2019-12-05T04:28:42+00:00

Gospel for Asia (GFA), Wills Point, Texas

It can be easy to over complicate what it means to serve God.

“It means moving to another country.”

“It means I have to minister full time.”

“It means I have to go to Bible college first.”

God certainly uses all those things and asks many people to do them. But those things in themselves aren’t where powerful ministry comes from—it is in obedience to God’s leading that the power rests. We expect serving God to be something grand or some huge act, but often powerful fruit for God’s kingdom is the result of a simple word spoken, a simple action carried out.

 “‘It’s not by might, nor by power, but by My Spirit,’ says the Lord of Hosts.” —Zechariah 4:6

Ramesh’s story is evidence of the simple power of an obedient servant to his Lord.

GFA Pastor, grocery shop - KP Yohanan - Gospel for Asia
Gospel for Asia-supported pastors have to grocery shop, too, yet their attentive hearts to God’s leading enables them to use even the ordinary tasks of life to impact lives for eternity.

‘Chance’ Meeting in the Market

Ramesh’s wife, Terti, wandered around the market. Colorful piles of fruits, vegetables, clothing and maybe even some jewelry covered the area.

A Gospel for Asia (GFA)-supported pastor also strolled through the market, and soon their paths crossed. They struck up a conversation, and Terti heard about the One who Pastor Kuplan served. The things she heard caused her ears to pique, and she soaked up everything Pastor Kuplan explained.

When Terti went home that day, what she tucked among her other treasures from the market was a piece of Gospel literature, while Pastor Kuplan went home with an invitation to visit the family and tell her husband the wonderful things he had told her about the God who died to save His children.

A Friend Like No Other

The next day, Terti and Ramesh welcomed Pastor Kuplan into their home. It was his first time he was able to freely and openly share about Christ in their village, and they paid close attention to him. Their desire to know this merciful Savior grew, and soon a prayer meeting started in their home. Pastor Kuplan helped them learn songs and Scripture verses, which God used to transform their hearts more and more.

Ramesh and Terti fell so in love with Christ they invited Him to make a home in their hearts. Their neighbors grew enraged at their decision and made life difficult—even destroying Ramesh’s crops—but nothing they could do would shake the resolve of the couple.

Although Ramesh and Terti have been shunned by their community, they experience the abiding presence of God in their lives, and they are learning the truth of the old song, “There’s not a friend like the lowly Jesus, no not one, no not one!”

discovered a love that prompted them to deny all to follow Christ - KP Yohannan - Gospel for Asia
After talking with a Gospel for Asia-supported pastor, Ramesh and Terti (pictured) discovered a love that prompted them to deny all to follow Christ.

Obedience to the Holy Spirit prompting us to do or say something to someone is critical in ministry.

It was a simple thing the pastor did, providing a fellow shopper with one of the pamphlets he kept in his pocket and answering her questions about Christ. But he could have hesitated, he could have busied himself with looking for a good onion or finding a better deal on rice. Instead, he chose to follow God’s prompting and trust that He would work good through the conversation. One simple act led to another, and now, there stands a family strong in their love for Jesus as evidence of the power of God!

In his blog, Dr. KP Yohannan writes more about being empowered by God to “do things that are otherwise impossible.” The key: being a partaker of God’s divine nature. Having the loving heart of Christ. When we partake of Christ’s nature, our hearts overflow with love toward Him and toward all those He loves. The result?

Once the divine nature overtook their lives, the Lord did amazing things through His disciples. It was not the disciples who did these things. It was God using them as His instruments to accomplish His purposes in His way.”

Let us be quick to follow the Lord’s prompting.

What simple thing is God asking you to do today? Whether it is to pray for someone, give someone a hug or gift, speak a word of truth to a total stranger, go into full-time ministry or make some other major life decision, obedience to the Lord will be worth it. Nothing is too large or too small to be used by God in a powerful way, when His power is the one behind it!

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2021-11-25T02:11:39+00:00

How worried would you be if your children had to walk two hours to and from school every morning and afternoon? Maybe you’d be concerned for their safety and well-being. That’s the case for many mothers and fathers in Asia.

Shamita had no other choice but to send her 16-year-old daughter, Sudipti, on foot to a school located more than four miles away from their rural village. Though Shamita herself worked as an uneducated daily wage laborer, she wanted her daughter to go to school.

Ever since Shamita’s husband died five years ago, life had been very difficult for her, and she struggled hard to care for her two children. Her only hope was that Sudipti’s education would make life better for them in the future.

But Sudipti had to get up early in the morning to make it to school on time. There were times when she ended up being late for class because her legs hurt so badly from all the walking. Sudipti wished so much to have a bicycle to ride to school, but she knew her mother, being a widow, could never afford to buy her one.

Yet God did not forget this poor widow’s family. When Gospel for Asia (GFA)-supported pastor Bhajan and his church from a neighboring community held a special gift distribution to needy families, Sudipti was chosen to receive a new bicycle. The young girl was so excited and grateful for this valuable gift.

“Now I won’t be late to school,” she said. “I am excited to ride my bike to school.”

Sudipti stands beside her new gift: a bicycle! - KP Yohannan - Gospel for Asia
Sudipti stands beside her new gift: a bicycle!

Moreover, because the bicycle saves her many hours of walking, she now has far more time to help her mother at home and take care of her younger sister.

When Pastor Bhajan and some believers visited this dear family, Shamita welcomed them gladly. She was so touched by what they shared with her about the love of Christ and by the kindness and help the church extended to her family.

“I knew that my daughter needed a bicycle,” Shamita said, “but I could not afford to buy a bicycle for her, as I hardly manage my daily needs. … You saw the need of my daughter and provided a bicycle for her; I am very happy.”

