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Thursday, September 28, 2017

Ministering Around The World- Part IX; The Caribbean

The Caribbean

God created a beautiful place when He formed and planted the Caribbean where it is amongst the beautiful waters and scenery. But he also created precious souls that live there. While they have commercialized these qualities for income they themselves generally live very modestly. From my research, depending on the island, 20-80% live below the poverty line. And while some are able to live prosperous lives this does not make them any less lost or in need of the gospel. I believe that missionaries in expensive economies, while often questioned about their motives know the sacrifice and struggles of not discriminating the gospel to the poor. Expensive places are often written off as impossible and beyond God's scope of capability. Therefore, it doesn't require a weak-willed servant looking for relaxation, but a dedicated servant determined to see God's Word sown in every heart and every area. In these areas, the missionaries will face a mixture of both backgrounds. But with God's grace they strive to reach these precious souls that God has emboldened their hearts to fight for.

I was blessed to speak to ladies in 4 different countries about their life and ministry. Please remember that this is not a thorough depiction of life in all of the Caribbean but a birds eye into how these missionaries live and serve. We will be taking a look at St. Lucia (Mrs. Bartley), Becquia-St. Vincent & Grenadines (Mrs. McKenzie Balinger), Jamaica (Mrs. Titus) and the Dominican Republic (Mrs.Pape),

The islands vary in size, from 5,000 (Becquia) to 11 million (Dominican Republic). They all have a strong Catholic and Seventh Day Adventist following. St. Lucia has 11-20 missionaries serving there while Becquia only has two on their island. Jamaica has less than 10 missionaries. The Dominican comes in with a strong 50+ missionaries in their very populated country.

The people are all pretty laid back and hospitable. All of the countries besides their resort areas are completely third world. The Dominican tends to have a strongly matriarchal society due to most families not having a father figure. Multiple families and adultry is sadly just everyday life. Throughout the years of ministering where these ladies are they have found that conversions come at varying rates. Through their many outreaches; children's ministries, tract distribution, Bible studies, camps and the bus ministry they have found many are able to trust Christ after just a couple of weeks while others take time of sewing the seed.

Mrs. Bartley and her husband are able to teach Bible classes in the public school and also able to witness by teaching adult ladies how to read. Illiteracy is still a looming problem in third world countries. There is nothing that can describe interacting with someone who is unable to read and especially unable to read the Scriptures. What a great opportunity to enlighten their world humanly and spiritually.

Mrs. Titus has a ladies ministry called, Sew Very Loved. It teaches impoverished woman how to sew, crochet and make jewelry to give them an opportunity to rise out of their situation and also find the One with all the answers as they teach.

These areas don't come without their struggles. Each lady shared with me one of their biggest challenges. Mrs. Bartley said that they really struggle with the mentality of the Nationals of being good enough to go to heaven. It is a struggle to get to them to realize that being a good person and going to church is not enough to take you to heaven. And also it is a struggle living in the heat with heat indexes of 100+. Mrs. Ballinger, spoke of the struggle to find a consistent meeting place. Either it is overly expensive or owned by families that don't want to rent to others. In a small island it represents struggles to find a good spot without many options. The Lord has opened the door for a building right now. They are praying they will get to stay there.

Mrs. Titus said that it is a big challenge to get Christians to obey the Bible above culture and live as a Chirstian should. While God expects every Christian in every culture to obey his Word and all who attempt to will receive enabling grace and immeasurable blessings, many struggle with the strong peer pressure. It is hard to imagine when you live in western society that is very private and segmented the power of an entire community and family commentating on every decision you make. It takes a regular walk with the Lord and a jump of faith to overcome this pressure in their life. Mrs. Pape, talked about the struggle of third world living as you first come from the states. It is a HUGE adjustment! Going from the life of ease to slow pace, crazy driving and irregular electricity and water. The first few years are very challenging as you are purged from modern living and find a new normal, that entails a lot of work and patience.

Along with the struggles come Gods gift of encouragement that comes in many forms. For Mrs. Balinger it comes from listening to online messages and having God speak to her heart. Mrs. Titus said what a blessing it was when pastors would call and pray with them. It means a lot to them for one of the men that support them to take the time to personally call and pray with them for the struggles and joys they live through. Mrs. Pape also said it was a great blessing to have phone calls and emails reminding her she was loved and not forgotten.

