This is a photo taken of the stage at a recent "bless India" rally held in Mumbai. there were about 20,000 christians present to worship and pray for God to move in their land. It was pretty amazing to see so many people worshiping God.
Also of significance, 2 major local politicians came, and allowed the organising team to pray for them on the stage.
Thursday, May 18, 2006
Circular cut-and-paste
Hi All this is simply a copy of our circular email, so if you've read it stop now!
It's been some time since we sent a 'circular' to let you know how we are getting on. We have been in touch with many of you over the past months and we do try to reply to everyone in person as we really appreciate any news. To everyone else, I hope you have been able to keep up to date with our website (address below). We update this regularly with news and photos, and know many of you are kept informed this way. This is why we have been neglecting these circular e-mails.
For those in our support group, we are very grateful to Sharmaine for also helping to keep you all in the loop and encouraging you to pray for us. We have been SO encouraged by all your prayers, e-mails, letters etc. It really does make such a difference to a day to receive these and to know that we are in your thoughts. I have said it several times but will say again that we have never felt better connected with our friends and family than since we came here. To use a familiar expression, God works in mysterious ways!
We arrived here in Thane 8 months ago today full of anticipation and a fair amount of trepidation. Our experiences since that day are too many to list here but, as most of you will know, there have been positives and negatives. Days when we have felt so excited to be here and about what God is using us for and other days when I have cried and, if offered, would have taken a flight back home to all that is familiar. Through it all we have known that God is with us, and you guys, which has made it easier. We have stepped significantly out of our comfort zones which is never easy but always ultimately rewarding. We wait to see what will happen next and know for sure that we are different people from those that left. Not least because we are now 4 instead of 3!
It's hard to believe that we will be back in Scotland 4 weeks today! In some ways it seems like a lifetime has lapsed since we were last there with so many significant life events having happened (new country, new baby, 2 house moves, a month in the hills learning Hindi...) That said, it also feels like yesterday that we stepped onto the plane.
We are so excited about our trip home (14th June - 11th July) but are conscious that, as somebody wisely prayed, we wouldn't have too high expectations and risk being disappointed or struggle to leave again! We are very aware that it will be an extremely social and very busy time that is full of emotion and inevitably tiring. This will be true especially for the kids who will be experiencing a constantly changing environment. Although Scotland is our home we have to remember that Freya has never been there and Alistair will have no real recollection of it! We will have to give them 'quiet days' as much as possible. That said, please don't be offended that if we don't manage to see you and know that we would love to if we could!
We will definitely be at our home church, Queen's Park Baptist, on 2nd July in the morning. We will be saying something about our experiences so far in the service. There will also be a lunch after the service where we can chat to folk in a bit more depth. If you are interested please come as it will be a good opportunity for us to catch up with you all.
Looking forward to catching up with as many of you as possible soon. Meantime, check out the website!
Love Jo et al.
It's been some time since we sent a 'circular' to let you know how we are getting on. We have been in touch with many of you over the past months and we do try to reply to everyone in person as we really appreciate any news. To everyone else, I hope you have been able to keep up to date with our website (address below). We update this regularly with news and photos, and know many of you are kept informed this way. This is why we have been neglecting these circular e-mails.
For those in our support group, we are very grateful to Sharmaine for also helping to keep you all in the loop and encouraging you to pray for us. We have been SO encouraged by all your prayers, e-mails, letters etc. It really does make such a difference to a day to receive these and to know that we are in your thoughts. I have said it several times but will say again that we have never felt better connected with our friends and family than since we came here. To use a familiar expression, God works in mysterious ways!
We arrived here in Thane 8 months ago today full of anticipation and a fair amount of trepidation. Our experiences since that day are too many to list here but, as most of you will know, there have been positives and negatives. Days when we have felt so excited to be here and about what God is using us for and other days when I have cried and, if offered, would have taken a flight back home to all that is familiar. Through it all we have known that God is with us, and you guys, which has made it easier. We have stepped significantly out of our comfort zones which is never easy but always ultimately rewarding. We wait to see what will happen next and know for sure that we are different people from those that left. Not least because we are now 4 instead of 3!
It's hard to believe that we will be back in Scotland 4 weeks today! In some ways it seems like a lifetime has lapsed since we were last there with so many significant life events having happened (new country, new baby, 2 house moves, a month in the hills learning Hindi...) That said, it also feels like yesterday that we stepped onto the plane.
