Driven by a passion to serve people Jesus referred to as “the least of these,” in 1979, Dr. KP Yohannan led a group of prayer believers to establish Gospel for Asia with a vision to turn the passion into practice.
Putting Our Passion into Practice to Serve the Least of These
While millions of people in North America were consumed with the debut of the Dukes of Hazzard, the release of The Muppet Movie, the introduction of the McDonald’s Happy Meal, and things on a more significant scale such as the American hostage crisis in Iran, the search for the Unabomber, and the peace talks in Washington between Egypt’s Anwar Sadat and Israel’s Menachem Begin, a small group of Christians had been fasting and praying in Dallas. They were praying that the Lord would open the way for them to reach “the least of these” in ways that would improve their living conditions and demonstrate the love of Jesus to change their lives forever.
Who are “the least of these?” There is no simple definition and there are even theological debates on the subject. The Lord referred to them as the hungry, the thirsty, the poor, the sick, and the imprisoned. The answer boils down to this – God has always shown a special concern for the poor and needy, so it should come as no surprise that He expects us to do the same. This is not a matter for debate. It is an indicator of Christ-mindedness.
A native of South Asia, Dr. Yohannan has always been acutely aware of the presence and needs of those whom we could call “the least of the least,” “the poorest of the poor,” and those without access to the common necessities for healthy lives or to an awareness of the Gospel.
Dr. Yohannan also understood that the leadership of the emerging nations, many of which had endured the commercialization associated with the colonialization of the British Empire, were wary of outsiders and their agendas. His ground-breaking book, Revolution in World Missions, pointed to the necessity and marked the beginning of reaching, training, and equipping local believers within their native countries who could reach their own people with the love of Jesus.
One of the ways that Gospel for Asia’s national workers serve “the least of these” is by providing care for women, the objects of culturally-based rejection and scorn in much of South Asia.
Serving Women Who Need Training and Assistance
Serving women who need literacy or vocational training minister to the least of these.
In 2017, Gospel for Asia (GFA) and its worldwide affiliates working in 18 Asian nations empowered more than 350,000 women through various ministry efforts.
In some areas where GFA-supported workers minister, women especially have it difficult. Some silently suffer violence at the hands of their husbands, their close and distant relatives and even strangers who exploit and abuse them.
In 2017, to make a positive difference, Gospel for Asia (GFA) helped provided free health care training to 289,033 women. This training focused on teaching women the basics of how to care for themselves and their families. They also learned how to keep a safe and hygienic home for their families and how to take care of themselves while pregnant. In addition, GFA taught 50,624 women in rural villages how to read and write, which will safeguard them from being cheated at the market and from entering into exploitative and usurious agreements with lenders. Another 10,965 women received vocational training that will provide them with valuable skills to make an honest living.
But more than this, as women experience the love of fellow human beings who are willing to serve and minister to them, their understanding of their worth and value in society is elevated. GFA-supported workers treat each girl and woman they meet with respect. They speak words of life into the hearts of women who’ve silently suffered violence, letting them know they matter, they have value and they are loved — even if the rest of society doesn’t think so.
As Dr. KP Yohannan noted, “It’s heartbreaking to consider the unthinkable struggles so many women go through, many of them unseen by anyone else in the world. We want them to know that they are precious in God’s sight, that they have unique value and worth as people created in His image, and that they are not forgotten.”
Providing Clean Drinking Water to Those Using Contaminated Sources
Another problem that plagues around two billion people worldwide – both women and men – is drinking water from stagnant ponds or water sources contaminated with feces. It is estimated that 502,000 deaths are caused each year by diseases, such as diarrhea, cholera, dysentery, typhoid, and polio, which are transmitted through contaminated water.
Providing clean water serves the least of these who are getting sick from contaminated water sources.
To meet the critical need for water in some of the neediest regions across Asia, GFA has spearheaded the “Jesus Well” project. In 2017 alone, Gospel for Asia was able to help provide 4,673 wells. That’s 4,673 sources of clean, fresh drinking water. One well typically provides clean water for at least 300 people and can last up to 20 years. GFA supporters around the world have allowed the rate of installation of Jesus Wells to continue and remain consistent, with tens of thousands of wells installed in the past several years. The Jesus Well project is one of the largest clean water initiatives in the world.
In regions where water might be accessible, but it’s just not safe to drink, GFA-supported workers provide BioSand water filters. These simple structures — locally built from concrete, sand, and rocks — filter water to remove 98 percent of biological impurities, providing safer water for drinking and cooking. In 2017, GFA helped provided 11,324 BioSand water filters for families and individuals.
As critical as these needs are, they are just a sampling of all that God has done through GFA in 2017. Around 234,300 families received much-needed income-generating gifts. GFA-supported workers organized 1,245 medical camps in villages and remote communities. They also helped install 6,364 toilets in communities desperately in need of safe sanitation facilities—and so much more.
“These statistics serve as an aerial view of what God accomplished in one year throughout communities in Asia,” Dr. Yohannan said. “God has done so much through His servants, who are faithfully ministering to the poor, desperate and needy around them. We praise God for giving us the opportunity to join Him in his work, and we are deeply grateful for the love, prayers and sacrificial giving of our donors so others may experience the grace and mercy of Christ.”
To learn more about all that God accomplished in GFA, click here.
About Gospel for Asia
Gospel for Asia is a Christian organization deeply committed to seeing communities transformed through the love of Christ demonstrated in word and deed. GFA serves “the least of these” in Asia, often in places where no one else is serving, so they can experience the love of God for the first time.
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Last updated on: December 10, 2019 at 11:30 am By GFA Staff Writer
Gospel for Asia (GFA World), Wills Point, TX – Discussing miracles from the past and the present.
Each of the Gospels shares examples of the many miracles that Jesus did during His earthly ministry 2,000 years ago. Many of them involved healing people when there was no other hope of healing.
Though there are many accounts of Jesus offering healing to the blind, the lame and the deaf, John ends his Gospel account telling us that “Jesus did many other signs in the presence of His disciples, which are not written in this book” (John 20:30).
What is more, he tells us that there were “also many other things that Jesus did, which if they were written one by one, I suppose that even the world itself could not contain the books that would be written” (John 21:25).
Though Christ has returned to His Father in Heaven, His work on earth is not yet done. His mercy and grace are still extended to all who believe. His message is delivered by believers all around the globe. While many who read this have heard the Good News for most of our lives, that is not the case for some 2 billion people in developing nations. That doesn’t make sharing the Gospel impossible, but it can often make it difficult.
Nearly 40 years ago, Dr. K.P. Yohannan had spoken on behalf of indigenous ministry workers who are serving their communities in the name of Jesus and His love.
This article shares the story of three people, each one in the grips of debilitating illness, but were healed by miracles and came to know Jesus through national workers supported by GFA.
Aarav Begin to Believe Jesus Could Heal His Hand
Aarav “was the closest thing to a doctor that his village had.” He was a kind-hearted person who sought and brought medications to sick people in his village. Although he was not really a doctor, he knew many of them as he was their medical supply courier, so to speak.
Aarav became the patient in need one day when he developed a severe pain in his right hand. No matter what doctor he saw, no matter what medication he was given, nothing cured the chronic, worsening pain. During his six months of suffering, Aarav reached out to Rangan, a GFA-supported worker who lived in his village. As their relationship developed into friendship, Aarav began to attend services to learn more about Jesus and the eternal life He offers. Still, the pain was relentless.
Many Asian believers still experience miracles today.
One day during a worship service, Pastor Rangan shared a message from Mark 3:1–5 and Matthew 12:9–13. Aarav read the account of Jesus healing the man with the withered hand, and the miraculous and awesome description of Jesus’s power sunk deep into his heart. Aarav began to believe Jesus could heal his hand, too.
It was only about an hour later that the pain in his hand completely disappeared. Arriving at home to learn that his wife had become ill with stomach pain, Aarav prayed and trusted the Lord to heal his wife’s affliction, which He did.
Using Pastor Rangan’s faithful witness, the Lord was able to demonstrate His mercy, His grace and His healing power, as only He is able to do.
