Archive for the 'rural' Category

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

The Church Getting It Right

Fernwood Community Bible ChurchWe were newly married (two months) and I had just passed my one-year anniversary of being a believer in Christ.  When I walked through the doors of the Fernwood Community Bible Church thirty-seven years ago, I didn’t know the difference between the Old Testament and the New Testament.  I had long hair, a beard, and many leftovers from my hippie days.

 But Carole and I knew that we wanted to follow Jesus.  We found a dedicated Village Missionary couple named Ray and Martha Bell and a church family that was willing to accept us, love us and minister to this strange couple who had traveled across the country not sure of where they were going and what they would find when they got there.

 We recently traveled back to Fernwood, Idaho to help the congregation celebrate 60 years of being served by Village Missions.  Throughout the weekend I marveled at how God led us to such a place, without our knowing, where we would be so nurtured in our Christian walk.  I thanked Him that a church with little “glitz and glamour” had gotten it right in being the body of Christ to a couple who needed their ministry.

Click here to see pictures and reflections of our personal journey.

 Click here to see pictures of Fernwood’s 60th Anniversary.


Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

The Anniversary That Almost Wasn’t

The Anniversary PictureCarole and I had the privilege of attending Liberty Chapel’s 175th anniversary on June 13, 2010.  However, it was an anniversary that almost wasn’t, for in 1982 the church, like so many rural churches, came perilously close to closing.

 In 1982, the congregation learned of Village Missions and its ministry of keeping country churches alive.  Village Missions would assign a Village Missionary and provide salary support so that he and his family could live and minister in the area full time.  The church, located four miles northwest of Crawfordsville, Indiana requested leadership from Village Missions.  In May 1982, Village Missions assigned Pastor Allen and Ramona Sparks.  Ramona died suddenly and unexpectedly a few months later (I remember hearing the news on a Sunday morning on our field in Iowa).  After some time Pastor Allen married Diane and they have ministered at Liberty Chapel ever since.

 The Lord blessed and the church grew in numbers and spiritual health.  Village Missions supplemented Pastor Allen’s salary until 1991.  Groups, especially youth groups, have ministered in several locations throughout the country, especially at fields served by Village Missions.  Jeremy and Mindi Sarver came from Liberty Chapel and are now serving with Village Missions in Volga, Iowa.

Dick Chastain relates how Liberty Chapel heard about Village Missions here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z1azFvwCfAs

You can hear Jon, Sarah, and Kate Sparks sing “God Is My Shepherd” at the celebration here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-UawM3QrojE

You can see pictures I took of the anniversary here: http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=180189&id=604744023&l=f3af29b80e

You can read an article about the celebration in the Journal & Courier newspaper here: http://www.jconline.com/article/20100605/LIFE07/6050308/-Cornfield-church-celebrating-175-years


Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

Beneath the Oil Spill

Burning Oil RigIn the aftermath of the Gulf Oil spill, we have learned of corruption on almost every level.  It seems that BP cut corners to make a profit.  For example, its disaster plan was barely repackaged from a disaster plan for Alaska that spoke of saving walruses and seals.  Amazingly, the Gulf plan included rescuing walruses!  Evidence exists that basic safety practices were violated although they knew extremely high pressure existed within the well.  Pressure to make a profit and speed up production overcame the pressure that was ready to explode.

Government oversight was no better and perhaps much worse.  Former employees or even individuals who would be future employees of the oil companies oversaw the safety and procedures involved in drilling.  Apparently, they had little time to do so, as “work” involved computer pornography, sexual liaisons, and enjoying the many favors granted them by the oil companies.  Inspections on the oil rigs were mere cursory glances in which the oil company filled out the paperwork in pencil and afterwards the inspector went over the form in pen.  The corruption transcended both Republican and Democratic administrations.  Whistle blowers were routinely fired.  Where else is the government on the job in such a way?

The oil spill is one more witness to the moral collapse of our country.  For those who favor increased government regulation and involvement, the government appears incapable of extricating itself from corruption and extreme inefficiency bordering on paralysis.  For those who favor less government intrusion, companies appear more than willing to cheat, steal, and do whatever it takes to make a profit even if wholesale disaster follows in the wake.

