Master Of Theology
Puritan Reformed Theological Seminary
The Puritan Reformed Theological Seminary at Grand Rapids Michigan has been licensed by the state to grant Master of Theology degrees for just over two years. The program has been actively teaching since early 2007. Originally envisioned as a three year degree the Master of Theology degree can be achieved in one year if the student is attending full time.
Though the number of students is relatively small, 15 student initially, the students have come from all over the world to take part in this learning opportunity. Some of them are just learning to be ministers while others have been preaching for years and have decided to go back to school to become even more knowledgeable and helpful to their congregations. Courses offered include Ancient Near Eastern Literature and the Bible, Conversion in the Old and New Testaments, Forerunners of the Reformation, and Lutheran Orthodoxy.
Gerald Bilkes
Puritan Reformed Theological Seminary
2965 Leonard Street, NE Grand Rapids, MI 49525
Monday, March 17, 2008
Friday, March 14, 2008
Eric E. Wallace
Eric E. Wallace
Uniting Church and Home
The Institute for Uniting Church and Home released an advertisement for the IUCH program, a request for support, and the purchasing of their new how to book on the subject of Church and Home.
The tenor of the letter was an optimistic sales pitch aimed at somewhat desperate ministers. On the Uniting Church and Home website they claimed that programs aimed at micromanaging the personal, spiritual lives of nuclear families, particularly dysfunctional ones, simply worked to drive people away from the church. By micromanaging spiritual lives the institute is of course referring to home schooling. These programs have in the past had problems due to hostile public and private school systems, which view them as money not in school vaults.
The efforts of the institute have been towards the continued improvement of these programs.
Eric E. Wallace
Institute For Uniting Church and Home
4012 Echo Ridge Place
Midlothian, Virginia 23112
Uniting Church and Home
The Institute for Uniting Church and Home released an advertisement for the IUCH program, a request for support, and the purchasing of their new how to book on the subject of Church and Home.
The tenor of the letter was an optimistic sales pitch aimed at somewhat desperate ministers. On the Uniting Church and Home website they claimed that programs aimed at micromanaging the personal, spiritual lives of nuclear families, particularly dysfunctional ones, simply worked to drive people away from the church. By micromanaging spiritual lives the institute is of course referring to home schooling. These programs have in the past had problems due to hostile public and private school systems, which view them as money not in school vaults.
The efforts of the institute have been towards the continued improvement of these programs.
Eric E. Wallace
Institute For Uniting Church and Home
4012 Echo Ridge Place
Midlothian, Virginia 23112
Krisztian Barticel
Krisztian Barticel
Transylvania Reformed Assistance Committee
The Reformed faith that once flourished in Transylvania has had severe setbacks over the years. The Communist government was never particularly happy with organized religion because Christianity offered an alternative to worshiping the state. The Reformed churches while numerous were hit harder by the decades of totalitarian dogma than the Orthodox church because the Orthodox church was more centrally organized, supported by the Romanian majority, and the individual congregations made up of Reformed Hungarians were easy targets for the predatory old government and the somewhat less predatory new government.
For these reasons an active movement has been working for years to restore the old Reformed churches in Romania and help the villagers find ways to live in an economic wasteland that prevents even good farmland from being used effectively. Krisztian Barticel has for sometime been at the very heart of the Transylvania Reformed Assistance Committee. The purpose of TRAC is the restoration of the Reformed church in Transylvania.
It is not an easy task. Any minister in the area receives a very small wage and must do as much to survive as any other villager. This provides the unappealing challenge of working as hard as possible seven days a week. In Transylvania it appears that being a minister is even more of a calling rather than a job than it is in other parts of the world.
For all these reasons the Reformed church is on the verge of dying out. Barticel said that he “identifies his calling with that of Ezekiel.” Ezekiel was the prophet who was told to preach to dead bones. However, there is still hope. The government has returned land that they stole from the churches to the churches, and a plan has been devised to bus children up to 60 km away so that they can get a Reformed education, as opposed to an Orthodox education.
