First, just want to say thanks to all those who have been praying for the situation in China over the past couple days. The three guys and girl that were taken into the police station were released after a couple hours of questioning. They were separated for most of it, as I understand, and their questions were kind of checked against each other. The questions seemed to center on four main issues:
What kind of religious group are they?
Where does their money come from?
What role do the foreigners have?
What are they preaching?
I am truly honored to know and work with these young men. They love Jesus and didn’t deny him when the heat was on. They clearly shared with the police officer the message that they proclaim. This may be the first and mildest of many things that they suffer for Christ and his kingdom.The police made it seem like the problem lay in a few areas. First, the size of the church. They told the guys that if they had a small meeting in their house it wouldn’t be a problem (if they didn’t annoy the neighbors). Second, preaching. They didn’t interrupt the service in the singing, prayer, or even the Sunday school classes. They waited until a few minutes into CongWei’s message. Third are foreigners in leadership (and they’re not sure that there are any). Frustrated as I am that I wasn’t there for all this, the guys are convinced that it would have gone much worse if it had been me preaching.
So where do we go from here?
Our role as missionaries doesn’t change. We are there to train young Chinese preachers of the Gospel – part of that is modeling for them the leadership of a church in a reproducible form. That may get us kicked out someday – but if we’re not busy doing that, we might as well leave.
My missionary mentor reminded me that we’ve always known that something like this would happen someday. After all, that’s the point of testing the fences. You get shocked sometimes. We know now a little bit more about where the fence is. If we went five years in China without something like this happening, it might mean we’re not pushing hard enough! The Chinese guys remembered this, too. Guess I’m the only one who forgot!
As we make the decision about what our services will be like in the future, it’s important (as another of my missionary friends reminded me) that we don’t recklessly use the word ‘can’t.’ We had services in that daycare for four months and nothing happened. Then the guys had to be questioned for a couple hours. If we go to another part of the city and try again, who knows how long we’ll go before anything happens. How can we know that the penalty then wouldn’t be just as harmless as the one they just faced? Sometimes when we say ‘can’t’ what we really mean is ‘won’t’ – unwilling to pay the price. As the Lord grants us boldness, we will always attempt to be more open in our witness than we have been. I hope we err in that direction.
So please continue to pray that the church and its leaders will move forward in boldness and faith. We’ll keep updating with any news.
another update from China church Police Situation Update – Released
Rejecting the culture
Another major problem that missionaries have is trying to take the United States to the foreign country. It causes them to have severe issues on the foreign field. The national gets very tired of being compared to “back home”. His country doesn’t measure up. His food is not as good. His house is not as well. That’s not how we do it back in America. It causes an inferiority complex. It causes hurt feelings among the nationals. The nationals never feel like they can measure up.
Many times, they would already have an insecurity caused by the fact that the missionary is from a foreign country. His country is advanced and is seen on TV and in movies. They have an idea that he lives far better than he actually would live in his country. And so there’s a built-in tendency to feel like maybe we don’t quite measure up.
But if God has called us to leave our country and go to their country, He did not call us to make little Americans out of them. He did not call us to Americanize them. He called us to take the gospel and develop it in such a way that it lives in their culture. That doesn’t mean changing anything about what the Gospel says or what the Gospel is or what the Gospel does.
It simply means that their church houses probably won’t look like our church houses. We don’t need to build the fanciest building in town. We need to build a building that they can build, a building they would be comfortable in, and a building they can maintain when we leave. We don’t need to take our way of driving, our way of doing everything that we do, and make that part of their situation.
If you go overseas, you’ll find that even down to the table manners you were taught as a child are American table manners, and they’re not international table manners. It would not be uncommon at all for a person in a Latin American country to use his knife to guide the food on to his fork, and it wouldn’t be uncommon for him to use his knife to put the food on. Or as I’ve seen in other countries, you might use your fork to put the food in the spoon that you’re gonna eat with. You may burp at your meal. You may should leave food on your plate when you get through, otherwise, it seems that you’re hungry and wanting more. You may should clean your entire plate or it looks like you didn’t like their food. Maybe you will not drink anything until the meal is over and everyone will share the same glass. You may eat with your fingers and not with utensils.
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Police Break Up Our Service
This is from one of our dearest friends. He serves in China and is home on a short furlough now. I am right now on the phone with another friend from our church in China! I hurt for the believers, the Bible teachers, and all who serve God in China.
