Saturday, October 6, 2012

Dumas Tract Meeting 2012

Was a great success except 41% of the Southeast congregations were not repesented. It was harvest time so I suppose many could not make it for that reason. Anyways it was a good meeting. Jeff Boese from Pincher Creek was flown down to give us talks on his experience in New England. As soon as I get the minutes I will share tips and stats that would interest the tract workers that read here. I am working on a quarterly newsletter that I send in the mail to the Southeast tract workers to keep up enthusiasm. My experiment with Op-Noah has been a mixed success. Most active tract workers don't seem to have internet so I end up missing contact with the core interest group I would like to connect with. As a result you may hear less from me here. I will rather post here international letter excerpts and portions from my newsletters if that project takes off. I have restocked my work truck with plastic covered tracts and am working at outreach in rural Alabama where I can as a fence worker.


As for my involvement in Haiti, I have to edit and fill in more on the book and I am also experimenting with growing bamboo for timber and erosion control on my place in Alabama. Hopefully I can get my hairless sheep on pasture before winter as well. I want to use the manure from the calves and sheep for fertilizer for my small future greenhouse that I have been preparing for. I have finished my bamboo porch and am just about finished with a bamboo wall on my yard. I am trying to get familar with working with the material, so that hopefully I can use it to the benefit somewhere here or abroad.......

 

Monday, September 17, 2012

Eye for an Eye in Paraguay




Justice has taken a new twist here in the 2nd Department of San Pedro, Paraguay. A little over a week ago Claudalina’s (our Land lord Hipolito’s wife) brother-in-law was killed by several knife stabs to his heart. He had been cheating on his wife and the husband of the woman he had been with several times had warned him to get out of the community or he would be killed. He was warned several times the way I understand and at last the threat was completed and he was stabbed to death.
 
Less than two weeks later Hipolito talked to a man that works at the Public Office that takes care of death certificates and other such official paper work. The official told Hipolito (is there any privacy laws in Paraguay?) that three more murders of the same nature have taken place since. One other jealous husband had killed a man that had been with his wife and left his body near the highway close to 6 mil. Two other husbands paid other men to do the murdering for them and got rid of the men that they thought needed to die.
 
Hipolito and I talked a little of what the Bible says regarding “and eye for an eye”. This was the way in the old testament but now we are in the new dispensation. I was inspired to see what the Bible said regarding revenge and the “new law” of love....
 
Exo 21:24  Eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot,
Exo 21:25  Burning for burning, wound for wound, stripe for stripe.
Exo 21:26  And if a man smite the eye of his servant, or the eye of his maid, that it perish; he shall let him go free for his eye's sake.
Exo 21:27  And if he smite out his manservant's tooth, or his maidservant's tooth; he shall let him go free for his tooth's sake.
 
1Jn 2:7  Brethren, I write no new commandment unto you, but an old commandment which ye had from the beginning. The old commandment is the word which ye have heard from the beginning.
1Jn 2:8  Again, a new commandment I write unto you, which thing is true in him and in you: because the darkness is past, and the true light now shineth.
1Jn 2:9  He that saith he is in the light, and hateth his brother, is in darkness even until now.
1Jn 2:10  He that loveth his brother abideth in the light, and there is none occasion of stumbling in him.
1Jn 2:11  But he that hateth his brother is in darkness, and walketh in darkness, and knoweth not whither he goeth, because that darkness hath blinded his eyes.
 
Joh 13:34  A new commandment I give unto you, That ye love one another; as I have loved you, that ye also love one another.
Joh 13:35  By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples, if ye have love one to another.
 
Please remember us and the People of Paraguay in your prayers,
missionaries in Paraguay

Wiebe Quotes: Devotion



The gap between a holy God and mortal man is beyond words. If we should put forth enormous effort to climb the highest mountains, we would there discover that we are not much closer to the nearest star. The closer we come to the light, the more we discover our lack. Yet we also receive a vision of God's grace and mercy. Consecrated souls are humble, and they tremble at God's word…
…A heart that is given to God will always be given to prayer, always feel a need of Him, and ever desire to worship Him. Our highest purpose on earth is to honor the living God. It is not enough to be a devoted or dedicated person, but we must be devoted to God. May our spirits reach out to God so we may say with David, "I stretch forth my hands unto thee: my soul thirsteth after thee, as a thirsty land" (Ps. 143:6).
Dedicating My Temple
Lesson 3 - September 16, 2012
Adult & Youth Sunday School Lessons

