Archive for the ‘Missions’ Category

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Jackie Pullinger

November 4, 2009

3At 22, Jackie Pullinger wanted to become a missionary, but no society would take her on. So she went on her own to Hong Kong and began a pioneering work among drug addicts and Triad gang members that continues today.

It seems insane. Giving up everything you have to go to one of the most dangerous places in the world to show Jesus’ love to criminals, prostitutes and drug addicts. You might at a pinch go for six months or a couple of years. But how about going for the rest of your life?

This is what Jackie Pullinger did.

Jackie Pullinger began to make this huge decision early. As a young girl at Sunday School she decided she wanted to be a missionary – and that was before she really knew what a missionary was. But as she grew up, she forgot about her childhood ambition for a while and became a student at the Royal College of Music.

It was only when she started meeting regularly with other Christians in a friend’s home that she thought about being a missionary again. Then one night, she had a dream.

“I saw a vision of a woman holding her arms out beseechingly as on a refugee poster. I wondered what she wanted – she looked desperate for something… Then words moved past like a television credit: WHAT CAN YOU GIVE US?”

After a series of dreams and vivid experiences, Jackie decided she would go to Hong Kong. The trouble was, no one else agreed with her.

She applied to every missionary group she could think of, and also to church organisations and the Hong Kong government – but all the doors closed in her face. You’re too young, you’re too inexperienced, you have the wrong qualifications, she was told.

She was about to give up, when the vicar of a church she helped in told her, against the received wisdom of everything else she had heard, to go to Hong Kong anyway.

In 1966, Jackie Pullinger gathered up all the money she had and bought a passage on the cheapest boat to Hong Kong she could find. She only had enough money for a one-way ticket, so there was no turning back.

She almost didn’t make it past Hong Kong immigration. But she was eventually allowed in and found a job teaching at a primary school in the Walled City. This was an area where the Hong Kong police had no regular jurisdiction. As a result, it was Hong Kong’s most deprived and dangerous area.

2The Walled City has changed since Jackie first entered it. Successive police crackdowns in the 1970s and 80s have brought a semblance of control to the area, and yet the Walled City is still an area of great poverty.

But in 1966, it was far worse. Many of its inhabitants could only scratch a living by slaving in sweatshops under appalling conditions. Others became prostitutes or sold drugs. All of them lived in fear of the infamous Triad gangs – even though most of the gang members were just teenagers.

Outside her primary school job, where she taught music, Jackie started approaching people in the Walled City to say that Jesus loved them. Most of the people she talked to were either politely condescending or just amused.

Then Jackie set up a small youth club. Many of the boys who came to it were members of the Triad gangs. To begin with, the people of the Walled City were sceptical of her – missionaries came with lots of money and nice clothes and preached and helped for a while before going home to the West. Many people simply couldn’t believe that Jackie had no money and wasn’t going to go away.

Eventually, she gained the trust of the young men, and they began to believe that she was there to stay, and that she meant what she said – that she really did care for them. She began to see the boys becoming Christians one by one. Many of them were addicts.

Opium and heroin abuse – “chasing the dragon” – was, and still is, an epidemic in the Walled City. In a 1989 interview, Jackie recalled:

“I could walk down the street and see a hundred people chasing the dragon. You had to climb over their legs. I wanted something real to offer them… not just treatment in a centre.”

Despite the power of heroin and opium addiction, the boys weren’t only kicking their habit, they were leaving it behind completely. They put this down to their commitment to Jesus. Many addicts who prayed for Jesus’ help found themselves freed of their addiction without going through any kind of withdrawal. Jackie opened a home for those who needed help and was soon inundated with pleas for help and a place to stay.

Not all of the addicts reformed immediately. Jackie started to realise that becoming a Christian didn’t automatically heal you of your addictions, or immediately reform you after a lifetime in the underworld. But the signs were good.

Several reformed addicts joined Jackie in her work. Ah Ping, a Triad who became a Christian, went on to set up a rehabilitation centre in Macao.

At first, Jackie’s unusual and dangerous work had been opposed from both sides – by the churches and the Triads. Many church members believed Christianity was only for “respectable” people.

Jackie promised herself very early on that she would never ask for money for her work. But money started flooding in. She quit her school job and was offered monthly payments to support her work. She accompanied one of the boys from her house to court, and sometime later found was sent a large sum of money from the legal aid department, even though Jackie had never asked for legal aid, and tried to send it back.

Jackie’s efforts to show and tell the love of Jesus eventually had an amazing degree of success. She also received help from some of the most unlikely places.

She won the trust and approval of the very groups she opposed: the Triads. After Jackie’s youth club was destroyed by vandals one night, a Triad boss sent guards to watch the building and make sure it didn’t happen again. This same gang boss later arranged a meeting with Jackie.

He told her that he didn’t want his gang members to be addicts any more than she did. She had succeeded where he had failed and therefore he would support her as she helped to free get his men off drugs.

Jackie’s response was uncompromising. She told him simply that she wouldn’t help the boys escape their addictions purely for them to become gangsters again. If they were to be followers of Jesus, they had to leave the gangs altogether. To her astonishment, the gang boss still offered to guard her house, and renounced all claim on those boys who chose to become Christians. It was unprecedented in Hong Kong gang culture, where people were bound to the Triads for their entire lives.

As Jackie’s work grew, she found herself able to open a second house. By the time a third home was needed, Jackie, with the help of a couple of American missionaries, set up the St Stephen’s Society, which continues its work in Hong Kong and south-east Asia today.

The society has become one of the most successful drug rehabilitation programmes in the world, rescuing hundreds of young people from a life of misery on the streets.

