Friday, March 7, 2014

Ministry Update

Here are two ways that we are sharing updates about the past year of personal ministry.

The first is an infographic of ministry activity in 2013.

 


The second is this 2.5 minute video clip which you can watch on YouTube by clicking here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vhH6TtM8bk8

When I especially think about the 170,051 airline miles flown this past year, I am so grateful for God's hand of protection and safety every step of the way. PTL!

Under His wings,

Jon Lewis

Monday, February 10, 2014

Cross-Cultural Class

Even though I never traveled more than a few miles from my home, I feel like the past few weeks have taken me around the world several times over. Why? Because I had my first experience of teaching a course on Cross-Cultural Ministry at Whitworth University. Every single day, during the three and half week period of Jan Term, I had the chance to share with seventeen students what God is doing to advance His Kingdom around the world.

As part of the Theology Department’s upper division offerings, TH317 or Cross-Cultural Ministry is an elective course designed to expose students to contemporary issues in global missions plus give an introduction to the cross-cultural understanding needed to effectively engage in ministry in a foreign context

It wasn’t too difficult picking the required reading for the course. First, my friend, Paul Borthwick’s brand new book, Western Christians in Global Mission was a must .Then I used David Livermore’s Cultural Intelligence as a great way of teaching how to adapt to cultural differences. Finally, Steve Corbett & Brian Fikkert’s, classic When Helping Hurts was essential for teaching how to engage in ministry with true sensitivity especially for those of us from America.

To add a little fun and break up the long, three-hour class sessions, we had a daily cross-cultural snack, curtsey of volunteers from among the students. Together, we enjoyed such things as Swedish rice pudding, home-made German soft pretzels, Indian dhal and Japanese seaweed wafers.  Speaking of food, Anita and I had the entire class over to our place for an Indonesian feast of nasi gorang, chicken sate with peanut sauce, and vegetable gado gado.

What has made this teaching experience the most meaningful of all for me was what the students produced as their final project. Asking them to dream up a brand new ministry in a foreign culture, I had each write their final paper in the form of a proposal for support from a church or foundation. Included in the submissions were plans for a rehab home in Ukraine for trafficked women, a counseling center in Japan to address teenage suicide and micro-enterprise in India using recycled saris. Not only were all the papers done well, but I believe many could easily become real-life ministries.


Will I teach again at Whitworth in the future?  It depends if I’m asked again, of course, and if I can fit it in to my existing overseas workshop schedule. But for now, I’ve found this experience to be both enjoyable, fulfilling and a great way to travel the world without having to get very far from home!

Saturday, December 7, 2013

Resource Development for Africa

The Lufthansa Senator Business Lounge at the Frankfurt airport feels a bit like a land in between realities. Whether I’m traveling to or from Africa, the few hours spent here always offer me a time to process where I’ve been and what to prepare for next. In this case, I’m on my way home from a week in Accra, Ghana, where among other things, I led a two day workshop on Biblical Stewardship and Resource Development.

The event was a leadership gathering of MANI – the African network focused on promoting a missions movement across the continent. Recognizing that they must learn new ways to fund and resource their ministries, this topic is of keen interest to African leaders today. So as I prepared to share with them, I worked hard at shaping the material so that it would be truly practical and applicable in an African context.

I had four key presuppositions:
  1. African ministries can no longer depend on 100% funding from the West
  2. Although West’s ability to contribute has greatly reduced, it still has much offer. But, it will take much greater understanding, wisdom and accountability to tap those funds.
  3. There is much more resource available locally in Africa than most might expect or believe.
  4. Learning to access funds either locally or from the West will take a whole new mindset about fundraising than what most African leaders have had in the past.
It was neat to see these thoughts strongly affirmed by the participants as well which, in turn, fueled their enthusiasm to learn all about a Theology of Stewardship which I proposed was foundational for this new fundraising mindset.  Thanks to some wonderful resources made available to me by my friends, Scott Rodin and Rob Martin, as well as a couple great Tim Keller sermons on radical generosity, I was able to explain how a paradigm of biblical stewardship totally changes the way we should think about fundraising for missions. Here are a couple of the PowerPoint slides that generated a lot of interesting discussion.


