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<strong>Anyone</strong><br />

<strong>could</strong><br />

<strong>do</strong><br />

<strong>that</strong>!<br />

Devotional mesages<br />

for misions-minded<br />

Christians<br />

Doug Nichols


A n yo n e<br />

c o u l d<br />

d o<br />

t h at !


A n yo n e<br />

c o u l d<br />

d o<br />

t h at !<br />

Devotional messages<br />

for missions-minded<br />

Christians<br />

D o u g N i c h o l s<br />

c o m p i l e D b y b r i a N s t e w a r t


Copyright © 2013 by Doug Nichols and Action<br />

International Ministries, USA.<br />

PO Box 398, Mountlake Terrace, WA 98043<br />

communications@actionusa.org<br />

Printed in the United States of America


Contents<br />

Foreword .......................................................1<br />

Witnessing in a TB sanitarium ........................5<br />

Witnessing in a Manila garbage dump ............8<br />

Admonish whom? Or, I’m certainly<br />

not going to say anything! ............................11<br />

Advice to new missionaries ..........................16<br />

Are ten “lickins” enough? .............................20<br />

Are you about through? ...............................25<br />

Are you easily offended? ..............................28<br />

Are you into fads? ........................................31


Bibles before bullets .....................................33<br />

Blood on the floor and pigs running wild! ...36<br />

Brotherly kindness .......................................39<br />

Can you stay on your horse? ........................41<br />

Cancer survivor by God’s grace ....................44<br />

Do our sins catch up to us in our old age? ....47<br />

Do you fire people graciously,<br />

or as the world <strong>do</strong>es?....................................50<br />

Do you go to God with small matters,<br />

as well as big? ...............................................53<br />

Do you have any spoons<br />

you need to return? .....................................56<br />

Does a little matter? .....................................58<br />

Embarrassed without notes ..........................62<br />

Francis Schaeffer slept here ..........................64


Honor to whom honor is due ......................67<br />

Hospitality and caring<br />

for the needs of others .................................70<br />

I wish I <strong>could</strong> be a brother like <strong>that</strong> .............72<br />

Is it okay for a missionary to<br />

drive a Cadillac? ...........................................76<br />

It is always too early to quit! .........................79<br />

Jail break in Bangalore, India ........................82<br />

Jesus sends a sword, so He must be God! ......86<br />

Leaving China .............................................89<br />

Little lady in the cancer ward .......................92<br />

Moaning and groaning <strong>do</strong>es not<br />

<strong>do</strong> a bit of good ...........................................95<br />

Only the beautiful lip-synch .........................97<br />

Playing hurt ...............................................100


Reggie Jackson, Willie Mays, and<br />

Pastor Sio<strong>do</strong>ra ............................................102<br />

Self-denial, afflictions, and a thorny bed ......104<br />

Street boy becomes academic dean .............108<br />

Thanks, mister, for talking to me ................111<br />

The Gospel is not word and deeds,<br />

but word only! ...........................................114<br />

The race is on ............................................116<br />

The State of California is on your side .......119<br />

Useless, or strategic ministry? .....................122<br />

Ushers, get the plates!.................................124<br />

We walk by faith ... not by sight,<br />

even in spending money ............................128<br />

What? $2.55 for a little cup of lemonade? ...131


What pictures <strong>do</strong> you have on your wall<br />

and who <strong>do</strong> you pray for? ..........................133<br />

What would you <strong>do</strong>? .................................136<br />

Where are the missionaries? .......................140<br />

Why are we not more friendly<br />

and kind to others? ....................................144<br />

You are not very smart, are you? .................146<br />

Missionaries are still needed ......................151


1<br />

Foreword<br />

The fact <strong>that</strong> you are holding this book in your<br />

hands is certainly no thanks to Doug Nichols.<br />

What I mean by <strong>that</strong> is <strong>that</strong> for years I have<br />

proposed to Doug <strong>that</strong> he combine some of his<br />

most inspiring missions messages into a book.<br />

But he has never been interested in <strong>do</strong>ing so.<br />

You see, Doug is the type of person who would<br />

rather talk about you and your ministry than be<br />

in the spotlight himself.<br />

So, while he was ministering in the<br />

Philippines in December, 2012, I compiled and<br />

edited these stories from all our archives of his<br />

writings here at the ACTION headquarters, and<br />

sent them off to be printed in a book. This book.<br />

I even put his picture on the cover, though I<br />

know he won’t like it because he always prefers<br />

<strong>that</strong> the attention be on Christ and others, not<br />

himself.


So if you are reading this, then somehow I<br />

have prevailed by “sneak attack” and after getting<br />

this printed up while he was away, have finally<br />

won his approval to distribute it. Sometimes it is<br />

easier to get forgiveness than permission!<br />

I hate to <strong>do</strong> this to one of my bosses, but<br />

these messages really deserve a wider audience.<br />

This book is also my way of saying thanks<br />

to a man who has been a great help and<br />

encouragement to me.<br />

I have always considered Doug Nichols to be<br />

the co-founder of my ministry in Cuba, because<br />

twelve years ago when I started out I had no<br />

money and very few contacts. It was Doug who<br />

initially found the money, found the conference<br />

speakers, and found the books for us to print!<br />

Perhaps more amazingly, he found confidence<br />

in this new missionary and treated me with<br />

greater respect than I possibly deserved. Doug<br />

surely realized <strong>that</strong> at the beginning I didn’t<br />

know what I was <strong>do</strong>ing, but he never gave a hint<br />

of <strong>that</strong>. Rather, he encouraged me every step<br />

of the way and continued to introduce me to<br />

his friends and ministry colleagues, which made<br />

2


me feel <strong>that</strong> he was very proud of me and the<br />

ministry.<br />

His faith in me helped me to grow into the<br />

leadership role I have, and the opportunities he<br />

gave me caused me to grow and learn in ways<br />

<strong>that</strong> I wouldn’t have otherwise.<br />

I have been blessed to know and work with<br />

Doug, and there are now tens of thousands<br />

of Cuban pastors and leaders who have been<br />

blessed with conferences and books because<br />

Doug Nichols found it in his heart to take a<br />

young missionary under his wing.<br />

I trust <strong>that</strong> these brief devotional messages<br />

written by Doug will encourage even those<br />

missionaries and missions-minded Christians<br />

who have not had the privilege of knowing him<br />

personally.<br />

—Brian Stewart, ACTION Cuba Director<br />

3


witnessing in A<br />

tB sAnitArium<br />

While serving with Operation Mobilization<br />

in India in 1967, tuberculosis forced me into<br />

a sanitarium for several months. I did not yet<br />

speak the language, but I tried to give Christian<br />

literature written in their language to the<br />

patients, <strong>do</strong>ctors and nurses. Everyone politely<br />

refused.<br />

I sensed many weren’t happy about a rich<br />

American (to them all Americans are rich) being<br />

in a free, government-run sanitarium. (They<br />

didn’t know I was just as broke as they were!)<br />

The first few nights I woke around 2:00 a.m.<br />

coughing. One morning during my coughing<br />

spell, I noticed one of the older and sicker<br />

patients across the aisle trying to get out of bed.<br />

He would sit up on the edge of the bed and try<br />

to stand, but in weakness would fall back into<br />

5


ed. I didn’t understand what he was trying to<br />

<strong>do</strong>. He finally fell back into bed, exhausted. I<br />

heard him crying softly.<br />

The next morning I realized <strong>that</strong> the man<br />

had been trying to get up and walk to the<br />

bathroom! The stench in the ward was awful.<br />

Other patients yelled insults at the man. Angry<br />

nurses moved him roughly from side to side<br />

as they cleaned up the mess. One nurse even<br />

slapped him. The old man curled into a ball and<br />

wept.<br />

The next night I again woke up coughing. I<br />

noticed the man across the aisle sit up and again<br />

try to stand. Like the night before, he fell back<br />

whimpering. I <strong>do</strong>n’t like bad smells, and I didn’t<br />

want to become involved, but I got out of bed and<br />

went over to him. When I touched his shoulder,<br />

His eyes opened wide with fear. I smiled, put my<br />

arms under him, and picked him up.<br />

He was very light, due to old age and<br />

advanced TB. I carried him to the washroom,<br />

which was just a small filthy room with a hole<br />

in the floor. I stood behind him with my arms<br />

under his armpits as he took care of himself.<br />

6


After he finished, I picked him up and carried<br />

him back to his bed. As I laid him <strong>do</strong>wn, he kissed<br />

me on the cheek, smiled, and said something I<br />

<strong>could</strong>n’t understand.<br />

The next morning another patient woke<br />

me and handed me a steaming cup of tea. He<br />

motioned with his hands <strong>that</strong> he wanted a tract.<br />

As the sun rose, other patients approached<br />

and indicated they also wanted the booklets I<br />

had tried to distribute before. Throughout the<br />

day nurses, interns and <strong>do</strong>ctors also asked for<br />

literature.<br />

Weeks later an evangelist who spoke the<br />

language visited me, and as he talked to others<br />

in the sanitarium he discovered <strong>that</strong> several had<br />

put their trust in Christ as Savior as a result of<br />

reading the literature!<br />

What did it take to reach these people with<br />

the Gospel? It wasn’t health, the ability to speak<br />

their language, or a persuasive talk. I simply took<br />

a trip to the bathroom.<br />

<strong>Anyone</strong> <strong>could</strong> have <strong>do</strong>ne <strong>that</strong>!<br />

7


witnessing in A mAnilA<br />

gArBAge dump<br />

It was in the early 1980s <strong>that</strong> Aries, a Filipino<br />

coworker, and I were standing at the top edge<br />

of the Manila garbage dump, in those days<br />

known as “Smoky Mountain,” nearly ten stories<br />

high. Below us lay a village which was home to<br />

15,000 people who eked out an existence at the<br />

dump.<br />

It was early morning, around 5:45, and the<br />

sun was just coming up. Aries and I had met at<br />

the dump to pray. We were asking God to assist<br />

us and the other team members in effectively<br />

reaching these extremely poor people with the<br />

Gospel of salvation in Christ.<br />

As we prayed, an old man approached us.<br />

He had begun his day’s work, scavenging at the<br />

dump. He was gathering aluminum cans to sell,<br />

but was too weak to carry many at the same<br />

8


time. He asked if we would guard the cans he<br />

had already gathered while he looked for more,<br />

and we gladly said yes. I guess it is okay to guard<br />

cans and pray at the same time. We continued<br />

to pray.<br />

The old man came and went with his<br />

tin cans as Aries and I discussed and prayed<br />

about evangelism and church planting among<br />

the poor. After our prayer time, the old man<br />

approached with another load of cans. Since it<br />

was now daylight, I <strong>could</strong> see <strong>that</strong> he was really<br />

quite elderly. He was not wearing a shirt, had<br />

wrinkled skin, and was very thin.<br />

It is respectable in the Philippines to ask<br />

older people their age. I greeted the man,<br />

commented on the fact <strong>that</strong> he was up so early<br />

to work, and politely asked his age.<br />

With a big smile, he answered, “Oh, it’s<br />

wonderful <strong>that</strong> you asked. Today is my birthday!<br />

I am 78 years old today!”<br />

Aries and I gave our congratulations and<br />

then broke out singing “Happy Birthday!” As<br />

we finished, we shook his hand and gave him<br />

a hug. He was so excited and thanked us very<br />

9


much for being so kind to him and singing for<br />

him on his birthday.<br />

We then asked him if he was prepared to go<br />

to heaven. He did not know what we meant. We<br />

proceeded to share the Good News of salvation<br />

in Christ. After some time, this early morning<br />

can-gathering old man, this garbage dump<br />

resident, turned from his sins and in joy trusted<br />

Jesus Christ as Savior!<br />

What a place to receive Christ—on the top<br />

of the Manila garbage dump.<br />

The old man then invited us to his little<br />

shack to meet his wife, son, daughter-in-law and<br />

grandchildren. During the next several weeks<br />

several in his family also trusted the Lord Jesus<br />

Christ.<br />

I guess you <strong>could</strong> call this event “From the<br />

Dump to Glory”! All this came about as the<br />

result of a simple prayer meeting on top of a<br />

dump and in the process guarding a few dirty<br />

cans for an old man.<br />

Anybody <strong>could</strong> have <strong>do</strong>ne the same.<br />

10


Admonish whom? or, i’ m<br />

CertAinly not going<br />

to sAy Anything!<br />

…Christ in you, the hope of glory. We<br />

proclaim Him, admonishing every man and<br />

teaching every man with all wis<strong>do</strong>m, so <strong>that</strong><br />

we may present every man complete in Christ<br />

(Colossians 1:27-28, nasb).<br />

Have you ever been surprised or disheartened<br />

with the conduct or teaching of pastors of large<br />

churches or directors of large ministries? Or<br />

discouraged by their rudeness, crudeness, anger,<br />

language, teaching, or lavish and ostentatious life<br />

style?<br />

Many of us are intimidated and fearful to<br />

say anything, for after all we may only be a<br />

pastor of a small church of 50, so who are we to<br />

11


confront (even graciously) a pastor of a church<br />

of 5000? How can we speak to the conduct of<br />

a famous Christian author when we’ve never<br />

even written a book?<br />

But should not all of us in the body of Christ<br />

encourage each in the body in our conduct and<br />

walk with God?<br />

A pastor of a megachurch speaks crudely<br />

of sex from the pulpit, publically says he <strong>do</strong>es<br />

not like people (except his own family), treats<br />

others rudely and is known as the “angry<br />

pastor.” I spoke at a meeting of pastors and<br />

was seated next to this famous young pastor.<br />

He spoke to no one at the table even when<br />

spoken to. When I sought to encourage and<br />

talk to him, he simply answered with an angry<br />

stare.<br />

Was this a time to say something like, “Hey,<br />

brother, what <strong>do</strong> you think of Paul’s instruction<br />

to the church of Colossae in Colossians<br />

chapter 3, when he says in verses 10 to 12 <strong>that</strong><br />

as a Christian, we are to put on (so the world<br />

can see) a heart of compassion, kindness, and<br />

humility? Brother, as a pastor and teacher of the<br />

12


Word, is it possible to be a true believer without<br />

the evidence in our lives of things <strong>that</strong> clothe a<br />

follower of Christ?”<br />

The reason most of us would not speak<br />

(even kindly) to a “big shot” church leader like<br />

this is because we are afraid he would answer,<br />

“Who <strong>do</strong> you think you are?”<br />

Well, we <strong>do</strong> know (or should know) who<br />

we are; we are members to each other in Christ,<br />

in His body the Church!<br />

So, <strong>do</strong>n’t be a coward like me. Tactfully,<br />

in love, with gracious speech (or writing)<br />

speak to those who bring shame to Christ and<br />

discouragement to those in the church. Don’t<br />

be intimidated and fooled with statements<br />

like, “I know Pastor So and So is not perfect,<br />

but look at the size of his church. He may be<br />

angry, use crude language, and not like people,<br />

but look at all he <strong>do</strong>es for the King<strong>do</strong>m.”<br />