Haiti Clinic Moves Beyond Isaac Storm


Sept 12, 2012
We have been constantly amazed by the way God has been opening doors, and working, and providing for us here. The clinic has been running very well lately and is steadily getting busier and busier. We love being here and everyday is a gift from God. We feel blessed to have good clinic workers, and that things run so smoothly. We love the people here and admire them so much. There is something so incredibly beautiful about these people and their strength of character that is an inspiration just to watch them and interact with them. Many times I marvel at the emotional, spiritual, and physical beauty of the simple (yet incredibly complex) package of a mountain woman with a baby in her arms. It’s like... WOW!
There are so many things to write about and tell you that I feel inadequate. Actually... we feel inadequate many times here. We can treat and heal many of this community’s sicknesses and problems, but the social and emotional problems we run into are almost beyond us at times. Like how should we council a teenage mother (a rape victim) who brings a baby to us and wants us to take it because her father hates the child so much that he threw him on the ground and tried to kill him by stomping? How do we comfort a church sister who one week finds out she is HIV positive (likely from the dentist who has pulled 4 of her teeth in the last yr and doesn’t bother to use new needles, grrrrrr!!!!), and then the next week comes to the clinic all battered up because her former boyfriend tries to kill her for not coming back to him? How do we comfort parents who take their sick baby to the witchdoctor and then the next day she dies from the potions and ignorance of the wicked charlatan? To show these people love and point them to a loving and caring Jesus is the best answer we have for them. Prayer is a wonderful thing. For example... Monday was an extremely busy day where I was running hither and yon... to keep the clinic flowing smoothly, the workers building the new clinic, Minister Nason was up for several visits in the area that he felt I should be in on, and then sooo many others needing my attention and help all day long too, that I was running all day trying to keep ahead of the Mack truck on my tail. I was stressed to the max. Then as darkness was coming and yet another man standing in our yard asking us to come visit his wife who had a new baby... I felt I had had about enough. But I told Candace “lets go!” So we walked across several hills to his house. His name is Dewdew. He is 25 and his wife is 20, they have 3 children. His 6x11ft house was barely standing on the edge of a cliff. The tropical storm Isaac from 2 weeks ago had taken his whole roof off so it is now covered with a holey tarp (not holy). The mud packed rock walls had softened in the 14 inch rain and 70 mph wind and one wall had fallen into the house... landing on the bed the four of them were hiding under. As we went into the darkness of the place we were honoured to realise that they were inviting us here to “name the baby”, and bless their home with a prayer. I told them the Bible story of Daniel, his steadfastness in prayer to God which resulted in him being thrown to the lions, and then how the angel protected him. I then pronounced his name to be “Daniel”. We prayed together, leaving encouragement for them to come to the clinic for treatment for several of their family’s issues, and I left there feeling like my stressful day was changed into a happy blessing.
Our nurse Heather, from Alberta, has been doing an awesome job, and she cheerfully goes thru her days duties. She’s been here 5 months and she is learning the Creole language fairly well. She has a full time translator at work yet. She and Ozias are very busy stitching wounds, dealing with burns, diagnosing all kinds of normal and strange illnesses, doing prenatal classes, delivering babies, etc. The clinic is open 5 days a week but often there is things to do on the other 2 days if we are around. About the only way to give Heather a break is to send/take her away for a day or so. Recently a newborn came in with a knee bent backwards. Just like this link... http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1297692/Blue-Peter-doctor-fixed-newborns-twisted-leg-sticky-tape-wood.html .  Heather is trying the Ponseti style treatment to correct it. I told her that if this works like we think it will... her whole time here in Haiti would have been worth it on this child alone, preventing the child from being a cripple the rest of her life! Honestly, there would have likely been no other place the family could have, or would have, ever gone to for help. I could tell you lots of stories! We really could use an ultrasound machine. If anybody knows of a good machine available, please let me know.
Our ambulance has been a great service to this community. We try to get patient’s families to cover most of the gas money for a 6-8 hour round trip to a hospital and back. That has worked well for the most part. We feel very blessed and are very grateful to Jeff Hageman for providing the vehicle and also for providing a mechanic who comes around on a maintenance and repair schedule. This mechanic is John, an American living and missionarying  in the DR. John and his lovely Dominican wife just spent a few days with us doing some servicing on the 1982 Pinzgauer Ambulance. It’s in tiptop shape again.
We as a family went back to Ontario for 2 weeks in Aug. We enjoyed meeting friends and family again and stocking up on a few things. We were unable to take our 2 yr old foster daughter Ketli to Canada with us so we were very happy to get back to her happy little self again. She is such little heater in our house. Helps keep our house warm and filled with love. The night we got back to Haiti was the night Storm Isaac hit Haiti. Alot of houses are damaged, and gardens too. The wind blew 50-80 mph for most of the night. We spent a week cleaning up our trees and yard, but we had no house damage. We are happy to tell you that our son Cam (13yrs, in 8th grade) was baptised here 2 weeks ago together with 7 Haitians. Christina, Cam and Chase are all back in school as of today. Our new school teacher Sallie Minninger is from Wisconsin and is a real winner. She has been with us less than 2 weeks and is already a good fit in our family. Missionaries Dallas and Linda Koehn have spent their year here and are now gone back to Kansas. We miss them and the mission house is empty, which is very sad. We also miss our oldest son Trev (almost 20yrs old - YIKES!!!) who is living and working in United Center KS for the time being. Nurse Heather is living with us now and with Miss Sallie and our son Zack (soon 18) and the Chadek CSI youth boys often here, our table is often surrounded by happy laughing youth. Right now Sam Willhite from Walnut Hill Florida is also with us for a week or so, helping out on the new clinic.
The church here is in serious need of a full time missionary leader. The congregation is courageous and in good spiritual health overall, but this is a large congregation already and there are challenges in their relatively new Christian lives that they need a pastor to help us with. We don’t always understand Gods will or why there is no one to fill the spot as of yet.
Our new clinic is almost done the construction phase. The rock front is being jointed and the exterior is being painted. There is still lots to do... floor tile, interior paint, plumbing, electrical, counters and shelving etc, before we can move in. We (or I should say ‘this community” ) has been incredibly blessed by generous funders that have taken this project into their hearts and out of their wallets. There has been other times too where it is amazing how God provides... like the day we had a child who needed a surgery that would cost 500 dollars. A couple hours later I got an email from a stranger back home.  They said their child had died and they had 500 dollars left in the memorial fund, and that they wanted to donate it to our clinic to help some child. THAT was a God moment. Thank You!
Today I was impressed with this verse from Joshua 22:5. But take diligent heed to do the commandment and the law, which Moses the servant of the Lord charged you, to love the Lord your God, and to walk in all his ways, and to keep his commandments, and to cleave unto him, and to serve him with all your heart and with all your soul. Key word for me was “cleave”. Am I “cleaving unto Him”? I need to, I want to. And I want to walk in all His ways. Pray for us that we can do just that.

Love to you all, and may you have a fabulous day.


Keith Toews
Administrator- Confidence Health Center
Oriani, Haiti
(011) 509-3783-9058

 

Saturday, September 8, 2012

New Birth in E. Africa: Victories on the Battlefield Part 1

  
Phillip and the Ethiopian from the Book of Acts   


These are experinces of real people in our present time of 2012. Christians read to relate and rejoice and searching soul  read for inspiration to follow Jesus.There is no other way.





