Wednesday, December 10, 2008



Volume 101: December 10, 2008
CHINA. When someone she barely knew asked her to meet with a student, the Christian worker contemplated whether it would be a wise use of her time. She was already responsible for mentoring five groups, she reasoned. But as she talked with the Lord about her busy schedule, He reminded her of the importance of each individual soul. When she arrived for the appointment, she was greeted by a Christian brother who said, "He brought you here," and ushered her into a group of 10 students, all seekers or new believers. One hour later, she had been enlisted to train some of the believers and work with the group on an outreach ministry. She was truly thankful that her schedule had become even busier!CHINA. A group of committed Christians traveled from their city to a small town two hours away to prayer walk and tell its people about Jesus. During the first month of regular visits, seven people accepted Christ. But during the first worship service, the local police showed up and told them they weren't allowed to assemble together. When the same thing happened at the second worship service, some of the new believers fell away. Two families, however, decided that their newfound faith was so precious that they would endure persecution. They continue to worship together, sometimes with the city Christians who leave after work and return home in the wee hours of the morning, traveling for several hours each way to encourage the new believers.CHINA. Having just moved to a new city in China, the American lady was struggling. She missed her family and friends, and although she could already speak Chinese, she was now challenged with learning a new dialect. As she waited on a taxi, she reflected on her situation. Just then a taxi pulled up and she got in, quickly giving her destination. The lady driver greeted her and then, to the utter surprise of her passenger, said, "Alleluia. Praise the Father!" After establishing that they were both Christians, the taxi driver began to sing praise songs and the passenger joined in. At the end of the ride, the passenger thanked the Chinese believer for blessing her so greatly on a day that she had been missing her family. The driver reached out, patted her hand and said, "We are family." Reminded of the truth of that statement, the overseas Christian wiped tears of thanksgiving from her eyes.

Monday, November 24, 2008

East Asia Update








Encouraging Responses
"The young shop owner sat out in front of her little store selling bottled water and Chinese dolls to the local village people walking by. She did not seem to be any different from all of the other local people until she was asked, "Are you a Christian?" With that question, her eyes lit up and she began to tell us of how not only she, but also her family and several other families in the village were also Christians. She explained that they had believed in Jesus several years earlier and that there are currently more than 50 believers in her small town. This is the kind of response we are beginning to hear as we scratch beneath the surface of the local areas where we serve." . . . by a frontline worker

Being at Home
"As we near the end of our first term overseas and begin preparations for going back to the States, we realize that we are not the same people (as before). We still look the same and enjoy the same American pleasures, but there is much more in who we now are. . . Our new friends live, not in American town houses and condominiums, but in Chinese shopping centers and antiquated mud houses. We eat beef burgers on Friday night and cold rice noodles on Saturday. We have grown accustomed to celebrating American independence on the 4th and the Dragon Boat Festival on the 5th. These and other newly adopted practices make us not new culture people, but bi-culture people." . . . by a frontline worker

Joy in the Midst of Despair
Shortly after the death of his wife in the Sichuan earthquake earlier this year, a Chinese man was introduced to Christ. After asking Jesus into his heart, he said, "For the first time in my life, I have joy." Another earthquake survivor received Christ into her heart after a volunteer worker who couldn't even speak the woman's language took time to fashion a Styrofoam cup into a cross. Since the woman had heard of Jesus previously, that simple act elicited her questions that, once answered by someone who could speak Chinese, led to her salvation. . . . based on frontline reports


Children of East Asia workers share some of their prayer requests below. Go to: http://easia.imb.org/ to read some additional requests.

Pray for all the people in the earthquakes. My family feels the tremors even though we are miles away. Thank you for praying for us. (10-year old)

Please pray for our people group. Many don't know Jesus. Not many people know about them or where they live. Even some Chinese people don't know. Also, please pray more people will come and help the people of our group. (9-year old)

Our dog is lost. Pray that he is safe. Pray that our Chinese friends will know Christ. Pray that my family (in the U.S.) will not be sad about my mom and brothers coming back to China. (7-year old)

One definition for "Summit" is "the topmost level attainable". That's what you can expect at the "Showcasing East Asia Summit". Mark your calendar with capital letters! FBC, Collierville, Tennessee is where you will want to be on April 15 to 17 to meet workers from East Asia, learn about the current situation, and explore how you can be involved from either side of the ocean. It will be followed by a Student Summit lasting from Friday night, April 17 through Saturday, April 18. http://easia.imb.org/summit/

Lottie Moon Resources

Christian workers in East Asia and throughout the world depend on the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering (LMCO). Go to: http://easia.imb.org to read some thank you notes from workers in East Asia.