The Sorcerer Did Not Come for Harda, But a Missionary Prayed for a Miracle
Harda is a good name for a hard man. He was a man who trusted very few people other than a local sorcerer. Among those people he did not like was Mayil, a GFA-supported woman missionary.
When the sorcerer didn’t show up, Harda turn to a missionary for prayer and a miracle.
Mayil, however, was kind to Harda and all of the other villagers as she taught both school and Bible lessons to the children in the community. Nonetheless, Harda continued to view Mayil with disdain—until he developed a painful boil on his leg.
Harda sent for the sorcerer to heal his wound. An entire month passed, but the sorcerer never came. Unable to endure the pain any longer, he turned to the national worker whom he respected for her kindness, even though he was skeptical of her.
Mayil prayed to the Lord to heal Harda. As she prayed, he began to cry. Mayil told him that the Lord was touching his heart and was beginning to heal his leg. Following three days of praying, Harda began to walk again!
Not only did Harda trust the Lord, but so did his entire family. They had witnessed the miracle firsthand.
When his friends began to ridicule him, Harda boldly said, “When I was in need of help, nobody came to me. Now I am healed in Jesus. So, this is my personal decision to [follow] Christ!” Now, because of Mayil’s ministry and Harda’s healing, many of those who had berated him have freely come to follow Christ as well.
Which Doctor Can Heal the Witch Doctor?
Smita had been raised in the home of a sorcerer, and she desired to follow in his footsteps. She was not only attracted to the black arts, she practiced them in her village for many years and eventually became a witch doctor. Then one day she discovered that even witch doctors can become sick beyond their own ability or the abilities of any other witch doctors to cure.
Shameena, a GFA-supported worker, eventually met Smita and her family. What Shameena witnessed was someone who needed healing and eternal life offered by Christ. The national worker gathered several other believers together to pray for Smita. Shameena explained the Good News of Christ’s love and how He could rescue her from her condition.
Shameena recognized her need for Jesus and said, “I want to welcome Him in my life.”
Today, Shameena is a faithful follower of Jesus, attending church and telling others in her community about what Jesus did for her and how He can change their lives.
All Those Miracles Jesus Did, He Still Does
When John was concluding his Gospel, he explained why the miracles and healings were recorded as they were. “These are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that believing you may have life in His name” (John 20:31). Though He did many other things—more than all the books in the world could tell—John knew that what the Lord had led him to write was enough for anyone who read his Gospel to believe that Jesus is the Son of the Living God, that He is who He says He is.
In much the same manner, we lovingly share these three true stories with you so that you, too, would believe and have life in His name—and so that you, too, will go and tell others about Jesus just as these national workers and the ones who came to Christ as a result of their witness and prayers are doing.
Pray for those to whom they minister. Pray that they will open their hearts to the Word. Pray that they will believe that Jesus is the Son of the Living God and that they will welcome Him into their lives.
This is Ralph and Sandy. With joy and steadfast hearts, they serve Jesus together, allowing many around the world to hear about the love of Jesus.
Sandy, a behind-the-scenes missionary with GFA, shares her family’s journey through 20 years of dedicated service. Still today, she and her husband Ralph face the unfinished task together, all for the sake of Christ and His love.
Although my husband Ralph and I were both raised in Christian homes, we had become very disillusioned within the church. We felt there had to be more to the Christian life than works and the fear that we would never be good enough for Heaven. After much prayer and searching, we discovered three things that changed our lives: grace, Jesus and the Holy Spirit. We have not been the same since.
Desiring to Serve the Lord Together
In 1997, after my husband completed a degree in business information systems, it was apparent to Ralph and me that we needed to use this skill for God. But we had no idea how to even begin. All we knew was that we wanted to work together as a team for the Lord. We heard an advertisement on the radio about a national Christian job placement service that could help us. After applying for ministries all over the country and asking God to send us wherever He wanted, Gospel for Asia’s response was the only one we received.
We are probably one of the few couples on staff who had no prior knowledge of Gospel for Asia or national missionaries. When we found out we would need to raise support, it was very intimidating. But after reading Revolution in World Missions, we knew this was where God wanted us to serve and that He would provide.
God never ceased to amaze us and show us His faithfulness. Two weeks after returning home from our interview with Gospel for Asia, someone called us and wanted to buy our house. We had not advertised or listed it yet—we hadn’t even told anyone we were leaving! Now we had no place to live and still needed to raise our support goal. Then, in response to one of the support letters we mailed, a couple we had known only three months prior opened their home to us to live with them until our support was raised.
Dream Job or God’s Calling?
We had mailed letters and contacted everyone on our family list, our friend list, our acquaintance list and our friends-of-acquaintances list. Our support came in steadily for about five months and then seemed to dry up. Now we had to really put our faith out there.
I asked the Lord in my quiet time one morning to show us once again our calling and to do something to encourage our faith. I met a lady at the bank later that same day whom I had never seen or met before. After chatting, the lady asked a few questions, and I shared with her our calling to GFA. The lady said that the Lord had given her the gift of giving and she wanted to support us! For the past 20 years that we have served with GFA, she has supported us faithfully every month.
Ralph continued working at his job while we raised support. We were at 75 percent of our support goal when his company offered Ralph his dream job, as well as a huge raise in pay and grade level. There was a deadline to accept the job, and we didn’t have our support fully raised, so Ralph told me on Friday before the deadline to start looking for a place to live and settle down in again. That same afternoon we received a phone call from Brother K.P., the founder of GFA, informing us that a church we had never been to or contacted was going to support us for the exact amount we needed to bring our support goal to 100 percent. Talk about humbling!
The church we had been members of for 15 years wasn’t supporting us, so it blew us away that God would use a church body we had never met, to support us in this way. Once again, we were humbled by His faithfulness!
Now we continued on course, declined the job and were on our way to Texas! To think that God could use us to impact the world with Christ’s love was both exciting and fearful. Would we be good enough? Would we be spiritual enough?
Not a Matter of Being ‘Good Enough’
When we arrived in Texas, it was 110 degrees and everyone from GFA was there to help unload the truck. They actually thanked us for coming and for our hearts to serve the Lord and prayed for us! We quickly found out the answers to our anxious questions: It is not a matter of whether you are good enough or spiritual enough, but whether you are obedient to what He asks of you.
Prayer Always Comes First
Of everything we do at Gospel for Asia, prayer has impacted our lives the most. We pray as individuals, pray in the halls and offices and pray as a staff. No matter what is happening, prayer is what we do first. Ralph and I had never prayed together as a couple before coming to GFA. To this day it is still mind-boggling, humbling and overwhelming to think that the God of the universe bends His ear to hear our prayers..
I remember after we first got to GFA, I really messed up on a project and was crying as I told my leaders. I just knew in my heart that we would be asked to leave or, at the very least, get a heavy reprimand. After tearfully telling them what I had done, the first thing they said was, “Let’s pray about it.”
I thought they didn’t understand how critical this situation was and repeated what had happened. They said, “Let’s pray about it.” So, we did. Then I saw God turn the entire situation around and answer in such a way that had we done what was originally planned, it would have failed. He taught me that day to rely on His plan, not my own, and to always seek Him first!
The Privilege and the Challenge
Being called by God to serve at Gospel for Asia is a privilege. Unfortunately, some days it feels like it is just an ordinary job. It is difficult to stay in the battle day after day when it seems as though you have a target on your back for the enemy to mess with. Some days you can quickly lose focus on Who you are serving and then everything starts going downhill. Although you are working in a Christian environment, there is still the flesh to deal with.
At times like this, I have my rocks of remembrance of how God brought us here and the call He has placed on our lives. When I can “peel away the layers of the onion” and get down to the basic fact that God called me, not to what I want when I want it or how I want it, but to do it His way, then I can rest in Him.
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Last updated on: October 27, 2019 at 1:47 pm By GFA Staff Writer
Wills Point, Texas – GFA (Gospel for Asia) – Discussing where violence against women occurs worldwide, including violence against widows.
Widows in Meru, Kenya, Africa who have lost their husbands and have only themselves as a group to look after each other.
If a woman happens to escape the abuse so common in marriage, what happens to her once she is no longer married and becomes a widow? Does the violence against widows end?
