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Embassy Teams: Why You Should Start One At Your Church

9/2/2019

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I’ve had a great summer.  One of the highlights has been connecting online with Ali, an Egyptian engineer.  We connect every Monday over lunch and it’s been a joy to get to know him and his family. We have recently started reading through a creation to Christ overview in the Bible.  Next week we’ll tackle Genesis 3 and the fall.  Ali is Muslim.  I am the first true follower of Christ that he has ever met and this is the first time he has read the Bible.
  
This summer I’ve also connected regularly with Mustafa, a young Muslim man in Syria and Mohammed, a Muslim college student in Lahore, Pakistan.  It has been a joy to build a relationship with both of them.  

I’ve been able to connect with them because of Embassy. 

Hundreds of thousands of Muslims living in hard to reach countries speak your language and are going online to find friendship, language partners and answers to their questions. 

Embassy exists so that they will meet a committed follower of Christ. Embassy offers training, encouragement and community and then helps you discover new Muslim friends online.  

“Embassy volunteers use secular, public-access forums to connect with Muslims in closed countries who speak English. As men and women begin to read the Bible and engage in questions about Jesus, we invite them to include their friends and family in the conversation: small seeds growing  to something great (Matthew 13:31-32).” *

Embassy is an amazing opportunity for the North American church to be on the front lines of the great commission.
  • How many Muslims in Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, Indonesia or Nigeria could be connected with the first true follower of Jesus they have ever met? 
  • How many in Egypt, Turkey, India or Iran could begin reading the Bible for the very first time?
  • How many Muslims in Kazakhstan, Syria, Algeria or Somalia could have groups of believers in North America regularly praying for them by name? And how many in Morocco, Iraq, Pakistan or China could have an opportunity to respond to the gospel?

What could God do through the local church?

Through your local church? 

Imagine if you - yes you reader - were to go back to your home church and help form an Embassy Team. 

Imagine if you could gather a group of friends who would begin reaching out individually online while also meeting regularly as a group to pray together, encourage one another and continue with ongoing equipping.

God is on the move in the Muslim world and this is an opportunity to join in that work.


Steps to Forming Your Embassy Team
  1. Stop by the Embassy website and become an Embassy Volunteer.  Get started building relationships online with new friends from the Muslim world.  
  2. Begin sharing about your experiences with friends and invite them to join you.  Then encourage them to become Embassy Volunteers (you can coach them along). Make sure and have a conversation with your pastor or missions committee about your plans.
  3. Find a time when your Embassy Team can meet regularly to share testimonies, encourage and pray for one another and to do ongoing equipping.  This could be weekly, bi-weekly or monthly.
  4. Help other local churches form their own Embassy Teams.
“The Great Commission is for every church in every culture in every generation.  There are no exclusions. But . . . every church in every culture in every generation must determine the way in which they respond to this responsibility -- in a way that is appropriate to time and context."​
                                                                                         -Doug Birdsall
Forming an Embassy Team is your opportunity to respond.

You can learn more about Embassy and sign up to volunteer at their website: https://www.crescentproject.org/embassy​
Share this article with your friends.
Stories About Embassy Encounters​
  • Coffee and Conversation
  • Simon's Story Part 1
  • Simon's Story Part 2
* This quote is from the Embassy homepage.
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Your 15 Second  Testimony

5/13/2019

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In John 4, Jesus talks with a Samaritan woman at well outside of her town.  During this interaction, the woman begins to suspect and even believe that Jesus might be the prophesied messiah.

Leaving her water jugs, she rushes back to her community where she proclaims, “Come see a man who told me everything I did. Could he be the messiah?”

We don’t know a lot about this woman, but the result of this simple statement is that the people of her villiage come out to see Jesus for themselves and many believed.  

Jesus spends two unplanned days with the townsfolk who end by saying, “We no longer believe just because of what you [the woman] said; now we have heard for ourselves, and we know that this man really is the Savior of the world.” [read the story here]

We have learned to use this story as a teaching tool at our E2E training events.  It answers a few questions to help us share the gospel:


  • Who do we share with?
  • What do we share? 
  • When should we share?

