Sunday, January 30, 2011

MY CALLING: Samplings from my Autobiography

MY CALLING, Part One: Samplings from my Autobiography

In these tidbits of my life’s story I will tell how the Lord called me to be a missionary.

When I was twelve years old, we moved to Mt. Carmel in the anthracite coal regions of Pennsylvania where my dad pastored the Mennonite Brethren in Christ Church. Incidentally, my grandfather (mother’s dad) had pastored there many years before.

In our church we would participate in round-robin missionary conferences for a whole week over two Sundays. Certain missionaries would circulate among these cooperating churches most evenings of the week. During that week we would take pledges for giving to missions. Our church always did very well with numbers of generous folk. We had owners of two dairies attending, bankers and other white collar workers as well as numbers of miners who of course were union workers. During Sunday School we had a “dollar stretch” in which each Sunday School class competed against each other to bring the most money for missions. The Sunday School Superintendent was a banker and arranged to bring dollar bills to exchange for higher denominations and change. These dollars were then pinned together with a straight pen. Each class brought their contribution which was then pinned to the others. These dollars were then “stretched” around the sanctuary with people holding up this chain of dollars stretching around.

My parents would entertain the missionaries in our home, not only during the missionary conference but whenever missionaries came throughout the year. Missions were an important emphasis. I well remember sitting with them around the dining room table and listening to them talk. I was fascinated with the displays of curios placed on tables in the church. God continued to deepen my heart for missions through this exposure to missions.

Our church participated in Mt. Carmel School District’s Release Time Classes for religious instruction. Kids would leave their schools one afternoon a week and walk to the church of their choice where they received religious instruction. I well remember it was through Release Time Classes that I memorized the Apostles’ Creed which we never recited in our church. Every summer my dad also led the two week long Vacation Bible School. Our church was filled with kids. When I became older I would help by teaching the younger children.

Continued in Part Two

Friday, January 28, 2011

My Life as a Child, PART TWO: Sampling from my Autobiography

My Life as a Child: PART TWO

My first testimony was given at the age of four in the Thursday evening Prayer Meeting in Graterford on August 10, 1939. My mother reported that I said, “Jesus loves me.” Prayer Meetings in Graterford and Harleysville left an indelible impression on me. A Class Leader led the service which consisted of singing, a devotional, testimonies, prayer requests and prayer. Testimonies were a vital part in which people shared answers to prayer, struggles in life and how God helped, or opportunities of witness with prayer request of salvation for the lost.

The time of prayer was quite different from what we are accustomed to today. We all got down on our knees in our pews and all began to pray out loud. For a stranger this might seem like confusion but it was simply the opportunity for everyone to vocalize their prayers. I conjecture that this practice developed from Great Awakening in the nineteenth century when a great outpouring of the Holy Spirit came upon the Church. On various occasions, both here in the States and in Africa, reports have been given of spontaneous eruption of audible prayers by everyone joined together in church. I well remember kneeling and praying audibly, loud enough so I could hear myself think surrounded by the din of the noise from everyone praying, yet soft enough so that no one else could hear my prayer.

In 1941 my mother during our Bible reading and prayer asked me whether I wanted to be saved from my sins and ask Jesus to come into my heart. Earlier on she must have broached the same question and had prayed with me. Probably I did not understand. So when I responded positively my father suggested that I do this in church Sunday evening. This could not have meant that he believed salvation could only be received in a church building because he himself was led to the Lord at his sister’s bedside in Lancaster County as a young man. More likely he wanted me to know what I was doing and have a memorable experience of this decision.

So on Sunday night in the Graterford Mennonite Brethren in Christ Church, February 2, 1941, I came forward to the altar along with another little girl at the end of the service to be saved . We knelt on the floor at a small wooden altar. My father first began to speak with the girl and pray with her. When he came to me he inquired whether I had prayed to receive Christ. I responded by saying I did not know what to do. So he explained the gospel to me once again and then invited me to pray in my own words, repenting of my sins and asking Jesus to save me. I can still remember that I prayed sincerely from my heart and believed that Jesus had truly saved me. From that time I have never had doubts about my salvation. During my teenage years in Mt. Carmel my mother inquired whether I had assurance of salvation or suffered from doubts. I had no doubts about my salvation and never did after that event at the age of five.