Sometimes the simplest things mean the world to others.


The Lord has made each of these ladies and their ministries unique and wonderful. For instance the Bartley family was told when they were planning to go to the area they minister in to never go there. It was too wicked to be reached. They are now serving there faithfully and successfully. I love how God is in the business of the impossible.


The Balingers have a burden and desire to get a boat and minister to the many surrounding islands through outreach. With the Lords vision, a missionaries calling and the encouragement of supporters many wonderful things for missions can be accomplished around the world.


Thank you to all you wonderful ladies who took the time to share your heart with me!

Bartleys -St. Lucia

Balingers- Becquia, St Vincent & Grenadines

 

Titus' - Jamaica

Papes- Dominican Republic



 

 

Tuesday, September 12, 2017

Tasty Tuesday

Calzone Day-

Pizza is generally yummy in any form! This week we decided to go for calzones. We have made these multiple times before but this is the first time to have mini calzones. It hit me that I could make my children a calzone any size I want and it would be the perfect portion for them.

And not to mention pretty stinking cute! Because everything is cute when it's small! It was stuffed with pesto and various other toppings. I will say I didn't find pesto to be the best calzone sauce. Due to the oil in the pesto, it made it difficult for the bottom to cook evenly. But pretty good over all.

 

 

Recipe-

2.5-3 c flour

1 C warm water

2.5 t yeast

2T oil

1 t sugar

1/2 t salt

Seasoning if you prefer

1. Take water. The temperature of your body. Not hot or cold to the touch. Let it sit till it activates.

2. Add sugar, salt, 1 C of flour, oil and any preferred seasoning.

3. Put on a floured surface and knead for five minutes while adding needed flour until it is no longer sticky. Add it fairly slowly. Let it rise 5 minutes. Shape and cook.

 

Friday, September 1, 2017

Ministering Around The World VIII- Pacific Islands

Hello Pacific Islands! Island breezes, fishing lifestyles, beautiful blue waters here we come! This month I was able to talk to the ladies in the Pacific Islands; Solomon island, Kiribati, Papua New Guinea, Chuuk (Micronesia), Guam,Vanuatu and American Samoa.

These are mostly all very small islands. I believe Papua New Guinea is the biggest, which is a little over half the size of Texas spread out over a few different islands with about 7 million people.

The cultures of these islands all include the similarities of being an island nation but they all have developed into unique personalities. In Vanuatu, the missionary wife said the people were like an onion. Always surprising you with more to learn about themselves and how they think.

In Kiribati, the islanders were said to be rarely shy people who have been largely protected from the outside world's influence. They love family and suffer some persecution any time they go against the family way. However, they are a very friendly people.

In Guam, they are a very family oriented culture. Every part of culture is entertwined by the family unit and even the salvation decision is looked at through the eyes of the family as a whole. Sarah Leclerq said,

"If you can get where a family will accept you and take you in you can minister to a large number of people. Getting them to see the need is also a struggle"


In Chuuk the missionary wife speaks of the clannish culture and how it makes it difficult to reach out into neighboring islands. Papua New Guinea is known for being extremely open and friendly to others and the gospel. However, the Gray family is serving in an area,Kerema, where the culture has been described as greedy, violent, and skeptical. 20 years ago Papua New Guinea was a wildly violent area that was quite challenging for missionaries. It has since very much improved including a large scale bible project that is being run by BIMI, to put 50,000 thousands of Bibles into the hands of school children by the request of the government. In the Solomon Islands they are described as very friendly and laid back and not too concerned about tourism. The island of American Samoa is an American protectorate, so it has a large American influence while many Polynesian cultural roots.

Catholic or "Christian" seems to be the prevailing religion in all these areas, except the Solomon Islands which is predominantly Anglican and Vanuatu which has a huge conglomeration of different religons and cults. All of these have been intertwined with the native religion in some form or fashion, leaving the difference between one cult from another indistinguishable. These islands range in population from 51,000, Chuck, to 7 million in Papua New Guinea. But most all of them are only a few hundred thousand for the whole country.

The amount of professing Bible believing Christians in these countries range from 1%- 30% in Papa New Guinea. In Kiribati, the percentage is 1% due to the Protestant churches that no longer teach salvation by grace. This is a quote by the missionary, Brooke Daku, serving there,

"Our church is the only church in the entire nation that teaches Salvation by grace without works."

