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We live in one world and, according to the teachings of Jesus Christ, every world citizen is my neighbour. That means I am to be concerned about every one. Not only concerned, but to love them and to want the very best for them. So, in this blog, I write about neighbours and social issues, often by bringing in someone else's writing and then commenting on it from my Christian point of few.
Showing posts with label Missions Fest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Missions Fest. Show all posts
Saturday, 25 March 2017
Post 158—Is Prime Minister Trudeau Funding Islamic Extremism?
Labels:
Conservative Party,
Graham Franklin,
Hamas,
Harper Stphen,
Missions Fest,
politicians,
Prime Minister,
The Rebel,
Trudeau Justin,
United Nations,
Vancouver Sun
Wednesday, 10 February 2016
Post 92—My Offering Appeal
This
is an edited version of an offering appeal speech I delivered at one of the
plenary sessions at MFV 2016.
“Salam
Alaikum”—That’s the common Arabic greeting used by Muslims to
each other around the globe, no matter what language they normally speak. Millions
and millions of times a day this is their greeting to each other. It means “peace to you.” What a wish. What a prayer. What a
greeting. Time and time again. In mosque
and market place. Everywhere.
The response: “Alaika
salam”—“Peace to you.” A
conversation throughout the day. How beautiful. I live next to 100 refugees who
are in a hotel next to us in the West End of downtown here. The men come out on
the street to smoke. So I stop and try to talk to them, something not easy due
to language differences. But when in the
middle of a halting conversation I stop and suddenly greet them “Salam Alaikum,” the entire tenor and
atmosphere becomes electric. They look up in surprise and enthusiastically all
chime in with “Alaika Salam.”
That, by the way, is one of only a few words of Arabic
I know, but they are key to beginning a relationship. I know them because I
speak Hausa, a major language in Niger and Nigeria. It is the mother tongue of,
I would guess, some 60 million Muslims as well as a trade language for another
30 million or so. It is the language I studied at Michigan State University and
frequently spoke as a missionary in
Nigeria. It is not a Semitic language like Arabic and Hebrew, but the language
has adopted many Arabic theological, philosophical and abstract words that I
often recognize due to their similarity to the Hebrew I picked up in seminary.
I thought about that greeting the other
day. We Christians have our own greeting:
“the peace of Christ.” But we do
this only in church! Why is that? Why
only in Church? Why not everywhere like
the Muslims? Is the peace of Christ only
for church? Of course not. It’s for the
whole world.
The purpose of MF is exactly that: to
convey the peace of Christ to the whole world. Wouldn’t it be nice if we would
regularly greet each other that way? “The
Peace of Christ” wherever you go. How
about us MFesters starting this tradition among each other publicly? Break through our secular secrecy and
silence. Thereby proclaiming the Peace of Christ throughout the world. But I would go one better than Muslims. While
many Muslims restrict the use of this greeting among themselves, though in
public as well as private, I would want us Christians to use it even when
greeting non-Christians no matter what
their religion. Proclaiming the “Peace of Christ” to everyone within reach time
and again throughout your day both in church and marketplace. Can you think of
any reason this would be inappropriate? I said, “Inappropriate,” not merely “politically
or culturally incorrect.” Any reason at
all we should not do this? Feel free to
contact me about this.
MFesters: The Peace of Christ to you
(raising my hand as in blessing).
My name is John Boer. I live within
walking distance—WE and I serve on the Board of MF
But today I have a much greater
role: MF Pickpocket. Yes, you heard that right: MF pickpocket. But pickpocket with a difference. Not with a
clever sleight of hand in your pocket but with a powerful sleight of the Spirit
of God in your heart!
Did you realize that MF is the largest unifying Christian event in our Metro? Yes, indeed. Annually some 35,000 or so
visits and that for 33 years. That’s visits, not individuals. Yesterday I heard
John Hall, our Executive Director, suggest this probably amounts to about
15,000 individuals at each annual conference.
That’s a total of about 495,000 people coming to this
event one time or another over our 33 years.
Nearly half a million! And that’s not even counting the thousands that
are touched by MF and its partners throughout the year, every year by means of
ongoing events.
Did you realize that this crowd annually
includes thousands upon thousands of young
people? It’s one of two events I
meet some of my nephews and nieces once or twice removed even, the other one
being family funerals. This is a place where many young people begin to think
seriously about their calling in life.
There are files in the MF office with amazing stories of young people having
been brought to a life time commitment and decision.
It’s also a place where all of us can
and do get connected to over 200 Christian
mission agencies from across the street and around the world. So many
challenges. Almost too many to take in.