Like every little child I emulated my father. To me he was always “daddy,” even when I was in college. In fact, when I was in my twenties my mother suggested that I need not continue to call him “daddy,” but he always remained “daddy,” until later on I began to call him “dad.” As a small child I said, “Daddy is almost as strong as strong as Samson.” Naturally, I began to think of emulating him in what he did. At home I began to “preach” on the stairway landing in our house. As a small child I said, “Richard want to learn to play and sing for sick people when he get big like daddy.”

At the age of five I said, “If Jesus does not want me to be a missionary, I want to be a worker in a barn to make pretty things.” (My dad would do some carpentry for his hobby.) Throughout our years my parents always hosted the missionaries who came to visit our church. These included Mary and Bertha Miller, C.L. Miller, Harry and Thelma Stam, Lucile Rhinhardt – all serving in Africa – and many others. These missionaries at my tender age made an impression on me. Was there an alternative to being a missionary? My dad used to work in our barn behind our house to make various things out of wood, a trade that he had learned from his father. So I wanted to follow in my dad’s footsteps.

As I grew a bit older my dad would take me around on his visits to the various church members. I would help prepare for the summer Vacation Bible School which lasted two weeks. In 1930s and early 1940s flannelgraph lessons were the state of the art in communicating with children. My mind is not as retentive as many others so I do not remember any details of those Bible Schools. So it is especially significant that I remember one song we learned about missions. The first stanza began, “Pray, pray, pray. The Bible says to pray…” The remainder of that verse I do not remember. The second stanza began, “Give, give, give. The Bible says to give…” Once again, I do not remember the rest. But I do remember the full third stanza. “Go, go, go. The Bible says to “go” to every land that every man and boy and girl should know; that Jesus died on Calvary’s tree to bring to all salvation free. Oh who will go? Oh will you go?”

During my formative years in Graterford I remember nothing else concerning a missionary call. But without doubt the seeds of missions were planted in my heart as evidenced above.

Though I prayed to receive Christ in February 1941, I was not baptized until July 8, 1945, more than four years later. I believe my dad wanted me to understand what I was doing as a believer in Christ. If in fact that was his desire, his prayers were answered. I was baptized in the Perkiomen River by the Loux Bridge near Graterford where many of our church baptisms took place. But on this occasion I was the only one baptized. In just over three months we moved from Graterford to Newark, New Jersey.

Monday, January 24, 2011

My Life as a Child, PART ONE: Sampling from my Autobiography

Throughout my life I have tried to multiply all my efforts. I just finished writing a 480 page Autobiography which will never be published but I thought I would share a sampling of it with you.

MY LIFE AS A CHILD: PART ONE


Born on December 24, 1935, I was nurtured by a loving and devout mother and father who was the pastor in the Mennonite Brethren in Christ Church in eastern Pennsylvania, in the Pennsylvania Dutch (German) part of the State.

Church played a major role in my formative years and in the years to come. Since my dad pastored a circuit of churches (Graterford and Harleysville), we attended two worship services every Sunday. One church had Sunday School first which enabled my dad to lead the service and preach in one church, then drive to the next one and do the same. Sunday evenings we had church with the two churches joining together for that service. Every week we attended two prayer meetings.

I first attended worship service, both morning and evening in Graterford Mennonite Brethren in Christ Church, February 16, 1936, being less than two months old. On Sunday April 12, 1936, Presiding Elder H. B. Musselman dedicated me to the Lord in the Harleysville Church. For ten years my life revolved around these two churches.

Our Mennonite churches were plain with simple frosted windows and wooden painted benches. These were simple meeting houses for worship and not cathedrals with ornate and expensive murals, carvings, stained glass windows or solid oak carved benches with cushions.