We are so excited about our trip home (14th June - 11th July) but are conscious that, as somebody wisely prayed, we wouldn't have too high expectations and risk being disappointed or struggle to leave again! We are very aware that it will be an extremely social and very busy time that is full of emotion and inevitably tiring. This will be true especially for the kids who will be experiencing a constantly changing environment. Although Scotland is our home we have to remember that Freya has never been there and Alistair will have no real recollection of it! We will have to give them 'quiet days' as much as possible. That said, please don't be offended that if we don't manage to see you and know that we would love to if we could!
We will definitely be at our home church, Queen's Park Baptist, on 2nd July in the morning. We will be saying something about our experiences so far in the service. There will also be a lunch after the service where we can chat to folk in a bit more depth. If you are interested please come as it will be a good opportunity for us to catch up with you all.
Looking forward to catching up with as many of you as possible soon. Meantime, check out the website!
Love Jo et al.
Wednesday, May 17, 2006
Challenging and Inspiring
Rick Warren is not your typical American evangelist. He's not an especially charismatic speaker, keeping his rhetoric deliberately folksy and low key. He's unassuming, a little bit pudgy and has a fondness for Hawaiian shirts, even when he's delivering his weekend sermons.
A long time ago, he decided he never wanted to be on television. He doesn't think a lot of televangelists or the powerful, media-anointed leaders of the Christian right, whom he accuses of "self-centred consumerism" and self-aggrandisement at the expense of their spiritual mission. Until relatively recently, he worked almost entirely under the radar and, despite building a movement of extraordinary power and reach in churches around the world, was barely known in the broader culture.
And yet he has achieved extraordinary things, and intends to keep achieving many more. His church, which he founded from scratch 26 years ago, attracts more than 20,000 worshippers each week, making it one of the three largest congregations in the country. His sermons, which he posts on the internet, are downloaded and used by thousands of churches around the world.
His book, The Purpose-Driven Life, has been America's top non-fiction seller for the past two years, doing twice as much business as The Da Vinci Code with 25 million copies. He and his congregants have adopted a unique method of organisation that has permitted them, among other things, to set up drug treatment programmes in southern California and the Mexican border town of Tijuana, provide three square meals a day for the entire homeless population of Orange County for 40 days, and offer training to more than a quarter of a million priests around the world - everyone from pastors in big-city churches to ministers in the smallest villages in Africa.
Starbucks has honoured him with a long quotation printed on its coffee cups, part of a series in which customers are offered words of wisdom from major writers and thinkers. Warren's line - asserting that none of us is an accident, that we are all part of God's plan - is the only one from a religious figure.
And Warren has much more up his sleeve. He believes he knows how to tackle what he calls the "global Goliaths", problems so intractable that nobody has managed to come up with a solution. He's talking about poverty and illiteracy and pandemic disease, and even more abstract concepts like spiritual emptiness and egocentric political leadership. What he really wants to do is launch a new Reformation, in which the organisational power of churches - any churches, representing any faith - is harnessed to deliver what politicians and international aid organisations and NGOs cannot.
"The first Reformation was about creeds, and this one is going to be about deeds," he said in an interview in his Green Room - a soundproofed office right next to the cavernous Worship Centre where thousands of people gathered for a Mother's Day service last Sunday. "The church is the body of Christ, but really its hands and legs have been amputated and all it is is a mouth."
People are not only encouraged to take their own decisions in his system; figuring out what they should do to help others is at the core of his message. "It's not about you," reads the opening line of his book, and he means it. The purpose of life, he believes, is to figure out what God intends each of us to achieve, and then to set about achieving it. Warren's Saddleback Church may be huge, but he has also split the congregation into manageable "small groups" of eight to fifteen people, who act as each other's church family, set goals and go about achieving them - whether it is helping someone's troubled relative or setting off on a mission to Cambodia.
These small groups, in turn, communicate with other small groups, perhaps half a world away. Always, the focus is on finding someone with credibility as a community leader and working through them. This is not a traditional, paternalistic model of missionary work, in other words; it's more about creating a decentralised, cellular model of organisation that can reach the sorts of people who usually remain invisible and entirely powerless.
Warren's interest in addressing the world's thorniest economic and social problems is relatively recent. It was stirred by his wife's interest in Aids, and then confirmed during a trip to South Africa when he asked to be taken to a village, more or less at random.
To his amazement, the pastor of the local church (which met in a tent) knew who he was - he had been downloading Warren's sermons for years from a post office computer an hour and a half's walk away. To his consternation, one-third of the 75 people attending the service were children orphaned by Aids.
"It was a shock, a wake-up call," Warren said. "That night I stretched out on the ground to pray under the African sky and asked, 'God, what else am I missing?'" And so he launched his so-called PEACE programme - a kind of viral marketing project for global stability, economic justice and access to health care and education. For now, his organisation has undertaken a series of pilot projects in 67 countries, just to see how it goes.