So, as those who have been chosen of<br />

God, holy and beloved, put on a heart of<br />

compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness<br />

and patience; bearing with one another, and<br />

13


forgiving each other, whoever has a complaint<br />

against anyone; just as the Lord forgave you,<br />

so also should you. Beyond all these things<br />

put on love, which is the perfect bond of unity<br />

(Colossians 3:12-14, nasb).<br />

Let no unwholesome word proceed from<br />

your mouth, but only such a word as is good for<br />

edification according to the need of the moment,<br />

so <strong>that</strong> it will give grace to those who hear<br />

(Ephesians 4:29, nasb).<br />

Let all bitterness and wrath and anger<br />

and clamor and slander be put away from<br />

you, along with all malice. Be kind to one<br />

another, tender-hearted, forgiving each other,<br />

just as God in Christ also has forgiven you<br />

(Ephesians 4:31-32, nasb).<br />

Therefore if anyone is in Christ, he<br />

is a new creature; the old things passed<br />

away; behold, new things have come<br />

(2 Corinthians 5:17, nasb).<br />

For the love of Christ controls us, having<br />

concluded this, <strong>that</strong> one died for all, therefore<br />

all died; and He died for all, so <strong>that</strong> they who<br />

live might no longer live for themselves, but for<br />

14


Him who died and rose again on their behalf<br />

(2 Corinthians 5:14-15, nasb).<br />

If our teaching, lifestyle, and conduct <strong>do</strong> not<br />

glorify the Lord Jesus, what good is it, whatever<br />

the size of our ministry or church?<br />

15


AdviCe to new<br />

missionAries<br />

1. No Bible, no breakfast! Do regular daily<br />

devotions and be serious about this. “O how<br />

I love Your law! It is my meditation all the<br />

day” (Psalm 197:97, nasb).<br />

2. Read! Read! Read! Read good books and<br />

read the Bible through at least once yearly!<br />

“Grow in grace and knowledge of our Lord<br />

and Savior Jesus Christ” (2 Peter 3:18, nasb).<br />

Someone said, “If you <strong>do</strong> not read, you will<br />

not grow.”<br />

3. Live by faith. “But my Righteous one shall<br />

live by faith; and if he shrinks back, my soul<br />

has no pleasure in him” (Hebrews 10:38,<br />

nasb).<br />

16


4. Build friendships with local believers,<br />

unbelievers and fellow missionaries.<br />

“Behold, how good and how pleasant it<br />

is for brothers to dwell together in unity”<br />

(Psalm 133:1, nasb).<br />

5. Network for the glory of God. “…but if<br />

we walk in the Light as He Himself is in<br />

the Light, we have fellowship with one<br />

another…” (1 Peter 1:7, nasb).<br />

6. Preach the Gospel to others. “Now I make<br />

known to you, brethren, the gospel which<br />

I preached to you, which also you received,<br />

in which also you stand, by which also you<br />

are saved, if you hold fast the word which I<br />

preached to you, unless you believed in vain.<br />

For I delivered to you as of first importance<br />

what I also received, <strong>that</strong> Christ died for our<br />

sins according to the Scriptures, and <strong>that</strong><br />

He was buried, and <strong>that</strong> He was raised on<br />

the third day according to the Scriptures…”<br />

(1 Corinthians 15:1-4, nasb).<br />

17


7. Practice hospitality whether you are single<br />

or married and <strong>do</strong> this often. “Be hospitable<br />

to one another without complaint”<br />

(1 Peter 4:9, nasb).<br />

8. Learn to love the Savior, love saints, and love<br />

sinners. “…You shall love the Lord your God<br />

with all you heart, and with all your soul,<br />

and with all your mind. This is the great and<br />

foremost commandment. The second is like<br />

it, ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself’”<br />

(Matthew 22:38-39, nasb).<br />

9. Put on humility daily. “… clothe yourselves<br />

with humility toward one another…”<br />

(1 Peter 5:5b, nasb).<br />

10. Be a servant of Christ by serving others.<br />

Remember manners are “the kindness of<br />

Christ in action.” “As each one has received<br />

a special gift, employ it in serving one<br />

another as good stewards of the manifold<br />

grace of God. Whoever speaks, is to <strong>do</strong><br />

so as one who is speaking the utterances<br />

18


of God; whoever serves is to <strong>do</strong> so as one<br />

who is serving by the strength which God<br />

supplies; so <strong>that</strong> in all things God may be<br />

glorified through Jesus Christ…” (1 Peter<br />

4:10-11, nasb).<br />

19


Are ten "liCkins"<br />

enough?<br />

When I was growing up in the 1940s, a spanking<br />

was called a “lickin,” and a swat was called a<br />

“lick.” Few people seem to know much about<br />

this anymore, so I was particularly intrigued by<br />

the excellent movie Places in the Heart.<br />

The movie deals with love, sacrifice,<br />

determination, and racial prejudice. In one<br />

scene, a young wi<strong>do</strong>w is faced with the need<br />

to spank her son. The mother asks the 11-yearold<br />

how his daddy had spanked him before. The<br />

little boy obediently says, “Mom, I bent over the<br />

table and he would spank me with his belt.”<br />

Distraught, the mother asks, “Would he hit<br />

you hard or softly?”<br />

“What I did was pretty bad, Mom, so he<br />

would probably spank me hard,” the boy<br />

responds.<br />

20


“How many licks would he give you?” asks<br />

the mother.<br />

“Well, Mom,” The boy replies, “Dad would<br />

be pretty mad so he would probably give me<br />

ten.”<br />

So the mother proceeds to give him ten<br />

swats. Through tears, she later says, “I will never<br />

spank my son again.”<br />

It was a very moving scene, but I laughed<br />

at the difference between the mother portrayed<br />

in the movie and my own mother. My mom<br />

would have said, “If you <strong>do</strong> it again, I will give<br />

you twenty!”<br />

Mom and Granddad, who helped raise me,<br />

believed in lickins. Boy, did they ever!<br />

On one occasion I received two spankings.<br />

I had thrown a rock through the win<strong>do</strong>w of a<br />

moving car and my grandfather almost wore out<br />

his thick brown belt on my backside! When my<br />

mother got home from work, she did not think<br />

he had beaten me enough, so she went at me<br />

with a black plastic belt. I may have had welts<br />

on my legs from these two hard spankings, but I<br />

did not throw rocks at cars anymore.<br />

21


When I was about six or seven, someone<br />

was selling fruit on the side of the road. It<br />

looked to me like they were making quite a bit<br />

of money, so I proceeded to open a fruit and<br />

vegetable stand myself. One thing was missing:<br />

product. We had no garden so I stole the fruits<br />

and vegetables from the neighbor’s backyard. It<br />

was a profitable little venture.<br />

Until my grandfather found out.<br />

He thought it was so funny and was laughing<br />

so hard <strong>that</strong> he <strong>could</strong> barely hold the belt to<br />

spank me. When Mom got home, she laughed<br />

in her room for a while, then got in a few good<br />

licks as well. I had to pay the neighbor back of<br />

course, but I <strong>do</strong>n’t think <strong>that</strong> was enough. From<br />

then on, I noticed <strong>that</strong> whenever I passed his<br />

house, he watched me very closely.<br />

Growing up, I think my middle name was<br />

“lickin.”<br />

The Word of God says there is a very<br />

important place for discipline. “Discipline your<br />

son while there is hope, and <strong>do</strong> not desire his<br />

death,” we are told in Proverbs 19:18. And again<br />

in Proverbs 22:15, “Foolishness is bound up in<br />

22


the heart of a child; the rod of discipline will<br />

remove it far from Him.”<br />

In the New Testament we read of God’s<br />

discipline of us, His children:<br />

My son, <strong>do</strong> not regard lightly the discipline of<br />

the Lord, nor faint when you are reproved by Him;<br />

for those whom the Lord loves He disciplines, and<br />

He scourges every son whom He receives…it is for<br />

discipline <strong>that</strong> you endure; God deals with you as<br />

with sons; for what son is there whom his father <strong>do</strong>es<br />

not discipline? But if you are without discipline,<br />

of which all have become partakers, then you are<br />

illegitimate children and not sons. Furthermore, we<br />

had earthly fathers to discipline us, and we respected<br />

them; shall we not much rather be subject to the Father<br />

of spirits, and live? For they disciplined us for a short<br />

time as seemed best to them, but He disciplines us<br />

for our good, so <strong>that</strong> we may share His holiness. All<br />

discipline for the moment seems not to be joyful, but<br />

sorrowful; yet to those who have been trained by it,<br />

afterwards it yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness<br />

(Heb. 12:5-11, nasb).<br />

Yes, God disciplines His children, but He has<br />

a purpose for <strong>do</strong>ing so: it is for our good. How<br />

23


can this be? That we might share His holiness,<br />

His righteousness.<br />

There is however, a difference in the way<br />

we discipline our children and the way God<br />

disciplines us, His children. As earthly parents,<br />

we make mistakes. We give five swats when we<br />

should have given ten or when we should have<br />

taken them for ice cream instead and had a<br />

meaningful talk.<br />

But when God uses whatever means of<br />

discipline He wants to use, He knows exactly<br />

how much to give, what pressure to use, and<br />

in what situation. He spanks exactly right; not<br />

too hard and not too soft, but only <strong>that</strong> which<br />

accomplishes His purpose for His glory.<br />

I knew my mom and grandfather loved me<br />

because of their care and—yes—even because<br />

of their lickins. If, like me, you have experienced<br />

God’s hand of discipline, remember the fruit it<br />

will bring. His love is felt daily as He cares and<br />

reproves us for our sake and especially for His<br />

glory.<br />

24


Are you ABout<br />

through?<br />

Recently my wife, Margaret, and her sister were<br />

visiting a dear elderly and godly friend in the<br />

hospital.<br />

As Margaret was reading Psalm 42 from the<br />

Word of God, suddenly the lady in the next bed<br />

said, “Are you about through? I <strong>do</strong>n’t like <strong>that</strong>!”<br />

The Word of God <strong>do</strong>es <strong>that</strong>, <strong>do</strong>esn’t it?<br />

To some, it soothes, comforts, challenges,<br />

encourages, convicts and builds up. To others,<br />

the Word of God is a stinging sound!<br />

Should we not read and use the Word of<br />

God more to let it <strong>do</strong> its work?<br />

During my cancer treatment years ago,<br />

Margaret had to rush me to emergency one<br />

night. After the <strong>do</strong>ctors worked on me through<br />

the night, not really knowing what to <strong>do</strong>, they<br />

called Margaret into the hall the next morning<br />

25


to explain my situation to her. About <strong>that</strong> time,<br />

a chaplain came in to see me and I thought, “Oh<br />

no, this must be it.”<br />

As the chaplain talked softly to me for a few<br />

minutes, I finally opened my eyes and as tactfully<br />

as I <strong>could</strong> in my pain said, “Is <strong>that</strong> the stuff you<br />

share with people all the time?”<br />

He said, “What <strong>do</strong> you mean?”<br />

I said, “Well, I’m dying of cancer. I <strong>do</strong> not<br />

want to hear about the sweet breeze blowing<br />

through the trees, the smell of flowers or the<br />

birds chirping. I am dying! You need to read the<br />

Word of God.”<br />

He said, “The Word of God? Where <strong>do</strong> I<br />

get a copy?” I said, “For Pete’s sake, you are a<br />

chaplain! Get one of those Gideon Bibles over<br />

there on the table.”<br />

As he picked up the Bible he asked, “Where<br />

<strong>do</strong> I read?” I said, “Well, why <strong>do</strong>n’t you start with<br />

Romans?” (I forgot <strong>that</strong> when you are dying<br />

you are supposed to read Psalms, not Romans.)<br />

So he began to read Romans chapter one. In my<br />

pain I went to sleep just as he got to verse 16,<br />

For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power<br />

26


of God for salvation to everyone who believes... What<br />

a great verse to go to sleep on!<br />

The next day, he came to see me again and<br />

asked, “Can we read the Word of God some<br />

more?” As he read and we talked, I challenged<br />

him to use the Word with more patients because<br />

even in our misery, agony, pain and discomfort,<br />

the Word of God brings hope.<br />

The Scripture says, So faith comes from hearing,<br />

and hearing by the word of Christ (Romans 10:17).<br />

So let’s read the Word of God and our faith will<br />

continue to grow.<br />

27


Are you eAsily<br />

oFFended?<br />

One of the biggest problems in the Christian<br />

church today is Christians who are easily<br />

offended. The sad truth is <strong>that</strong> even some<br />

Christian leaders are easily angered and<br />

offended!<br />

The true mark of a mature Christian is a life<br />

<strong>that</strong> is characterized by the fruit of the Spirit:<br />

“love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness,<br />

faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control”<br />

(Galatians 5:22-23, nasb).<br />

Many Bible commentators feel <strong>that</strong> love is<br />

the fruit, with the other eight characteristics<br />

listed simply as a manifestation of love.<br />

We read in 1 Corinthians 13:5 <strong>that</strong> love “is<br />

not easily provoked”, which means “not easily<br />

offended.”<br />

28


Are you living a life of love? Do you manifest<br />

in your life the qualities of this spiritual fruit of<br />

love? If you <strong>do</strong>, you will not be easily offended.<br />

A spirit-filled life is one <strong>that</strong> is not easily<br />

angered or insulted. Here is a simple list of<br />

questions to check yourself to see if you are<br />

truly walking in the Spirit.<br />

How <strong>do</strong> you react or act when:<br />

1. Your name is spelled wrong or<br />

mispronounced or not remembered?<br />

2. You are not recognized?<br />

3. You are not called upon to pray, sing, cook,<br />

speak, testify, or lead?<br />

4. You are not elected to the church board of<br />

elders or deacons or even to the music or<br />

Sunday School committee?<br />

5. You are not chosen as the most creative,<br />

most friendly, or cutest?<br />

29


6. You are just plain forgotten, or treated<br />

wrongly or rudely?<br />

7. You are not given a raise or promotion?<br />

8. No one seems to like you, or you are<br />

lonely and no one seems to care, or no one<br />

encourages you?<br />

If you react to any of these situations with<br />

anger or by being offended or insulted, the Bible<br />

says you are not living in the spirit of love.<br />

Let us all deal with this matter in our lives!<br />

Let’s put Christ and others first and not think of<br />

ourselves and our feelings so much.<br />

The mark of maturity in a Christian life is<br />

Christ having first place in our lives and not we<br />

ourselves!<br />

30


Are you into FAds?<br />

It was recently reported on the news <strong>that</strong> a special<br />

study in Copenhagen found <strong>that</strong> there are no<br />

more vitamins or minerals in organic food than<br />

non-organic. They are no more healthy than<br />

foods <strong>that</strong> are grown with insecticides, yet they<br />

cost at least 30% more!<br />

It was also recently reported here in Seattle<br />

<strong>that</strong> the water straight from the faucet is better<br />

and purer than bottled water. Yet, you still see<br />

people lined up to buy bottled water, which is<br />

nearly $12 a gallon (and we’re concerned about<br />

$4 for a gallon of gas?)<br />

We also have fads in the church and in<br />

Christian missions, <strong>do</strong>n’t we? A new method<br />

for evangelism, the key way to reach Hindus<br />

or Muslims, six laws for spiritual success, three<br />

ways of guaranteeing church growth, and other<br />

faddish secrets.<br />

31


These fads seem to run their course in<br />

several months or a couple of years, and then<br />

there is something else new.<br />

The problem with these fads in the church<br />

is <strong>that</strong> people almost sell their body and soul to<br />

new fads, a certain method, a book or a style, to<br />

the point <strong>that</strong> relationships are broken, there are<br />

splits in churches and organizations and many of<br />

God’s people become discouraged.<br />

Instead of following a fad, a new teaching,<br />

or a method or style, let’s follow Christ and<br />

the teachings <strong>that</strong> He has left for us in His<br />

Word regarding our relationship with Him<br />

and obedience to His commands for life and<br />

ministry.<br />

Jesus said, If you love me, keep my commands<br />

(John 14:15). The Apostle John in his epistle<br />

said, …His commandments are not burdensome<br />

(1 John 5:3b, nasb).<br />

So dear friend, let’s trust, obey and live!<br />

32


BiBles BeFore<br />

Bullets<br />

For the Word of the Lord is upright; all His<br />

work is <strong>do</strong>ne in faithfulness (Psalm 33:4, nasb).<br />

Just before the People’s Revolution in the<br />

Philippines in 1985, after which President<br />

Marcos and wife were forced to leave the<br />

country, we received a call from General Fidel<br />

V. Ramos (who later became President of the<br />

Philippines) asking if our ministry <strong>could</strong> provide<br />

New Testaments for 75,000 soldiers and police!<br />

This was a huge request for New Testaments<br />

valued at $1 each. I said we would try. The<br />

Lord was gracious and two organizations,<br />

The Bible League and the International Bible<br />

Society, provide the funds to print 75,000 New<br />

Testaments in Tagalog (Filipino), English, and<br />

three other languages. The New Testaments<br />

33


were delivered to General Ramos and he had<br />

these systematically distributed to soldiers and<br />

police throughout the country.<br />

One missionary friend, who worked with<br />

army officers at a very secure military base,<br />

said he normally had to go through three very<br />

strict checkpoints every time he conducted<br />

a Bible study with the officers. However, the<br />

day the New Testaments were delivered, he<br />

was simply waved through each security check<br />

point with the guards paying him little mind<br />

because they were busily reading their New<br />

Testaments!<br />

When the peaceful People Power<br />

Revolution began a few days later, the army<br />

was ordered by the President to shoot into the<br />

crowd and run over them with their tanks. The<br />

army refused to shoot the innocent. Was this a<br />

result of the military reading the Word of God?<br />

Who knows? But we <strong>do</strong> know <strong>that</strong> it was one of<br />