When the moral fabric of a society tears apart, no segment of that society is immune.  Unfortunately, not even the church is immune.  We would have had a fantastic opportunity to proclaim the Gospel in today’s society if the church had been a beacon of integrity.  Instead, pastors such as Ted Haggard and materialistic Christian organizations designed to make their leaders rich are part of the downward slide to moral anarchy.

Although by far most Village Missionaries conduct themselves with integrity, and we have high standards within the administration, even some Village Missionaries fall far short.  Recently I had to dismiss a missionary for behavior that reflected the deepest depths of depravity.  Our three enemies, Satan, the world, and our flesh, gain great power and influence when all morality is in ruin.  None of us is immune or incapable of embracing depravity.

The answer must lie first in resolving to make integrity our priority, nurtured by an intimate walk with Jesus Christ.  At every candidate school, my final challenge to the candidates is a sermon from I Thessalonians 2:1-13.  Reread this passage to see how committed Paul was to integrity in the ministry.  Most of us, because of the nature of the Village Missions’ ministry, will have many opportunities to live out that integrity before people within our community.  We of all people must model integrity.

Second, we must renew our focus on winning people to Christ and discipling them to be committed followers.  Although some believers bear false witness to the Gospel by their corrupt lives, the Gospel is still true.  Jesus Christ does change lives and He does enable us to live lives of integrity.  He is the only answer in our collapsing world.

Finally, we must pray.  The oil spill is only one witness to the devastation a moral collapse causes.  We may indeed be approaching the end times and inevitable moral collapse before Jesus comes, but even so souls need to be won to Christ and Christians need to stand with integrity.  We have seen in Village Missions entire communities transformed by the power of the Gospel.  Pray that Christians in government, business, and in all walks of society might have lives that are testimonies of uprightness.  Pray that they will have the courage to speak and stand against the corruption.  And pray for Village Missions, that all of us might be powerful testimonies to the sufficiency of Jesus Christ to transform our lives and enable us to live lives of integrity.


Friday, March 26th, 2010

The Wounded Missionary

Wounded SoldierIn the previous blog, I asked, “Are You a Missionary?” If we are missionaries, we will be prepared for a fight and we will expect tough conditions as we take back territory from Satan.

Yet a battle often results in wounds and scars. I was reminded of that as I read a letter from a fellow Village Missionary couple who had been in the battle for a long time. They faithfully serve and give their lives for the cause of Jesus Christ in rural North America. I would consider them one of our best missionary couples. The letter was very positive, mentioning often the great joy of serving the Lord and doing what God has called them to do.

Yet, after years in the battle, the scars are present. The wife wrote me of sleeplessness, anxiety, and even depression on the part of her husband. The battle for men’s souls has taken its toll.

Now, I hesitate to mention the above for fear that some prospective Village Missionary might read this. It is hard enough to recruit men and women to do what we do and to go where we go without frightening them with the possibility of wounding. Yet only couples with an eternal perspective, only couples who are ready to take up their cross, only couples who are consumed with the love of Christ last anyway, so they might as well be forewarned. Ministry in today’s world, whether at home or abroad, will not be easy.

Yet, has anything really changed? In perhaps the most poignant verse of Scripture, Paul writes the Corinthians, “And I will very gladly spend and be spent for your souls; though the more abundantly I love you, the less I am loved” (2 Cor 12:15).  Something in Paul’s thinking motivated his willingness to give himself completely to the Corinthians even as they increasingly rejected him.

I think anyone experiencing or having experienced wounding or discouragement in the ministry should study 2 Corinthians. After I read this missionaries letter, I reread Paul’s most personal of letters. I don’t have space (or time) to make a lengthy exposition of 2 Corinthians, but I do want to identify four themes found in this letter that might help a wounded missionary.