Oluoch: I did not worship anywhere. When John came he preached good doctrine. I decided to follow God, and am following up until now. I love the word of God. Nothing is greater. I want to learn more of God’s word so I can be baptized. I prayed hard to see the kingdom of God.
On witchcraft: I felt I could not serve two masters. I wanted to serve God, so destroyed witchcraft items even though no one knew I had those things.
I want only salvation. I felt very dirty and sinful which is why I exposed my witchcraft. Today I feel very clean.



Lots of discussion on the way to be saved. He seemed able to identify.


Wife of Oluoch – Mary: Before I was married I prayed, but when I married I found my husband did not. We attended church for a while, but there was no salvation so we left. We were just home until John came. I rejected all the sin in the world.
Oluoch says she used to be much angry but now has changed. They pray together.
Moses: I worshipped before before, but I found after listening to John that I was not born again. I was religious but not born again. Today I feel like I am born again. I loved worshipping with instruments, shouting, dancing and clapping. Now I don’t like these things. They are dead in my life.


When I was a boy I did the things of the flesh. When I received Jesus these things died in my life because I have received the word of God. I can’t dance in the disco, run with the girls, etc... I repented of abuse, etc... Also pride was in my life but God saved me. These things are no longer in my heart. I was baptized but the water did not wash my sins, only the blood of Jesus. I have peace.

The spirit has been speaking to me about walking with people who don’t believe, bad books with murder scenes, music, traditional customs. I testified of my sins to God. After I was born again I testified first to my wife. My friends also know of my change; they would be afraid now to offer me beer.

His wife says that he was angry and cruel but now all has changed.
Moses later read the verse about the merchant man and the pearl of great price. He said he also felt he had found the pearl of great price and sold everything. In the church where he was he was respected. But he counted that as nothing. He returned them their documents and told them he had found something very precious. He also talked small of his plans to get rid of his DVD and radio, and wants to build a house with the money from selling them.



Wife of Moses – Pendo: Before, I prayed but I did not know the light. I heard the teachings of being born again from John. I knew I was not born again. This is why I decided to be born again. God saved me from all the words of the world and the things I was doing. I repented of adultery and music. Now these things are not in my life and I don’t want to remember them. I pray to God for help with temptations.


Sometimes in the night God spoke to me telling me there was a preacher somewhere. Now I desire to be part of the Church because of the teachings.

Moses says she has repented. She no longer does the worldy things she did. She was very bad but now is Ok.


Ochieng: I was religious but had no contact with Jesus. After the teachings I heard, I met Jesus. I was bad, angry, beating people with clubs, I drank and did drugs, loved music, committed adultery. When I heard John teaching about life – any who follow Jesus can have everlasting life- this touched me. I felt bad for the deeds and received a change. I no longer desire those things. Even there was a party nearby but I had no desire to go. Those who saw me sitting at home asked me to go. I said no, I have something better. I cannot mix it with those things. I have left all those things.

Satan tempted me in the night. I saw Satan’s power. It came as if to strangle me. Before I received Jesus, I heard a voice saying, "If something strangles you, ask in the name of Jesus for help." When those spirits came I forgot to use the name of Jesus and used my own power. After the teachings I began to pray. Now I am free of that thing. One day I saw the light and I know Jesus is in my life.

He says he has not confessed to anyone yet, but is ready and willing. He reads the Bible and finds answers there.

Wife of Ochieng – Molly: Before before I prayed. I was baptized but did not understand. When John taught about baptism I felt to be born again. After John’s message on the new birth I understood and accepted. I have told my friends. I left the bad things after hearing the gospel. I felt bad, prayed to God, telling him all my sins. I now feel meek, not angry. Before when I prayed my prayer did not go to God, but now I feel I am talking to God.


Ochieng says she was born again before he was. He saw that now they could work together well; before she did not obey him. Now they always agree.


Ezron: I met Jesus in ’64 in Pentacostal. I was a sinner, I was fighting. Nobody dared to fight me, even with a stick. I was bad. When I met Jesus these things left my life. From then to now I am in Jesus. When John came he found me in the Holy Spirit and I received his teaching. Some temptations had come to me between, and when John came I remembered and realized I was going back to sin. Now I am free and have found salvation. I don’t fear to die because I will die in Jesus.


Philemon: I used to be a fighter and a drunkard but left all of that and chose blessing instead of condemnation. I also left playing ball because of the witchcraft practices there.
In a vison or dream, I went into a church and found all the people in darkness, sleeping. I asked , "How can I find a true church?" I was taken to a small place, and saw two people kneeling in quiet and sorrowful prayer. There were tears. My guide told me, "You need to worship like this."
I saw another thing like the end of the world. I was taken to a large plain full of weeping people. There was thunder among them. I was led to a river. We passed the troubled waters and I saw I was dipped in the blood. I saw a big and beautiful town of gold. The man told me, "If you work hard you will be here in this place."
God has been good to me but my heart is troubled when I see those in darkness.
I was very bad. I was suffering from anger but now I am free. When asked if he had requested forgiveness from those he beat, he said: They are now my friends. Ezron was my enemy but now is my friend. I went to far places to ask forgiveness and some I even paid 100, 000 shillings, because they did not want to forgive me.
Later he talked of how white missionaries in Mwanza offered him a vehicle and place to stay to join them and spread the word of God. He refused.


Wife of Philemon – Rojeana: I am in God and have done nothing bad in him. I was a sinner but when I heard the word of God I am in the word of God. I am born again because I am not sinning. I was angry but now I am not. I loved the world and was making my hair fashionable, but now I don’t like these things. Now I am not doing wrong. I love God.
I heard the word of God and realized sin is bad. I knelt and prayed to God. I asked God to take my heart and life, because the world remains here. I testified to Philemon the things I did in darkness, things he did not know.