Violence Against Widows
“Gulika’s life drastically changed the day her husband died. … Bearing the title ‘widow’ was a heavy weight to carry. The sharp, condemning words of the villagers stung Gulika’s already broken heart. Because of this, the pain of losing her husband increased all the more. It seemed that every time she stepped out of her home she wasn’t safe from their harsh criticism.
“The villagers believed Gulika was cursed. They were even afraid that if she passed them on the street, she would bring them bad luck. This shame and rejection, on top of the reality of her husband’s death, grew unbearable. Soon Gulika fell into deep emotional despair.”
Condemnation. Shame. Rejection.
Wearing a white sari symbolizes that a widow has lost all “color” from her life once her husband has died.
Gulika, like so many other widows in South Asia, incurred the blame for her husband’s death—even though he had died crossing railroad tracks as an oncoming train headed his way. But that didn’t matter. The cause of a husband’s death, no matter how arbitrary or natural, is blamed on the wife.
People believe the husband’s death came about because the wife is a curse, a bad omen. They may strip her of her jewelry, shave off her hair, and force her to wear a white-colored sari, signifying she no longer has any “color” and must spend the rest of her days on earth in mourning. Often, she’s cast out of the home, left with no property and no way to fend for herself. She no longer has any family unless she has dependent children. In order to survive, she may need to beg or turn her body over to prostitution.
There are more than 57 million widows in Asia—and it transcends ages and social statuses. A person can become a widow as young as 7 years old (depending on if they were forced into a child marriage) or can come from a wealthy, high-class family. But once a girl or a woman bears the name “widow,” who they were before no longer matters. They’re obligated to live out the rest of their lives forgotten, shamed and without any hope.
The cause of a husband’s death, no matter how arbitrary or natural, is blamed on the wife.
In an article published by National Geographic, journalist Cynthia Gorney was able to get an insider’s view on the plight of widows. In one interview, she noted the “fury” a social worker named Laxmi Gautam had when talking about the condition of widows:
“We asked whether Gautam had ever imagined what she would change if she were given the power to protect women from these kinds of indignities. As it turned out, she had. ‘I would remove the word ‘widow’ from the dictionary,’ she said. ‘As soon as a woman’s husband is gone, she gets this name. This word. And when it attaches, her life’s troubles start.’”
There are more than 57 million widows in Asia
When Will the Violence Against Widows End?
From one stage of life to the next, it would seem the women of Asia hardly get any reprieve from abuse and discrimination. Violence against women is “from the womb to the tomb,” as the old saying goes.
But in the midst of such gloom, Gospel for Asia—and other governmental and non-governmental organizations working on behalf of women’s rights in Asia—is seeing a new dawn rising for hundreds of thousands of women.
As women experience the love of fellow human beings who are willing to serve and minister to them, their understanding of their worth and value in society is elevated. Gospel for Asia-supported workers, including men, treat each girl and woman they meet with respect. They speak words of life into the hearts of women who’ve silently suffered violence, letting them know they matter, they are important, they are valuable, they are loved—even if the rest of society doesn’t believe so.
Remember Aamaal, the woman who tied a noose and was planning on hanging herself to escape her husband’s abuse? She didn’t jump. She didn’t kill herself. Instead, a relative offered her hope in the name of Jesus and led her to a compassionate GFA-supported pastor. Because of that, her life changed—and her husband experienced renewal too! He no longer drinks. He no longer beats his wife, and Aamaal is no longer living the life of an abused woman.
Geeta and her two young children rebuilt their lives after their abusive father left, through the support of their local church.
When Geeta’s abusive husband left her, she went from fear to despair—not relief. She faced pressure to sell her body as a prostitute, and she eventually started working as one. But one of her friends, a believer, knew there was a better way to live. She shared loving counsel with Geeta, something she had been searching for.
The hunger and poverty Geeta and her children faced remained a problem, however, until Geeta’s children were enrolled in a Gospel for Asia-supported Bridge of Hope center. The local church has also came alongside the family, helping them find a safer place to live and provided help and encouragement.
As GFA-supported workers lead their congregations to truly value women, whole portions of society are showing women respect they’ve never experienced before. Believers can be heard thanking God for their newborn baby girls. They educate their daughters to give them a future of their own. They refuse to receive dowry as a testimony to the love of Christ. And when their sisters in Christ become widows, they embrace and support them rather than reject them.
Gospel for Asia-supported Initiatives Helping to End Violence Against Widows, Women
Through various GFA-supported initiatives, girls and women have opportunities to reach heights they were once barred from reaching because of their gender.
Literacy Training is key for helping women and widows get back on their feet.
provides adult women with the opportunity to learn how to read and write—skills they never had the chance to learn, most likely because in the minds of many parents, a girl’s education is not worth investing in.
Health care seminars give women and widows practical training in personal hygiene.
is a child sponsorship program that helps keep young girls off the streets and provides them with an education—while teaching every student how boys and girls are created equal in God’s sight.
Vocational training and Income-generating gifts like sewing machines give widows practical skills to earn a living.
give impoverished women the ability to take care of themselves and their families if their husbands are struggling to provide, unemployed, or incapacitated due to alcohol or other addictions. Vocational training makes it possible for women to learn skills that will help them find good jobs—or even start their own business!
At the heart of many of these initiatives are GFA-supported women missionaries and Sisters of Compassion, specialized women missionaries. They stand beside and advocate for the rights of abused and neglected women. They show others how to love and care for the people around them, regardless of their gender. Through them—and the guidance and teaching of male pastors and missionaries who see each woman as precious, valuable and made in the image of Almighty God—violence against women is ending. Women are enjoying new life safe from hands that once sought to abuse them.
Sisters of Compassion help widows in need of support, encouragement or medical attention.
As for Geeta, she has a solid group of people who have stood with her through her hardships. We, too, can come alongside women like Geeta. Through our prayers and support of national workers, we take part in helping end the violence against women in Asia.
When we come alongside GFA-supported workers, we empower them to empower others. We have seen the fruit of these efforts over and over again, and by God’s grace, we will see more and more women set free—physically, emotionally and mentally—from the abuse and neglect they’ve known their entire lives.
For more on Patheos about violence against widows, their plight and need, go here.
This article originally appeared on gfa.org.
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Last updated on: December 11, 2019 at 4:52 am By GFA Staff Writer
At Gospel for Asia, we’ve been praying for the water crisis that’s been happening in South Africa. Sometimes I think about it a little more as I take a shower, drink a glass of clean water, or see the rain pouring down. Millions upon millions around the world are wondering where their next drink of water will come from.
Can you imagine waking up this morning at the crack of dawn to wait in line for the water truck to arrive? Maybe you have to dunk your bucket into a dirty old well, because it is your only source of water supply. Your children are getting sick often and you know the brown substance you’re drinking is not ideal. But you have no other choice.
Balab and the other Christians in his village had a problem of their own. They were banned from the public water source—a source that was already polluted and full of bad bacteria. If they needed to get water, they had to wake up early before the sun rose to avoid being beaten or abused. It was an ongoing struggle.
No More Morning Secrets
Before Balab, his wife and five children met Jesus, they were often sick. Malaria, typhoid and jaundice frequently plagued their family, and there seemed to be no end to it. Balab had to start selling his land, cattle and even trees to pay for doctor fees. As sicknesses continued, the bills did too, and eventually Balab had to take out loans from his friends and family members.
Poverty took hold of their lives in more ways than one. Balab and his family were poor in spirit and discouraged. Peace had left their home, and there seemed no hope of help for their family.
But one day, Gospel for Asia (GFA)-supported pastor Salm met Balab, and the two men began to talk. Over the course of their conversation, Balab shared with Pastor Salm about his family and their deep discouragement. Balab learned about the hope Salm had in God’s Word and listened to the pastor as he prayed for him and his family.
This is Gospel for Asia-supported pastor Salm and his family. God used him to speak hope into Balab’s life and to bring a Jesus Well for 150 villagers to use.
Pastor Salm visited Balab and his family once a week and saw with his own eyes the struggles they faced. The pastor earnestly prayed for them. Slowly he witnessed how the Lord answered his consistent prayers.
