What is God doing in the Himalayas? Some pretty exciting things! I have been going yearly to Nepal to develop, empower and release church planters and all I can say is that I have found the context pregnant with missional passion. Then one of the leaders there shared with me that a church growth study coming from Gordon Conwell seminary's Center for Global Studies found that Nepal has the fastest growing church at this time, followed closely by China. That report is quoted here: http://discipleallnations.wordpress.com/2013/08/25/the-top-20-countries-where-christianity-is-growing-the-fastest/
I give God all the glory. The best way I know how, is to share how I saw God
at work during the last two weeks of March 2014.
As the Nepali custom goes, participants sat on the floor which made it easy to work in groups.
The training was rich in
excitement, discussion and practical application.
The Church Planting Training Network (CPTN) of Kathmandu prepared well and organized several case studies illustrating the impact of Level one and two training.
Tilak
Thapa planted new churches in Lalitpur (near Kathmandu) and Kapri (in the
mountains) and three other churches in the Lamju district near Tibet.
Indra
Shestra, with the leaders he trained and coaches, started 3 new churches near
the Tibet border and strengthened 15 others.
Krishna
Dangol has been the most prolific church planter. He works with others in seven
regions to start 16 churches and 13 more are projected.
One of the most helpful tools has been the "four field" church planting process. They learn what to do at each stage: the empty field, the seeded field, the fruitful field and the harvest field. The the process starts over because mature churches look for new empty fields.
The CPTN produced a manual combining Level 1 and 3 and another manual for the Training of Trainers.
One day there was a political protest by the Marxists and all public transportation including taxis came to a halt. Cars were warned not to attempt to break the strike. Some that did were turned over and burned. At first the second day of training was canceled. But the trainees got through on their motorcycles and came to ge us at our hotel. The Lord made a way!
My protective angel who got me through the city unharmed.
Blake, one of Craig Ott's students enjoyed the adventure.
Learners worked together to make regional plans to train more church planters.
On
March 24, I flew across Nepal and met up with my team mate Mark Wold in
Bagdogra, N. India. During our four-hour drive north to the Bhutan border, Sam
Sharma, our host and key leader of the movement, hit a pedestrian. An angry
crowd surrounded our car. We took him to see a doctor, fearful that he might have
internal injuries and die on the way. We prayed desperately. God answered. He
had surface wounds but no serious injury. We asked God to use Sam’s care and
witness to save this man as we went to bed for our first night in Jaigaon.
The
three following days, Mark Wold and I taught Level 2: Biblical Foundations for Building and Reproducing Healthy,
Transformational Churches – to help church planters plant churches that are
increasingly healthy & impactful and will reproduce.
The 39 men and women we trained were extremely eager to learn. They will now be passing on the training to the other pastors and leaders in their home regions. It is such a key crossroad, strategic area for training leaders – so close to the borders of Nepal, Sikkim, Bhutan, Assam, Bangladesh, China, and Myanmar. And they are drawing pastors, leaders and students from each of those areas, except China to date.
The 39 men and women we trained were extremely eager to learn. They will now be passing on the training to the other pastors and leaders in their home regions. It is such a key crossroad, strategic area for training leaders – so close to the borders of Nepal, Sikkim, Bhutan, Assam, Bangladesh, China, and Myanmar. And they are drawing pastors, leaders and students from each of those areas, except China to date.
The
last day we debriefed and strategized with the organizing team. They honored us by giving us gifts and invited us
to return next year for the Training of Trainers. We prayed with them for
wisdom to implement the strategic plans they have developed - teaching others
and forming their teams to reproduce healthy churches back in their home countries,
particularly in Bhutan, a creative access country.
The cake says 50 years of faithfulness. I told Sam I have been a Christian for 50 years and he surprised me with this. My testimony is 50 years of His faithfulness not mine. I don't deserve any recognition!
Young and old shared what God was teaching them.
There were solemn moments and joyful ones.
We
also went to visit the land on which they are preparing to build a new Bible
School. A week before we arrived, they had dug down 200 feet and reached very
clear water. The pump is working well.
This land, about 15 kms south of Jaigaon, will be the site of the new Bible School one day. The first step has been to drill a well and install a pump.
The funds ($500) given for this project will go toward the next step: a pump house. The pump needs to be protected from the elements and misuse by strangers.
This land, about 15 kms south of Jaigaon, will be the site of the new Bible School one day. The first step has been to drill a well and install a pump.
The funds ($500) given for this project will go toward the next step: a pump house. The pump needs to be protected from the elements and misuse by strangers.
(pump controls)
(goal shed)
Already on the land they have a goat
shed, some farming and a small structure that houses the control center for the
pump and provides shelter to the guard.
I am most thankful that our 4 hour ride back to
Bagdogra airport on Saturday was totally uneventful. We had a great driver who
is a Christian and we even stopped as a huge Indian elephant crossed the road
right behind us. Not these elephants! They were featured in the new Delhi airport.
I close with these pictures of one church planter's ministry in the mountains. They speak for themselves. What a privilege to partner with those who will pray for days and walk up mountains to take the gospel to those who haven't heard.
I close with these pictures of one church planter's ministry in the mountains. They speak for themselves. What a privilege to partner with those who will pray for days and walk up mountains to take the gospel to those who haven't heard.