What a Fun and Fruitful Week!
Jill, this is the little girl that cracks me up - she’s so sweet - sunglasses helps her worship!
This is “Zoom” - he’s one of the new exchange students from Hanoi - he turned 17 Sunday and we ate at a Mexican restaurant - he’s an awesome young man. This year there are 9 from Hanoi - they’re all smart, sharp, promising, and we are glad they are with us!!! He reminds Nikki and I a lot of Ti - he’s absolutely wonderfully crazy and funny!
Jill, here are some potential men who love God, are real Chineese but grew up in Malaysia - keep them on your potential possibilty list - don’t forget what I’ve always told you - marry Chineese - they are about to rule the world - and finish the Great Commission!
I LOVED Pepperdine University. It’s not a university - it’s a resort! It is on the cliffs of Malibu, California - wow - I’d never have made it there. I’d be too busy hiking in the mountains or on the beach. There was great response to my “talk” and afterwards I had a lot of college students come up talking to me about what they were looking at doing globally and how integrate their faith with it. I also met some of the college kids who were involved in different global projects. I really was blown away by the school and the student body. Dr. Charles Hall is Dean of the international programs and he gets it. He’s assembled a great team of people to drive his department. We ate on the beach at some place called Dukes - we watched the dophins in the ocean and ate Mahi Mahi on our plate! Thanks for a great time Charles.
OK, I’ll write more serious blogs later - just catching up for now.
Partners in Vietnam
Vince Antonucci and Forefront Church in Virginia Beach have begun working with Glocal Ventures, Inc. – NorthWood’s NGO in Vietnam – and are seeing changed lives. Below, you’ll find a letter written to Dennis Jeffares, International Director for GVI from Dan Pollard of Forefront Church.
“We made it back safe and sound and are now trying to tell everyone about how awesome our trip was. I’m emailing to tell you how fantastic the GVI Hanoi staff is. From start to finish, they were nothing but awesome, friendly and just plain fun to be with. I LOVE being there and I’m missing the Ta Phin School and our friends there. What a year!
I know God has got some awesome things ahead for us, GVI, and those we serve. I want you to know that personally, I’ve been changed by this experience. There is a part of me still on that new slab of concrete in Ta Phin and I know I speak for the rest of my team when I tell you that because of GVI’s hard work, we were able to realize things that were only dreams a year ago. Thank you so much for your leadership and Bob’s vision. We look forward to a long partnership.
Sincerely,
Dan Pollard”
Anybody who would want to partner with us in Vietnam – you can contact Dennis Jeffares at http://www.northwoodchurch.org – you can find out what we do and how we work. If you’re up for it, we can make a difference together.
Nonpolarity
For a couple of days this week I was in Manhattan at the Center for Foreign Relations where Richard Haas is President. It was fun. It was on religion and foreign policy. I got to be with some friends and meet new friends. Hopefully I’ll be able to fill you in on some of them in a few days and things I learned from them.
Richard has been writing on the “Age of Nonpolarity.” The article is in the May/June issue of the probably the best for affairs magazine around called “Foreign Affairs!” Here’s the link. The premise of which ”the world is not dominated by one or two or even several states but rather by dozens of actors possessing and exercising various kinds of power. This represents a tectonic shift from the past.”
It fascinated me because it is how I see the world operating and how we do global engagement in the domains of society. I’m in the editing process on my fourth book – and I literally draw diagrams to illustrate what Richard is talking about.
So what will faith look like in this ever connected global world? Go to the link, read the article and let’s translate it in to a “faith response.” What about Richard’s conclusions? Agree or disagree?
Sleepy Reflections at Heathrow
I’m kind of sleepy--just got off the plane from Kenya--at Heathrow for a couple of hours, then home to Texas. I have to finish my fourth book in the next 30 days. Won’t be easy, but I’ll get it done. I’m excited about it. I’m getting some really big boulders off my plate, getting into the new worship center, finishing the book, gathering a group of global leaders to network . . . . At the same time, some things are warping up like never before.