Transylvanian Reformed Assistance Committee
6970 Bouer Rd.
Hudsonville, MI 49426
Transylvania Reformed Assistance Committee
The Reformed faith that once flourished in Transylvania has had severe setbacks over the years. The Communist government was never particularly happy with organized religion because Christianity offered an alternative to worshiping the state. The Reformed churches while numerous were hit harder by the decades of totalitarian dogma than the Orthodox church because the Orthodox church was more centrally organized, supported by the Romanian majority, and the individual congregations made up of Reformed Hungarians were easy targets for the predatory old government and the somewhat less predatory new government.
For these reasons an active movement has been working for years to restore the old Reformed churches in Romania and help the villagers find ways to live in an economic wasteland that prevents even good farmland from being used effectively. Krisztian Barticel has for sometime been at the very heart of the Transylvania Reformed Assistance Committee. The purpose of TRAC is the restoration of the Reformed church in Transylvania.
It is not an easy task. Any minister in the area receives a very small wage and must do as much to survive as any other villager. This provides the unappealing challenge of working as hard as possible seven days a week. In Transylvania it appears that being a minister is even more of a calling rather than a job than it is in other parts of the world.
For all these reasons the Reformed church is on the verge of dying out. Barticel said that he “identifies his calling with that of Ezekiel.” Ezekiel was the prophet who was told to preach to dead bones. However, there is still hope. The government has returned land that they stole from the churches to the churches, and a plan has been devised to bus children up to 60 km away so that they can get a Reformed education, as opposed to an Orthodox education.
Transylvanian Reformed Assistance Committee
6970 Bouer Rd.
Hudsonville, MI 49426
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Menorah Ministries
Menorah Ministries
Palm Harbor, Florida
Menorah Ministries is expanding its work among German and Russian Jews. The ministry has had visitors from non-Messianic Jews who were curious about their Christian neighbors. The German Jewish population is on the rise. Most of these German Jews are actually Russian Jews so that the spreading of the gospel message can move much more freely in both of these nations.
Menorah Ministries is developing a training program for leaders of the 100 or more Russian speaking messianic synagogues around the world.
John and Patrice Fischer
Menorah Ministries
PO Box 669
Palm Harbor, Florida 34682
Palm Harbor, Florida
Menorah Ministries is expanding its work among German and Russian Jews. The ministry has had visitors from non-Messianic Jews who were curious about their Christian neighbors. The German Jewish population is on the rise. Most of these German Jews are actually Russian Jews so that the spreading of the gospel message can move much more freely in both of these nations.
Menorah Ministries is developing a training program for leaders of the 100 or more Russian speaking messianic synagogues around the world.
John and Patrice Fischer
Menorah Ministries
PO Box 669
Palm Harbor, Florida 34682
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Historical Artifact Found
Historical Artifact Found
Jerusalem
A recent archeological dig near the Dung Gate in Jerusalem resulted in an interesting find. The find was a 2,500-year-old seal that has been identified with the Temech family. This family is referenced in the book of Nehemiah. They worked at the first temple, which was destroyed by the Babylonians in 586 B.C. The seal contains the symbol of the Babylonian god Sin. That a worker at the temple would use this symbol fits with the corruption of the Jewish people described in Nehemiah. That this coincides with the destruction of the temple and the beginning of the “Babylonian Captivity” is fascinating in both a historical and religious context.
Religiously it shows the down sliding of the people, which is referenced as the reason God allowed the Babylonians to conquer them. Historically it helps confirm some of the events described in Nehemiah. The head Israeli archeologist Dr. Eilat Mazar was happy to have found physical evidence confirming the existence of a family mentioned in the Bible.
Prayer-Life Seminars News
630 Meadowbrook Drive
Corpus Christi, TX 78412-3019
Jerusalem
A recent archeological dig near the Dung Gate in Jerusalem resulted in an interesting find. The find was a 2,500-year-old seal that has been identified with the Temech family. This family is referenced in the book of Nehemiah. They worked at the first temple, which was destroyed by the Babylonians in 586 B.C. The seal contains the symbol of the Babylonian god Sin. That a worker at the temple would use this symbol fits with the corruption of the Jewish people described in Nehemiah. That this coincides with the destruction of the temple and the beginning of the “Babylonian Captivity” is fascinating in both a historical and religious context.