Philemon says he saw a vision of him and Jared worshipping God with their wives. The wives were in darkness, while they were in light. They fasted and prayed. They knelt together and prayed and asked all bad spirits to leave them. Out of Philemon’s wife went three spirits. After this his wife came to him and testified of having met God.


Jared also says she has changed. She used to abuse him. Now they love each other.


Mama Philemon says that before Rojeana’s change when she talked with her Rojeana would shout at her. Now if there is a problem she is just quiet.

New Birth in E. Africa: Victories on the Battlefield Part 2

Ethiopian baptized by Phillip in Book of Acts Jared: I am thankful I found Jesus and he saved my life. I was a sinner – a drunkard, smoker, druggie, lier, even cheated my parents – my life was a lie. No one knew when I was lying. This was when I was 16. I married my first wife, who is now dead. After she died I left home and went to Kenya. I travelled many places there. I went to Mbita and stayed two months. I heard the word of God- salvation for sins, and healing for people. I saw my life was not good. I said, I will listen to this word. I went to church and heard the preacher teaching. I felt judgement in my heart. I said, I want to search until I find Jesus.
At this point he requested that everyone in the group but us and his family leave.
Before I was saved, Satan infected me with HIV. When I heard salvation being preached I decided to follow Jesus. After three Sundays I found a pastor from Migori. I heard him say three things. (1) Jesus can take us from ignorance and tradition. (2) Jesus heals. (3) You will be ok (?) I wanted to follow Jesus and purposed to find him. I knelt and held my hands up and said, "Jesus, save me, I am a sinner." (He was told to say this.) I felt clean and shaken, and fell unconcious. In the darkness appeared light. I saw a hill and two people and a dog. The dog was going out of me and running. The people went with him. I was in the light and all those things vanished. I awakened. People were around. My heart was sad so I sat down. When the service ended four preachers asked me to remain. They asked what I saw, or what happened. They said, "You have found salvation, but not the Holy Spirit." They told me to cry to God for it. I was friendly with that pastor and visited him in the evenings. The third day in the eve I called, "Jesus save me, I am a sinner." There came a light like an arrow and blood like a torrent covering my life. I talked in a language I didn’t know. I was told that now I was saved and had the Holy Spirit.
I remembered Jesus’ healing, and decided to be tested for HIV. I tested negative. Went to another hospital and tested the same. After a month I went again, and still tested negative for HIV.
I came home then, and God gave me this wife. I didn’t go to church much as it was far. Last year in Shirati I heard the word of God had come to my place. My brother told me of John coming. He told me, "As they teach, as they walk, I see they are saved. " I wanted a church like the one I was saved in. One day I saw John with Moses and Joseph. I heard the teachings. I said, "This is of God." I received the word into my heart. I continued to ask God if this was truly His word that had come here. The answer was yes. In a vision I saw John in the light. We were in that light together.
I have many temptations. I testified to those I lied to when I was saved. Now I don’t lie. I pray every day that I will not go back to lying. I don’t desire it. I still speak in tongues.


Philemon: This my brother was not a good person. He was a liar and drunkard. He was ten years younger than I but had many ways to cheat me and lose my money. Now he is a good person. If I gave him 5000 to buy something, even if the change was only 50 he would bring it back to me. He has changed.



Philemon also testified against speaking in tongues.


Mama Philemon (also Jared’s mother) testified of Jared: Before receiving God he was a bad child. He had HIV. After receiving God he is well. He left his bad deeds. I can sleep in peace. If I go astray he helps me find the way of God.


Mama Philemon- Lucia: I was a sinner. Jesus found me and saved me. I was sick and healed me. I love Jesus. My friends with whom I was drinking, they left me. I’m alone with my children. Still I love Jesus. When I was praying and asking God why my children were going to a strange church, God told me that this was His church. These people were His people. I want to be with my chidren there. I want to know more of the word of God. I want to go to Heaven.
My heart was pained when thinking of my sins. The word of God cleansed my life.


Jared testified of a change in his mother.


Philemon says that before she was saved he felt shame over his mother. She was an awful drunkard, and would lie in a stupor where she fell. She used tobacco. She was always sick and much money went to cure her. She was angry. Now she is a good mother. She has left the teachings of the other churches. For twelve years she has not smoked or drunk.


Wife of Jared – Halima: I am not in worldly places. I want to be a Christian.
Philemon says that both she and his wife were Muslim, but now are Christians.

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Haiti Clinic Needs Skilled Help

 
Keith Toews has informed us that he needs some help finishing a building for the health clinic. He needs someone that can lay tile flooring, make some shelving and an electrician. If you can do one or more of these things and are interested in volunteering, please contact Kevin Bronson or email me. He can use the tile layer and the builder as soon as you can get over there. The electrician will be needed at the end of September or first part of October. Thanks for your consideration!


Good News
Dan Jantz
209.409.4597
Atwater, Ca

The Fate of Ukrainian Orphans


 "See that you do not look down on one of these little ones. For I tell you that their angels in heaven always see the face of my Father in heaven." Matt 18:10 NIV

These are waiting children in Ukraine…orphans wanting a family to love them and give them a secure home of their very own. Right now they are mostly available to Ukrainians due to the current laws.


After these children leave the orphanage…
*10% commit suicide
*60% of the girls are sold into the sex trade across the world
*70% of the boys end up in prison

Sent to me by reader 

At least we can pray......

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Still Busy

Between summer work, family visits and life in general it has been very busy. Still in progress though slowly with Haiti Book.

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Summer Slowdown

I have been very busy in the literal heat of summer. It has been very humid with spotty light rains nearly everyday in our neck of the woods here in Alabama. I have been illustrating for the Haiti book. Today my AC quite working at our house.........

I am not finished Two Ears of Corn yet. I see the price of the book sky rocketed-- so I would like to share some of the good points it brings out.

