Prayer for Thursday

Ecclesiastes 5:9,10a, “Two are better than one because they have a good reward for their efforts.  For if either falls, his companion can lift him up.”

Have you ever taken time to say a prayer of thanks for your friends?  I am blessed to have some great friends.  When I fall, they are there to pick me up and brush me off.  My friends are the first to listen to me and say, “Amen!” But, they are also close enough to call me out when I cross the line.  When I am having a hard day and struggle to see God in action, they are there to show me how much God cares and is with me in all circumstances.

[A prayer to consider] Thank you Lord for friends and how they help me.  Please give them wisdom and strength as they deal with me.  I pray that I can be as good as a friend as they are.

Prayer for Wednesday

These requests come from the Living Hope Prayer Connections Card.  Permission has been given to list these requests. Please pray for the following:

Ronnie H. as he recovers from a bad motorcycle accident.

For a family that is going through a divorce which involves a fight for the custody of the children.

C.S. for his work to pick-up.

Wisdom for elders, deacons, and staff of Living Hope.

A man in our church is having an artery surgery next week.

For salvation: Bob and Steve M; Ron and Tyler C; Joe and Meadow H; Missy C; BJ C; Matt G.

Tommy A. lost his father this week.

Irene A’s father begins radiation this week for lung cancer.

 

 

Prayer for Tuesday

God’s sheep hear His voice (From Mark and Parker in West Africa)

If you’ve sat through our on-field orientation then you are familiar with the title of this blog.  Our ministry philosophy is summed up in two presuppositions:1) God’s sheep hear His voice
2) Wide sowing equals wide reaping.

Practically this simply means that we speak the name of Jesus boldly and often in places it’s never been spoken and to people who’ve never heard it.

These came about from years of ministry among the Songhai and seeing the same words being received differently.  As we shared Christ in a group, there would be 2 who got up and left, 2 who ignored us, and 2 who were acting as if they were hearing the voice of their Father! We shouldn’t be surprised by this.  In fact, these presuppositions are nothing new and are based on Jesus’ parable of the sower.  The point is that our job is to share the name of Jesus and trust God for the fruit.

I am writing this after seeing it displayed on two separate occasions in two different villages.

Sam in Boubon:
We had the first believer in Boubon accept Christ a few weeks before the May Living Hope team came. One of our national partners had led him to Christ and our LH team spent the week discipling him. We were all amazed at how fast he was growing.  He is almost 60 years old and he can read.  These are two things that separate him from 90% of our other believers.  After the team left we got the whole story about Sam.

He told us that around 20 years ago he had some interaction with a Nigerian Christian in Niamey. This man didn’t really share his faith with Sam but he did give him a New Testament. So for 20 years Sam has been reading this New Testament but not really understanding it. Then we sent 2 national partners to Boubon to live for 3 months.

As one of them was walking by Sam’s house, Sam called out to him and said, “Why are you here?’ Our partner was a little worried he’d run across an iman or maribou who wanted to pick a fight.  But our partner answered boldly “I’ve come to tell people about Jesus, the Messiah.”  Sam’s heart leapt as he said, “Please come tell me about him, I’ve been waiting for 20 years to understand who Jesus is.”  Sam became a new creation that day.

David in Kouli Kwaara:
We’ve spent the past week in KK painting a clinic but also sharing in the village.  There have been some obvious attacks on our group and our time.  Yesterday, our two translators were not able to go out in the village and story so my initial thought was, “Let’s just hit the clinic really hard and finish the painting.”  However, I asked if some of the group wanted to story and they said, “Yes,” so off we went.  I had seen a group of women and children (since most the men were out farming) and was heading to talk to them.  But a man came to us out of his compound and was greeting us.

We went through the typical greetings and I was still planning on going to the women’s group when he said, “Wa kokari,” which means something like “take courage” or maybe more appropriately “you’re really doing something good here.”  He said, “You need to change the children [this generation] with your message, they need to hear it.”  I responded that he was right but that he too needed this message.

His eyes sort of lit up and he scurried into his house to produce a mat for us to sit on.  He called all his children onto the mat to listen to our story.  You could just see each of the words sinking into his heart.  When we got towards the end he exclaimed, “I believe, I want Jesus!” This 56 year old man became a new creation yesterday.  He said that he would now lead his whole family to find salvation in Jesus as well.  He said he’d been waiting for 3 years for someone to explain the story of Jesus to him after receiving a cassette that many years ago.