I want to comment on the questions asked by my friend.
Oh the junk going through my head right now….
Got a phone call from my buddy tonight just as we were laying down to go to sleep. Told me that there was an email from China just sent out to our missionary team (I am in the States right now). This morning’s church service was interrupted by twenty police officers. Two of the Chinese men training for ministry, two of the best friends God has ever blessed me with, are in the police station right now.
One of them was about ten minutes into his sermon when they came in. They didn’t all have on uniforms – most didn’t I understand. The pastor from the government church was in their entourage. Guess it didn’t get ugly or anything. They gave the Chinese people a lecture on the illegality of the service. Took down people’s info. Then they took the guys away. In good spirits, according to my co-laborer still on the field.
- why am I here on the other side of the world when this goes down?
- how long are they going to hold the guys?
- what are we going to do next week?
- whose faith will be shown to be false in this trial?
- will the cops leave us alone after this?
- how much of our 4 years of work must be rebuilt?
- do those two know how much I love them and how proud I am?
- have I prepared them sufficiently for this day?One question need not be asked, and I pray my friends won’t ask it even in custody: is it worth it? Preaching the Gospel to many who are learning to love it, to some who’ve never heard it before? Attempting to share it with even more people? If that’s not worth it all, what is?
Was there a way to avoid this? Sure. By staying under the rock. Maybe they’ll keep pushing us back under. If so, we’ll do all we can from there. But how can we not try to reach? Not try to be more bold? How can we content ourselves with the rumors of other people’s persecutions and avoid all of our own? How can we act like we have no higher purpose than escaping persecution? Jesus was expelled from places, as was Paul – who do we think we are to rest under the rock?
So to all my friends and brothers who visit this page: please pray, not that the Lord will allow us to escape safely under the rock, but that we will take refuge in him and gladly pay the price of preaching the Salvation that cost the ultimate price to earn.
God is in control. He knew this was going to happen as well as did my friends. They have been the boldest witnesses I know of in China. They will continue to be so. Many have been saved. Others have grown spiritually.
They were big enough to get on the Devil’s radar. Their message was never political but Biblical. They told people about the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
The true believers will be stronger. Some will go back because they never believed. Others may be scared for a short time but will believe and get stronger.
This is just more proof of why we must train national pastors to do the work in case the missionaries get kicked out!
This is proof of the need for an indigenous church. A church that can operate on their own, serving Jesus, without help from America.
I am so proud of these believers. I am super proud of my missionary friendsh. They are my heroes. They have trained the men. One of them was preaching today. None of them backed down. None of them denied who they were, who Jesus is, or what they were doing.
That happens because God’s men have invested correctly in the people.
This is not a man’s work and it will stand. Jesus is and will be glorified. To my friends M and J. I love you and I am so proud of you!
To my friends in China I love you. I am so super proud of you and blessed they get to know you and serve Jesus with you.
Keep up the good work!
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God Stuff or Good Stuff
If you are a preacher I hope you will take the time to read the following quote. It is a little long but well worth your time. The older I get the more I realize how much I have spent time on the good stuff and not on the God stuff. I realize that I have preached pop psychology. I have preached what my pastor friends believed and my heroes taught me. I have been very wrong.
Real preaching is preaching the Bible and what it says. I wish that I had been better educated as a young man so that I would not have hurt so many people. I wish that someone would have helped me to see that I should preach the Bible and not mimic so much of what I was seeing.
Read this and consider it! We need to be real God Stuff preachers and not good stuff! It is hard for my pride to admit that I have made so many mistakes but I have. I feel like I am just now learning what I should have learned 40 years ago!
We live in a day in which people in churches are crying out for practical application and longing to see the relevance of the Bible. People have grown weary listening to sermons that only give them historical facts but provide them with no connection to real life.
Because we are a people of extremes, however, our humanity causes us to overreact to such abuses. And the result is that the pendulum swings to the opposite extreme of viewing the Bible merely as a resource manual for life on earth. And our infatuation with practical application has caused us to overlook the most important quality of the Bible—its Divine feature. We must understand that the Bible is God-centered, not man-centered. It is a book about Him more than it is a book about us. To make it otherwise is both selfish and arrogant. When we search God’s Word with a how-to mentality, we often run right past the revelation of Almighty God. This perversion fits hand in glove with the order of contemporary culture: “It’s all about me!”
