Week of December 5, 2010

December 5 : Faithful Workers Return. For 12 years, representatives from two Baptist churches in Asia have depended on your prayers as they have traveled to Bihar to minister to and encourage Indian church planters serving among the Ansari Muslims of Bihar. Give thanks to God for their faithfulness. This month, representatives will travel there once again. Please pray that God will work mightily during their visit. Ask Him to bless them with wisdom, discernment and love. Pray that He will give them His message to share with the Indian church planters and with Ansari Muslims as well. Ask that the kingdom of God will grow in depth and number among Ansari Muslims because of these committed servants who keep returning to plow furrows in soil that often seems like nothing more than hard, unbreakable ground. The Ansari Muslims of Bihar are a segment of the 12.5 million Muslims who live in Bihar and Jharkhand states. BihariBride@pobox.com

December 6 : Wisdom Needed. “Around mid-December, I will be teaching a group of followers of Jesus who were born into Muslim families. This month’s topics are ‘The Nature of God’ and ‘The Family.’ These are both very big topics, and since I will only teach a total of approximately 10 hours, I will need to choose carefully what to include and what not to include. Please pray for wisdom as I prepare and present this teaching. A pastor from the United States has written a book on spiritual warfare. As I write this request, the book is being translated (I hope). In January, that same pastor will come and visit Lucknow to teach on the same topic. Please lift him up, because he will be teaching often. Please pray that the book will get translated and printed prior to his arrival, and also intercede for those who will attend the teachings.” http://www.IsaMasih-Lucknow.org

December 7 : Learning To Tell the Story. Please pray for some trainings happening in a large South Asian city in mid-December. Expatriate and national believers will be learning how to story chronologically through the Bible. Pray that key people will attend, and also pray that all the leaders expected to help will be able to make it. Ask that the stories learned and told will draw many to the Most High.

December 8 : Factory Workers Need Jesus, Too. The garment industry of Bangladesh now employs more than 3 million factory workers, 90 percent of whom are women. Chittagong is a major hub of the garment industry. These women work at least six to six-and-a-half days a week for approximately 10 to 12 hours a day. Some of the difficulties in reaching these women are in finding the time and place for sharing with them. Please pray that God will open doors in this area for outreach to women.

December 9 : For His Glory Alone. “Charges against S are still pending even though he thought they would be dropped in July. He appeared in court again in October and, because the police had not yet provided the ‘charge sheet,’ a new court date was set for February 2011. S continues to labor for the Lord and to give God the glory for all things. He asks us to pray that the case will be closed soon, but adds that, most of all, He wants whatever the Lord wants for His glory.”

December 10 : Healing of the Heart. R is a 12-year-old girl from a very poor Bihari Muslim family. These days she seems to be without hope, after learning that she has a hole in her heart; she knows that her family will never be able to obtain enough money for the surgery she needs. Yet R does have hope. Two Bengali Christians tutor R in her studies, and they also have told her about Jesus. Together they have prayed in Jesus’ name for R’s complete healing. Please intercede with them. Pray that R’s heart will be healed by Jesus’ power. Pray that her family will receive Jesus’ salvation and proclaim Him as their Lord before their unbelieving Bihari Muslim neighbors. Pray that the Lord will anoint the two Bengali Christians ministering to this family as they share with them and other Bihari Muslims the Good News of the hope that only Christ can bring. BihariBride@pobox.com

December 11 : Taga Continue to Hear. “Some women are continuing to go back to the Taga believers of northern India to encourage them and do further discipleship among them. Thank God with us that small steps are being taken! Please continue to pray for the Taga people of northern India. Pray that the handful of Taga believers we know about will continue in the Word, proving to be His disciples. Pray that they will be rooted and grounded in Christ, bearing fruit for Him. Pray for a greater movement toward Christ among the Tagas.”

Viewpoint: To reach Muslims, trade fear for love

Viewpoint: To reach Muslims, trade fear for love

Baptist Press, Sep 10, 2010: http://www.bpnews.net/BPnews.asp?ID=33670

By Don Graham

RICHMOND, Va. (BP)–It isn’t that Muslims aren’t responsive to the Gospel, International Mission Board strategist Sam McAlister* says. The issue, he says, is that most Muslims have never heard it or seen a committed Christian live it out.

Islam claims nearly one-fourth of the world’s population — 1.57 billion Muslims. But fear — felt by both Muslims and Christians — ranks among the most significant barriers separating the Muslim world from the Gospel today.

After Sept. 11, 2001, Western culture collectively branded Muslims as suicidal jihadists bent on the Islamization of the globe politically as much as religiously by the fear-producing act of terrorism. Though these stereotypes are softening as Americans’ understanding of Islam grows, strong anti-Muslim sentiment endures as war with terrorist groups continues in Afghanistan and Iraq.

What’s more, Americans’ phobia toward Islam doesn’t appear to stop at the church threshold. A survey of more than 1,000 Protestant pastors released by LifeWay Research in December 2009 showed that 77 percent of evangelical pastors either somewhat or strongly agreed that Islam is a “dangerous religion,” though the study did not explore the specific issues behind their concern.

So what does all this mean in light of Jesus’ command to make disciples of all nations?

McAlister, who leads the IMB’s strategy for spreading the Gospel among Central Asian peoples, believes Christians must transcend their own prejudices if they are committed to fulfilling the Great Commission. The real problem, he says, is a “lack of love” for Muslims that causes believers to respond with fear and hatred rather than loving them as God does.