So why do Sam and David respond to the Gospel when so many others don’t?  I don’t know.
Why did God use the same dream 4 nights in a row to call Ibrahim but not Alassan? I don’t know.
I don’t know how God’s sovereignty and human responsibility work together but that’s sort of the way mysteries work:  they’re mysterious.

But one thing I’ve learned in 5 years of ministry among the Songhai is that God’s sheep hear His voice.  The only problem is that there aren’t enough people looking for those sheep.  How many more have waited 3 years or 20 years for someone to come and tell them about Jesus.  Will you be one of the ones to carry the name of Jesus to those who’ve never heard?

Prayer for Monday

What will it take? It will take the prayers, support and commitment of every believer. It must start with you and me. This is the message behind the new song “Let it Start with Me” from No Other Name as they go to Bangkok, Thailand to sing about being Christ’s Heart, Hands and Voice for the lost.

[vimeo http://vimeo.com/25595586]

Prayers for Saturday

Please be in prayer for the following requests:

For healing for Terrill T. Praying for good test results.

Nathaniel, a teenager, is very unhappy to be in church.  Pray that he can come to a point and be able to worship.

Charles and Debbie, a members parents, who are not focusing on God.

LeAnn M. lost her husband in a car accident this week.  Pray that she will feel God’s strength and presence.

Pray for salvation for Drew C.

Pray for salvation for Chris J. and his relationship with his son.

David W. is recovering from heart problems, praise the Lord.  Continue praying for recovery.

Pray for salvation for Kyle and Kristen

Pray for Bruce and Diane A. that they will get back in a church

Pray that the doctors can figure out what is effecting Nancy M. skin.

Helen M. has health issues

Pray for Bob C., he had a stroke

 

Prayer for Friday – Update from West Africa

This is from Emily H.  I thank the Lord for her willingness to go and serve our Lord in West Africa.

It’s weird to be back in America. Upon arriving in the US, I was literally speechless when the guy at McDonald’s asked, in English, “what can I get for you?” Walking into my room at home was strange, as well- I couldn’t remember what clothes I owned or what my bed felt like or where my wallet was or what my wallet even looked like. But, as I settle back into the American way of life, I am slowly coming to remember what life was like for me 9 weeks ago.

We attract all the village crazies- young & old

9 weeks ago, I did not know the names Ibu, Halima, Mariama, or Fadida. The word “Fofo” had no meaning to me, and I couldn’t speak a lick of Zarma. I knew what it was like to sweat, but I didn’t know what it was like to sweat. 9 weeks ago, I prayed for the Songhai, but I didn’t see the need for prayer as much as I do now.

A few weeks ago, I found myself holding a precious little girl named Zaaratu as all the other kids fought for crayons to color with. Zaaratu was a snuggler to the max, so I sat and rocked the cuddly girl as I sang “How He Loves.” Will the little girl ever understand that God is jealous for her and how truly great His affections are for her?

Henna! I get a lot of odd looks now in the US

We are merely the vessels for Christ’s work; the megaphone to carry Christ’s glory to all nations. Without a voice, the megaphone is useless; without Christ’s glory as our goal, our work is useless. Because of our work in the village, so many women heard the name of Jesus. Because we loved on kids, they know a bit more about Christ’s love. Because we were light in a dark place, the Light is beginning to conquer and overwhelm the darkness on the dirt roads of “B”. I was a warm body that God placed in a very hot place, and He did all the work through me. Although Zaaratu and I did not speak the same language, I can trust that God did something on her heart during our time there. I am overwhelmed with humility because of the ways He used me this summer!

Fadida- sweetest little girl

The journey is most certainly not over. God is not finished with “B” just yet. Continue to pray that the women we encountered will be convicted by the words we shared. Continue to pray that children will experience the love that only Christ can provide through His disciples. Continue to pray for understanding. Continue to pray that people will rise up to the call and will go to work with the Songhai. We are so thrilled to know that there will be a family living in “B” and that there will be several teams visiting the village in just a few months! God is not finished with His work. I am back in America, but God is still in “B”!

Prayer for Thursday

The below article comes from the Superior newsletter.  What a great testimony to Cool River Church and our Youth Mission Team.  Thank you Lord for allowing this teams to plant seeds for your Kingdom in a town that only has one church.

Appreciation of On-Going Volunteerism: Volunteers

At the July 11, 2011 Town Board Meeting, Mayor Muckle read and signed a Proclamation of the Board of Trustees of the Town of Superior in Appreciation of the Volunteer Service of Kevin Colon, the Cool River Church, and volunteers from the Living Hope Baptist Church from Bowling Green, Kentucky.

