Preaching in an Unreached Village
Two hours away, in a small village in the province Chaochoengsao, a woman has been praying for someone to share the gospel in her village. God told her He would send a team to her church, and that team would come to her village. But when she talked to her pastor, he said no one was coming.
In faith, she cleaned and prepared rooms for the team she knew God would send. Two weeks later, her pastor shared the good news with her -- a team from Madison, Wisconsin in the USA was coming and they would go to her village!
Last night, we hopped into two pickup trucks and drove to this small village. We set up the equipment and met the locals. They showed us their banana trees and gave us mangoes. We invited them to our drama. Just before dark, about 40-50 people came on bicycles and motorbikes.
After we performed our drama, I grabbed the microphone. "We want to tell you about the God who made this world and made each one of us," I said. "There are six billion people in the world, but He thinks about you every second and wants you to know Him."
We all shared from our personal testimonies, prayed for the sick, and split into small groups to chat with them. Afterward, the pastor told me that none of the people there that night had ever heard the gospel before! Only a couple of them had even heard the name of Jesus before that night.
Please pray as this church continues to minister here!
Thailand's Red Light District
by Mike, DTS Leader
Several from our team joined with YWAM-Bangkok's MST (Male Sex Tourist) ministry. This is a ministry to reach the men who come to Bangkok for the prostitutes. Outreaches to prostitutes have existed here for years, but unless the men who come for them are reached, the demand for women will always draw more into the business.
We spent several hours on the sidewalks on the very edge of the "Red Light District" talking with men going in and out of the area. We had significant conversations with men from the U.S., Germany, England, & Reunion (a French-Speaking Island).
I was shocked by the perspective some of these men had. They saw prostitution as good for the emotional wellbeing of men and financial wellbeing of the women.
When we asked them what their religion was, several said they were Christians. But when we questioned them further, we discovered they also believed in a mixture of other religions. The other men we met were either agnostic or atheist. We gave many of them a packet of information, including the personal testimonies of a former prostitute and a former male sex tourist, who are now both Christians. Please pray for this ministry!
Thai English-Language Camp
The morning sun beat down on the students and teachers at a Thai high school. It was the beginning of the daily assembly. Fifteen hundred students had just recited their Buddhist prayers. The head teacher invited their guests on stage, and Mike introduced his team to the assembly.
“We come from the University of the Nations, a university for students from every nation on earth,” Mike said through a translator. He surveyed the crowd of black-haired teenagers who sat cross-legged on the pavement before him.
“We’re from many cultures and languages, but we are all followers of Jesus Christ. Jesus came as a servant. We are here to serve you by teaching you English and befriending you.”
Mike is leading a young team of missionaries-in-training from YWAM Madison’s Discipleship Training School. For three days, they will share the gospel and their own personal testimonies of how Jesus has impacted their lives. For 150 of the students, they will host an English-language training camp. The students will practice pronunciation, learn basic conversation skills, experience American food, play sports, and listen to music. They’ll learn about the meaning of holidays—Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter. And they’ll learn about how God designed families.
The students are eager to learn! Those who are interested in learning more about Jesus will be connected with the local church.
What an opportunity in one of the least evangelized regions of Thailand!
Before leaving for Asia, the Field Ministry Team prayed about what their focus should be for those next six weeks. They knew they would do some practical health care (even giving hair cuts!), but they wanted to know more about the spiritual focus they should have.
"We felt like God wanted us to focus on the value of the individual," said Jen. "Then we met Sue*, a new believer."
When Sue was in college, she became pregnant. Her boyfriend immediately pressured her to have an abortion. But it didn't feel right to her. Through her struggles of deciding whether to keep her baby, she met Jesus. She knew in her heart that she should have the baby--but that decision cost her her boyfriend.
Sue, like many new Christians in her area, was discriminated against by her friends and family after choosing to follow Jesus. The last couple of years were shaky, but she remained faithful to her son and also to her God.
When the FMI team met Sue, they were learning more and more about God's attention and love for individual people. They wanted to show Sue that love.
"We spent time with Sue, praying for her, doing conversational
english, shopping, eating together and loving her son," Jen said. "She was so excited and
amazed that we would spend so much time with her. We soon realized that because she was an unwed mother, she
didn't have many friends and was looked down on. She ate up all of the love we gave her."
God not only taught Sue about his love for her but taught us about how he loves
each person individually, even in a nation with so many.