The things that are happening here are amazing. Yes, amazing, nothing short of
that. And all of this is accomplished by the Spirit of God through a miniscule staff of 5 people. JUST 5! Imagine what all this around you
takes to organize in just one year by such a small crew. Oh, yes, including 600
volunteers who do herculean work. Without them it would be impossible. But you
probably have no idea how much work those 5 staff people have to do to get
those volunteers aboard and trained.
This is a modern miracle, nothing short of it.
This brings me to the, hard, cold fact of money. You all know full well, all of this takes
money. This venue takes money, big money. And that in turn brings me to our
budget.
At the mention of budget, a technician will show the
budget slide.
Our budget this year? A modest
$520,000. Yes, that’s it—a mere
$520,000. I’m not saying it’s a small amount, but for what you get for it?!
Just think of the cost of this venue and then of all the programmes going on
around you throughout this entire weekend. It is our goal at this event to raise $120,000 through tickets and offerings.
That’s the big O-WORD for today! Offering! And that’s where you come in. Offerings.
Can you say that word? Offerings! Yes, offerings with an exclamation mark. Your offerings. Your
offerings today, In this meeting.
The big O!
We ask that you give generously today
and maybe even consider starting a routine
of monthly giving. By doing so you
will have the privilege of participating in an event that that sends ripples of
hope throughout the world. I can just
feel these ripples surge through my body right now. Don’t you feel them?
So, offering. There are three ways you
can do thi:.
(1) Online using Canada Helps. Go visit MFV website
and click on the donate button on the
home page. That’s one easy way—if you’re into online stuff.
(2) If not, well then you use the envelopes found on your seats. That one
thing most of us have learned to handle . If you need a tax receipt, fill in
the info section on the envelope. And please check the box authorizing us to
send you news and updates.
(3) You just place your 1000 bucks in the bucket
that will be passed around. It doesn’t get easier than that.
Oh, and allow me to draw your attention
to an important info column in the MF Magazine, p. 40.
At this point, we’ll take just a moment
so we can consider how God wants you to invest in His Mission. Yes, we have the
courage to call MF "His Mission." We will
pause for about 30 seconds for you to make a serious commitment around this big
O-word.
After that, I will break into prayer,
after which the ushers come with their buckets.
PRAYER
Holy, Divine Triune God. We begin with
adoration of you the creator of the
entire universe that till today, we are told, is still expanding. Amazing.
We adore you, Holy, Divine Son of God, who did not hesitate to come
down from your position of power and glory to take on our flesh and blood, including
all the pain, suffering and agony that come with that.
We adore you, Holy, Divine Spirit, who works in our
individual hearts but who also moves amid the cultures of this world and who today wants to pick our pockets.
Pick it, Holy Spirit, pick it, so that the work of Mission Fest Vancouver can
continue to connect the people of this city to your Kingdom. Triune God, open
our hearts today, open our hands, our pockets for our own sake, but even more for Your
sake. And for all those who have been
moved to give, we say a loud….”AMEN!”
Mission Festers:
the peace of Christ to you!
Volunteer
Ushers—Please come forward with your buckets. We have
prayed ourselves ready for you.
Labels:
Arabic,
greeting,
Hausa,
John Hall,
Missions Fest,
Muslims,
Offering,
Peace of Christ,
prayer.,
volunteers,
youth
Sunday, 7 February 2016
Post 91—Missions Fest Vancouver (MFV)
With the exception of 2010, the year of Winter Olympics in Vancouver, MFV is regularly held
during the last weekend of January in one of the most prestigious locations in
downtown Vancouver, namely the city’s Convention Centre. Most of it in the
older part of the Centre, but this year the Film Festival was held in the newer
West section, a building so beautiful, I would describe it as
ostentatious.
It’s kind of funny that
part of it is built over the waters of the Burrard Inlet, an arm of what is
really the Pacific Ocean. The “funny” part of it is that Canada is a huge
country, the second largest in the world next to Russia, with only a tiny
population. It’s got oodles and endless empty spaces, but we build over the
ocean waters as if the country is crowded and land scarce! OK, that’s just a humorous but true aside.
The best ways to get acquainted with MFV,
apart from actually attending it, are, of course through its website
<www.missionsfestvancouver.ca
>
and by reading its annual magazine simply
called Missions Fest 2016. Below that title MFV always prints the theme,
which in 2016 was “Mission: Being or Doing?”
For the leaders of MFV, that was a rhetorical question with an obvious
answer, but it was posed to help Christians overcome a seriously mistaken
dichotomy between being and doing.
Missionaries have taken sides on that issue and structured their mission
programmes accordingly. That in effect led to their hosts being presented with
one-sided and thus distorted versions of the Gospel, some emphasize being;
others, doing.