the first “peaceful” revolutions which resulted in<br />

the overthrow of an unjust regime.<br />

34


We may be shy sharing the Gospel, but we<br />

can give people the Word of God encouraging,<br />

them to read it. The Word of God is “upright.”<br />

Who knows, another revolution may be just<br />

around the corner.<br />

35


Blood on the Floor And<br />

pigs running wild!<br />

When I was a freshman in high school, trying<br />

to make my way through school, not really<br />

knowing how to read or write, I always chose<br />

what I thought to be the easiest classes.<br />

One class was an agricultural class and I even<br />

became a member of Future Farmers of America.<br />

In my English class, we all were assigned to give<br />

a demonstration speech on topics such as how<br />

to blow a trumpet, how to thread a needle, how<br />

to read a book, how to make a kite, and so on.<br />

I chose a topic <strong>that</strong> I thought would be<br />

quite easy and fit in with what I was learning<br />

in my agricultural class and <strong>that</strong> was how to notch<br />

the ears of a pig.<br />

So, on the day of my speech, I took a piglet<br />

to class. This was a young pig, not really a piglet,<br />

36


which was supposedly not going to bleed much.<br />

However, as my friends tried to hold the pig<br />

while I attempted to cut the notches in the ears,<br />

the pig jerked, causing me to cut a big hunk out<br />

of the poor pig’s ear! Blood went everywhere!<br />

The girls in the front row screamed and one<br />

fainted. The pig got loose, and while slipping<br />

and sliding on the blood on the floor, instead<br />

of catching it, I knocked over a desk. It was<br />

pandemonium!<br />

Later, after being man-handled by my<br />

teacher to the principal’s office, the principal<br />

simply said, “Doug, you are nothing but trouble.<br />

You can’t even give a speech without causing a<br />

problem!”<br />

Yes, I was trouble then, and as I became<br />

older, I became even worse in violence,<br />

thievery, and drunkenness. But praise God for<br />

His grace, when at age 21 someone shared<br />

with me the Good News of Salvation in Christ<br />

and in Him alone, and I turned to Christ in<br />

simple repentance and faith. Someone said,<br />

“No one is so bad <strong>that</strong> he is beyond grace’s<br />

37


each, or so good <strong>that</strong> he is not in grace’s<br />

need!<br />

…so <strong>that</strong> being justified by His grace we<br />

would be made heirs according to the hope of<br />

eternal life (Titus 3:7, nasb).<br />

38


Brotherly kindness<br />

“Brotherly kindness” is from the Greek word<br />

philadelphia which means “an affectionate<br />

involvement of our lives with others,” especially<br />

with our brothers and sisters in Christ.<br />

Commitment to Jesus Christ means<br />

commitment to His people!<br />

In 1 Thessalonians 5:14-15, Paul gives<br />

instruction to the church in its relations with one<br />

another, “And we urge you, brethren, admonish<br />

the unruly [this is a judgment call], encourage<br />

the fainthearted, help the weak, be patient with<br />

all men. See <strong>that</strong> no one repays another with<br />

evil for evil, but always seek after <strong>that</strong> which is<br />

good for one another and for all men” (nasb).<br />

Years ago the USS PUEBLO was captured<br />

by North Korea. Thirteen of the crew were put<br />

in one room and given assigned chairs. Every<br />

day a Korean soldier would suddenly come in<br />

and beat the sailor in the first chair. This went<br />

39


on for three days. This sailor was slowly being<br />

beaten to death. Finally the other prisoners<br />

began to take his place each day. Each sailor<br />

knew what would happen when he sat in the<br />

first chair. They knew what was coming. But<br />

out of concern for his fellow sailor, they each<br />

took his chair!<br />

When was the last time <strong>that</strong> “in brotherly<br />

kindness” you sat in the chair of someone who<br />

was suffering? The chair of pain, of loneliness, of<br />

heartache, of grief, of poverty, or of helplessness?<br />

40


CAn you stAy on<br />

your horse?<br />

Jane Austin was a writer during the Victorian<br />

era and wrote several books, most of which<br />

portrayed the clergy in a demeaning way. The<br />

clergy were always simpletons and prideful,<br />

seemingly turning <strong>do</strong>wn their noses at people,<br />

rather than ministering the grace of God and<br />

His loving kindness.<br />

Recently my family and I watched a new<br />

rendition of Emma by the BBC. The acting and<br />

photography were excellent!<br />

In the first part of the series, the Vicar<br />

(clergy) was leaving a house and getting on a<br />

horse and someone said about him, “That man<br />

is so full of himself, it is a wonder he can stay on<br />

his horse!”<br />

41


This is exactly the opposite description of<br />

what should be said about a pastor or even a<br />

Christian.<br />

Instead, a person should be able to say, “That<br />

man [woman] is such a wonderful person. He is<br />

so kind, gracious, humble and easy to get along.<br />

He is always reaching out to others, serving<br />

them, taking the back seat (or even giving up<br />

his seat) so <strong>that</strong> others can be cared for; he is<br />

the last one to be served and the first one to<br />

graciously give a kind word of encouragement<br />

and minister to others, even though he may be<br />

suffering himself.”<br />

In Colossians 3:12-13, Paul says, “So, as<br />

those who have been chosen of God, holy and<br />

beloved, put on a heart of compassion, kindness,<br />

humility, gentleness and patience; bearing with<br />

one another, and forgiving each other, whoever<br />

has a complaint against anyone; just as the Lord<br />

forgave you, so also should you. Beyond all these<br />

things put on love, which is the perfect bond of<br />

unity” (nasb).<br />

42


As you can see, these nine character qualities<br />

listed in Colossians are the exact opposite of<br />

pride. A good question for each of us, therefore,<br />

is, “Can we stay on a horse or are we too full of<br />

ourselves with pride?”<br />

God is opposed to the proud, but gives grace<br />

to the humble” (James 4:6, nasb).<br />

43


CAnCer survivor<br />

By g o d’ s grACe<br />

I am a survivor of colon cancer which was<br />

diagnosed in 1993 and treated over the next<br />

year. God’s hand was on my life through<br />

this experience, especially in giving me two<br />

extraordinary <strong>do</strong>ctors. Dr. Dan Froese was the<br />

skilled surgeon who, when faced with a difficult<br />

choice in the middle of my surgery, stopped and<br />

asked God for direction. The decision he made<br />

to perform a colostomy helped save my life.<br />

The second <strong>do</strong>ctor par excellence was Dr. Saul<br />

Rivkin. All the patients who are privileged to<br />

be in his care love this man and appreciate his<br />

dedication to each one of us. He aggressively<br />

attacked any cancer cells <strong>that</strong> escaped the knife,<br />

and so I’m alive and well today.<br />

Several months ago during a regular<br />

checkup with Dr. Rivkin he mentioned to me<br />

44


<strong>that</strong> he had only one other patient of similar<br />

circumstances to mine who was still alive.<br />

“Why <strong>do</strong> you think God allowed you to live<br />

when so many others have died?” he asked me.<br />

For a moment I was taken aback by his question,<br />

but then I thought of several possible reasons. I<br />

replied <strong>that</strong> perhaps God gave me cancer so <strong>that</strong><br />

I <strong>could</strong> share the Gospel with him.<br />

Also, it was during my cancer treatment<br />

<strong>that</strong> God gave me a deep concern for Africa,<br />

especially to the 13 million AIDS orphans. In<br />

the intervening years I have had the opportunity<br />

to begin projects on <strong>that</strong> continent. Another<br />

purpose for still being alive is <strong>that</strong> God<br />

continues to work in my life for my good and<br />

His glory.<br />

In a recent discussion with my former<br />

surgeon and now friend, Dr. Froese, in which<br />

we were planning a medical outreach to Africa<br />

with a team of <strong>do</strong>ctors, I related to him my<br />

conversation with Dr. Rivkin. Dr. Froese<br />

concurred about the severity of my cancer and<br />

shocked me by saying <strong>that</strong> it was one of his<br />

worst cases which survived.<br />

45


I had not known <strong>that</strong>, and am humbled <strong>that</strong><br />

God has allowed me to live these extra years.<br />

Whether I die today or live many more years,<br />

my prayer is <strong>that</strong> my life will be pleasing to my<br />

Heavenly Father. In the words of John Newton,<br />

“I am a wretched sinner, but I have a wonderful<br />

Saviour!”<br />

46


<strong>do</strong> our sins CAtCh up to<br />

us in our old Age?<br />

Our sins have a way of catching up to us in our<br />

age. As we read in the Word of God, “The sins of<br />

some men are quite evident, going before them<br />

to judgment; for others, their sins follow after”<br />

(1 Timothy 5:24, nasb).<br />

If you and I <strong>do</strong> not deal with our sins<br />

now, they will surely be evident when we get<br />

older. Sins such as stubbornness, unkindness<br />

and selfishness seem to really hit us as older<br />

people.<br />

Recently I was visiting a friend in need at<br />

a senior care home. As I was leaving, they asked<br />

me if my friend was like another Christian<br />

acquaintance of ours whom they had cared for<br />

previously. I answered, “What <strong>do</strong> you mean?”<br />

They responded, “Well, we had so much<br />

trouble with Mr. ____. In fact, not only did we<br />

47


have real problems with him, but with his wife<br />

also, when she came to visit!” They went on<br />

to say <strong>that</strong> this Christian couple said very bad<br />

things to the directors and staff, were extremely<br />

difficult to care for, and were rude and never<br />

satisfied.<br />

I felt ashamed <strong>that</strong> this was the testimony of<br />

some of my friends. Even though I had noticed<br />

this, especially in the gentleman’s life over the<br />

years, I was never in a situation to discuss this<br />

with him, but possibly should have.<br />

It is important to not only hear the Word<br />

of God Sunday after Sunday in messages from<br />

our pastors, but also to obey the Word of God.<br />

As we read Scripture day by day describing the<br />

characteristics of a godly person, we need to<br />

immediately confess our sins before God and<br />

ask His help in obeying for His glory.<br />

Any offense <strong>that</strong> we give or criticism <strong>that</strong><br />