“The stereotypes that you see in the Western media are no more true of the Muslim world than to say all Americans are New York City gangsters or Wild West cowboys,” McAlister says.

MUSLIMS ARE RESPONSIVE

McAlister adds that there are widespread and deeply held misunderstandings among Muslims about what Christians believe. Unlike Americans, he says, Muslims don’t separate their religious and ethno-cultural identities — to cease to be one is to cease to be the other. And, they don’t understand how Jesus can be part of a divine Trinity if God is One.

These differences and misunderstandings help explain why the decision to follow Jesus as Lord is so difficult for Muslims and why many mistakenly assume that what they see in Hollywood-perpetuated American popular culture represents Christian ideals.

“The demonstrable difference in the lives of believers is a key witnessing tool, particularly in areas of honesty, morality, kindness and family life. These are huge adornments to the Good News,” he says. “Without exception, where we have planted ourselves and gone deep in language and culture, established relationships and stuck it out, we have seen fruit for the Gospel.”

FEAR HALTS WITNESS

It is particularly frustrating that American believers’ heightened fear of Islam can halt them from sharing the message of truth with Muslims at a time of unprecedented Gospel advance in the Muslim world, McAlister says.

Jim Haney, director of global research for the IMB, says some of the world’s most responsive people groups to the Gospel are Muslim. In 2008 alone, Southern Baptist missionaries and their national partners baptized more than 12,700 believers and started 1,300 new churches among Muslim people groups. Missionaries also engaged 30 unreached Muslim groups for the first time, totaling more than 35 million people.

But Haney points out that Southern Baptists don’t have to go to Asia or the Middle East to share Jesus with Muslims — they can start in their own neighborhoods.

“If you had an opportunity to see a Muslim in your community come to Christ, would you want it to happen?” Haney asks. “Or is your hatred for Muslims so great you don’t see them as someone in need of the Gospel? To us [Americans], Muslims are kind of like the Samaritans were to the Jews — we want to [avoid] their territory. But Jesus sought the Samaritans out.

“If we’re going to effectively engage Muslim people groups, it’s not going to be because of strategy, it’s going to be because we love them. Maybe love is the strategy.”
–30–
*Name changed. Don Graham is a writer for the International Mission Board.

Amid drawdown, IMB still sending full-time missionaries

Baptist Press, Nov. 11, 2010: http://www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?id=34061

Posted on Nov 11, 2010 | by Tammi Reed Ledbetter

RICHMOND, Va. (BP)–Southern Baptists are seeking to deploy as many missionaries worldwide as resources will allow, amid reductions in personnel due to lower Cooperative Program receipts and the U.S. recession. The International Mission Board’s interim president, Clyde Meador, told the Southern Baptist TEXAN he expects the anticipated end-of-year missionary count of 5,000 to be maintained into next year.

With 57 new long-term missionaries slated for appointment this month, the number of IMB personnel serving around the world will total 5,189. Attrition through short-term personnel completing their two- and three-year terms, career personnel retirements and the routine resignation by about 5 percent of the force will cause that number to decline by the year’s end, combined with budget restraints that had already been put in place to lower the number of new personnel appointed.

Meador expressed great enthusiasm at the depth of commitment among new recruits. “There’s something about these young 20-somethings who exhibit a deeper commitment than I’ve ever seen,” he observed.

In years past, Southern Baptists have appointed between 850 and 900 personnel annually, then slowed the process down in light of economic projections to this year’s level of about 550 new long- and short-term missionaries.

But to blame all of that on the economy would be inaccurate, Meador told the TEXAN. In addition, he said, individual Southern Baptists need to evaluate whether they are giving as much as they should.

IMB chairman Jimmy Pritchard of Forney, Texas, echoed that theme in his report at the trustees’ September meeting in Tampa, Fla., stating, “The issue is not that we [Southern Baptists] can’t afford it, but that we just don’t want to foot the bill. What will solve our problem is a good dose of spiritual awakening in our churches.”

Meador, asked by the TEXAN whether the board is still appointing full-time career missionaries, offered a resounding affirmation. “We do continue to send new personnel — lots of them — each year, but not as many as we would like to send.”

Long-term personnel remain the priority, though the budget constraints required a cutback “from the usual 400 or so new long-term folks” to this year’s target of 300.

Two factors caused the projected number of new career personnel deployed in 2010 to dip even further to about 250 — the inability of many candidates to sell their houses and an over-adjustment in the appointment process for those who were in the pipeline.

“We overdid it” in restricting the career missionary appointments, said Meador, explaining the difficulty of projecting anticipated income while at the same time deciding how many prospective personnel should advance toward appointment, both of which must be decided over a year in advance.

Having to sell a house before a missionary appointment is approved delays many qualified candidates. “Three or four couples are delayed for that reason at every appointment service,” Meador said. “One of the couples appointed … in Tampa had waited two years for their house to sell.

“Still, we are clearly sending out long-term missionaries,” Meador said, countering the misperception that global evangelism efforts have been shut down by a lack of resources. When the IMB sees an increase in giving to the Cooperative Program combined with a rise in Lottie Moon Christmas Offering for International Missions, consideration can be given to increasing the headcount to pre-recession levels.

“If finances continue to fall, we might have to reduce that further — which we do not want to do!” Meador said.

While making career personnel a priority, significant cuts have been made among short-term personnel. Typically, short-term personnel include:

– Journeymen: 20-something college graduates who can commit to two years of international cross-cultural missionary service.

– International Service Corps: singles, couples and young families who can commit to two to three years.