My vocational school project ideas has brought a new perspective. I talked with a brother that has really advocated the vocational prospect. He advised me that the main way such a project would work is to establish a business and outsource work abroad to our brethren. Starting in a small way under the radar--as it were until it is undeniable that it is bearing forth good fruit. I have continued to pursue electronic and electrical training for myself so that perhaps in the future it will come in handy to teach, etc. I also thought of a rickshaw manufacturing and taxi service. Salvaging motorbikes and building them into rickshaw or tuk-tuks.

I am waiting for a debate about the pros and cons about colonizing abroad by someone that grew up and latter observed colonies as a missionary.

As for this blog and internet I am slowing down my involvement--I have said all I have to say and few have more to add. I will publish letters and news from various places, but as far as I know there may be fewer posts here on out. Thank-you for the interest and don;t forget what season we are in..........

Friday, July 20, 2012

Very Sad Day for the Nation

Prayers to the grieving ones in Colorado. To those that are suffering in the hospital.  Wishing that our culture would not tolerate the glorifying of violence and immorality in the entertainment industry. Pray that this could cause a deep inner look into what we want to be represented as as a nation. For those that are abroad: 70 people have been shot; 12 of those killed by a lone gunman in a movie threatre last night at 12am.

Monday, July 16, 2012

To Agree or to Disagree: Patrick Enike--Wiebe Quotes



Our disagreement over one matter today should not mean we cannot work together or we cannot get along with ourselves.  If it does, it shows our sense of carnality and spiritual immaturity in our Christian experience.  Remember that is not only they with whom we always agree that challenges our capability but with they whom we sometimes have some differences.  The challenge of our capability is an opportunity to improve in the areas where our weaknesses might have been revealed by reason of our differences.

Apostle Paul confessed of Mark that he is profitable unto him for the ministry.  Brothers, sisters and family members, we are profitable unto one another.  Be our differences what they may, we are profitable unto one another.  The weakness of one another is to provoke one another’s strength.  Where a fellow brother or sister or a fellow labourers might not be useful or relevant in one occasion, he or she might be relevant and useful in another.  For such reasons we should strive to maintain harmony among us….

…We cannot afford to create enmity between us for any reason whatsoever.  The points of our agreement are usually more than the points of our common disagreement.  Let us always strive to maintain harmony in our relationship because many more reasons for our agreement are ahead of us.  Such was the case and the comments of Apostle concerning Mark.

Patrick L.O. Enike--Nigerian Minister
Paul versus Barnabas and Mark
(Acts 15:39-40 & 2 Tim. 4:11)
The Voice of Christians’ Fellowship
May 2011

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Zimbabwe has Brother Falsely Jailed for Auto Theft


A report from CSI ZIM
As near as I can tell July 12 ,2012
    We just wanted to let you all know that we are facing a challenging situation here. As you all probably know, Takemore & Tracy are members here in our congregation. We call them Baba & Amai Charlene. The night before last we recieved a call from Amai saying that Baba Charlene had not come home & she didn't know why. After some investigating we found out that he had been taken to jail because a car had been stolen. He is a professional mechanic here at Nissan in town. As it turns out he happened to be the last one to have worked on the car. So he is also the last one to have seen it. Amai was very sad & was crying. The next day we took her to see him. He doesn't get fed anything there so she (or we) have to take him food. We talked to him just a little. Needless to say there were tears in all of our eyes as we talked to him through the bars. At this point he is still locked up & we don't know when he will be released. They are waiting on more information before they can let him go. So this could take a while. Amai is quite sad & fearful & wants to just be with us for now. So she has spent the night at our house. They have a 2 yr old girl & a baby boy. Last night we knelt & held hands & had a special prayer for them both. We asked God to help them to get the rest that they need & that He could grant them the courage & grace to face whatever the future holds. I just hope that they will not lose faith. We are begging for you all to pray. They are both very faithful in their spiritual lives & he takes his place quite faithfully in our services here. He does all of our translating as well as leading the Shona songs etc... because he is the only brother that we have. His small family also needs him. They miss him very much. We have only been here for 2 months but have become very close to this couple already. I will try to keep you updated as to what happens. We are going to take him food today & see him again.


Updated:


  I have wonderful news this evening! We just took Baba Charlene home. He is a free man. I will briefly relate what happened today & maybe later provide more details. Samantha & I took Amai Charlene to Sherugwe this morning to see him & take him food. We were able to talk to him through the fence for 10 minutes or so. Needless to say his courage was quite low. Our courage wasn't so good either by that time. He was slammed into a very small cell with 8 or 10 other guys & by what I could see through the door opening I wouldn't have wanted to set foot in there! We sadly watched as he was led back into the cell & walked away trying to keep from crying. His boss Mabika was with us & was determined to do everything he could to get him out. We ended up staying at that police station almost all day because they kept giving us a bit of hope that something would work out. When I was almost ready to give up, the Lord provided our miracle. The car that had been stolen was found! Immediately 3 officers jumped into our car with us & off we went way back into the boonies to inspect. (remember we provide quite a bit of transport here) :) This information happened to be the missing link for them so after we inspected they told us to take them back to the station & they would withdraw the case & we could take Baba Charlene home. Of course this took a couple more hours it seemed like. They let me come back to the cell again when they let him out & I immediately threw my arms around him. He had been locked up since thursday so he seemed quite confused & not sure what was going on. His boss also gave him a big hug then we followed the case officer into his office. He had to ask a thousand more questions then they let us go. I will never forget the feeling of being able to put my arm around him & lead him out to the car. Many happy tears there were! I knew he was tired but I told him that if we could take him to our house he could have a warm shower (he didn't smell too good) & we would feed them supper. So that is what he chose to do. We had a prayer of thankgiving to God then we took them to their own house! All of your many prayers were answered! Thankyou thankyou thankyou!!!! To God be the glory!! We all are so so happy!