we receive should never be because of our<br />

crudeness in speech or un-Christlike actions.<br />

Our only offence should be because of our<br />

godly character and in speaking of the cross and<br />

the Gospel.<br />

48


So what type of person are you going to be<br />

at age 70, 80 and 90? Grumpy? Unkind? Selfish?<br />

Stubborn? Or are you going to be a man or<br />

woman of God with character qualities which<br />

bring glory to God.<br />

49


<strong>do</strong> you Fire people<br />

grACiously, or As<br />

the world <strong>do</strong>es?<br />

Recently, a friend of ours was laid off from a<br />

large Christian organization. He was one of<br />

the top men in the ministry and was given no<br />

notice or warning at all.<br />

He was followed to his car by one of<br />

the executives at the end of the day’s work.<br />

The executive simply informed him <strong>that</strong> the<br />

company was going in a new direction and his<br />

services were no longer needed. He was not<br />

allowed to go back to his office; they would<br />

clean out his office and send his items to his<br />

home by courier!<br />

Another acquaintance was at the airport<br />

when he received a telephone call from one<br />

of the vice presidents of the ministry, located<br />

in several major cities throughout the United<br />

50


States. The call from the corporate office was<br />

to inform him <strong>that</strong> he was terminated, effective<br />

immediately. This was quite a shock as he had<br />

just received a wonderful commendation from<br />

the president and had excellent reviews of the<br />

effectiveness of his ministry for Christ.<br />

My wife and I were counting up similar<br />

stories of friends and acquaintances. Even<br />

the organizations of the world <strong>do</strong> not treat<br />

their people this way. What is so amazing<br />

about the stories above is <strong>that</strong> in each of<br />

these ministries, their leaders teach Christian<br />

management seminars throughout the United<br />

States and write books on Christian leadership<br />

principles.<br />

So, dear friends, what can we learn from this<br />

in our everyday lives, ministry and activities?<br />

When we are faced with the need to “let<br />

people go,” we should follow the principles<br />

of the Word of God …as those who have been<br />

chosen of God, holy and beloved, put on a heart<br />

of compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and<br />

patience (Colossians 3:10-12, nasb).<br />

51


Yes, sometimes we may need to fire someone,<br />

but <strong>do</strong> it graciously and kindly, helping the<br />

person move on to another ministry for the<br />

glory of God.<br />

52


<strong>do</strong> you go to god<br />

with smAll mAtters,<br />

As well As Big?<br />

Trust in the LORD with all your heart<br />

and <strong>do</strong> not lean on your own understanding. In<br />

all your ways acknowledge Him, and He will<br />

make your paths straight (Proverbs 3:5-6, nasb).<br />

Recently I woke up late at night meditating<br />

on this wonderful passage in Proverbs 3:5-<br />

6. What a wonderful, encouraging, as well as<br />

convicting, passage of Scripture.<br />

The next morning I went through Proverbs<br />

3 again and read several commentaries on this<br />

passage. The saintly Matthew Henry, in his<br />

commentary on the verse, states <strong>that</strong> so often<br />

we only go to God with the big things <strong>that</strong> we<br />

consider to be important, rather than relying<br />

upon God for everything, even the small things.<br />

53


I was bothered by a certain “small thing”<br />

<strong>that</strong> morning as I needed to take out the four<br />

heavy back seats of our van to make room for<br />

nearly $2000 worth of used Christian books <strong>that</strong><br />

had been <strong>do</strong>nated to ACTION by a church, for<br />

needy pastors in the Philippines. I was scheduled<br />

to speak at the church the next day. They had the<br />

books ready for me to load into our van after<br />

the service, yet I did not know how to remove<br />

the seats. To make things even more difficult, my<br />

hands are arthritic and I am dealing with high<br />

blood pressure which made the task even more<br />

frustrating.<br />

As I was struggling as to what to <strong>do</strong>, I<br />

prayed, “Lord, to many people this may be a<br />

simple thing, so maybe it is. So will you help me<br />

figure out how to get the seats out of the van<br />

so I can load the books for needy pastors in the<br />

Philippines?”<br />

I went back into the house to <strong>do</strong> more study<br />

for the message I was to give the next morning.<br />

After I had warmed up a bit, I put on a pair of<br />

work gloves and went out to try to figure out a<br />

way to remove those heavy seats.<br />

54


Believe it or not, the seats were out and<br />

safely stored on our back porch out of the rain<br />

within ten minutes! So I was able to phone my<br />

strong and younger friend who had volunteered<br />

to help and let him know <strong>that</strong> he would no<br />

longer need to come, as the job was <strong>do</strong>ne!<br />

Yes, in all things we are to “trust in the<br />

Lord with all your heart and lean not on your<br />

own understanding.” I guess this might include<br />

abilities and strength.<br />

55


<strong>do</strong> you hAve Any spoons<br />

you need to return?<br />

A few years ago, when my father-in-law, Walter<br />

Jespersen, <strong>could</strong> still drive, we took several<br />

people out for Sunday dinner at a restaurant<br />

called The Country Buffet about eight miles<br />

from our home.<br />

When Dad was going through the line, he<br />

put his knife, fork, spoon and napkin in the<br />

upper pocket of his suit coat while he served<br />

the food onto his plate.<br />

Later <strong>that</strong> day, he noticed the spoon from<br />

the restaurant in his coat pocket and was very<br />

bothered by this. He had used the other utensils<br />

but had forgotten about the spoon.<br />

I told him <strong>that</strong> we would return the spoon<br />

later in the week when we passed by the<br />

restaurant, or we <strong>could</strong> mail it to them. However,<br />

by Monday, Dad was still very bothered <strong>that</strong> he<br />

56


had taken the spoon. He decided to drive (even<br />

though it had become very difficult) to the<br />

restaurant to return the spoon and apologize.<br />

Dad, now 93, is still the same. He continues<br />

in the Word of God daily. He cannot see, but<br />

listens to theological books on tape and the<br />

Scriptures. He continues to grow in grace and<br />

the knowledge of Christ. Being a godly man, he<br />

is not overly sensitive, but is sensitive to truth,<br />

error and what it takes to live a godly life in an<br />

uncaring, wicked world. He is the kind of man<br />

we should all emulate!<br />

So, I have asked myself a question quite<br />

often, “Do I have any spoons to return?” In<br />

other words, is there anything I need to take<br />

care of today? Do I need to apologize, return<br />

a favor, minister to others, show graciousness,<br />

display goodness, or share the gospel? What <strong>do</strong> I<br />

need to take care of today so <strong>that</strong> I will be more<br />

like Jesus?<br />

57


<strong>do</strong>es A little<br />

mAtter?<br />

Africa is a continent with massive needs, but<br />

with wonderful opportunities for ministry with<br />

the gospel and compassionate care for God’s<br />

glory!<br />

We should not settle for <strong>do</strong>ing little for the<br />

king<strong>do</strong>m of God when we can <strong>do</strong> so much<br />

more by trusting in our sovereign Lord to use<br />

us for His glory. On the other hand, we should<br />

never despise the day of small things and <strong>do</strong><br />

what we can, even if <strong>that</strong> might be something<br />

small. The boy in the Gospel of John only had<br />

a small, poor lunch of five loaves and two fish,<br />

yet in the hands of Jesus the food was multiplied<br />

to meet the physical needs of 5000 men plus<br />

women and children.<br />

On one occasion in Africa, my wife<br />

Margaret held a little AIDS baby for about one<br />

58


hour. Did this baby know what was happening?<br />

I carried another baby around the AIDS<br />

hospice and sat with another little sick boy who<br />

hugged up next to me. He did not understand a<br />

thing I was saying as I sought to minister to him<br />

from the Word of God and sang, “Jesus loves<br />

the little children…” We may not have made a<br />

real difference in the lives of these children, or<br />

did we?<br />

Margaret and I were on the streets with a<br />

young ACTION missionary from Minneapolis<br />

working with street children.<br />

We bought lunch for 20 boys, which only<br />

cost 25¢ each. Did this make a difference? Most<br />

of the boys ate their lunch and left; only a few<br />

were very thankful and appreciative. Five <strong>do</strong>llars<br />

to buy a large lunch for 20 boys is such a little<br />

thing. Did it make any difference?<br />

We visited a church-based community<br />

school in a building with no roof, no win<strong>do</strong>ws,<br />

no chairs, and a dirt floor. Almost 500 children<br />

were gathered in the one room. I saw a little boy<br />

with an open, infected sore above his eye. I put<br />

on a little antiseptic and band-aid. This was such<br />

59


a small thing. Did it make any difference? The<br />

little boy sure seemed to appreciate this care and<br />

concern and repaid us with a smile and a hug.<br />

The ACTION Zambia team leader and I<br />

conducted a three-hour seminar for 44 pastors<br />

and Christian workers which included a snack.<br />

The three-hour seminar along with the snack<br />

and soft drink for each came to a total of only<br />

$20, which is less than 50¢ each. This is such<br />

a small amount. Did it make any difference?<br />

These pastors sure appreciated it, especially the<br />

teaching from the Word of God and the small<br />

snack of bread and soft drinks. Many of these<br />

pastors go without food weekly so their wives<br />

and children can eat.<br />

Many times we think missions and ministry<br />

are only for the people who are well-educated,<br />

very knowledgeable, articulate speakers, can<br />

sing, lead well, direct, and give counsel to every<br />

problem. However, many of us are not is this<br />

category, but we can <strong>do</strong> small things. We can sit<br />

on the corner with a street child and offer a<br />

piece of bread and a soft drink while sharing<br />

the Gospel. We can hold children in an AIDS<br />

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hospice or in the many Christian orphanages in<br />

Malawi, Uganda, or Zambia.<br />

There are at present 12 to 13 million AIDS<br />

orphans in Africa and thousands of untrained,<br />

needy pastors. It would be wonderful if many of<br />

God’s people age 21 to 83 would consider taking<br />

their abilities, talents, background, finances and<br />

expertise, give them all to Jesus, and let Him<br />

multiply these gifts to reach the multitudes with<br />

His Gospel and compassion, for His glory! Why<br />

not?<br />

Someone said years ago, “a little from our<br />

world makes a big difference in theirs!”<br />

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emBArrAssed<br />

without notes<br />

Recently I spoke to a group of pastors, elders,<br />

missions committee members, and missionaries.<br />

I was to give a word of encouragement for<br />

10 or 15 minutes to these men and women<br />

who have faithfully served God. I spoke from<br />

one of my favorite passages of Scripture:<br />

1 Corinthians 15:57-58.<br />

I had meditated on this verse for several<br />

days and felt prepared. However, I had traveled<br />

all day, was very tired, and my knee was giving<br />

me problems with pain. Nevertheless, I felt<br />

confident in the Lord to minister to these dear<br />

saints of God, and felt I did not need to use<br />

notes. Was I ever mistaken! I forgot special points<br />

in mid-sentence, lost my train of thought twice,<br />

did not finish certain applications properly from<br />

62


the Word, and sat <strong>do</strong>wn in complete frustration<br />

and embarrassment.<br />

I have come to realize I cannot speak without<br />

notes. It is good to trust God, but also remember<br />

our limitations. God will lead and guide as<br />

we prepare, and then we trust Him. He leads<br />

us to divert to other matters and applications.<br />

I’ve learned I need to at least have studied and<br />

prepared the basic framework to speak from,<br />

and God will help me to prepare.<br />

It was a good experience for me to learn<br />

from my mistake; however, I feel sorry for the<br />

50 people who had to listen to me <strong>that</strong> day!<br />

Throughout the night the incident<br />

kept returning to my mind because of the<br />

overwhelming sense of embarrassment and<br />

failure. My prayer was, “Oh, God, you taught<br />

me this wonderful lesson, BUT I ask <strong>that</strong> You<br />

still use my stammering speech to glorify Your<br />

name and encourage Your people!”<br />

63


FrAnCis sChAeFFer<br />

slept here<br />

In 1966, I joined Operation Mobilization for a<br />

year of ministry in France, but spent two years in<br />

India instead. While in Lon<strong>do</strong>n in the summer<br />

of 1966 at a one-month OM orientation, I<br />

volunteered to work on a clean-up crew late<br />

one night. Around 12:30 am, I was sweeping<br />

the front steps of the conference center when<br />

an older gentleman approached and asked if this<br />

was the OM conference. I told him it was, but<br />

<strong>that</strong> almost everyone was in bed.<br />

He had a small bag with him and was<br />

dressed very simply. He said he was attending<br />

the conference, so I said, “Let me see if I can<br />

find you a place to sleep.” Since there were<br />

many different age groups at OM, I thought he<br />

was an older OMer. I took him to the room<br />

where I had been sleeping on the floor with<br />

64


about 50 others and, seeing <strong>that</strong> he had nothing<br />

to sleep on, laid some padding and a blanket on<br />

the floor and gave him a towel for a pillow. He<br />

said it would be fine and <strong>that</strong> he appreciated it<br />

very much.<br />

As he was preparing for bed, I asked him<br />

if he had eaten. He had not, as he had been<br />

traveling all day. I took him to the dining room,<br />

but it was locked, so after picking the lock, I<br />

found cornflakes, milk, bread, butter and jam—<br />

all of which he thanked me for.<br />

As he ate and we began to fellowship, I asked<br />

where he was from. He said he and his wife had<br />

been working in Switzerland for several years<br />

in a ministry mainly to hippies and travelers. It<br />

was wonderful to talk to him and hear about his<br />

work and those who had come to Christ. When<br />

he finished eating, we turned in for the night.<br />

The next day I was in trouble! The leaders<br />

of OM really got on my case. “Don’t you know<br />

who <strong>that</strong> man is on the floor next to you? It<br />

is Dr. Francis Schaeffer, the speaker for the<br />

conference!” I did not know we were going<br />

to have a speaker, nor did I know who Francis<br />

65


Schaeffer was, nor did I know they had a special<br />

room for him!<br />

After Francis Schaeffer became well-known<br />

because of his books and I had read more about<br />

him, I thought about this occasion many times –<br />

this gracious, kind, humble man of God sleeping<br />

on the floor with OM recruits! This was the<br />

kind of man I wanted to be.<br />

Of course, I will never obtain the intellect,<br />

knowledge, or wis<strong>do</strong>m of Francis Schaeffer, but<br />

I can reach out to younger people and humbly<br />

minister to them in Christ’s name by living a life<br />

of humility. What about you?<br />

66


honor to whom<br />

honor is due<br />

In this rude, disrespectful world, it is refreshing<br />

to read simple teachings in the Word of God,<br />

such as giving honor to others. Romans 12<br />

and 13 give very practical guidelines for God’s<br />

people to live the life of Christ, being salt and<br />

light, in a dark, cruel world.<br />

Take, for example, the simple phrase, Render<br />

to all what is due them…honor to whom honor<br />

(Romans 13:7 nasb).<br />

Recently I was thinking of men and women<br />

who have influenced me in practical daily living<br />

for Christ. When I was twelve, my wi<strong>do</strong>wed<br />

mother remarried and we moved to Southern<br />

California to the little desert town of Indio. As<br />

a 12-year-old boy, it was difficult for me to find<br />

work <strong>that</strong> summer. I began to go <strong>do</strong>or-to-<strong>do</strong>or<br />

asking for odd jobs. One kind, older man, Mr.<br />

67


Jones, hired me to mow his lawn, using his lawn<br />

mower since I did not have one. He was very<br />

patient and kind, and took time to show me<br />

how to use the lawn mower and <strong>do</strong> a good job.<br />

Mr. Jones knew <strong>that</strong> I was trying to find<br />

other lawns to mow and <strong>that</strong> I did not have a<br />

lawn mower. He said if I would mow his lawn<br />

throughout the summer for free, he would give<br />

me his mower. What a wonderful, generous<br />

offer! He inspected some of the lawns I worked<br />

on and showed me how to <strong>do</strong> a better job.<br />

Soon I had more than I <strong>could</strong> <strong>do</strong> and began to<br />

hire other kids to help me. He taught me how<br />

to supervise and pay them properly. By the<br />

end of the summer, I had eight others working<br />

with me.<br />

Over the next three years my lawn<br />

mowing business grew such <strong>that</strong> I had to hire<br />

older people to help me including one with a<br />

car to drive and pull my gardening trailer to<br />

various mowing sites. When I was 15, I had a<br />

crew of 30!<br />

I have thought of Mr. Jones many times.<br />

Not only did he reach out to me as an unknown<br />

68


12-year-old nobody with no job skills, he<br />

patiently and kindly instructed me in basic work<br />

skills. Mr. Jones, therefore, was a man I sought to<br />

emulate when I came to Christ years later.<br />

Another man to whom honor is due is<br />

my father-in-law, Walter Jespersen. My wife,<br />

Margaret, and I have had the privilege of living<br />

with him for several years. Even though he is<br />

95 and cannot see or hear well, he still radiates<br />

Christ’s love and has a desire to continue to walk<br />

with God and minister to others loving care and<br />

the good news of salvation in Christ.<br />

So, dear friends, whom shall we honor<br />

today? Let us be men and women who obey<br />

this simple, but important, command in God’s<br />

Word.<br />

Render to all what is due them…honor to<br />

whom honor (Romans 13:7 nasb).<br />

69


hospitAlity And CAring<br />

For the needs oF others<br />

As a Christian, <strong>do</strong> you care about the needs<br />

and comfort of others? If you are a pastor, elder,<br />

church leader, or missionary, this is an especially<br />

important question to answer.<br />

Let us look at a few “when” questions:<br />

When you are eating with others, <strong>do</strong> you<br />

wait until all are served before you begin eating?<br />

Do you pass the food and help others or only<br />

yourself? Do you teach your fellow workers,<br />

family, and children these basics? In a restaurant<br />

are you polite and friendly to the workers and<br />

<strong>do</strong> you tip well?<br />

When traveling, <strong>do</strong> you make sure others<br />

have a seat and <strong>that</strong> women, children, and the<br />

elderly are helped and cared for? Do you let<br />

others go first? Are you especially helpful to<br />

70


people from other countries? (This especially<br />

opens the <strong>do</strong>or for the Gospel.)<br />

When speaking, are you gracious and kind?<br />

Do you say things like, “How are you today?”<br />

“Thank you.” “I appreciate your help.” “What is<br />

your name?” “You really <strong>do</strong> well.”<br />

When sharing your home, <strong>do</strong> not keep your<br />

guest guessing. Do you show them where the<br />

towels, soap, and shampoo are? Are there places<br />

to hang clothes in the bathroom so <strong>that</strong> they <strong>do</strong><br />

not have to put their clothes on the floor? Do<br />

they know where the tea and coffee pots are?<br />

Might they have special needs? Be careful about<br />

putting them in an uncomfortable situation<br />

by leaving them alone with a member of the<br />

opposite sex.<br />

“So, as those who have been chosen of God,<br />

holy and beloved, put on a heart of compassion,<br />

kindness, humility, gentleness and patience;<br />

bearing with one another, and forgiving each<br />

other, whoever has a complaint against anyone;<br />

just as the Lord forgave you, so also should you”<br />

(Colossians 3: 12-13, nasb).<br />

71


i wish i Could Be<br />

A Brother like thAt<br />

Years ago in the Philippines, I heard a story of<br />

a man who parked his car in his office complex<br />

in <strong>do</strong>wntown Manila. There was a street boy<br />

nearby and to pick up some money, he asked if<br />

he <strong>could</strong> watch (guard) the man’s car while he<br />

was in the office.<br />

Several hours later, when the man came<br />

back to get his nice Mercedes, he paid the boy<br />

some loose change and, as he was getting in his<br />

car, the little street boy said, “Mister, you sure<br />

have a nice car.”<br />

The man was quite surprised <strong>that</strong> this boy<br />

had even spoken to him and said, “Well, thank<br />

you.” Then the little boy said, “Where did you<br />

get your car? Did somebody give it to you?”<br />

The man replied, “Well yes, somebody did give<br />

it to me. My brother gave it to me.”<br />

72


As he continued to get in the car, he<br />

expected the boy to say something like, “Oh,<br />

I wish I had a brother who would give me a<br />

nice car.” Instead, he heard the little boy say,<br />

“Your brother gave it to you? I wish I <strong>could</strong> be<br />

a brother like <strong>that</strong>.”<br />

The man was so amazed at the statement of<br />

the little boy, he asked, “Have you ever been in<br />

a nice car like this?” The little boy said, “No.”<br />

The man replied, “Well, get in. Let me give you<br />

a ride.” The boy jumped up in the front seat and<br />

as they drove <strong>do</strong>wn the road, the man had to<br />

roll <strong>do</strong>wn the win<strong>do</strong>ws because the little boy<br />

was so smelly.<br />

The boy was so joyful and in awe <strong>that</strong> he said,<br />

“Sir, <strong>could</strong> we go get my little brother and give<br />

him a ride too?” The man said, “Tell me about<br />

your brother. Where is he?” The boy pointed at<br />

a poor slum area of Manila called Ton<strong>do</strong>. They<br />

drove there and parked and the man said, “Go<br />

get your brother and we will give him a ride.”<br />

The little boy ran <strong>do</strong>wn a filthy alleyway<br />

and a few minutes later came back with his<br />

little brother on his back, as he was crippled!<br />

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The man said, “So this is your little brother?<br />

What’s wrong with him?” as they put him up<br />

in the front seat. The little boy said, “He had an<br />

accident. He’s crippled and can’t walk.”<br />

As they drove and talked, the man found out<br />

<strong>that</strong> the brother had a crippling accident and<br />

because his family was so poor, they <strong>could</strong> not<br />

get him the medical care he needed.<br />

The businessman said, “Well, my brother is<br />

a <strong>do</strong>ctor. Why <strong>do</strong>n’t we go see him and find out<br />

what he can <strong>do</strong> for your little brother.” After<br />

the examination they found <strong>that</strong> after a simple<br />

operation, the boy would be able to walk again.<br />

The operation was performed and the little boy<br />

who <strong>could</strong> not walk, but had a brother who<br />

loved him, was able to walk again.<br />

Why did all this happen? Simply because<br />

of the unselfishness of someone caring for<br />

someone else, rather than for himself. So, might<br />

we have the words on our lips, “I wish I <strong>could</strong><br />

be a brother (or mother, father, sister, fellow<br />

worker) like <strong>that</strong>.”<br />

In the words of the missionary, the Apostle<br />

Paul, “…regard one another as more important<br />

74


than yourselves; <strong>do</strong> not merely look out for your<br />

own personal interests, but also for the interests<br />

of others” (Philippians 2:3-4, nasb).<br />

Yes, “I wish I <strong>could</strong> be a brother like <strong>that</strong>.”<br />