– Masters: single or married, these “over-50″ missionaries meet a particular need and commit to two to three years of service.

Budget cutbacks in recent years led to suspension of the International Service Corps and Masters programs with the exception of missions degree programs offered through some Southern Baptist seminaries and appointment of short-termers to meet critical needs where long-term personnel are not available. The number of journeymen being deployed has been cut in half from 200 to 100 new missionaries each year.

Despite having to reduce the mission force from 5,656 to 5,000 over the course of 2009-10, Meador said newly deployed missionaries are “the cream of the crop.”

“In fact, 65 percent of the journeymen we’ve deployed recently said, ‘I’m in it for the long haul,’ intending to eventually return as career missionaries once their two years are over. The young people we’re sending out are sold out.”

No reduction has been made in the appointment of seminarians who finish their degrees on the mission field. “We’re sending all that the seminaries can give us,” Meador said.

Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, for example, has 80 students enrolled in that program, allowing interested students an opportunity to speed up the process of heading to the field.

Requirements for appointment through the IMB remain higher than most mission-sending organizations. Applicants are screened for doctrinal fidelity and given background checks related to financial integrity, standards of morality and emotional, physical and mental health. They must be between the ages of 21 and 50 years of age at the time of appointment, never divorced, active members of a Southern Baptist church and trained and involved in personal evangelism.

In addition to selling any house they might own, prospective missionaries must eliminate debt. Most career candidates in church planting, evangelism and theological education must complete a graduate-level seminary degree and enter a 36-month apprentice term before being approved for long-term service. Spouses must complete 15 hours of similar coursework in addition to at least 60 hours of bachelor’s-level studies. Assignments in business, medical, agriculture and education require 20 hours of graduate-level biblical, theological and missiological studies.

Meador expressed concern that the false impression that Southern Baptists can’t afford to send out more missionaries might prompt some young people to turn to independently funded avenues for service or encourage churches to put such para-church ministries in their budget to the neglect of the more traditional approach of supporting the Cooperative Program which, along with the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering (LMCO) contributions, keep the 5,000-plus IMB personnel on the field.

“They need to understand what they’re saying no to when they say yes to something else,” Meador said. Now is not the time for churches to reduce their Cooperative Program giving, he reminded.

The number of annually deployed short-term personnel soared a decade ago when 1,000 new missionaries were sent to the field for two consecutive years, but now-retired IMB President Jerry Rankin announced in late 2002 that the board would have to restrict the flow of appointments if receipts did not increase by another 10 percent, calling it “absolutely tragic.” That projection came at a time when CP and LMCO funding was steadily increasing for the IMB, and investment income was more predictable.

“Southern Baptists are giving. But the growth doesn’t begin to compare to the growth that we are experiencing in the missionary force,” Rankin told the Florida Baptist Witness, having grown at that time to 5,480 overseas personnel.

By early 2006, Rankin told state Baptist editors he decried the inability of financial support to keep pace with the vision of deploying 8,000 to 10,000 missionaries. “For three years now, we’ve kinda plateaued,” he said. “We haven’t kept the momentum of growth.”

However, in 2007 Southern Baptists exceeded the LCMO goal. This success led Meador, then-IMB executive vice president to say, “We are prepared financially to support a significant increase in the number of missionaries on the field.” Meador also echoed Jerry Rankin’s call earlier that year for a larger pool of missionary candidates.

As Southern Baptists began to respond to that call, they ran headlong into the financial recession and a weakening dollar overseas. Even though giving to the LCMO continued to increase for the next two years, the increases were overshadowed by significantly decreased buying power. The result was more candidates somewhere in the appointment pipeline, particularly short-term workers, than the IMB could send.

What began as an acknowledgement of negative economic factors soon became a call for church members to give more. President Jerry Rankin, during a 2009 board meeting, laid the problem at the feet of Southern Baptists who do not tithe and later that year was more pointed in asking if the problem could be “distorted priorities and hearts that are not aligned with our Lord’s passion to be glorified among the nations and peoples of the world.”

As churches head into a season of promoting the world missions offering, the IMB can assist in making stateside personnel available to speak to congregations. This year’s theme of “Are We There Yet?” shares the challenge of finishing the task of reaching the 4,743 people groups not yet engaged with the Gospel and the 6,426 unreached people groups (those with less than 2 percent of people who profess to have a personal relationship with Jesus Christ). Promotional materials were mailed to every church in September, with more information available at imb.org or by calling 1-800-999-3113.

After the IMB announced the need to suspend crucial missionary endeavors in 2009 due to a $30 million shortfall in the 2008 LMCO offering, a number of churches and Baptist entities collected a “Christmas in August” offering benefiting LMCO.

“Southern Baptists simply cannot allow the mistakes of Congress and the monetary establishment to curtail our missionary enterprise, regardless of the financial hardships thrust upon us,” Southwestern Seminary President Paige Patterson told students in calling for the offering at the Texas campus.

The 100 new missionaries typically appointed each November would have been cut to 30 had it not been for the generosity of those Southern Baptists nationwide, noted IMB Vice President David Steverson. The late boost to the offering allowed the board to appoint 51 new missionaries at the appointment service held in Louisiana last November.

Among the other adjustments that made it possible for IMB to cut its 2010 operating budget by about 7 percent were a hiring freeze at the board’s offices in Richmond, Va., slicing the IMB retirement contribution amount in half to 5 percent with a matching contribution of 3 percent, changes in co-pays for medical insurance, and eliminating salary increases for all personnel.