First, leaders will experience stress and frustration in the ministry. If the Apostle Paul experienced stress and frustration, then none of us is exempt! Paul was quite open about identifying his feelings. Paul reminds them that he wrote them out of “much affliction and anguish of heart” (2 Cor 2:4). They were reserved in their love for Paul (2 Cor 6:12). Paul writes of being “troubled on every side. Outside were conflicts, inside were fears” (2 Cor 7:5). Paul enumerates the perils he has experienced in ministry in 2 Corinthians 11:25-29. These perils include what comes upon him daily: “my deep concern for all the churches.” He asks in 2 Corinthians 11:29, “Who is weak, and I am not weak? Who is made to stumble, and I do not burn with indignation?” Rather than embracing Paul they will “put up with it if one brings you into bondage, if one devours you, if one takes from you, if one exalts himself, if one strikes you on the face” (2 Cor 11:20). Paul had battle scars, both physical and emotional, from his years in ministry and especially, it seems, from the church at Corinth.

In spite of the wounding at their hands, a second theme surfaces. Paul is unreserved in the love he has for people who are not deserving of his love. I already cited 2 Corinthians 12:15  above. His ministry was totally other centered—everything was for them (2 Cor 1:6). He repeats the same idea in 2 Corinthians 4:15, “For all things are for your sakes . . .” and in 2 Corinthians 5:13. Despite his disappointment at their spiritual failure, their embracing of false teachers, and their personal attacks against him, Paul still loved them. We tell our missionaries, “Preach the Word and love the people.” We must love even if that love is rejected.

A third theme is made necessary by those personal attacks. Paul must remind them of the integrity of his ministry. He writes in 2 Corinthians 1:12,  “For our boasting is this: the testimony of our conscience that we conducted ourselves in the world in simplicity and godly sincerity, not with fleshly wisdom but by the grace of God, and more abundantly toward you.” In 2 Corinthians 6:3-10 he tells them that he gives “no offense in anything” and “in all things we commend ourselves as ministers of God.” Read the list of circumstances, attitudes, and ministry approaches that exemplify the ministry approach of a man of God.

Unfortunately, I’ve met just as many wounded parishioners as I have pastors. When pastors do not minister with integrity, the sheep will be hurt. Rural churches in general suffer from pastors who serve a rural church simply to gain experience. Sometimes a pastor in one way or another violates integrity resulting in many becoming disillusioned about following Christ. A pastor, in a time of testing, will show little faith and his people will wonder if what he has preached to them is true. Paul experienced opposition and the church made many poor choices but it was never due to personal failure on Paul’s part.

The fourth theme is the most important of all and in various ways permeates the letter. Paul handles the ministry, keeps on keeping on, loves in spite of being hurt only because of the sufficiency of God in and through him. But we’ll wait until the next blog to discuss this great theme.


Thursday, January 28th, 2010

Looking Back Along the Trail

A Look BackI’ve been thinking about the last ten years, both for myself and for Village Missions. I started as Executive Director in November 2000, so I’m about in sync with the decade. What a decade it has been! I’d like to highlight the ten most significant developments involving or affecting Village Missions.

1. The decade has involved a series of man-made and natural disasters. Early in the decade, we experienced 911 and now at the end of the decade the earthquake in Haiti has occurred. We experienced two major economic downturns, several earthquakes, a tsunami, several hurricanes and typhoons, several new diseases, and an ongoing conflict against Jihadist Muslims. The decade seems to be remarkably in tune with Mark 13:8.

Yet in spite of these terrible events, it appears, at least to me, that the human race has been remarkably unaffected. One would think that these constant, powerful reminders of our frailty and the finiteness of our resources would remind us of our need of the Infinite God. I have not observed any significant turning to Christ, at least in the United States and Canada. Perhaps Christians have deepened in their walk with Christ, but the signs are subtle at best. It would be interesting to hear from Village Missionaries and others as to what they have observed in their local communities.