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Logos Hope in Belfast

November 1, 2009
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Logos Hope

November 1, 2009

A cutting-edge example of international cooperation and cultural understanding, this growing fleet has been sailing the world since 1970, housing at any one time over 600 unpaid volunteers from around 70 countries! These crewmembers have each given several months or even years of their lives to serve on board, promoting world-wide education, cooperation, aid relief, social awareness and a personal relationship with God, in the ports and countries to which they travel.

2Operated by non-profit organisation GBA Ships e.V. based in Mosbach, Germany, Logos Hope is the newest ship in a fleet which has impacted millions of people world-wide.

Over 37 million people in 142 different countries have walked up an OM Ship gangway to visit one of the floating book fairs. For many, it is their first ever opportunity to purchase good quality literature at a fraction of the retail value. From car manual to children’s novel to cook book, many without the means to study, have learnt vital skills and been able to enhance their lives through a purchase from over 6,000 available titles.

As well, the ships are a hotbed of cultural variety, where five continents meet on 12,000 tonnes of steel. For volunteer crew they provide a life-impacting training programme, sharing experiences with a wide range of people around the world, as well as learning valuable skills and broadening their horizons. For visitors, interactive programmes provide fresh perspectives on the breadth of life in this large world.

Travelling from port to port, crew experience the needs of the world first-hand. Being in a position to help – whether through donating supplies, building a house, or offering a listening ear – is both a privilege and a responsibility. The ships seek to bring aid and relief as an outworking of God’s love, through any possible means. Coupled with their promotion of education, this approach aims not only to alleviate immediate needs, but also to bring long-term change in each community.

Every crewmember can testify to a radical transformation in their personal life – a turnaround from despair and death, to hope and purpose, through entering into a reconciled relationship with God. Having experienced this change firsthand, they desire to share it with others, and thus spread a message of good news around the world. This is always done with greatest respect for and sensitivity towards the culture of the community hosting the ship.

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Youth With A Mission

October 31, 2009

Youth With A Mission (YWAM) encompasses thousands of people and hundreds of ministries in almost every country of the world. In every case, their passion is to know God and to make Him known.

2They are a mixture of people from all over the world, from 149 countries in fact. In many of their locations, people from a wide variety of nations serve side by side. They come from numerous different Christian denominations and speak hundreds of languages. Nearly half of our staff come from “non-western” countries, such as Brazil, Korea, Indonesia, India and Nepal.

In addition to their full-time staff, many YWAM locations host short-term outreach teams made up of individuals, youth groups, families and churches who get to participate first-hand in “making God known” through both words and actions. They send out over 25,000 short-term missionaries each year.

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Letter to Prime Minister

October 29, 2009
 
The Rt Hon Gordon Brown MP
10 Downing Street
London
SW1A 2AA

Dear Prime Minister

I am writing to you on behalf of BMS World Mission and our partners worldwide in connection with the Copenhagen Climate Conference 2009. One of our significant partners is A Rocha, a Christian conservation organisation with a global reputation, and co-signatory to this letter.

BMS World Mission is one of the world’s oldest Christian mission organisations, having been founded in 1792. From that date, a deep concern for the poorest peoples of the world has been at the heart of our work, which now spans more than 30 countries on four continents.

We are supported by over 2,500 churches in the UK representing a community of more than a quarter of a million people. Together, we believe that we have a fundamental responsibility to care for God’s world and God’s people. It is that sense of moral responsibility which led past generations to combat the evil of slavery, and more recently, support the Jubilee debt campaign, where your leadership, alongside others, was of such importance.

Prime Minister, we wholeheartedly support the personal commitment that you have shown towards ensuring that the crisis of climate change is addressed as a moral issue, and not just an economic or scientific issue. The poorest people in the world will suffer the most unless we, the richest, take a strong lead.  

We therefore ask that you continue to do all you can to make sure that at the Copenhagen Conference the United Kingdom speaks for the interests of the poor of the world on these issues, and provides clear leadership to other nations in this regard.

As you do so, please be assured that you have the prayers, not only of the BMS family globally, but also of the Christian leaders whose organisations and communities worldwide have given their support to this letter.

Yours faithfully

David Kerrigan                 Steve Hughes
General Director            CEO A Rocha UK

Information from www.bmsworldmission.org

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BMS Letter to Prime Minister

October 29, 2009

BMS World Mission has written to Prime Minister Gordon Brown, encouraging him to continue along the right path concerning climate change and committing, along with Baptist groups around the world, to praying for him as he goes to the Copenhagen conference on climate change in December.


BMS Director for Communications, Mark Craig, explains why:

Climate change –  two words guaranteed to start a debate anywhere two or three are gathered, including churches.

2At BMS we’ve had our own debate about where we stand on the issue. Like many of you, it’s been a journey for us, and we’re still travelling. We’ve offset all of our air travel this year, we’re working to reduce travel through technologies like video-conferencing and we’ve introduced the subject to the Baptist Assemblies we partner in.

With the UN Copenhagen Climate Conference starting on 7 December, we were faced with a choice about how to respond. We could have added our voice to the many who are shouting, demanding and pleading for action from the world’s leaders.

We decided instead to write our first-ever open letter, to Prime Minister Gordon Brown. The letter was signed by both David Kerrigan, General Director of BMS, and by Steve Hughes, Chief Executive of key BMS partner A Rocha. In our letter, we asked Mr Brown to ensure that the United Kingdom speaks for the interests of the poor of the world, and provides clear leadership to other nations in that regard.

However, our key message to the Prime Minister was not a demand or a request. It was a promise – a promise to pray for him. We were also able to secure that same promise from Baptist leaders in 23 countries, and offer Mr Brown their prayers too.

We believe that’s a biblical response, and we hope that you’ll join us in praying for the Prime Minister as the Copenhagen conference progresses.

Information from www.bmsworldmission.org

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