The woman goes back to her community; her friends and family and acquaintances.  This is her relational network.  And our own relation networks are who we can begin to share with and for whom we should be praying regularly [Read: Personal Prayer Strategy].

The woman shares two things.  The first is a one sentence summary of her story. The second is a question pointing to the gospel.  Those are two ways we see the good news shared in the New Testament: personal testimony and gospel presentation.  

These are what we can share.

And when does the woman begin to share?  After her seminary training? After her confirmation class or new members class?  No. The woman begins sharing immediately! She has discovered good news and she will not be stopped.

With today’s article we want to look at that middle question: What do we share?

We’ve previously written about a helpful tool for sharing the gospel called The Three Circles.  There are a lot of great gospel sharing tools, but this is one we train people to use at E2E  events.

We also train everyone how to share their story in 15 seconds.  This is just a smidge longer than the Samaritan woman’s testimony but the purpose is the same: to invite people to learn more about Jesus.  This is something we’ve learned from the No Place Left coalition.

We use the diagram below as a teaching tool to help shape our 15 second testimonies.  There is also a great training video that I’d encourage you to watch both to craft your own 15 second testimony but also to have as a tool to train others.

We aren't using the 15 second testimony to explain the fullness of the gospel.  We use it to open up spiritual conversations that give us a chance to hear someone’s story and to invite them to come and discover Jesus for themselves. 

[Read an example of how this was shared]
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Crafting Your 15 Second Testimony
  • Use the simple introduction, "There was a time in my life when . . . ."
  • Think of two words that describe your life before Christ.
  • Think of two words that describe what Christ did for you.
  • Think of two words to describe your life after Christ.
  • End with a question:  Do you have a story like that?

Watch the video below and allow Troy Cooper to train you to share your 15 Second Testimony.
Your Assignment
  1. Spend some time today crafting and practicing your 15 second testimony.  
  2. Share your 15 second testimony with five Christian friends before the day is over.  Ask for their feedback.  Have them help you make it as simple and understandable as possible.  Teach them to write their own 15 second testimony (2 Timothy 2:2).
  3. Pray for an opportunity to share your 15 second testimony with someone this week.  Pray through your prayer strategy list and see who God highlights for you to share with.
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Coffee and Conversation: The Great Commission is For EVERYONE

3/11/2019

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It was noon and I was meeting my new friend Musa* for an hour over my lunch break.  We’d decided to meet at our favorite coffee shops to connect.  I’d first met Musa when he had reached out looking for someone to practice his English with.  He’d had a lifetime of classroom instruction in his home of Cairo, Egypt* but had few native English speakers with whom he could practice.

The first time we met we covered the bases of getting to know one another.  Where are you from? What is your family like? What do you like to do in your free time?  The sounds of Arabic were all around him in the busy Cairo coffee shop where he sat.

I then asked Musa what he did for a living.  He is a young guy, in his early twenties and had just gotten started working as a mobile phone app developer.

Then he returned the favor and asked me what I do.  I’m in full time ministry so this is always an interesting question to answer.  But I dove in.

"I help people in churches in America understand and follow Jesus.  That is pretty broad but it involves teaching, training, coaching, encouraging and casting vision with leaders and regular people.  I'm not going to get rich, but I do find tremendous fulfillment in doing the things that I believe that God has made me to do. I bet that sounds a little crazy, but that's what I do and really it's who I am."

I could tell He didn’t completely understand what I was talking about so he asked a few more questions but then moved on, wondering if I’d been to Turkey.  He’d recently visited Istanbul and loved the city. I told him of our four and a half years living there and how much we loved the people we knew there.

We meandered in and out of topics and then he asked a serious question, “I hope to hear an emotional situation you have been through?”  

I thought for a few minutes and then told him about a recent struggle I’d been facing and about how our family had spent time praying for God’s wisdom and healing. It was good to be transparent with my new friend even though it felt a bit hard and I wasn’t sure he was following everything.  Musa’s English is good but he hasn’t had a lot of experience talking about personal topics.