The system works. Warren himself has made several personal adjustments since the runaway success of his book made him rich and famous. He and his wife, Kay, decided right away they would make no changes in their personal life. They still live in the same house, and drive the same Ford truck, which is now six years old.
Rather, they decided to make some aggressive decisions about the money flooding in. Warren not only stopped accepting a salary from the church, but paid back his accumulated salary from the past 25 years. Rather than giving away 10 per cent of their income to charity - the traditional tithing system - they decided to give away 90 per cent.
After some grappling, Warren also understood how best to deal with his own celebrity. He turned to Psalm 72, in which Solomon prays for more influence, not less. Warren said that opened his own eyes. "The purpose of influence is to speak up for those who have no influence," he said. In other words, becoming famous didn't have to be a distraction; it could be a tool in attaining his goals.
"I could have bought a Pacific island and spent the rest of my life having people bring me drinks with little umbrellas in them," he said. "But this is not about me, as I wrote in the book. It's all about others."
A long time ago, he decided he never wanted to be on television. He doesn't think a lot of televangelists or the powerful, media-anointed leaders of the Christian right, whom he accuses of "self-centred consumerism" and self-aggrandisement at the expense of their spiritual mission. Until relatively recently, he worked almost entirely under the radar and, despite building a movement of extraordinary power and reach in churches around the world, was barely known in the broader culture.
And yet he has achieved extraordinary things, and intends to keep achieving many more. His church, which he founded from scratch 26 years ago, attracts more than 20,000 worshippers each week, making it one of the three largest congregations in the country. His sermons, which he posts on the internet, are downloaded and used by thousands of churches around the world.
His book, The Purpose-Driven Life, has been America's top non-fiction seller for the past two years, doing twice as much business as The Da Vinci Code with 25 million copies. He and his congregants have adopted a unique method of organisation that has permitted them, among other things, to set up drug treatment programmes in southern California and the Mexican border town of Tijuana, provide three square meals a day for the entire homeless population of Orange County for 40 days, and offer training to more than a quarter of a million priests around the world - everyone from pastors in big-city churches to ministers in the smallest villages in Africa.
Starbucks has honoured him with a long quotation printed on its coffee cups, part of a series in which customers are offered words of wisdom from major writers and thinkers. Warren's line - asserting that none of us is an accident, that we are all part of God's plan - is the only one from a religious figure.
And Warren has much more up his sleeve. He believes he knows how to tackle what he calls the "global Goliaths", problems so intractable that nobody has managed to come up with a solution. He's talking about poverty and illiteracy and pandemic disease, and even more abstract concepts like spiritual emptiness and egocentric political leadership. What he really wants to do is launch a new Reformation, in which the organisational power of churches - any churches, representing any faith - is harnessed to deliver what politicians and international aid organisations and NGOs cannot.
"The first Reformation was about creeds, and this one is going to be about deeds," he said in an interview in his Green Room - a soundproofed office right next to the cavernous Worship Centre where thousands of people gathered for a Mother's Day service last Sunday. "The church is the body of Christ, but really its hands and legs have been amputated and all it is is a mouth."
People are not only encouraged to take their own decisions in his system; figuring out what they should do to help others is at the core of his message. "It's not about you," reads the opening line of his book, and he means it. The purpose of life, he believes, is to figure out what God intends each of us to achieve, and then to set about achieving it. Warren's Saddleback Church may be huge, but he has also split the congregation into manageable "small groups" of eight to fifteen people, who act as each other's church family, set goals and go about achieving them - whether it is helping someone's troubled relative or setting off on a mission to Cambodia.
These small groups, in turn, communicate with other small groups, perhaps half a world away. Always, the focus is on finding someone with credibility as a community leader and working through them. This is not a traditional, paternalistic model of missionary work, in other words; it's more about creating a decentralised, cellular model of organisation that can reach the sorts of people who usually remain invisible and entirely powerless.
Warren's interest in addressing the world's thorniest economic and social problems is relatively recent. It was stirred by his wife's interest in Aids, and then confirmed during a trip to South Africa when he asked to be taken to a village, more or less at random.
To his amazement, the pastor of the local church (which met in a tent) knew who he was - he had been downloading Warren's sermons for years from a post office computer an hour and a half's walk away. To his consternation, one-third of the 75 people attending the service were children orphaned by Aids.
"It was a shock, a wake-up call," Warren said. "That night I stretched out on the ground to pray under the African sky and asked, 'God, what else am I missing?'" And so he launched his so-called PEACE programme - a kind of viral marketing project for global stability, economic justice and access to health care and education. For now, his organisation has undertaken a series of pilot projects in 67 countries, just to see how it goes.
