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Women on Mission -December 2019

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                                     Who is this Lottie Moon, anyway?                                                                        
Charlotte Diggs Moon, 1840-1910, better known as Lottie Moon, became a legend in her own time.  A daughter of old Virginia and one of the best educated women in the South, Miss Moon was petite 4 feet 3 inches.  Her voice is described as deep, rich, gentle, musical, which she used skillfully as a teacher/missionary.  But no photographer ever captured on film the animated, attractive, charming, delightful, energetic, fearless Lottie Moon, although a few photos do exist.

For 40 years she represented Southern Baptists in China.  Again and again she wrote back to America, “Send on the               missionaries.”  Once she wrote, “It is odd that the million Baptists of the South can furnish only three men for all China.  I wonder how this looks in heaven.  It certainty looks queer in China.”

After the Japanese-Russian war, economic conditions in China produced much poverty, but there were some new missionaries.  Miss Moon welcomed them, advised them, mothered them, and loved their children, who adored her in  return.  The Chinese women and children came and went in her home as if it were their own.  If the Pingtu Christians were starving, Miss Moon would not eat.  By December of her seventieth year she was so frail the doctors sent her back to the States.  But enroute on Christmas Eve, while the ship rode at anchor in Kobe, Japan, Miss Moon died.  The memory of such a life never ends.
In 1918, Annie Armstrong, the woman who refused marriage to a China missionary so she could fulfill her calling as the leader of mission support among Southern Baptist women in the homeland, wrote: “Miss Moon is the one who suggested the Christmas offering for foreign missions.  She showed us the way in so many things.  Wouldn’t it be appropriate to name the offering in her memory?”* And so it was.
                                                                        
                            The Most Persecuted People in the World
Named “the most persecuted people in the world” by the United Nations, more than 723,000 Rohingya have fled to Bangladesh from their homes in Myanmar (Also called Burma). An additional 100,000 remain in Myanmar living in IDP (internally displaced people) camps.

The Rohingya have been stripped of their homes, their citizenship and their rights. Living as illegal aliens in camps built on land annually destroyed by floods, these people have nothing - no education, no health care, no income, no land, no assets and, seemingly, no allies.

International Mission Study: Rohingya will introduce you to the Christian organizations who are working as the hands and feet of Christ among the Rohingya. From delivering buckets of hygiene supplies to planting grass to sharing words of hope, followers of Christ are engaging this crisis head-on. Through this study, you will a) identify with feelings experienced by Rohingya refugees; b) discover how to pray specifically for refugees; c) explore how to accept people who are different from you; d) learn ways you and your church can give through the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering, Baptist Global Response and the WMU Foundation. We pray this study would inspire you to reach out in love to refugees and other displaced people groups in the name of our Savior, Jesus Christ.

Our study is Wednesday, December 11th at noon in the fellowship hall. Please join us if you can.

Our Lottie Moon Christmas offering goal is $18,000. Offering envelopes will be made available to each family. Women on      Mission will meet at 6:00 pm on Monday, December 9th at the home of Jean Hitchcock for a Week of Prayer program. We will  carpool from the church leaving at 5:45 pm. We collected 1,180 boxes of mac and cheese for the Evansville Rescue Mission. Thanks you to all who made this possible.

*Excerpts from The Lottie Moon Story.

 

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Student Ministry - November 2019

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Dear Church Family,

This October has been quite the adventure. As the month began, preparations for our mission trip to Jamaica were fully underway. My plan was to go with the mission team and help minister to the students and faculty of a primary school in the mountains of Jamaica. We were going there to teach Bible studies to the kids and build them a new playground. My plan from there was to meet Kayla and Samuel in California, where she was visiting her grandparents and celebrating her uncle’s wedding. It was to be a great ministry opportunity followed by a great vacation.

However, “The heart of a man plans his way, but the Lord establishes his steps” (Prov. 16:9). After the flight to Jamaica, we had a good night’s rest and then made our way up the winding mountain roads to the school. As we surveyed the dilapidated state of the “playground,’ we quickly realized we would have to remove a slab of concrete to make way for the geometric dome. So 30 minutes after we arrived, a rudimentary pick-axe and
sledgehammer were acquired and put to quick use. I swung the pick-axe with vigor… too much vigor perhaps. The makeshift handle broke after the fifth or sixth swing. Someone then tried using the head of it to chisel away the concrete. Since we were limited on tools at that time, I decided to give it a try. I took it with both hands and began to swing down hard. On the fourth swing, it hit hard and slipped off the edge catching my pinky between the side of the pick-axe and the concrete, crushing the tip just beyond the joint and cutting it open along the side. Don’t worry, that’s all I’ll say about the injury.

So with that, my involvement in the mission trip was severely altered. I say altered and not ended, because I found that through all of this, I was able to meet countless people and share with them why I was in Jamaica in the first place. The “hospital” that I stayed in was full of interesting characters. There is far too much that happened in that place to tell here, but thankfully I was able to pray with several other patients and bear witness to God’s goodness in the middle of it all. At first I was fairly upset with the situation. I couldn’t believe that I was once again sitting in a hospital, unable to do anything for myself and totally dependent on other people. Only this time it was people I didn’t know in extremely unfamiliar surroundings. My team made sure I was taken care of, and visited me each morning to provide me with essentials. But they still had a job to do, and I had no desire to slow them down.

After many hours of waiting and praying, the Lord gave me peace of mind. He reminded me that while I wasn’t doing what I had planned, I was doing what He had planned. He established my footsteps in Jamaica from the beginning of creation. Once I accepted His plan for me, I was able to see the blessings in it all.

And that is one of the many lessons God taught me through this trial. Amazingly, my pinky tip was saved, I don’t require surgery, and there hasn’t been any infection. God used the tip of my finger to take me many places I would never go on my own, and I am very thankful for it all. I even was blessed enough to go on vacation and experience the beauty of God’s creation in California with my family. So if you’re going through something difficult, remember that God has established this from the very beginning. He has a plan for you, and He will bless you through it if you will accept His plan and let go of your own.

In Christ,
Brian Van Doren 

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