When I was finished, I said, “What about you?  Have you been through any hard situations in life?”  

Musa was contemplating his answer when he looked at his watch. He gave me a wry smile.  “I’ll have to tell you next time. I’ve got to go now. But let’s make sure and meet again.”

As Musa left, I wondered about our conversation.  Had I said too much about what I do? Should have I asked more questions about his faith and beliefs?  Should I have offered to pray for him before he left? What if I had said something wrong?

I spent some time praying for our time together asking the Lord to use it for his glory and to reveal himself to Musa.

And then I removed my headphones and shut down Facebook Messenger on my laptop computer.  I got up from my seat in the corner of my coffee shop in South Dakota, grabbed my mug and headed up to the counter for a refill.  

Though we were half a world away, Musa and I had enjoyed a great cup of coffee and better conversation.

We continue to connect regularly, oftentimes just texting back and forth, sometimes hopping on a video chat to say a quick hello and at other times, setting aside an hour to grab a cup of coffee for an extended talk.  

To my surprise, Musa had quickly moved into questions of faith.  I’ve introduced him to Discovery Bible Study and we are slowly working through a creation to Christ story set.  We read a passage of scripture - I paste it into Messenger and he reads the Arabic and I read the English.  We then ask some simple questions to help us discover what the story says about God, about people and about how we should live our lives.  

It’s been slow because Musa often brings up his own questions - questions that are stretching me and forcing me to dig into my own faith and theology.  We started with his questions about the Christian idea of a triune God. We’re now pressing into the validity of the Bible.  And those conversations are packed in between talk of family and culture and food and movies and dreams for life.  

It’s a whole lot of fun.

I am the only true follower of Jesus that Musa knows.  I’ve been able to pray for him and continue to pray for him regularly.   Musa is one of many young guys that I am connecting with online all across the Muslim world and someday, I hope I will be able to meet all of them in person, if not in this life, then in the eternity of heaven.  That is my prayer for each of them.

There are 1.7 billion Muslims in the world today and collectively, Christians are sending one missionary into the Muslim world for every 405,000 Muslims.[1]  

This has to change.  

John Stott has said, “We must be global Christians with a global vision because our God is a global God.”

Because of advances in technology and the globalization of our world, millions of people throughout the Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, Animistic and un-religious worlds are working to learn English.  They are going online to try and find people with whom they can practice speaking.

A new door of missionary activity has opened and it is open to everyone who is a follower of Jesus and has an Internet connection.  Geography is no longer a barrier to your relationship with a Muslim like Musa.

C.T. Studd said, “If Jesus Christ be God and died for me, then no sacrifice can be too great for me to make for Him.”

Will you sacrifice an hour a week to invest in a relationship with a young man or woman in the Muslim world who is looking for friendship and someone to practice English with?

Let Us Help You
  • Embassy - A ministry of Crescent Project that will help you get started building relationships with Muslims online.  This is the place to get started!
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*For security, names and places have been changed.

1 - http://www.thetravelingteam.org/stats
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How Many Loaves Do You Have?

3/4/2019

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How Many Loaves Do You Have?

It is an interesting question that Jesus asks his disciples.  After all, they are standing amidst a crowd of 4,000 hungry people who have been with Jesus for three days and don’t have any food.  They find themselves in a remote place, far from any eating establishments or bakeries.

But Jesus has something he wants to accomplish and so he asks them, “How many loaves do you have?”  

It’s a familiar story, one of many similar stories recorded in the gospels.  Jesus takes what resources the disciples have, seven loaves and a few fish in this case, and miraculously multiplies it to feed the whole crowd, leaving seven basketfuls of leftovers for them to deal with when the day is done.
 
This story reflects an important principle in the kingdom of God.  The resources are in the harvest.

Think of the parable of the growing seed.  Where did the seed come from that the farmer was scattering in the empty field?  It came from last year’s harvest.