Every quarter the Presiding Elder, H. B. Musselman, came to our church and led in the Communion service and the Washing of the Saints Feet, the only time we observed these ordinances. The circuit of churches would join together for those Sundays. These were ordinances, that is, commandments by our Lord to perform, not sacraments which imparted grace through the partaking. Our Mennonite view of these ordinances was a further step of reform away from the received Roman Catholic tradition and the Lutheran/Reformed tradition. We were Anabaptists.

Christ and the Gospel were central in our home. Not only did my parents teach me God’s Word and pray with me and teach me in family worship, they also brought gospel truths into every day conversation. God's love and grace were foremost. The imminent return of Christ must have been a prominent emphasis. Not only did I dream of his return and conclude that the bright, shiny jet stream I saw in the sky was the return of Christ, some of my earliest sayings reflect my thinking. At the age of three and a half years, I said, “If Jesus comes for me, then Richard can’t go to school and Richard wants to go to school and camp meeting.” I asked this question, Does Jesus have a red school house up there? How Jesus get down? On a step ladder? Jesus fall in grass.” “If Jesus take Richard up, then Richard does not know where mama is.”

Divine healing, though not central, was believed and practiced. My dad would take a vial of oil along on his visitation and anoint people with oil if they requested prayer with anointing with oil. This must have become part of my worldview. On Labor Day 1939 at the age of three I became sick. I told my mother, “Pray to Jesus to make me well.” I was then asked, “Will you be a good boy?” My response was, Yes, I think so, I hope so.”


On one occasion I had a persistent case of appendicitis which kept me home from school. I lay around with a sore abdomen and loss of appetite. Our doctor was not quick to decide on surgery. On one visit to the doctor, however, he decided that if I was not feeling better by the next morning I would need to go to the hospital for an appendectomy. That night my dad reportedly spent much of the night in prayer for my healing. He prayed until God gave him a sense that God had actually healed me. When he retired to bed he determined that he would not ask me in the morning how I felt for he believed that God had healed me. In the morning the first thing I said was, “I am hungry,” something I had not said for a long time. That marked the conclusion of illness. To this day I still have my appendix.


TO BE CONTINUED

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Secret of Success After Graduation, Part Three

Third and Last part of Series from my parting message to NIST Graduating Students, Nassa Theological College Graduating Students and Kapsabet Bible College Graduating Students  on the topic of how to succeed in ministry after graduation, based on I Timothy and amplified from Scott graduates whom I visited. All three parts of this series are important.

III. SET AN EXAMPLE FOR BELIEVERS I Tim. 4:12


1. Problem of age - youth not accepted.
By Western standards Timothy was not young. But the Greek idea of youth was very similar to Africa. Timothy was relatively young - in his early 30’s, possibly 35. But in a culture which highly respects age, 35 is still a young person. Timothy was relatively young when given the assignment to rule over the older ones.

2. How does one do it? He leads by example.
Actually, ALL church leaders are supposed to lead by example, and not by authority.
See I Pet. 5:2 Amplified Version: Speaking to the elders he says, “Tend the flock…not as arrogant, dictatorial and overbearing persons, domineering over those in your charge, but being examples - patterns and models of Christian living - to the flock, the congregation.”

3. An Example in what you are - a positive example I Tim. 4:12
Be an example in your speech and in your life - what you say and what you do.

One Scott graduate said there are three main reasons by people fail in ministry: Girls- Gold and Glory - Lust of the Flesh - Girls; Lust of the Eyes - gold; Pride of Life - glory.

“Be an example in Love, Faith, Purity” - take them in reverse order - Purity, Faith and Love. I suggest that these three virtues, Purity, Faith and Love are the solution to these three common character flaws. These positive characteristics are the solution to the 3 evils that destroy Christian leaders.

   a. Purity - a clean, pure life with no hint of immorality.
Not only to be pure before God but pure before men - no hint or rumour. Eph. 5:3 “But among you there must not even be a hint of sexual immorality.” We need to watch our relationships with the opposite sex.