In a society where millions live far below the poverty line, people like Shamita struggle just to survive another day. They will take any job they can get or resort to begging to earn a few pennies to buy food for their families. Without the safety net of a welfare system, a parent’s sickness or death can plunge the family into further poverty or destitution.

How do gifts like a bicycle immensely help poor families achieve a better quality of life?

For many, it’s a game changer! Beyond helping children attend school, this simple but effective transportation opens up many new job opportunities:

  • A father can take a higher paying job in a place that is farther away,
  • A farmer can transport his produce to the market
  • A vendor can sell his goods from village to village
  • A launderer can expand his laundry service to new customers
  • A fisherman can sell his daily catch in town
  • A son or daughter can go to school or job training even if it’s more than four miles away from home.

Throughout the year, Gospel for Asia (GFA)-supported missionaries seek to help poor families in their communities by providing gifts that will enable them to earn a living. Bicycles are included in those gifts.

Gospel for Asia (GFA)supported workers see the needs of those around them and want to help in whatever ways they can. By giving away a gift like a bicycle, they’ve seen lives change in big and small ways—even if it’s just the joy on people’s faces when they realize how much they are looked after by the God who created them and loves them.

This is what motivates us to do what we do—to see people and communities transformed!

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For more blogs on Patheos from Gospel for Asia, go here.

To consider donating a bicycle to someone in need in Asia, go here.

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2019-12-05T04:50:52+00:00

Have you ever felt helpless? Rajasi, widow and mother of two, wanted to provide for her children, but she had no way to earn an income. She was completely dependent on her angered father-in-law for their future.

There appeared to be little hope for Rajasi’s dreams for her precious children to come true. But Rajasi was not helpless. She readily used the only tool she had: prayer.

Failing Kidneys, the Agony of Loss, and Blame

Even though Rajasi was only a young woman of 25, sorrow and difficulties were no strangers to her. Though her and her sickly husband Mahasvin, found Jesus at just the right time, life did not grow easier when they decided to follow Christ. In anger, Mahasvin’s father turned against them and began to oppose them.

But the words against them in anger did not stop them. Instead, Mahasvin and Rajasi grew strong in their faith. But Mahasvin’s health deteriorated quickly. His kidneys were failing. Rajasi listened closely as her dying husband shared his last requests with her: Never forsake Jesus, but go to church at any cost.

After Mahasvin’s death, Rajasi was heartbroken. She suffered through severe mental agony and pain. To make matters worse Rajasi’s relatives blamed her for the death of her husband. “All these [problems] happened in your life only because of your faith in Jesus,” they said.

These wounding words stung Rajasi’s lonely, grieving heart. But even though so many had forsaken her, Rajasi was not alone. Her church family stood with her during her bleak hours. They visited their sister in Christ and encouraged her to follow Jesus. Rajasi was strengthened by their words and upheld the plea of her husband to continue steadfast in the faith, even in the midst of opposition.

Worrying About Her Children’s Future 

After Mahasvin’s passing, Rajasi was completely dependent on the income of her father-in-law, Farhat, to meet her and her young children’s needs—but so was the rest of the family. He worked in a small grocery shop, and many of her relatives became dependent on the income Farhat brought in.

Rajasi grew concerned about her children. She wanted them to have a good education, but her father-in-law would not give her extra money to send them to a good school. This troubled her deeply. Rajasi brought her worries before the Lord and her church family. Together, they all prayed for her need.

An Answered Prayer 

By God’s grace, Rajasi’s prayer was answered through a Gospel for Asia (GFA)-supported gift distribution. On the happy distribution day Rajasi received a brand new sewing machine! The gift was such an incredible blessing in Rajasi’s life. She quickly got to work by setting up a personal tailoring shop.

Sewing machines help bring families out of poverty - KP Yohannan - Gospel for Asia
Sewing machines help bring families out of poverty.

Within a few months, Rajasi was doing so well and received such a good income that she was able to buy a second machine to expand her business. Rajasi found a good school for her beloved children and is able to provide for their future.

Rajasi, a despised widow, was given a precious gift that went far beyond a sewing machine. She was given dignity. Rajasi now has a way to provide for the future of her children from the labor of her hands.

Rajasi’s story is one we rejoice in. God knows the story of each precious life who receives a income-generating gift. The beautiful fruit is reason to praise the Lord for the compassion He has for the poor and the broken.

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2019-12-05T04:55:47+00:00

Bob Mayo went to be with the Lord on December 18, 2017. He served faithfully at Gospel for Asia for the past 21 years, and his passing leaves a hole in many of our hearts. Known to many around GFA as “Uncle Bob,” he was marked by his gentleness, his humility and by how much he loved others.

Bob Mayo - KP Yohannan - Gospel for Asia
Robert Mayo | April 16, 1947 – December 18, 2017

He is preceded in death by his dear wife, Alice, who passed away just before Christmas five years ago.

Throughout the years, Bob served in many aspects of Gospel for Asia’s ministry. He led the Missions Department and the Fulfillment Department at different times. He also served in Admissions in School of Discipleship, and taught several classes in the discipleship program. Most recently, he was a Ministry Partnerships representative. His hands have touched countless missionary profiles, linking them with sponsors around the world; he managed people and packages with both love and excellence; and he called, wrote letters to, prayed for and encouraged hundreds of donors and sponsors.

Bob impacted hundreds of Gospel for Asia staff over the years, too.

Uncle Bob - KP Yohannan - Gospel for Asia

Susanna, a Gospel for Asia staff member, shared her fondest memory of Uncle Bob: “Dear Uncle Bob, one of the most recent and fondest memories I have of you is when, a few months ago, after Tuesday prayer ended, my baby girl spotted you across the room and made a dash in your direction. She was determined. She very clearly needed a big bear hug from Uncle Bob. She was all smiles when you picked her up, and she happily stayed in your arms til we had to head home. I’m so thankful someone snapped a picture capturing this moment. You will be missed by many, because you loved many. Most of all, you showed us how to simply love the Lord. But we will see you again. And then we’ll never have to say goodbye.”