Friday, July 13, 2012

Miracle Worker: Play About Hellen Keller and Anne Sullivan




    About two weeks ago we went to Tuscumbia  AL to the Hellen Keller birth place to see the Miracle Worker play. It was very interesting to become reacquainted with the Helen Keller story. However the story revolves around Anne Sullivan who was formerly a blind orphan that comes to Alabama from Yankee Boston to the house of a Rebel captain to help his blind and deaf daughter break out of her dark cocoon. First you arrive at the birthplace grounds and tour the plantation house and outbuildings. After you go to the bleachers. In front is a multilevel stage for various scenes that take place in the house, yard, and outbuilding, train station, etc. They are cut-aways. All through the act they have to mimes using sign language to interpret the act's dialog to any who may be deaf. They mixed up our reserved seating tickets and forgot to assign us numbers so they placed us in the VIP seating upfront by the stage. It worked out okay though being the modest Mennonites that we are, we were at first a little self-conscience. More so because our rowdy boys are a little unpredictable in such settings. 
     The play starts with Helen's birth and skips along at a pretty brisk pace. Her teenage brother and also the cook bring a little comic relief. The Captain did a good job booming around and acting big and yet in the end shows his soft side as in the end he gives in to his "Helen". Imagine having a little savage girl going around the dinner table sampling everyone's food. She was rather spoiled. 
     Throw young disciplinarian Anne Sullivan on the scene and you soon have chaos. I liked the skit and it made me appreciate the Helen Keller story more. Though I would say the drama is even more appreciated by the femmine part of your family. It is amazing what perseverance and determination can accomplish against great odds. However I believe desperate prayer on the behalf of mother and Anne Sullivan and the blind girls definitively played a big part --though not mentioned in the skit. It was a miracle there is no doubt. 


    However I would say more but perhaps you would like to discover it out yourself. Northern Alabama, Tuscumbia at 6:45 pm -10:30pm. Apparently the word is out amongst the Mennonites because we seen quite a few couples and youth there from Mississippi. 


    To me it was a testament to the mercy of God and that when helping someone in a seemingly hopeless situation---one needs to look up to God: 


     With men this is impossible; but with God all things are possible. Matt 19:26

Two Ears of Corn

 
Whoever makes two ears of corn, or two blades of grass to grow where only one grew before, deserves better of mankind, and does more essential service to his country than the whole race of politicians put together --Jonathon Swift


I am so excited today! I received my Roland Bunch book, Two Ears of Corn, A Guide to People Centered Agriculture Improvement. Last week I crunched in 440 pages of "Up from History, The Life of Booker T. Washington" to get solid background on the Tuskegee model. Today I started on The Life of George Washington Carver, the "Peanut Man" that worked at Tuskegee. I recommend anyone interested on what we have been talking about here on OP-Noah to read up on these two men. God Centered Science and helping the man down back up through teaching honesty and hard work ethics. Inspirational to say the least. 


However Two Ears is written by Dr. Bunch who has done alot of work in Honduras. He has spent decades working with agriculture projects in Third World countries. This book should be on the shelves of CSI directors. It talks and discusses methods of implementing workable projects that will work long term in poor villages. I will definitively report on it when I am finished with it. It is a 1982 book still used by Peace Corp, Universities, and NGOs. However it looks pretty humble with hand drawn illustrations. I had to pay a price for my dog-eared copy.  Just reading the headings and illustrations and the material----I am like where has this book been? 
The Barefoot Architect by Johan van Lengen is also an awesome book. It is written by a Dutch architect in Brazil. Nearly 700 pages of illustrations and simple to follow explanations of the why's and hows of building communities and housing in Third World countries. How to build Adobe to bamboo houses. Thatch roofs. Cisterns. Water Treatment. Solar Heating. Basic design to a lot of things related to sustainable living. How to build to utilize using your natural enviroment. Good news is is that it is also written by a man that has done it with his own hands and you can follow his blog on TIBA in Brazil. Anyways call me overblown, but I like these books and think they would be good material for CSI oriented individuals to consider on their bookshelves. A few dirt stains on the pages is okay in this case. 
Okay I got to get back to a wife and two boys, a Bible and alot of off time reading. I am still working on the Haiti book. I want to sit down an illustrate tonight with my boys. Today at work we slugged away on finishing half a mile of fence-seven braces (equipment faliure leaves about 400ft unfinished), drove poles for a retaining wall, and a couple of the guys finished another half a mile of stapling up fence along a creek----so yes we are busy and hands on...........


The price of this book has sky-rocketed since I even have purchased it.



Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Spiritual Capital: How the Church is Able to Break Poverty Cycle


How the Church Is Uniquely Equipped to Break the Poverty Cycle

July 01, 2011 by Ken Eldred
Excerpts from God Is at Work (primarily) and The Integrated Life
Please don’t send us money; it only creates division. But do send us business people who can create jobs for us, that we can build ourselves up.” The Eastern European Christian leaders at a 2004 conference in Bulgaria were unified in their call for the Western Church to send Christians skilled in business to bless their nations economically and spiritually.
Rajesh, an Indian leader of an organization that coordinates the efforts of 15,000 Indian missionaries, agreed. “We need to learn how to live our faith in the workplace; how to work and witness,” he said. “We need models of doing business and outreach.”
The question arises: Should mission efforts even concern themselves with business activities? Isn’t that a secular pursuit of mammon that runs contrary to the mission of the church?
I believe this thinking is wrong on both accounts. Properly understood, the work of believers to influence the marketplace and serve others in their jobs is every bit as spiritual as the more direct ministry which churches and missions agencies conduct. I further believe Christians are uniquely positioned to address the cycle of poverty at its root cause—in a way secular efforts are unable to do. And the concept of spiritual capital explains why that’s the case.



