Thursday, October 31, 2019

First Teaching Session at Santisuk Silom English Center Bangkok


Chao Phraya River
Our condo is just to the right of the tall white building on the other side of the river

After returning back to Thailand from our ministry trip with Teaching Leaders International in India on Sept. 29, we started our first English teaching session in Bangkok and now 29 days later we are already beginning our second session. Each session is composed of classroom instruction/conversation for two hours a day for 15 days. Lyndell taught Level 1 and Gary taught Level 4 during the first session. Our classroom student numbers were down, which has been a similar experience in the other 6 branches of the Santisuk English Centers. Although this is somewhat disappointing, it does offer the opportunity to spend more time with the students on an individual basis. Our hope is that some would continue to take more instruction in order to facilitate their English learning and understanding of the gospel.

This second session Gary is teaching Level 1 and Lyndell is teaching Level 6. None of the seven students that Gary has in his class have ever heard any stories about Jesus. One of the them is a dentist who is studying to be an oral surgeon and another is a 4th year law student. The dental student is of course excited to have Gary as her teacher.

The ties to the student’s Buddhist heritage are very strong, as they are for most Thai people. One student in Gary’s class seemed to feel that he really had life figured out for himself and didn’t really have a need for any religion. Please pray for Mos and Beer (yes, like the adult beverage) to press on with a real desire to know the truth about God. The other student, Boom, will continue on with more classes at Santisuk and we pray his heart would soften and humbly see his need for a Savior. We understand that unless the Lord circumcises their heart and makes it receptive to the truth of God, they will continue to live in darkness and not have their spiritual eyes opened to seeing the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ.

In the Thai culture we observe great respect and adoration of the students for their parents. They appear to do just about everything for them, including providing financial support as their parents become older. This concern for parents is honorable, but also is a strong barrier against anyone considering becoming a Christian, which would bring great dishonor to their family. Yet, we continue to trust that the gospel of Jesus Christ has the power to bring anyone to salvation. No one can make someone else become a Christian and no one can make themselves become a Christian. The work has to be accomplished by the Holy Spirit, as God replaces the heart of rebellion (stone) with a heart of receptibility (flesh)to the substitutionary saving work of Jesus Christ’s life, death and resurrection. 

In Level 4 each student has a closed session Q&A interview with their teacher after which the gospel is presented and explained in the Thai language as well. This is a time to evaluate if the stories taught from the Bible are moving the student towards an interest in knowing God. The students were told in their interviews that the merit of Jesus’s perfect life could be exchanged for our imperfect life and the penalty He paid for our sins by His sacrificial life would clear a sinner from all their guilt and shame, in order that they could enter into an eternal relationship with God characterized by everlasting peace and joy. 

When the students were asked to describe what their religion of Buddhism meant to them, it became evident that none of them would actually consider themselves a practicing Buddhist. They said they were Buddhists because they were born Buddhists and followed certain rituals to honor their parents and earn some merit. Gary later gave a short testimony at the session’s closing party and stressed that no one is born a Christian, but each person must individually place their trust in what Jesus Christ has done for them in order to become a Christian. 

Lyndell’s students did not know what a Bible was and had not heard any stories about Jesus before the class began. We often wonder what kind of thoughts each student must have when they are first exposed to the love and power of God through the stories from the Bible in the curriculum. Her student’s Gale, Js, and Ja really enjoyed Lyndell as their teacher and expressed how they would like to have her again in another session sometime.

We had an outreach event in our apartment in which we had 17 students and staff attended so we could get to know our students better as we ate and played games together including ping-pong and swimming. We also had a dinner night out at a street side restaurant with all the evening students, which is always popular among the Thai people. There have been a few former students who we have met again that we taught last time and we’ve tried to get reacquainted. This is difficult however because of the long time it takes in the city to travel from where many of them are working or living. We believe follow up is crucial if our desire is to see them begin to have faith in Jesus. So, we keep inviting them to events and activities where relationships can continue and foster greater trust in what we are telling them about God to be true and relevant to their lives.

Holidays are plentiful here and during the celebration of Rama V (former King) one Monday, classes were not scheduled and so we traveled a couple hours south with friends to the island Koh Si Chang for some hiking. It was a very hot day (what’s new) and we were so thankful for a thunderstorm that came through which helped to cool things down a bit.

Gary was asked to preach a couple Sundays after we returned from India and then taught from the book of Ephesians at the two day long second annual church retreat that was held the weekend between our teaching sessions. We traveled about a 3-hour drive to an Airbnb north of Bangkok. We all enjoyed getting out of the busyness of the city and actually hearing what quiet is like again. We observed an interesting sign similar to ones we are accustomed to back home. This one was a warning to watch out for elephants, not deer like in Minnesota. The retreat provided a time to reflect on God’s amazing grace and discuss how both our salvation and our maturity in Christ are fully dependent upon this gift of God, as we wage the daily war all Christians face against the spiritual forces of evil.