Think of Jesus giving his disciples the great commission.  One of his greatest Apostles was not there with Jesus to hear the commission.  He was still in the harvest. He was Saul but God would use him in mighty ways after he came to faith.

Jesus demonstrates this principle when he sends out the disciples.  In Luke 10 he sends the seventy two into every town and place where he was about to go.  First he instructs them to pray for more harvesters.

Where are those harvesters going to come from?  From the harvest!

Then he instructs them to find the house of peace and stay there. Don’t move around from house to house.  My thinking would say, “I’m the Christian. I have to be the one to tell everyone about Jesus.” It seems however that Jesus is asking me to take off my superman cape and realize that the one he will use is in the harvest.  So he instructs the disciples to stay.

Stay and invest in this household. They know the context of their village. They have the relationships. They will be the ones to plant the church in their home.

The Apostle Paul also sees the resources in the harvest.  He doesn’t take teams of twenty believers to plant an already functioning church.  He and a few of his guys enter a town, preach the gospel, invest in new believers and then leave.  He encourages them from afar through letters, sends back his young Timothys to equip and encourage and comes back for a visit to encourage and help appoint elders.  

Everyone in the churches that Paul plants come out of the harvest.

Dependence on our own giftings, calendars and resources always limits our vision of what God can do.  When we move into new or challenging contexts with the confidence that Jesus will provide all that is needed to see his Kingdom expand, we are able to enter into the God sized vision of making disciples among all nations.

And so we have to learn to look for the resources for completing the great commission out in the harvest.

Because who knows, your next church planter might be a crack dealer. 
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Your Personal Prayer Strategy

2/13/2019

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In John 4, Jesus and his disciples were walking toward Galilee and were passing through Samaria. Tired from the journey, Jesus sat down by a well while his disciples scooted off to a nearby town to pick up some food.  A Samaritan woman came to the well to draw water and Jesus spoke to her saying, “Will you give me a drink?”

There is all kinds of background and context to this exchange but in the course of the conversation between Jesus and this woman, she comes to realize that Jesus is someone very special, the long awaited Messiah.

Once she realizes this, she leaves her water jug where it is, hurries back to her town and says to the people there, “Come, see a man who told me everything I did. Could he be the Messiah?”

And the people respond. They come out to the well to meet Jesus for themselves where they eventually are lead to say, “We no longer believe just because of what you said; now we have heard for ourselves, and we know that this man really is the Savior of the world.”

Making disciples begins with telling others about the good news of Jesus; the gospel.  As we train people to make disciples, we find it helpful to answer a few simple questions to help people get started.

This story helps us answer the question of who. Who should we share with?
 

Who did the Samaritan woman share with? She went back to her town and shared with the people who knew her and by whom she was known.  There is a relationship already established. And this is the place where we are all called to start making disciples.

In Acts 17, the Apostle Paul is speaking at the Areopagus in Athens and he says, “From one man he made all the nations, that they should inhabit the whole earth; and he marked out their appointed times in history and the boundaries of their lands.”

Have you ever thought that you are where you are, that you have the neighbors and co-workers that you do because God appointed you to be their neighbor or co-worker or friend right where you are?  Paul continues by telling us why this is so: “God did this so that they would seek him and perhaps reach out for him and find him, though he is not far from any one of us.”

Like the Samaritan woman, we have neighbors, friends and acquaintances who need to hear about the the good news of the Kingdom of God.  

And it’s no mistake that you are in their lives!

God wants to use you to introduce them to Himself.


Action Step
Our lives are busy!  Too often we get going through our days and weeks and, without some intentional effort, we easily miss the opportunities that God is putting before us. I too often find myself with my head down and it’s go, go, go.  

At our E2E events one of the training strategies we use is to have everyone take five minutes to pray about their life and think about the people in their life.  We then have them make a list on a note card of everyone they can think of who they think is far from God. I’d like to challenge you to do this activity right now for yourself.  