Balab and his family began to heal from their sicknesses, and joy entered their lives. Instead of sorrow, peace came into their home, and they began to go to church. They had experienced Jesus, and now nothing would take that hope away from them—not even opposition.
Rejection, Violence from the Community
When the villagers saw that Balab and his family had begun to follow Christ, they beat them and prohibited them from getting water from the village well or pond. Balab and his family had to wake up early in order to gather water without being harmed. If they didn’t secretly go to the forbidden well, they had to travel nearly a mile and a half to get water from the river.
Jesus Well Provides Safe Drinking Water, and Changes Attitudes Too
Pastor Salm saw this struggle, so he requested a Jesus Well to be drilled in this village. By God’s grace, a Jesus Well was installed, and the village had a new source of clean, safe drinking water for everyone to use. The villager’s hearts began to change toward the believers as they, too, pumped water from the new well.
We, the Gospel for Asia (GFA) community, find great joy in knowing pure water is being given to many villages around Asia! The need is vast, but we know change comes one step at a time. We praise the Lord for the work that has begun and will continue by His grace! And we continue to pray for those in South Africa and Asia who are still struggling without enough water. May the Lord hear our prayers and provide. In Jesus’ name. Amen.
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Last updated on: December 9, 2019 at 8:16 am By GFA Staff Writer
Gospel for Asia (GFA), Wills Point, Texas
Most of Israel’s existence has been spent surrounded by antagonistic countries both big and small. Whether in modern or biblical times, super powers like Egypt, Babylon, Assyria or Arab nations have threatened to wipe it out of existence. Or smaller harassment’s like Philistine giants, terrorist bombings and daily barrages of rockets threaten the lives of its people. Despite this, the people of Israel have almost always had a hope of a deliverer.
Like every nation, this hope is kindled whenever a new political party comes into power. The possibility for positive change and freedom from oppression entices the hopes and dreams of its people. Hope can easily interpret other changes as signs that deliverance may come. Take, for instance, the possibility of the U.S. embassy moving to Jerusalem. Could that be a sign that more positive things are still to come? Or what about the hope of years ago: Is this prophet going to deliver us from the Romans?
When something happens in any national capitol, people across the nation take notice. When events cause a stir in Jerusalem, the whole country looks expectantly. A number of years ago, about this time of year, a charismatic Jewish leader came to the city that carried with him the hopes of a greater Israel. Many Israelis crowded the streets to get a glimpse of him. This man brought new ideas to Israel, was ethically sound and confronted the old guard, which seemed powerless to help Israel. This man seemed to have all the promise of a revolutionary that would bring real change.
When the crowds flocked to see him, he was not in a motorcade or a limo. No. He was riding on a young donkey. He wasn’t a political activist wielding military power. He was a rabbi, who healed the sick and cast out demons. People waved palm branches—a symbol of Israeli nationalism—in excitement to welcome the Galilean, Jesus of Nazareth.
But how is it that within the span of a week, those very same people would crucify their hero? The last week of Jesus’s life is filled with drama: driving people from the Temple with a homemade whip, filling people’s hearts with powerful teaching, thwarting arrest, confounding his opposition with wisdom. All this back and forth … until one of His closest, most trusted disciples betrayed Him to death.
The people were desperately longing for a Messiah. He came. They killed Him. How could it happen? The people of Israel wanted their Messiah to do something He wasn’t intended to do and wanted Him to be something He was not supposed to be. Their agenda was not His agenda; they wanted Him to establish their earthly kingdom, but He came to establish a spiritual one—and they crucified Him because of it. As believers, we know ourselves to be God’s special people, His chosen ones, but so did Israel, and we can be just as susceptible to agendas that are contrary to God.
Competing Agendas
In our modern world, we thoroughly understand the idea of competing agendas. There is never enough time, energy, money, etc., to meet all the demands on our lives. Multi-tasking was once heralded as an ability that people had to master in order to succeed. “Work-life balance,” the ability to properly prioritize the demands between home and work, has surged in success literature as people climbing the corporate ladder burnout more often than not.
But even if we learn the secret of living a peaceful life within a world of constant bombardment, there is often a subtler competition of agendas that we don’t see happening. This competing agenda is the very thing that could move a nation to kill its long anticipated Savior. We long for our God to bless our lives so we can juggle everything that competes with Him for our time, energy and focus.
As we get sucked into prioritizing all these secular demands in our lives, we don’t see that keeping God in our lives has become only one of many priorities rather than the only priority. The Messiah as King of the Jews had become a means to a secular end for the people of Israel, not the end in itself. So in this last week of Jesus’ earthly life, they rejected Him. How do we keep from doing the same?
Breaking Free and the Bigger Picture
Have you ever noticed that the Gospels—and therefore, God—spend a disproportionate amount of time on the last week of Jesus’ life on earth? Despite this being just one week among an approximate 1,700 weeks of Jesus’ life, it takes up more than 25 percent of the Gospels. Should taking time to set this week apart each year and remembering Jesus be a priority for us?
Giving special attention to Holy Week has been the normal practice of the Church worldwide for centuries; only in recent decades has this practice faded. Like many churches from the Protestant, Catholic and Orthodox traditions, GFA and Believers Eastern Church follow the liturgical church calendar. Doing so helps us remember that we are primarily spiritual people following a Christ-centered agenda for our lives rather than a secular one. The subtlety of these pressures aren’t always obvious.
Having personally lived in multiple countries and cultures, I’ve found that each one is undergirded by a national rhythm created by its calendar and holidays. Take, for instance, the importance of holidays that shape our national identity. These not only remember those who gave their lives for our freedom, but the holidays themselves reinforce the cultural characteristics of our individual countries.
American culture is very celebratory over its soldiers and freedoms. We have holidays like Memorial Day, Veteran’s Day and the Fourth of July. The United Kingdom, on the other hand, is very solemn in its remembrances. For instance, it takes a minute of silence to remember those who died in the Great War at the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of November every Armistice Day. And then there is India, which is very proud of its ancient heritage, especially seen on its Republic Day, a day when the entire country takes part in a flag-hoisting ceremony after the prime minister hoists the Indian flag at 9 a.m.
Every year, our secular holidays and their cultural icons shape each culture and the attitudes of the people within them without their citizens even realizing it. They are an outside force that silently reinforces who we are, what we are like, and what we do as a culture, and we are completely unaware of their subtleties.
In the same way, the church calendar provides a framework for us as Christians to remember that we first and foremost are a spiritual people who are part of a heavenly culture rather than a secular one. If the church calendar becomes our dominant rhythm-maker for each year—rather than the secular calendar—we have an outside force working for us to remember that Christ is our only priority.
As I write this, we are in the end stages of the Church’s Lenten season, a season of fasting and turning away from secular agendas. I am more aware than I want to be that I have not eaten any cookies, cakes or ice cream; drank any pop; watched any movies, etc., since before Ash Wednesday (oh, so long ago!).
At the start of Lent, we’re filled with an anticipation of God using this special time in our lives to draw us nearer to Himself. After a week or two, the initial romance with fasting wears off as we find that part of us really wants that cookie! And the struggle for who reigns in us wages on. By this time, many of us are dominated by the desire for Lent to be over. No more anticipation, no more romance, no more battle…bring on the cookies!
How unspiritual of us? Maybe. But maybe that’s exactly the rhythm that this season is supposed to work in us. As fasting causes the season of Lent to drag on, the arrival of Palm Sunday is good news for multiple reasons. The quickly approaching end to my fasting increases my focus on and my excitement for Easter coming. Jesus is coming, and my time of fasting is coming to an end with Him!
I remember being in Asia for the entirety of one Lent. The tradition of Believers Eastern Church, like many Eastern churches, is to fast from meat during Lent. This was particularly difficult on one young seminary student. So, on the last night of Lent, he bought some fried chicken and stayed awake until midnight. After finishing his fasting prayer and giving thanks to the Lord, he devoured the whole box of chicken! He was so thankful for Easter coming!
Jesus asked if friends of the Bridegroom can fast when the Bridegroom is with them (see Mark 2:19)? When the resurrected Jesus arrives on Easter, we are commanded to end our fasting. We are not allowed to fast on Easter, not even to kneel in church! It’s time to embrace and celebrate Christ’s coming, death, resurrection and soon return!