This group of people spent numerous hours of their time and energy to work on the Town’s trail system improving the quality and accessibility of the recreation experiences in Superior. In addition, this industrious group volunteered their time at the Town of Superior Fourth of July Pancake Breakfast.

Prayer for Wednesday – East Asia

From R and N

Hi Living Hope family,

It’s been one year since we’ve started our journey in Asia!  We’ve had a full year of language learning and ministering to the people of our city.  We know that we have only been able to live and work in such a place because of God’s grace and your prayers!

Our main focus for the past year has been language learning.  It’s a very difficult language, but our ability to speak it has been progressing well.  We’ve been able to learn several ways to present the good news and how to disciple in the local language.  We’ve been blessed to be the part of seeing people come to believe in Christ and now have started starting discipling these people.  The Father really seems to be moving lately.  Hearts are becoming open more every day and in a city with less than 1% Christians the Gospel is being heard and accepted!

This kind of movement of the Spirit doesn’t come without spiritual warfare though.  Lately a lot of our national fellow believers have been met with more than usual amounts of opposition from authorities.  However, even in the face of this our national friends are not backing away from their sharing and seem to have an even stronger passion to meet this opposition with a stronger gospel witness that is even spreading to other cities outside of our own!

This summer we have had students from Living Hope come to help engage the university campus here.  They were able to build relationships with English-speaking students and share the gospel with them and they also saw students believe.  This has been phenomenal and very helpful as we don’t always have time to engage this campus yet as we are still in full time language learning.  However, there is still a lot more work to be done on the campus and in other parts of our city.

As we look forward to the next year, we are expecting for God to be at work.  Our focus in our city of 1.5 million is to reach new people with the good news, disciple, and start new house churches.  We believe for us that means starting in our neighborhood and with the people we see on a daily basis.  Pray for us as we continue to share with neighbors, shop keepers, and friends we make in our community.  Pray for those who have already chosen to believe that they would be obedient to Christ in sharing with others and building His church.

As we press on in the work, we want our Living Hope family to join in the work by praying for…

1) Continued boldness both from us and from local believers

2) That Father would continue to blind the eyes of those who seek to do harm or to oppose the movement of the Spirit that we are seeing lately.

3) That Father would continue to strengthen the relationships we already have and help us build new relationships with others.

4) That Father would bless our language efforts and give us endurance for long class days and that our words would be understood by the local people.

5) Pray for our marriage.  That we would be a good example and illustration of how Christ loves the Church and vice versa.

I thank my God upon every remembrance of you, Always in every prayer of mine for you all making request with joy, For your fellowship in the gospel from the first day until now. 

                        Philippians 1:3-5

Prayer for Tuesday – Update from West Africa

From Emily H.

We’re down to the final days! We’ve been here for long enough that I’ve come to think of West Africa almost as home- it isn’t all that odd to me anymore to see cows walking into the yard or Zarma chit-chat outside my window. I actually touched the walls of our mud-brick house the other day and told myself I might actually miss living in there. We’ve got one more week in the country, then it’s back across the ocean for these two girls! I’m sad, to say the least.

Hanging out with the “family” on a rainy and “cold” day

This past week has been so much fun and pretty eventful! Our friend BB was able to come out the village and stay for 2 nights with us in our humble abode of a mud house. It is interesting, to say the least, to live with a West African. She found our food choices (peanut butter crackers & granola bars) hilarious, so we lucked out and got a few African meals. Like I said, we loved having her around!

Not as easy as it looks

With BB by our side, we were able to share Christ’s story with a group of women and plenty of kids! There have been so many women who have been able to hear Truth, and we are thankful for that. We shared several Bible stories with the kids who routinely visit our compound, and they drank in every single word of every story! It was so amazing to watch their attentive faces as BB translated the stories to them. Please keep praying for our conversations in the last few days we have left in the village. We have 2 full days left, and we want to finish the race strong! Pray that we’ll continue to stay healthy (something that the Lord has been extremely gracious about) and that we will have enough energy to give all of ourselves to the women & children around us. Pray for the new missionary family, who just got to the country this week and will be moving to our village in just a few months. We can’t wait to hear how the Lord grows what we have planted by using this family!

Once again, thank you so much for praying for us throughout the summer. The Lord has heard every single prayer and has been answering them very specifically. We are so so thankful for it! Keep praying for the Songhai, even in these last few days of our service here in West Africa. God is good!