Here are the four steps:
  1. Take a minute to pray and ask the Holy Spirit to bring to mind everyone you know who is not walking with Him, who is far from God.
  2. On a sheet of paper, note card or in a document on your phone, write down every name that the Spirit brings to mind.  
  3. Take a few minutes to pray about every person on that list right now.  Ask the Lord to remove the blinders of darkness, to soften their hearts and draw them to Himself.  Ask the Lord to use you to share His love with them.
  4. Make a plan.  Make a plan to pray over this list every day.  Some people set a daily alarm on their phone that goes off every day to remind them to pray.  Others post the list on their mirror at home or on their dashboard for their morning commute. Find what works best for you and determine to pray every day.  This is your prayer strategy.

If you can do this; if you can begin to pray daily, I can almost guarantee that God will begin using you.  You’ll find your friends suddenly asking questions about God. You’ll find that you are more readily transitioning to spiritual conversations and that you conversations are more fruitful than you would have imagined.  

God delights to answer these kinds of prayers for our lost friends and family members.

And then they won't believe just because of what we have said, but will believe because they have met the Lord Jesus!
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Zúme - It's Where You Can Begin

11/12/2018

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Zume is a small group training module focused on helping small bands of Jesus followers learn how to obey the great commission and to multiply.

And in that, it is not your average small group study.

Zume is an online training that has ten lessons of roughly two hours each.  
Zúme means yeast in Greek. In Matthew 13:33, Jesus is quoted as saying, "The Kingdom of Heaven is like a woman who took yeast and mixed it into a large amount of flour until it was all leavened." This illustrates how ordinary people, using ordinary resources, can have an extraordinary impact for the Kingdom of God. Zúme aims to equip and empower ordinary believers to saturate the globe with multiplying disciples in our generation.
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Zúme uses an online training platform to equip participants in basic disciple-making and simple church planting multiplication principles, processes, and practices.
A Few Details:

The Zume Website:   www.zumeproject.com


Cost: FREE

Time Commitment:  Ten 2 hour lessons plus the rest of your life.

Platorm: Small group format with online video lessons.

Workbook:  Printable PDF

Languages: English, Farsi, Hindi, Spanish, Thai
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Gather a group of like minded friends and get started today!
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What will they Hear?

10/22/2018

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Driving through Mcpherson, KS on my way back from an Everywhere to Everywhere training event in Wichita, I pulled into a gas station to fill up for the drive back to South Dakota.  Mcpherson is a small midwestern town of around 13,000 people with a small Christian college, a strong economy and a lot of churches.

But there behind the counter was an olive skinned man whose heavy accent belied the reality that he was not born in the U.S.  With curiosity and expectation I asked where he was from and he told me his homeland was India.  

I inquired further, "So if you are from India, you speak both English and Hindi, but you also probably speak a third language as well, is that right?"

Surprised by my interest, he smiled and said, "Yes, I also speak Gujarati."

While he was telling me this and ringing up the sale, I pulled out my smartphone and opened the Jesus Film App.  Clicking on the "map" tab, I showed him the map of the world that opened up on the screen.  Zooming in on India, I tapped the little red flag that opened up a list of over 200 languages that are spoken there.  

I pointed at what looked like the language he had mentioned and he said, "Yes, that is it. That’s my language."

Ten seconds later the Jesus Film began playing in his native tongue - a language spoken by nearly 57 million people.  The man smiled then and nodding his head happily said, "Yes! Yes, that is my language."


The Gujarati people are an unreached people group at less than 1% evangelical Christian.  And there he was right behind the counter selling me gasoline and a coke as we listened to the beginning of the Jesus film in his native language.

But then he caught me off guard as he asked me a question.  

"Are you a Christian?"

"Yes," I replied, "I am a follower of Jesus."  I was giddy with anticipation, thinking that this was one of those God prepared moments, that perhaps he'd had a dream of Jesus and was going to ask me to tell him how to become a Christian.

It was indeed a God prepared moment, but the the lesson was to be for me.