Promote the LMCO in new and fresh ways this Christmas by ordering East Asia resources that will bring focus to Lottie's long-time home of China. Go to: http://easia.imb.org

Revving Up; Not Winding Down

Holiday times are not for winding down in East Asia; rather "tis the season" to embrace extra special opportunities to tell the lost about Christ. Please take some time this week to lift up those who are serving in China, Mongolia, and Taiwan, asking God to give them strength and enabling to entertain seekers and new believers in their homes, facilitate special outreach projects, host volunteer teams, distribute seasonal evangelistic materials, and impact East Asia friends, neighbors, and strangers for eternity. Pray that in the midst of all of the busyness, they will stay centered in Christ and joyous in their family life.

Numbers of Note


• 53,000 — Chinese babies sickened by tainted milk this fall.

• 470,000 — Tibetan herders to be settled in permanent houses.

• 09/27/08 — First time a Chinese astronaut walked in space.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

East Asia Update




Volume 100: November 11, 2008

CHINA. The landscape seemed to have changed since the Christian worker had visited the earthquake survivors a few weeks earlier. On that visit shortly after the quake, he had shown a desperate mother how to make a rehydrating liquid for her sickly child and had led a man to Christ. On this follow-up visit to deliver a Bible to the new believer, he sensed that he was headed in the right direction, but was a bit disoriented. He urged his reluctant and uncomfortably opinionated driver along, while silently praying that they would find the way. When a lone motorcycle headed toward them, the driver stopped to ask for directions. The motorcyclist looked through the van window and said, "He is going to my house." Amazingly, it was a member of the very family that the Christian worker was trying to find.

CHINA. He was one of the first members of his deaf community to receive Christ, and he was faithful in sharing the Gospel with other deaf people. But when his job was phased out and he left town, his spiritual mentors had no idea how to reach him. Then the deaf believer suddenly reappeared at a weekend training session. Using sign language, he told the group that although he had been gone from them, he had been constantly with Christ. He had carried in his heart a dozen or so Bible stories that he had memorized soon after receiving Christ. "I remembered all of them!" he signed. "I knew about the Rock foundation on which my life was built. I knew about the Good Shepherd who looked after me when I was alone. I knew about Jesus being the only Way, Truth and Life. I knew how to talk to my God and petition Him for help." He is now busily expanding his collection of Bible stories. He has a lot more to learn, and a lot more to share.

CHINA. The American teenager was only 13-years old, but she knew that she had a story to tell. So when a great natural disaster befell the people that her family had come to serve, she was intent on going with her parents to minister in the area. One day she and a Christian lady had an opportunity to share the Good News with a non-Christian Chinese mother and her teenage daughter. The mother had heard previously about Jesus' death on the cross, but hadn't heard about His resurrection. Once they heard the complete story of His love and received some responses to their questions, both mother and daughter indicated their willingness to accept Christ. But the mom insisted that her daughter was too young to make such a drastic decision. "Well, I'm only 13-years old and I believe," said the bearer of the Good News. "When God gives you understanding, it doesn't matter how old you are." The point was taken and both mother and daughter prayed to receive Christ that day.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

East Asia update


Jasmine Riden* is building relationships with a people group in southern China.

"It is really easy to want to give up and go home," Riden said. When she feels like packing up and leaving she: 1. Refrains from pulling out her suitcases; 2. Asks her friends to remind her why she is there.

What makes her stay is remembering why she came and what she is here to do: to tell this people group about saving grace. Riden and her friend's hope is to plant a church in every village in the seven counties. It is an ambitious dream, Riden said, one only the Father can accomplish.

Read more about Riden's work in the Hard Places of China: http://easia.imb.org.

Jennifer's* first year in Asia has been tough and lonely as she tackles several new languages and looks for opportunities to share truth with members of an unreached people group.

Recently, she had an opportunity to visit an area affected by China's massive earthquake. Along with some friends, she worked long hours in the hot sun to help locals move heavy loads and was pushed to use language to share the gospel with them.

The experience of sharing in fellowship with others in a challenging environment also renewed her excitement to return to her people group. "I came back home excited not only about the work we did, but the other things that are going on in this country," said Jennifer. "I came home encouraged to keep pressing on in my isolated work, knowing that my new friends are all out there doing the same."

