Updates from the Mission Field

Read the articles below to catch up on what is happening in General Baptist missions, both internationally and here at home.

By Carl Nichols

Last month, National Missions hosted our first in-house assessment for future church planters, and boy, did we learn a lot!  I speak for the entire advisory team when I say we are so excited about the future!  We will soon be releasing an update with an introduction to our newest church planter slated to plant in Bonita Springs, FL in late 2015 or early 2016.

October 26th will be National Missions Sunday, and we will be receiving an offering.  All of this offering will help fund the Go Project to launch 15 churches in the next five years, like our newest plant in Bonita Springs.  (To read more about the Go Project, click here)  Thank you so much for your faith in our team. Keep your eyes open in the coming weeks for more information and updates.

 

From Jessey and Brittany Vemula, missionaries in India

This is a personal story of an Indian woman who was brought to Christ through the work of the Lydia Sewing Center in Siddipet.  This year’s Ed Steven’s Day offering is helping make stories like Pushpa’s a reality in India by funding not only the sewing center, but mission work out in the community, and food and clothing distributions also. 

Pushpa is an India woman from Irkod village, which is eleven kilometers from Siddipet.  She was brought up in a Hindu family.  Pushpa, who is 25 years old, has three older siblings.  She joined the Lydia Sewing Center at the beginning of this year.  She had to walk the 11 kilometers from her hometown to train, and was rarely afforded the opportunity to travel by rickshaw.  There are devotions every morning at the Lydia Sewing Center, and after hearing these, she decided to give her life to Christ.  However, when she chose to become a Christian her life here became much harder.

update from India

Pushpa with Alan Motley, short term mission trip participant, this past summer.

Pushpa started attending church, and even told her siblings about Christ. They came to church with her and also became believers.  However, their father was not pleased with this.  He told them that if they didn’t come back to Hinduism, they would not get their share of the Mango orchard he owned.  Pushpa and her siblings stood strong and refused to convert back to Hinduism.  Since they refused, their father signed over the property to his nephew.

Pushpa and her siblings pray for their father’s conversion daily.  As her pastor, Jessey has conducted prayer meetings and talked with the father, but to no avail.  Pushpa and her siblings, however, remain faithful to God in this time of hopelessness.  The situation is helped by the fact that Pushpa received free training at the Lydia Sewing Center and received a sewing machine.  She and her family are using the sewing machine to bring in extra money.  She is very thankful for the help she received from the Lydia Sewing Center.  Currently, she is preparing to follow Christ’s example in baptism.  Please remember our sister Pushpa and her siblings in your prayer.  Most importantly, pray for their parents who have yet to accept Christ into their hearts and lives.

Let’s GO!

By Clint Cook

I recently had a phone conversation with Carl Nichols (the chair of the National Missions Advisory Team) to receive an update on our upcoming Church Planter Assessment, which is essentially a boot camp for prospective church planters.  It was exciting to hear about our current prospects and how God is already making a way for us to accomplish the GO Project.

Carl Nichols discusses the new church planting initiative (GO Project) at the 2014 Summit.The GO Project is our National Missions five-year initiative to start 15 new churches. While this seems like an aggressive goal for General Baptists, we have to have vision and faith as leaders to achieve our objective.  However, we must also realize our limitations. God is the one who must call up men and women, husbands and wives, to take on these assignments.  Not only must the GO Project have the call of God upon it, our National Missions Department must determine if a prospective planter’s gifting is a good fit for church planting and the demands that will be placed upon them, or if they may be better suited for other types of ministry.  If we do not align ourselves to His plan, the 15 churches will not be accomplished.

In Acts 16:9, we find the outline for church planting, “And a vision appeared to Paul in the night: a man of Macedonia was standing there, urging him and saying, ‘Come over to Macedonia and help us.’ And when Paul had seen the vision, immediately we sought to go on into Macedonia, concluding that God had called us to preach the gospel to them.”  God issued the call to GO, He had gifted and equipped the burdened individuals with the specific skills and talents needed to plant a new church, and He revealed the location of where He wanted the new church to be started.  That’s the Lord’s part.

We are not all church planters, but all of us still have a part. As in Matthew 9:38, we are to “pray earnestly to the Lord of the harvest to send our laborers into his harvest.”  As individual General Baptists, our responsibility is to pray.  We must pray that God issues the call to prospective candidates and that they respond to His call, pray that He fine-tunes their gifts for church planting, and pray that He reveals the location of the church plant.  Unless all of these criteria are met, the GO Project is merely a collection of words on paper.

These are exciting days to be partnering with God to fulfill the Great Commission in our generation. God will surely do His part, and we must be faithful to do our part by responding as Isaiah did in Isaiah 6:8-9, “And I heard the voice of the Lord saying, ‘Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?’ Then I said, ‘Here I am! Send me.’ And he said Go.”

Let’s GO!