Reaching beneath the counter and pulling out a magazine, the man said, "Another Christian was here a few days ago and gave me this."  He held out the magazine for me to see.  

It was a pamphlet from the Jehovah's Witnesses.

​The least reached from the world are here.  They are immigrating to our cities and towns. They are coming to our universities.  They are looking for friendship and hope and truth and if we don't reach them, someone else will.

If it’s not the Jehovah’s Witnesses, it’ll be the Mormons or the American dream or secular humanism or radical jihadists or atheists.

Someone at some time will reach them.


The only question is who it will be and with what message.  Let us not neglect God's call to reach the nations locally, nationally and globally.  

We all have a role to play in God's global purpose.
100 Largest Unreached People Groups
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Something I Can Do

10/11/2018

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One of the beautiful things about our everywhere to everywhere world is the ability to learn from and be challenged by our brothers and sisters in Christ from around the globe.  One such couple serves in Thailand.  I read about their journey of prayer which lead to church planting in an article recently published at the Multiply website.
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​It is a powerful story of perseverance and prayer.
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We had been in Bang Chalong for months, and while we clearly felt God leading us to serve there, I often faced many feelings of inadequacy.

I had never planted a church before. In fact, I barely finished two years of Bible College! I don’t play guitar, so I couldn’t even use music as a way to draw people in. There were so many gifts that I lacked, so much that I could not do. Then God showed me that there was one thing that I could do. I learned this from the Book of Nehemiah. I saw that Nehemiah spent a lot of time in prayer before he ever built anything. I thought to myself, that’s something I can do! I can pray! So I began to do this.
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We would rise early, at four in the morning, so that we could stand on a high bridge and see everyone going off to their jobs. We prayed over each person that we saw. Then we would walk the streets of Bang Chalong, praying for opportunities to meet people, to build relationships and to share the Gospel.

>>>​ read the rest of the story here


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7 Smart Phone Apps for Reaching the Nations Among Us

10/4/2018

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As we head out into diverse neighborhoods in our city, we often run into new Americans, people who've just recently come to North America and who have yet to master the English language.  Like first generation immigrants from years past, they'll probably never master English, working rather to earn a living and give their children a chance at a better life than they had.  

As someone interested in sharing the good news of Jesus with these new neighbors, this poses an interesting challenge. 
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  • How do we communicate? 
  • How do we build relationship? 
  • How do we tell the story of Jesus?

Technology offers a way around this challenge.  There are some amazing apps that you can use to help  share the good news of Jesus with the nations among us.  These can be found by searching for the apps below on either your iPhone or Android phone.  

Here are seven smart phone apps for reaching the nations among us that we have found helpful.  As always, if you know of others, please share them in the comments below.

[READ ALL OF THE 7 SERIES BLOG POSTS]
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Google Translate

Google translate is getting crazy good at translating. It's not perfect and it is capable of making interesting and at times embarassing mistakes, but it is very helpful for communicating with those whose languages we haven't mastered yet.  

The "conversation" function allows you to simply set your phone in between you and your new friend and talk.  It picks up your English and quickly translates it audibly to most target languags.  Your friend responds and it translates to English.  No typing. No pushing buttons.  

Google translate is not perfect but it can be a useful tool to begin a conversation.  You can use it online here:  https://translate.google.com/
Bible.is

There are a lot of Bible apps out there and others are probably better than Bible.is for functionality and reading plans and other bells and whistles.  Bible.is has more languages available than any other app though and so it is a must have for anyone interested in diaspora ministry.  With over 1,400 languages available, the Bible.is app is helpful when beginning to build relationships with new friends whose native language is something other than English. 
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Bible.is has a number of features that are helpful.  If there is an audio version of the particular language, you can use it to listen to the language.  I know a friend who was doing a creation to Christ Bible study with a Somali family and he'd simply place his phone in a bowl on the table (for amplification) and play the chapter of the Bible they were exploring that week.  The family would listen in Somali and then they'd discuss the passage. 