75


is it okAy For A<br />

missionAry to drive<br />

A CAdillAC?<br />

For we have regard for what is honorable, not<br />

only in the sight of the Lord, but also in the sight<br />

of men (2 Corinthians 8: 21, nasb).<br />

Several years ago, I arrived in Chicago in the dead<br />

of winter to speak at Moody Bible Institute for<br />

three days. The school arranged for me to have a<br />

rental car, so when I picked it up, the attendant<br />

said, “Good news! You have been upgraded to a<br />

luxury car at the same price!”<br />

I walked to the parking lot and saw the black<br />

Cadillac Escalade, and it was beautiful! However,<br />

I told the attendant I <strong>could</strong> not take it; I would<br />

have to stay with the simple Chevy Malibu.<br />

He exclaimed, “Sir, you <strong>do</strong>n’t understand,<br />

it’s free. There is no extra charge at all!”<br />

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I responded, “I’d like to drive the Cadillac.<br />

In fact, I enjoy cars very much, but I will not be<br />

able to take it.”<br />

The attendant still did not understand so<br />

finally in my frustration I said, “I am sorry,<br />

but I am speaking at a Bible school and will<br />

be challenging the students to give their lives<br />

to Christ serving Him among the needy of<br />

the world with the Gospel and compassionate<br />

care. It would not be good for me, even though<br />

it is free, to drive a Cadillac Escalade when I<br />

am asking young people to live sacrificially.”<br />

The attendant still did not understand, but<br />

went ahead and gave me the less expensive<br />

rental car, a Chevy Malibu. As I walked out of<br />

the building toward the car, I turned and saw the<br />

attendants shaking their heads at me—this crazy,<br />

older man who would not take the Cadillac<br />

even though it was free.<br />

That week as I drove professors, staff, and<br />

students to various places, I was relieved <strong>that</strong> I<br />

did not have to explain what type of car I was<br />

driving! We were able to concentrate on the<br />

77


things of God, not on the distracting thoughts<br />

of why I, a missionary, was driving a Cadillac.<br />

There is a saying used by some, “Others may,<br />

you cannot,” in reference to those in Christian<br />

ministry regarding what we can or should <strong>do</strong>.<br />

Layman and the rich can drive whatever they<br />

like, but those of us in ministry, need not and<br />

should not, but be “…honorable, not only in the<br />

sight of the Lord, but also in the sight of men”<br />

(2 Corinthians 8: 21, nasb).<br />

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it is AlwAys<br />

too eArly to quit!<br />

Does it bother you <strong>that</strong> there are 160 million<br />

street children and 140 million orphans<br />

worldwide? Most likely it <strong>do</strong>es, and for good<br />

reason. Being disturbed by something is often<br />

the Holy’s Spirit’s way of prompting us to take<br />

action and dive into missionary work—which<br />

is positive. However, as missionaries we must be<br />

cautious not to move from being bothered to<br />

being discouraged or defeated.<br />

My family recently watched the excellent<br />

film Amazing Grace about William Wilberforce<br />

and the 1800s abolition movement in the<br />

United King<strong>do</strong>m. Wilberforce was bothered<br />

by slavery. This movie chronicled Wilberforce’s<br />

battle in the British Parliament for the abolition<br />

of the slave trade. In one scene, Wilberforce’s<br />

future wife asked him why he <strong>could</strong> no longer<br />

79


talk about the matter of slavery. He responded,<br />

“I have been battling slavery for years, and yet<br />

after all the petitions, all the speeches, and all the<br />

bills presented to Parliament, ships filled with<br />

human souls in chains continue to sail around<br />

the world as cargo!”<br />

He was right. Slaves continued to be beaten,<br />

brutalized, raped, and killed. Little children were<br />

separated from their families or even burned<br />

alive. Masses of slaves died in the hulls of slave<br />

ships. After years and years of fighting the slave<br />

trade, Wilberforce felt nothing seemed to have<br />

changed, and he was deeply discouraged.<br />

Those of us in ministry to street and<br />

underprivileged children and orphans can be<br />

just as easily discouraged. We have had camps for<br />

thousands of needy children, street children, and<br />

orphans. We’ve cared for thousands of precious<br />

little ones, rescued hundreds from pe<strong>do</strong>philes,<br />

opened hundreds of orphan homes and day<br />

care centers, and we’ve challenged church after<br />

church in Africa, Asia, Europe, and Latin America<br />

to reach out to needy children. Yet, there are<br />

27,000 children dying daily from malnutrition<br />

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and disease, another 160 million still on the<br />

streets, 143 million orphans worldwide, and 27<br />

million slaves (mostly children) throughout the<br />

world—with up to 400,000 child slaves in Haiti<br />

alone.<br />

Yes, we see thousands rescued and coming<br />

to Christ every year, but there are still millions<br />

not being reached. It is easy to become<br />

discouraged just like Wilberforce, and yet, he<br />

persevered in the grace of God to see the slave<br />

trade throughout the British Empire come to<br />

an end. Will we persevere as God’s servants in<br />

ministry to children? We must! And, with God’s<br />

help, we will! Encourage one another and take<br />

encouragement from God and His Word:<br />

But thanks be to God, who gives us the<br />

victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. Therefore,<br />

my beloved brethren [and sisters], be steadfast,<br />

immovable, always abounding in the work of the<br />

Lord, knowing <strong>that</strong> your toil is not in vain in the<br />

Lord (1 Corinthians 15:57-58, nasb).<br />

81


JAil BreAk in<br />

BAngAlore, indiA<br />

When I was serving with Operation Mobilization<br />

for two years from 1966 to 1968, I spent time<br />

in Bangalore working with OM future leaders<br />

while I was recovering from tuberculosis and<br />

hepatitis.<br />

One afternoon after we had prayed, we<br />

targeted a radical Hindu area in Bangalor, and<br />

preached the Gospel there, from the back of a<br />

lorry (the British word for a large truck).<br />

It was my turn to preach, and while <strong>do</strong>ing<br />

so, a man jumped up onto the truck and<br />

slugged me very hard in the nose and mouth.<br />

I fell backwards, but instinctively gave him a<br />

hard kick in the chest which threw him out<br />

into the crowd, some of whom were trying<br />

to get onto the truck to beat us and burn the<br />

truck.<br />

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Mercifully, a large group of police arrived<br />

just at <strong>that</strong> time, stopping the riot and arresting<br />

me and my ten Indian coworkers.<br />

When the police escorted us to the station,<br />

about one hundred of the radical Hindus came<br />

with them. My coworkers were left in the<br />

truck and I was taken inside to face charges<br />

with the chief of police. About twenty leaders<br />

of the radicals circled around his desk basically<br />

screaming for my blood. I had no idea what they<br />

were talking about, what the charges were, or<br />

what was going to happen to us.<br />

As they continued to yell and scream, I<br />

backed away from the crowd to another desk<br />

where a police officer was sitting. I smiled and<br />

said, “Excuse me, sir, would you mind helping<br />

me? I have no idea what I am being accused<br />

of. We had a public meeting and I was sharing<br />

about the gospel of Christ. Is <strong>that</strong> what I am<br />

being charged for?”<br />

He replied, “No, they can’t charge you on<br />

<strong>that</strong> so they are trying to make up something,<br />

most likely <strong>that</strong> you did not have a permit to use<br />

a loudspeaker.”<br />

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I answered, “Oh, a permit. Where <strong>do</strong> I get<br />

a permit?”<br />

The police officer explained and I asked<br />

him to write the address on a piece of paper,<br />

which he proceeded to <strong>do</strong>.<br />

As he gave me the written directions, I said,<br />

“Another thing, sir, I am very thirsty. Do you<br />

have a drinking fountain here?”<br />

He replied, “Yes, there is one right outside<br />

the <strong>do</strong>or and around the corner in the hallway.”<br />

So, as people continued to yell and scream, I<br />

slowly walked around the corner, out of sight, to<br />

the drinking fountain. I then noticed the hallway<br />

led to the truck which was still surrounded by<br />

police and about 100 fanatics.<br />

An idea came to mind, so I walked boldly<br />

out the <strong>do</strong>or, smiling and waving the piece of<br />

paper and told the team members <strong>that</strong> it was<br />

time to go. Everyone assumed <strong>that</strong> the paper<br />

was my release. I had not said a thing, but simply<br />

waved the paper, got in my truck and drove<br />

away. As I picked up speed, I looked behind in<br />

the rear view mirror and saw all the fanatics and<br />

police running out the <strong>do</strong>or after me.<br />

84


Needless to say, I did not drive slowly and<br />

made it all the way across town (which had a<br />

population of 2.5 million at <strong>that</strong> time) to the<br />

safety of our OM headquarters.<br />

I am not a brave person, but was very<br />

concerned about the safety of my ten coworkers<br />

who would have been treated very badly inside<br />

the jail cells.<br />

I guess you can say this was a “mass escape”<br />

for the safety of God’s people and the glory of<br />

God!<br />

85


Jesus sends A sword,<br />

so he must Be god!<br />

Do not think <strong>that</strong> I came to bring peace on the<br />

earth; I did not come to bring peace, but a sword.<br />

For I came to set a man against his father, and<br />

a daughter against her mother, and a daughterin-law<br />

against her mother-in-law; and a man’s<br />

enemies will be the members of his household. He<br />

who loves father or mother more than Me is not<br />

worthy of Me; and he who loves son or daughter<br />

more than Me is not worthy of Me. And he who<br />

<strong>do</strong>es not take his cross and follow after Me is not<br />

worthy of Me. He who has found his life will lose<br />

it, and he who has lost his life for My sake will<br />

find it (Matthew 10:34-39, nasb).<br />

My wife has a Chinese friend who married<br />

an Iranian man named Omar. Years ago, when<br />

Omar first came from Iran to the United States,<br />

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he lived in New York City. He was a Muslim<br />

who hated Americans, and wanted to make a<br />

lot of money and go back to Iran rich. Desiring<br />

to be a successful businessman, he purchased a<br />

self-help book entitled How to Win Friends and<br />

Influence People. Although not a Christian book,<br />

the author included several verses from the<br />

Bible.<br />

As Omar read these verses, they rang true<br />

to him. There was something different about<br />

these verses compared to other words in the<br />

book. Later, he bought another book, How to<br />

be a Successful Salesman by Zig Zigler, who is a<br />

Christian. This book included quite a few verses<br />

from the Bible.<br />

As Omar read these, a desire came over<br />

him to read the whole Bible. So, he went to a<br />

bookstore in New York City and quietly, so no<br />

one <strong>could</strong> hear, asked the clerk if the store had a<br />

Bible. The clerk said they didn’t have Bibles, but<br />

they had a New Testament, which was part of<br />

the Bible. Omar purchased the New Testament<br />

and went to his apartment and began to read<br />

God’s Word.<br />

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Here was Omar, a Muslim who hated Jews,<br />

reading Matthew, the first book in the New<br />

Testament. Omar was reading a book <strong>that</strong> was<br />

primarily written to explain the Messiah to<br />

Jews.<br />

As Omar read of the genealogy of the Lord<br />

Jesus, and on through the beatitudes and the<br />

wonderful teachings of the Lord Jesus, God<br />

began to draw his heart to the Savior.<br />

As he read the verses in Matthew 10 about<br />

members of your own household being your<br />

enemies and Jesus bringing a sword which<br />

would divide family, he fell to his knees and<br />

confessed Christ as Savior.<br />

Later when someone asked him why those<br />

verses, of all verses, would be the very ones <strong>that</strong><br />

would bring him to faith in Christ, he said,<br />

“When I read them, I knew <strong>that</strong> Jesus must<br />

be God because only God would require such<br />

from His followers.”<br />

88


leAving ChinA<br />

Fifty-three years ago, when my wife,<br />

Margaret, was a little girl, she began the trip<br />

from Suyung, Szechwan Province, China,<br />

to Canada, with her mother and father<br />

(Walter and Helen Jespersen), two sisters<br />

(Carol and Linda), and baby brother (David,<br />

who was only seven months old at the time).<br />

The family was asked to leave communist China<br />

by government officials, and began the trip on<br />

May 26, 1951. They arrived at their family home<br />

near Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, on October<br />

13, over four months later!<br />

It took Dad and Mom and their four<br />

children, with several other missionary single<br />

ladies, nearly seven weeks to reach the Hong<br />

Kong border. On this long journey, their<br />

baggage and <strong>do</strong>cuments were inspected eight<br />

times, once just before crossing the border.<br />

89


At the border crossing, one of the missionary<br />

ladies <strong>could</strong> not find her <strong>do</strong>cuments, so they<br />

wouldn’t let her cross. Dad thought <strong>that</strong> possibly<br />

her <strong>do</strong>cuments might have been placed in her<br />

baggage by accident at the previous inspection<br />

point. He asked if he <strong>could</strong> remain in China<br />

and let her cross (her baggage had already gone<br />

ahead). The official agreed, saying <strong>that</strong> if her<br />

<strong>do</strong>cuments <strong>could</strong> not be found, then Dad would<br />

have to return all the way back to Suyung (sevenweek<br />

journey) and begin the process again.<br />

It was very tense for Dad waiting in China,<br />

realizing he might be separated from his wife<br />

and four children for another 14 weeks or so –<br />

and possibly permanently!<br />

The lady eventually returned with her<br />

papers, and Dad was able to cross the border to<br />

free<strong>do</strong>m.<br />

I have heard this story many times, and it<br />

never ceases to amaze, challenge, encourage<br />

and motivate me to be like my father-in-law;<br />

one who, even with family responsibilities,<br />

would immediately offer to stand in the place<br />

of another (yes, possibly even give his life) <strong>that</strong><br />

90


they might be free. May we be such a person,<br />

especially one who would give up our life <strong>that</strong><br />

people might be free through the Gospel of<br />

Christ, whatever cost it might be!<br />

For the love of Christ controls us, having<br />

concluded this, <strong>that</strong> one died for all, therefore<br />

all died; and He died for all, so <strong>that</strong> they who<br />

live might no longer live for themselves, but for<br />

Him who died and rose again on their behalf<br />

(2 Corinthians 5:14-15, nasb).<br />

91


little lAdy in<br />

the CAnCer wArd<br />

Several years ago while going through cancer<br />

treatment, I was in a room with about 15 other<br />

oncology patients in a major Seattle hospital.<br />

As I sat there feeling sorry for myself, ill<br />

and miserable along with these others, I looked<br />

around and realized everyone was a sorry mess!<br />

In fact, we were all in such terrible shape, it<br />

was quite humorous. As I smiled, a little black<br />

lady sitting across from me said, “What are you<br />

laughing at?”<br />

I said, “Oh, am I laughing?”<br />

She said, “Yes; what <strong>do</strong> you have <strong>that</strong> big<br />

smile on your face for?”<br />

I said, “Well, ma’am, have you looked around<br />

this room? We are the most sorry-looking bunch<br />

of people you have ever seen!”<br />

She replied, “Well, I <strong>do</strong>n’t think it is funny!”<br />

92


I said, “Well, you are correct, but to tell you<br />

the truth, I am so ill I feel like lying on the<br />

floor right now and dying because I am going<br />

to heaven and I can hardly wait to get there!”<br />

She said, “Are you going to heaven? Well so<br />

am I.”<br />

I asked, “How <strong>do</strong> you know you are going<br />

to heaven?”<br />

She gave her testimony of how she came<br />

to faith in Christ. It wasn’t a normal testimony.<br />

She shared how she was a wicked person and<br />

someone shared with her the Gospel of salvation<br />

by faith in Christ alone.<br />

As she related how she turned from sin and<br />

trusted the Savior, her face beamed. Here was a<br />

little lady with red spots all over her beautiful<br />

black skin, who <strong>could</strong> hardly talk because her<br />

face was so skinny and drawn <strong>that</strong> her false teeth<br />

didn’t fit properly, whose wig was off to one<br />

side, and yet, she glowed with the joy of the<br />

Lord.<br />

When she finished, she said, “And how<br />

<strong>do</strong> you know you are going to heaven?” So, I<br />

shared how Christ had worked in my life, how I<br />

93


had come to repentance, and <strong>that</strong> I had trusted<br />

Him for salvation.<br />

It was amazing how two sickly, miserablelooking<br />

people <strong>could</strong> share what Christ had<br />

<strong>do</strong>ne in and through their lives for His glory<br />

with thirteen other people listening intently.<br />

My, oh my, it was worth having cancer to<br />

share the Gospel so openly in a cancer ward.<br />

94


moAning And groAning<br />

<strong>do</strong>es not <strong>do</strong> A Bit oF good<br />

Moaning and groaning <strong>do</strong>es not seem to <strong>do</strong> a<br />