Jose and his family were next-door neighbors with Bob when they lived on Gospel for Asia’s campus. Bob fondly referred to Jose’s three young daughters as “his prairie pixies” and always enjoyed when they would stop by, play or share a meal.

“When we were next-door neighbors, my daughters, his ‘Prairie Pixies,’ would love to wait for Uncle Bob to arrive and take him dinner in exchange for a hug,” Jose said. “He learned to live to encourage others; even the middle of the busyness of life, Uncle Bob always had time for you.”

Danny Yohannan, vice president of Gospel for Asia, shared, “All of us have different memories and thoughts about Bob from over the years. The many years he was a part of our family and community means so much. My brother-in-law was recently sharing that often times when we pray, the Lord answers not in the way that we think would be best, but in the way that He knows is best. As many of us know, Bob had to say goodbye to his wife Alice many years ago. Although our hearts are sad right now, we can rejoice that Bob is now together with the Lord and with Alice, rejoicing in full health. Today, we can praise the Lord for our brother Bob who gave his life so that so many, whom he will now meet in eternity, could come to know Christ because of the part he played.”

Bob also led several vision tours to the mission field over the years.

Joy, one of his trip teammates, shared, “Several years ago, I had the privilege of visiting Asia in a staff group led by Bob, and I also worked with him some over the years, though not in the same department. I so appreciated his smile, his example of loving others and pouring into their lives, his love and faithful service for the Lord, and his openness and willingness to share what he’d learned in His walk with God.”

Alley, former Gospel for Asia staff member, shared in a Facebook post, “Gonna miss ya, Unca [sic] Bob Mayo… You made my time with GFA full of hugs and friendship. Thankful that we will meet again and that you are finally reunited with Alice and our Lord.”

Andrew, former Gospel for Asia New Zealand staff member, said, “Humble, gentle, kind, faithful. The list could go on of traits that you demonstrated in abundance, Uncle Bob Mayo. I never got to spend as much time with you as I’d have liked, but you sure left an impression on me in the little time we did share. You were and still are loved by many many people, and you will be greatly missed on this side of eternity. Enjoy your well-earned reward!”

Anna, former GFA staff member, calls herself an “adopted niece” of Uncle Bob’s. She shared, “We lost a beloved friend tonight, but he gained a crown. Love you, Uncle Bob. Being your adopted niece was the best. Give Jesus a big hug for me… and Aunt Alice, too. She’s been waiting for you.”

Several years ago, “Make Uncle Bob Happy Day” was initiated by GFA staff members, with the instructions that you were to tell Uncle Bob that he was ‘cute as a button.’ It started as part of an inside joke with one of the young people on staff, and it grew into a way for us all to let Uncle Bob know he was loved.

Bob Mayo and School of Discipleship Students - KP Yohannan - Gospel for Asia
Celebrating Bob’s birthday with Gospel for Asia School of Discipleship students in 2012.

Bob was a self-appointed Gospel for Asia historian, recording events and happenings, such as the arrival of new staff, marriages, babies, School of Discipleship classes, new relationships and other memorable occasions. He shared that log every year at GFA’s Watchnight Service, which takes place on New Year’s Eve. We enjoyed listening to those reflections on the year, laughing at Uncle Bob’s dry wit and what occasions “made it in” his list, and also praising the Lord for His faithfulness and answered prayers throughout the year.

Bob was an active member of Stonepoint Church in Wills Point, Texas, from the very start of Gospel for Asia’s move to East Texas. You couldn’t get in the doors at the 8:30 a.m. service without a hug from Bob.

After journaling his reflections of a few Sunday sermons on Facebook, the church asked him to start blogging on their website. Bob wrote more than 150 devotional blog posts.

He was also involved in a Bible study group called “Journey Group” that met weekly, as well as the Regeneration Ministry (Regen), a 12-step recovery program, that met every Monday night.

Betty Bachtel, who led Bob’s Journey Group with her husband Coach Mark, shared,

“[Bob] was a gentle giant; so loving. Coach was his Regen mentor. They spent lots of time together over coffee.

“Bob loves animals.  He always had to love on them before he ever came in the house for Journey Group. He would be sure to take pics of them, loved to go and feed the baby calves and the cows, and stopped to feed donkeys down the road from our house.  He especially loved our Pomeranian who passed away a while back.  He would get close to Bob sometimes and lay beside him in Journey Group.

“Bob always led the prayer at end of Journey Group. He would name each request and petition each one to the Lord.  And he always prayed for our daughter even though she might not be on the list that night.

“Bob enjoyed dining with us at Journey Group as well.  And always with dessert he would have his coffee.  His death has left a hole in our heart and an empty seat in our Journey Group family.  However, we will see him again one day. That’s a promise!!”

Uncle Bob will be missed, and we miss him already—but for more than his unending supply of chocolate, the Texas Pecan coffee he loved to share, or his big bear hugs. We will miss his example of walking with the Lord, learning from his wisdom, and knowing we were truly loved by him.

We want to leave a legacy like Uncle Bob. He ran the race well, and he ran it to the very end. He got to hear Jesus say, “Well done, good and faithful servant.” Now, he’s rejoicing in heaven with Auntie Alice. He is worshipping Jesus with other precious people he helped minister the love of Christ to.

If you knew and loved Bob too, please feel free to share your thoughts and memories in the comments below.