2. The decade saw a dramatic change in our relationship with Stonecroft Ministries. In the United States, in the budget year ending in June 2000 we received $1,684,621 from Stonecroft, approximately half of which was the Christmas gift. Giving declined to $410,000 in the budget year ending June 2009 and then was eliminated in the current fiscal year. Although we still pray for one another, clubs are no longer hearing about Village Missions and we no longer have a Stonecroft representative on our board. These changes have been painful and involved great heartache for both organizations. I am thankful for the continued giving to Village Missions Canada on the part of Stonecroft Ministries Canada.

3. The two previous developments have caused me to reflect in wonder and praise to God over His provision in the past decade. In addition to the financial pressure from the above two developments, we have experienced escalating pension and workers compensation costs. I just received word of yet another dramatic increase in our pension cost. The new churches we have served in this last decade have generally required increased financial investment on our part. How is it possible, then, that we ended our last fiscal year with a surplus and are in the black six months into the current fiscal year? Perhaps there is more evidence for a deepening Christian commitment than we generally realize. Beyond that, we have observed firsthand a miracle of God.

4. A fourth significant development has been the challenge of providing adequate health coverage to our missionary family. I discussed our Health Plan in a previous blog. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, health care costs have risen 131% over the last decade. The monthly cost of employer-sponsored family health insurance coverage is $1115. The last ten years has required constant adaptation and innovation on the part of our Benefit Board to hold down costs and provide adequate coverage. After some painful increases in the early part of the decade, we have been able to balance the plan and hold the premium of $950 a month for the last three years.

5. In these last ten years, we have fine-tuned our purpose statement and communication. Our purpose statement is, “Village Missions exists to glorify Jesus Christ by developing spiritually vital churches in rural North America.” We distilled that even further with the tagline, “Keeping Country Churches Alive.” We developed a new logo that better expressed the reality of who we are and what we do. With the development of the new logo, we also created new brochures and banners, as well as a redesigned magazine called Country Matters. We also created three new videos plus some offshoots of those videos. Thus, no longer able to depend upon Stonecroft to get the word out about Village Missions, we ramped up our communication in several ways.

6. Over the last ten years, we have seen the apparent continued decline of Christianity in the United States and Canada. Our video, “They Are Not Forgotten” gives a face to the decline in rural communities. This decline has been measured by several statistics and it is seen in the prayer requests sent in by Village Missionaries. Many more requests deal with symptoms of a societal breakdown that once was reserved only for the inner city. In the last ten years, we have prayed for broken marriages, terribly dysfunctional home life, people battling with addictions, and even anguished requests (mine included) for our own children. Ministry to hurting people is challenging and uplifting as we see people find hope and forgiveness in Jesus.

7. We have seen the rise of technology related ministry. Recently, I kept people informed on my Facebook page and on my blog about the Village Missionaries who were in Haiti. We just finished a pilot program called Pastor’s Roundtable in which Village Missionaries connected with each other visually and audibly while a mentor discussed leadership issues. We’ve changed to web based monthly reporting in Canada and hope to do so soon in the United States as well. We’re finding that an increasing number of people are learning about us on the web and are making inquiries about serving with us or are donating through PayPal.

8. The change in the office in Canada is a significant development that is still in process as I write this. It has been delayed by the difficulty we have had in obtaining banking privileges. When fully implemented, Roy and Lennie Adrian will handle depositing and receipting while the Dallas office (ISC) handles all the background accounting. I am rejoicing that we have at least reached the point where someone contacting Village Missions Canada will communicate with someone who knows something about the Mission! Already, we have significantly improved communications and the accuracy of receipting. Along these lines, the Board of Village Missions Canada has clarified my responsibilities with the adoption of a service agreement with Village Missions US.

9. Over the last ten years, we have expanded our ministry cross–culturally. God has done a mighty work through our approach on our Hispanic field in Avenal. We trust that He will do the same thing in the Navajo Nation as we now serve two Navajo churches, one in Arizona and one in New Mexico. The independence of the local church, the ability of a missionary-pastor to devote full-time to ministry, accountability and support, and the approach of “Preaching the Word and loving the people” I believe will translate very well into the Navajo culture as it has in the Hispanic culture. Pray that the Lord will lead the right couples into our ministry.

