• Our hope-filled future is bound up in sharing the story of Jesus, in discipling others, in bringing those disciples together into communities of believers, and in developing and releasing those believers to create other communities... till Jesus the King comes again!

Moving mountains

We as a global community of cross-cultural workers are committed to facilitating movements of disciples and churches among those who are lost.  As many writers have observed, church planting or church multiplication movements do not come about as a result of our efforts. They are first and foremost the work of God’s Spirit among a people group.

So, one of the primary means by which CP movements arise is by prayer – fervent, perseverant, and informed prayer on behalf of a people group where the number of believers is extremely minimal. 

It is prayer that is at the top of everyone’s list of CP movement characteristics.  However, two obstacles may keep us from this kind of movement prayer. 

The first obstacle is our desire to “do something”.  Prayer seems like such a passive activity in our minds. We want to be able to engage in some tangible work that would, in our minds, lead to a demonstration of God’s work among a people group.  And yet God calls us again and again to pray.

The second obstacle is a misplaced faith.  Jesus in Mark 11:22-24 says: “Whatever you ask in prayer, believe that you have received it, and it will be yours.”  Alistair Begg comments on this verse this way: “In this bold command, Jesus reminded His followers to trust God, because it is actually faith’s foundation in God that gives that faith significance.  We should not have faith in faith or faith in ourselves, but faith in God alone.”

Once again, we can be tripped up by our own desire to “do something” first, rather than putting our faith in God alone and letting Him direct our actions as He builds a movement among people groups.

Begg goes on to write: “When God is the object of our faith, we can have an audacious faith – a faith that believes the impossible to be possible with Him.  We can know that we are speaking to someone who is able to do far more than we can even imagine (Ephesians 3:20-210. Jesus essentially says to us, I want you to pray in a way that says you actually believe in a God who is too wise to make mistakes, who is too kind to be cruel, and who is too powerful to be subdued by the normal forces of the universe.”

As we look forward to 2023, let us ask God to give us this kind of audacious faith as we pray for CP movements among people groups across this world.

Lots of lessons to learn

All of us are deeply concerned by the ongoing conflict in Ukraine.  Several of our teams are actively involved in serving the many who have had to leave their homes and cross borders into other countries.  I would encourage all of us to continue “mightily” (as some saints would put it) in prayer for all those involved in or bearing the repercussions of this conflict. Our God is mighty to save and is able to redeem every situation for His glory.

My thought in this blog post is to reflect on the simple question: what can we learn at this point from all that has happened?

Two answers come quickly to mind, but you should feel free to add others.

One of the first lessons learned from my perspective is the incredible solidarity of the global Church.  The reports I have heard from several of our teams tells us of the amazing financial generosity of believers, but also the willingness to engage in serving others in very practical ways: housing, food, transportation, clothing, logistical and administrative help … to name just a few examples. This is a time when the global Church can stand together and tangibly demonstrate what it means to “love others as oneself”.

A second lesson learned is a bit more difficult.  The human heart is basically ruled by evil and selfishness, not by good.  This is not news to us as the prophets spoke of this at many points (Jeremiah 17:9). From our perspective, we can easily see how the evil heart of men & women is being lived out in this conflict.  However, the problem comes when we see that evil in others, but fail to see the depth of that same deceitfulness in our own hearts.  It’s probably why repentance is not a daily exercise of our hearts.

Yes, there are evil forces in this world; people and leaders who use their authority and influence for their own purposes.  Yet, those same roots of selfishness find root in our hearts and lives.  And that is why the psalmist cries out to God to search his heart and drive him back to the cross which stands his and our only sure hope and assurance of His forgiveness and grace (Psalm 139:23-24).

18 months

This month, we launch the 18-month challenge.

The challenge? To ask God, and work with all our strength and wisdom, to put workers on the ground in our two (2) global priority projects within 18 months.

These two global priority projects are each focused on an unreached people group with limited access to the Gospel.  One is in South Asia, the other in Chad.

In South Asia, over 150 million people have very limited access to the message of Christ.

In Chad, almost 60,000 people, in the specific people group on whom we are focusing, have no access to the Gospel with only one known Christian family among them.

When I read these figures, my thoughts turn to that passage in Luke 24:32 where the travellers on the way to Emmaus talk about their encounter with the resurrected Christ: “Did not our hearts burn within us while he talked to us on the road, while he opened to us the Scriptures?

I pray that we as a World Team Global community will be stirred to join in participating in this 18-month challenge.  It will only be by God’s grace and intervention that we will finally see workers on the ground in 18 months. However, God is calling us to participate in what He longs to do: to bring to Himself people from all nations, language groups and peoples.

Maybe your part to play will be prayer.  Maybe it will be sharing your networks of potential candidates.  Maybe it will be navigating interested people through the process.  

At the very least, I pray that your hearts will burn with the passion and vision to see these two people groups touched with the Gospel in the very near future!

Considering the STRATUS-Sphere

There is a new online global database which is worth a look.  It’s called STRATUS. Simply click on the word and the hyperlink will take you to the site.

As you consider the STRATUS-Sphere, you will quickly realize that among the top 30 locations [where access to the Gospel is limited and where spiritual investment is most needed] are two locations where we are committed, as a mission, to working in the future.

What the STRATUS-Sphere did for me is to re-ignite a heart commitment to pray for these two locations. Prayer is a guiding principle for us, that’s a given, but prayer is also our main access to the Father who opens doors and hearts that we could not open.

The STRATUS-Sphere also caused me to ask myself: what can I practically do to help put a team of workers on the ground among these two people groups?  I don’t have an answer to that question just yet, but it will be one of my prayer points in the coming weeks.  You might want to reflect on a similar question: What can you practically do to help put a team of workers on the ground?