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2019-12-05T04:59:46+00:00

My favorite Christmas gift I have received is a small whisk, a little bigger than a pencil. My children bought it for me three years ago. It is perfect for whipping up a glaze for scones, which I make quite often. It is also useful for whisking just one egg for an egg wash. I love kitchen items as gifts because they are very useful but something I rarely splurge on for myself. They are a practical luxury. Do I need a pencil-sized whisk? Of course not. Do I use it often? You bet!

Giving thoughtful gifts is a genuine act of love. A gift that someone would use all the time but would not buy themselves is the best kind. Fulfilling a need shows care. Many items in Gospel for Asia Christmas Gift Catalog are practical luxuries: They are gifts that our partners on the field often make do without, but such gifts can be an everyday blessing.

Christmas Gift Distribution - KP Yohannan - Gospel for Asia

Bible-college students studying in the Himalayan mountains received winter clothing packets.
Many of these women are from poor backgrounds and came to Bible college without warm clothing.

 

Take the gift of a bicycle for a missionary who has been traveling on foot. He cares for multiple congregations; plus, he visits even more villages. He walks many miles every week just so he can be there for everyone. At the end of the day, he may get home just in time to tuck his children into bed—or not. With the gift of a bicycle, he may make it home in time for dinner with his family. He may be able to visit his congregations more frequently. He may be able to share with others the amazing gift of Christ Jesus! A bicycle may seem like a child’s gift to us, but for a missionary in Asia, it is a gift that will dramatically impact his daily life.

A few years ago, a group of women attending a Bible college on the slopes of the Himalayan mountains received such a gift. It is very cold year-round, but especially in the winter. Many of these women come from poor backgrounds and arrived at Bible college with very few possessions. It is common for women in Asia to not have the support of their families to attend Bible college. They are often expected to marry and help care for the family. Many are cast out of their families for following Jesus. In such cases, these women come to Bible college without much more than the clothes on their bodies and with no financial support. There receive no care packages from home with toothpaste, soap and homemade goodies.

In these situations, gifts are a very tangible way to show God’s love and provision. These Bible college students studying in the frigid Himalayas received winter clothing as part of a Christmas gift distribution. Rose, a first-year student, said, “I really did not have any warm clothes to wear in this winter season, but by God’s grace, I have received warm clothes. These warm clothes will surely help me in this cold season.”

I am grateful that we can give practical luxuries such as bicycles and winter clothing to those serving the Lord on the other side of the world. We can give simple gifts that do not cost much but that impact someone’s daily life as they reach out to those around them with the message of hope. We can enable missionaries and Bible college students to continue meeting with people in the cold months, instead of needing to stay indoors where it is warm. We can provide needed transportation for pastors to reach their congregations and minister to them.

Let’s thank God for the gifts He has blessed us with: the gifts of family, friends and Himself. Take a moment to remember simple, sweet gifts you have received from caring friends who knew just what you needed. And let us look to others and how we might bless them in tangible ways with the love of Christ this Christmas season.

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For more blogs on Patheos from Gospel for Asia, go here.

To see our Christmas catalog of gift for missionaries in Asia, go here.

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2017-12-21T15:57:15+00:00

Almost every year for the last 14 years, I have offered a 24-hour Advent retreat of silence during the first week of December. Advent, on the liturgical calendar, is the beginning of the church year that follows the life of Christ for 12 months. This retreat felt like a perfect way to begin centering the minds of Christ-followers and provide a decent antidote, if taken, to protect against the consumerism, the commercialism and the secularism of the world that surrounds us. It’s easy to be sucked into all that, if we’re not careful.

For me, the Advent retreat is always a gift of love. I generally come home after it ends, physically blasted from hauling and designing and interacting. Nothing in my home speaks of Christmas, and often, by early December here in Chicago, some early snow and dropping temperatures mean that the barrel by the mailbox, which I always decorate, including some message for passersby, will be frozen. This fall, corn shocks and wild grasses, dried allium heads and pumpkins and gourds and three signs proclaiming “Count Your Blessings” and “Give Thanks” adorned the barrel beneath the postal box. As I anticipated, two snowfalls have come this year, and the weather is 10 degrees outside. Everything is frozen, and I will have to carry buckets of boiling water across the street in order to dislodge the now rather sad-looking arrangement.

Retreat_praying - KP Yohannan - Gospel for Asia

This year, we held four (four!—what were we thinking?) 8-hour Advent retreats of silence in the 1920s restored barn-house of my daughter and son-in-law, Melissa and Doug Timberlake. Something about this place embraces people. It has been beautifully decorated with garage-sale finds. The high lofts (which are great for people to tuck into and to go deeply into silence) lift the eyes. There are all kinds of nooks and crannies where people can sit and be still, where they can follow the guided instructions we work hard to create, where they can pray and listen in the silence.

However, it takes about a month to hang Christmas decorations in this huge place. Since we are not going to a retreat center with paid staff—crews that set up and tear down and clean up after the retreatants leave—we are the ones on whom all this work lands (and more so, on my daughter, Melissa, and her family, since this is their home).

For our recent retreats, treats needed to be prepared and arranged on two coffee-and-tea bars, and a hot-chocolate center in the basement needed to be readied with homemade cookies (everything gluten-free due to guests’ dietary constraints), carafes to hold hot milk, and various kinds of powered chocolate to make the drinks.

The barn needed to be cleaned, stalls mucked—one horse and three sheep and a stall full of chickens all contributing to the task. Due to guests’ allergies, cats were stored in a room in the basement, and two Great Danes and an aging shih tzu named Supreme were temporarily kenneled at our home, some 50 minutes away, while two young-adult Timberlake grandchildren supervised this arrangement for the four days, two Thursdays and two Saturdays early in December.