I expressed dismay when I first noticed that theme and
objected that these two could and should not be ever be separated. The CEO,
John Hall, explained that the intention was precisely to undermine that
distinction and insist on their togetherness. I was happy that this pseudo
distinction was finally going to be laid to rest. In the meantime, some of the
emerging churches suffer from the residue of this false dichotomy in their
thinking. Perhaps I can use a later post to explain how this distinction caused
serious problems, but today I want to talk more of MFV itself, perhaps induce
you to attend the 2017 version.
You should have been there Friday afternoon
and all day Saturday. If you had any degree of claustrophobia, but for the
grace of God, you would not have lasted. The wide hallways were so crowded in
both directions that pedestrian traffic was close to standstill.
The most
important fact here was the amazing number of youths, both primary and
secondary as well as tertiary. MFV is
successful beyond imagination and far more than any other Christian
organization in attracting youth. True, some of them are bused in by schools,
no doubt often forced, but their enthusiastic participation was obvious.
There were programmes for every age level,
even for pre-school. There were the Film
Festival, youth concerts, art and drama along with outstanding speakers, all
aimed at youth and attended by huge crowds. I’d like to say “thousands,” but I
don’t want to exaggerate. But with approximately 35,000 visits by an estimated
crowd of 15,000 individuals throughout the conference, one can be generous in
his estimates without exaggerating too much. The MFV archives contain many
stories of young people having made decisions
in the areas of the spiritual and career choice that affect them for the
rest of their lives.
An annual feature of the multi-faceted
programme is that of seminars, about 100 of them! These are given by various
experts who have something to contribute to contemporary mission debates. This
year there were three “seminar tracks,” one on “Business as Mission.”
They had four sessions with the following themes:
1.
“The call for all: Finding purpose in Life,
work & mission.”—“Every believer is called. We are all on a mission. Our
calling is bigger than our job. Find out how to live out calling in the
marketplace, whether whie collar, blue collar or no collar.”
2.
Panel discussion on calling: From white collar
to blue collar to no collar.”—Markletplace believers will discuss how to live
our calling in the marketplace, whether while, blue or no collar.”
3.
The
call to business: The new frontier?”—“The world of business may be this
century’s most important mission frontier…--find out why!”
4.
“Panel
discussion on living your calling at work.”—Panelists discuss how to live out
your calling in the workplace on a daily basis and to have a kingdom-building
impact.”
This was actually the subject that interested
me more than anything else. I myself have written a book on the subject with
the title Caught in the Middle:
Christians in Transnationals. (See www.SocialTheology.com/ boeriana
for the entire text.) I had hoped to attend at least one of these sessions, but
somehow I could not make it due to other duties assigned me.
I did attend
another seminar on the subject by another speaker and was left very
dissatisfied, for the speaker strongly advocated an approach that gave business
no legitimate or significant place in God’s Kingdom except as a means of
evangelism. That entire book of mine fulminates against such an approach and
gives business a significance and meaning of its own in the Kingdom, not merely
as a handmaid to evangelism. Go read that book of mine! I do not know just
which direction the business track took. I suspect and hope along the line of
my book. That, at least, I would expect from one of the leaders, Paul Stevens,
a professor emeritus from Regent College.
Then
there was an “Islamic” track led by seven discreet individuals, not by a team
as was the case with the business track. Here, in
summary,
were the issues presented:
1.
“Introduction to Islam”—“This lecture is
designed as an introduction to the religion of Islam and the Muslim cultures.”
2.
“Share your faith with a Muslim”—“A
conversation about reaching out to Muslims in your life and sharing the Good
News with them. Topics include what to say, what not to say and Stevens Paul, resources.”
3.
“Muslims
and media”—“Muslims in the Islamic world live in controlled environs where
questions are prohibited but smart phones and the internet have become secret
conduits to truth.”
4.
“Ask an ex-Muslim”—A panel discussion”—A
moderated panel discussion in which panelists will share their conversion
experience and present ministry before fielding audience questions.”
5.
“Current issues in Islam”—“A Christian view of
explosive issues around reaching Muslims for Christ. Topics: Who is Allah? Chrislam, insider movements, bible
translation and radicalization.”
6.
“Major
barriers for Muslims”—“Muslims are currently coming to Christ in unprecedented
numbers, but often they face huge barriers. Be equipped.”
7.
“Islamic worldview”—“An interactive aid to
understanding critical aspects of the Muslim worldview and view of western
Christians, with practical considerations for reach out.”
Again, I did not attend even one of them, partially
because I was busy but, more importantly, having been immersed in Muslim
culture for many years, by living, researching and writing,I did not
expect there would be anything new for me in these presentations. If you are
interested in any of them, you can order them on CD from MFV,
including the one I delivered some years ago.