The STRATUS-Sphere also caused me to wonder why I am not praying more often for the other locations which are in the top 30 locations in need of Gospel witness.  More about that later.

Might we not PRAY BIG for the peoples of these different countries where Gospel witness is so limited, that the light of Christ might shine among them?

Dependency is where it all starts

The Pray Big Initiative is meant to challenge each of us in the WT Global community to increased prayer for new workers.  We know, and we believe that it is ultimately God who raises up new workers.  He may use us in that process, but we are a dependent people.

I love the very first chapter title: Prayer is dependent, and Begg’s very first statement: “To pray is an admission and an expression of dependence.”  Dependency is where it all starts.

However, that’s where our struggle also starts.  In our devotional reading this morning, Rebecca and I came across this comment: “The thought that any fallen human being would be able to perform his or her way into acceptance with God has to be the most insane of all delusions. Yet we all tend to think that we are more righteous than we are, and when we think this, we have taken the first step to embracing the delusion that maybe we’re not so bad in God’s eyes after all.” 

Dependency strikes deep to our sense of self-sufficiency, our ‘competency’ to do the work to which the Lord has called us.  It’s not through mustering more prayer that more workers will join us.  Though, yes, we do need to pray more to the God of the harvest.  Our hope is in Him, and all our prayers are a humble expression of our worship and thanks, pleading with Him to be faithful to His promises.

Let’s pray together the prayer that Alistair Begg wrote at the end of that first chapter of Pray Big:

Father, thank you for the privilege of addressing you in this way.  Help me to remember that the Lord Jesus obtained this access for me through his death on the cross.  Please help me to remember that I am entirely dependent on the work of the Holy Spirit as I pray, and entirely dependent on you in my life in every way. Help me to learn to pray as I pray for Jesus’ sake. Amen.

Partnering Prayer

I read this post (How God is Teaching Me to Pray as I Raise Support) on a blog (https://supportraisingsolutions.org/) about partnership development and wanted to share it with our World Team Global community because of its emphasis on prayer for all aspects of life and ministry.  Hope it encourages your heart!

“Embarking on a season of raising support probably provides one of the best opportunities you will ever have to grow in your prayer life. 

  • You have a great need that is impossible to meet on your own. 
  • You are taking a leap into the unknown, with only your Father to catch you. 
  • You are daily involved in a sometimes tedious, sometimes hair raising task requiring humility, courage, and patience.

I predict that during support raising you will see flabbergasting reminders of God’s goodness and His ability to provide—along with frequent reminders of your own weakness. And on top of it all, you’re going to have a thousand questions—what to ask for, why God works the way He does, and how to approach Him—questions that can only be answered by pressing in. Please don’t let this season pass without taking up the challenge to really pray.

The most important lesson I’ve learned over the years is that I must remember to Whom I’m praying. This is key. Sometimes I’m tempted to pray like I’m rolling the dice and shouting, “Come on, big money!” Who am I approaching? My good, good Father. He called us to serve Him, and He has everything we need to obey Him. It never ceases to astonish me that my support goal is a light thing to the Lord (and would be even if I had to raise ten times as much)! The One who loves and provides for the sparrow also loves and provides for me.

With that firmly in mind, here are four ways God is teaching me to pray:

1. Honestly

What is it I am really asking God to do? Am I asking Him for that, or am I whittling my request down to make it somehow easier for Him to answer? While it can be helpful for my to-do list to break my big support goal down into small, achievable steps, I don’t need to likewise break my big prayer request into little chunks for God. The temptation to do so betrays a lurking suspicion in my heart—that my requests are beneath the Lord, or that asking for the whole need is too much for Him. 

Are you worrying, subconsciously, about offending Him? He knows your need and your heart, so spill it. If you know your motives are wrong, confess that and ask Him to change you, but at least be honest.

2. Fearlessly

Is it a big goal? Good, then you will absolutely know that it is beyond you! George Müller said, “The greatness of the sum required affords me a kind of secret joy; for the greater the difficulty to be overcome, the more will it be seen to the glory of God how much can be done by prayer and faith.” Pray in faith—pray for faith—and spend as much time thanking God for His provision as you spend asking Him to supply. When I can’t summon the faith to thank God expectantly for the future, at least I can thank Him for the past—after all, He has provided for me time and again!

3. Eternally

I must remind myself not to get so bogged down by dollars. Money, after all, is a human invention. The God I worship “owns the cattle on a thousand hills” (Psalm 50:10), and will certainly not withhold the resources I need to obey Him. Ask God to accomplish the bigger vision for your ministry. Then ask Him to provide anything you need for that to happen. Praying for the mission rather than the money is not only infinitely more significant, it engages in the spiritual battle raging all around. It also has a way of inspiring tenacity, reminding me of why I’m doing this in the first place. Money? That’s the easy part. 

4. Selflessly

Pray for your supporters, current and future. Pray that this adventure would stretch their faith too, and be just as much a divine appointment for them as for you. Over the years, we have watched as one supporter placed his trust in Christ for the first time and another sold his grand house to go into ministry himself. We have seen supporters battle cancer, Alzheimer’s, financial crises, and grief, and have heard their prayer requests for strength and courage. Praying for them is just as important as the “front lines” work of ministry we do from day to day. It is a privilege and an honor to call them our friends. I am learning (slowly, slowly) the very real beauty of support raising after decades spent doing it. The mission our family has pursued all these years is emphatically not ours alone—it is the vision and work of our entire team. These saints who sacrificially and generously give to keep us in ministry share in our reward; we owe them our gratitude and our faithful prayers. 

As you work to raise up a team who will then work to hold up your arms as you serve the King, don’t let the enemy convince you of the futility or the frustration of this task. Let this season be a rich time of training for your heart. “Draw near to God, and he will draw near to you” (James 4:8).”