Haiti

>> Sunday, March 11, 2012

video

A few weeks ago, I mentioned on Twitter that Dad was going with a couple other men from our church to teach a conference at a Bible school by Port-au-Prince, Haiti. The condensed time of ministry there seemed to be blessed by God and immensely profitable; I wanted to thank those of you who prayed for their safety and effectiveness! Here in America, preachers, teachers, videos, books and all manner of materials are at our fingertips on virtually any topic we desire to study. I think the abundance of teaching in the States can cause us to forget just how valuable instruction is, when in places such as Haiti, there are hundreds of believers who are starving for truth, seeking for someone to teach them how to live in light of the Scriptures. As I heard of the sacrifices the Haitians made to attend the conference, how they listened with such attentiveness, how they were filled with gratitude and communicated such zeal for knowledge, I was convicted once again that "to whom much is given much is required". We have been given so much in America; what opportunity we have to grow in knowledge and be of service to others who have not been equally blessed. Our focus should always be on deepening our walk with God, not on broadening it. When we deepen our relationship with Christ, there will be no lack of outlets for ministry.


Below are just a couple excerpts from emails Dad sent throughout the week they were gone:

Greetings from Haiti.


 . . . At the baggage claim many, many red-shirted attendants converged on us, grabbing our luggage and insisting on significant money ($40+) as they moved us through the crowd to our awaiting pastor and his pickup. From there we drove through pot-holed, rutted Third World streets littered with concrete rubble, garbage, open sewage, and wild drivers, some in pickups with men in back brandishing 12-gauge shotguns and wearing ammunition belts. Everywhere were hordes of people hawking goods—plastic jugs, shucks, wire, used clothes, bananas, etc. In time we drove through a series of nearly impassable alleys, the pastor honked his horn, a steel gate opened, and we were at an orphanage, and soon after that, at the building where our seminar was to be held. It was a little after 9 AM Tuesday. We had slept very little for two nights; nor had we cleaned up. We stepped into an unfinished cinder block building with near stiflingly warm air, high humidity, almost no breeze, and over 30 eager Independent Baptist pastors and church workers. Soon I rose to speak, unshaven and disheveled; then brother Renner; then I; then he. At around 3:00 that afternoon we stopped for the day, a little dizzy but OK, hopped in a pickup with Pastor Jacque, and bounced our way through other Third World streets till we arrived at our hotel.


As I write, we have now completed our second day of teaching, Dr. Renner speaking on Biblical counseling in Christian warfare, and I, on fundamentals of the Christian faith, with Andrew supplying support however He can. We can report our strong impression that God is with us and blessing the work. Thank you for your prayers.


I need to go now. We are a far way from snow but you are close to our hearts.


Hi, everyone. We finished speaking at the Haiti Bible Institute seminar this Thursday afternoon. The attenders appeared to be enthusiastic and grateful. The labor has been full and joyful for us. Following the seminar we spent a couple hours at the orphanage and then took one wild, long ride through very rough, dusty, vehicle-packed, mobs of people-lined, dark streets until we found ourselves in an outskirts tin-roofed church plant prayer meeting, where we were each asked to say a few words following a sermon delivered in Creole. . . . We plan to travel up a mountain tomorrow, then fly to Miami, stay in the airport till morning, and fly back to Omaha Saturday afternoon.


By God's grace, see you Sunday.


Pastor

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Sometimes We Get Our Priorities Upside Down

>> Sunday, March 4, 2012

Or am I the only one that struggles with that? It's so easy to be busy all the time, and yet accomplish nothing of lasting value, fixing oneself comfortably in the "nice, but nothing" category and filling time with all manner of good things. Sacrificing the best.

Good things. They can be so deceptive. Often what we want to do are good things and we make time for such easily commendable busyness, justifying ourselves. After all, somehow, someway, we find ways to make time for those things we want to do, and effortlessly complain at having no time for those things which would have been better, but would have been harder. 

Good things. They keep our hands tied with constant activity and do accomplish some measure of profit, yet - we are robbed. We our robbed and our families our robbed. Our churches and our communities are robbed for us having missed the mark, for us having fallen short of God's design for who we would and should have become, had we spent less time spending ourselves with "good" at the expense of "best". 

Every decision is at the expense of another; every choice an exchange for something else. Choose the best. Rise to the competition, and then raise the standard higher. "Always do the next best thing," my dad tells me. 


Show me a thoroughly satisfied man and I will show you a failure.
Thomas Edison

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Following Up on the Last Post

>> Thursday, February 23, 2012



Isn't it beautiful to see such unwavering faith? It is one of the evidences of a truly born-again Christian! Please continue praying for the Cretzman family!

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Why Does God Wait?

>> Wednesday, February 22, 2012

"Please pray for the Cretzmans, our missionary family to Cuba. They were at our church last October. They are still on deputation and had a car accident this morning. They lost their little 3 year old girl Azlynn. Please take a moment right now to pray for them... :'("


~~~

When I read about the Cretzmans, my heart immediately sank. I do not know them personally, but I heard they were leaving shortly for missions work in Cuba. In addition to their 3-year-old being killed in the car accident, Mrs. Cretzman was in a coma and her legs have been severely crushed. She has yet to be told about her daughter's passing.

Tragedies like this . . . they feel so unnatural. So wrong. I shake my head and am struck with the terribleness of it all. I am weighted by the deeper, underlying message; the reminder these things feel so unnatural and feel so wrong because they are

This is not creation as God designed it. This is not what He called, "very good". Death, pain, sickness, grief: they are the billows of smoke that rise from man's simmering rebellion against God. Because we have broken God's laws, "the whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain together until now. And not only they, but ourselves also, which have the first fruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body." (Romans 8:22-23)

How wonderful it will be when Creation is restored to the way God desires and intended it to be! . . . But why does He wait? Why does God allow this curse to affect so traumatically the lives of people He loves, people we love? If God is loving, why, why does He allow so much pain?

The answer is in the question. He waits because He is loving. Our pain is consequence of our our own sin, but God has not only provided a way of escape, He patiently withholds judgement on those who have not yet repented, that they might have a change of mind. "The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is long-suffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance." (II Peter 3:9) Every moment you and I have on earth is an undeserved and unguaranteed chance to repent and share the Gospel before it is too late. The curse is a symptom of a much deeper problem: our rebellion against God. We sit vulnerable under the hammer of His justice and -- He waits


God longs for His people to turn again to Him! For there is indeed a day when the time is passed for repentance. He waits, but not indefinitely; mercy does not deny justice, it delays it. There is a last name that will be penned in the Book of Life and never again will we have the chance to share our faith with an unbeliever, because in Heaven and in Hell, everyone will be a believer. Every knee will bow. 

Please, pray for the Cretzman family. Their work on the mission field expresses their desire for souls to be saved and for God to be glorified! Pray that God would take that desire and greatly multiply their effectiveness and impact for the Kingdom of Heaven through this unforeseen trial.

Therefore be ye also ready: 
for in such an hour as ye think not the Son of man cometh.
Matthew 24:44

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