Every year, this short season mirrors the bigger picture of our lives. We suffer and toil here in a world full of sin, temptation and suffering, longing for the day when Christ returns and brings freedom from the bondage of sin and this world. Also, we remove the aspect of choice that is involved with competing agendas. In following Lent, Palm Sunday, Holy Week and Easter, our lives are governed by something bigger than me, something that transcends the busyness of modern life.
Many Asian cultures are full of religious festivals that help center the lives of the people on God. When we remove the Christian calendar from the lives of new believers, there is a sense of loss. They have joy in Jesus, but when does that joy become tangible, when can they celebrate? Incorporating these powerful rhythms into the life of the Church not only makes the life of Jesus more tangible and relevant, but it helps shape their thinking about this world and the world to come. It helps remind them that they are governed by something that transcends their past life and secular world.
Preparing Our Hearts
As we reach Palm Sunday this year, we start a time of transition. As mentioned earlier, the Gospels give a disproportionate amount of attention to this last week of Jesus’ life. Jesus enters into Jerusalem; His death and Resurrection are almost here. Whether or not you observed Lent, can Sunday mark the beginning of the most important week of your year? Can we at least ask ourselves if we are so secularized by our competing agendas that we can’t make one week out of 52 all about Jesus?
It’s easy enough to find a simple reading plan for holy week online or in the back of many Bibles. We can read and meditate on what Jesus did each day of the week. Do you realize that the first act of Jesus when He was heralded as the Messiah was to re-establish the Temple of God as place of prayer for all nations (see Mark 11:17)? Maybe that’s a good place to start for us.
We can spend a bit more time each day meditating on Jesus, His life and His overcoming as recorded in Scripture. As a family or church, we can spend time worshiping together by following Christ’s life this week. On Maundy Thursday, we can take time to meditate on the Last Supper, Jesus’ agony in the Garden and His betrayal. I’m always struck by the loneliness of Jesus on this night, how none of His disciples could put Him first and how His Father was His only comfort as He wrestled against sin and temptation.
On Good Friday, can we take a special time of solemnness as we remember how Jesus hung on the cross, slowly dying after being brutally tortured? Growing up Roman Catholic, even as a child, I was required to fast during the hours that Jesus was on the cross. As an adult, setting aside those six hours from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. is so difficult. They drag on for so long, and when you realize that this whole amount of time Jesus spent crucified, it makes what He did all the more amazing.
All of this is to help us to celebrate the resurrection of Jesus Christ with the greatest joy possible when Easter Sunday finally arrives. We’ve prepared our hearts and minds and calendars for the coming of our King. We’ve broken free from the competing agendas to say “God only is my agenda and priority.”
Making It Real
Some of us from Gospel for Asia recently attended the two-year anniversary celebration of a church plant in Terrell, Texas. What struck me the most was how “incarnational” it was. The celebration was not behind closed doors; it was out in the street and parking lot. It was a community event filled with “tax collectors and sinners.” When Jesus came the first time, it wasn’t to spend it with those who didn’t need a physician, but with those who needed Him and would receive Him. The Gospel was preached at this church anniversary celebration, not by the most eloquent of speakers, but by someone who knew what they had been saved from and who exuded Christ’s love.
As we prepare for Christ to come, do we have a self-centered agenda or a Christ-centered agenda? We have the term “C and E” Christians, referring to people who only come to church on Christmas and Easter. I haven’t seen the statistics, but my guess is that the percentage of people who opt to come on these two days of the year are decreasing. Can we be like Jesus and go out and invite non-churched people to come with us?
On the mission field, the focus of Easter is celebrating Christ, but it’s done as a community event. Believers and missionaries from thousands of local parishes will be encouraging their surrounding communities to celebrate with them the life, death and resurrection of Christ. They have been praying for their neighbors and will be lovingly inviting them to celebrate Jesus with them next Easter Sunday. Can we follow their example?
A friend of mine and I are hoping to hand out Easter gospel tracts next week. Being an introvert, I cringe every time I step out of my car with tracts in hand. But I know Jesus loves the people around me, and His agenda for their salvation is more important than my agenda to do something that benefits me or provides me the comfort of not having to talk to people I don’t know.
Whatever my personal priorities for my life are, there is one priority that rises above them all, and rightfully so. This week is the perfect time for us to crucify the busyness agendas that would seek to compete with Jesus in our lives, and to let how we spend our time, how we focus our minds and who we invite to worship Jesus with us say to God, “You are our only priority! You are our Messiah, our King. You and You alone. Deliver us from this world’s continuous bombardment of agendas that would seek to turn our eyes from You.”
Will you join us at Gospel for Asia (GFA) as we set apart this week for God? Start with Palm Sunday. Invite people to attend Easter Sunday service with you. And pray for our brothers and sisters on the mission field who are seeking to do the same. Happy Palm Sunday!
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Last updated on: December 6, 2019 at 2:13 pm By GFA Staff Writer
I brought my rubber garden clogs for this very reason.
I remember very well the warm, sweaty, sunny day I found myself on the other side of the world—in a slum in Asia.
The sights and smells of the slum we visited assaulted me at every step. As I walked through the mud, avoiding piles of trash and keeping a sharp eye out for mice, I was glad to be wearing my trusty rubber clogs. Our guide, Sanjeep, a Gospel for Asia (GFA)-supported missionary, lead us through a maze of leaning patchwork dwellings. We crossed active train tracks as trains screamed past us at a very uncomfortable proximity. We navigated around garbage heaps bigger than any city garbage dump I’ve seen.
This train speeds through the middle of the slum several times a day.
As we neared our destination, I watched Sanjeep disappear through the doorway of a corrugated metal structure slightly bigger than a shed. It was raised three feet above the ground on a foundation of mud and sand bags to avoid flooding in the monsoon season. I climbed up the mud steps to the opening and found myself in a cramped family dwelling. As my eyes adjusted to the darkness, I could see the inside was divided into two rooms by a half wall. One large bed took up most of the space in the front room.
Our host, Bharat, husband and father of the family who lived here, urged us all to sit. My husband, our guide Sanjeep, and Bharat’s wife and son all piled on the bed. I shared a plastic chair with Naya, a Sister of Compassion who had accompanied us. She and two other sisters lived and worked in this slum alongside Sanjeep.
Our host, Bharat, greeted us with a thousand-kilowatt smile. He did not speak English, but he communicated eager hospitality and excitement very clearly. As Sanjeep translated for him, Bharat asked if he could share how he came to know of Jesus. His face beamed with eagerness as he began.
With Bharat and his family
Bharat had been living in this slum for many years. He remembers when Sanjeep first came to this slum several years ago. Sanjeep had been sharing God’s love for several weeks and offered to pray for people’s needs. There was no interest, however, and many of the men in the slum threatened Sanjeep. He decided to visit another area in the city instead and left the slum.
But there was one man who had been impacted by Sanjeep’s offering of God’s love. At one point, he read a tract about Jesus and was overwhelmed with the love of God displayed through Him. Bharat was immediately transformed. He eagerly shared with his family, who also embraced the Lord’s love.
Bharat was so excited about the new life he had, he couldn’t help but tell others in the slum about Jesus’ great love. Many more people in the slum decided to follow the Lord, and more than 25 people began gathering together for prayer in Bharat’s home.
Gospel for Asia-supported Sisters of Compassion serving in the slum.
About a year later, Sanjeep came back to the slum he had been chased from. When he came, he was astonished to find Bharat was already gathering people into his home for prayer. That was the beginning of the church in this slum.
I sat spell bound by the amazing testimony of this brother. Through the power of God’s Word found in a tract, Bharat was transformed by Christ’s love, and a church was born from the passion of his heart.
As we picked our way back home, slipping through the mud, all I could see was the beaming faces of this family who had so little but were so rich. They were rich in gratitude, rich in hope and rich in faith. I took that gratitude, hope and faith home with me and continue to be inspired by it to this day.