“If finances improve significantly,” Meador said, “we would hope to be able to see our missionary count go back up — because every number in that count is someone else seeking to spread the Gospel to every people group in the world, and see that every person in the world has an opportunity to hear, understand, and respond to the Gospel.”

–30–

Tammi Reed Ledbetter is news editor of the Southern Baptist TEXAN (www. texanonline.net), newsjournal of the Southern Baptists of Texas Convention. Used by permission.

Week of November 28, 2010

November 28 : Seeking Training Locations. “At one time, we had several places to teach our course on how to reach Muslims in North India and several other people who were interested. But then we had to spend two months out of country, and that has put a serious dent in our original plans. At this point, we have to start over in looking for people who are interested in being trained by us. Please pray that we will be able to teach the course we have worked so hard to develop.” http://www.IsaMasih-Lucknow.org

November 29 : Seeking God in the Diaspora. Earlier this year you were asked to pray for a young woman who had been meeting with two Baptist workers and learning about Jesus. In March, their contact with R was cut off because of persecution from her family. Things have changed; she recently moved and kept her new location a secret from her family. In this freer atmosphere, she is renewing relationships with Christian friends. Give thanks to God for this answer to your prayers! This is a good step, but she still does not understand why she must deny the Sikh “gurus” to come to Jesus. One fear is that she will lose her ethnic Indian identity. Please pray that when R is with other Jesus-followers, she will hear the words of Jesus and the Holy Spirit will open her understanding. Pray that “God will grant (her) repentance to know the truth . . . (she) may come to (her) senses and escape the Devil’s trap . . .” (2 Timothy 2:25b-26a, HCSB).

November 30 : Worshipping Idols in Canada. Many church people wonder, “How do people of other faiths worship?” A better question is, “Who do they worship?” In the Hindu temple, for example, you can see up to a dozen statues of deities, each one having a supposed power for granting specific desires (such as wisdom, wealth, fame, etc.), and yet these statues must be cared for daily – dressing, feeding, putting to rest at night, etc. Hindus worship these gods not only in Asia, but also in North America! What can we do so that they turn “from idols to serve the living and true God”? (1 Thessalonians 1:9b, HCSB). Call out to Yahweh, our heavenly Father, to do as He said in Zechariah 13:2b (HCSB): “. . . I will erase the names of the idols from the land, and they will no longer be remembered . . . .” Pray that the Holy Spirit will open doors to His workers for the Gospel message among Hindus in Canada and the United States. Pray that they will see the truth and come to Jesus. “. . . everyone who sees the Son and believes in Him may have eternal life, and I will raise him up on the last day” (John 6:40b, HCSB).

December 1 : Taking Refuge in Karachi. Please claim 1 Timothy 2:1-4 (NIV) for the people of the city, leaders and those in authority, as well as displaced people from the floods who are currently taking refuge in Karachi. “I urge, then, first of all, that requests, prayers, intercession and thanksgiving be made for everyone – for kings and all those in authority, that we may live peaceful and quiet lives in all godliness and holiness. This is good, and pleases God our Savior, who wants all men to be saved and to come to a knowledge of the truth.”

December 2 : Gifts Make a Difference.  “Dear Faith­ful Supporter: Lives have been changed –  for eter­nity – because of you! The dark­ness of South Asia can some­times seem impen­e­tra­ble. Thank the Lord for the great­est sup­port­ers in the world to help us con­tinue the task of tak­ing the Gospel to the ends of the earth. Because of your prayers and finan­cial sup­port, Jiva, for­merly in bondage to idol wor­ship, is now a born-​​again believer in Jesus Christ, along with many others. With sin­cer­est love and grat­i­tude, we thank you from the bot­tom of our hearts for your gen­er­ous dona­tion to the Lot­tie Moon Christ­mas Offering. Yours in Christ, Vincent, Reba and Salem.”  Please pray that during this Christmas season, many more South Asians like Jiva will be set free from idol worship as they learn about the Savior who left His home in heaven to be born in a manger, crucified for the sins of the world, rose victorious over death on the third day and ever lives to interecede on our behalf.

December 3 : Henna Used to Spread the Word. A cross-cultural worker in India writes, “The Henna Drawing Team has had their second training meeting. They are getting more confident in the fine art of using henna drawing on women’s hands as a means to teach Bible stories. Indian women love to decorate their hands with beautiful designs drawn with a temporary henna dye, which lasts for about ten days. Incorporating symbols of Bible stories into henna designs allows us to spread the seed of the Gospel in a natural way among unbelieving women in India. Because of opposition to the Christian message, Bible distribution among women in our area would lead to persecution (of the women “caught” with a Bible). It would also be ineffective, since most women can’t read. However, having the Bible taught in oral form is safe for the women, and the symbols in the henna designs both remind them of the story and provide an occasion for them showing it to and teaching it to other women. Pray that as national women learn these special henna drawings that God’s Word would continue to pass from woman to woman in a non-threatening way. Pray that seeds sown thru henna drawings would bring forth fruit among women and their families. 

