Wednesday, December 5, 2007

World Christian Partnership


Brian Hogan
Church Planting Trainer, Youth With a Mission, Malta

Brian and his wife Louise, have served in missions since 1987. From the Navajo Tribe to Outer Mongolia, their passion has been to see Jesus glorified and lifted up among those who have never known Him.

From 1993-1996 their team pioneered a church planting movement in Erdenet, Mongolia that continues to grow under fully indigenous leadership to this day. Their Mongolian disciples are now training and sending out their own missionaries to other unreached people groups. The story of the work in Erdenet can be read in the case study article - "Mongols Follow the Khan of Khans" - included in the 1999, third edition of Perspectives on the World Christian Movement: A Reader, ed. Winter & Hawthorne (William Carey Library).

Brian and Louise have four children: Melody, Mollyanne, Alice, and Peter.


Currently this family makes their home in Northern CA where Brian manages the YWAM Church Planting Coaches office. In addition, he coordinates the Church Planting Coaches activities in East and Southeast Asia, and Europe. Brian travels extensively conducting workshops and seminars on cross-cultural church planting skills and Frontier Missions. Brian serves on the European Frontier Mission Leadership Team.


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Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Pioneer Church Planting


David Watson is the founder and executive director of Asian Partners International, Inc. (API), a Lubbock, Texas based church planting ministry that focuses on un-reached people groups primarily in Asia.

David and his wife Jan have been involved in this type of ministry since 1986 and were among the pioneers of the nonresidential missionary movement. They not only established two missions agencies that concentrate on church planting among un-reached people groups but also started three companies that support missionaries and provide income for local Christian workers.
Their entire career in foreign missions has centered on restricted access countries, and during the past fifteen years their teams have helped to initiate more than 40,000 house churches throughout Asia.

Before becoming executive director of API, David was a church planter and strategy coordinator for the International Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention. His ministry experience also includes youth evangelism, associate and senior pastorates, senior adults, radio and television, music, working with the hearing impaired, hospice care, and hospital chaplaincy.






Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Spontanoues Multiplication of Churches


Brad Buser
West Coast Representative, New Tribes Mission

Brad and Beth Buser served for 20 years in Papua New Guinea (PNG) with
New Tribes Mission, working among the Iteri people. Their ministry included learning the language and culture, creating an alphabet, teaching God’s word, planting churches and translating the New Testament. God granted them much fruit, as hundreds accepted Christ as Savior and have since begun reaching their own people with the gospel. The Busers also served in leadership in the Sepik region of PNG and at the Numonohi Christian Academy. Since returning to the U.S. in 1999, Brad has served as the West Coast Representative for New Tribes as well as the Missions Pastor at Clairemont Emmanuel Baptist Church. Brad teaches Inter-Culture Studies at Eternity Bible College in Simi Valley, California; Cross-Cultural Church Planting at The Masters College in Santa Clarita, California; Intro to Tribal Missions at the New Tribes Bible Institute in Jackson, Michigan; and the book of Acts at Ecola Bible School in Oregon. Brad is a frequent speaker at Christian colleges, churches, and Perspectives courses. Brad especially enjoys talking to young people, exhorting this generation to reach the world with the truth of Jesus Christ. Brad and Beth have four children and three grandchildren. They make their home in San Diego, California.


Thursday, November 15, 2007

Christian Community Development


Michele Rickett is founder, president and CEO of Sisters in Service (SIS). SIS is an innovative ministry that informs, mobilizes and equips advocates for global outreach to women and children in the least Christian regions.

Michele Rickett brings over 20 years of experience in international women's outreach. She travels internationally to create partnerships with indigenous women and bring their insights and stories to audiences throughout the U.S. Michele is a delightful speaker who helps people to grow in their spiritual walk and co-labor with their sisters who are risking their lives to share God's love.

Michele and her husband, Daniel, committed their lives to international work in 1975. In 1979 they joined Partners International and in the early 80's moved their family to Africa where they worked in five East African countries before returning to the international headquarters.