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Last updated on: February 2, 2018 at 5:53 pm By Karen Mains
Rush University Hospital Chicago, IL
World Cancer Day 2018 By Karen Burton Mains
When our last-born child, Jeremy, was younger, he used to complain regularly about the privileges of his older brothers and sister.
“Why don’t I get to do all the things Randy and Joel and Melissa get to do,” he would whine—frequently. My reply always was, “Just wait. Just wait. When they all grow up and leave home, you will be older, then you will be able to do all the things that they all do.”
Of course, that parental prophecy came true. When the older siblings were in college, or getting married, moving to their own homes and entering their first jobs, Jeremy was the only child left with us—a teen home alone, a high-schooler, then a college student, and finally a young adult, and he got to do a whole lot of the things he had always wanted to do.
Early, Jeremy exemplified a cross-cultural curiosity. At 16, he decided to study Japanese, arranged for a tutor, then nagged us to let him go to Japan through the contacts of a mutual friend for a whole summer living with Christian Japanese folk we had never met. Striking a bargaining advantage, he insisted that a several-month-language-and-cultural plunge was exactly what he needed. Missionaries to Japan, whom I went to for advice as this plan was forming in Jeremy’s mind, counseled, “If you don’t let him do it now, he might not want to go later.”
So we did; we sent him off across the ocean to a country we had never visited to stay with hospitable people we had never met. He came home a changed, more mature and much, much less picky eater than the teenager we had sent off early that summer.
After Jeremy returned from Japan, he began studying Spanish. Again, a close friend and missionary in Mexico agreed to arrange for him to live in Mexico for the whole next summer. And that is what our son did. He lived in a mountain village somewhere in the state of Puebla, helping to build shelter for a widow. Then he contracted the mumps, which added a personal health experience to another three-month-long language-and-culture plunge.
Almost 40 years ago, we purposely moved from the city of Chicago, where we had planted an inter-racial church in 1967, to West Chicago, a suburb where the demographic was 60 percent Hispanic. In high school, distressed by the prejudice against this immigrant community, Jeremy designed a social studies project where he interviewed his classmates regarding their assumptions about the Hispanic community and then interviewed his senior-class Mexican friends.
Despite the bias of white Americans, Jeremy discovered the Mexican immigrant community worked hard (some of his young Mexican friends held down two or three part-time jobs to help their families), held to high family values and wanted to be successful American citizens.
Jeremy arranged for a social in the basement of the nearby Episcopal church that would mix the two groups. I, la madre, the head of the refreshment committee, was introduced to a novel idea—male “uncles,” who accompanied their nieces or god-daughters or young female friends of the family to these mixed socials. Mostly young men themselves, they were a formidable presence, as they sat at the edges of the room, arms crossed, observing the interactions of the young men and women (mostly the young men, I’m guessing).
To complete his ongoing one-man, cross-cultural project, Jeremy proudly was the only white classmate to accompany a Mexican friend during her traditional fiesta de quince años—more commonly known as a quinceañera—the celebration of a girl’s fifteenth birthday. Our whole life together with Jeremy, from that point on, was to be one long, extended, unending cultural plunge.
Jeremy, after graduating from college, eventually went to China as an English language teacher with ELIC, the English Language Institute China, at the Petroleum Institute in Nanchong, Sichuan Province. He stayed there for two years, then came home and began working as an immigration counselor for World Relief, the International refugee organization. After he met (and then married) his wife, Angela Kinder (who had received a master’s in teaching English as a Second Language), the two soon headed back to Dalian, China, working at the Technological Institute as English language specialists. By this time, our son was fluent in Mandarin.
While in college, Jeremy suggested we meet at the Art Institute of Chicago to view an exhibit of ancient Japanese kimonos. This privately guided gallery tour gave me a hint that my son was a compulsively curious scholar, a lifelong learner; did he learn all this and retain from those years in Japan? He knew the kinds and ages of the kimonos without looking at the plaques on the wall.
It was here I learned about the Edo period between 1603 and 1868, which was under the rule of the Tokagawa shogunate, the last military feudal government. I also received an additional short, though unasked-for briefing, on the demise of the samurai.
A typical Jeremy example: Before visiting him for a month in the middle of his two-year teaching stint in Nanchong, we were emailed a full reading list to study before embarking. The ones I remember are: The Gates of Heavenly Peace by Jonathan Spence, Life and Death in Shanghai by Nieng Chen, Rise and Fall of a Decadent City by Stella Dong, Red Star Over China by Edgar Snow, Wild Swans by Jung Chan, and Every Step a Lotus by Dorothy Ko. In all, there were about 12 books to gather. Not quite the equivalent of a college semester of learning, but close.
Before a Christmas holiday trip to Italy with Jeremy and my husband, David, I bought language-learning tapes just for the purpose of acquiring some tourist Italian. Of course, I learned nothing, but Jeremy with his excellent Spanish blew through our taped-language plunge; romance languages have commonalities. New idea for me at the time: Some people just have an uncanny and innate understanding of how languages (all languages) work, as well as an ear to hear; Jeremy, of course, conquered the tourist Italian.
David and I will always remember our son in Rome conversing in Spanish with South American immigrants, chatting in Mandarin on a train ride from Florence to Milan with Chinese garment-workers, and basically making our way across Italy with his just-learned-but-excellent functional Italian.
He was the consummate teacher: Want to know about the confusing Serbian/Croatian conflict? Ask Jer. What and where is Herzegovina? What is comprehensive immigration reform? Ask Jer. If there was time, you would receive a lecture on the topic, and if you were lucky, it would be accompanied by charts that would convince the most adamant law-and-order skeptic that the U.S. (during the years of the 20th and early 21st centuries, at least) had a Byzantine immigration system. He had the capacity to understand it all.
In May 2013, David and I were attending the International Council meeting of field directors for Medical Ambassadors International, a faith-based world health organization. I was a board director and David often accompanied me, using his pastoral gifts to encourage and affirm. We hadn’t been in California for more than a day and a half when Angela, our daughter-in-law, phoned to say that she had rushed Jeremy to the emergency room, where doctors had determined that, for some reason, his kidneys were failing.
He had seemed unusually tired that April, but I chalked it up to having multiple jobs and being an active father of three small children and sharing responsibilities with a working wife. Who wouldn’t be tired? Eventually, because of presenting symptoms of fatigue, stomach pain and swollen lymph nodes, he and Angela saw a general physician. The rest of us suspected mononucleosis. Why not? After all, one of his jobs was that of a language professor to students. Plenty of Epstein-Barr virus circulating around there.
However, when the general physician phoned Angela with an urgent message, saying the results of the blood work indicated Jeremy should be taken immediately to hospital, Jeremy had already been admitted, because his kidneys were shutting down, and he had a bowel blockage causing extreme pain. An early diagnosis indicated an acute form of a rare and aggressive lymphoma. Quickly, he was transferred to the oncology unit of Rush University Medical Center, a teaching and research hospital in downtown Chicago.
A dedicated team of oncologists at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, headed by Dr. Parmeswaran Venugopal, designed a strong course in chemotherapy and radiation with the accompanying pharmaceutical regime. Our son was young and healthy (once the kidney failure had been reversed). Plus, he was determined to live.
He loved his life as an immigration specialist, a college professor, as well as a freelancer illustrating rather boring corporate programs. He loved his wife Angela, who was the Director of Winfield Community Outreach, a faith-based community development service. He loved their three beautiful children: Eliana, 6; Nehemiah, 4; and baby Anelise, just 6 months old. Because of all this, there was a slim chance that Jeremy might beat the odds. We heard the hopefulness of this, didn’t really calculate the weight of negative data, and activated our prayer chain, which included hundreds of friends in many countries around the world. We chose to believe in healing.
So the team of oncologists designed treatments, the goal of which were to bring the active cancer into remission, keep the toxicity manageable and find a bone-marrow-transplant donor (Jeremy’s oldest brother, Randall, was a perfect match).
Jeremy did go into remission, which Dr. Vengugopal described as a miracle. But the treatment was so toxic to his system that he had no capabilities to fight off the highly contagious, antibiotic-resistant staph infection that leads to potentially killer infections: MRSA, or in medical terminology, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus.
