Mission to the Americas

Serving Ministries and Missions in Latin America

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Pioneer Leaders Need to Take Responsibility

July 11, 2013 by ecoach 1 Comment

Every pioneer is out on the edge.  In our missions work in Latin America, we regularly are involved with pioneer missionaries:

  • Young Life Missionaries opening new clubs in new communities
  • Church planters seeking to reach people who need to meet Christ.
  • Missionaries in training to work cross culturally.

YoungLifePrayerTrainingRecently, Young Life Panama invited me to share with their pioneer leaders about maintaining an active prayer life.  They are pioneering new clubs in at least two new communities, sending out leaders they have been training for the last few years.

One of these leaders is working in a community where one of our church families lives and will be a great connection for their teen daughter.

Pioneer leaders are often away from their church community during that initial season of plowing new territory.  In Young Life’s model, new leaders spend months making initial contact with new teens and young adults, spending time with them, listening for community needs and so one.  It can be lonely work for a season, though awesomely fun.

ResponsibilityForGrowth

Every leader needs to take responsibility for their own spiritual growth.  In the teaching of day, I shared about the responsibility to maintain your own devotional time and allowing the Spirit of God to shape your character through the word and prayer.

MorningDevotions

These leaders discussed their joys in prayer, as well as their difficulties in prayer.  They did an exercise using sticky notes to brainstorm and work together to find ways to break through those challenges.

StickyNotePrayerDiscussion

At then end, they wrapped up reviewing a possible structure for quiet times that I picked up out of a book called Transformative Prayer by Daniel Henderson.

At the end of the meeting, several leaders commented to me on how important this reminder was:

  • A helpful tool to help me spend time in the word.
  • A good reminder that I need to care for myself, not just the people I am reaching.
  • Thanks for sharing this awesome teaching to help me grow in my personal devotions.

A Thank you to Supporters

We get to serve in situations like this because of our faithful supporters.

Thank you for your financial gifts that enable this kind of work.

VidaJovenPanamaLeadership

Most of these teaching moments focus on leaders of ministries that are doing on-the-ground evangelistic work.  There is no way we could reach all these people alone.  Rather, the Lord has us in networks of evangelism activity to reach more than we can possibly imagine.

Your support of us enable us to multiply that training to reach new networks for Christ.  Contribute your support towards the next training events by making your gift online today.

Filed Under: Ministry, Panama

The Celebration of Believer’s Baptism

June 7, 2013 by ecoach 1 Comment

The greatest joy in our ministry in Latin America is to watch believers take baptism.  Last Saturday, our church family celebrated three of them.  I’ve included a few pictures of the celebration and the folks taking the steps to baptism.

Baptism

Several family members and guests turn out for the celebration that we thought would be cancelled due to heavy and persistent rains over the last few days.

We firmly believe that the public celebration of baptism can itself be a chance to proclaim the gospel to invited guests and friends who may not know the Lord.

Before the actual baptisms, our pastor and I spent some time praying a blessing over the candidates before they take to the waters of the pool that is in our social area on the roof our apartment buildling.

Baptism twoo

 Just prior to that, he shared a short message about baptism that gives the candidates a chance to affirm their faith in Christ, as well as offer a public explanation of salvation to all who have gathered.

Baptism is a symbol of a profession of faith in Jesus Christ.  It is a sign that one has decided to be a follower of Jesus.

The goal of of work

Our whole mission is dedicated to helping the church be more effective in helping people become fully devoted followers of Jesus, and baptism is the most public fruit of our teaching.

Celebrating baptisms is what “Done” looks like.

The journey to faith that each of these three people has taken is unique and different, and our church helped to shape that journey to faith.    They are each on their own place in faith in Christ, but this public declaration is a sign of their commitment to follow Jesus.

One of the greatest joys I have in this ministry is participating in a believer’s baptism as a minister of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

To be able to participate in a person’s faith awakening process, sometimes in large ways, and sometimes in small ways, and sometimes as a fruit of this work, is what makes this effort worth it.

Celebrate with us!

Baptisms3

Filed Under: Ministry, Panama

Praying with kids in life changing moments

May 31, 2013 by ecoach Leave a Comment

HelpingVidaJovenAnakarina helps with a game during a Young Life Panama weekend retreat.