Not only to be pure in body but pure in your thoughts. “Guard you heart, for it is the well spring of life.

   b. Faith - while purity and love deal with our relationships with others, Faith deals with our relationship with God. “Without faith it is impossible to please God.” Do you believe there is a God? that he saved you? That he called you into the ministry? Then can you trust God to provide for you and guide you? Faith in God will protect you from the temptation of covetousness, to steal money, misappropriate money.

ILLUSTRATION Billy Graham - God has helped him to live a life without any hint of scandal. Decision early in ministry: never to counsel women in private; never to receive salary from offerings.

   c. Love - We have so many tragic examples of leaders who struggle for power. They are proud and arrogant. The tragedy is that everyone else can see that you are proud but you cannot see it yourself.

If you truly love your neighbour as yourself, you will not be proud and self seeking. You will be devoted to one another in brotherly love. You will honour one another above yourselves.

One servant of God told me, “Training should not make you puffed up. One must not be aloof. You must mix with them. One pastor said, ‘You are a layman but I am educated.’ But he was a dictator. He got a Ph.D and thought the world was in his hand. But he failed. People said, ‘We don’t need him.’ He thought the country needed him. He was proud of his education. But he was pushed out of the church. He desired to divide the denomination. He didn’t respect anyone. He left the country and went to the United States. In the USA he pastored a church, but ended up marrying someone’s wife. He did not guard his heart.”

CONCLUSION: You can only set an example for believer if you train yourself to be godly.
You can only endure hardness and persevere if you train yourself to be godly.

You have learned in Bible College. Now the rest is up to you. You must persevere in ministry. Perseverance is the key. But you can only persevere if you KEEP ON TRAINING YOURSELF IN GODLINESS. Train yourself to be godly. This will enable you to endure hardship and persevere, and to set an example.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Secret of Success After Graduation

Continued lessons learned by graduates of Scott Theological College which I shared at several graduations. These are my thoughts in outline form:

II. ENDURE HARDSHIP II Tim. 2:3-7


1. Meaning of phrase:

i) The word means, literally, Suffer. From this Greek word we get the English word, pathos. There is deep feeling and emotion expressed here. As we grow older in life we all do suffer pain, grief and hardship.

ii) This word means to suffer and endure evils, like hardship, troubles and problems.

iii) This word was often used of hardships of military service.


2. Example of hardship endured by a) a soldier; b) an athlete, and c) a farmer
This includes deprivation of good food, suffering discomfort, living in constant danger.

3. Examples of hardship in the ministry.
a) Financial Struggles -
b) Opposition to New Ideas
c) Jealous Leaders -
d) Church Divisions -
e) Slander -

4. Suffer with me
Suffer with me. Paul the elder, Paul the mentor, exhorts his son, Timothy, suffer with me these hardships in life, endure them, persevere in them.

Three times in II Corinthians he describes the hardships he has endured.

II Cor. 6:4-5 “Rather, as servants of God, we commend ourselves in every way: in great endurance; in troubles, hardships and distresses; in beatings, imprisonments and riots; in hard work, sleepless nights and hunger.”

5. Secret of being able to endure hardship - keeping eye on the goal.
a) soldier - to please his master II Tim. 2:4
b) farmer - to receive the harvest II Tim. 2:6
c) athlete - to win the prize II Tim. 2:5

6. ILL. Jesus Christ - Heb. 12:1,2 “Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles, and let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us. Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfector of our faith who for the joy set before him endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.”

ILL. I know a young man and family called by God to be a missionary. A friend brought him and his family from his rural home to Nairobi and dropped him off in the city. He was told to find a place to stay that night and then find transportation to the bus by 7:00 A.M. for his destination on the mission field. He felt like giving up. He had a child to be carried, a small boy walking and lots of luggage. There was no transportation from the place he would stay that night. He felt like giving up. Then the question came to him. “Who called you to be a missionary? Did that man? He committed himself to obey the Lord and trust the Lord. He persevered and God provided the transportation in a miraculous way and he arrived safely.

Persevering during times of hardship is necessary for success in ministry.

To be Continued

Friday, January 7, 2011

Secret of Success After Graduation

One address I gave at several College and Seminary graduations is worth while sharing with you. It is based on I and II Timothy.