Why go to all this trouble? (May I also mention that the fees for the retreat just barely covered the expenses.) It is worth the effort and the resulting fatigue when, as a retreat leader, you feel that movement of silence settle on the house and on those who are inhabiting it for eight hours, when people ooh-and-ahh about being quiet with so much surrounding beauty, when tears come due to the persuasion of the Holy Spirit and the power of the Scriptures and the chosen theme, and the reality settles in that we have so little time to simply be because of the cacophony and hurriedness of our modern living.

I went home after the first two retreats, sent the dogs back for four days before they returned again before the second stage of retreats, fought off a cold, slept for nine hours one night and took naps during the days but still felt that warm glow, which some have designated “helper’s high,” that I have felt after every Advent retreat I’ve ever offered. We may be tired from the effort, weary to the bone, but knowing that people have met with God, have heard Him speak, have faced some of their own personal dilemmas with a little more honesty due to the opportunity of uninterrupted self-reflection—that makes it all worth the time and energy and expense.

An interesting thing happened this year (perhaps it happens every year and I just noticed it more this year): I personally was deeply impacted by the Advent theme Melissa and I chose and our husbands, Doug and David, helped us develop. The theme was “Taking the High Road: The Courage to Choose Goodness in a Challenging World.” We had the opportunity to meditate on the meaning of goodness through August, September, October and November. David and I realized that we, in all our 57 years of marriage, had never heard a sermon series on the topic of what it means to be good or to serve a good God.

Our guided retreat program included quotes from religious thinkers. This one from Billy Graham struck me: “Man has two great spiritual needs. One is for forgiveness. The other is for goodness.” I deeply agree. And I have thought about this through these months.

The morning time of quiet began with a series of questions that encouraged an hour and a half of self-reflection. The theme Scripture started us: “Let us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up. Therefore, as we have opportunity, let us do good to all people, especially to those who belong to the family of believers” (Galatians 6:9–10, niv). Two pages of scriptures with the concept of good or goodness were provided for all to examine. We asked the retreatants to look back over their lives and think about the people who had impacted them with goodness and what, in particular, it was that those people had done. We provided them with two pages of synonyms for “good”: a list of adverbs (acceptability, adequately, all right, decently, nicely, satisfactorily, etc.); a list of nouns (benediction, benefit, boon, felicity, godsend, blessing, grace, mercy, favor, kindness, comfort, consolation, etc.); a list of adjectives (right, decent, ethical, honest, honorable, just, moral, righteous, straight, true, upright, virtuous, etc.). We gave them time to debrief as the group gathered together what thoughts had come to them, what the Holy Spirit might have whispered to them, what kept them from doing good, being good. We asked them to set goals to become people who thought good, spoke good and determined to be good. We gave them things to do in the afternoon—activities, but still conducted in silence.

We ate our meal in silence, together, but not talking. A small poem at each plate further focused our minds on the meaning of goodness. A handmade bookmark contained different Scripture verses, and a collage of dried leaves from Turtle Creek Acres, the name of the Timberlake barn-house with some 15 acres of protected marshland surrounding it, was an individual gift for all.

We included this intriguing poem puzzle. Read it slowly down the page, and when you are finished, read it slowly up the page.

Today is the absolute worst day ever
And don’t try to convince me that
There’s something good in everyday
Because, when you take a closer look,
This world is a pretty evil place.
Even if
Some goodness does shine through once in a while
Satisfaction and happiness don’t last.
And it’s not true that
It’s all in the mind and heart
Because
True happiness can be obtained
Only if one’s surroundings are good
It’s not true that good exists
I’m sure you can agree that
The reality
Creates
My attitude
It’s all beyond my control
And you’ll never in a million years hear me say that
Today was a good day.

By the time of our whole eight-hour day—arriving at 9 a.m., eating at 12:30, gathering at 4:00 for our last time of group debriefing, then concluding with an ending ceremony at 4:30, and saying goodbye at 5:00—we’d all had a full day. (“All of us” includes 44 retreatants, 4 leaders, 2 marvelous helpers and 1 musician—51 in all).

And most importantly, all of us, as testified by remarks at the door, left with minds surfeited with thoughts of goodness—its meanings, its capacities to work wholeness and health and beauty and reconciliation and redemption in the world. David has been writing letters to those people from our past life who influenced us in major ways for the good. We have a stack of red envelopes, some 30 of them, self-addressed by retreat guests, waiting for stamps: This an exercise of writing out those words we believe God might say to us—an assignment to help us experience “The Goodness of a Letter from God.” We will mail these back to the authors the week before Christmas.

We played the gospel-music song “Good, Good Father.”

David and I laid hands on each person at the end of the retreat and pronounced a blessing, “This is what your good, good Father says to you: ‘You are my beloved daughter [or son], in whom I am well pleased.’” People were powerfully moved. Tears flowed. We knew many of us had met with a good and loving God.

The last Advent retreat for 2017 was three days ago. I’ve slept and done the minimal things I need to do. Not one Christmas display has been put up in my house. The dining-room table with the white bisque angels set has not been laid with the holiday dishes. The lovely nativity I picked up in Alcala, Spain, has not taken its rightful place on the sideboard. The shepherd hooks will need to be pounded into the frozen ground so that lanterns will light the Christmas Eve path leading to our front door.

Nevertheless, I am celebrating Christmas in my heart. I have a good, good Father who teaches me to be good, instructs me when I forget to do good, inspires me by the example of others who are good, who sent His Son into the world—gave this extraordinary gift—so that we would know what good looks like and become like that good. As a gift, for the last 15 years, we’ve mounted an Advent retreat of Silence. And that’s a good thing. Because of all this inner work, we are going to have a good (perhaps undecorated) Christmas.