"It's easy to think that since we spent so much time with just one person, that our outreach was a waste. But that wasn't the case. God loves Sue and she needed to know that. In God's eyes, that wasn't a waste of time."
* named changed for privacy
Although the father still wants nothing to do with his son, and Sue's heart is still healing from the loss of the man she loved, she knows that God is with her and He loves her.
Kelly and Jewel, two YWAM Madison missionaries, spent two weeks in
Haiti. They are both part of the Mercy Ministries department in
Madison. Mercy Ministries focuses on practical ways to show God's love
to people.
In Jacmel, Haiti, they left for the beach six o'clock to
beat the sun there. For several days, they cleaned a beach near
city hall. This beach had become so polluted that no one would swim
there. Kelly said, "We've gone every morning this week to pick up
garbage and haven't even gotten half-way across the beach yet."
"We've been able to have great conversations just by being willing to
take on the sand flees, trash, sewage and water," said Jewel. 
One morning, a pastor from a nearby church stopped by. He was interested
in getting his congregation involved in the clean-up efforts. Kelly and
Jewel also prayed with the mayor of the city after one of our mornings
working on the beach.
Micheal, the leader of another YWAM-Madison outreach team in the area
also attracted interest when his group joined in cleaning the beach. A
DJ from a local radio station interviewed him and broadcast the
interview nation-wide. Michael talked about true freedom and how a
godly governement system would look. For his story, click here.
"Cleaning the beach is a hot and gruelling thing to do," says Jewel. "But God really used it."
by Michael, DTS Outreach Leader
Our team
has been serving the city of Jacmel, Haiti by cleaning the city beach -
it was covered with loads of garbage. On the third day of work, it
crossed my mind that the Press may show up to ask questions about the
foreigners doing this strange work. I began thinking through what I
would say.
A couple of
hours later I wasn't at all surprised to see a man walk up to me and
present a badge that said "PRESS." He wanted to discuss our work.
We
found a bench in the shade. Through a translater, the reporter asked me
questions about who we are and why we were cleaning the beach. He held
a recorder in his hand to capture the conversation.
 I knew
this interview was one of the times Jesus spoke of when He said, "Do
not be anxious how or what you should say, for it is given to you in
that hour what you should say." It went so smoothly with simple,
concrete images to explain difficult concepts. The interview turned
into an amazing opportunity to share about true freedom. To read about
our discussion, check out our team's blog, here.
At
the end of the interview, the journalist seemed very happy about our
conversation. "I'll air this here in Jacmel and then send it to Port au
Prince to air on national radio," he said.
A few days later, we
traveled an hour up a mountain road scouting out future ministry
opportunities. While in a village there, I found a man who spoke
Spanish. We talked for a while. I told him I was with the mission.
His response surprised me.
"Oh, you're with the group cleaning the beach. I heard you on the radio," he said.
He
had already heard the interview and had been thinking hard about the
message. He recounted much of it to me and told me how he sees that
Jacmel can change through Christ. I was blown away!
The team has been encouraged to see how God is using our simple
obedience--even in the simple task of cleaning the filthy beach -- to
bring hope and change to a nation.
I fought to hold back tears of sadness and frustration as the founder,
a pastor, gave me a tour of their modest 4 room building. Few of the
children had mattresses, many used only cardboard over wire bed frames.
The orphanage has no income or sponsorship, but relies completely on
God's provision. The pastor even said he had no money to buy food for
the children for the next day, but would go to town to buy it on credit
if necessary.
While hearing of the dire situation of the
orphanage I looked around at the children who were completely focused
on the business of playing games. They are not at all aware of the
struggle for provision, but are thrilled to receive the love and care
that they do.
As
our conversation ended a woman arrived with 2 boys, brothers age 12 and
7. She was their aunt. Her sister had died recently and the father, who
had 7 other children, could not provide for them all. She handed the
pastor the boys' birth certificates and asked him to take them.
He turned to me and explained that he had no choice but to take them in. "Who else will care for them?"
Shortly after, the woman left. The boys seemed very shy as they sat next to their new guardian.
I asked the older boy how he felt about coming to the orphanage.
"I am very happy," he said showing a smile.
Dumbfounded at his response, I finally realized what this boy's life must be like at home.
Next, I asked him what he had eaten that day (it was already evening).
"Rice," he replied.
"When is the last time you ate meat?" I asked. "I have never had meat," he replied.
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