Imagine the fun of trying to move a cookie (that white spot on the forehead) to your mouth, using only your face muscles?!

If the cookie drops, you lose!

After a few attempts, she did it successfully!

Praying for Teens

Young Life Panama invited us to join them on a Saturday night to serve as an intercessory prayer team during a crucial night in their growth camp.

Many of those teenagers have made a commitment to Christ and have started walking with the Lord.

Vida Joven Panama

But many experience the trials, tribulations, and preoccupations of living in an environment that may not be conducive to growing in their new found faith.

It’s like the parable of the sower in Mark 4:

Listen! A farmer went out to sow his seed.

As he was scattering the seed, some fell along the path, and the birds came and ate it up.

Some fell on rocky places, where it did not have much soil. It sprang up quickly, because the soil was shallow.  But when the sun came up, the plants were scorched, and they withered because they had no root.  

Other seed fell among thorns, which grew up and choked the plants, so that they did not bear grain.

Still other seed fell on good soil. It came up, grew and produced a crop, some multiplying thirty, some sixty, some a hundred times.  (Mark 4:3-8)

Growth camp is a place where these teenagers learn about how to walk with the Lord in the face of temptations and mental struggles.

On Saturday night, they do a group experience that cause many of them to wrestle with their new found identity in Christ.

Vida Joven Panama Help

Our role

Our role was to pray for the teacher that night, as well as for the teenagers who were wrestling with their faith.

Brenda and I stood along side many of these kids, praying for them one-by-one as they came out of their group experience.

There were plenty of tear filled moments as the Lord did a great work in many of the lives of these kids.

Some were visibly touched by the power of the Lord.

Others seemed to brush it off with a cold indifference.

But for those who took advantage of the prayer time, it appears to have been a solidifying decision to walk with the Lord.

As part of our partnership with Young Life Panama, we got to serve as prayer intercessors for their active ministry of reaching kids for Christ in some of the toughest areas of Panama.

Next up, we’ll be involved with some leadership development with Young Life Panama here in a few weeks.

Filed Under: Panama

Setting the DNA of a church

March 12, 2013 by ecoach Leave a Comment

Epicentro Church in Panama is a church that has invited me to speak to them in the past.

Building on those visits, they invited me to give another seminar on personal evangelism as well as preach for their evening service.

EpicentroTeaching

Keeping a passion high.

For the first segment, they heard me share about how to maintain a passion for personal evangelism, in the face of many different fears that are natural.

The talk to was timed to finish out a weekend conference on growing the church and near the beginning of a month of intensive outreach into their community, using

  • dramas,
  • tracts,
  • relationships,
  • come and see events
  • evangelistic small groups.

Only time will tell exactly what fruit this bore.  The immediately observable result was a ministry time of renewed dedication to reach people for Christ.

EpicentroAudience

Setting the DNA of a church

In 2013, Epicentro church will launch two new churches, one in the city of Panama, and the other in Santiago, the capital city of Chile.

Several of their leaders from Chile joined in via an internet connection for the worship service where I felt led to teach on the DNA of a church.

What do you want your church visitors to think when they experience your church?

  • You’re crazy.  OR
  • God is in your midst.

I asked them the same question as they set the DNA for their future churches.  This sermon was based out of

So if the whole church comes together and everyone speaks in tongues, and inquirers or unbelievers come in, will they not say that you are out of your mind?

But if an unbeliever or an inquirer comes in while everyone is prophesying, they are convicted of sin and are brought under judgment by all,as the secrets of their hearts are laid bare. So they will fall down and worship God, exclaiming, “God is really among you!”

1 Corinthians 14:23-25

EpicentroChurch

Epicentro church is a church in the Pentecostal stream.

As they set the DNA of two more churches, thinking about visitors will become part of their DNA.

They are a little under 4 years old and currently meet in a former gas station convenience store they rent near a busy intersection and bus stop.  Even though their resources appear meager, they have a heart to plant churches instead of hoard their resources for themselves.

A special thank you to the donors who helped make this visit possible!  Your gifts help set the DNA of 3 churches with the potential for more!

Filed Under: Ministry, Panama

You’ve helped me overcome my fear

February 28, 2013 by ecoach Leave a Comment

This week, you helped me spend time with Operation Mobilization Panamá, teaching in their school of missions at their base in Volcán.