10. The final development in the last ten years has been increasing challenges in recruiting and retention. Over the last ten years in the United States, we accepted 93 couples/singles into Village Missions, not counting Associates. We lost 143 couples/singles through retirement, resignation, or dismissal. As a result, our total number of fields has declined although just recently the number has risen in both countries. Increasingly, Bible colleges are eliminating their pastoral departments and encouraging their graduates to go to seminary. Although worthwhile, seminary graduates generally have enough debt to make it difficult for them to serve with us. In addition, most schools emphasize the mega church ministry in spite of the fact that the vast majority of churches are small. An extremely exciting development in the past ten years has been the development of schools at our fields, led by Contenders Bible School at our field in Machias, WA. Fields in Camano Island, WA and New Gloucester, ME have also started Bible schools. We are also grateful to Peace Haven ministries for their support of missionaries who need to regroup.

Perhaps some of you have had the experience of climbing a mountain. It can seem strenuous at certain points but you just keep plugging away on the trail. Then, at the top, you look back and are amazed at territory you have traveled. That’s what this look back has done for me. Remembering the challenging times along the trail, I am amazed at what God has done and how graciously He has provided for Village Missions in the past ten years. If the last decade and the start of this decade is any indication, God will allow many challenging trials to occur in our personal lives and the life of Village Missions. Yet Jesus will continue to build His church through this ministry until that unexpected time when He calls His church home. May that time come soon!


Monday, January 18th, 2010

Visit to Halsey, OR–A Field Waiting for Leadership

Grace Bible Community ChurchCarole and I traveled Sunday January 17 to Halsey, OR to preach at this new field. The congregation of Grace Bible Community Church is trying to secure a parsonage so that we can send them their first Village Missionary family. They are a wonderful congregation, and we were warmly welcomed.

You can see pictures and read about our visit at my Facebook page (even if you are not a member of Facebook).


Friday, November 13th, 2009

Nailed Straight

Nailed StraightWhat does it take on our part to advance the cause of Christ in rural North America?  How can we succeed in the challenging yet essential call of God to make sure that every country community in the United States and Canada has a vibrant church committed to reaching people with the good news of Jesus Christ?

At the close of Paul’s great letter to the Romans, he sends greetings to, by my count, twenty-six people by name as well as several other household members and at least one church.  Some are familiar to us such as Priscilla and Aquila, who Paul describes as “fellow workers in Christ Jesus, who risked their own necks for my life . . .”  We learn little tidbits about some, such as Mary, “who labored much for us.”  Others like Phlegon are simply sent a greeting.  We don’t know how Paul knows them.  Together they form a wonderful network of individual believers, families, and churches advancing God’s Kingdom in Rome.

I have been Executive Director of Village Missions for nine years now.  The greatest privilege of this position, besides simply serving God, is learning of the wonderful network of individual believers, families, and churches that advance God’s Kingdom through Village Missions.

I think of the dedicated Village Missionaries who pour their lives into a rural community in order to bring the Gospel of Jesus Christ.  As I write this, on my second monitor is Jeremiah Knoop’s web page.  Jeremiah, son of Village Missionaries Frank and Lynette Knoop, and his wife Elizabeth serve in a new field in Scotia, NE.  He writes about his first baby dedication with humor but also with obvious dedication to the glory of God.  You can read Jeremiah’s blog about his first baby dedication by clicking on this link.  What a joy to know that God has led such a couple to serve with Village Missions.

I think also of Gary Horton, who serves our Canadian field in Weston, Nova Scotia.  He told me the other day on the phone that he was “nailed straight,” a Maine expression that means extremely busy.  He was “nailed straight” because the Lord had given him the privilege of leading several to the Lord.  Here is his report of the opportunities he has had:

Three weeks ago a missionary serving in Romania visited our church just before he was to return to his field.  He stayed at a B&B owned by a couple that attends our church.  Shortly after his return to Romania, he found that his Aunt Beatrice had had a stroke and was in the hospital here.  He called the folks that he had stayed with and asked them if they would let me know so I could visit his Aunt.  Kathy and I went to the hospital and found she was unable to talk but could understand when she was spoken to.  I held her hand and asked if she could understand me.  If she squeezed my hand that meant yes.  If she did not squeeze my hand that would mean no.  I then gave her the plan of salvation and asked if she understood.  She squeezed my hand.  I asked if she wanted to pray to ask for forgiveness and accept Christ.  She squeezed my hand.  After I prayed, I asked if she had prayed with me.  She squeezed my hand for a long time.  Meanwhile, another lady in the bed next to her was listening.  She, too, was recovering from a stroke.  When I asked her if she would like to receive Christ she said, “Yes.” so I was able to lead her to Christ, too.  Five days later, the Lord took Beatrice home.  I received a call from a lady that does not attend our church a few days ago.  She attends another church some distance away but she heard me speak at a Christian Women’s Club meeting three years ago.  She asked me if I would visit her niece.  She has a 21-year-old daughter near death from anorexia and she felt the Lord wanted her to contact me about seeing this young lady.  She was adamant that God wanted me to do this.  I agreed to go to the hospital where she was receiving potassium because they were afraid she would have a heart attack.  When I got there, her great aunt met us and went to get the young lady’s mother.  They were very afraid that she would get agitated and have a heart attack but she agreed to see me.  She knew nothing about the Bible or Jesus but after answering her questions for an hour, she prayed with me to receive Christ.  Her mother had been sobbing the whole time I talked with her daughter and after we prayed, I asked her if she, too, would like to ask for forgiveness and be saved.  She was shaking and crying as she sobbed, “Yes” and she prayed to receive the Lord, too.  When we went out to the lobby, the aunt met us and we shared the wonderful news with her.  When we left the hospital all three were weeping and holding one another in one of the most tender and loving moments!

How I thank God for the privilege of serving Village Missionaries!  You can see a video of Gary and Kathy Horton taken when they were serving a field in Maine here.

Carole and I have also been privileged to meet several people who attend churches served by Village Missions.  I think of the couple we met at Lake Tapps, WA, saved for less than a year, and recently baptized.  You can view pictures of the Lake Tapps visit here.  We could sense their desire to live for the Lord.  On the other hand, we met a couple at New Gloucester, Arnie and Doris, who had been married for sixty-three years and were married by Miss Clark!  Arnie, eighty-three years old, is enrolled in the Bible Institute being sponsored by the New Gloucester Bible Church!  By the way, what a joy on that trip to meet the Maine missionaries and see the retirement homes!  You can see pictures and read an account of my visit to Maine here.

I have also talked on the phone and have visited several people who give to Village Missions.  I continue to be impressed by their sacrificial giving and their interest in Village Missions.  We regularly receive reports in the office of new people who have been led to donate to Village Missions.  Often our donors will send in a note of encouragement telling us something of their situation, sharing a Scripture verse or two, and assuring us of their prayers on our behalf.  A young boy named Andrew sent in $29.10 with this note:

This is my tithe from my 4H goat.  I would like you to use it where you need it the most.  Thank you.

What a blessing to me to learn how God is at work in a young man’s heart!

Then there are the District Representatives, staff in the office, and, of course, our board members.  All working and praying to bring people to a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ. Together they seek to develop spiritually vital churches in rural North America.  How thankful I am for the privilege of seeing first-hand His work!

May we all be “nailed straight,” focused and working hard by God’s grace to keep country churches alive!


Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

Landslide in Nile Valley

The Nile Valley, where Village Missionaries Gary and Vicki Turner serve the Nile Valley Community Church, has experienced a major landslide.

A caption of one of the pictures reads:

Peggy Emhoff, left, and Juanita Wickstrom start making dinner for the Nile community and the rescue and emergency workers helping with the landslide on the west side of the landslide on State Route 410 in Naches, WA. The Nile Valley Community Church became a gathering point for those west of the landslide, and volunteers cooked spaghetti, garlic bread and dessert for workers as well the rest of the Nile community. (AP/SARA GETTYS/Yakima Herald-Republic)

You can read about the slide and see pictures here.

