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Friday, September 24, 2010

When less is more and down is the best way up

Grace and peace in the Lord!

Last week my sister wrote "We haven't heard from you for a while, is everything O.K.?" She is used to getting regular email updates. Usually I send them out before a ministry trip to ask for specific prayer. Even though my bags aren't packed for another trip, we still need your focused prayer. First let me share some of the things that have been happening in our lives.

July was a difficult month because of a health problem that grounded us and brought us to our knees. I won't go into any details about the health issues. I had to postpone a trip to Haiti. Our ministry leaders counseled us to slow down for a while. God is blessing us through this time. We are spending a lot more time together as a couple, and that is so good for us. Our walk with Him is being refreshed and we are learning so much. Healing is taking place and our energy is being restored.

In August we went up to Hershey, PA and the church there provided a missionary home for a couple weeks. From there we visited some family and friends. We participated in grand-daughter Rachel's baby dedication (picture). Gene spoke with some mission pastors and shared in one of our new supporting churches in New York.  

In September, some strategic advances were made. Some of you may remember that Stephen Covey speaks of "Quadrant Four" activities: those that are important- but not urgent- so you never put the time into them. It's a gift to devote time to them. Gene finished the final review of a Baker Church Planting book he is co-authoring with Dr. Craig Ott that will come out in January. Working with our team, we have launched a Web Resource Bank for church planters globally and completed 101-level church planter training.

Another blessing is the perspective you gain when you slow down. God has been speaking about our ministry flowing from who we are in Christ. It's not the amount we accomplish that counts but loving Him with all our heart, mind, soul and strength. The strength of our ministry flows from a heart that loves God and listens to him. God has given us clearer priorities that will guide our travel and ministry. We will be focusing on regional efforts that develop, empower, and release national workers for church multiplication.

There are exciting things ahead of us this year. Lord willing, Gene will be helping regional church planting leaders in Central Europe, West Africa and Myanmar launch reproducible church planting training, and Linda will be accompanying him to Prague and Germany. But we are still recovering and have to take one step at a time. In October we will be visiting some churches and sharing with pastors in Florida. The next international trip will be to Port-au-Prince, Haiti in November to help with plans for a truly global church planting team. We are expecting church planters from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Brazil, and the USA to come together in a long-term church planting effort that will complement relief efforts already underway.

Would you please bring the following Praise and Prayer items before the Lord?

Praise:

  1. God's grace and healing.

2.   Great opportunities to launch church planter training in places where none is available.

  1. Our kids and grand-daughters are doing well. New ministry for Jarrett and Michelle.


 

Prayer:

  1. Full recovery of strength and God's continued spiritual formation in our lives.
  2. God's provision for our ministry ($750/month needed) and guidance as we share with others what God is doing.
  3. Wisdom in planning training trips and church planting initiatives.
  4. Church Planting Summit in Port-au-Prince Haiti Nov 8.

 

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Our central ministry focus




Gene & Linda Wilson
Serving as Church Planting Director with ReachGlobal, the international Mission of the Evangelical Free Church of America



Our Central Ministry Focus: developing, empowering and releasing healthy workers to plant healthy, reproducing, indigenous churches.

 

Help ReachGlobal staff research and implement best practices for church planting and multiplication.

   Form a global church planting team and regional church planting networks.

   Coach church planting leaders, trainers & coaches.

Work with churches in the USA and overseas to launch 100 places where church planters are trained and churches are multiplied (Acts 19 effort). Three partners are needed:

   National churches overseas work together to select, train and deploy church planters and teams.

   ReachGlobal staff comes alongside them with training tools and coaching.

   North American churches partner with resources, short-term teams, encouragement and teaching.

Prioritize church planting projects of strategic importance for major prayer and coordinated support:

   Pray for the Lord to raise up a new army of church planters worldwide according to Matthew 9:38.

   Partner with national churches to penetrate unreached people groups and strategic urban centers.

