Thursday, June 30, 2011

OMS Conference / Meetings & Ann's Birthday

We’ve been quiet with regard to the blog the last few weeks.   We recently returned to our idillic cabin in the woods after meetings at our mission headquarters.  I feel that I owe some sort of synopsis.  But before that, some updates:
  • We continue to be on-track for leaving the States on August 6.  This was a bit later than we wanted but at the same time, it is largely a function of full planes this time of year.  
  • We have sent our passports to the Mozambique Embassy to obtain the requisite visas we need to enter the country.  
  • Our International Driver’s licenses just came in the mail with a three-year expiration date instead of the one-year you get with Triple A.  This links to our driver’s license expiration date, which makes more sense.
  • We have been diligently packing up the few belongings we have in preparation of leaving the cabin.
  • Ann is looking forward to attending the Women of the Harvest conference with her dear friend Jeannie in Denver.
  • We are both looking forward to the ‘short’ airplane ride to Denver and Idaho to visit friends and family before departing.  It is all happening too fast!
Today is Ann’s birthday and yesterday was our anniversary - I’m not saying how many years, but it passes quickly.  Ann’s brother drove over yesterday to be with her on her birthday and was rather amazed at our place.  He wasn’t so sure about our five mile gravel driveway as he has had back surgery recently and is unable to turn his head to back up and wondered what he’d do if he met someone on the road!  But we didn’t.  We enjoyed talking and he had brought an article about Rob Bell’s recent book and wondered what we thought about it.  Ann’s brother is very well read and always interesting to talk to about most any subject.  
The meetings at OMS.  Well, not a lot to say actually.  The business part was a continuation, more or less, of the last couple of year’s meetings as the organization struggles with how to best function with a number of sending countries (Canada, UK, Australia, New Zealand, US, South Africa, Columbia, Philippines, South Korea) being empowered and independent yet all linked to an International organization.  (By sending countries, I am referring to countries that are currently sending missionaries under the OMS banner or OMS-related churches - OMS uses a slightly different definition that deals with the number of missionaries being send out)  Adding to the challenges are the self-sufficient OMS started churches that are now wanting their “place at the table” so-to-speak and wanting to send missionaries across the globe, either as their own missionaries or as a part of OMS.  Exciting problems and challenges to have, but also not easily addressed in such a strongly cross-cultural environment.  And then, in any given field, you may have missionaries from a number of dramatically different cultures serving in an even different culture; and additionally each sending country has different money accountability requirements, life-style expectations, medical expectations, and even worship expectations.  It gets very interesting and we must be full of grace, humility, acceptance, and  peace to deal with the very fluid dynamics - almost chaos theory!  So, we voted on some things, worked as a group on some recommendations for the board, and will see what comes of it all.   It is my prayer that God will move in wisdom in the hearts of leadership and the various board members as they lead OMS into the future in these uncertain times (but then again, aren’t all times really ‘uncertain times’?)  We truly need His presence in our lives, as individuals, as missionaries, as a mission organization, and as a nation truly.  We need to pray more and seek His face more.
When we weren’t in the business meetings, we received training on working cross-culturally.  The training was based on a great book I’ve written about previously and the training was done very well.  They call the teaching style “adult interactive learning” or some such nomenclature.  I’m not a big fan of the style as it takes a veeeeerrrrrryyyyyyyy loooooonnnnngggggg time to deliver a wee bit of information, but it is the current teaching rage I understand.  (Yup, just give me dat der slate and piece of chalk and a one-room school-house with a school-marm, now that’s teaching the way it was meant to be!  I’m sure that’s in the Bible somewhere....;-))  The interactive adult learning may be effective statistically, because it is certainly easy to remember a wee bit of information that is given over days and days in a various numbers of ways, but efficient? - don’t think so. The bruises on my head from banging it on the table are nearly healed..... However, I have to admit that we have used the technique with success in Mozambique, where group learning is highly valued, group dynamics are important and oral learning is key.  But for me as the Western student, I’d rather read the book, look at the chart, write a paper, take a written test, talk about how we apply the material in a practical way.  Do I sound like a visual learner to you?   Is that why I write too many words on the blog?  Is my cultural bias showing?  How about your own cultural bias?  This cross cultural stuff is hard, isn’t it?!
After the meetings, we moved into a several day conference which included more training on what is commonly called the doctrine of ‘holiness’.  I’d like to use a different term perhaps, because the word seems to invoke in people a whole host of preconceptions or misconceptions (more cross-cultural bias!) but we enjoyed the study and were privileged  to sit under the well-known and respected Asbury Seminary professor, Dr. John Oswalt.  He gave us much to ponder as we weave our way through the deep truths of the Bible.  While the gospel message itself is really quite simple, the Bible can also be as deep as the intellect desires to search and Dr. Oswalt’s teaching was deep, thought-provoking, and I thought quite strong.  I see such similarity in this doctrine with other teachings we've sat under; it just seems people use different terms and different experiences to try and explain an infinite and loving God's presence in our wee-little lives.  It is a journey, walking in the presence of Jesus, in the good times, in the bad times, but always with the peace that only He can bring.
The highlight for both of us was a session with Beth Coppedge, who is the daughter of Dennis Kinlaw, is the founder of Titus Women, and is a renowned and gifted speaker with a sweet spirit.  She took the teaching of Dr. Oswald and put a practical and real face to what he was teaching.  Ann has met her in times past and was overjoyed to get reacquainted with her.
We also enjoyed a time of fellowship with former missionaries to Mozambique and a couple serving in Africa with the Every Community for Christ church planting program.  We shared what was happening in Mozambique (although our information is becoming somewhat dated!), and enjoyed hearing about what is happening in other countries in Africa.  
Some fun statistics put together by fellow OMS missionary Valetta Crumley, that I thought I’d share with you: 
By our Lord’s grace many of the OMS goals for 2010 were exceeded and the OMS goals for 2011 are amazing.  We believe the Lord wants to do great things.  Please join us as we encourage many to pray more, give more and do more.  The harvest is truly ready.
Pray for:
            403,000 to make a decision to follow Jesus in 2011
            130,000 to be enrolled in follow-up programs
            125,000 to be baptized
              21,000 worshipping groups to be established
              12,000 new churches to be established
               27,000 LEADERS IN TRAINING
          1,750,000 attending services