Learn more here:  
http://www.bible.is/
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 Jesus Film Media

The Jesus Film has been used by the Lord for nearly 40 years and through it, millions of people all across the globe have come to faith in Christ.  Now the Jesus Film has found it's way onto your smart phones and the app is really pretty amazing.  

The Jesus Film has been translated into oveer 1,600 languages and by using the app's "Map" function, you can simply find the country your friend is from on the map of the world, click on the country pin and find the Jesus film in their language.  Push play and within seconds, they will hear their language being spoken as the Jesus film begins.  

Learn more here:  https://www.jesusfilm.org/
5 Fish

5 Fish is an app that has consolodated all the available audio and video gospel resources available for each language.  You can search by country name or language name.  When you find the language of your new friend, it will give you access to whatever resources are availble in that language.  

​A good way to explore the resources is to search for the resources in English.  This will allow you to listen in English first so you know what they are listening to.   5 Fish brings a lot of great resources (including the Jesus Film) into one place.

Learn more here:  ​https://5fish.mobi/
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God Tools

Devleloped by Cru, the God Tools app has six great "tools" for sharing the gospel.  The app allows you to search through the list of tools and select the ones you want to use.  You can find apps in parallel languages that allow you to see each page of the particular study in English and in the other language with the click of a button.  

One tool that will be helpful is called Honor Restored and it shares the gospel through the lens of honor and shame.  This app is simple to use and there are tools available in over 70 languages.

Learn more here:  ​https://godtoolsapp.com
M28 Global Discipleship

When beginning to engage new friends with the word of God when you don't know their language,  discovery Bible study (DBS) is a helpful way to go.  With DBS, you don't need to rely on your ability to explain concepts but rather focus on allowing the Word of God and the Holy Spirit to be the teacher.  

The M28 Global Discipleship app will help you facilitate a DBS with your new friends.  It will equip you to lead a DBS and walk you through the process.  Coupled with the Bible.is app and Google translate, anyone can lead a creation to Christ DBS even if you don't know how to say anything more than hello in your new friends language.

Learn more here:  http://www.m28global.org/
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Google Earth

​This may seem like a strange app to finish out our list with, but there is something special that happens when you open up Google Earth and find your friends home village on the map.  When you zoom into their neighborhood and perhaps even to their house -- well it's pretty special and a lot of fun.  

It also expresses a level of concern and shows that you want to really know about them and their story.  It allows you to enter into their story, to walk the streets of their home town, a place that they've left, probably for good.   And then it's interesting to show them the street that you grew up on.  

Learn more here:  https://www.google.com/earth/

We hope that these smart phone apps will help you out in the harvest among the nations.  If you know of other helpful apps, be sure and share them in the comments below.

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The Person of Peace

9/19/2018

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Every fourth Saturday of the month, a group of Jesus’ disciples gather in Sioux Falls South Dakota for what we call Sent Saturdays.  We spend some time training through Luke 10, do a little role play, pray together and then head out into the city to knock on doors, offering to pray for people.  After about an hour in the harvest, we return for a time of debrief.

We are not wanting to do door to door evangelism with Sent Saturdays.

​We are looking for persons of peace.  

At the heart of Jesus’ ministry was the conviction that, since the Father is Lord of the harvest, he will provide the workers.  God alone initiates the mission. So in each location the disciples’ assignment was to find the people that God had prepared. In this way Jesus laid the foundation for a missionary movement that would reach the world.”
                                                                                             --Steve Addison, What Jesus Started
A person of peace is a God prepared person.  Troy Cooper, in the video below, defines a person of peace as someone who:
  1. Receives the messenger
  2. Receives the message
  3. Receives the mission

The woman at the well (John 4), the demoniac (Mark 5), Zacchaeus (Luke 19), Cornelius (Acts 10), Lydia at the river’s bank and the Philippian jailer (Acts 16 ), Jason in Thessalonica (Acts 17) and Crispus the synagogue leader (Acts 18) are all examples of people in the Bible - persons of peace - who received the messenger, the message and the mission.