December 4 : The “Big Day” in Bangladesh. “Sleigh bells ring as people dressed in festive attire walk into the night illuminated with twinkling lights. Families sit cozily by a fireplace sipping hot chocolate while enjoying the glow of the Christmas tree and the bounty of beautifully wrapped gifts under the tree. This is a Norman Rockwell view of Christmas that many of us picture as standard holiday fare. However, living in Dhaka, Bangladesh has taught me a lot about Christmas. The word for Christmas in Bengali means ‘Big Day.’ This is very true – it is a big day for all mankind, though most of Dhaka’s more than 15 million people know nothing of the importance of this ‘big day.’ Christmas, when all of our added tinsel and traditions are stripped away, is a story of love and sacrifice that is greater than anything we can ever imagine. It transcends time and space and makes it possible for each human being to have a relationship with the God of the universe. The message of Christmas is as real and alive today as it was over 2,000 years ago. It can be felt in the hearts of those who live in slums and in mansions. Pray that the millions of Dhaka city would hear the Good News of the Savior who left His position of majesty because of His love for them. Pray that those who have so little in this world would celebrate Christmas with more joy than the rest because of the realization of what Christ did for them.”

TRUSTEES: IMB leader relays question, ‘Is anybody else coming?’

Baptist Press, Nov. 11, 2010: http://www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?id=34060

Posted on Nov 11, 2010 | by Alan James
GREENSBORO, N.C. (BP)–”Is anybody else coming?” Clyde Meador, interim president of the International Mission Board, posed the question to trustees during their Nov. 10 meeting in Greensboro, N.C.

The IMB encounters this question more and more as it treks through an ailing economy and reduces its overseas missionary force through attrition from a high of 5,600 to a goal of 5,000.

“All around the world, millions of lost people are asking the question, ‘Is anyone else coming to tell us the message of hope?’” said Meador, who shared a story about a former missionary couple who encountered this question among the South Asian people group they were working with before they retired.

Trustees adopted a 2011 budget of $308.5 million, $9.1 million less than 2010′s budget. While many missionary positions remain unfilled, IMB trustees appointed 57 new missionaries. Calvary Baptist Church in Winston-Salem, N.C., hosted an appointment service Nov. 10, and some of the new appointees will participate in a Nov. 16 commissioning service at Oklahoma Baptist University in Shawnee.

“We are still sending new personnel, contrary to rumors that we sometimes hear,” said Meador, noting that the missionary force has been reduced solely by sending fewer replacement personnel when there are retirements, resignations or completed terms.

“We look forward to a day when financial support reaches the point when we can increase the number of new personnel being sent to the field each year,” Meador said.

SHARPER FOCUS

Trustees also heard reports of spiritual victories led by Southern Baptist missionaries and Baptist partners on the field.

In 2009, IMB missionaries reported 360,876 baptisms, 29,237 new churches and 96 newly engaged people groups. These new numbers, Meador noted, usher in a more focused approach to reporting the IMB’s missionary work.

The organization’s annual report is now separated into two reports, with the numbers cited by Meador reflecting work by IMB missionaries and those with whom they directly relate.

Trustees also received a report from 133 overseas Baptist conventions that listed 136,422 baptisms and 2,151 new churches. This report could show some overlap with the IMB report.

“We are focusing more than ever on the work done specifically by our personnel and those with whom they work most closely,” Meador said, “which will enable us to better understand how God is using us and how we can better serve.”

2011 BUDGET

For the third consecutive year, IMB trustees adopted a decreased budget from the previous year’s budget.

Though the IMB pulled $7.5 million from its reserves to balance the budget last year, the trustee finance committee was committed to not repeating that move.

“We continue to face very difficult economic times as a nation,” said Charles Fowler, a Tennessee trustee who chairs the finance committee.

“We’re grateful for Southern Baptist support of the Lord’s work that’s being accomplished around the world,” Fowler added. “It truly is an amazing story of the grace of God at work.”

According to IMB officials, the mission board is sending about 30 percent fewer long-term personnel than would be sent if there were no financial constraints. The IMB still anticipates sending 300 new long-term personnel and 200 to 250 new short-term personnel in 2011.

As Cooperative Program dollars continue to slip, trustees focused on ways they also could cut costs in the stateside budget, which accounts for a little less than 15 percent of the overall budget, Fowler said.

The IMB recently offered qualifying staff members in Richmond, Va., a voluntary retirement incentive to take effect by the end of 2010.

In other business, trustees heard a report of $2,063,474.46 released for hunger and general relief projects, including funds used by Baptist Global Response, a relief and development organization that partners with the IMB. The funds were used in many places such as earthquake recovery needs in Haiti and helping peoples in Central and South Asia.

During the meeting, trustees also were encouraged to continue praying for the presidential search committee.

A RENEWED HOPE

As missionaries continue their efforts overseas, Meador said Southern Baptist churches also are answering the question he posed during his report — “Is anybody else coming?”

Trustees heard several stories of churches, students and state convention leaders who are making sacrifices to help send and support missionaries.

One of these stories is Calvary Baptist Church in War, W.Va. The church averages about 45 people each Sunday in a poverty-stricken coal-mining community, Meador said. A third of those attendees are children.

“Only eight or nine members of the church have a paying job,” he added.

Five years ago the church gave $140 to the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering for International Missions. The next year they gave $1,300. Last year they gave more than $7,500.

“They expect to give even more this year,” Meador said. “They are answering the question.”

The next trustee meeting will be March 15-16 in Dallas, with an appointment service slated March 16 at First Baptist Church in Dallas.

–30–

Alan James is a writer for the International Mission Board. Used by permission.

FIRST PERSON (Jennie Huxley*): “The Lord brought me back to my true calling — to love Him with all my heart”

By Jennie Huxley*

INDIA–I realized recently that I don’t get to have many conversations like this one with my friends and family because if there is a phone call, it is filled with a game of “catch up” from the days missed. The call usually ends with me longing for deeper conversation that would perhaps take three or four hours, and there is just little time for that these days.