Religiously it shows the down sliding of the people, which is referenced as the reason God allowed the Babylonians to conquer them. Historically it helps confirm some of the events described in Nehemiah. The head Israeli archeologist Dr. Eilat Mazar was happy to have found physical evidence confirming the existence of a family mentioned in the Bible.
Prayer-Life Seminars News
630 Meadowbrook Drive
Corpus Christi, TX 78412-3019
African Bible College
African Bible College
Malawi
The Observer has previously written about the African Bible College in Liberia. This is not their only location. The African Bible College is an international organization dedicated to bringing Christian higher learning to Africa. They have campuses in many nations on that continent and they are growing. The college in Malawi covers 50 acres. It contains a pediatric ward that can support 12 babies. Efforts have been made to expand the ward to double that number. Not wanting to stop there, future plans include making a pediatric clinic that may be able to hold 40 babies. Perhaps one day they will open a campus in the Americas so that they can reach the real heathens.
J.W. Chinchen
African Bible Colleges
PO Box 103
Clinton, MS 39060
Malawi
The Observer has previously written about the African Bible College in Liberia. This is not their only location. The African Bible College is an international organization dedicated to bringing Christian higher learning to Africa. They have campuses in many nations on that continent and they are growing. The college in Malawi covers 50 acres. It contains a pediatric ward that can support 12 babies. Efforts have been made to expand the ward to double that number. Not wanting to stop there, future plans include making a pediatric clinic that may be able to hold 40 babies. Perhaps one day they will open a campus in the Americas so that they can reach the real heathens.
J.W. Chinchen
African Bible Colleges
PO Box 103
Clinton, MS 39060
Friday, March 7, 2008
Christians in Pakistan
Christians in Pakistan
Frank Van Dalen
Christian missionaries have a historical tendency to get killed. When a person goes to another country and challenges the beliefs of that country the locals get violent. If the local government is marked by instability and chaos the situation gets worse. For this reason the Christians of Pakistan are worried. The World Witness program was allowed into the country in 1906 when it was still part of British India. Over the past century the country has gone from stable to unstable to violently changing its government once a decade.
During this time The Christians in general, and the World Witness program in particular, has ministered to the Pakistanis, converted many, and become valuable members of the community. However, Muslim aggression has ballooned throughout the world in the last two decades. In mid 90s Pakistan two prime ministers were removed by coups and in the end General Musharraf came to power. After ten years of desperately trying to hold the country together radical political and religious elements have tried to seize power.
This took a relatively stable situation and turned it into a chaotic one. The assassination of Benazir Bhutto, one of the ousted prime ministers and political agitator, has only made the situation worse. Frank Van Dalen, executive director of World Witness, does not think as highly of Mrs. Bhutto as the western media. However, he claims that her death did not improve the situation.
For the moment the Christians in Pakistan are not being persecuted the way Christians are in most of the Muslim world. Even so, two of the four Pakistani provinces are now controlled by Islamic militants. These men will almost certainly try to force compromises from the government. It is unlikely that these compromises will benefit the Christians of the nation.
Frank Van Dalen
World Witness
One Cleveland St. Suite 220
Greenville, SC 29601
Frank Van Dalen
Christian missionaries have a historical tendency to get killed. When a person goes to another country and challenges the beliefs of that country the locals get violent. If the local government is marked by instability and chaos the situation gets worse. For this reason the Christians of Pakistan are worried. The World Witness program was allowed into the country in 1906 when it was still part of British India. Over the past century the country has gone from stable to unstable to violently changing its government once a decade.
During this time The Christians in general, and the World Witness program in particular, has ministered to the Pakistanis, converted many, and become valuable members of the community. However, Muslim aggression has ballooned throughout the world in the last two decades. In mid 90s Pakistan two prime ministers were removed by coups and in the end General Musharraf came to power. After ten years of desperately trying to hold the country together radical political and religious elements have tried to seize power.