What Is Spiritual Capital?
Spiritual capital is the collective societal faith, trust and commitment to do what is right—not only what is right in our own eyes or what benefits us the most, but what is right in the eyes of God. Showing integrity, being accountable and honest, offering hope, being loyal and trustworthy, loving and encouraging others, exhibiting good stewardship, being fair, creating order and serving others—these are not, for the most part, covered by the laws of the land. We have no legal compulsion to love others, exhibit good stewardship, create order or serve each other. There is no legal compulsion to encourage one another to pursue new ventures in hope and faith, trusting that God will go before us. But where these biblical values are exhibited, spiritual capital is built.
If spiritual capital is the faith, trust and commitment that we and others will do what is right, it then follows that spiritual capital can increase or decrease based on personal experiences.
Imagine that there is a spiritual capital account that accrues to the individual and to the country. Like a bank account, it can grow or shrink due to deposits to or withdrawals from the account. The spiritual capital currency that is deposited (or withdrawn) is the exercise (or lack of exercise) of biblical principles: integrity, accountability, honesty, hope, love, trust, stewardship, fairness, order, loyalty, service, and so forth. For example, if one sells something with true weights and measures, then he has completed an honest transaction and has added spiritual capital to his and the nation’s account. However, if one fails to fulfill his commitment to replace any defective products he sells, then he has proven untrustworthy and dishonest and has withdrawn spiritual capital from his and the nation’s account.
A lack of trust can turn a simple transaction like purchasing a chicken into a horrendously costly exercise, never mind more complex transactions. By contrast, where much spiritual capital is present, others are given the benefit of the doubt, and transaction costs are lower. This has profound implications on the development, success, and culture of an economy.



Spiritual Capital: The Missing Leg in Economic Development
Spiritual capital is critical to economic success. Dr. Theodore Malloch calls it “the missing leg in the stool of economic development.” He’s spot on. There’s a relationship between economic prosperity and the pervasiveness of biblical values in the culture. Douglass North won a Nobel Prize in economics for demonstrating which “institutions” in a society characterize successful economies. He proved that the trust factor, when pervasive in a society, is one of the “institutions” that lead to a better economy.
At the beginning of the twentieth century, one of the founders of sociology examined the origins of successful capitalism. Why, asked Max Weber, did capitalism thrive in certain parts of Europe and especially in the United States? His conclusion was simple and powerful. He noted that predominantly Protestant nations had adopted values of vocation, hard work, and personal piety that led to greater economic success. Neighboring countries with similar resources and people groups didn’t fare as well. Weber noted that in Catholic societies, the pious served in the Church; in Protestant cultures, the spirit of personal piety permeated into the marketplace and built spiritual capital. Applying internalized biblical values to business resulted in successful capitalism.  Almost a century apart, Max Weber and Douglass North reached very similar conclusions—that a society’s beliefs and values are strong determinants of its economic success.
Indeed, it is interesting to observe that with very few exceptions, every nation at the top of the GDP-per-capita list has a long Judeo-Christian tradition. That’s no coincidence. There’s a relationship between economic prosperity and the pervasiveness of biblical values in the culture. When biblical principles are practiced in business, spiritual capital grows, and economic success follows. Thus, spiritual capital provides the link between biblical principles and business success.



Depleting the Trust Fund
Most developing nations are trying to build their economies with very little spiritual capital, and they lack the business practices and institutions necessary to grow that capital. In these situations, people who draw on the nation’s spiritual capital account can bankrupt it. After the fall of communism, Western corporations rushed into the former Soviet Union, attracted to cheap labor, an educated workforce, and a large market. However, many were stung by corruption and lost millions of dollars in the process. Russia is not an isolated case. Companies have encountered similar situations in China and other emerging economies.
“Most have been dismayed by the adverse business environment fostered by corruption,” observed Askold Krushelnycky, a British-born journalist to Eastern Europe. “Many western firms and investors have withdrawn or reduced their activities because they are fed up with becoming the targets of corrupt officials demanding bribes, of being cheated by corrupt businessmen, of being at the mercy of a corrupt legal system. . . . In sum, corruption corrodes a society. When nepotism replaces merit, when cunning and cheating replace trust and honesty, when force and murder triumph over the law and a sense of decency—then the threads binding together a civil society are weakened and eventually destroyed.” A nation that has little or no spiritual capital reserve runs the risk of bankrupting the account and freezing the nation’s economy.



Misguided Development Efforts and the Failure to Recognize Spiritual Capital
The lack of recognition of spiritual capital’s importance has led to disastrous outcomes. For example, it has been thought for decades that the world’s financial community holds the keys to success for developing nations. What’s holding back certain regions of the world, the argument goes, is a lack of access to economic capital. Bangladesh has been the focus of the largest microenterprise development programs. More than 10 million people have received business loans over the past thirty years, yet poverty is still pervasive, and the economy hasn’t developed much. Why? Bangladesh also suffers from the highest perceived corruption in the world. Development efforts provided economic capital but not the tools to build the nation’s spiritual capital.
Likewise, billions of dollars have been invested in African economies, but it hasn’t made a dent. In fact, economic data suggests these nations are worse off today than they were before they received funding from the West. “Most African nations today are poorer than they were in 1980, sometimes by very wide margins,” note Haber, North, and Weingast. “More shocking, two-thirds of the African countries have either stagnated or shrunk in real per capita terms since the onset of independence in the early 1960s.”  Much of the money disappeared and is suspected to reside in the Swiss bank accounts of various corrupt leaders and dictators. Where funds did reach the local economy, they failed to achieve any sustained economic growth. The large-scale attempts to reform African economies fell flat because they focused on the lack of economic capital and poverty but did nothing about the woeful lack of spiritual capital so evident in the marketplace.