Showcasing East Asia: An "East Asia Peoples Summit" will be held on April 15-17, 2009 at Collierville First Baptist Church, Collierville, Tennessee. Connect with workers and regional leadership. Learn more about how you and your church can be involved in a practical and personal way. Watch for details in your inbox soon.

Other ways you can help:

Pray specifically. Become a Priority Prayer Advocate for Zaozhuang or another unreached city in East Asia. Write to eaprayer@pobox.com in for details on Prayer Travels.

Volunteer. Come for a few weeks or few months to pray and serve along side our long-term workers. View requests: http://easia.imb.org/go

Come long-term. Is He stirring your heart to come for a few years or a lifetime? We would love to help you work through the process. E-mail gochina@imb.org.

Perhaps one of the most trying things about a city like Zaozhuang is how typical it is. It has little to make it stand out from other average cities in China, and has more than its share of pollution from the cement factories and coal refineries that ring the urban area. Members of the heavily populated working-class fill the streets as they commute on their bicycles, which outnumber cars 5 to 1.

Each month we focus on a different unreached city or people on our Day of Prayer and Fasting. Join us as we lift up Zaozhuang November 11.

Find specific requests for Zaozhuang on the web at: http://easia.imb.org/prayer-blog/zaozhuang-november-prayer/

Also, download the a .pdf with specific requests for Zaozhuang.




Our website has a new look with more resources for you! Check it out: http://easia.imb.org If you subscribe to our blogs and East Asia news feeds, you need to update your links:

All East Asia Feeds: http://easia.imb.org/feed/

East Asia News: http://easia.imb.org/category/news/feed/

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God is moving in amazing ways all over East Asia. Read more East Asia story on the web at http://easia.imb.org. Add the site to your favorites.

Saturday, June 28, 2008

East Asia Update

Mending Shattered Dreams

Measuring 8.0 on the Richter scale, it altered forever the lives of millions of Chinese people. The government statistics tell part of the story. 69,000 dead . . . 18,000 still missing . . . 5,500 children orphaned . . . 5 million homes destroyed . . . 15 million people evacuated . . . 35 "quake lakes" formed . . . 8911 aftershocks in the first 16 days.

But only God can measure the number of tears shed, the agonizing screams of parents who lost their children in school collapses, the puzzlement of children suddenly orphaned, the numbers of Chinese people who walked for days to rescue their loved ones, the pain and fear of those who survived only to find that they lost so much. Only He can know of the prayers that were lifted up to Him by Christians all over the world who grieved as one with the Chinese people. Only He can mend the broken hearts and provide for the phenomenal physical needs of the survivors.




"On Monday, May 19, 2008, flights resumed from our town to Chengdu. It was exactly one week after the 8.0 earthquake had hit, rattling all of us who live in Sichuan Province.

Approaching Chengdu from the mountains, it looked like it always does until we landed. The airport was full of military and transport planes bringing in supplies and troops. Time had run out for survivors still buried in the rubble, but there was still hope maybe just one more would be found. The military and medical personnel were still working round the clock. Reporters in the area frequently broke down in tears as they reported the news, but then so did the military and the medical personnel during interviews.

On the way to the hotel, we saw the earthquake's impact on the emotional condition of Chengdu's residents. The whole of Chengdu looked like a colossal campout. There were few tents, but people were mainly camped out under tarps tied between trees. They had hauled out their beds and tables, pots and pans, and settled in. It's understandable. In the week since the main quake, there have been over 3000 aftershocks reported."

Go to: http://easia.imb.org to read more of the journal »




Change of Policies

In response to a national outpouring of grief, China will waive its one-child policy for those who lost their only child in the earthquake. Many thousands of children were crushed to death in the 7,000 classrooms that fell on them when the quake struck.



More than 10 million Chinese students took exams to compete for 6 million available college placements early this month. But for the 9,000 university hopefuls living in the earthquake areas, the exams were postponed.

Summer Prayer Focus

The long-awaited Beijing Summer 2008 Olympics will begin at 8:08 p.m. on 08/08/08. Pray that Christ's love can be shared effectively with many thousands of Chinese people during special events surrounding the international event.



Hot summer weather always comes in combination with warm-hearted volunteers who take their vacation time and pay their own way to share Christ in locations throughout China. Pray for God's protection to be upon them, for His Spirit to lead them, and for Him to use them mightily.