Michele has taken active leadership roles in women's ministries. She is an engaging speaker who helps women grow spiritually, and work together to make a difference for suffering women and children. Along with an international speaking and teaching ministry, she has developed numerous workshops and retreat presentations including:

  • Women In the Hardest Places - A Global View
  • Beauty Out of Hardship
  • Moving Beyond Your Mailbox
  • A Heart of Purpose for Every Woman
  • What, Why and How of Mentoring

Michele is co-author of Ordinary Women, a course that guides a developing spiritual life for individuals or groups, and graduates trained mentors. She has also authored Daughters of Hope, Stories of Witness and Courage, published by InterVarsity Press.



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Wednesday, November 7, 2007

How shall they hear?

Don Richardson

Upon entering a chapel service at Prairie Bible Institute, Don Richardson was a run of the mill college student, barely out of his teens. Leaving the service that morning however, Richardson was a man headed of all places, to the Sawi headhunting tribes of Netherlands New Guinea.

Answering that specific call in 1955 would seem absurd to the average suburban family in the 50s. Yet Don knew his mission: no matter how immense the barriers were, he would preach the Gospel of Jesus Christ to a place where wild jungles, cannibalism, and bloodshed ran rampant. With a young bride and a seven-month-old baby at his side, Don first set foot on the Sawi lands. Mud, sago thorns, tangled vegetation, leeches, crocodiles, malaria, dysentery, and hepatitis viruses were not the most ideal conditions to settle a new family. However, it was a constant reminder of the problematic task he and Carol Richardson had in front of them.

The couple's first struggle was conquering the language. Not only did Sawi have an intricately complex vocabulary, but it also had 19 tenses for every single verb. With 8-10 hour daily learning sessions, Don was able to become proficient in the dialect. The next obstacle involved the actual Sawi people. Richardson became baffled as to how the villagers could comprehend a Savior who gave His life for them. But then came an unlikely event that would spawn a crucial analogy.

Around this time, three villages were in constant battle. Presented with the threat of the Richardsons leaving the area, the Sawi people came together and miraculously decided that they would make peace with their hated enemies. Ceremonies commenced that saw young children being exchanged among opposing villages. One man in particular ran toward his enemy's camp and literally gave his son to his hated foe. Observing this, Richardson writes: "if a man would actually give his own son to his enemies, that man could be trusted!" From this rare picture came the analogy of the Father's sacrifice of his own Son. The Sawi were beginning to understand.

Following the incredible event came legions of villagers converting to Christ, a translation of the New Testament in Sawi, nearly 2,500 Sawi patients being treated by Carol, and the creation of the world's largest circular building made strictly from unmilled poles as a Christian meeting place. Armed with beautiful memories and a sense of accomplishment, the Richardsons left the Sawi people, only to minister to yet another tribe, the Yawi of Iranian Jaya. By 1966, about 20 of the fiercest Yali tribesmen were converted.

Don's chronicles of the numerous adventures he experienced in these foreign lands are documented in his bestsellers Peace Child, Lords of the Earth, and Eternity in Their Hearts. Richardson's story is unique in that he produced revolutionary ideas of ministering to people while still adhering to those tactics that apostles like Paul in the New Testament used. His principles seem new and innovative, yet are inherently based on God's word. With this approach, Don was able to see thousands come to Christ.



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Thursday, November 1, 2007

Building bridges of Love

Bruce Green
Since November 2002, after the first anniversary of 9-11, Rev. Green has been the "Bridge Building Facilitator" between a consortium of churches and our Muslim neighbors, especially Afghans living in the East Bay Area. Bruce has an MA from Biola University (1983) and currently serves on the board of the Afghan Coalition.


Due to the sensitive nature of Bruce's Ministry there is no audio offered for this speaker. But please fill free to check his blogspots.

The Task Remaining

Rev. Virgil Lee Amos

Virgil began his missionary service in 1962 with Operation Mobilization, working for 10 years in Mexico, Europe, India, Sri Lanka and Iran. Upon graduation from Talbot Seminary in 1979 he went on in 1982 to found Ambassador Fellowship (AF) which, from its start, was focused on getting minorities involved in missions.