Lyndell has again joined the local Bible Study Fellowship (BSF), but this time the other 5 staff women from the school have joined as well. Lyndell is already developing friendships with several women from other countries also.


We continue to rely upon God working through your prayers to help encourage us and overcome the barriers of culture and language when sharing the good news of Jesus as we teach English to the satisfaction of our students. 

Sawatdee-krap and Sawatdee-kah from Bangkok

First session students and teachers


Lyndell's Level 1 Class
Party at our apartment
Level 4 students
Student's final essay


Dinner on street with students.

 
Motorcycle accident in front of our school.
80% traffic accidents in Thailand involve motorcycles.

                           Lunch after worship every Sunday.


Koh Si Chang Island



That's a good-sized millipede!
We saw many on the island hike.



Temple along the shoreline of the Bay of Thailand.
Seen on our return from the island.


Beautiful location for our church retreat.
Thankful for no smog or loud noises of the city.


Studying for teaching sessions.



A more isolated quiet place to study at retreat 



We later found 3 snake skins hanging from beams in gazebo.
Lyndell found a new quiet place to study! 



Church members


Cooking pancakes at retreat over charcoal fire.
Our kitchen stove didn't work.


Kabobs for supper.

Tallest tower built with spaghetti noodles and marshmallow
Team contest winner at retreat.

Good plan, but last place!


This looked interesting.



Now we understand the reason for the warning.



OSHA would freak out!
Notice how close the fan blade is from Tuk-tuk drivers leg.


Typical lunch or supper for us.
Cost around $10 for the two of us.


Som tum (spicy green papaya salad) being made for us.
Our default local restaurant.


             Favorite local gyoza (Chinese dumpling) restaurant.


                        Favorite breakfast on the weekend.
                              Pad krapow moo kài dao 
                  (Thai basil minced pork with fried egg on rice)



         Cooking crispy Pad Thai with oysters and chicken for us. 
                        Another favorite, but go easy on the oil.




                Window washing crew at our apartment building.


How to prepare one of our favorite desserts.
Nutella, banana, egg Roti.


                               Sign placed in our elevator.
            Should we suggest this person sign up at our school?


        Scene from our ferry as we cross the river after teaching.

Lyndell's Level 6 class for Session II

Gary's Level 1 class for Session II





There's always seems to be a festival going on in Bangkok.

Wednesday, October 2, 2019

TRAINING PASTORS IN INDIA



On September 21, Lyndell and I set foot in India almost 30 years since our first trip to that country back in 1990 on a short-term medical mission trip. We traveled at that time with an organization called Project Christ International (PCI) whose founder and leader was an Indian named Samraj. This man was used by the Lord on that and several other trips to train and challenge me often in regards to how much I needed to study the Word of God and make the truth of what I learned known to others who had never heard.

Now we were traveling again to India and the same state of Andhra Pradesh with an organization called Training Leaders International (TLI) to train local itinerant pastors in the study and interpretation of the scriptures in order to help them prepare and deliver God-centered, Christ-exalting expository sermons to the people of their remote villages. It was a great joy to be used of the Lord in this capacity. Samraj was about 65 when we first met him and now I am 68. He first came to our residence in Houghton, MI one day and introduced himself by saying, "Hello my name is Samraj and I want you to come to India with me". Through our witness of his ministry to share the gospel of Jesus Christ to the Hindu villagers of India, I was gripped by the Lord with a desire to follow a course of attempting to do the same wherever God would open the cross cultural doors of opportunity.

So we were graciously permitted to join TLI as part of the training program that some 60 or so pastors have been taking for over a period of 2 1/2 years thus far. They were in their seventh of nine sessions, which they will finish in the summer of next year upon their graduation. Each session goes for a week and several of the pastors must travel by bus or train long hours and many miles to attend the training. Their witness for the Lord has become more difficult in India in the past 10 years or so and several have been beaten or their lives threatened for preaching Christ Jesus.

Currently there is a political group of leaders in the state of Andhra Pradesh who are seeking to propose a new law that will oppose anyone who might choose to convert from Hinduism to Christianity. This anti-conversion law has already passed in several other Indian states and would bring about an increased level of hostility and persecution to pastors and other Christians in Andhra as well.

We were able to hear some fascinating testimonies on how some of the pastors had come to believe in Jesus as their Lord and Savior. One man was dying from cancer and all the doctors and Hindu priests had given up on him ever getting well again. Then a Christian pastor came to the hospital to pray for him and later after the prayer he had a dream that Jesus had appeared to him, touched him and said he was now healed. That man did get well and then went to find the pastor who had prayed for him and said he wanted to know more about Jesus who had touched him. That man was now one of the pastors at our training session.