The confusion regarding the essence of the Bible is compounded when applied to pastoral preaching, and the resulting deception is ever so subtle. Shepherds are ministers of grace and desire to meet people’s needs and heal their hurts. But what happens when the Bible gives no specific and practical help for the life situations some of our people are facing? Among other things, the shepherd in his desire to help is tempted to find his preaching material from some place other than the Bible. Walter Kaiser lamented that many pastors have decided that using the Bible is a handicap for meeting the needs of the current generation and, therefore, “have gone to drawing their sermons from the plethora of recovery and pop-psychology books that fill our Christian bookstores.” Worse yet, the shepherd lowers himself to making the Bible say things it does not say. In an attempt to offer practical and helpful information, he stands up to say, “Thus saith the Lord,” when the Lord did not saith! How can God get the glory if the preacher does not speak what God says?
While the preaching described above cannot necessarily be categorized as heresy or even blatant error, neither can it be described as consisting of the inspired Word of God. In Power in the Pulpit, Jerry Vines and I described this subtlety as the often overlooked difference between good stuff and God’s stuff. The body of truth that is revealed in the Bible, given for the purpose of godliness (see 2 Pet. 1:2–4) and righteousness (see 2 Tim. 3:16), can be called God’s stuff. It is the stuff of the Bible—its very essence. On the other hand, there is much helpful advice in life that is comprised of information or principles gleaned from simple observation and research. That is good stuff. Let us be very clear—the shepherd has not been charged with the task of speaking on all matters of good stuff.
While all truth is God’s truth, not all truth has been included in His written Word. He has sovereignly chosen to include only that which is necessary for man’s sanctification. There is a whole lot of good and helpful information in the world, but God did not choose to consecrate all of it as His inspired revelation necessary for spiritual transformation. In our previous work we cited the example of Aristotle, who delineated his principles of rhetoric simply by engaging in observation. He watched enough public speakers that he was able to glean certain “truths” for doing it effectively. The principles of rhetoric have had profound impact on preaching and all other forms of public speaking. But they are merely good stuff. Although they are both helpful and useful, they will not foster the God-life, much less glorify Him.
But the crisis we face in preaching today is not shepherds who deliver sermons on how to do good public speaking. The body of good stuff is far more appealing to contemporary churchgoers. That is what makes it so tough. If a therapist observes enough people dealing with stress on the job place, he will glean certain helpful principles for addressing the issue. If a marriage counselor observes enough people journeying through divorce recovery, she will be able to develop some guidelines that are helpful for that crisis. If parenting experts talk with enough moms and dads who are raising kids, they will be able to outline some practical ways for navigating such a task. And there will always be certain general truths in Scripture which can be applied to these and other life experiences.
The shepherd’s authority to stand and speak “Thus saith the Lord” is not in good stuff, but God’s stuff. While biblical truth surely informs certain principles that might be categorized as good stuff, its primary intent is more specific and far-reaching. The faithful shepherd will rightly interpret, exegete, and proclaim the truth of Scripture so as to allow it to accomplish its purpose in people’s lives. But when the shepherd prostitutes God’s stuff for good stuff, anarchy occurs. And the biggest tragedy is not what people are getting but what they are not getting. While they certainly are getting some helpful information, they are being robbed of the truth that is necessary for realizing God’s end and subsequently bringing glory to Him.
God’s stuff is the very essence of the Bible. It is His book, and it is primarily about Him. When the preacher begins at this point in his interpretation and his application, then he is sure to exalt God and bring glory to His name. When he begins at the point of resourcing man regarding all of his questions and felt needs, however, his interpretation and application are certain to exalt humanity.
Shaddix, J. (2003). The Passion Driven Sermon : Changing the Way Pastors Preach and Congregations Listen (64–66). Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman.
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Only 13 minutes a day!
It has been calculated that an average reader could read the entire Bible in 76 hours. This means that it would only take 12.5 minutes a day to read the Bible in a year. Do you realize that 12.5 minutes is only about 4/5 of a percent of your time each day. That’s right! If you give God less than 1% of your time each day you can read through the Bible in a year. Experience teaches me that those who choose to give Him 12.5 minutes will probably want to give more in order to do more than simply read through it. They will want to meditate, pray and examine what they read a little more thoroughly. They won’t want to lay their Bible down when 12.5 minutes comes around. But start with a 12.5 minute a day commitment…determine to give God 1% of your day and see where that leads.
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