bit of good. The old saying goes, “When it rains,<br />

it pours!”<br />

Recently, we picked up our van <strong>that</strong> we had<br />

loaned to a family who needed a car for several<br />

weeks and noticed the “Service Engine Now”<br />

light was on. I took the van to our mechanic<br />

and it cost over $1400 to repair.<br />

Recent computer and equipment problems<br />

this week for my office will cost $2100.<br />

The <strong>do</strong>ctor told me <strong>that</strong> surgery on my knee<br />

is badly needed, but he cannot guarantee results.<br />

Because of my arthritis and other problems, the<br />

pain will probably continue, as he says my knee<br />

is one big mess!<br />

However, when you and I as Christians begin<br />

to ponder bad situations, it is good to realize<br />

95


<strong>that</strong> compared to the situation <strong>that</strong> millions are<br />

facing in Haiti and the Philippines, our troubles<br />

are nothing. For example, I just watched a video<br />

of street children going through garbage in<br />

Manila just trying to find a scrap of food they<br />

<strong>could</strong> eat to keep from starving.<br />

So what if there is a large bill for the repair<br />

of our vehicle. God owns it! It is His money. So<br />

what if computers crash? It is His equipment<br />

dedicated to His service; and the same goes<br />

for my body. If it has been dedicated to Him<br />

(Romans 12:1-2), then He can <strong>do</strong> with it <strong>that</strong><br />

which He pleases: cripple it, heal it, use it, or put<br />

it in the barn!<br />

Psalm 66:11-12:“You (God) laid an<br />

oppressive burden upon our loins... yet You<br />

brought us out into a place of abundance” (nasb).<br />

Charles Spurgeon said, “We often forget<br />

<strong>that</strong> God lays our afflictions upon us; if<br />

we remembered this fact, we should more<br />

patiently submit to the pressure which now<br />

pains us.”<br />

96


only the BeAutiFul<br />

lip-synCh<br />

At the Olympics opening ceremony recently, a<br />

sweet, very cute little girl of about 7, 8 or 9 sang<br />

a beautiful song with several thousand other<br />

singers. It was later revealed <strong>that</strong> the girl was<br />

only lip-synching. The real singer was off-stage,<br />

as she was not attractive enough to be on stage.<br />

The government said <strong>that</strong> it was in the<br />

interests of the nation <strong>that</strong> they use a girl to lipsynch<br />

who had a “flawless image.”<br />

Many of us are like the girl off-camera, not<br />

good-looking at all. In fact, we look in the mirror<br />

and say, “Mirror, mirror on the wall, who is the<br />

fairest of them all?” And the mirror answers back<br />

quite quickly and loudly, “Certainly not you!”<br />

What is really bad is when the mirror continues<br />

to talk. It said to me the other day, “You look<br />

like you’re on your way out!”<br />

97


Yes, many people have flawless images, but<br />

the majority of us are flawed, maybe not in our<br />

appearances, but certainly in our lives. Praise<br />

God <strong>that</strong> He chooses the weak things of the<br />

world to confound the wise.<br />

On one occasion, I spoke to a large group<br />

of teenagers in a church in Detroit. In the<br />

beginning of my short talk I said something like,<br />

“I am sorry you have to listen to an old, ugly<br />

missionary.” One of the young people in the<br />

front row said, “You are not so old.” He didn’t<br />

say anything about not being ugly!<br />

Years ago when I served with Operation<br />

Mobilization on a village evangelism team in<br />

India before Margaret and I were married, an<br />

elderly, very poor lady came to faith in Christ.<br />

Her Hindu family immediately turned<br />

against her, with one even saying to her very<br />

shamefully and degradingly, “You’re just an ugly,<br />

old woman!”<br />

This new follower of Christ humbly<br />

answered, “Isn’t it wonderful <strong>that</strong> God <strong>could</strong><br />

love such an old, ugly person like me? Isn’t it<br />

wonderful <strong>that</strong> God <strong>could</strong> love me so much <strong>that</strong><br />

98


He sent His son, the Lord Jesus Christ, to die in<br />

my place for my sin!”<br />

But God has chosen the foolish things of the<br />

world to shame the wise, and God has chosen<br />

the weak things of the world to shame the things<br />

which are strong (1 Corinthians 1:27, nasb).<br />

So, whatever we have, flawed or good looks,<br />

let us magnify Christ. He is the altogether lovely<br />

One!<br />

99


plAying hurt<br />

Some years ago, I was able to watch the last four<br />

minutes of the Super Bowl. It was an exciting<br />

game. Several times in the reporting of the game<br />

and interviews afterward, it was mentioned <strong>that</strong><br />

one of the key players played hurt. He had an<br />

injury, but continued to play thorough the pain<br />

for the good of his team and the game.<br />

I know many pastors, Christian workers, and<br />

missionaries who <strong>do</strong> the same. They serve, work,<br />

and help others, but with pain and sadness. They<br />

have hurt in their lives: sickness, inabilities,<br />

a child <strong>that</strong> is not walking with the Lord, an<br />

unloving parent, a relative who <strong>could</strong>n’t care<br />

less about their life or ministry. Even though<br />

they have friends <strong>that</strong> pray for and encourage<br />

them, health to get through the day, and enough<br />

money to buy food, they still have sadness, they<br />

still have <strong>that</strong> little hurt.<br />

100


We need to realize <strong>that</strong> this hurt is the very<br />

thing <strong>that</strong> God uses to bring sanctification in<br />

our lives to trust in God and not in man. Hurt<br />

is simply a feeling, an emotion, and one of the<br />

basic tenets of Scripture is <strong>that</strong> we are not to<br />

walk by our feelings or let them dictate our<br />

lives. We walk in faith trusting <strong>that</strong> God will<br />

care, lead, guide, and minister to us in our need.<br />

A great verse to remember during sad and<br />

hurtful times is “For You have tried us, O God;<br />

You have refined us as silver is refined. You<br />

brought us into the net; You laid an oppressive<br />

burden upon our loins. You made men ride over<br />

our heads; we went through fire and through<br />

water, yet You brought us out into a place of<br />

abundance” (Psalm 66:10-12, nasb).<br />

So, dear brother and sister, continue to<br />

minister to others in your hurt in Jesus’ name.<br />

It is the very thing <strong>that</strong> God uses in your life to<br />

draw you closer to Him and to bring glory to<br />

God!<br />

101


eggie JACkson,<br />

willie mAys, And<br />

pAstor sio<strong>do</strong>rA<br />

One time on a flight I saw a short video on<br />

the life of Reggie Jackson, the baseball celebrity<br />

who retired at the peak of his career with the<br />

Oakland Athletics in 1987.<br />

A few years ago, Margaret and I met him<br />

briefly. As I shook his hand, I mentioned <strong>that</strong><br />

the only other famous baseball player I had ever<br />

shaken hands with was the great Willie Mays.<br />

Reggie immediately grabbed my hand again as<br />

Willie Mays was his hero!<br />

Meeting the famous Reggie Jackson and<br />

Willie Mays, however, is nothing in comparison<br />

to other people I have met, such as Pastor<br />

Evangelista Sio<strong>do</strong>ra, the little man barely five<br />

feet tall with a big heart who died in his 70s. He<br />

pioneered the Philippine Missionary Fellowship,<br />

102


and for 40 years took the gospel to small villages<br />

and tribes throughout the country.<br />

Once when asked to visit the United States<br />

to speak in meetings, he applied for a visa at<br />

the U.S. embassy in Manila. They rudely asked<br />

him why he wanted to go to the USA. He<br />

politely replied, “I <strong>do</strong>n’t want to go the USA; it<br />

is God who wants me to go to the USA! Who<br />

would want to go to the States? I am only going<br />

because God wants me to go!” (He got his visa!)<br />

On one occasion in Manila about 1974,<br />

Pastor Sio<strong>do</strong>ra knew I was very discouraged. At<br />

a meeting for pastors and leaders, he called me<br />

aside, sat me <strong>do</strong>wn, took my hands in his and<br />

for 20 minutes (with his face only a few inches<br />

from mine) preached and shared from the Word<br />

of God the encouragement we have in Christ!<br />

He helped get my focus back on the Sovereign<br />

Lord.<br />

Yes, I have shaken the hands of Reggie<br />

Jackson and Willie Mays, but so what? God<br />

touched me and so many others through the life<br />

of a humble, zealous, godly Filipino, the truly<br />

great Evangelista Sio<strong>do</strong>ra.<br />

103


selF-deniAl,<br />

AFFliCtions, And<br />

A thorny Bed<br />

As all of you know, life is a marathon, not a<br />

100-meter dash! If you are not having troubles<br />

today then wait until tomorrow.<br />

Some of us may be shocked when we first<br />

arrive on the mission field or the first month<br />

of marriage, or the first year of our baby or<br />

a<strong>do</strong>pted child. Things <strong>that</strong> were supposed to be<br />

so wonderful, blessed and easy become difficult.<br />

We rejoice at the birth of our little children<br />

and yet they are sickly. We get married and<br />

find out our mate <strong>do</strong>es not agree with us on<br />

everything. We arrive on the field enthusiastic in<br />

serving God and we find we have to work with<br />

a bunch of grumpy, inhospitable missionaries<br />

<strong>that</strong> appear to have no vision, or we get sick, or<br />

104


the people we came to minister to <strong>do</strong>n’t seem<br />

to really like us.<br />

The world would say give the children back,<br />

get a divorce, or leave the field and go back to<br />

where people like you. Good questions to ask<br />

ourselves are: “What will happen to our mate if<br />

we <strong>do</strong>n’t love and care for them, our children if<br />

we <strong>do</strong>n’t nurture and train them, and what will<br />

happen to the needy pastors or street children<br />

or the church in the country in which we have<br />

been called to serve if we pack up and leave?”<br />

Let me share three quotes which might<br />

encourage all of us in our walk with God:<br />

1. Matthew Henry, one of my favorite British<br />

pastors, who died in 1714, made an excellent<br />

comment regarding Luke 6:40: “Christ’s<br />

followers cannot expect better treatment in<br />

the world than their Master had. Let them<br />

not promise themselves more honor or<br />

pleasure in the world than Christ had. Let<br />

each live a life of labor and self-denial as his<br />

Master, and make himself a servant of all; let<br />

him stoop, and let him toil, and <strong>do</strong> all the<br />

105


good he can, and then he will be a complete<br />

disciple.”<br />

2. Psalm 66:11-12: “You (God) laid an<br />

oppressive burden upon our loins... yet You<br />

brought us out into a place of abundance”<br />

(nasb). Charles Spurgeon said, “We often<br />

forget <strong>that</strong> God lays our afflictions upon us;<br />

if we remembered this fact, we should more<br />

patiently submit to the pressure which now<br />

pains us.”<br />

3. J.I. Packer said the Puritans teach us much<br />

of the love of God: “...<strong>that</strong> it is a love <strong>that</strong><br />

redeems, converts, sanctifies, and ultimately<br />

glorifies sinners, and <strong>that</strong> Calvary was the<br />

one place in human history where it was<br />

fully and unambiguously revealed, and <strong>that</strong><br />

in relation to our own situation, we may<br />

know for certain <strong>that</strong> nothing can separate<br />

us from <strong>that</strong> love (Romans 8:38), although<br />

no situation in this world will ever be free<br />

from flies in the ointment and thorns in the<br />

bed.”<br />

106


I trust this will encourage you to persevere.<br />

Keep your mate, love your child, and make a<br />

long-term commitment to the country <strong>that</strong> He<br />

has called you to for His glory!<br />

It is always too early to give up, walk away<br />

or quit!<br />

107


street Boy BeComes<br />

ACAdemiC deAn<br />

He who oppresses the poor taunts his Maker,<br />

but he who is gracious to the needy honors Him,<br />

(Proverbs 14:31, nasb).<br />

Sometimes there may be a subtle slight in<br />

the way we treat the poor, the needy, and the<br />

orphan. Although we would never knowingly<br />

oppress orphans, are we gracious to them?<br />

In Christian history a man of faith cared<br />

for thousands of orphans. This was wonderful!<br />

However, since the children were orphans,<br />

they were considered low class by society.<br />

Instead of sending these children to college<br />

and encouraging them to enter ministerial<br />

training, the boys and the girls were<br />

apprenticed out as laborers and servants at age<br />

15 and 17.<br />

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The love and care given to these orphans<br />

were exemplary, but none were ever known to<br />

become lawyers, <strong>do</strong>ctors, educators, pastors, or<br />

missionaries because of their social standing.<br />

Praise God for this man of faith who cared<br />

for thousands of orphans. As many of God’s<br />

people worldwide care for street children and<br />

orphans, let us follow in faith as this great man<br />

did, but let us go further. Let us make sure <strong>that</strong><br />

we care for them as we would our own children<br />

and give them the same opportunities to serve<br />

God whether as a bus driver, civil engineer,<br />

<strong>do</strong>ctor, educator, missionary or pastor.<br />

A street boy of Manila went to an evangelistic<br />

camp. He came to faith in Christ and was<br />

trained in ACTION’s Second Mile Discipleship<br />

& Vocational Training Program. Later he got a<br />

welding job, but felt <strong>that</strong> God was calling him<br />

into ministry. He took a job in maintenance at<br />

a large church in Manila so he <strong>could</strong> attend all<br />

the services and seminars to prepare for ministry.<br />

Later a wealthy church member noticed his<br />

industriousness and paid for him to attend Bible<br />

school at Philippine Mission Institute (PMI).<br />

109


Even though he was from the streets and had<br />

no education, the faculty helped him through<br />

school. He later received assistance to attend<br />

Asia Theological Seminary (one of the largest<br />

in Asia), graduated, and returned to PMI as<br />

Academic Dean! He has been considered for<br />

future presidency of this same institution.<br />

Praise God for the people who did not give<br />

up on this orphaned street boy. They instead<br />

encouraged him to be all he should be to the<br />

glory of God.<br />

110


thAnks, mister,<br />

For tAlking to me<br />

I try to walk at least one or two miles daily. One<br />

afternoon, on my daily one-mile walk, I was<br />

reading printed-out copies of my email. A little<br />

nine-year-old boy getting out of school walked<br />

up behind me and said, “There you are again.<br />

We talk about you at school all the time. This<br />

old man <strong>that</strong> walks <strong>do</strong>wn the street reading.<br />

