TUHAN ITU BAIK KEPADA SEMUA ORANG

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All three of the churches we visited in East Indonesia had the same banner with the same “tema” (theme/motive). It was from Mazmur 145:9a. With such a high chapter number, I figured that “Mazmur” was a verse from “Psalms”.

With the help of the YouVersion Bible App (available from bible.com with a few hundred different languages to boot) I found the verse.

“Tuhan itu baik kepada semua orang, dan penuh rahmat terhadap segala yang dijadikan-Nya.” (Mazmur 145:9 TB)

The first part means: “The Lord is good to all”

A great God centred verse to focus on in church.

The second half, the bit not quoted on the banner, said: “he has compassion on all he has made.” (Psalm 145:9 NIV)

Apt considering we were there with Compassion!

It was a joy to go to church with our Indonesian brothers and sisters. Lots of bible reading, confession of sin, songs of praise and items from different groups within the church.

Our translator, Claudia, did a sterling job with communicating the sermon to us in English. A solid sermon. The preacher spoke the word of God faithfully with some culturally relevant and pertinent application.

It was good to spend time with our family after church and over good food.

The LORD is indeed good to us all.

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JESUS LOVES KIDS

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Jesus loves kids. Compassion loves kids. Kids in Indonesia now love Jesus because of Compassion’s love “In Jesus’ Name”. What precious work!

“People were bringing little children to Jesus for him to place his hands on them, but the disciples rebuked them. When Jesus saw this, he was indignant. He said to them, “Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of God belongs to such as these. Truly I tell you, anyone who will not receive the kingdom of God like a little child will never enter it.” And he took the children in his arms, placed his hands on them and blessed them.” (Mark 10:13-16 NIV)

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WRITE LETTERS TO YOUR SPONSOR CHILD

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Vicky’s family were given critical support by Compassion after a typhoon ripped the roof off their house two years ago. It was a privilege to be welcomed into his home and see how Compassion has restored their home and loved this family.

One framed photo stood out on their wall. It was an Italian couple: Antonella and Roberto, Vicky’s sponsors.

When asked if he had received any letters from them, he dashed around to his bed and pulled out a precious tin box. Proudly he presented the letters he’d received from his generous friends from Europe.

A consistent message from Compassion staff and kids in the projects is that letters make a difference.

We met a veteran letter translator in the Compassion office. She passionately pleaded with us to write letters and encourage other sponsors to write letters.

Convicted. Rebuked.

We’ve got 2 sponsor children in Swaziland, Bandzille and Silungilie. We regularly pray for them but have been pretty slack in writing letters. The plan? Start writing to them. We want to share our lives, share our hope in Jesus and let them know we love them and are praying for them.

Got sponsor kids? Write often.

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LOVE IS NOT OPTIONAL

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At #KYCK2013 I urged young crew from 1 John 3 to see that LOVE IS NOT OPTIONAL in our response to God’s love shown in Christ Jesus.

Check it: “This is how we know what love is: Jesus Christ laid down his life for us. And we ought to lay down our lives for our brothers and sisters. If anyone has material possessions and sees a brother or sister in need but has no pity on them, how can the love of God be that person? Dear children, let us not love with words or speech but with actions and in truth.” (1 John 3:16-18 NIV)

Christians must love their brothers and sisters in Christ. This happens as we meet the needs of those local to us.

As I have met Indonesian brothers and sisters living in poverty, I’m convinced that as those with means (98% of Aussies) our love ought to also reach out more globally.

So many Christians around the world have so little. We (rich Aussies) have so much. Our means can actually release a child from poverty.

Love is still not optional.

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YESUS NOMOR SATU!

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My ability to speak in Bahasa Indonesian is limited. It means that conversations with kids who have limited English is always going to be with a limited vocab.

From previous work with kids with limited English (in Vanuatu) I worked out a phrase – JESUS IS NUMBER ONE – that was useful in verbal communication.

YESUS NOMOR SATU was a phrase I used lots of times with kids (and adults) that I met.

Here’s why I like it:

  1. It’s simple and fun
  2. It’s verbal and visual (one finger in air)
  3. It’s an opportunity to speak joyfully about Jesus
  4. Manado is a city where there is a large number of people who profess to be Christian. It means it is easy for the next generation to assume the gospel. I think the speaking of the supremacy of Christ is one way of, from even a young age, helping young people put Jesus ahead of anything that might compromise their discipleship.

On our second last day I was talking to a local lady who had very good English. She asked me how much Indonesian I knew, I said not much and then gave the YESUS NOMOR SATU phrase. She said ‘he’s more than number one, he’s the one and only!!’ She then tried to teach me to say that in Indo. I struggled. She said my phrase was good enough :)

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WILL YOU SPONSOR JUN?

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Today I met Jun. He’s a cool 12 year old kid. I enjoyed hanging out and getting to know him. Like me, his favourite sport is soccer. We had fun beat boxing and making up songs about how Jesus is Number One!

Jun lives in Surawet, North Sulawesi with his mum, dad and brother. He is part of the Compassion project in his area. Unfortunately he no longer has a sponsor.

His father is a rural worker, but work is seasonal. It mean his family lives on $25 a month.

A Compassion sponsorship for Jun would be an incredible support to his family and Jun continuing in the program.

Do you have a sponsor child? If not, prayerfully consider sponsoring Jun. It’s only $44 a month.

Interested? Let me know ASAP and I can line it up.

Ps – Jun is the one on the left :)

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STOP CUTTING BABIES IN HALF

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Sometimes Christians unhelpfully put evangelism (sharing the good news of Jesus) and mercy ministries (caring for the sick, sad & suffering) on opposing ends of a spectrum.

In one of our team meetings someone suggested that it’s like cutting a baby in half. Implication, we do both… So don’t cut the baby in half! We love people by proclaiming the death & resurrection of Jesus AND by loving people practically.

Sometimes organisations like Compassion are critiqued for not sharing the good news of Jesus, only on about the physical and not the spiritual.

The evidence on the ground is that the good news of Jesus is central to the work of Compassion and the communities they work with.

On Thursday we visited a Child Survival Program (CSP). It’s a program where mothers are supported from pre-birth until their child is 3. We had the privilege of sitting in on one of their weekly meetings and hearing some of their stories.

It was kind of like a noisy women’s bible study. It included: a bible reading; singing; Jesus-centred preaching; prayer; a call to turn from superstition by coming to God in prayer and seeking medical care; partnership through financial giving; eating food.

If it was only about physical support, most of those things would have been unnecessary.

But lives are being impacted now and for eternity.

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