On the Web

Go to http://easia.imb.org to

Follow the Olympic torch as it is routed through China cities.

Join in our Monthly Day of Prayer and Fasting.

Learn about East Asia volunteer opportunities.



Saturday, May 10, 2008

EAST ASIA UPDATE

News

Hope for Japan
One of the most densely populated countries, Japan has adopted a Western lifestyle and accumulated wealth and technology. Yet Japanese are a traditional people who have everything they need, except the one thing they fear or resist accepting: a relationship with Jesus Christ. Japanese are driven by cultural rules handed down through the generations. “The nail that sticks its head up is the one that gets hit” goes a Japanese proverb. Another barrier to the Gospel is adherence to traditional animistic religions, although many Japanese have apathy rather than adherence to faith. Missionary Buddy Brents adds that the Japanese are “locked up in fear of what other people will think about them if they become a Christian.” Missionaries seek lost people through relational evangelism, joining sports, social and business groups.

The going is tough, but God is producing a harvest of Japanese souls

Pray

‘Yet-to-be believers’
He is truly a carpenter following a carpenter. Ima Oka has fashioned tables, cabinets and clocks for 33 years. Ten years ago he heard the Gospel, but only recently was his heart ready for treatment, in the same way Oka treats and matures his wooden creations. After prayerwalking the streets of Osaka, Japan, missionaries Bob and Gloria Gellerstedt encountered Oka in his woodshop and began weekly Bible study in his showroom. In just months, Oka accepted Jesus and was baptized on the shop’s second floor. Oka’s response to the Gospel was unusually quick for Japanese, who may take 40 or more years to come to faith after contact with the Gospel. “You just encourage people, and be patient with people,” says Carlton Walker, a veteran 25-year missionary in Japan. “We call them ‘yet-to-be believers.

CHINA UPDATE

CHINA. Three U.S. college students had experienced discouraging days of futile searching for an ethnic minority group. When they stopped at a noodle shop for lunch, they were encouraged to see a scripture calendar hanging on the wall. After they prayed over their meal, the owner quickly approached them to share that he too was a Christian. They asked about the minority group and found out that the man's house church had already led five members of the group to Christ. He made it clear that they didn't want training from the outside, but said that they did want Bibles in the heart language of the people. The need was conveyed to a Christian worker living in China. It took him a year and a half to secure the books and a 12-hour bus ride to deliver them. In the meantime, the group of five believers had grown to 40 and not only did they want Bibles, but training in how to grow. "That's what we're here for," said the worker. "That's what God has called us to do."

CHINA. Probably because of their advanced years, and most certainly because of their persistence, they were given an incredible opportunity by local authorities to share Christ in specific ethnic minority areas. The older couple had asked several times for permission to tell the local people about Jesus, and been denied. But on their final try, the doors were miraculously and mysteriously thrown open. It became apparent that God's spirit was at work when, in several villages, they shared the gospel with entire village populations assembled by village heads, and in one village, more than 50 persons accepted Christ over a period of several months.

CHINA. It took a long time for their neighbors to warm up to the American family. But after six years and a handful of new Christians, the family was finally able to establish the first church in the community where they lived. They had tried befriending the villagers, had prayed over the sick people in the villages, and had even hired some of them for a construction project. But nothing really impacted the people until, in the cold of winter, they distributed some quilts handmade by Christians in Minnesota. As best they can tell, that was the turning point for the ethnic minority group. Barriers were broken down and hearts began to open.

Monday, March 31, 2008

EAST ASIA UPDATE

Bibles in China

Two American men were traveling in a location so remote that they claimed even the cows stared at them. There they gave a "linguistically challenged presentation" of the Gospel to a Chinese man and left him a Bible. When they returned to visit him two weeks later, he had accepted Christ! Once again God's sword had cut straight to the heart of man.

Throughout China there is a great hunger for God's Word. An American summer teacher was amazed when one of her Chinese students asked for permission to just touch the teacher's Bible, not dreaming that she could hold it, read it, and even own it. A house church trainer was moved when he realized that several ladies in his group shared one Bible, not only in class, but in their daily life. Many others have witnessed the inexpressible joy of Chinese friends receiving a Bible for the first time.

Tragically, China has long been known as a country where Christians and seekers have limited access to Bibles. It is true that Bibles can be purchased at government-sanctioned registered churches, and it is also true that Amity Printing, the publishing arm of the government churches, has printed 41 million Chinese Bibles in recent years. But the numbers pale as one looks at the needs of as many as 60 million Chinese Christians, and more than one billion lost people.