The second day was focused on as much practical advice as I could think of that would help my African friends promote their ministries among local communities and churches. We covered such topics as how to craft a compelling case statement, how to present PowerPoint with most impact, how to build an effective, portable display, and how to build a successful website. I tried to illustrate each point with a bunch of cool tech gadgets, such as mini LED projectors, Bluetooth micro speakers, presentation remote controls, simple digital HD cameras and even a half-size portable display. I guess I was successful in demonstrating their effectiveness, because I’m returning home without a single one of those items having sold everything to folks wanting to implement their use right away!


So, as I munch on piece of German swartz brot (black bread) with cucumber and tomato here in the Lufthansa lounge, I feel really good about this past week in Ghana.  I think it is a true indication that African ministry leaders are ready to take on new responsibility for resourcing their mission outreach and not only look to the West for their funding. 

And if that’s true, I just may find that this workshop could be in demand again sometime in the not too distant future!

Sunday, November 24, 2013

More eBook Christmas Stories

A few days ago, I announced on Facebook that I had just added four more Christmas stories to the Amazon Kindle marketplace making a total of eight short eBooks I now have available for sale. 


These are all part of a tradition I started years ago of reading a short story to my family every Christmas Eve. Although all of them have a theme linking them to Christmas, many were inspired by travel to other countries for visits with national ministry leaders. Here’s a bit of background on some of the latest stories I just uploaded to Amazon:

The Forbidden Christmas  The setting for this story is Timbuktu, Mali, site of one of the ancient Islamic university centers of the 1500’s. I've had a chance to visit Timbuktu on multiple occasions both while working with MAF and Partners International. My good friend, Pastor Nouh, gave me the official tour of the city, including a visit to the famous Sankore Mosque and a camel ride out into the surrounding desert. Unfortunately, Timbuktu has been the center of horrific rebel fighting during the past two years which has forced the evacuation of most Christians from the region.

The Christmas Card  Years ago, MAF was exploring how it might be able to start a flight program and possibly a radio communication service in the country of Kazakhstan. As the VP of Research back then, I was sent to check it out. Accompanied by John Charlier, we traveled from the capital, Almaty, all the way across the country to the fascinating cities of Actau and Atyrau, both on the Caspian Sea. Although our interviews with government officials didn't produce any new possibilities for MAF, it certainly gave me plenty of ideas for writing this Christmas story.

Bread Upon the Waters  My friend, Maher Fouad, founder of the Arab World Evangelical Ministers Association in Cairo, Egypt, was the reason for my visit to that city a number of years ago. Not only did we spend plenty of time discussing the challenges of mobilizing Arab church-planters across North Africa and the Middle East, but he also graciously arranged for a tour of the pyramids and the Cairo Museum. It didn't take long to dream up a Christmas story based on the sights and sounds of that ancient city.

Sorry – no cool mission trip connection on this story. It just happens to be the second one I ever wrote dating back to 1993.

The other four eBooks I have on Amazon are:


Hope you might have as much fun sharing some of these stores with your family has I have had reading them to mine.

Monday, November 11, 2013

More Than Maps

What would you guess an organization like Global Mapping International (GMI) is mostly involved with?

If your answer is “mapping,” guess again!