 

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Pastoral Training in Venezuela May 18-24








Left: Mario and Madilva Lopez /Right: Break out session

I met Mario Lopez in 2003 when he took the first offering of the Pro-Meta Church Planting Course (Latin America Training Network). Now he is serving as head of the Ministerial Association. His heart is for pastors and their preparation for ministry. When our team of trainers (church planting, church development and pastor training) offered to come he was excited. Twice we spoke on skype to prepare the event. He involved his entire team and did an excellent job preparing it. He said that last year they didn't have enough response to gather the pastors. This year they hoped for 25 and had 38 participate. The purposes were to encourage, equip, and build a long-term relationship. Here is the schedule in a nutshell:

  • Weds May 19- Total Mobilization – Seven Steps toward Church Multiplication – Mike Gunderson and Gene Wilson
  • Thurs May 20- Foundations of Church Health and Development – Part I – Mark Wold
  • Friday May 21– Pastoral Training: A Biblical World view including a Biblical Understanding of Unity and Suffering – Al Lewis.
  • Meeting with Association board. Report on the state of the churches, evaluation of training and plans for the future.
  • Saturday – Visited Cata Bay and fellowshipped with Mario Lopez, his wife and Alexander Mora. Debriefing with Mario Lopez.
  • Sunday – We preached and ministered in Valencia churches

During our debriefing he shared this evaluation:


  • The training was on target and on level.
  • Several pastors came who hadn't participated in any event for years. There was a hunger for this kind of training.
  • It was timely. God has been stirring a growing interest for cooperation in church planting and leader/pastor training.
  • In Maracay the pastors had not gathered for quite a while. They met recently and say "Perhaps we should plant a new church together." They took the training as a confirmation and decided to cooperate to start a new church in an unchurched region.
  • In the Caracas region they decided to start a church in Los Teques, State of Miranda. It is the state next to Caracas. Mario said: "I had been praying for a while that God would lead someone to start a church there since we have none. When they announced that I said 'Praise the Lord' in my heart."

Saturday night it poured down rain and the Lopez home was flooded. It is the fourth time this has happened. The first time the water was 5 feet high and they lost everything. They had some work done to protect their home so this time the water only rose a couple feet. They have a terrazzo floor so no damage was done to wall or flooring but it will take time to get things back in order. And since the water is infected with garbage they have to disinfect everything. Their son Timothy (about 8 yrs old) who is experiencing some trauma every time there is a storm is calming down and people from the church helped them clean up. Life is returning to normal. Praise the Lord for Mario and his family.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Thank you for praying:

1) Praise God for the work of the medical team in Milot. Here they are headed to the base for refugees needing medical attention. Some returned on Sunday; others are staying longer. Please pray for them and for a vascular surgeon joining them this week.
2) Pray for Henoc Lucien and his family. Two orphanages collapsed and they have taken in many of the children. They have a good sized home to accomodate teams that come in but no permanent staff so Guerline Lucien and her volunteer helpers have to do most of the cooking and hospitality as well as care for the kids.
3) Pray for Mark and Kevin, the leaders of TouchGlobal Crisis Response as they plan the follow-up and put together new medical teams.
4) The biggest needs right now are cash donations and medical supplies. People have been generous. I called a pharmacy and a hospital and both agreed to donate supplies. Pray that this generosity would continue.
5) Pray for hurting people to humbly call on God and turn to him in spite of their hurt and questions. The seminary in Port-au-Prince has been turned into a refugee center. A friend reported that people were turning to God there and giving their lives to him during Sunday services there. Others may not be exposed to the love of God and Word of God.

Monday, January 18, 2010

Latest Prayer Requests and News on EFCA Relief in Haiti

REACHGLOBAL HAITI RELIEF
Prayer Requests

If you are like me you probably have given and want to do more. Let's maintain a sustained prayer effort even after the media shift their focus. I sense God is asking me to coordinate SPECIFIC and CURRENT prayer requests. I will send 5 a week until God releases me from this. Will you join us in praying?

Prayer requests:

1.Pray for [Pastor] Henoc Lucien and team as they go into Port-au-Prince (PAP) and get refugees out. They are establishing a refugee center in Pignon where he grew up and both his father and brother are pastors. It is ½ way between PAP and Cap Haitian (CAP). See report from yesterday, following.

2. Estimates of dead are increasing. Please pray for civil order and against the spread of diseases. Pray for generous hearts.




3. I learned that our friend Moise Vaval lost his oldest son Jean-Marc when the school building collapsed on him. Almost every family in PAP has lost at least a person. Jean-Marc is the boy on the right. The young man on the left is Michael Pinney who recently went with his father to minister there. Please pray for Moise and his wife Francoise as they grieve and still work to save others.