It was 7 hours on an overnight bus that got me there just in time to start teaching.

volcan-baru-2008-073.jpg

Missionaries from Columbia, Salvador, and Switzerland are in a short term study to develop their sense of call towards missions.

At the beginning of the class, they each shared some of their fears about personal evangelism

  • Beginning conversations about Jesus
  • Finding ways to steer a conversation.
  • Preaching in the parks at crowds.
  • Diagnosing spiritual condition in relationship with Christ
  • Appearing judgmental

However, as missionaries, they recognize the responsibility of personal evangelism and part of their work in their mission is open air contact evangelism.

What is contact evangelism?

Contact evangelism is sharing your faith upon first contact with a person.  It usually involves strangers, and an often scripted conversation.

ContractEvangelism

This approach and style works well for some people, but not for everyone.  Yet, in this mission, contact evangelism is a regular format of proclaiming the gospel.

How can these students overcome their fears about this form of evangelism and find a way to share their faith?

The big obstacle is fear.

Rather than diagnose the different fears, these students learn that people can overcome their evangelism fears by focusing on

  • the sovereignty of God (the key to timing)
  • how to listen for spiritual thirst (the open door to normal conversation)
  • simple conversational skills centered around your own journey to faith.
  • simple gospel presentations.

SmallGroupEvangelismTraining

I spent the first day with these students looking over this theology and skill.

Going to the streets in the big city

After some class time, the team took their dramas and preaching to the street.

For the first location, we visited a AIDS treatment clinic, where the team visited with patients receiving treatment and then shared the good news of the gospel via drama and conversation.

This clinic is in partnership with a local church, so there is a great place for new people to start connecting.  There, they can explore their faith for the first time, or seek answers to their question, or start their work of discipleship.

OpenAirAids

Because this was held outdoors on a busy street corner, a few people from the neighborhood dropped by to see what all the noise and commotion was about.

At the end of the dramas, a short message from one of the students led to an invitation to further conversation.

Right after that short preaching, nearly every team member was engaged in 1-1 conversation with people who were very willing to talk.

Second stop: the park

ParkOpenAir

Our next stop was the town square in the center of a busy city.  The team added more dramas to the mix and it didn’t take long before a crowd of up to 50 people had stopped to watch.

Then the team told the redemption story through a drama called “Light and Darkness.”

One of the students then gave a short message that invited further 1-1 conversation with those who wanted to learn more.

The conversations are important

SpiritualConversations

The spiritual conversations that followed are the key to effective open air evangelism in the way we practice it.

It gives us a chance to listen to the spiritual needs of people who are willing to engage us in conversation.

We are not manipulating the conversation, but looking for the advance work of God in preparing hearts for such a conversation.

Those who are not ready for conversations leave, but those who are at a place to talk seek us out.

This is where the students saw that knowing the principles of spiritual thirst and God’s sovereignty  there is little need for fear.

They were looking for spiritual thirst, they could see where God was working, and each conversation was fruitful conversation around spiritual need, rather than argumentative debates over apologetics.

People came to faith

The exciting outcome is that these students saw that some people were ready to committ their lives to Christ.  They were at the harvest point in the process of evangelism.

Others were not yet there, but left with some gospel information and seeds that the Lord could use to further help people along in their process to faith.

Some of the team members had the joy of leading new people to Christ.

My great joy

ClassTeaching2

When it was all over, I rejoice that there were total strangers who willingly placed their faith in Christ that day.

On top of that, the students had the following feedback to give me:

  • You helped take the fear out of evangelism.
  • Once I learned about spiritual thirst, I started knowing what to look for in a conversations.
  • I didn’t feel like I had to steer a conversation.  The door was already open.
  • I was able to relax during this outreach and not stress over people’s lack of response.
  • This is a less aggressive form of evangelism that respects the dignity of the other person.

That evening, I took the 7 hour bus-ride home.

Is 14 hours in a bus worth the 2 days of teaching?  You bet.

Support this work

If you’d like to become a financial partner in this ministry, read here.  You can make monthly automatic contributions, or one time donations.

Your gifts will enable future mission training events like this one in Latin America.

I’ve got four more events scheduled this month of March alone.

Filed Under: evangelism, Ministry, Panama

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