I have just returned from my first experience of acting as chairman for a GMI board meeting and I’m amazed and impressed at some of the new ventures the dedicated staff of GMI have produced in the past six months. With Jon Hirst completing his first full year as CEO, it is obvious his vision that GMI become a strategic source of information that helps mission leaders make informed decisions is really starting to take off.  That’s why Jon has been steering GMI beyond mapping to do things like mission research and then present results in creative digital and print publications.  Here are three recent examples we were shown during our meetings:

  1. 1.       Mission CEO Survey 2013: Navigating Global Currents – a research project commissioned by Missio Nexus that involved interviewing CEOs from 150 different organizations to understand the trends they are facing as global mission leaders.
  2. 2.       Agency Web Review 2013 – A comprehensive study of how well US mission websites are being used to attract and accommodate new missionary staff candidates.
  3. 3.       India Decision Makers Research – A special study to learn how decision-making is done among leaders of key Indian mission organizations. Already this report is reshaping how GMI is preparing resources to equip Indian mission leaders of tomorrow.

The GMI website will soon have information on where and how to download all these reports. (www.GMI.org)

If that isn’t impressive enough, another very cool venture of GMI is launching Missiographics: eye-openning infographics telling the story of global mission. Using its own team of experienced mission/mapping technicians along with a cadre of young local graphic designers, GMI is attempting to crunch complex mission data into powerful one-page presentations that tell the story in a glance. You can actually sign-up to receive two of these missiographics each month—free!  (Learn more at http://www.gmi.org/missiographics.htm)  On top of that, GMI is now offering to produce custom-designed missiographics specifically for mission organizations to tell their story to friends and donors.

Besides board members with impressive credentials like Scott Moreau, professor of Intercultural Studies at Wheaton Grad School and Editor of the Evangelical Missions Quarterly, Greg Jensen – Microsoft Division Director for MS Office Applications on the Apple Mac, Joseph Vijayam – Founder of the multinational software company, Olive Technology, we were happy to welcome new board member, Timothy Beals. Tim is the president of CREDO Communications, a company that offers both publicist and publishing services to Christian authors. We’re all expecting that Tim will be able to help GMI significantly expand its own goals to publish and offer eBooks for the global mission community.


Who knows? With all these new resources, maybe GMI will finally inspire me to sit down and write that book on mission strategy I keep thinking about!

Friday, November 1, 2013

MozMed

One of the most significant ministries MAF is supporting here in northern Mozambique is a flying doctors service to rural clinics called MozMed. Comprised of a Dutch doctor, a Brazilian dentist, Mozambican nurses and, of course, American pilots, MozMed is a great example of global missions working together in partnership.

Dave LePoidevin in the MAF hangar
Although the country’s government has said no Mozambique citizen should ever be more than 50 kilometers from a health clinic, the fact is that is still far from reality. Clinics have yet to be built and the ones that have are seriously lacking in supplies and trained personnel.

Which is why MozMed was created.

Waiting patients at the Tupuita clinic 
When Dr. Pim (short for his real Dutch name) and MAF program manager, Dave LePoidevin got their heads together to do something about it, they targeted two communities seriously lacking in health care and worked out a way to fit a small medical team and their equipment into a six-place Cessna that could bring them to each place on a consistent monthly basis. I got a chance to visit one of them—a place called Tupuita right on the Mozambique coast along the Indian Ocean.  

Brazilian dentist, Ida, ready for another extraction
What’s really cool about Tupuita is that MozMed was able to get a nearby multi-national titanium mine to use their required social sector contribution as the source of funding for a brand new clinic desperately needed by the surrounding area. When we arrived, already a hundred patients filled the waiting area and the floor space around the clinic doorways. Ida, the Brazilian dentist, went right to work with her cool portable dentist chair checking out the first of many patients suffering from an abscessed tooth needing extraction. In the maternity area, midwives began examening the endless stream of local pregnant women usually facing one complication or another.

Meanwhile, Dr. Pim showed us how new medical technology is helping them do things never before possible at remote clinics such as this one. A small, battery-operated sonogram invented by the U.S. Army is now standard operating equipment for Tuptuita. And simple finger-prick blood tests can now give a quick, early-sign test for both malaria and HIV-AIDS without the need of microscopes or complex lab equipment.