What are you reading?”<br />

Surprised, I simply answered “Oh, I’m<br />

reading some letters from the people I work<br />

with in other countries who work with street<br />

kids.” He then asked, “What’s a street kid?”<br />

I said, “A street kid is an orphan.” He replied,<br />

“What’s an orphan?”<br />

This really surprised me because here was a<br />

boy of at least 9, not knowing what an orphan<br />

was. I answered, “You know, <strong>that</strong>’s a good<br />

111


question. I am a Christian and God has given<br />

Christians a book called the Bible to show us<br />

how to know Him and live for Him. God says<br />

in His book <strong>that</strong> an orphan is a fatherless child.”<br />

The boy was quiet for a moment as we<br />

walked along. He said, “Oh, I guess most of<br />

my friends are orphans because they <strong>do</strong>n’t have<br />

fathers.” A few moments later he said, “I guess I<br />

am an orphan too because I <strong>do</strong>n’t have a father.”<br />

I said, “I know a Father who cares for you.”<br />

He said, “What Father?” I replied, “God, the<br />

Heavenly Father.” I then began to share with<br />

him the glorious Gospel of Christ.<br />

After a few minutes, he had to turn into his<br />

house and as he walked away he waved and said,<br />

“Thanks, mister, for talking to me.”<br />

Two or three days later I had almost the<br />

same conversation with a 13-year-old girl. As I<br />

was walking and reading, she got off the bus just<br />

as I passed the bus stop, and walking behind me<br />

said, “Hey mister. There you are again reading.<br />

What are you reading?”<br />

As I began to explain, she suddenly said,<br />

“Do you have a cigarette?” I said, “No, I <strong>do</strong>n’t.<br />

112


Do your parents know you smoke?” I expected<br />

her to say, “My parents <strong>do</strong>n’t care what I <strong>do</strong>,”<br />

but instead she said, “My parents <strong>do</strong>n’t care<br />

about me.”<br />

At <strong>that</strong> I said, “I’m sorry, but I know a parent<br />

<strong>that</strong> cares about you.” She said, “What parent<br />

cares about me?” I replied, “God, the Heavenly<br />

Father, cares about you.” She said, “Really?” and<br />

I began to share the Gospel with her.<br />

The same thing happened as with the little<br />

boy. As she came to her house and turned to<br />

leave, she said, “Thanks, mister, for talking to me.”<br />

So, dear friends, whether you are out walking,<br />

reading, or whatever, even if you’re an old man<br />

or an old woman, God will bring opportunities<br />

to share the glorious Gospel of Christ. Perhaps<br />

someone will say to you today, “Thank you for<br />

talking to me.”<br />

113


the gospel is not<br />

word And deeds,<br />

But word only!<br />

Quite often people quote St. Francis of Assisi,<br />

“Preach the Gospel; if necessary, use words.”<br />

However, St. Francis never said this. The closest<br />

<strong>that</strong> researchers have found of something similar<br />

was when he was upset with some Franciscan<br />

priests for preaching without permission, but to<br />

encourage them, he said, “Let all the brothers<br />

(Franciscans) … preach by their deeds.”<br />

The truth of the Word of God is <strong>that</strong> the<br />

Gospel stands alone. It is <strong>that</strong> Jesus, sent by His<br />

Father from Heaven lived a perfect sinless life,<br />

died on the cross for sin, was buried, rose again,<br />

and ascended into Heaven. If anyone believes and<br />

turns from sin and trusts Jesus Christ alone for<br />

salvation, he will receive forgiveness and inherit<br />

eternal life (John 3 and 1 Corinthians 15).<br />

114


John Piper outlines the Gospel in his book,<br />

Finally Alive, “It comes as a God-given, clearheaded,<br />

conscious embrace of the historical<br />

person Jesus Christ as Savior, Lord, and Treasure<br />

of our life. Look at Him in the Gospel—the<br />

story of His life and death and resurrection and<br />

what they mean for your life. See His glory<br />

and His truth. Receive Him and believe in His<br />

name. And you will be a child of God.”<br />

The Gospel stands alone! Good deeds are<br />

the result of salvation through Christ through<br />

the Gospel (Ephesians 2:8-9, 10). We are to trust<br />

God to build into our lives character qualities<br />

taught in the Word of God in obedience to<br />

Christ, but these are not the Gospel, but the<br />

results which help and prove <strong>that</strong> we have turned<br />

to faith in Christ. But the Gospel stands alone!<br />

115


the rACe is on<br />

Soon after trusting Christ in my early twenties,<br />

I got a job on the night shift at a plywood<br />

company, mainly with Hispanics. We enjoyed<br />

working with each other, on an 8-man crew<br />

(4 teams of 2 men) <strong>that</strong> off-loaded huge crates<br />

of fifty 4’ x 8’ sheets of plywood from trucks.<br />

We would then unstrap each crate of plywood,<br />

inspect each piece and then stack them into piles<br />

of 100 good sheets. The stacks of plywood were<br />

then taken to another building to be painted for<br />

mobile homes.<br />

In an 8-hour shift, each 2-man team would<br />

prepare two or three stacks of 100 good sheets<br />

ready for painting. My teammate was also a new<br />

Christian, and as we began to reach out to others<br />

with the Gospel and <strong>do</strong> Bible study together<br />

on breaks, we began to be concerned about our<br />

testimony in the lazy, union-controlled work<br />

environment.<br />

116


So we began to pick up speed and work<br />

harder. Soon we were <strong>do</strong>ing four stacks of<br />

plywood, instead of two or three. The other<br />

teams also began to speed up as they did not<br />

want to look bad. The race was on as each team<br />

began to race each other and still be careful of<br />

quality control. The amount of stacks increased.<br />

Soon it was three or four stacks by lunch, and<br />

eight or ten stacks completed on each shift<br />

instead of the previous two or three.<br />

This became a problem as the painters<br />

then had to keep up and go faster on the paint<br />

machines. The union bosses then came in<br />

and made a fuss, but the management was so<br />

happy <strong>that</strong> they gave everyone a raise, extended<br />

our break and lunch times, and provided all<br />

kinds of amenities to the 250 workers. Our<br />

company became the most productive factory<br />

in California.<br />

As young Christians this made a great impact<br />

on our personal life as we saw the difference<br />

Christ made in the simple matter of stacking<br />

117


plywood for the testimony of Christ for the<br />

glory of God!<br />

“Whatever you <strong>do</strong>, <strong>do</strong> your work heartily, as<br />

for the Lord rather than for men” (Colossians 3:23,<br />

nasb).<br />

118


the stAte oF CAliForniA<br />

is on your side<br />

When I was only 15 years old, but had obtained<br />

my driver’s license early, I was involved in a<br />

major traffic accident involving two fatalities.<br />

I was driving on a main highway, and a lady,<br />

driving a car full of other women who had been<br />

working in the vineyards, ran a stop sign directly<br />

in front of me. I was driving about 55 mph and<br />

had no way to avoid her.<br />

On impact, I lost most of my teeth, and a<br />

good friend who was with me went through the<br />

windshield and was almost killed. He panicked<br />

and ran from the accident scene. I ran after him<br />

and was able to tackle him a half a block away<br />

from the accident. No one helped me care for<br />

him because in those days people were sued<br />

for helping. I took off my shirt and wrapped<br />

it around his head wound which was bleeding<br />

119


profusely. When the ambulance finally came, I<br />

was bare-chested and covered with blood. I held<br />

my friend’s pressure points all the way to the<br />

hospital.<br />

You can imagine the scene when I was in<br />

the waiting room as the medical staff took care<br />

of those seriously injured. I had no shirt, was<br />

scared, had thoughts of what had happened and<br />

didn’t know if my friend would die. There was<br />

blood everywhere. I knew already <strong>that</strong> others<br />

had died. My step-father’s car was totaled, and<br />

I knew the wrath of others would be upon me,<br />

being a teenage driver.<br />

About this time, a state patrolman walked<br />

in to the waiting room. He was an impressive<br />

figure, well over six feet in height. I always<br />

remember how he approached me, took off<br />

his hat, and asked if I was Doug Nichols. He<br />

sat <strong>do</strong>wn next to me, put his arm around me,<br />

and said, “Young man, I know you are very<br />

frightened. I have thoroughly investigated the<br />

scene of the accident, and want you to know<br />

<strong>that</strong> you are not in the wrong. People will be<br />

angry with you because you are a teenager, and<br />

120


there are several deaths, but I want you to know<br />

<strong>that</strong> you did everything right. Remember one<br />

thing, the State of California is on your side!”<br />

My mother arrived soon afterward crying,<br />

and my step-father swore in anger at the loss of<br />

his car. Others were crying and screaming, and<br />

yet this state patrolman continued to sit with his<br />

arm around me.<br />

What a great testimony of a public official,<br />

especially his example to us as Christian<br />

believers in our care of others even if they are in<br />

the wrong or thought to be in the wrong!<br />

The world is filled with people who are<br />

fearful, uncertain, and filled with pain. You and I<br />

as believers can put our arms around them and<br />

say something much greater than “The State of<br />

California is on your side.” We can say, “God is<br />

here, and He will care for you.”<br />

We can minister to people the grace and the<br />

peace of God through His Son Christ Jesus.<br />

Casting all your anxiety on Him, because<br />

He cares for you (1 Peter 5:7, nasb).<br />

121


useless, or<br />

strAtegiC ministry?<br />

Recently, while on an early morning walk in<br />

Manila, I noticed an older, filthy, mentallyhandicapped<br />

man surrounded by his meager<br />

possessions. I felt compelled to speak with him<br />

to at least show some measure of kindness. There<br />

was no response, just glazed, lifeless eyes, not<br />

even focusing on me as I was speaking to him.<br />

I decided to help him and gave him the<br />

delicious bread which I had purchased for<br />

breakfast. He said nothing as he took the bread<br />

and began to eat it.<br />

Years ago a noted Christian leader said, “All<br />

souls are precious, but not all souls are strategic.”<br />

In other words, spend your time with the people<br />

of prestige who can influence others, not some<br />

poor man on the street.<br />

122


Well, I sure blew it this morning, wasting<br />

time on an old, mentally-deranged dirty man<br />

living on the streets. “Useless ministry.” Or was<br />

it?<br />

Jesus said, I was hungry and you gave me food …<br />

(Matthew 25:35, esv). He also said, If you love me,<br />

you will keep my commandments (John 14:15, esv).<br />

Perhaps my bread-giving was not useless<br />

after all. If given in Jesus’ Name, for His sake, and<br />

in obedience to Him, how much more strategic<br />

can you get?<br />

123


ushers, get<br />

the plAtes!<br />

My family and I recently attended four days of<br />

seminars on “Evangelism to World Religions,”<br />

led by Ron Carlson. He is an excellent<br />

communicator. Ron, his wife, Marge, and<br />

their two young sons served in the Philippines<br />

with ACTION for one year in the 1980s. He<br />

spoke and conducted lectures throughout the<br />

Philippines and instructed many pastors and<br />

Christian workers on how to share the gospel<br />

to the cults. It was a great year of ministry!<br />

Upon return to their large home church<br />

in the Minneapolis area, Ron was asked to<br />

give a report on his year in the Philippines<br />

on a Sunday evening. During his report, he<br />

shared how ACTION had a real burden to<br />

start a ministry among the 50,000 prostitutes<br />

in <strong>do</strong>wntown Manila. However, he said <strong>that</strong><br />

124


we were not able to start a ministry because<br />

we had made a decision <strong>that</strong> until we had a<br />

budget for one year of ministry, we would not<br />

begin. The budget would include the rental of a<br />

facility for evangelism and counseling ministry,<br />

support for a large team of godly Filipina ladies<br />

for evangelism and discipleship, a small van,<br />

discipleship material, food and many other<br />

expenses. As the budget was $55,000, Ron said<br />

<strong>that</strong> we would probably never begin because, as<br />

a small mission, how <strong>could</strong> we ever come up<br />

with <strong>that</strong> huge amount of money?<br />

As he continued his report, he began to hear<br />

people tear checks out of their checkbooks.<br />

He suddenly realized what was happening, and<br />

because the elders had informed him <strong>that</strong> they<br />

would not be taking an offering, he stopped<br />

and said, “I think you might be writing checks<br />

for ACTION’s ministry, but please <strong>do</strong> not<br />

<strong>do</strong> so, as we have no permission to take an<br />

offering.” However, the people continued<br />

to write checks and there was a continuous<br />

rustling noise of checks being torn out of<br />

checkbooks.<br />

125


Ron began to cry, basically in fear of getting<br />

in trouble with the church and the elders. At<br />

<strong>that</strong> moment, the chairman of the elders stood<br />

up and slowly walked up to the platform, put<br />

his arm around Ron, and said, “Ron, I am the<br />

new chairman of the elders and you are not in<br />

trouble.” Then, looking to the audience, he said,<br />

“Ushers, get the plates!” The ushers began to<br />

pass the offering plates ran<strong>do</strong>mly throughout the<br />

church, collecting a cash offering of $55,400!<br />

The money was used for a one-year<br />

outreach, right in the heart of the area of Manila<br />

given over to prostitution, with many people<br />

being trained in working with the girls involved.<br />

Nearly 900 of these ladies of the night indicated<br />

coming to faith in Christ, and many of them left<br />

this wicked profession.<br />

In another meeting with Ron, the pastor<br />

said he felt he should take an offering to raise<br />

$10,000 to print Ron’s book in Italian for use<br />

in Italy. This was not a planned offering and<br />

was a real testimony and encouragement to all<br />

when the pastor shared the need. He then said,<br />

“Ushers, get the plates.”<br />

126


Friends, as God leads you among your<br />

people, always be ready when there is a need<br />

and you sense <strong>that</strong> God’s people want to <strong>do</strong><br />

something about <strong>that</strong> need to encourage and<br />

challenge them and simply say, “Let’s get the<br />

plates! Let’s <strong>do</strong> something about this need for<br />

the glory of God.”<br />

127


we wAlk By FAith ...<br />

not By sight, even in<br />

spending money<br />

Our car mileage was nearing 90,000 miles.<br />

Repairs were more expensive as the car became<br />

older.<br />

We were advised to sell it before it hit<br />

100,000 miles to get a better price. We also<br />

needed to obtain a newer car, especially for<br />

long ministry trips and large enough for Dad<br />

Jespersen, age 95, to get in and out.<br />

We a saw a 2007 Chevrolet with only<br />

31,000 miles on sale for only $14,500. It was<br />

a good price, but I offered much less and the<br />

Christian dealer said yes!<br />

We only had $600 in our car fund, but we<br />

were able to come up with the balance and also<br />

sell our older car to a family who needed it.<br />

128


However, later, I really had <strong>do</strong>ubts (as<br />

I always <strong>do</strong>) in spending so much money.<br />

Questions such as: “Should I spend so much<br />

money at this time?” “Perhaps our older car<br />

would have lasted a few more years?” “The<br />

car looks so new (even if it is two years old),<br />

what will people say?” “Perhaps we should have<br />

waited.” Even though friends recently bought a<br />

smaller car for <strong>do</strong>uble what we paid, I still had<br />

<strong>do</strong>ubts.<br />

Doubts, however, are just feelings. For<br />

example, Margaret and I both have feelings<br />

of low self-worth, but so what? Feelings are<br />

feelings, and if we only made decisions and lived<br />

our lives for Christ by feelings, we would be<br />

most miserable. As followers of Christ we are<br />

able to live by faith. Our funds (and our lives)<br />

are God’s and we can trust Him with all of it.<br />

The car belongs to God, and if it falls apart next<br />

week, well, so be it!<br />

If we only live to satisfy ourselves and think<br />

our funds are ours instead of God’s, we have a<br />

problem. But if we move forward in obedience<br />

129


to God, we can trust Him, <strong>do</strong>ubtful feelings or<br />

not.<br />

Our prayer should be Jehoshaphat’s prayer<br />

in Chronicles, O our God…we are powerless ...<br />

We <strong>do</strong> not know what to <strong>do</strong>, but our eyes are on You<br />