Despite the dearth of adequate Bibles for her own people, China will produce one-quarter of all the world's Bibles by 2009! With Amity relocating to a larger facility, Bibles in 90 languages ranging from Slovakian to Swahili will soon roll off its presses and be exported to countries around the world, including the U.S. and Great Britain.

To meet the demand of the world's most populous country, some are taking great risks to make large quantities of Bibles available. A house church leader was arrested last August in northwest China and charged with receiving three tons of Bibles from a source outside of China. In December of last year, the Chinese owner of a Christian bookstore near Beijing's Olympic Village was detained and charged with the illegal printing and distribution of Christian literature.

Bibles are purportedly being illegally published, stored, and shipped in locations throughout China. Hundreds of thousands of Bibles are also being distributed popular tourist destinations worldwide to Chinese people with hands outstretched to receive them.

Please join us in praying that everyone who longs to read God's Word will have access to a Bible. Go to www.peopleofchina.net for more prayer requests for China.



What Volunteers Are Saying

Asked about their most meaningful experience while in East Asia, recent volunteers replied:

"Everything was meaningful. I loved my time inside China. I loved the people oh so very much. Every contact was amazing."

"I was really encouraged by the Chinese believers there. It was amazing to see how much they do with so little, and how excited they are to come in contact with American believers."

"Visiting villages of unreached people groups and putting a face on missions by experiencing the needs of the people. Also, I believe we were an encouragement to the team on the field."

Are you ready for a meaningful volunteer experience? Go to http://easia.imb.org/jobs.htm to check out exciting opportunities or contact eavolunteer@pobox.com



To the Ends of the Earth

From Frontline Workers

"We asked the Lord where He would have us go to finish the task of reaching unreached peoples. Our people gave us a list of the current needs and this group stood out. So I wrote back and said, 'Who are these people?' And the response I got was, 'They are a sub-group who live far out in the Northwest. They have not been engaged. They've been on our list for 10 years. No one has been interested.' There were no other Christians praying for them, advocating for them, living among them. And there were no known believers. And we know that the task is to bring the Gospel to every language, to every tribe, to every tongue. And to finish that task, we need to engage those people groups that are that isolated and unengaged. And we really felt the Spirit say, 'We want you to go there and help finish the task.' And so that's how we ended up living where we live."

University Graduates

  • China had nearly five million university graduates in 2007, but almost one-fifth of them had not yet found jobs in early 2008.

  • Since China reopened its doors three decades ago, 1.8 million postgraduate degrees and 240,000 doctorates have been awarded.

Tibetans

  • Severe winter weather left 1.65 million people, most of them Tibetan, snow blind and frostbitten in the Qinghai province.

  • Tourism in Tibet rose 60 percent last year following the 2006 opening of a direct train route into its capital, Lhas

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Commission Stories

There is a new website featuring stories about mission from around the globe. It is called Commission Stories. A menu for the contents can be found in the left column. Below are a few clips from this informative and inspiring website. Visit it and see for yourself.













Wednesday, March 12, 2008

News from the Home Front--Vermont

As the second least churched state in America, Vermont cries out for spiritual assistance. Can you hear the cry of her heart? Does it call to your own heart? Why not join Terry Dorsett and his team of missionaries in reaching Vermont with the Gospel of Jesus Christ?


A Word from the Director:


Watching your children follow the Lord is a blessing beyond description. The first Sunday of March I watched my 17 year old daughter lead a group of 9 teen musicians as they led over 100 adults in a time of praise and worship. It brought tears to my eyes to watch my daughter serve the Lord in such a way. Later that same week I had lunch with a Christian business man who was present for that service and with tears in his eyes he talked about how moved he was to see teens leading adults in worship. May God be praised as He allows us to see our children walk in truth.

Sadly, many parents today are seeing their children turn away from the church. My heart breaks for the next generation and I often ask the Lord to show me what I can do to pass the torch to those younger than I. Sometimes their styles are different than what I'm used to, but their hearts are on fire for the Lord and their spirits are in tune with the Holy Spirit. I see part of my mission as helping mature the next generation in a way that is godly and biblical without destroying the creativity God has put in their hearts. What is your mission? What are you doing to reach the next generation? You do not have to compromise the truth or follow the world's patterns, but you do have to be willing to listen and learn from the "mouth of babes." May God show each of us how to reach the next generation in our circle of influence.