I had a discussion last week with one of our journeymen who is headed back to the states after spending two years here in India. The journeymen are very interested in conversations about marriage, their futures, etc. On this day, the journeymen asked me how I knew I was called overseas for the rest of my life. Whew, big question! It started a two-hour conversation about the idea of a calling.

When doing college ministry, I found myself in the exact same conversation but my views and ideas have changed a bit. I knew from the time I went to Thailand and met so many who have never heard of Jesus that I carried a burden that would only be quenched if I served on the frontlines overseas. I cried over Lottie Moon videos and held a huge conviction that I should serve instead of the conviction that most received – that they should give. I took this to mean that I was “called” and would live the rest of my life overseas in a small hut with the people.

When I finished college, I felt it was part of my call to go straight overseas. God had other plans, however, and through a series of circumstances kept me in the states for a few more years working with college students, preschoolers and special needs kids. Was this part of my calling? I struggled at times with my own pride and how nothing else I could do would be better than serving overseas. After all, I had been called a long time ago.

Perhaps somewhere along this road, my ideas of a calling were misshaped to believe something entirely different from what God intended. While in seminary, the Lord brought me back to my true calling – to love Him with all my heart, mind and soul and to love others as myself. What a hard calling! I had to reconstruct my ideas and form them back to the ways of Scripture. Now we are living overseas, and although I am completely satisfied, fulfilled and complete, I have a better understanding of this idea of calling.

So back to the conversation, I had to tell my sweet friend that knowing God wanted us overseas is what keeps us here through hard times. I knew her question ultimately meant she was wondering if she was called and what that meant for her – does she really have to consider coming overseas single? The answer is to walk with the Lord, and He will give you the desires of your heart. He gave us a passion for the lost before we came, and He has given us a deep passion for India. As we faithfully walk with Christ, He molds us, changes us, makes us whole in Him. Whether one is a teacher, a doctor, a missionary, if we fail to abide in Christ, we will find ourselves on a road we never meant to take and in a direction that we didn’t want to go. For Christ is truly the Answer! It is a hard concept to grasp. One can shallowly see it and say, of course, but to live it out in life is a much harder task.

–30–

*Name changed.

Jennie Huxley and her husband, Karson,* are from Mississippi and serve among South Asian peoples with the International Mission Board.

Week of November 21, 2010

November 21 : Father Meets All Needs. Thank you for praying for 6-year-old M, the second daughter of P, a Bihari Muslim-background believer who serves the Lord, and his wife, V. M had a two-hour operation to remove a large kidney stone, and she has recovered wonderfully. Praise God for His healing. “After reaching home, she never sat on bed despite of our control, always playing and playing,” her father wrote. You also prayed that the Lord would provide financially for this surgery, and He answered that prayer as well. “At the time of discharge, insurance company paid all the expenditure of hospital that was 40,000.00 rupees (about $895),” P wrote. Please continue to pray for P and V as they await the birth of their third child, who is due on January 2. BihariBride@pobox.com

November 22 :  Board Meetings Goes Well. Thank you for praying for the hospital’s governing board meeting. Give thanks to God that it was a very positive time of hearing reports concerning the physical and spiritual ministry of the hospital. The board approved an increase in the chaplain staff in view of new facilities and services. This agrees with the spiritual priorities of the hospital. Continue to pray for this board and for the hospital management team.

November 23 :  Radio Ministry Closing. Please pray for P, a former Bihari Muslim who produces Urdu broadcasts for a Christian radio ministry in India. Recently P and his colleagues were informed that the radio ministry would be closing their office because of economic shortfalls, probably by the end of the year. The staff members have the opportunity to transfer to another office, but for P that would mean moving far away from his personal ministry among Bihari Muslims. P has decided to look for other employment to support his family in their current city. He asks you to pray that the Lord will clearly guide him. Please also pray for the others at the radio ministry who are trying to decide what the Lord would have them to do. Finally, pray that Bihari Muslims and other Urdu speakers will continue to have access to Christian radio programming in the Urdu language. BihariBride@pobox.com

November 24 : Volunteer Team Makes a Difference. A volunteer team from Oklahoma came to South Asia and spent two days working in Taga-dominated villages. They were able to meet and share with a large number of families, many of whom were Taga. After they left, a group of four summer volunteer college women stayed for another five weeks and continued to go back to the villages to meet with the families who had shown an interest and teach them stories from the Bible. From their combined efforts, there are still four Taga groups that are meeting, with new Taga believers in two of them. Please pray that these newly formed groups will become full-fledged house churches in the coming months. Local church planters and others are working together to continue meeting with these new groups. Please keep praying for these new believers and small house groups to remain faithful to Christ and to grow in His grace and truth.

November 25 : Asking Big Things from God. Give thanks this month that God is active in Sri Lanka! He desires for the people of this island to know Him and His love for them. While many are hearing this truth, understanding it and receiving it, growth in their new Christian faith is often slow. Whether it is because of a new believer’s unbelieving family, or because of circumstances beyond one’s control such as storms that keep leaders away from their disciples, pray that God’s Spirit will help the growth process of young Christians. Pray for leaders to remain faithful, no matter the cost, to the task of making disciples and for the disciples to remain faithful to staying in the Word and prayer. Will you join international Christians in asking some really big things of God – that He will provide a national “Paul” for each of the nine provinces of Sri Lanka and that there will be fourth-generation house churches in each of the 25 districts that will have a vision to plant healthy, reproducing churches among the local unreached people groups with a population of 100,000 or more? Pray also that at least 1 percent of the believing population will be trained in the next 12 months in evangelism and discipleship and that 850 of those believers will accept the “5/7 challenge” to share with five people every seven days. That will ensure that 1 percent of the lost of Sri Lanka will hear the Gospel in 12 months. Is it possible? With God, anything is possible!