This took a relatively stable situation and turned it into a chaotic one. The assassination of Benazir Bhutto, one of the ousted prime ministers and political agitator, has only made the situation worse. Frank Van Dalen, executive director of World Witness, does not think as highly of Mrs. Bhutto as the western media. However, he claims that her death did not improve the situation.
For the moment the Christians in Pakistan are not being persecuted the way Christians are in most of the Muslim world. Even so, two of the four Pakistani provinces are now controlled by Islamic militants. These men will almost certainly try to force compromises from the government. It is unlikely that these compromises will benefit the Christians of the nation.
Frank Van Dalen
World Witness
One Cleveland St. Suite 220
Greenville, SC 29601
Bulgaria
Bulgaria
Harry Miller
Back in June, the Synod of the Evangelical Church met in Velingrad to dedicate its new building. In late July and August they held their annual pastor’s conference in Velingrad. About 40 ministers and their wives were in attendance. Also, even though the church building in Panagyurishte was returned to the congregation by the Bulgarian Supreme Court it was in an extreme state of disrepair. No one is certain if it should be repaired or demolished and built anew. Severe water damage, hidden by the concrete covering the wood floor, is one of the major sources of concern. This is not the only construction going on. Presbyterian Evangelistic Team Member Ivan Dimitrov has gotten help from as far away as Australia in building a family retreat center outside of Petrich, Bulgaria.
Harry and Julie Miller
2095 Rolling Acres Dr.
Conyers, GA 30094
Harry Miller
Back in June, the Synod of the Evangelical Church met in Velingrad to dedicate its new building. In late July and August they held their annual pastor’s conference in Velingrad. About 40 ministers and their wives were in attendance. Also, even though the church building in Panagyurishte was returned to the congregation by the Bulgarian Supreme Court it was in an extreme state of disrepair. No one is certain if it should be repaired or demolished and built anew. Severe water damage, hidden by the concrete covering the wood floor, is one of the major sources of concern. This is not the only construction going on. Presbyterian Evangelistic Team Member Ivan Dimitrov has gotten help from as far away as Australia in building a family retreat center outside of Petrich, Bulgaria.
Harry and Julie Miller
2095 Rolling Acres Dr.
Conyers, GA 30094
Wednesday, March 5, 2008
Creation Museum
Creation Museum
Petersburg, Kentucky
The recently opened Creation Museum in Petersburg, Kentucky, has caused both wonder and controversy among its visitors. The museum was created as a direct challenge to the evolutionary steamroller that has been used to badly educate children on scientific and social matters. Students are taught to believe that the Bible is wrong and that humans should be worship as the highest form of life in existence, and that scientists are the infallible priests of this new religion. Worse, the utter refusal of evolution to be taught as a theory leads to teaching evolution as though it were law. Children are then taught to accept authority without question.
The Creation museum serves to point out that there are other points of view on the questions surrounding the origins of the universe and the creatures that inhabit it and that these paradigms, specifically the Christian one, are supported by good scientific research. Apparently, even some who went to the museum as detractors were impressed by the exhibits quality, which supposedly rivals far more famous science museums.
Whereas the evolutionists have tried to destroy our culture, starting at its roots in Genesis, the Creation Museum serves as a bulwark that upholds the distinctly Christian belief in observed study. The evolutionist refusal to debate these matters flies in the face of the scientific method and is disturbingly reminiscent of the dogmatic and superstitious “scientific” communities of the past who threatened to kill those who opposed their points of view. With the current ridicule that believers face from the mainstream world for voicing dissenting opinions in public it looks likely that the more drastic and homicidal methods of the past may come back into fashion. That is why challenges to such dogma, such as the Creation Museum, need to be presented now before it is too late.
Rusty Benson
American Family Association Journal
PO Drawer 2440
Tupelo, Mississippi 38803
Petersburg, Kentucky
The recently opened Creation Museum in Petersburg, Kentucky, has caused both wonder and controversy among its visitors. The museum was created as a direct challenge to the evolutionary steamroller that has been used to badly educate children on scientific and social matters. Students are taught to believe that the Bible is wrong and that humans should be worship as the highest form of life in existence, and that scientists are the infallible priests of this new religion. Worse, the utter refusal of evolution to be taught as a theory leads to teaching evolution as though it were law. Children are then taught to accept authority without question.
