Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Church Buildings


A building gives visibility, permanence and security to the believers.  We partner with local communities to construct a church building. Right now we are constructing buildings in Sagwa (Rajasthan), Pipalwada (Maharastra), Jodhpur (Rajasthan) and four other similar locations in Orissa and three in Gujarat.

The cost of building these varies based on the size and the distance from the nearest town.  On an average you need Rs 200,000 (app $5000) to help the believers finish the building.

When Women Lead


What happens when men and women begin to share equal responsibilities to see the church grow and go on?  This is not a debate that we conducted recently, but the realization that came to us as we witnessed persecuted churches coping with circumstances.

When pastors were being threatened for their life, if they entered the village to conduct services or pray for the sick, the women stepped in.  They took over services, they led the people who gathered for prayer and they were not afraid to tell the group what God had laid on their hearts. This happened several years ago.

But last month, when connected and premeditated incidents of persecution began to be unleashed on the believers, the women had to step in again.  This time, they were well prepared.  They had the Bible in their hands and in their hearts too.  They were ready to meet the needs of the people and also to approach the authorities for the needed protection.
“One look at these precious ladies, and you would think that they are too silent and too accommodating.  But their real strength was displayed when they began to pray.  There was no way that heaven would not entreat on behalf of their teary and passionate prayers”, observed a visitor the region.
On the cultural front, we are still coming to terms with women sharing equal status, but in the spiritual field, God is raising these women up to become ‘mighty women of valour”

“When I got saved, I was in a desperate situation.  My two children had died, my husband was an alcoholic and there was no income in the house” Ambu briefly narrated.  “Now that I am saved, I am happy, my husband is free from alcohol and we have bought a rickshaw on loan that is bringing us steady income.”  She continued while pointing her finger at her neighbours, “But it is important that they get saved, and I am praying regularly for their salvation.  I don’t want them to go through what I underwent, and I will make sure that I bring Jesus to them”  Now remember Ambu has known the Lord hardly for a year and it is  totally revolutionizing to her testimony and her desire to bring Jesus to others in her locality.

Leela is another hero. Three kids, one husband, no job, no place to stay and constant sickness in the house meant that she was always knocking the doors of doctors and those who would help her. Then she found Jesus and her life turned around.  He bought a push cart and also rented a small house in the slums.  God blessed them and the kids began to go to school.  She had two more children but God began to bless her abundantly.  They bought the shack where they were living and began to rebuild it by faith.  With no money but total faith, she completed her house! And recently two of her children aged 12 and 9 recited the entire epistle of Colossians on a Sunday morning.  God began to show her visions and dreams and all were coming true.  Then she started to pray for the sick and they began to be healed.  Her house now has become a centre for healing and help.

“I have received so much from the Lord and I don’t know how to thank him” she said to us recently, ‘so I have decided now to spend at least one hour in the prayer room in the church interceding for my community and the nations of the world.  I have a sense that it is going to be the best gift I can give to the Lord.”

Women indeed  are changing the spiritual scene in this country, becoming not just recipients of grace and compassion but becoming the very life that brings about a total and radical change in their homes, their families and in their communities.

Children Homes


'Let the children come to me', said Jesus.  That is our singular vision of giving children from difficult circumstances a life time opportunity to connect to the Way, the Truth and the Life. Every child that we care for, has the potential of becoming an agent of change in his village or town, maybe a role model for an entire generation.

“When I came to the home, I had only desire and that was to run away,” told Viram.  It took me three months to settle down and to actually enjoy all that was being done for me.”  Six years later, he had completed his studies and he wanted to do what had been done for him.  So he decided  to come to the Bible College.  After studying for two years, he decided to go back to Kotra to help with the work.  Today, he is the Warden of the same home, where he stayed.  He also is pastoring a church there and overseeing over 18 others who are serving God full time.

One of Viram’s four children is deaf.  “After two children, a son was born to us.  We were delighted but soon we realized that the baby was deaf.  We waited for over four years, thinking that it would go away.  But it stayed. We prayed but it did not change.  I believe that God has set a time for his healing and we are praying and waiting for that moment”  But this does not stop us from going ahead. I am working now to cover every single village in my area and bring Jesus to them in a culturally relevant manner”

Kotra is one of the places where we have a children’s home.  People like Viram make sure that the children that God has entrusted would become true children of God.  Please keep them in your prayers.

NMM has established homes in 16 locations and are caring for hundreds of needy children in these places.

Modern Livingstone


MUKESH D
Imagine going to a church service with a death sentence on your head.  Each time you leave the house for church, there is a death threat issued to you on the phone. You complain to the Police but they are helpless.  But you just cannot hide yourself in a hut when hundreds are about to congregate to worship in another hut, far from your house.  So what do you do?  You say a quick prayer for safety, bid your family good bye and tell them that you will meet them in the service and kick start your bike to reach the worship site. Your drive takes you through lanes that pass through dangerous sections of the town where all the people know you and all of them don’t like you.  You have an appointment to keep and an assignment to do and none can stop you, even death threatening calls.  Welcome to a regular worship day in the life of Pastor Mukesh D.

In his own words, “I heard about Jesus for the first time from my older sister.  She had been going to meetings and had seen the power of God.  When she took me there, for the first time I saw the power of God at work and there was no magician or blood flowing from animals sacrificed recently.  I was hooked.  I wanted to go the next week with her too.  Soon I was praying like everyone else.  Before I knew anything, I was doing what everyone was doing and getting all the blessing.   After I finished my studies, I wanted to know more about Jesus.  So I enrolled in the one year Filadelfia Bible Training programme, and since that there has been no turning back.”

He returned to his region to start work, but it was not that easy.  People would not trust him but he kept ploughing the ground.  One miracle led to the other and one family began to bring others to the meetings.  They were coming from far and soon it was getting impossible to reach all of them.  Then Mukesh began to conduct services on Tuesday, the open market day.  This was the day they would come to buy and sell their goods.  It was perfect.  Once the people had finished their dealings, they would come to the meetings.

The first hut was hired, then the second.  But they all had to be vacated to accommodate the number of people coming.  But with growth came persecution too.  Regular complaints against him were lodged and regular visits to the police station ensued.  The work and the threats have grown consistently.

The last time I met him, he was taking two men with him to go to the meeting, in spite of all that was happening.  That was three weeks ago.  When I spoke to him two days ago, it was again a similar situation.  He was not happy to receive all these threat calls, but as he said to me, ‘the only thing that you can do is pray for me and the people.  Please go ahead and do it and if I come back, I will give you a call.”

Hundreds of young men like him are facing heavy persecution right now.  Join us in praying for their safety and for the qualitative and quantitative growth of the churches in those areas.