Terry Dorsett (Contact Terry at this address: terrydorsett@charter.net)
To visit the Green Mountain Baptist Association website click here

Preachables from China

CHINA. The overseas couple only knew of one Christian in the ethnic minority group that they were seeking to reach for Christ. Her name was Rita. They had tried to contact her, but her phone number didn’t work and they didn’t have an address. Seeking the Father’s guidance, the wife faithfully lifted up Rita during times of prayer and fasting. One day the couple traveled to a remote area. They stopped in a market town and before they knew it, had been invited into someone’s home for a feast. As they struggled to communicate using their limited Chinese, the father of the home said, “Soon my daughter will arrive. She can speak some English.” A few moments later, the daughter showed up. She smiled at them and said, “Hello. My name is Rita.”

CHINA. While training a new believer, they asked her to lead in a prayer. She was reticent to do so, but with encouragement, overcame her fear and voiced a prayer to God. Several days later she led her sick niece to salvation in Christ. The niece died the next day. The aunt told the trainers that if she not had the experience of praying in public, she never could have told her niece about Jesus.

CHINA. An American mom and her children had accidentally gotten locked out of their China home. While they waited at the guard house of their apartment complex, the mom took the opportunity to tell their Chinese guard about God's love for him. When her husband arrived with the key a short time later, he joined in the conversation. After a short time, the guard opened his heart's door to Christ, receiving Him as Savior even before the family returned home to unlock their own door.

CHINA. For long difficult years they labored faithfully among an unreached people group that was uninterested and even resistant to the gospel. The Christian workers welcomed prayer intercessors, volunteers, and other partners to join them in the task. As members of the minority group began to turn to Christ, the workers and their partners rejoiced. But then they watched with heavy hearts as some of the earliest believers of the group underwent beatings, incarceration, and other forms of persecution. Through the years, the new believers have persevered. Last year 150 members of the minority group accepted Jesus into their hearts.

Thursday, February 28, 2008

CHINA UPDATE


Frigid Weather Greets Chinese New Year

Havoc resulted when China's worst winter weather is 50 years coincided with its traditional Lunar New Year celebration. Millions of people trying desperately to return to their home towns for their most important holiday were confronted with closed airports, derailed trains, and highways frozen over with ice. Still they persisted, waiting at train stations and airports for days at a time, in the hopes of seeing their loved ones. As the crowds grew, troops were sent in to maintain order at transportation hubs. A stampede at the Guangzhou train station resulted in many injuries and the death of one woman. Harrowing tales were told by those stuck in cars, trains, and buses for 20 hours or more for trips that would normally last only a few hours.

The crisis that impacted 20 of China's provinces has since subsided, and most of China's residents are slowly returning to their places of residence and work. But the winter will long be remembered for nightmarish inconvenience, dashed dreams, and loss. An official mid-February estimate of 107 deaths is most likely conservative. More than 1.5 million people were evacuated from their homes and at least 350,000 homes collapsed under the weight of record snows. One-tenth of the country's massive forests suffered damage. Power lines were downed by snow and ice, resulting in the loss of electricity to millions, and pipes cracked in the freezing temperatures, resulting in the loss of water to millions more. Impassable roads resulted in a shortage of food supplies in many locations. Recovery is expected to take many more months.

Let's continue to pray for all who are suffering, asking God to supply their needs. Pray that Christians in China will be sensitive to special ways that His love can be shared during the aftermath of such devastation.

Winter Wonderland

As the cold weather raged, God poured out special blessings on His children, resulting in these inspiring reports from the front lines.

"When my flight got snowed in during the recent snowstorm, I was a bit frustrated that my agenda to travel to another country had been interrupted. But the snow that paralyzed my city for a few days and kept me stuck there was a means God used to remind me of some profound lessons. During those days of being "stuck," I met people, shared truth with families and had opportunities I would have otherwise missed if things had gone according to my plan. Praise God for working great things out of a challenging situation."

"During the coldest winter in the history of China, we learned that we really can survive without electricity, tap water, television, internet, and transportation. A big pot of vegetable soup shared with neighbors can put smiles on their faces and opened doors to tell them of His love. One dozen eggs, three pounds of rice, and three heads of cabbage will feed six Chinese families. Because we endured the cold and lack of conveniences along with our neighbors, a bond was formed. We became more aware of our weaknesses, and we found new strength in Him."