The Creation museum serves to point out that there are other points of view on the questions surrounding the origins of the universe and the creatures that inhabit it and that these paradigms, specifically the Christian one, are supported by good scientific research. Apparently, even some who went to the museum as detractors were impressed by the exhibits quality, which supposedly rivals far more famous science museums.
Whereas the evolutionists have tried to destroy our culture, starting at its roots in Genesis, the Creation Museum serves as a bulwark that upholds the distinctly Christian belief in observed study. The evolutionist refusal to debate these matters flies in the face of the scientific method and is disturbingly reminiscent of the dogmatic and superstitious “scientific” communities of the past who threatened to kill those who opposed their points of view. With the current ridicule that believers face from the mainstream world for voicing dissenting opinions in public it looks likely that the more drastic and homicidal methods of the past may come back into fashion. That is why challenges to such dogma, such as the Creation Museum, need to be presented now before it is too late.
Rusty Benson
American Family Association Journal
PO Drawer 2440
Tupelo, Mississippi 38803
Tuesday, March 4, 2008
Presbyterian Missions
Presbyterian Missions
Team Timothy
The Presbyterian Missionary Union recently held a Vacation Bible School in La Paz, Bolivia. Of the 54 children who attended 11 claimed Jesus as their personal lord and savior. The school was organized by Team Timothy Bolivia, a group of eight missionaries working in Bolivia on behalf of the PMU. Team Timothy also held divine services and distributed 250 tracts to the people who attended. The team Timothy USA group claims to need new members for missions.
Part of this mission work involves reaching out to local churches like the Grand Island Bible Presbyterian Church in Grand Island, New York. This church has been in existence for fifty years. To celebrate this momentous occasion Grand Island BPC are planning to try and bring the gospel message to every home on the Island.
Other mission work has been going on in Myanmar, really Burma, and Cambodia. Neither one of these countries is particularly safe therefore each makes a good place to spread the Gospel. Desperate people need a savior and Christianity has proven historical benefits for nations that adopt Christian social and business practices.
The Missions Banner
Presbyterian Missionary Union
1650 Love Road
Grand Island, New York 14072
Team Timothy
The Presbyterian Missionary Union recently held a Vacation Bible School in La Paz, Bolivia. Of the 54 children who attended 11 claimed Jesus as their personal lord and savior. The school was organized by Team Timothy Bolivia, a group of eight missionaries working in Bolivia on behalf of the PMU. Team Timothy also held divine services and distributed 250 tracts to the people who attended. The team Timothy USA group claims to need new members for missions.
Part of this mission work involves reaching out to local churches like the Grand Island Bible Presbyterian Church in Grand Island, New York. This church has been in existence for fifty years. To celebrate this momentous occasion Grand Island BPC are planning to try and bring the gospel message to every home on the Island.
Other mission work has been going on in Myanmar, really Burma, and Cambodia. Neither one of these countries is particularly safe therefore each makes a good place to spread the Gospel. Desperate people need a savior and Christianity has proven historical benefits for nations that adopt Christian social and business practices.
The Missions Banner
Presbyterian Missionary Union
1650 Love Road
Grand Island, New York 14072
Monday, March 3, 2008
News From Atlanta
News From Atlanta
Presbyterian Evangelical Fellowship
Paul Bellino has been doing some unusual things in Atlanta. One of Bellino’s groups Atlanta’s Church of All Nations has been attempting to break down barriers between people of different nations and races for the cause of Christ and even just for the sake of getting along. Unlike many groups that claim the mantle of multiculturalism, ACAN actually works with various groups as opposed to setting them against each other for a short-term political gain. The ACAN states that it is, “grateful to be a place of Christian fellowship and love for all people, ‘red and yellow, black and white.’” Bellino’s message is that what brings people of different races together is not civil rights but the gospel of Jesus.