Remarkably, when I returned home, InterVarsity Press had sent me one of their just-released books as a Christmas gift, The Magnificent Story: Uncovering a Gospel of Beauty, Goodness & Truth by James Bryan Smith. One paragraph pierced my fatigue and the temptation to crankiness that accompanies the effects of overdoing: “‘Beauty,’ said Dallas Willard, ‘is goodness made manifest to our senses.’ What is goodness?  Goodness is that which works for the benefit or betterment of another. If, as [Thomas] Aquinas said, beauty is that which, when seen, pleases, then goodness is that which, when experienced, benefits. That which is good makes us better, heals us, restores us, improves us, strengthens us, and makes us right, perhaps when we were wrong.”

All through this 2017 season of offering Advent retreats, I had been receiving text messages from a high school friend I hadn’t seen in 30 years. Traditionally, one of the satisfactory acts for me at this time of year is to provide gifts for others in real need. There is so much abundance in our lives—just living together as a loving married couple; just being privileged to serve our God in full-time ministry—that David and I don’t give gifts to each other, but we try to be aware of those around us who have little, who have had losses they still grieve and who struggle to make it through the days. However, this Advent season, I was tight financially myself and admittedly dubious about the concerns my long-ago friend was texting to me.

For years she had served as a missionary to Romania, and she returned home to the States to retire, bringing a young teenager she had adopted while in her late 60’s. Some of the young men she had once mentored in faith were now encountering dreadful circumstances, were ill and destitute, had been beaten by bullies . . . Her texts indicated how frantic she had become for them.

Finally, a royalty check came my way, and I attempted to send an electronic gift per my friend’s instructions to me. The woman at the fund transfer counter was skeptical:  Did I know these people? she asked. No, I didn’t. She actually didn’t want to wire it; there were so many scams perpetrated by overseas hoaxes, particularly at this time of year. Not only was she practically refusing to service me, but this fund transfer group would not take my check, only a debit card, which David and I do not use. I had prayed about this need and was still confused about the legitimacy of the ask. But because I had told my friend I would wire funds—the whole of my small royalty—I procured her checking account numbers, went to a bank branch and sent the money on its way.

Word came back. A hospital bill was paid; medicine to combat pneumonia was procured; wood was purchased to heat a little cottage that had been made available; and a debt to a loan shark was paid off. Then another royalty check, a surprise, came in the mail, and I forwarded it, rescuing small children who had been taken as earnest against the loan shark’s loan. (Do these things really happen in the world? Apparently they do.)  The two little children were released. I went to bed for a couple of days (or at least dragged around the house).

But—with Advent in our hearts, and charity (one of those synonyms for the word good) activated, despite not one Christmas decoration being in place outside or inside, we are already having a good, good Christmas. (“Really, really, really,” as my five-year-old granddaughter says.)  Really. He is a good, good Father.

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2021-06-15T03:20:05+00:00

Schooling. Food. Clothing. An encouraging smile. These are simple ways of showing love to a child, but those simple gestures shape lives.

In God’s Church, generosity flows freely toward the hurting and sorrowful. We at Gospel for Asia (GFA) can testify to that. Tens of thousands of men and women and children of all ages in many countries freely give of their resources to help uplift the lives of people they love but have never met. Why? Because that’s the heart of the King we love.

Bridge of Hope, an afterschool tutoring program supported by Gospel for Asia (GFA), is currently giving more than 82,000 children those simple gestures of love. But it wouldn’t be possible without the prayers and support of the loving Body of Christ. Without them, stories like Kaling’s would be quite different.

82,000 children in Asia receiving help today through Bridge of Hope - KP Yohannan - Gospel for Asia
These are two of Asia’s children who live in a slum. We may not be able to change every difficult circumstance in their lives, but we can do something! We rejoice in 82,000 children in Asia receiving help today through Bridge of Hope.

Bitterness Becomes Gratitude

Dirty, tattered clothes hung loosely over Kaling’s malnourished frame—poverty marred his appearance in many ways. Yet Kaling felt even more forlorn on the inside than he looked outwardly: Bitterness and insecurity churned in his young heart.

Death took his father when Kaling was only 5 years old. With no father, the burden of providing for the family fell heavily on his mother’s shoulders. His mother, Nadia, decided the best thing for the family was to send Kaling to live with his grandmother while she and her other son worked as daily laborers in another state.

Kaling’s grandmother also lived in poverty, and she couldn’t provide for the young boy or fill the void after his family left him. Kaling felt lonely and longed to see his mother and brother, but they knew no other way. Although Nadia meant well, a tangled mass of bitterness festered within Kaling.

A Place of New Beginnings

Situations like Kaling’s are not unusual in many South Asian nations. Gospel for Asia (GFA) field correspondents have encountered many such desperate plights. When parents die young or leave to find work, the elderly and fragile are often charged with the responsibility of caring for young grandchildren.

Kaling, enrolled in GFA-supported Bridge of Hope - KP Yohannan - Gospel for Asia
When Kaling (pictured) enrolled in GFA-supported Bridge of Hope, his future changed completely.

That is one of the many reasons Gospel for Asia’s Bridge of Hope Program exists: to help care for children like Kaling who have next to nothing; to ease the burden of their loving but helpless caregivers.

One day, a team of staff members from a Gospel for Asia-supported Bridge of Hope center met Kaling. Touched by his sorrowful plight, they invited the unhappy 8-year-old boy to enroll in the center. His first day in Bridge of Hope, December 14, 2012, marked the start of a new life.

Outward changes appeared first. A new school uniform replaced his tattered clothes, and he was given a backpack full of school supplies. The nutritious meal he received each day at the center helped his underfed body grow stronger and enabled him to fight off illnesses.

With the tutoring Kaling received from the Bridge of Hope staff, he grew academically as well. He eagerly applied himself to his studies and to the extra activities at the center.