Vicki Turner sent this update to Lisa West:

Hi Lisa,

I wanted to personally let you know that we are doing better here and thank you for your prayers!  Our power came back on yesterday about 2:00 and that was a HUGE blessing!!  We could get warm again and it really cheered everyone.  We still cooked up dinner for people but it wasn’t as many as we would’ve had without the power, so now we have leftovers to share.

But we had 150 or so come for the community meeting at 5:00 and had some good reports.  Since the county declared this an emergency situation there are funds coming so DOT workers are working hard on the Nile Loop Rd. to get that built up where there was damage & flooding, and that will become the new “highway” for winter anyway.  That connects our end of hwy. 410 with the hwy. below the slide so we can get to Yakima again.  They said last night it might be drivable by tomorrow or Thursday, so that’s a big praise too.  They’ll have another community mtg. here tonight to update us.

The front page picture of the Yakima Herald shows Rebecca, from our church, by her house that was lifted up 15 ft., taking things out of it since it was condemned by the county, as well as her parents’ house next door (they’re also in our church).  I’ll have them on the prayer list.  We can’t get to them yet to help, but hopefully soon.  They have another home up here that they’re staying in.

Gary’s heart procedures are scheduled for next Tuesday, so Lord willing we can get there.  Thanks so much for your concern & prayers, Lisa!!

Please pray for the Turners and the Nile Valley Community Church as they minister during this time. Pray also for Gary as he undergoes a heart procedure this Tuesday.


Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

The Intern and the Village Missions Daughter

I don’t cry at weddings-guys just don’t do that sort of thing.  But as I sat with Carole in the Evergreen Community Church, a church served by Village Missions in beautiful Redland, Oregon, tears began to flow down my cheeks as I learned more of this remarkable couple who stood before the congregation to exchange vows.  Wedding of Travis and Jennifer

Consider, Travis, the groom.  Travis grew up in a godly Christian home, a farm family in eastern Washington.  In High School Travis became convinced that God was leading him to some type of vocational Christian ministry.  Acting upon that conviction, he applied and was accepted at Moody Bible Institute.  God soon directed him into pastoral ministry and then, more specifically, into rural ministry.

I met Travis when he was in his junior year and John James and I were representing Village Missions at the annual Missions Conference.  Travis was interested in learning more about Village Missions.  The chair of the Pastoral Department, Dr. John Koessler, highly recommended him.  We had just changed our policy about accepting single young men.  Believing that God was leading him to Village Missions, Travis applied and we accepted him.  We assigned him to serve an internship of one year with Village Missionaries Tony and Kathy Pinkham, serving in Kettle Falls, WA.

Consider now Jennifer, the bride.  She is the daughter of Village Missionaries Steve and Lisa Rief.  She felt from an early age that God wanted her to be the wife of a Village Missionary.  But where was he?  In High school she patiently waited upon God.  Each year at staff conference at Cannon Beach, as I addressed the teens and challenged them to become Village Missionaries, she would be one of the teen girls that would say, “But we have to have a husband that wants to be a Village Missionary!”

Jennifer attended Ecola Bible School and still she waited.  Even at Ecola, none of the guys wanted to be a pastor.  Feeling that being a pastor’s wife was what God called her to be, she waited.  There was even a rock on the beach and Jennifer would go there, sitting on the rock, reading her Bible and praying.  Jennifer’s rock was not the rock she sat upon but the Rock of her salvation.  She cast herself upon that Rock, believing that if He had called her to that role then He would provide for her.  Would He?

Tony and Kathy Pinkham arrived at Cannon Beach in June 2008 for what would be our last staff conference for at least some time.  Travis stayed behind in Kettle Falls.  But as Kathy renewed ties with the Rief family at staff conference, and specifically Jennifer, she thought of Travis.  She mentioned Travis to Jennifer and he soon began to e-mail her.  They continued e-mailing and then met in person last September.

Now this young couple was standing in front of the congregation entering into the marriage covenant, led in the ceremony by Jennifer’s dad, Steve.  Their kiss, after Steve pronounced them husband and wife, was their first kiss.  They had waited until that time.