Bellino’s work has included such outlandish yet successful efforts as getting Black Christians to work with the Sons of Confederate Veterans to try and free Black slaves in the Sudan from the Muslim warlords who are their masters. This is not a man who thinks small.
Paul Bellino
Presbyterian Evangelistic Fellowship
425 State Street, Suite 312
Bristol, VA 24201-4300
Presbyterian Evangelical Fellowship
Paul Bellino has been doing some unusual things in Atlanta. One of Bellino’s groups Atlanta’s Church of All Nations has been attempting to break down barriers between people of different nations and races for the cause of Christ and even just for the sake of getting along. Unlike many groups that claim the mantle of multiculturalism, ACAN actually works with various groups as opposed to setting them against each other for a short-term political gain. The ACAN states that it is, “grateful to be a place of Christian fellowship and love for all people, ‘red and yellow, black and white.’” Bellino’s message is that what brings people of different races together is not civil rights but the gospel of Jesus.
Bellino’s work has included such outlandish yet successful efforts as getting Black Christians to work with the Sons of Confederate Veterans to try and free Black slaves in the Sudan from the Muslim warlords who are their masters. This is not a man who thinks small.
Paul Bellino
Presbyterian Evangelistic Fellowship
425 State Street, Suite 312
Bristol, VA 24201-4300
Friday, February 29, 2008
High Plains Fellowship
High Plains Fellowship
Conservative Congregational Christian Conference
A new association of churches has been founded in affiliation with the Conservative Congregational Christian Conference. The High Plains Fellowship is located in Nebraska and eastern Wyoming, along the Oregon Trail. It consists of six churches located within a 25-mile radius of each other. The membership of these congregations is mostly Russian and German, descended from immigrants who came to the United States in the early 1900’s.
Conservative Congregational Christian Conference
8941 Highway 5, Lake Elmo, MN 55042
Conservative Congregational Christian Conference
A new association of churches has been founded in affiliation with the Conservative Congregational Christian Conference. The High Plains Fellowship is located in Nebraska and eastern Wyoming, along the Oregon Trail. It consists of six churches located within a 25-mile radius of each other. The membership of these congregations is mostly Russian and German, descended from immigrants who came to the United States in the early 1900’s.
Conservative Congregational Christian Conference
8941 Highway 5, Lake Elmo, MN 55042
American Council of Christian Churches
Ralph G. Colas
The American Council of Christian Churches
Ralph G. Colas, on behalf of the American Council of Churches, sent out a letter. This letter expressed deep concerns on two specific topics. First was the new Pope’s assertion that Roman Catholicism is the only proper Christian faith. When one considers the centuries of bloodshed based on that old argument the concern at least seems justified.
As an odd juxtaposition to his first problem his second was the seeming unification of many of the United States’ more liberal churches which claimed that they were just Christians like any other. Colas pointed out the openly Communistic views of Liberation Theology, and that the Methodist church has actively supported homosexuality, a sexual practiced specifically and continuously condemned and abolished in the Old and New Testaments of the Bible. Colas went on to say that an unnamed Episcopal clergyman declared that a good foundation for church government could not be found in the Bible, a point of view that Colas called heresy.
Dr. Colas summed up his several statements by saying that Fundamentalism and the Bible were under attack and that Christians should not compromise with liberal groups on spiritual matters.
Dr. Ralph G. Colas
American Council of Christian ChurchesPO Box 5455Bethlehem, PA 18015
The American Council of Christian Churches
Ralph G. Colas, on behalf of the American Council of Churches, sent out a letter. This letter expressed deep concerns on two specific topics. First was the new Pope’s assertion that Roman Catholicism is the only proper Christian faith. When one considers the centuries of bloodshed based on that old argument the concern at least seems justified.
As an odd juxtaposition to his first problem his second was the seeming unification of many of the United States’ more liberal churches which claimed that they were just Christians like any other. Colas pointed out the openly Communistic views of Liberation Theology, and that the Methodist church has actively supported homosexuality, a sexual practiced specifically and continuously condemned and abolished in the Old and New Testaments of the Bible. Colas went on to say that an unnamed Episcopal clergyman declared that a good foundation for church government could not be found in the Bible, a point of view that Colas called heresy.