(2 Chronicles 20:12, esv).<br />

130


whAt? $2.55 For A little<br />

Cup oF lemonAde?<br />

On the way home recently, I stopped at a<br />

lemonade stand. The two little girls were so<br />

excited to have a customer! I asked, “How<br />

much?”<br />

They said, “Well, look at the sign.” So, I<br />

looked at the sign and <strong>could</strong> hardly read it, but<br />

it looked like it said $2.55. So, I said, “I just want<br />

a little cup of lemonade.” They said, “Okay, <strong>that</strong>’s<br />

$2.55.”<br />

I asked, “How big is the cup?” One of them<br />

said, “I <strong>do</strong>n’t know. What size would you like?” I<br />

said, “Those cups <strong>do</strong>n’t look very big to me and<br />

I can’t afford $2.55 for a glass of lemonade.”<br />

One of them quickly said, “Okay, how about<br />

55¢?” I said, “That sounds pretty good but can I<br />

see the lemonade?” She said, “Oh, no, it’s inside<br />

this container here.” I said, “Well, what color is<br />

131


it?” She said, “I think it’s pink.” The other one<br />

said, “No, it’s not!”<br />

As much as I like to help little kids in their<br />

entrepreneurial efforts, I decided <strong>that</strong> since the<br />

two girls were arguing about what size it was,<br />

what color it was and how much to charge, I<br />

needed to keep going!<br />

This may be a picture of the church these<br />

days. We have the glorious Gospel and are still<br />

trying to figure out how to present it; what<br />

color to paint it, and how big a cup to serve it<br />

in. It might be best to leave it as it is and <strong>do</strong> what<br />

the Word of God says and simply tell the Good<br />

News to people.<br />

The Gospel is the power of God to salvation<br />

for everyone who believes. It is the Good News<br />

of Christ and His death on the cross to pay the<br />

penalty for sin. Because of His grace, we can<br />

come to Him by faith. Now <strong>that</strong> is good news,<br />

no matter what color you paint it or what<br />

container you serve it in!<br />

Jesus said, I am the <strong>do</strong>or; if anyone enters<br />

through Me, he will be saved…(John 10:9, nasb).<br />

132


whAt piCtures <strong>do</strong> you<br />

hAve on your wAll And<br />

who <strong>do</strong> you prAy For?<br />

Margaret and I were able to visit her Uncle<br />

Harvey Jespersen, living in a very small room<br />

in a retirement home in Wetaskiwin, Alberta,<br />

Canada. After only a 2 ½-hour visit, Margaret<br />

and I left greatly encouraged in our walk with<br />

God and with a determination to share our<br />

resources and the years remaining in our lives to<br />

the glory of God!<br />

Uncle Harvey is 89 and has served the Lord<br />

faithfully in ministry to orphans, the needy,<br />

and foster children for over 60 years, with<br />

possibly millions of <strong>do</strong>llars passing through his<br />

hands for the work of the Lord. Yet here he is<br />

now, in a small room with no earthly treasures,<br />

rejoicing in the Lord and stating, “What need<br />

I more? The Bible says to be content with food<br />

133


and raiment, and I am content!” Uncle Harvey’s<br />

room is filled with pictures, some of family, but<br />

mostly of missionaries from around the world<br />

for whom he prays daily.<br />

Each day he rises at 5:30 a.m. and prays<br />

for missionaries who serve in different parts of<br />

the world. On Monday he prays for Asia; on<br />

Tuesday, Africa; on Wednesday, North America;<br />

on Thursday, South America; on Friday, Europe,<br />

and on Saturday, the islands of the world<br />

including the Philippines. Each Sunday he<br />

prays for family members, friends, and each<br />

pastor of the local evangelical churches in the<br />

town where he lives. He regularly writes each<br />

pastor ensuring them of his prayer. What a man<br />

of God!<br />

As Margaret and I left after our short<br />

visit she said, “When I get to be 89, I would<br />

like to be like Uncle Henry.” I reiterated,<br />

“So would I.” To be happy in the Lord and<br />

content with only food and raiment, daily<br />

giving ourselves to the Lord in prayer and<br />

praise for the Gospel and His compassionate<br />

134


care to go to the ends of the earth should be<br />

the goal of each of us.<br />

Uncle Harvey is truly happy, thankful, and<br />

holy. Might we all follow in his steps to the<br />

glory of God!<br />

135


whAt would you <strong>do</strong>?<br />

What would you <strong>do</strong> if you and your team<br />

planned a camp for 75 underprivileged street<br />

children of Manila but 280 boys ages 10 to 18<br />

showed up? Would you send them home? If so,<br />

which ones?<br />

What would you <strong>do</strong> if you planned a<br />

Christmas jail party for 10 prisoners who<br />

had trusted Christ the previous year and you<br />

became aware <strong>that</strong> there would be about 220<br />

other prisoners listening in and watching from<br />

their near-by jail cells? Would you invite them<br />

also?<br />

What would you <strong>do</strong> if you published a<br />

Gospel ad in a secular magazine with funds<br />

to handle follow-up for 100 people but you<br />

received 3000 letters? The letters not only<br />

requested more information about the Word of<br />

God, but many asked for someone to meet with<br />

them for a Bible study in their home?<br />

136


What would you <strong>do</strong> if you and a team were<br />

conducting a midnight ministry at two in the<br />

morning for 150 children and a little child<br />

prostitute 9 years of age came to faith in Christ?<br />

Would you let her remain with the lady she was<br />

living with in the park, the lady who was selling<br />

her to men?<br />

What would you <strong>do</strong> if a man was dying of<br />

heart trouble in a small village in the central part<br />

of the Philippines, and the only way to save his<br />

life was to fly him to Manila as soon as possible?<br />

You <strong>could</strong> not get him to a main airport which<br />

was 3 hours away. The only way to get him out<br />

was to fly him from a small landing strip nearby<br />

but this would involve leasing a private plane at<br />

a cost of $4000, money which you did not have?<br />

What would you <strong>do</strong>?<br />

Hard decisions? Let me mention a few more:<br />

What would you <strong>do</strong> if one of your followup<br />

workers visiting a small boy who had trusted<br />

Christ the week before in a camp became<br />

aware <strong>that</strong> the boy had no food in his house<br />

and had not eaten since the camp? His sister<br />

had died the previous week of tuberculosis, his<br />

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father had just aban<strong>do</strong>ned the family, his mother<br />

had tuberculosis, and they had no money for<br />

medicine. Would you close your Bible (as the<br />

follow-up worker did) and take the family to<br />

buy some food and medicine, feed them and<br />

then have the Bible study? I hope you would,<br />

but what would you <strong>do</strong> if you found out the<br />

follow-up worker had used all of his own<br />

personal money and the organization had no<br />

money to repay him?<br />

What would you <strong>do</strong> if you were already<br />

swamped with nearly 8000 people who trusted<br />

Christ during the year and yet more people<br />

were crying out for follow-up, for Bible studies,<br />

for counsel, for help?<br />

These are just some of the situations we are<br />

faced with almost daily! Some may not be as<br />

dramatic as these, but many are. What would<br />

you <strong>do</strong>?<br />

It is very easy for people to say, “Well, all you<br />

have to <strong>do</strong> is say No.” We would like to challenge<br />

these people to come to the Philippines (or<br />

India or Uganda or Mexico or Colombia),<br />

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join the team, and be in a position to say “No.”<br />

ACTION needs missionaries!<br />

We would like to encourage many to<br />

participate with ACTION and other missions<br />

in dealing with problems like these. Especially<br />

for additional missionaries to reach out to<br />

others in the name of Christ, to ask Him to give<br />

wis<strong>do</strong>m in dealing with situations like these,<br />

and encourage men and women to trust Him<br />

as Savior.<br />

The need is overwhelming and the<br />

opportunities are staggering. What can we <strong>do</strong>?<br />

All we can!<br />

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where Are<br />

the missionAries?<br />

In traveling the USA, Canada, and United<br />

King<strong>do</strong>m, I get caught up easily in the<br />

excitement of evangelical happenings, but, even<br />

so, I come away with a deep concern. Where is<br />

the burden to reach the world with the Gospel?<br />

Hundreds of Christian book titles are being<br />

published monthly, yet there are thousands<br />

of pastors in the developing world who<br />

still <strong>do</strong> not have a single Bible commentary<br />

or Bible dictionary. Scripture cookies and<br />

candies are being sold in Christian bookstores<br />

while missionaries are brokenhearted with<br />

people starving in countries where they serve.<br />

There are Gospel-verse T-shirts, belts, jackets<br />

and hats, while thousands of Christians in<br />

developing nations wear rags. Christians in<br />

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North America continue to argue about what<br />

is the best version of the Bible when there<br />

are still millions without any version of the Word<br />

of God!<br />

Our Bible schools, colleges, and seminaries<br />

are more modern and nicer. We <strong>do</strong> not have<br />

to be ashamed in any way of low intellectual<br />

attainments or facilities. We have really come up<br />

in the educational world!<br />

And what about our evangelical church<br />

buildings—they are really something else! Old<br />

European cathedrals may still have it for grandeur<br />

and majesty, but for sheer “football field” size,<br />

the North American church has really caught<br />

the world’s attention.<br />

Yes, the Church has made great strides in<br />

the last 20 years. Christians are on TV, in the<br />

movies, politics and sports. Many of these have<br />

a very effective, positive Christian testimony.<br />

But I ask a question. In the excitement, growth<br />

and spotlight—where are the missionaries who are<br />

needed throughout the world?<br />

It seems to be popular to talk about missions,<br />

to have a missions committee, to break last year’s<br />

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missions budget, but where are the missionaries<br />

who are being trained and sent out?<br />

Many evangelical pastors and laymen, as well<br />

as some of my own friends in North America,<br />

look upon missions as good, but not as a priority.<br />

The hardest things for me to understand as a<br />

Christian is why are there so few foreign missionaries.<br />

It is estimated <strong>that</strong> there are about one million<br />

Christian workers in North America, but only<br />

50,000 foreign missionaries! To reach the world’s<br />

unreached 3 billion, over 300,000 more crosscultural<br />

missionaries are needed! Not all of these<br />

need come from the North American church,<br />

but many should.<br />

At no other time in history has the Church<br />

been as large or as influential or as wealthy,<br />

but where are the missionaries? I love the North<br />

American Church! If bigger and better buildings<br />

need to be built, then build them, but let reaching<br />

the whole world be a priority!<br />

Jesus said, “Go and make disciples of all<br />

nations.” The Church needs to send more people.<br />

More need to go. The North American Church<br />

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can rise to its responsibility and opportunity and<br />

send many more missionaries to make disciples of<br />

all nations.<br />

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why Are we not<br />

more Friendly And<br />

kind to others?<br />

I am most likely coming to the end years of<br />

my life. I am 66 years old and probably <strong>do</strong> not<br />

have too many more years. I was supposed to die<br />

fourteen years ago with cancer as the <strong>do</strong>ctors<br />

only gave me three months to live.<br />

Today I was waiting at the pharmacy for<br />

a prescription. An older lady seemed quite<br />

distressed with problems and about losing some<br />

prescriptions. As she was leaving, I simply said,<br />

“I am sorry you are having such difficulty. Is<br />

there anything I can <strong>do</strong> to help?”<br />

She immediately started to talk about how<br />

she lost her purse, how her medicines were not<br />

working, her diabetes count was up, and so on.<br />

She followed me as I went through the line<br />

and stayed with me until I got my prescription.<br />

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When I was leaving she said, “Thank you for<br />

talking to me and cheering me up. I appreciate<br />

it very much!”<br />

Our brief conversation probably irritated<br />

the other people in line, as the lady was quite<br />

loud. But so what! She was blessed in the Name<br />

of Christ for a few moments and I trust God<br />

will use this brief kindness in her life to manifest<br />

His glory.<br />

So, <strong>do</strong>n’t be like what my grandkids call a<br />

“grumpy gut.” Smile. Say hello. Be friendly. As<br />

Christ has changed our life and given us a new<br />

life in Him, <strong>do</strong>es the world see this change? Are<br />

we just as grumpy, rude, and miserable as the<br />

world, or <strong>do</strong> we have the joy of Christ evident<br />

in our life?<br />

So, as those who have been chosen of God,<br />

holy and beloved, put on a heart of compassion,<br />

kindness, humility, gentleness and patience<br />

(Colossians 3:12, nasb).<br />

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you Are not<br />

very smArt,<br />

Are you?<br />

On one occasion, I had arrived at the Manila<br />

airport after 30 hours of travel. Needless to<br />

say, I was exhausted. I was taken directly to a<br />

conference center, where I was to speak to a<br />

gathering of 300 workers with children in crisis<br />

throughout the Philippines. It was a special<br />

banquet and celebration <strong>that</strong> night, and I was<br />

trying to stay awake.<br />

After eating and during the preliminaries<br />

of the program, I was reviewing the notes of<br />

my message. A choir from a local orphanage<br />

had sung and was standing immediately behind<br />

me, waiting to sing again. One of the little boys,<br />

named Raffy, about six years old, was an orphan<br />

living at the Home of Joy and was standing quite<br />

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close to me. We began to talk. He reminded me<br />

of my son, Robby.<br />

Raffy noticed I was reviewing some notes<br />

and said, “What are you <strong>do</strong>ing?” I said, “Well,<br />

I am going over my notes for my message<br />

tonight.” He said, “You need notes when you<br />

speak?” I said, “Yes.”<br />

He said, “You’re not very smart, are you?”<br />

I laughed and said, “No, I’m not.” In his<br />

youthful innocence he said, “I <strong>do</strong>n’t need to<br />

look at words when I sing. I just memorize<br />

them and sing.”<br />

That night during my restless sleep, I<br />

thought of Raffy quite a bit. I telephoned<br />

my wife, Margaret, the next day and said,<br />

“God has given us two a<strong>do</strong>pted children and<br />

perhaps we should think about one or two<br />

more.”<br />

So, the next day I went to the Home of Joy<br />

orphanage and the director, who is a friend of<br />

ours, saw me coming, stepped outside and said,<br />

“No, Mr. Nichols. You cannot a<strong>do</strong>pt Raffy.” I<br />

said, “How did you know I was coming to you<br />

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to talk about a<strong>do</strong>pting Raffy?” She said, “I saw<br />

how you and he were drawn to each other at<br />

the banquet last night.”<br />

I said, “Why can’t Margaret and I a<strong>do</strong>pt<br />

him?” She replied, “Well, for one thing, you are<br />

too old! But seriously, we can’t release Raffy<br />

because the new law in the Philippines is <strong>that</strong><br />

you have to keep families together and he has<br />

one brother and two sisters.”<br />

We have kept in contact with Raffy through<br />

the Home of Joy over the years. His brother is<br />

now a second-year student at the Philippine<br />

Missionary Institute and Raffy is in his second<br />

year of studying automobile mechanics. Raffy<br />

and his brother and sisters are continuing on in<br />

the Lord and are trusting Him to use them for<br />

His glory.<br />

James 1:27 (nasb) says, Pure and lasting<br />

religion in the sight of our God and Father<br />

is this: to visit [care for] orphans … in their<br />

distress ….<br />

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No, I am not very smart, but I praise the<br />

Lord for allowing me to meet this little boy,<br />

whom God has continued to care for and<br />

work in and through to the blessing of others<br />

for His glory!<br />

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missionAries<br />

Are still needed<br />

Perhaps God has spoken to your mind and heart<br />

about serving Him in world missions. The needs<br />

are great:<br />

• Hundreds of additional missionaries are<br />

needed to take the Gospel to Africa, Asia,<br />

Europe, and Latin America as people<br />

can only go to heaven through faith in<br />

Christ Jesus.<br />

• Missionaries are needed to take the Gospel<br />

and compassionate care to the estimated<br />

over 160 million street children of the<br />

world and about 140 million orphans.<br />

• Workers are also needed in Lusaka,<br />

Zambia; the bush regions of Malawi; the<br />

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urban areas of São Paulo, Brazil; Manila,<br />

Philippines; and in the city of Phnom<br />

Penh, Cambodia.<br />

• There are thousands of towns in Europe<br />

with no Gospel witness.<br />

• For every Christian in Thailand, there<br />

are 999 Buddhists. Missionaries are<br />

needed to take the Gospel to them.<br />

• Older pastoral couples are needed to help<br />

train the estimated 3.2 million untrained<br />

and needy pastors worldwide especially<br />

in Africa, Asia, and Latin America.<br />

For more information on becoming involved<br />

in world missions, please visit the website of<br />

Action International Ministries, or contact any<br />

of our offices listed on the next page.<br />

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Action International Ministries (ACTION)<br />

www.actioninternational.org<br />

ACTION Canada<br />

3015A 21 st Street NE<br />

Calgary, Alberta T2E 7T1<br />

Tel: 403-204-1421<br />

info@actioncanada.org<br />

ACTION Philippines<br />

PO Box 110, Greenhills Post Office<br />

1502 Metro Manila<br />

Tel: 632-477-3559<br />

take.action@actionintl.org<br />

ACTION United King<strong>do</strong>m<br />

PO Box 144<br />

Wallasey, Wirral CH44 5WE<br />

Tel: 0151-630-2451<br />

info@actionuk.org<br />

UK Registered Charity 1058661<br />

ACTION USA<br />

PO Box 398<br />

Mountlake Terrace, WA 98043-0398<br />

Tel: 425-775-4800<br />

info@actionusa.org


About the author:<br />

Doug Nichols and his wife, Margaret, have<br />

served in missions for over 40 years, of<br />

which the first 20 were spent ministering in<br />

the Philippines.<br />

They presently reside in Seatle,<br />

Washington, where Doug serves as Founder<br />

and International Director Emeritus with<br />

Action International Ministries (ACTION).<br />

He is an advocate for Children in Crisis and<br />

Pastoral Leadership Development with a<br />

special focus of evangelism, discipleship,<br />

and development.<br />

After a serious bout with cancer in 1994,<br />

Doug continues to travel in ministry<br />

worldwide, speaking on behalf of the glory<br />

of God in missions. Margaret accompanies<br />

Doug when possible and is involved in<br />

teaching and discipling.

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