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
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
1 comment:
I apologize for the delay in posting. We moved to Texas from Arkansas last June, and with all the changes plus sickness in our family, I have not been able to keep up. But I promise to do better in the future
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