As had been feared by his staff team, with no immune system to speak of, Jeremy succumbed to waves of illness. There was no opportunity for the blood-marrow transplant. Soon, because of the chemo toxicity, his mouth and face became paralyzed. He couldn’t eat and was fed through stomach tubes. His words were mumbled, and in truth, after the early chemotherapy treatments, for five months, at least to my viewpoint, there was not one day when he was better than the day before.
Looking back, I realize our son spent the last five months of his life going from debilitating physical crisis to demeaning physical incapability, longing to be home with his wife and three small children (and the two dogs)—on his own terms anyway, anyhow. This was not to be. There is no way to state this other than in stark terms: Our beautiful son, compassionate, eager and intellectual, died a gruesome death at the hands of cancer. I remember thinking, One day we will look back on this medical approach, like we do now at the practice of bloodletting, and think, “How primitive.” A genius Creator would not have designed a body without the capacity to activate its own healing systems.
Indeed, the leading edge of cancer-cure discovery is the use of the body’s own T cells, which can seek and destroy cancer cells, extracted from the patient’s own blood. Then, in the laboratory, the T cells are genetically modified to produce chimeric antigen receptors, which are grown in large numbers known as hyper-cancer warriors. They’re then infused back into the patient where they latch onto unique proteins in cancer cells, destroying them rapidly and in a way that trains the body to keep on treating itself, perhaps for a lifetime. But first, the right human protein-coding gene must be matched to the correct cancer in order to trail what works where and how; there are 19,000 to 20,000 of these protein-coding genes.
CAR T-cell therapy, and its stunning possibilities, is too early in its evolution to know the vast possibilities it offers, or what its many downsides might be, or where and for which cancers it can be applied. Genetic engineering is at the dawn of its own promising (and potentially frightening) future, and our knowledge of the gene is galloping wildly into that future with scientific discoveries almost too rapid to absorb. In fact, when I mentioned to my friend Dr. Roger Vieth, neurosurgeon outstanding and personal consultant to me on anything brain related, that I’d read Siddhartha Mukherjee’s masterwork The Gene, he responded, “That book was outdated before it was even published.”
Though I spent many nights on cots in many of Jeremy’s hospital rooms, monitoring the names of nurses and residents and fellows and aides, diverting attention from the constant tests and blood draws and the impossible difficulty of swallowing pills (even before his mouth became frozen, when kind nurses would crush all the tablets yet the taste was so bitter he had difficulty), the opportunity to talk significantly was slipping away. Asking, “How do you want to die?” and have a serious discussion as recommended by Dr. Atul Gawande in his book Being Mortal was snatched from us.
As a result of the early chemo rounds when an Amoyo Reservoir was implanted in his skull to enable the toxic intrathecal brain drips, a bilateral droop developed, paralyzing a side of his face and his mouth. It was an excruciating exercise to catch what my son was attempting to say since the consonants b, d, f, m, n, p, v and w were unpronounceable. Often Jer would press his lips together with his fingers to make the puffing effort for any of these sounds.
Yet before the paralysis went rampant and during the first weeks of chemo treatment and hospitalization, Jeremy, the consummate teacher—and a gifted one at that, according to students from as wide an expanse as Sichuan Province in China to the small liberal arts Christian college in the Midwest—determined the long hours spent on my shift would be devoted to catching me up on my woeful ignorance of popular music, or as he teasingly defined it, “That would be the last 50 years of cultural music history.” My father, after all, was the Director of the Music Department of Moody Bible Institute—hardly a bastion of popular culture. I was raised in a home where the emphasis was church music.
Jeremy kept records by printing pertinent ideas in small black notebooks, wrapped with elastic bands. So with his determination not to waste the hospital hours, still lying in bed, and with me, a captive student at hand, spending hours, sometimes day and all-night shifts, he introduced me to The American Idiom 101. The black books came out, then the iPod. It didn’t take me long to realize I was being privately tutored in a course in ethnomusicology.
Initially, ethnomusicology was the study anthropologists made of non-Western music and the cultures and environments and customs that gave rise to them, but eventually, attention was turned toward Western music as well. In short, it has been described as the study of “people-making music.” That is exactly what this son opened up for me—he helped me to understand contemporary popular music as a means to identify with the people who had either made or were making it. It was not a matter of preference—what I liked or didn’t like—but a matter of understanding the cultural and class and national milieus that bred these songs to life.
Hard rock—not my favorite musical genre—is one “art” form I have intentionally avoided in my seven decades of life. This was not to be, however, in the Hematology Ward of Rush University Hospital, Room 1121. We began with the song “Gimme Shelter,” originally recorded by the Rolling Stones in 1969. Snatches of lyrics are: “Oh, a storm is threatening/ My very life today/ War, children/ It’s just a shot away/ The world exploding…rape, murder, just a shot away/ Just a shot away…” Then we went onto the blues, to jazz forms, to funk, to hip-hop and rap, and to his love: Latin compositions. Out of regard to my motherly status, Jeremy always played the “clean versions.”
What I did come to suspect is that these songs are often eloquent laments in raw, offensive but also poignant street language about the fallen world. They are dirges, victory chants, laments.
Jeremy had many rooms on the oncology, hematology, critical-care and ICU floors. Through them all we watched the days turn to night, the seasons change from May’s high spring to October’s brilliant fall; we cheered the Blackhawks’ 2013 Stanley Cup win in the United Center just across the expressway. We took turns, doling out shifts to family and friends, making sure Jeremy was not alone in all those rooms on different floors in different wings of Rush University Hospital. Traffic patterns formed and reformed by day on the Eisenhower Expressway beneath us, just before it folded into the turn-off to Indiana/Wisconsin or dipped beneath Chicago streets to Lower Wacker Drive. Its vehicle-driven energy continued flowing through the mornings and afternoons and nights. So much to see, so much to talk about, so much to know, so much pain to absorb before that final day: November 5, 2013. Words, however, were no longer our métier.
Cancer shatters families. It lays waste to beautiful life. It does not discriminate between the good and the bad. (I personally felt there should be another kind of death lottery; one where only the evil and wicked and useless contact the disease.) The prayers of a thousand friends often do not eventuate the outcomes we seek. But I, 72 years old when our son died, never once shook my fist at God, nor did I question why. We have walked too many decades in this long faith direction to recant now. I concentrated, instead, on finding God in the hot cauldron of pain, in the numbing response to overloaded sensory systems, in refusing fear as we shuffled barefoot through the broken glass shards along the path that winds through the valley of the shadow of death.
Decades ago, when I asked a friend how she could bear the death of her beautiful daughter at age 24, she answered, “I decided that I would concentrate on giving thanks for the 24 years of life we had with her.” And so have I. And so have we. This holy harbinger given to me by a grieving mother stayed with me for 30 years. So too, we give thanks for every day of the cross-cultural journey with this son who was Jeremy Mains. (As have hundreds of immigrants, some of whom have gratefully told me, “He brought my whole family.”)
Phillip Yancey and his wife, Janet, have been friends for decades, but we haven’t seen them for years. Phil and I were in a writers’ group together. For most of his journalistic life, Yancey has focused on the problems of suffering and pain. Most of his books have been best-sellers, one of which was Disappointed With God. They were going to be in town. Would we have time to get together for dinner?
I realized after our wonderful evening of reconnecting that I hadn’t responded to their concerns about recovering from a son’s death in as succinct a way as I would have liked. So I wrote this letter, knowing it would force me to express myself better.
“The question I kept hearing in the back of my mind through the months of Jeremy’s dying was: Could I give up my son to One who had not refused to give His son to me? And so I gave this son up, sometimes every day of his dying, trusting in God’s perfect plan, be it life or death.
“The gift of that struggle, to submit to terrors unasked for, of bending the knee before crucifixions of surprising variety, of choosing to believe that God is in the midst of all the painful improbabilities, is the gift of love.
“A deep, deep attunement has come, to the world with its exquisite beauties and its terrifying sufferings. The results as the ancient writers often attested, the result is amor mundi: love for the world. As some saint once declared, ‘Hallelujah! All my gashes cry!’ I am being made alive with love in incomprehensible ways—love that suffers, love that rejoices, love that is there when I wake and work.