4. A team from our Mission left for CAP Monday. Mark lewis, crisis response director and Brian Duggan are flying into PAP Tuesday a.m. to preprare for a medical team that will be arriving on Wednesday. Please pray for safe travel and supernatural direction. Please pray for Mark Lewis who will lead the effort and long-term aid. Pray for wisdom in setting up refugee shelters.

5. Pray for René Préval, President of Haiti (palace destroyed) and for the government to make wise decisions when mistakes can be very costly in lives.

Sent: Sat, January 16, 2010 9:28:34 PM


Subject: The Latest from Pastor Henoc in Haiti



Here you go...please be praying as you read...


The earthquake happened on Tuesday evening. All communication was cut off. We did not know what was going on except for what we were reading on the internet and on the radio.. Because of the heavy overcast, we could not watch CNN. I wanted to go to Port au Prince, but with no telephone communication, it could get complicated.


Thursday morning, around 11, the telephone started to work slowly. Just one company. So, we could try to reach anyone subscribed with Voila. However, people in Port au Prince cannot be reached because there is no power to charge the phone. Some have lost their phones and it takes a lot of time to get through. We arrived around Port au Prince at 5:00. However it took over 2 and a half hours to travel the one mile road to the airport. People are coming in to look for their loved ones and others are leaving town. We saw many people on top of roof digging up flattened buildings. Stock piles of dead human beings were everywhere. At the cemetery, and on open fields, they dig large holes and fill them up. We found at one cemetery where they put a pile of dead people and burned them with gasoline. To ignite the fire, they used old tires. The smoke was going up and I call it the Smoke of Hell.


There is no fuel. However, there are lines of people by the gas stations. They are just hoping that there will be some somehow. There are no government ministries.. Most of them have been crushed. Some senators, some deputies, a lot of high government officials have lost their lives. There is no one in Haiti that has not lost a loved one. The schools and universities have been crushed to the ground with students underneath. It happened at the end of the day when most people were still at work. Many banks have all their employees and clients under the rubbles. There is no water, no electricity, no store opened, no food. Dead people are piled by the hundreds and dump trucks come by to pick them up. All the markets have been destroyed. The prisons have been crushed. The prisoners are on the streets and some of them have been killed by the earthquake. There is a lot of pillage, looting, raping. There was even an exchange of fire yesterday between the police and thieves. People fear their homes will fall again. Everyone sleeps on the streets where there is the smell of dead flesh.


Banks are closed, churches have been destroyed. There is nothing left. The people sleeping on the streets don't know for how long. They don't even know if they will ever return to their homes and have normal lives. Port au Prince is a metropolitan center with 4 million people coming from all corners of Haiti. Everyone starts going back home. No money, no vehicles, nowhere to go. I left on Thursday morning and came back in the middle of the night with 18 people in the double cab Toyota. It was mainly students from CSS who are in Port au Prince for university education. Now their houses and apartment are destroyed and they are homeless. On Friday morning, I went back. We spent all day looking for Sainsoir's two daughters. One of them was found and the other one was no where to be found. We were looking for two other girls who go to nursing school in Port au Prince. On our way back, Sainsoir's daughter called us and we'll go back on Sunday to pick her up. On that day we rescued 23 people and we were back by 11:45 PM.


Unfortunately, we had 6 flat tires. Today, Saturday, we bought 4 brand new tires. One family from the church had a daughter who is a nurse and had gone to Port au Prince to look for a job. Both she and her son were found dead. The same family could not locate their son. He was found alive under the ruins of a government building.


His leg is almost destroyed. We will pick him on Sunday to take him to a hospital. A man from the Grande Riviere church has been found with multiple injuries. He will come back with us. I will finish this e-mail and head to Pignon where I will spend the night and need to be in Port au Prince before 8 am.


My cousin's daughter was killed in school as the building collapsed and everyone inside was killed. A graduate of CSS, Sterly Manigat, was killed. Many other friends and loved ones were destroyed. I have seen death, but I don't understand it. I have seen people's lives destroyed and I cannot understand it. However, I trust in the Lord and that He has a purpose for everything. Above everything His name will be praised and there will be a reason to see His glory in the midst of chaos.


Please pray for our safety as we travel at night time and everywhere. Please pray for strength.


Pastor Henoc Lucien


Glen Schrieber
Superintendent - EFCA Southeast


For more news:
www.vohmhaiti.com


Give to Relief through EFCA Touch Global www.touchglobal.org/haiti