November 26 : Needs Being Met – Trust  Being Formed. Give thanks to the Lord for resources given by Southern Baptists to aid in flood relief in Pakistan! Work is being done in two specific areas, where more than 1,000 tents and hundreds of relief packs have been distributed in the name of Jesus. Many people have expressed their gratitude for the aid received, and the relief effort has helped to build trust between Christians and Muslims.

November 27 : Praying for Good Soil. As shared previously, there have been pockets of responsiveness where some have professed faith in Christ. Some have taken the plunge, literally, to be baptized. Others have faced tremendous hardships in the form of family and community pressure and rejection. Some of those who had professed Christ have silently walked away, back to their Islamic loyalties. Please pray for those coming to faith in the Deccan of India, asking that they will be solidly founded in the Word and become the “good soil” that Jesus mentions in the Book of Mark, chapter 4. Ask God to give the recent disciples a deepening thirst for Him and His Word, and pray that He will provide laborers to take up the tools necessary to meet the illiteracy challenge in discipleship that many recent believers face. 

India Briefs: Recent Incidents of Persecution

Compass Direct News, Oct. 29, 2010: www.compassdirect.org

By Mahruaii Sailo and Binaifer Wadia

EDITOR’S NOTE: Nov. 14 Southern Baptist churches will observe the International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted Church. For more information on how you can pray for persecuted Christians around the world, go to www.persecutedchurch.org or download a prayer guide for the persecuted church.

Karnataka, October 29 (Compass Direct News) – Police arrested Pastor Muthyalan Paul on Oct. 26 in Nelamangala, Bangalore, after Muslim radicals barged into a prayer meeting, accused him of forceful conversion, tore Bibles and damaged household items. The Global Council of Indian Christians reported that police, alerted by the Muslim extremists, charged the pastor with “deliberate and malicious acts intended to outrage the religious feelings of others.” A judge sent the pastor to Nelamangala Sub-Jail, but with area Christian leaders’ intervention he was released on bail the next morning. – MS

Karnataka – Hindu nationalists on Oct. 20 burned down a house church in Bellakatte village, near Chitradurga. The Global Council of Indian Christians reported that Pastor Mallappa Hanumanthappa Andrew of Samadhana Prayer House and his brother were walking on a village road when six area extremists waylaid them and began slapping the pastor, falsely accusing him of forcible conversion. They also slapped and shoved his brother when he tried to come to Andrew’s aid. Cursing, the extremists then burned down the house used for worship. Baramasagara police arrested four extremists identified only as Manjunath, Parashuram, Ramanna and Devaraj, charged them with unlawful assembly and released them after two hours. – BW

Madhya Pradesh – Threatening to file a police complaint, Hindu nationalists in Chattarpur on Oct. 19 accused Pastor Kunal Parichha of forcibly converting people and sending them to Bible college, a source said. The pastor and the nationalists met for talks the next day, only to have the extremists threaten to kill him if he continued to lead worship meetings. At press time area Christian leaders were taking steps to resolve the conflict. – MS

Karnataka – Police detained a pastor identified only as Surendra for more than three hours on Oct. 15 after Hindu nationalists disrupted the worship of Calvary Assemblies of God Church and beat him in Boothanhalli Kaval, near S. Bidra village, Chickmagalur district. The Global Council of Indian Christians (GCIC) reported that at 7:30 p.m., as the pastor was leading worship in another Christian’s house where 15 others had assembled, nearly 25 cursing extremists stormed in, chased them out and repeatedly slapped and punched Pastor Surendra. A GCIC coordinator told Compass that the extremists dragged the pastor outside, ripped his shirt off, took away his mobile phone, and telephoned police that “conversion activities” were taking place. Conversion and “conversion activities” are legal in India. Police arrived at 9 p.m., arrested the pastor and interrogated him. With GCIC intervention, Surendra was released at 12:30 a.m. without being charged. – BW

Orissa – Hard-line Hindus in Paikamara, Puri, Orissa district on Oct. 14 confined three recent converts to Christianity in a house, assaulted them and pressured them to deny their new faith. The Global Council of Indian Christians (GCIC) reported that Aswini Sahu, Sanatana Jena and Amulya Swain became Christians six months ago after listening to Christian radio broadcasts. When the Hindu extremists learned of it, they threatened them and expelled them from the village after the Christians continued to worship Christ. The Christians took shelter in different homes, and then went back to their village after receiving word by telephone that tensions had cooled. As soon as they returned, however, the extremists caught hold of them, beat them and confined them. With GCIC and area Christian leaders’ intervention, police rescued the Christians and warned the extremists not to disturb them again. – MS

Haryana – Hindu extremists on Sept. 30 attacked a church’s Christian school in Ghaziabad. A source said that the extremists showed up in a truck armed with guns and other implements of destruction at the Ingram Institute and broke a wall. Trying to occupy the church property, they started building a wall around a student hostel and other properties near the school and verbally abused director Hepesh Shepherd, staff members and students. Christians immediately filed a complaint, and police detained two extremists. They were later released without charges. – MS