“This is a gift beyond my capabilities. It is the grace that can be given to those who pass through death here on this earth, yet live. Praise rises in my heart unaccountably—sweetness at the breathtaking beauty of it all, so fragile and so tenuous. A terrible tenderness swells in me beneath the watchful eye of a God I am humanly incapable of comprehending beyond my finite abilities. There are many things I do not know about this God I follow, but I do know He suffers for this broken and beautiful planet; and in some way, through the gift of this terrible tenderness, I have become a partner with Him in this suffering.”
Indeed, this suffering has made me one with all those who flee evil, with those facing the gun or the whip or the cage or the beheading sword. I, too, hold the broken body of the child some father carries, his mouth open with outrage before a photographer’s lens. I gasp at the little drowned body of a 3-year-old washed ashore on a beach—little refugee, little immigrant once carried in his mother’s arms.
Cancer has wantonly robbed us of one we treasure, his laughter, his voice on the phone, “Mom, it’s Jer.” And I thank God for the beauty of the 41 years of his life, and for the cultural plunge he took me on almost daily, and for the fact that from him I learned that all people are fascinating and not to be feared. Suffering has taught me to love—and to listen. I give thanks for this: A dying ethnomusicologist, this cross-cultural specialist, age 41, his mouth frozen closed by bi-polar paralysis (and eventually frozen open in death), nevertheless took his black notebook, his iPod and Pandora to introduce me to the voices of my culture, wailing and howling, defiant and demanding. I am hearing them, thanks to the hospital-room lessons and the consequent research since he has died, I am hearing them the way I believe God hears them—as human cries for the earth.
“And God so loved the world that He gave His only Son…” So I bow before the reality of amor mundi—always a pain-filled reality—and I grieve and enter into the pain. And I give thanks.
In the Critical Care Unit, as Jeremy was entering the last slumber before death, beyond the physical capacity of words, mouth open, a tracheotomy in his throat, tubes and monitors, physical depletion, the tortured remains of a body like the painting by Hans Holbein the Younger (Christ in the tomb), I held his hand and he squeezed my palm—one, two, three—one, two, three. I–love–you; I–love–you. That was the hand signal from all those hours seated in church pews. And that is the gift Jeremy Mains’ life and death—despite cancer’s victory—have left to me: love, this terrible tenderness. Amor mundi. Cancer’s victory is not such a great triumph after all.
Far off, distant, like a modern Bolero by Ravel, I can hear genetics inexorably advancing. Can you hear the march-step—fainter, then nearer, one day loud?
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For more blogs on Patheos by Karen Burton Mains, go here.
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Last updated on: December 6, 2019 at 2:04 pm By GFA Staff Writer
If the greatest misunderstanding about leprosy is believing that it is a highly contagious disease, the second is misunderstanding its pain.
In fact, leprosy is highly treatable and curable, and nerve damage can be entirely avoided. Early treatment, in other words, limits leprosy to a minor skin disease. Even in people with advanced stages of leprosy, the likelihood of others contracting the condition is minimal at best.
As to the matter of pain, the nature of the leprosy bacteria is that it seeks primarily the cooler parts of the human body: the skin and the extremities. Once there, it can cause unsightly discolored lesions and nerve damage. The nerve damage compounds the damage by making the injuries, bruises, cuts and sores imperceptible to the victim. That unrecognized damage leads to more sores and, often, the eventual loss of fingers and toes.
Like many other diseases, the longer the disease is untreated, the greater the internal pain. But that is not the worst pain someone infected with leprosy a bears.
Leprosy, in its various forms and manifestations, has been viewed as an abomination in every culture in which it exists for more than the millennia. The common fear of contagion and the response to the repulsion of the external damage have typically cut off people with leprosy from society to spend the rest of their lives dealing with the pain and misery of rejection, shame and loneliness.
The unrealistic perception of the otherwise healthy population imposes medically irrational isolation on victims of leprosy. The path to the pain of loneliness looks something like this:
Leprosy: The Path to Pain (GFA)
It is part of the human condition to fear the unknown – and to fear that which is not visually appealing. Leprosy presents both conditions. Therefore, the uniformed response is rejection at the family and communal levels.
The scope of rejection, in fact, goes far beyond, as evidenced by the fact that World Leprosy Day is necessary to raise awareness of the disease. Our human nature, left untransformed, doesn’t even want to think about it.
In some developing nations of Africa and Asia, the misunderstanding of leprosy runs deep. Most, but not all, cases of leprosy appear in the poorest of communities, so victims may already be objects of derision living in slums and already isolated from the community at large. But people with leprosy are rejected by their own equally impoverished families and friends.
“While this ancient disease may be largely forgotten in many parts of the world, it’s an everyday reality for many in Asia,” said Dr. KP Yohannan, Gospel for Asia founder.
Left to fend for themselves, they are relegated to leper colonies where they can be amongst “their own,” often without treatment and without apparent hope. This is the pain of leprosy. Life separated from family and former friends. Life where the other residents bear the same “shameful” marks and disease. Life where all you see is the unsightly and loathsome ravages that others don’t want to see. Life in the pain of despair.
Through national missionaries and aid workers, Gospel for Asia (GFA)-supported leprosy ministry provides practical relief services to these victims, including food distribution, medical aid, health and hygiene awareness programs, adult education and tuition centers for children.
The ministry also offers Sunday school and fellowship groups to those forced to live in leprosy colonies, giving sufferers the opportunity to hear about Jesus’ unconditional love for them.
During the week surrounding World Leprosy Day, Gospel for Asia (GFA)-supported missionaries demonstrate Christ’s love through special one-day programs. Beyond their routine care for these leprosy patients, they also clean leprosy colonies and individual patient homes. Doctors will also visit the colonies to provide much-needed medical care. In addition, missionary teams will provide patients with gifts, such as blankets, shoes and goats, which can be used for individual or community income-producing opportunities.”
Prayer Point: Pray that people with leprosy will see the unconditional love of Jesus, as demonstrated to them by GFA-supported national workers.
Gospel for Asia deals first hand with the scandal of slavery and human trafficking by helping our field partners who minister among the poverty stricken in Asia, where over two-thirds of the worlds human trafficking victims reside.
The 2016 Global Slavery Index estimates that 45.8 million people are living in some form of modern slavery. Over 30 million reside in Asia. Five countries are home to 26.5 million men, women and children trapped in the grips of slavery and human trafficking.
Another source estimates 36 million victims worldwide, with 23.5 million in Asia.
Regardless of the exact number, any number of this magnitude is scandalous.
Many of the tens of thousands to whom Gospel for Asia ministers are victims of this scandal or of its results.
“The United Nations estimates that some 64% of human trafficking in Asia is for forced labor, servitude and slavery, while 26% is for sexual exploitation . . . In Asia, 36% of trafficked victims are children.”
The effects of slavery and human trafficking include destitution, poverty, humiliation, hunger and lack of access to nutrition and education.
The irony of the scandal is that, while millions suffer from its impact, others profit from its perpetuation.
Gospel for Asia understands that we cannot prevent slavery and human trafficking. Neither can we sit idle and do nothing. We, too, believe this is a crime against humanity and that it should be recognized and dealt with as such. That is clearly a governmental responsibility. But rendering unto Caesar what is Caesar’s does not absolve us from rendering unto Christ what is Christ’s.
Jesus said that while He was in the world, He was the Light of the World. When He has preparing to leave, He told us that we are now that light as we let His love shine through us.
He told us to love one another. He gave us a task to minister to the widows and the fatherless and all those in need. And so, we must go.
GFA-supported national missionaries witness first hand and minister to the deepest physical and spiritual needs of tens of thousands throughout Asia, many of whom are victims of the results of slavery and human trafficking.
GFA’s Bridge of Hope Program helps minister to more than 82,000 impoverished children in Asia, rescuing them from the effects of the scandal of slavery and human trafficking.
GFA’s programs to provide compassionate care and our community programs help tens of thousands to have basic necessities, which they would not otherwise have for a healthy life.
You can learn more about how you can help to support Gospel for Asia’s efforts to reduce the effects of the scandal of slavery and human trafficking in Asia by clicking on any of the above links.
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