“The Bridge of Hope staff takes care of us as their own children,” Kaling shared. “I was unable to get a good education and live a regular life, but Bridge of Hope made impossible things possible for me.”

Kaling’s grandmother watched her grandson mature under the care of the Bridge of Hope staff. Thankfulness swelled in her heart toward all those who helped her grandson, and she learned it was because of Jesus’ love that Kaling received such blessings.

Growth Within

Through Bridge of Hope, Kaling gained skills that would help him break out of the cycle of poverty, and he also learned truths about the forgiving nature of God and saw it lived out in the staff. As he understood how forgiveness could transform his life, Kaling exchanged his insecurity and bitterness for confidence and thankfulness.

Although he was a young child, Kaling recognized the blessings of Bridge of Hope, and he found joy and comfort.

These children walk home after attending their Bridge of Hope center - KP Yohannan - Gospel for Asia
These children walk home after attending their Bridge of Hope center. On their backs are backpacks they received from Bridge of Hope, and in their hearts they carry hope for the days to come and joy for today.

As Danny Yohannan writes on Dr. KP Yohannan Metropolitan’s blog, “Thankfulness keeps our hearts from losing hope, and hope fuels our faith to believe God for the things He will do and the promises He has made.”

Daily Love from Caring Strangers

Even though his mother was still absent from his life and his father had died, Kaling received the love of other men and women whom he’s never met. Supporters of GFA’s Bridge of Hope Program and contributors toward GFA’s Unsponsored Children Fund make Kaling’s and 82,000 other children’s life-changing stories possible.

While the program is structured to be supported by monthly pledges, GFA’s Unsponsored Children’s Fund supplements the daily needs of the program. When Bridge of Hope staff members discover children in desperate need of help, this fund helps enable them to immediately assist that child, without waiting for another sponsor to pledge recurring support.

It’s remarkable. We may live thousands of miles away from a child in Nepal, Sri Lanka or some other Asian nation, yet through our prayers and financial support, we can help give them a hope for the future.

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2019-12-04T02:44:30+00:00

Gospel for Asia (GFA) News, Wills Point, Texas

There is nothing impossible with God.

Nothing.

This truly is an inspiring thought. But it is much more than a thought or word to keep us going—it is truth. Truth many impoverished people are getting the chance to witness in their own lives. Truth that was made evident in 33-year-old Pramesh’s life.

Pramesh’s family life was troubled. For 13 years he was possessed by an evil spirit, and his behavior changed. He couldn’t work to provide for his children and wife, which also meant they didn’t have enough money to pay for sacrifices so their god would heal him.

But “there is nothing too hard for the Lord Jesus.”

These very words of hope spoken by Gospel for Asia-supported pastor Haatim— words found in the nature of God, the worker of the impossible—gave Pramesh courage.

After seven months of prayer offered up by Pastor Haatim and the local believers, Pramesh was set free from the demonic powers. This miracle brought his entire family into the loving arms of Jesus.

The impossible did not stop here. Because of his healing, faith grew deep in Prameh’s heart, and he believed God could and would hear his prayers.

So Pramesh prayed for a fishing boat. Why not? If God could heal and deliver him, surely he could provide what he couldn’t. And a fishing boat would keep him from having to travel about 21 miles to find work as a daily laborer.

Pramesh prayed for a fishing boat - KP Yohannan - Gospel for Asia
Pramesh prayed for a fishing boat, and the Lord answered when He provided this fishing boat as part of a Gospel for Asia-supported Christmas gift distribution.

Pramesh knew God could perform miracles, and the Lord did not fail him. Pastor Haatim, through the help of people all across the glove, was able to provide Pramesh with a boat! This was the direct answer to Pramesh’s hopeful prayers. It is amazing how Pramesh’s livelihood was impacted through this gift. The fish he caught from fishing, he sold at the market, and whatever was leftover, he used to feed his family for the day.

With a grateful heart, Pramesh did not forget God’s faithfulness toward him and his family. From the very first profits he gained from his new boat, he offered a tithe to the Lord. He now testifies of God’s blessings, and all can plainly see the Lord’s glory revealed through his redeemed son.

fish with a new boat and earn profit - KP Yohannan - Gospel for Asia
Pramesh is able to fish with the boat he received and earn a profit.

God is the God of the impossible. He is the one who parted the Red Sea and raised Jesus from the dead. He is the One who spoke by the prophets and came as a humble baby. He is the One who lifted Pramesh from his desperate place and changed his poverty into abundance.

This Christmas, God is using men and women like you and me to uplift the lowly with our plenty. Being the hands and feet of Christ could mean something as simple as saying “yes.” Saying “yes” to provide someone on the other side of the world with a chance to know they are loved by God.

No Christmas gift is a mistake or a random-chance blessing. It is all orchestrated by the hands God. The Lord of love. The King of compassion and mercy.

So may we all cling to the God of the impossible and align ourselves with the heart and mind of Christ. May we have faith like Pramesh, believing God to do miracles. May we be open to being the hands and feet of the very One who died for the sake of mankind. The One who loves Pramesh and loves you.

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2019-11-29T07:59:33+00:00

Gospel for Asia (GFA) News, Wills Point, Texas

I hear the stories all the time. I work at a missions organization, so, of course, I’m aware of suffering children in Asia. Sometimes I pause and let it break my heart, but other times my mind glides over the words and tucks the story into a pile of “sad things” and moves on with my day.

But today I want to hear these stories with Jesus’ heart, to pause and take time to be there with these children, imagining they are my own. Listen to this little girl talk about her sister Lakshmi:

“My sister is 10 years old. Every morning at 7 she goes to the bonded labor man, and every night at 9 she comes home. He treats her badly. He hits her if he thinks she is working slowly, or if she talks to the other children, he yells at her.