God had prepared them to encounter the gospel witness and when they did, they became the conduits of the good news in their families and communities.  They, not the apostles who shared with them, become the main vehicle for the spread of the gospel in their regions. 

The person of peace is not the only strategy that God uses to expand his kingdom in families, cities, nations and people groups but it was one strategy that we see Jesus training his disciples to use.

​Jesus Sends Out the Seventy-Two
After this the Lord appointed seventy-two others and sent them two by two ahead of him to every town and place where he was about to go.  He told them, “The harvest is plentiful, but the workers are few. Ask the Lord of the harvest, therefore, to send out workers into his harvest field.  Go! I am sending you out like lambs among wolves.  Do not take a purse or bag or sandals; and do not greet anyone on the road.

“When you enter a house, first say, ‘Peace to this house.’  If someone who promotes peace is there, your peace will rest on them; if not, it will return to you.  Stay there, eating and drinking whatever they give you, for the worker deserves his wages. Do not move around from house to house.
​

“When you enter a town and are welcomed, eat what is offered to you.  Heal the sick who are there and tell them, ‘The kingdom of God has come near to you.’  But when you enter a town and are not welcomed, go into its streets and say, ‘Even the dust of your town we wipe from our feet as a warning to you. Yet be sure of this: The kingdom of God has come near.’

                                                                                                      -Luke 10:1-11

Jesus sent the “seventy two others” out on mission.  These aren’t even his closest disciples but “others” who’ve been hanging around, learning, growing, observing.  And Jesus sends them out on mission.  They are to go into the villages of the region, sent as sheep among wolves. They’re not to take anything with them but rather to depend on the hospitality of strangers.  They are to find the peaceful person who will accept them and feed them and listen to them. They are to heal the sick and proclaim the kingdom. If they don’t find the peaceful person, they are instructed to brush the dust off their feet and leave.

Who does ministry this way?  . . .  Jesus does.

Think of it this way.  You may be the person of peace in your neighborhood, the person through whom God will work to introduce your friends and neighbors to the life of faith in Christ.  You know these people.  You have regular chances for interaction. You understand their culture, language and history.

But you probably won’t be the one to reach the apartment complex on the other side of town.  The harvesters are in the harvest. The person of peace living in that apartment complex, who knows the culture, language and history of those living there is better positioned to naturally share the good news of Jesus with everyone in the apartment complex.  

Jesus commands his disciples to pray for harvesters as they are going into the harvest.  Why? Because the harvesters are in the harvest. And so when we go into neighborhoods and apartment complexes and new communities, we are not looking to evangelize the whole area.  We are looking for the person of peace and, when we find them, we don’t leave. We invest there. We cast vision. We train them to be disciples of Jesus so that they can disciple their friends and neighbors.
​
This is the basic idea behind the idea of the person or house of peace.  Again, it’s not the only way that God works to expand his kingdom but it is an important principle that we see again and again in scripture.
​
I want to encourage you to explore this principle more. First, study Matthew 10:5-14 and Luke 10:1-11.  Read the book of Acts as well. Look for how and where the person of peace principle shows up. Take notes and ask what it would look like to apply the principle in your context.  

Next, take some time to look through the resources in the links below.  I’ve added approximate times to read or watch each.  In it all, be like the Bereans (Acts 17:10-12) and examine the scriptures to see if what we’re talking about here is true.

Learn it   -   Apply it   -   Share it   -   Today.

​RESOURCES FOR FURTHER LEARNING

The Person of Peace by Jerry Trousdale and Glenn Sunshine
(article -5 minutes)

Kingdom Kernels by Steve Smith and Nathan Shank
(article - 15 minutes)

Testimony of a person of peace at Movements
(article - 3 minutes)

Searching for a House of Peace in the U.K. at Movements Podcast
(podcast - 30 minutes)

House of Peace by Jeff Sundell
(youtube training - 12 minutes)

Four Fields of Kingdom Growth by Nathan and Kari Shank
(training manual - 2-3 weeks)

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