The system works. Warren himself has made several personal adjustments since the runaway success of his book made him rich and famous. He and his wife, Kay, decided right away they would make no changes in their personal life. They still live in the same house, and drive the same Ford truck, which is now six years old.
Rather, they decided to make some aggressive decisions about the money flooding in. Warren not only stopped accepting a salary from the church, but paid back his accumulated salary from the past 25 years. Rather than giving away 10 per cent of their income to charity - the traditional tithing system - they decided to give away 90 per cent.
After some grappling, Warren also understood how best to deal with his own celebrity. He turned to Psalm 72, in which Solomon prays for more influence, not less. Warren said that opened his own eyes. "The purpose of influence is to speak up for those who have no influence," he said. In other words, becoming famous didn't have to be a distraction; it could be a tool in attaining his goals.
"I could have bought a Pacific island and spent the rest of my life having people bring me drinks with little umbrellas in them," he said. "But this is not about me, as I wrote in the book. It's all about others."
Thursday, May 04, 2006
From the heart
Well, what a buzzing centre of activity our flat has been of late! Like Sauchiehall Street! Over the past week we have had Roger and Michelle Hartley (+ 2 friends who they work with) and Henry and Maggi Merriweather to stay with us. Along with Paul and Jean Dobbing who visited us in March, that makes 3 couples from Queen's Park Baptist Church (our church in Glasgow) who have stayed since we moved flats! It has been brilliant to have a bit of banter with folk from a shared culture. We've enjoyed conversing freely and being able to understand exactly what's being talked about - with a good bit of humour too which we miss. How about all our friends get together and draw up a rota of when you're coming to visit. That would be fun!
Jo continues to struggle here quite a bit of the time, missing all her friends and work back home a lot. I am busy and occupied at work, which makes things easier for me, but most of the time Jo is in the flat with the kids. Feel free to say a wee prayer for her. It would be appreciated (and for me). We are all really looking forward to coming back to the UK, it is only 6 weeks now!
My work is difficult at times. I find the language barrier extremely frustrating. If I could only converse freely in Hindi I could be a proper doctor again, and see patients by myself!! WOW! At present Sheba (the other Dr.) and I see pt.'s together, which is quicker than seeing them by herself, and she values my opinion, and listens to me. However she often doesn't translate large sections of conversation, but just paraphrases. I lose any humour and depth to the "Doctor-Patient relationship". I know this will improve, but I need to be more disciplined at studying Hindi.
Alistair is now 2 and a great wee conversationalist! He knows quite a few Hindi words and, I think, understands a lot. He spends all morning chatting with the lady who comes to help us and she only speaks Hindi. He's learning to assert his independence (interpret that how you wish!), mainly in the the area of food. He has become a picky eater at times and isn’t gaining weight. He also sucks his thumb, which is not ideal here, so I think I'll treat him for worms just in case this is why he’s not getting fatter!!!!
Freya is a delight. She is growing really fast, and has had no illness. She is quite strong and I think is more physically able than Alistair was. It will be interesting to see if she crawls/walks sooner than Alistair did. Alistair continues to be very fond of her and is quite protective if others get too close!
Jo continues to struggle here quite a bit of the time, missing all her friends and work back home a lot. I am busy and occupied at work, which makes things easier for me, but most of the time Jo is in the flat with the kids. Feel free to say a wee prayer for her. It would be appreciated (and for me). We are all really looking forward to coming back to the UK, it is only 6 weeks now!
My work is difficult at times. I find the language barrier extremely frustrating. If I could only converse freely in Hindi I could be a proper doctor again, and see patients by myself!! WOW! At present Sheba (the other Dr.) and I see pt.'s together, which is quicker than seeing them by herself, and she values my opinion, and listens to me. However she often doesn't translate large sections of conversation, but just paraphrases. I lose any humour and depth to the "Doctor-Patient relationship". I know this will improve, but I need to be more disciplined at studying Hindi.
Alistair is now 2 and a great wee conversationalist! He knows quite a few Hindi words and, I think, understands a lot. He spends all morning chatting with the lady who comes to help us and she only speaks Hindi. He's learning to assert his independence (interpret that how you wish!), mainly in the the area of food. He has become a picky eater at times and isn’t gaining weight. He also sucks his thumb, which is not ideal here, so I think I'll treat him for worms just in case this is why he’s not getting fatter!!!!
Freya is a delight. She is growing really fast, and has had no illness. She is quite strong and I think is more physically able than Alistair was. It will be interesting to see if she crawls/walks sooner than Alistair did. Alistair continues to be very fond of her and is quite protective if others get too close!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)