I don’t care about school or playing. All I want is to bring my sister home from the bonded labor man. For 600 rupees I can bring her home—that is our only chance to get her back.

We don’t have 600 rupees…we will never have 600 rupees [the equivalent of U.S. $14].”

In another place in Asia, Neha and Prema shared a six-by-eight-feet hut with their parents and five other siblings. For a bathroom, they had to go to the railroad tracks—they had no alternatives to escape prying eyes. Their parents worked as garbage collectors, digging through people’s trash every day to look for anything they could sell or recycle. Prema and Neha often ended up helping their parents, hoping they could provide that little bit extra their family always needed.

Then there’s Sashmita and her family, who lost everything they had in a flood. Already poor, Sashmita’s parents struggled to get back on their feet and provide for their three children. After the flood, the family had to move, and they couldn’t afford to send Sashmita and her brothers to school for several years.

Children provided hope - KP Yohannan - Gospel for Asia
Children like these are being provided hope through the work of Gospel for Asia-supported Bridge of Hope.

Like many other families in Asia, all these children were stuck in a nearly unbreakable cycle. As poverty kept them from attending school, their chances for a good education—and to rise out of poverty—faded. Most likely, their children and grandchildren will inherit the same struggles.

Fortunately, for tens of thousands of children throughout Asia, this is no longer their story. The cycle of poverty is being halted at the first step: educating the children. For the more than 82,000 boys and girls enrolled in Bridge of Hope, a child sponsorship program supported by Gospel for Asia, poverty is no longer an obstacle to education.

Thousands of families have been transformed by the support they receive from the GFA community across the world to provide children in Asia with quality education and care. People from the U.S. to the U.K., from Canada to Finland, from South Korea to New Zealand and many other places around the globe are all fighting for the children of Asia to succeed. And they’re helping provide Bridge of Hope with the resources needed to ensure every child in the center—whether sponsored or not—is taken care. Because of this, we’re seeing boys and girls breaking free from the cycle that threatened to keep them stuck.

When Neha and Prema joined Bridge of Hope, their lives changed dramatically. After four years of support and education, they were able to build a three-bedroom home with an indoor bathroom for their family. Their next goal is to both become teachers to help other children in need, a goal that would have been impossible before Bridge of Hope.

For Sashmita, after enrolling in Bridge of Hope, she could return to school and receive the extra help she needed after missing so many years of education. This helped her family’s financial burden and enabled her brothers to return to school as well.

Children enrolled in Bridge of Hope are provided with school supplies they may not be able to afford and tutoring so they can excel in school. They are given a daily meal, relieving a burden for many families. They receive medical care and lessons about hygiene. Entire families and communities are impacted by the Bridge of Hope centers, freeing their children from the cycle of poverty.

It is a privilege for us to impact the lives of so many children across Asia. As Jesus said, “Let the little children come to Me and do not forbid them; for of such is the kingdom of heaven” (Matthew 19:14).

Hope and a flourishing future is the new inheritance for these children.

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2019-11-29T02:56:01+00:00

Gospel for Asia (GFA) News, Wills Point, Texas

Try to think of a gift you received five years ago. Can you think of one? If you remember one, it probably made a special impression on your heart. It was something meaningful.

But did it change your life or your family’s?

Ujala was in need of a gift like that, a gift that would drastically alter the course of his life.

Two Goats Provide Recurring Revenue

Sweating in the open fields every day wasn’t helping to get Ujala’s family out of poverty. It looked as though his five sons would have to follow the continuous cycle of harsh life and struggle. But Ujala had hope, and he prayed God would provide.

Ujala didn’t let their circumstance shake his devotion and love for Jesus. He firmly believed God would supply all their needs. Month followed after month, and their situation didn’t improve, but somehow, they always got by. Ujala faithfully continued meeting with other Christians to worship Jesus, and he worked hard to provide for his wife and sons. Although their financial situation was difficult—even pathetic at times—Ujala trusted Jesus.

He learned that, as Dr. K.P. Yohannan writes, “During chaos, confusion and uncertainty, we don’t have to lose hope.”

A Seventy-five Goat Increase

Ujala’s struggles did not go unnoticed. God moved in the heart of Gospel for Asia-supported pastor Patoj to help his friend. Patoj arranged for Ujala to receive a pair of goats during a Christmas gift distribution held at their church. Ujala received the gifts gratefully and took them home. This was just the beginning of his faith-filled prayers being answered.

God blessed his family through this simple pair of goats. Over the next five years, the goats multiplied again and again, and Ujala ended up with 75 goats! Ujala didn’t keep them all, however. He could sell one male goat for around $70, and he sold several to help his family.

Through this revenue, Ujala was able to send his children to school and even build a small house.

God answered this father’s prayer through a pair of goats. Gifts like this are made possible through GFA’s Christmas Gift Catalog. God honored Ujala’s faith and steadfast heart, and now Ujala and his sons have a brighter future!

raising goats - KP Yohannan - Gospel for Asia
Ujala received a pair of goats through Gospel for Asia’s Christmas Gift Catalog. After five years of raising his goats, his herd increased to 75 goats!

The gift Ujala received drastically changed his family. Years later, his day-to-day life was still affected by the generosity of people all across the globe whom he had never met—all because of love.

Gifts abound at Christmastime, some large and some small. There’s nothing wrong with giving someone a little trinket or a fun snack to show them we thought of them and love them; almost everyone enjoys those kind gestures—because it is the love behind the gift that means the very most. But love is even greater revealed through gifts that meet the current needs of those we care about.

For Ujala and his family, and for thousands of other families who receive gifts in the name of Love, knowing they are seen by God and His children brings bright hope into their situations. Whether the gift provides income, like Ujala’s goats did, or whether the gift is a cup of water given in Christ’s name, the possibilities of transformation are limitless.

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