I would love to tell you about the 200+ booths in which a
bewildering range of mission, development, educational and medical agencies
presented their programmes. In addition, there were those who tried to “sell”
major opinions, like views on Free Masons, on creation versus evolution, as
well as abortion and euthanasia issues.
One of my jobs as member of the Board of Directors was to interview all
the exhibitors in one isle, about 24 of them. This was an attempt to establish
good relations with them as well as uncover any problems they may have
experienced and special experiences they had with their visitors.
I would love to tell you more, but I’ve already gone way
beyond my 750. Post 92 will feature a
speech I gave at a plenary session to encourage generous giving to help MFV
cover its costs. Here’s hoping these three presentations on the Festival will
be enough to encourage you to attend MFV 2017?
Labels:
business,
Business as Mission,
calling,
Caught in the MIddle,
dichotomy,
Islam,
John Hall,
marketplace,
Missions Fest,
seminars,
Stevens Paul,
worldview,
www.SocialTheology.com,
youth
Wednesday, 3 February 2016
Post 90 Missions Fest International (MFI)
I ended the last post with the announcement I
was going to attend the annual conference of Missions Fest Vancouver (MFV).
There is a world-wide Missions Fest movement so that I do need to specify it is
the Vancouver version I am talking
about. Every specific Missions Fest has a place name associated with it to
distinguish it from the others.
Well, not quite. There is actually a Missions
Fest without a place name. It is the international version that is the
proprietor of the name and the logo, and that is also based in Vancouver. It is appropriately called Missions Fest
International (MFI). Yes, our secular Vancouver is the womb where it all
started. In fact, the original founder, Richard Dodding, now a man of seasoned
age and living in Metro Vancouver, is still busy founding new chapters
especially in Africa. There are now chapters in seven African cities with more
preparing for theirs. At the MFV
conference he strides around sporting a lanyard that identifies him as “Founder.”
I think he is both justly grateful for and proud of his achievement—with the
help of God, of course—and well he might. He wrote the history of it all in his
book Uncovering Missions—Engaging the
World with the Gospel that I found very interesting reading. I encourage
you to check out MFI’s website.
I have great respect and admiration for his
achievements. People of greater fame than mine likewise exude in praise for MF
in general. Tony Campolo, the well-known maverick Christian sociologist, wrote:
Missions Fest
is one of the premier missions conferences in the world. This conference draws
huge crowds to hear some of the best speakers in the world. Here, in Uncovering Missions
Fest–Engaging the World with the Gospel, is a
thorough account of its history, which in itself can inspire the reader to
consider what he or she can do to carry out the Great Commission.—Dr. Tony
Campolo, Eastern University, St. Davids, PA.
Likewise, Mrs. Darlene
Dodding wrote a book entitled Stories
from a Reluctant Missionary of which one reader exuded:
You won’t be
able to put this book down. I wasn’t! Reading Stories from a Reluctant Missionary made me laugh and cry–and relive my days in
Kenya. These stories of sacrifice and dedication are full of adventure,
challenges and, most of all, love. Arlene has captured the thrill of
introducing her village students to the wonders of science and technology. In
truth, these Christian young people have taken their places in Kenyan society
in medicine, teaching and business. —Lillian
Cornelius Warkentin, missionary and Bible translator.
I haven’t read
Darlene’s, but it sounds like I should.
I do want to
alert the more academically inclined among my readers. These books are not of
an academic nature and sometimes that’s enough for us academics to shove them
contemptuously aside as not worthy of our time. I have at times caught myself
with that kind of attitude. But you know, some of the best things in this world
are not of academic inspiration or nature. Any academic who dismisses popular
books purely for that reason, is acting on prejudice and false pride, and
definitely not according to a genuinely academic standard. Missions itself—yes, a legitimate singular/plural
combination—is not an academic enterprise, though missiology is. Non-academic
as missions is, it has been one of the most positive forces for good during the
last two centuries, in spite of its warts and even more in spite of its many critics and
detractors. My writings, including this blog, are a combination of the two.
As noted at the
beginning of this post, I intended to write about MFV but ended up writing
mostly about MFI and its founders. OK, so I changed course slightly, but this
MFI stuff really needed to be aired first in order to understand the context of
MFV. So, I promise: The next post will
be on the latter.
There I go again
with my promises! I just can’t seem to
live without them. In addition, this post represents a break from some of the
longer ones I have forced on you recently—not even up to the 750 words at which
I generally aim and often exceed. An entire 37 short!
Labels:
Africa,
Campolo,
Dodding,
Dodding D.,
missiology,
missions,
Missions Fest,
R.,
T.
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