Building Spiritual Capital: The Transforming Power of the Gospel
Spiritual capital is the foundation for successful commerce, and the Church is uniquely equipped to develop and produce Kingdom business professionals who will equip the nations with the life-changing means of growing their spiritual capital account. We shortchange a nation if we introduce laws that facilitate commerce and teach principles of accounting and yet fail to equip the nation with the means to establish a spiritual capital base on which to build its economy. Without the integrity, morality and love that comes from the Spirit of God transforming the hearts of men and women, nations will fall short of God’s ultimate blessing.
Not all Christian-based groups involved in economic development see the connection between their work and the development of spiritual capital. But failure to bring the gospel is helpful neither to the individual nor to the nation. It may well lead the nation down the wrong path, one in which spiritual capital cannot accrue. And that will not improve or bless the nation.
Say there is a villager who buys wheat by the sack and sells it by the quart, but he cheats his customer. If there is no alternate vendor, the customer may return, and the villager does well financially. However, the result is ill will and a loss of spiritual capital, and the nation fails to learn the value of honest weights and measures. There is an immediate economic penalty as well, since transactional costs are higher where there is low spiritual capital. For example, the other villagers may need to buy their own scales and conduct their own measurements in order to counter the cheating seller. In the long run, the lack of spiritual capital makes for an unhealthy and destructive business environment, and the nation, including the dishonest villager, will suffer. We see this today in many African states where a low level of trust has held back many economies.
Jesus’ parable about the wise and foolish builders (see Matt. 7:24-27) is particularly instructive here. The wise man builds his house on the rock. The foolish man builds his house on sand. Business principles, technical training and start-up funding are just the walls, doors and roof of business. The transforming gospel of Jesus and the ultimate authority of God are the rock foundation. The businessperson must be committed to pleasing Jesus and doing what is right, or his business will be built on sand. If these rock principles are not in place, they will not support the business structure in times of trouble. When the economic storms of life come, the uncommitted businessperson will revert back to what he fundamentally believes.
The gospel is an important component of developing an economy and blessing the nation through Kingdom business. Only the Holy Spirit has the power to transform the hearts of men and women. Only the gospel can work at the core level and alter the collective DNA of a society. Only the gospel can ingrain the biblical values that lead to spiritual capital accumulation and successful business.
Transformed hearts lead to renewed minds. Fundamental beliefs, values and attitudes are radically changed. Spiritual capital is built, laying the foundation for economic development. And that’s why the church is uniquely equipped to break the poverty cycle.f


Projects For the Poor: What Works Here May Not Work There

Another article by R Miller

When doing Projects for the Poor, and you are starting from scratch, and you are scratching your head,
to know where to start, then you come across some article or plan that someone else is doing in another
country, usually our first reaction is, that's nice but it'll never work here.

That's what we want to analyze in this article, there are certain principals that apply to all projects, but not
all projects are the same in each country, culture and land opportunities.

For example: In Paraguay you SHOULD NOT serve visitors rice and beans, when we went to Nicaragua, some
days we had beans Morning, Noon and Night!!! However rearranged in different forms.

So my short term of service in El Salvador was real helpful, to help keep in mind that there can be huge
differences in the possibilities from one country to another.

That's why in the future as this Projects for the Poor slowly develops, the goal is to have people that have served from each country analyze what could be done there, then this information passed on to the next
missionary.  What I see happening is, one missionary goes and tries his ideas, some work and some don't,
the next one comes along and he does the same thing, some work and some don't.
This tends to be very confusing to the locals, as here these "gringos" come in and they are all enthused,
set something in motion, then poof it was a flop. Then he starts something else, wow that works, but
bingo, he now goes home, and the next one, naw that is not his thing, so now that project also dies.
So after a while the locals throw their hands into the air and say, let them come and go as they please
but they sure don't know what they are doing.

One thing to keep in mind, locals tend to think that missionaries all come from the same place, have the same
goals and will keep on doing what the previous missionary was doing, when that does not happen they begin
to lose faith in the foreign missionary, because all they can see is the disorganized way they go about
doing things.

The main goal for this discussion group is to eventually, have subgroups especially for each country,
then those groups will analyze the possibilities for that country. That way we won't bog down the system
where we will share those articles. Hopefully this will give future missionaries some helpful insights on what
has happened in the country that they will be serving.

Country Comparison Analysis

El Salvador and Paraguay are the two countries that we want to compare.

Keep in mind these are approximates.

El Salvador has 8,123 sq. miles, with a population of 6,071,774.  = 748 people per sq. mile
Paraguay has 157,046 sq. miles with a population of 6,459,058. =   42 people per sq. mile

El Salvador is very mountainous and has a lot of rocks, with a low rate of tillable soil mechanically.
Paraguay is fairly level and a high percent of the soil that is tillable mechanically.

El Salvador has a climate of six months of rain and six months of dry.
Paraguay has a fairly stable climate, with not any pronounced dry season.

El Salvador has one planting season.
Paraguay has two planting seasons in one year

El Salvador has places were it is difficult to access by road.
Paraguay also has a poor road system, however when it is dry, most places can be accessed.


These are to mention a few.

When I was in El Salvador, my wife packed some lunch and I went out to help the neighbor
work in his field.

Here are some observations.
I was huffing and puffing till we got to the field, kinda felt like a days work just to get to the field.
Rocks everywhere, some small, some large, some you step over, some you had  to climb over.
However, the field had a nice stand of corn.

So now how do you relate such an environment to the articles that we have already looked at.
For example: Soil preparation, we would not get to first base, trying to get the people in El Salvador
to use plows, disks and planters, it just doesn't work in all those rocks, but just suppose all of a sudden
a family moves down from the rocks, and has a fair sized plot of tillable land, but the only way he knows how to do farming
is how he did it on the rocks. He will need encouragement and teaching on how to do farming now more efficiently,
since his circumstances have changed.

This principle is very important to teach to the locals, how to adapt new technology to current farming possibilities.
What I see happening is, on the mission field the locals rapidly adapt to bad technology, such as cell phones, opps ect.
However the missionary does not take any steps to provide new available technology, and trains the locals to become
more efficient in supplying the needs that they may have, well they have always done it that way and we suppose they
should just keep on that way.

The missionary has great opportunities to interact with the community, especially giving teaching on new techniques that
are beneficial, and use that as an opportunity, to bring God into the picture.

Bad technology is sweet, good technology needs to be taught.

Submitted Mar.10, 2012
R Miller
Indiana