Another man was known as a big brawler in his village and had beaten up a young pastor who had come to preach in his village. He was told never to come back or he would be killed. Sometime later that big man became very sick and was in the hospital when this young pastor returned after recovering from his injuries, so he could pray for this brawler. The man was so moved by the love of that pastor that he became a believer after being healed of his sickness and then became the young pastor's "bodyguard" going into other hostile areas to bring the gospel.

The living conditions of the missionaries we worked with are very difficult due to the extreme poverty around them as well as the unsanitary conditions with open sewer ditches, polluted streams,  extreme heat and humidity, hoards of cluster flies, poisonous snakes, huge rats, spotty electricity and dangerous driving conditions. The ability to minister in this area for those who have not grown up in such an environment is truly based upon the grace of God.

The pastors and Bible School students who attended the sessions all seemed genuinely pleased with the training and many commented that they were excited to see how all the Bible stories and various books of the Bible are related to each other to showcase the glory of God in Jesus Christ. Some were able to present short sermons at the end of the week to demonstrate what they had learned from the previous sessions.

Now we are back in Bangkok to begin teaching English at Santisuk English School with hopes that our students will not only become more proficient in speaking the English language, but grow in their understanding of Jesus and be drawn by God to receive Christ as their personal Lord and Savior.

We wish to thank all of you who prayed for us while in India and now ask for continued prayers for our work in Thailand. May God be glorified in all that we do. "... whatever you do, do all to the glory of God." (I For. 10:31)

Indigo Ailines from Bangalore to Vijayawada


Vijayawada with population of about 2 million
(about 1 hour away from training center)


Organization that we partnered with in India




Backyard of Reach All Nations (RAN) training center 
RAN Center
(where we lived and taught)
Open sewer ditch harboring source for disease 
RAN Center under construction
(houses 80 staff, students, children, & students)

Local housing with water buffalo and chickens (roosters were our alarm clock around 3:00 am each morning)

Doors built at this height due to frequent flooding


Cook named Zaccheus
(A wee little man was he)


Our bedroom with one of the few A/C units we deeply appreciated

Large rat killed outside the kitchen
(it had been residing in the couch in the living room)





Preparing our food
Kitchen where our delicious meals were cooked
Treated to a very special creation one evening
Gluten-free cookies for our resident missionary's wife


Dining Room (can you see the flies on the baby's high chair?)


Now you can see them!



Some of the children being raised at the center
Rainy season brings about lush vegetation
And beautiful flowers
Various unique varieties
Hidden creatures also among the flowers 
Decorative art daily sketched to invite 
pleasant spirits into Hindu's home
Bible student's wife who recently recovered from deadly venomous cobra's bite
Shanty where old women lives among the chickens
 and human waste receiving only minimal care. 
(The local missionaries were forbidden by the woman's relatives from providing
 any food or other  palliative care for her.)


Stairway up to training room on third floor

Training session for pastors
(
They also enjoyed singing "This is the day the Lord has made"
 in English using bongos to keep the rhythm)
Another teaching session for pastors
My wonderful interpreter and his lovely wife
who also prepared all our meals for us



Pastors discussing the lesson together
Pastor preaching sermon prepared after training

Bible women also attended the training
Our team with area's prominent woman's Bible study teacher
(she was also the aunt of one of our trainers from USA)



Honored with flower leis and shawls(very heavy, odiferous and honey bee magnets)
TLI team with pastors
Missionary singing in Telegu



On behalf of Lyndell, myself and the rest of our team, I can't express how much we valued your prayers, while we worked with these beloved Indian brothers and sisters in Christ. Their eager willingness to learn more and more in order to be a greater blessing to their churches was certainly exciting. And it has made for an experience that will always be remembered in our minds, since our hearts were so encouraged and touched by the testimony of their faithfulness to the spreading of the glorious transforming gospel of Jesus Christ.



I thought this picture portrays a story in itself. This is a statue in the Chennai airport of Shiva known as the Destroyer god of Hinduism. Notice the caption that is "photo bombing" the picture that says, "Make Life Convertible". Hinduism has kept millions of people in bondage to a life of misery and an eternity with no promise. The only thing that can transform such false teaching and convert a person from experiencing a life of no hope to one of enjoying the gift of eternal life is the proclamation and penetration of the good news of Jesus Christ into that society and culture. Please remember to pray for those who are taking the gospel to those still in darkness. Jesus is the only one who can convert their life from one of despair to one of everlasting hope, peace and joy.




"
Behold, he (Jesus) is coming with the clouds, and every eye will see him, even those who pierced him, and all tribes of the earth will wail on account of him. Even so. Amen." Revelation 1:7