Chhattisgarh – Hindu extremists assaulted Pastor Suresh Deep of The Church of God on Sept. 28 in Rajnandgan. A source reported that the incident began the previous day when two church members, Shilembra Sahu and Raj Kumar, started quarrelling about whether Kumar was meeting standards for Christian living, and as villagers came to become involved in the conflict, Hindu extremists took Kumar’s side. The extremists filed a complaint against Sahu, and police arrested him for joining an assembly likely to cause a disturbance. The next day, Pastor Deep went to submit a bail petition for Sahu, and some 20 extremists who had gathered at the court verbally abused him, beat him and dragged him to a Hindu temple. There they forced him to drink dirty water and to write that he would refrain from any conversion activity. The pastor sustained bruises all over his body. Area Christian leaders intervened, and police registered a case against the attackers, but no arrests had been made at press time. Sahu was sent to Rajnandgan district jail but was released on bail on Sept 30. – MS

Kerala – Muslim extremists beat a Christian convert from Islam after they saw him worshipping Jesus on Sept. 22 in Vikas colony, Ambalavayal. The Global Council of Indian Christians (GCIC) reported that a pastor identified only as Chacko had established a friendship with a Muslim man who was an alcoholic. After attending the church, the Muslim stopped drinking alcohol, led a changed life and decided to follow Jesus Christ. Enraged by the change in him, the extremists seriously injured the convert. They also damaged Pastor Chacko’s pipeline, the source for water for about 10 Christian families, and pelted the pastor’s home with stones, damaging the house. GCIC reported that the extremists continued to threaten the pastor by telephone daily. – MS

Madhya Pradesh – Hindu extremists from the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) on Sept. 16 attacked a building belonging to the Believers Church in Jabalpur, bringing it to the ground. Believers Church representative Sushant Sona reported that the RSS members arrived in a huge vehicle designed to demolish buildings and destroyed the facility, claiming that they would not allow any church to exist in the area. The Rev. Samkutty Issac and other Christian leaders pleaded with the government officials to take action against the culprits. – MS

Karnataka – Hindu extremists attacked a church building under construction at Byappanahalli village on Sept. 12 near Bengaluru, accusing area Christians of large-scale, forcible conversion. The extremists broke into the church building and tried to pull it down, reported the All India Christian Council. Police arrived in time to stop them, but the extremists filed a complaint against Pastor John Babu and other Christians for alleged forcible conversion. Under the extremists’ pressure, the police later issued a notice to the church to stop construction and issued arrest warrants against the pastor and seven others. To avoid further harassment, the Christians applied for anticipatory bails. They also filed petitions seeking court intervention to stop the extremists from further assaults. At press time the church building remained abandoned and unguarded. – MS

Karnataka – A mob of about 100 Hindu extremists on Sept. 5 barged into the house church worship of a congregation of the Indian Pentecostal Church and beat a pastor in Doni, Gadag. The Global Council of Indian Christians (GCIC) reported that the extremists ripped Bibles, tore the clothes of Pastor Mallikarjuna Sangalad, dragged him out of the house and beat him. Police arrived and arrested Pastor Sangalad, where they ordered him to stop leading worship meetings, according to the GCIC. Christian leaders intervened, and police released the pastor without charges. – MS

Karnataka – Ramnagar police Sub-Inspector Babu Madhar on Sept. 3 forcefully entered a Calvary Fellowship Prayer house church meeting led by Pastor P.R. Jose and ordered him to immediately stop the service. The Global Council of Indian Christians (GCIC) reported that police accused the Christians of forceful conversion and ordered them to close down the house church. After area Christian leaders’ intervention, according to the GCIC, the Christians were given police protection for worship. – MS

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Compass Direct News (www.compassdirect.org), based in Santa Ana, Calif., provides reports on Christians worldwide who are persecuted for their faith. Used by permission.

Pray for South Asia

This prayerwalk will guide you through praying for each country in South Asia, plus the five megacities in South Asia and South Asians all over the globe.

ASAP Virtual Prayer Walk
Runtime
3:18
View count
666

FIRST PERSON: Smells and sounds of South Asia move people to pray

By Ginger Wallace

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Authentic. That would be my word to describe the prayer rooms at the South Asia Summit.

Each morning, after a time of worship that focused our thoughts on the day to come, we spent an hour in prayer. We prayed for Hindu and Muslim people, for South Asians living around the world and for the people who are unreached.

Participants prayed for South Asians by walking through experiential prayer rooms.

We removed our shoes, covered our heads and entered the prayer rooms. I was immediately met with vivid memories of my recent trip to India. The smells and sounds took me right back. My heart was right back there with the people.

My time in the prayer rooms was meaningful because I have had the wonderful privilege and blessing of being there and experiencing the culture first-hand.

Those without personal experience received an authentic taste of the culture and were exposed to the desperate need to share the Gospel with these unreached people groups.

Of all the prayer rooms, I think the most moving for me was the Living in Darkness room. The Living in Darkness room focused on praying for unreached people groups.

We entered an area in the dark. We picked up a flashlight to help us as we traveled through the darkness.

To focus my prayer time, I walked to a table scattered with cards for specific people groups. Since we were in the dark, I needed the light from my flashlight to point me to a people group.

As I moved through the darkness, I remembered South Asia. I was also inspired and encouraged by how much light one, small flashlight provided in the complete darkness.

I praise God for His power to shine with great power to reveal true Light in the darkness.

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Ginger Wallace is a musical assistant and member of Wallace Memorial Baptist Church, Knoxville, Tennessee.