Another quote given by the missionary wife in Vanuatu,

".. devoutly religious people, including pastors of churches of the various denominations have no knowledge of Christ's saving power."

This should give us a glimpse for sure into the situations these ladies are serving amongst. Many of these ladies are the first or only church on their small islands.


All of these places have less than 10 missionaries except Papua New Guinea. And the Solomon Islands missionary I talked to was on deputation to be the first missionary to that island. These islands vary in receptiveness to the gospel. While Kiribati and American Samoa seem to be places where they are a little more quick to receive the gospel message most of these islanders take a year or more. In Vanuatu Mrs. Hirtzel, spoke about how it takes years for them to accept and believe the gospel message. They have a school ministry to reach out into the community that has given them an effective long term outreach. She said that even those children if they will come every year from K -5, it won't be till 4th grade that they accept Christ, and the parents take even longer.

Something that I find exciting is that a lot of these missionaries are farely new to the field. With some only having served there a few months up to the longest two being at 7 & 12 years. It is exciting that God is calling and guiding new missionaries to reach these Pacific islands that have a great need for the gospel. Especially when you think that islands such as Vanuatu were cannibalistic as recently as the late 60s.


Most all of these countries are described as third-world with struggling economies. This is a description I found online about a Pacific island,

"Kiribati is one of the most remote and geographically-dispersed countries in the world, consisting of 33 coral atolls spread over 3.5 million square kilometers of ocean; an area larger than India. The half a million residents of the Solomon Islands live across 90 inhabited islands, 78 percent of whom reside in rural areas."

The island countries are many and largely spread out. For the many small islands their natural resources are limited and outside resources are sparing.

 


I always ask the ladies to share with me something that is a struggle for them. Something to help you understand them and their ministry and to help you all pray for them more effectively. These ladies talked about their struggles adapting to culture, dealing with sorcery, being lumped in with lots of other religions or cults or aid groups, and also getting the people they serve with to truly see their need for salvation and fighting the devil as he seeks any foothold to discourage! These are some pretty big challenges. It is definitely the grace of God that works in us to enable us to adapt to a drastically foreign culture and live and serve there fruitfully. And definitely his daily grace and power that gives a missionary the discernment, wisdom and power to overcome wicked influences and harden and decieved hearts. All these things are aided by your prayers and support. Please remember these categories as you pray for the missionaries in the Pacific islands.


They also said that these were their favorite things that uplift and encourage them; care packages, snail mail and faithful prayers, godly music and the relationship with their spouse and church groups visiting. This is a quote from Brooke Daku in Kiribati, "The faithful prayers of God’s people around the world(are my biggest encouragement). We have faced some very trying and scary times but the prayers of brothers and sisters in Christ have seen us through those dark days." What an encouragement to us as prayer warriors, that we are making such a difference in the lives of these faithful messengers as they brave the battle on the front lines.

These ladies, just like all the missionaries around the world are seeking to give the gospel to those around them. What does the gospel outreach look like in the Pacific islands? For all it involves tract distribution, just like most of us at our home churches. They also strive to make themselves known and seen in the community, so that the gospel message is accessible, through children's programs and community events and schools.


But Brooke Daku, Kiribati, shared one of their outreach tools that I found very powerful. This was her quote,

" Training church members to reach their own friends and families is our most successful way of reaching the lost."

I find this completely simplistic and yet super powerful! Just as we teach our church people in the states to be fluent in the sharing of the gospel, it is also essential that we take the time to empower and educate these fledgling Christians we have led to Christ to also be powerful and effective wittness'. I believe that most missionaries would say that a national empowered with the gospel and boldness is 100x more effective than a foreigner with the same message. So what an encouragement as we all serve either as missionaries, laymen or Christian workers to train those around us so that they may reach their sphere of influence as only they can do.

Great big thank you to all the missionary wives who lended their brains to me for this article.


Melissa Gray

http://www.reachingthegulf.org/


Wagar family

http://wagars2chuuk.com/


The LeClercq family

http://www.guampreacher.wix.com/mysite

Daku family

The Hirtzel Family - Vanuatu

https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=862510583828547&ref=br_rs

The Thuran Family -American Samoa

https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=862510583828547&ref=br_rs