Dr. Colas summed up his several statements by saying that Fundamentalism and the Bible were under attack and that Christians should not compromise with liberal groups on spiritual matters.
Dr. Ralph G. Colas
American Council of Christian ChurchesPO Box 5455Bethlehem, PA 18015
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Arnold Elek
Arnold Elek
Komlόd, Romania
Mission work continues in former Communist countries like Romania. Even though the better part of two decades have past since the Communists left, Eastern Europe is still mired in the corruption, economic stagnation, and religious void that resulted from 40 years of Soviet domination.
As Arnold Elek a missionary in Romania said, “It was so strange and seemed like 50 years ago, and here time had stopped.” Mr. Elek is a 3rd year college student who went to Komlόd back in October. Elek went with a doctor to the village of Beszterce-Naszod and tried to help the spiritual needs of the locals as the doctor saw to their physical ones. The student was surprised by the lack of young people. Elek only saw the old and the sick present, however they were all happy to see the missionaries who were brining them the gospel as well as medicine.
Elek was happy that he could help be the shepherd that they needed even if only for a short while.
Transylvanian Reformed Assistance Committee
6970 Bouer Rd.
Hudsonville, MI 49426
Komlόd, Romania
Mission work continues in former Communist countries like Romania. Even though the better part of two decades have past since the Communists left, Eastern Europe is still mired in the corruption, economic stagnation, and religious void that resulted from 40 years of Soviet domination.
As Arnold Elek a missionary in Romania said, “It was so strange and seemed like 50 years ago, and here time had stopped.” Mr. Elek is a 3rd year college student who went to Komlόd back in October. Elek went with a doctor to the village of Beszterce-Naszod and tried to help the spiritual needs of the locals as the doctor saw to their physical ones. The student was surprised by the lack of young people. Elek only saw the old and the sick present, however they were all happy to see the missionaries who were brining them the gospel as well as medicine.
Elek was happy that he could help be the shepherd that they needed even if only for a short while.
Transylvanian Reformed Assistance Committee
6970 Bouer Rd.
Hudsonville, MI 49426
Tuesday, February 26, 2008
African Bible College
African Bible College
Yekepa, Liberia
The civil war in Liberia recently ended, leaving in its wake a shattered nation with a bleak future. As with the nation so went the church. Heavily damaged in population by hatred and in buildings by weapons fire, this former American colony has to work with little to rebuild. Help has come from Christians in the southern U.S.
Southerners are all too familiar with rebuilding after total wars and natural disasters. They have leant their help and experience to the church in Liberia. So far, the response to this help has been enthusiastic and efforts to build and rebuild churches have begun.
The African Bible College specifically has been trying to “begin again” as they put it. In 1994 the war became so bad that the campus had to be closed. Several buildings throughout the campus have been damaged, unfinished, or just neglected until they needed massive restoration to be usable. Efforts to rebuild have begun and the college is trying to first rebuild the buildings that are just damaged and then build the ones that are gone. For that reason a large push has been made to rebuild the school’s gym. The college is hopeful that soon they will have, “the only Gymnasium in the country of Liberia.”
ABC University
Yekepa, Liberia
S.E. Africa
Yekepa, Liberia
The civil war in Liberia recently ended, leaving in its wake a shattered nation with a bleak future. As with the nation so went the church. Heavily damaged in population by hatred and in buildings by weapons fire, this former American colony has to work with little to rebuild. Help has come from Christians in the southern U.S.
Southerners are all too familiar with rebuilding after total wars and natural disasters. They have leant their help and experience to the church in Liberia. So far, the response to this help has been enthusiastic and efforts to build and rebuild churches have begun.
The African Bible College specifically has been trying to “begin again” as they put it. In 1994 the war became so bad that the campus had to be closed. Several buildings throughout the campus have been damaged, unfinished, or just neglected until they needed massive restoration to be usable. Efforts to rebuild have begun and the college is trying to first rebuild the buildings that are just damaged and then build the ones that are gone. For that reason a large push has been made to rebuild the school’s gym. The college is hopeful that soon they will have, “the only Gymnasium in the country of Liberia.”