"Southern Cross Chinese New Year's 2008 distribution was a tremendous success with people coming to faith and over 10,000 Chinese tourists receiving their first copy of God's Word along with Gospel testimonies! With fewer volunteers on fewer teams than last year, He was able to equal the distribution! God answered our prayer that He would allow nothing to stand in the way of these dear people getting a copy of His Word, a Jesus Film and other Christian literature."

Claiming the Year For Christ

This is the "Year of the Rat" according to China's ancient calendar that recycles zodiac signs over a 12-year cycle. Not only has it resulted in a run on hamsters at pet stores in China, but it's all about "carpe diem" for Mickey Mouse who is sporting Chinese garb at Hong Kong's Disneyland. Let's pray fervently that long before 2008 ends, it will be know as a "Year of Christ" in China as millions of people accept the salvation that He freely offers.



  • Hong Kong now has 1.5 mobile phones per resident!

  • For the first time since 1949, passenger ship travelers from China disembarked in Taiwan



Current Requests:
last updated December 11, 2007
1. As Christian workers pour out their lives in service in China, new generations of missionaries are being developed in churches all over the United States. Pray today that Sunday School teachers, pastors, and missions workers among children will impart love for the peoples of the world and passion for reaching the lost to the children who are under their tutelage.

2. Pray that Christian mothers serving overseas will find ways to balance their many responsibilities so that they can spend quality time among the people, sharing Christ's love. In some cases, this means finding reliable household help. In other cases, it means including their children in evangelistic activities, or having the husband more involved in primary childcare. Thank God that He sees and knows each situation and is willing to give the answers needed as His children look to Him.

3. After surpassing a record goal last year, Southern Baptists will be challenged to give more than ever to the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering this month. Pray that all who are committed to reaching the world for Christ will resist resting on laurels of years past and will give sacrificially. Praise God for working through this offering to provide for Christians workers all over China and the world.

Friday, February 15, 2008

China Update


Time to Celebrate

Holiday celebrations may have wound down in the U.S. following Christmas and New Year's, but are just kicking into high gear in East Asia. As you read about the upcoming festivities, please pray that God will use Chinese and Mongolian Christians to impact their family, friends, and even strangers during this time.

Chinese New Year's

The Lunar New Year will fall on February 7 this year, and as always the major holiday of the year will be celebrated widely throughout China. Much of the country will be on the roads, the rails, or in the air as China's people head to their family homes for visits that will be highlighted with New Year's Eve feasts. Offices, schools and businesses will shut down for a few days. Red envelopes filled with new money will be exchanged. Greetings of "Happy New Year" will resound during the daylight hours and sounds of firecrackers will be heard late into the evening hours.

Mongolian White Moon Festival

Although its culture and language is markedly different than that of China, Mongolia also celebrates its most important family holiday at the beginning of the Lunar New Year. During Tsagaan Sar, family and friends enjoy visiting with each other, exchanging khadags: blue silk scarves that symbolize goodwill, and devouring buuz: steamed dumplings filled with minced mutton or yak meat. Traditional games are played and oral histories are shared.

Christmas in China

God worked mightily at Christmas to draw Chinese people into His Kingdom. Rejoice with us as you read these exciting reports from those who participated in the Christmas in China project for U.S. university students:

"Workers had been praying about a Christmas party for months, hoping that 100 people would attend. But 450 showed up and half of them raised their hands to accept Christ!"

"We saw 27 come to know the Lord through the team's efforts and God's grace. We had the largest Christmas Party we've ever had, and the 170 plus people who attended heard the Gospel and 14 received Jesus that night

Eye On China

Numbers are climbing in many societal realms of China's populace.

  • Students: China now has 25 million university students, five times that of nine years ago.

  • Singles: More than 45 percent of Chinese people aged 15 to 35 are single.

  • TV viewers: With televisions in 99.89 percent of its homes, China now has more than 1.2 billion TV viewers.

  • Wealthy: China had 108 billionaires last year, up from only 15 the year before, and now has more billionaires than any country but the U.S.

  • Displaced: Four million more China residents will soon join the 1.4 million who have already been relocated from the Three Gorges Dam area in recent years

  • Would you like to pray for China? Perhaps you can't physically walk the streets of China, but you can still pray! Take a virtual tour of the places and people of China, praying as you go along. Click on this link. Virtual Prayer Walk