You may ask, how can such a small missionary staff (OMS) propose such amazing goals? It is because the Lord called OMS to disciple and train multiplying disciple-makers.  Today OMS joins with 13,736 cross-culture co-workers in 53 nations.  Every day 275 people are baptized.  Last year 4,116 new churches were established.

Well put Valetta. Teaching National’s to evangelize their own countries - 2 Timothy 2:2
God Bless.  God with us - Immanuel.

Dave & Ann
Jesus-style greatness:  “...  Instead, whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant and whoever wants to be first must be slave of all.  For even the Son of Man (Jesus) did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life as a ransom for many.”  Mark 10:43-45 

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Shipment is off, more or less

The thunderstorm waited for us to finish.  The shipment is on its way to the warehouse awaiting us to release it for shipment to Mozambique.  Timing is very important.

The moving company showed up and inspected our shipment; made us remove a clump of dried Eculyptus leaves (dried plants) but other than that, we passed inspection.  The photos show the general progression.  The crew was wonderful and they knew their business.  The big cardboard container will be banded and wrapped at the warehouse and placed in storage until we release it.  We want it to arrive after we have arrived and after we have our resident visas in hand.

I have visions of it going into the big warehouse from the Indiana Jones movie, where it is parked next to the crate containing the Ark of the Covenant, lost forever to be revealed at a later time.  (If you don't know the movie, then ignore this paragraph!).

One highlight of the day was meeting a nice young lady at the storage unit named Serenity, who is on her way to Medical School in Oklahoma.  It was easy to see God's hand on this precious young lady, who has a sense of God's call on her life to serve in a developing country, perhaps in Africa, after she completes her training.  Maybe God will call her to Mozambique to work with our friends the Meyers in Beira, Mozambique, training doctors for Mozambique.  It is exciting to see young people like her with a strong sense of God's call on their lives and strongly resisting the lures of our culture.  