“Despite our state-of-the-art facility and service,” Dr. Pim confesses, “we still find ourselves competing with the local witchdoctor as the first place people come to for medical help. The power of an animistic worldview is so strong in this culture that people simply can’t break away from tradition. Unfortunately, many children die from the witchdoctor’s fetish practices before we get a chance to see them. But slowly, as we share God’s love and provide consistent care with our medical service, we are seeing changed mindsets begin to happen.”

Dr. Pim with his cool portable sonagram
Without question, the potential MozMed radius of impact for both physical and spiritual transformation in northern Mozambique is huge. MAF has the ability to replicate this service to many other regions of the country. But the bad news is that family issues are forcing the departure of both Dr. Pim and Dr. Ida next August paralyzing this valuable community effort until new replacements can be found. “Everything is set up here ready to go,” says Ida. “We just need to find a doctor and dentist with vision to carry on what we have started. Can you please help us find such people?”

 So, how about it?  Got any names I could pass on to them out here in Mozambique?

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Colonial Comparison

The year was 1498. The Portuguese explorer, Vasco da Gama, had just anchored his caravella sailing ship in the sheltered waters of the inlet and was making his way in the longboat with a landing party to a rocky island that dominated the bay. Soon, he would meet the sultan of the island, a successful Arab trader by the name of Mussa Al Bique. At the moment they would meet, a new chapter of history would begin—one that would be dominated by Portuguese colonial presence in southeast Africa for several hundred years. Vasco da Gama would initiate that era by naming the island after his host, a name that Portugal would later call its new colony: Mozambique.

Dave Wunsch and I interview US and Brazilian missionaries
For the past several days, Dave Wunsch, VP Operations, and I have been here in the northern part of Mozambique continuing our job of helping MAF take a strategic look at its flight programs. Thanks to the hospitality of three dedicated MAF staff families based in the city of Nampula, we’re enjoying good fellowship, great meals and some amazing Indiana Jones-type Land Rover rides around town on roads that would belong better on a dirt-bike racing track. Our days have been filled with back-to-back interviews conducted with mission and national church leaders. As we ask questions and take copious notes, an interesting picture of this country is emerging.
Having just completed similar interviews in Angola, the other former Portuguese colony of southern Africa, I really expected to find similar conditions in Mozambique.  I couldn't have been more mistaken. Differences in tribal groups, geography and colonial history seem to have produced significant differences in how these two countries function today. Here are just two examples:

·         Because Angolans are deeply grateful for the national peace they've enjoyed since the end

of their civil war ten years ago, there is a unified sense of readiness to embrace progress in economy, technology and even in church collaboration. In contrast, Mozambicans seem stuck in a past paradigm of tribalism that is causing everything from business to church relations to be fragmented and frozen in tradition         .

·         In Angola, we were impressed with the maturity of national church leaders who have not only prioritized the importance of graduate level seminary education but are also actively engaged in church-planting outreach efforts among the remaining unreached people groups of their country. In Mozambique, some churches have produced prolific daughter missions in nearby villages, but we found none that were committed to a true missionary effort among the yet untouched tribal groups along the coast or in the far northwest. Additionally, we were told there were only two pastors who had completed a bachelor-level seminary degree in the entire northern region of the country.
Three little friends from a local orphanage

One thing that both countries share, however, is an incredibly strong influence of animism in their current cultures. It was interesting to find Angolan church leaders who really believed that one particular tribe’s witchcraft empowered them to swim underwater for over an hour without surfacing and ride crocodiles like horses. In Mozambique the power of fetish traditions and ancestor worship is not unlike that of Muslim cultures that prohibit family members from becoming a Christian and may even disown them if they do.

Interviewing one of the two church leaders in Nampula
who have graduated from seminary
 It will be an interesting challenge to see how MAF can best serve the mission and church community here in northern Mozambique. I hope by the time we wrap up this trip, we will have some new and creative ideas about how to answer that question.