In some ways, this trip has changed the way I view some things that will impact what I write. The challenge of all this will be bridging culture which translates into how people process, the pace they process, what they value, etc. I’ve known Americans have a tendency to be ethnocentric of their culture, but so do other cultures as well.
I think I’ve discovered the reason why church planting movements stay focused on a “tribe” or a “nation.” It’s a lot easier to do your own thing in your own context, than to partner. If you partner, your agenda has to die and it has to become “our” agenda. THEN, once you agree on the agenda, even if you speak the same language, the words mean different things. THEN, you realize it’s not all about words but what’s not said, etc., etc., etc., etc. This stuff is complex--the mission is simple. Not complex to do “my” thing, very complex to do “our” thing.
In spite of all of that, I’m more convinced than ever the church will be global beyond merely existing in different tribes and nations. It will be connected. It must be connected. Everyone talks about the “Unity” needed in the church. Unity, for unity’s sake, will never happen. Unity, because we should all be nice and love one another, will never happen. Unity, because God has called us to a common mission and purpose, is the only way we will die to ourselves and come together.
On another note, the Kenyan’s are pulling for Barak O’Bama. He was on the front page yesterday.
On another note, just read The Post American World by Fareed Zacharia. He spoke of how India is being influenced by China which promotes peace and stability that leads to development. India’s last electoral campaign centered …
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The Future of the Church - The Global Church
Last night we ate supper at Oscar Muriu’s home. It was a lot of fun. Omar spoke and did awesome. Later today we’re going to ride through a game reserve. Jack Sara from Palestine also spoke--what a powerful story. This is an utterly incredible conversation--a book could be written on it. One of the biggest ideas is the reality that the church is really not connected globally. Denominations and mission agencies are, but not the church. I’m sitting with the church--major leaders from all over the world and we believe this is the future. I wish young pastors were here. I MUST get them together with these guys. These are totally different conversations than the American Church and they are having conversations separate and apart from ours. We are the loosers. The problem is we don’t want to listen, and they don’t take us serious.
Lovin’ Kenya and These Pastors
Sorry guys I haven’t been able to write. Web service is sporatic where I am and this is the first time in a few days I’ve been able to get on. I have had an incredible two days. I spoke at the Redeemed Gospel Church - they have 20,000 at their main campus and thousands of others at the other campuses. It was incredible. I spoke at the main campus and another location. It was very moving. The LONGEST worship I’ve ever been in in my life. It was good, and didn’t get old. The pastor has started 2,000 churches in Kenya--not bad! He’s a very happy man and is head of the Evangelical Union of Churches here in Kenya. We had a lot of fun. It’s a Pentecostal Church. Maybe I’m going soft as I get older but I liked it--didn’t seem that wild to me. Everything was appropriate and in order.
Today, I met with the guys here and we talked all day about what it would look like to work together. It was a blast. We had a lot of spirited debate and “ah-ha” moments. Tonight, we go to Pastor Oscar’s house. Yesterday they launched a church and it had 1,000 in the first service--that’s where all the other pastors went. David Grubbs said he’s moving to Africa and joining that church. Of course, he said that a couple of months ago when we were in Korea. I love seeing a young guy’s eyes opened to the world.
Omar Reyes is just so stinkin’ smart. He had some incredible insights along the way that brought clarity. We were talking how we make a good team.
I’m more convinced than ever the church has to come together globally. It’s going to happen. I’m also convinced we are even more lost in the West than I have previously thought. We may be ready to engage the world, but they no longer want us engaging, and there’s some good reason to it. In the end, we all have to come together--it’s just going to be hard because the way we come together is going to be so radically different. As I sit and listen to these guys who plant tons of churches and have massive ministries, I’m amazed at how much they have to teach us. I’m not sure we’re ready to learn, yet. …
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