We have a friend in Idaho who sends us daily thoughts relative to what scripture says and what God's perspective might be...we love to get them and this morning's musing talked about how Satan sets traps for us, luring us with little pieces of bait he puts out and we nibble and WHAM, the trap springs....Why do we take the bait?  Our culture is just chock-full of those little traps.

Was it a random meeting - her storage unit was in the same area as our daughter's - what are the chances?  Coincidence or godincidence; time will tell!  As our dear momma Meyers says, in the mission business, you are always on duty!

Our airline tickets back are on hold and we're negotiating the final arrangements; expecting to leave the States around August 6 it would appear.  Should know in the next day or two.

Blessings,

Dave and Ann


I know that you can do all things; no purpose of yours can be thwarted."  Job 42:2

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Communications

A short post - by now you should have received our first mass email letter which we are doing to communicate better and reduce the costs associated with printing and mailing snail mail.  If you didn't, that means we don't have your email, you've changed your email, or we simply made us a mistake.  Let us know and we'll get that fixed right away!  Kudos again to Ann who figured this out also.  We were not successful making mass email updates from Mozambique and hope this new service we are using will work better for us.

In addition, we still think snail mail updates are important and we plan to still do a couple a year.  You will be receiving that update in the mail very soon.  An electronic copy is now posted on the link on the left side of the page under "newsletters".  Just click on the link and look for the "Summer 2011" file.  You'll need Adobe acrobat reader to read it.

Blessings!

Dave & Ann

"What made the pony express obsolete?  The telegraph....."  So what does that mean about snail mail newsletters?......
Quote source unknown...probably one of my elementary school teachers.

New Technology for Evangelism

In Mozambique, we use the Jesus film in our evangelism outreaches.   As I've written previously, this film has been translated into hundreds of languages included the more predominant tribal dialects in Mozambique.  It is based on the book of Luke and people are moved and respond to the message of this film.  But, this requires that we haul a generator, gasoline, a big screen, speakers, amplifiers, microphones, wires, repair parts, tools, stands,  - you get the picture. You need a big 4-wheel drive truck to show the movie in a remote location....

But things are changing and we've always been interested in doing new things, taking advantage of new technology so that outreaches can be more cost effective and practical.  There is this on-going battle with mankind always willing to assert with vigor, "but that's the way we've always done it!" regardless of whether it makes sense or similarly being resistant to change, any kind of change, or just immediately assuming it's just too hard and 'can't be done.'  It's programmed in our nature for some reason.  What do you mean try something different?  Are you crazy or something?   We're simply excited at the potential this may represent for our work this next term.

In this picture, instead of a pick-up truck, Ann can carry the same equipment in a small pack and run it off of a battery that is charged by a solar panel.  The solar panel is in her left hand and folds up into a small flat package.  The equipment will run for several hours on a charge and there is certainly lots of day-time sun to recharge in Mozambique.  It has the amplifier, speakers, screen, and LCD projector, all in that little pack.  Our church planter/pastors can hop on their 50 cc motor scooter, their bicycle, or their two feet and take what they need with them and still show the movie.  It should work great in the remote areas where we work in the northern provinces.

A few of our supporters have gotten behind us on this effort and encouraged us to give it a try.  If it works for us, we can get more in the future, and we also have the equipment for loading different language-versions of the film onto the SD cards that are used by the equipment.  Modern, small, and efficient.  Can't wait to try it out!  It's really much cheaper also than all the other stuff you need.  We'll let you know in future updates how it goes!  We can also load messages and other things on the SD cards as well - exciting stuff!

Great project and kudos to Ann who really grabbed hold of this and made it happen.  It goes in the shipment we are sending hopefully in two more days.

Plus, no moving parts!

Blessings,

Dave

"Look at the nations and watch - and be utterly amazed.  For I am going to do something in your days that you would not believe, even if you were told."  Habakkuk 1:5