We can’t wait for AT1 to start next week in Portland! If you haven’t yet had a chance to register for our grace-centered gathering, click here to take care of that! AT1 has been organized by Adventist Today. Themed “Christ Challenges Culture,” this event seeks to refresh us with the knowledge that there is reconciliation […] Source: https://atoday.org/at1-starts-next-week-have-you-registered/
ADRA Statement about Suspension of Operations in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh
26 September 2019 | The Adventist Development and Relief Agency released a statement this month regarding the suspension of its operations in Rohingya refugee camps in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, near the Myanmar border. In it, the development agency denies any involvement in a recent rally of Rohingya refugees in the area. The aid organization was […] Source: https://atoday.org/adra-statement-about-suspension-of-operations-in-coxs-bazar-bangladesh/
Church Delivers Mental Health Training to Local Community Groups
Mental health challenges were analysed at the Stanborough Centre as individuals were trained in their response to mental distress.Source: https://adventist.uk/news/article/go/2019-09-26/church-delivers-mental-health-training-to-local-community-groups/
Friday: Inside Story ~ Korea
Driving Passengers to Christ
By Andrew McChesney, Adventist Mission
Byungeun Oh, a taxi driver in rural South Korea, had never led anyone to Christ after years in church, and he decided to change that.
Byungeun saw many repeat customers and began to build relationships. He collected passengers’. cell phone numbers and, with his wife, took them out to eat and visited them at home.
One Sabbath afternoon, Byungeun and his wife, Mihyun Yun, visited the home of a passenger named Mr. Choi. They chatted for a while, and Byungeun invited the man out to dinner. As they left the house, Mr. Choi pointed to a small church nearby and said he once had worshipped there.
Byungeun saw an opportunity to share his faith.
“We have a very beautiful church”, he said. “Would you like to visit it?”
Mr. Choi agreed to visit the church in the town of Chuncheon.
Byungeun drove to a local restaurant. Its Adventist owner expressed delight that Mr. Choi planned to attend church and declared that the meal of buckwheat noodles was on the house. The kindness surprised Mr. Choi and strengthened his resolve to visit the church.
After that first Sabbath, Mr. Choi returned to the church every week and was baptized.
Byungeun had won his first soul for Christ, and he didn’t intend to stop.
One day, he saw an elderly man emerge from a house as he drove past. He had seen the man before and stopped to greet him.
“I was about to call for a taxi”, the man said.
Byungeun quickly offered to take the man to his destination. As he drove, he learned that the man was named Mr. Park and decided to visit him at home that evening.
Byungeun and his wife showed up with several small gifts. Mr. Park ushered them into the living room and introduced them to his wife, Chunja An. Byungeun learned that the wife had a problem. She couldn’t attend Sunday services at her church because she worked six days a week, with only Saturdays off.
“We go to church on Saturday”, Byungeun said. “Why don’t you come with us?”
Soon she was baptized.
In two years, Byungeun, pictured left, has led three people to Christ. He is convinced that if he, a 58-year-old taxi driver, can do it, so can anyone.
“Reduce your work so you can do God’s work”, he said. “Simplify your life, and then fill it with the joy of meeting souls”.
Produced by the General Conference Office of Adventist Mission. Find more mission stories at adventistmission[dot]org
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Friday: Further Thought ~ A Community of Servants
Further Thought:
Read Ellen G. White, “A Faithful Witness”, pages 546-556, in The Acts of the Apostles; “Kindness the Key to Hearts”, pages 81-86, in Welfare Ministry.
“The work which the disciples did, we also are to do. Every Christian is to be a missionary. In sympathy and compassion we are to minister to those in need of help, seeking with unselfish earnestness to lighten the woes of suffering humanity …
We are to feed the hungry, clothe the naked, and comfort the suffering and afflicted. We are to minister to the despairing, and to inspire hope in the hopeless.
The love of Christ, manifested in unselfish ministry, will be more effective in reforming the evildoer than will the sword or the court of justice … Often the heart that hardens under reproof will melt under the love of Christ”. – Ellen G. White, The Ministry of Healing, pages 104, 106.
“Slavery, the caste system, unjust racial prejudices, the oppression of the poor, the neglect of the unfortunate—these all are set forth as unchristian and a serious menace to the well-being of the human race, and as evils which the church of Christ is appointed by her Lord to overthrow”. – General Conference president A. G. Daniells, speaking of the work of Ellen G. White at her funeral, Life Sketches of Ellen G. White, p. 473.
Discussion Questions:
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Summary:
Yes, as Christians, we are called to minster to the needs of others, especially others who are hurting, suffering, and oppressed. And though we have our individual responsibilities in this area, as a community focused on ministering to others, we can be much more effective working together as a church family.
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