and in his name. In this new era of globalization this means new patterns of cooperation and new forms of partnership for mission” (pg 154).

To me it seems his bottom line is that in the midst of all the changes taking place in the world, we must ready ourselves for the “global partnership of churches” (pg 164) and that this partnership, while indispensable for mission, will challenge us deeply. We are accustomed to sitting in the driver’s seat, but our role is shifting due to the sheer numbers of Christians living in other parts of the world. Christianity will no longer look Western, and we must be ready to encounter this change and know how to respond.

I find Escobar’s writing tedious at times. On occasion I became lost as I tried to decipher his point in the midst of many examples interwoven with biblical commentary. Nevertheless, I recommend that you read or re-read Escobar’s book. While I don’t agree with everything he says, what he’s written will cause you to think and react to the issues he discusses—issues which I believe are even more pertinent today than when he wrote the book four years ago.

About the Author
Samuel Escobar, a leading Latin American theologian, was one of the key participants in the International Congress on World Evangelization at Lausanne, Switzerland, in 1974. A native of Peru, he serves as professor of missiology at Eastern Baptist Theological Seminary in Wynnewood, Pennsylvania, and is theological consultant for the Board of International Ministries in Valencia, Spain. He is also president of the United Bible Societies and past president of the International Fellowship of Evangelical Students. (from back cover)

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