It was a holy moment and tears ran down my cheeks.  Holy, because it was before the body of Christ, faithfully ministered to by Village Missionaries over the years, and specifically by Jennifer’s parents, Steve and Lisa, since 1995.  Holy, because godly parents had raised them both in homes where Christ was preeminent.  Holy, because both were obeying God’s call to serve as Village Missionaries.  Holy, because both had waited upon God with trust and perseverance.  Holy, because we in the congregation powerfully glimpsed how much God cares about our individual lives, how much He cares about His church, how much He cares about marriage as the picture of His church, and yes, how much He cares about calling young couples to the great task of keeping country churches alive.


Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

Trespassers Will Be Shot

The Apostle Paul expected nothing but difficulty.  He only anticipated “chains and tribulations.”  Every step brought him nearer to trouble and hardship.  Yet, in his farewell address to the Ephesian elders, he made clear that nothing would stop him from fulfilling his God-given ministry.  He tells them,

But none of these things move me; nor do I count my life dear to myself, so that I may finish my race with joy, and the ministry which I received from the Lord Jesus, to testify to the gospel of the grace of God.  (Acts 20:24)

No fearful prospect swayed Paul from his course.  Paul knew that he found joy, not in hanging on to his life but in letting it go in service to the King.  He kept focused on only one thing-fulfilling his God-given ministry of testifying to the gospel of the grace of God.

God has given us, Village Missionaries and Village Missions as a whole, the ministry of testifying to the gospel of the grace of God to rural and once rural communities throughout the United States and Canada.  As I reflect on our history, I have no doubt that we have received this ministry from the Lord.  As I reflect on how God is at work on our fields, I have no doubt that He would have us continue testifying to the gospel of the grace of God. 

For example, I think of the rodeo cowboy and town drunk, Sam (I’m changing his name and the missionary’s Bucking Bronconame for obvious reasons) that came to Christ recently on one of our fields.  People were afraid of Sam when he went on one of his drinking binges.  Dennis, the Village Missionary, prayed with him when he was in the shoot, ready to ride the bucking bronc.  He won grand prize that day!  The next Sunday Sam was in church and he continued to show up most Sundays.  A few months later, in a drunken stupor, he was somehow shot in the leg.  He decided to dig the bullet out himself rather than go to the hospital.  Sam spent the long hours of the next days recuperating and thinking about his life.  He finally realized that he could have a different life and he went forward the next Sunday in church, loudly proclaiming that he had trusted Christ!

On the road into this cowboy’s ranch is a sign warning, “Trespassers Will Be Shot.”  But the newly saved rodeo cowboy carved “Except for Dennis” underneath “Trespassers Will Be Shot.”  

In some ways, it seems like our society has a big sign warning, “Trespassers Will Be Shot!”  Village Missions faces one of our most difficult time in our sixty-year history.  The loss of so much income from Stonecroft is a major challenge, but we also face many other obstacles to ministry in our post-Christian world.  Al Mohler discussed the recently released American Religious Identification Survey in his March 2009 blog (http://www.albertmohler.com/blog).  He considered the survey’s finding that now 27% of Americans expect a secular funeral.  He wrote:

The researchers are surely right to see this trend as related to a decline in “personal concerns about salvation.”  If anyone needed proof that many Americans now operate out of a secular worldview, this single data point should suffice.  There can be little doubt that when 27% of Americans “do not expect a religious funeral at their death,” this does indicate an absence of religious concern at the point of death.  Millions of Americans expect to die without God.

In a previous blog, commenting about this study Mohler concludes:

In any event, the ARIS report draws our attention to one great and undeniable fact — we are living in the midst of a vast mission field for the Gospel.  Of course, we should have known that all along.

For sixty years we have known that our two countries are a “vast mission field for the Gospel.”  No matter what obstacle or difficulty, mission wide or on an individual field, we simply must persevere, like the Apostle Paul, in our God-given ministry of testifying to the gospel of the grace of God.  People like Sam, who used to be the town drunk, but is now a new babe in Christ, impel us to continue.  It will be our joy!


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