ABC University
Yekepa, Liberia
S.E. Africa
Monday, February 25, 2008
A Letter From Pakistan
A Letter From Pakistan
Friends of Forman Christian College
As 2007 closed, a letter giving the current status of Forman Christian College in Pakistan was sent out. President Musharraf was attempting to keep the peace but was curtailing many freedoms to do so. Though Musharraf had worked for democracy in Pakistan he was placed in the odd position of having to damage it to preserve any of it. Student protests were flaring up on colleges around the nation but not at the Forman Christian College.
At the college there had only been one small protest. The administrators were glad that there were no repeats of the 80’s demonstrations and unrest. Those almost destroyed the college and the administrators did not want it to happen again. Interestingly at the time the letter was sent out the school had 4,330 students of whom 709 were Christians. Those numbers have actually grown dramatically since the early days of the decade. That Forman Christian school has been able to hold off the unrest that is ripping through the country is incredible given that the unrest is as much religious as political and the university has a combined Christian Muslim population.
Peter H. Armacost
Friends of Forman Christian College
3434 Roswell Rd.
NW, Atlanta, GA 30305
Friends of Forman Christian College
As 2007 closed, a letter giving the current status of Forman Christian College in Pakistan was sent out. President Musharraf was attempting to keep the peace but was curtailing many freedoms to do so. Though Musharraf had worked for democracy in Pakistan he was placed in the odd position of having to damage it to preserve any of it. Student protests were flaring up on colleges around the nation but not at the Forman Christian College.
At the college there had only been one small protest. The administrators were glad that there were no repeats of the 80’s demonstrations and unrest. Those almost destroyed the college and the administrators did not want it to happen again. Interestingly at the time the letter was sent out the school had 4,330 students of whom 709 were Christians. Those numbers have actually grown dramatically since the early days of the decade. That Forman Christian school has been able to hold off the unrest that is ripping through the country is incredible given that the unrest is as much religious as political and the university has a combined Christian Muslim population.
Peter H. Armacost
Friends of Forman Christian College
3434 Roswell Rd.
NW, Atlanta, GA 30305
Dean Perry
Dean Perry
Devon, UK
Like many developed nations the United Kingdom has problems with drug, and alcohol addiction in its population. Though especially bad among college age people, these problems are symptoms of a larger despair and disillusionment with society and God. For this reason the Gilead Foundations have been working to rehabilitate addicts and use the opportunity to reintroduce them to God and His message of salvation.
This is much more difficult in western nations due to the backsliding of the people into paganism and the active discouragement of open religious discussion by so called “open minded, liberals” who in truth fit the description of neither term in their actions. Since much of the addiction problems have been caused by the utter failure of the church to challenge, or in some cases joining, these counter cultural forces it becomes very difficult to explain to a disillusioned drunk that his or her salvation, let alone recovery from addiction, comes only through Jesus.
Chaplain Dean PerryGilead Foundations Charity International and Registered Office: Gilead Foundations Christian Centre Risdon Farm, Jacobstowe, Okehampton, Devon, EX20 3AJ, United Kingdom
Devon, UK
Like many developed nations the United Kingdom has problems with drug, and alcohol addiction in its population. Though especially bad among college age people, these problems are symptoms of a larger despair and disillusionment with society and God. For this reason the Gilead Foundations have been working to rehabilitate addicts and use the opportunity to reintroduce them to God and His message of salvation.
This is much more difficult in western nations due to the backsliding of the people into paganism and the active discouragement of open religious discussion by so called “open minded, liberals” who in truth fit the description of neither term in their actions. Since much of the addiction problems have been caused by the utter failure of the church to challenge, or in some cases joining, these counter cultural forces it becomes very difficult to explain to a disillusioned drunk that his or her salvation, let alone recovery from addiction, comes only through Jesus.
Chaplain Dean PerryGilead Foundations Charity International and Registered Office: Gilead Foundations Christian Centre Risdon Farm, Jacobstowe, Okehampton, Devon, EX20 3AJ, United Kingdom
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