SECRET OF SUCCESS ATER GRADUATION, Part One

Introduction

For the past 38 years I have been involved I the training of men and women for Christian ministry, both here in Kenya and in the USA. So I have done a lot of reflecting on the secret of success in ministry. All those who graduated have been trained in the same way by the same teachers in the same educational programme. Many succeed in ministry after graduation but some do not. Why is this? What is the secret of success after graduation?

This morning I want to speak to you on the Secret of Success after graduation based on three commands of Paul given to Timothy in the Pastoral Epistles.

How can you succeed in the ministry when you face challenges?

1. Train yourself to be godly.

2. Endure hardship

3. Be an example


I. TRAIN YOURSELF TO BE GODLY I Tim. 4:7,8

1. “Godly” - what does it mean to be “godly”?
     I used to think that to be godly referred primarily to character. But character is not at the heart of the issue.

     The Greek verb means "to be reverent, respectful, devout"

     When this is directed to God, it means worship

     Godliness begins with an attitude of devotion to God. This devotion includes the fear of God, the love of God, and trust in God.

     Godliness is “a genuine reverence for God that governs one’s attitude towards every aspect of life.” Out of this attitude of devotion to God arises godly character. Arising out of this worship and reverence for God is godly character.

2. “Train yourself to be godly”

     a. In English we get our word, gymnasium, from this Greek word. The word, “to train,” was used in reference to training in sports. It is interesting that the root of this Greek word means naked. It ancient Greek the young men would train in with gymnastic exercises while they were naked. The Greeks loved sports and of course our Olympics began with the ancient Greeks.

     b. Training in sports requires real discipline.

    Illustration: One of our Scott graduates was a great athlete who was encouraged by a world champion who was his neighbour, to go out for professional athletics. When he trained to run he trained every day of the year. He practised for THREE hours and FORTY minutes EVERY day of the WHOLE YEAR. He ran for one hour in the morning, 40 minutes at 10:00 A.M. and 2 hours every night. It was painful. It required discipline.

3. How to train for godliness

    a. Some try to be godly through self discipline and self denial, like the monks.

    b. The secret of godliness is Jesus Christ. 3:16 This verse speaks of Jesus. Jesus is the revelation of godliness, the mystery or secret that has now been revealed. Jesus embodied all that it means to be godly. He was the God-Man who prayed, trusted in his Father, submitted to his Father’s will. His lips and his life reflected the glory of God.

      The secret of being godly is to know Jesus. Godliness is not derived through hard work and discipline. Godliness is derived through abiding in Jesus and Jesus in you.

      John 15:5 “I am the vine; you are the branches. If a man remains in me and I in him, he will bear much fruit.”

     c. The secret of godliness is a strong private life of prayer and Bible study.

        II Cor. 3:18 “And we, who with unveiled faces all behold as in a mirror the Lord’s glory, are being transformed into his likeness with ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit.”

    Illustration: Over the past year I have visited and interviewed over 95 graduates of Scott Theological College. As I interviewed them, it became very clear that the secret of their success was their strong private life, devoting themselves to prayer and Bible Study.

     d. This requires discipline and priority, especially when you are busy..

      I Cor. 9:24f “Do you not know that in a race all the runners run, but only one gets the prize? Run in such a way as to get the prize. Everyone who competes in the games goes into strict training. They do it to get a crown that will not last; but we do it to get a crown that will last forever. Therefore, I do not run like a man running aimlessly; I do not fight like a man beating the air. No, I beat my body and make it my slave so that after I have preached to others, I myself will not be disqualified for the prize.”

4. “Train yourself to be godly” - present imperative tense, meaning, keep on training, continue on training yourself. Timothy was training but he could not rest on past achievements. Neither can we. You have been training yourself in NIST. Continue on doing so. A real danger of growing lazy - stopping some of the disciplines you learned here at NIST.

5. Physical training has limited value 4:8 - honours, awards, money, fame, physical health.

    But spiritual training has value for this life and the life to come 4:8

    This life - benefits of godliness are great in this life

     Life to come - pleasing God and rewards in heaven.

TO BE CONTINUED