Banyo

Banyo

Monday, September 14, 2015

Ropes

William Carey has been called the “Father of Modern Missions.” In the late 1700's, he uprooted his family from England and went to India where after 40 years of service, he saw 212,000 copies of the Bible he had translated reach 300 million people in over 40 different Indian dialects.

There is another man integral to this great missionary story- Andrew Fuller. He held the ropes.

Before he left for India, Carey told a group of missions focused believers , “I will go down into the well, if you hold the ropes.” Fuller was among those believers. He raised funds, recruited more missionaries, and sent personal letters to Carey in India. He held the ropes.

When talking about missions John Piper put it this way, “You can be a goer, a sender, or disobedient. The Bible does not assume that everyone goes. But it does assume that ones who do not go care about goers and support goers and pray for goers and hold the rope of the goers." If you believe in Jesus, when it comes to “making disciples of all men,” you have three choices: go, send, or disobey. It is as simple and as difficult as that.


Josh and I have picked up one end of the rope. We have said we will go into “the well”. We will go down into the dark unknown where it is uncomfortable and risky, but we need you to hold the other end.

Literally we need you.

We need you to pick up the other end of the rope! We need your financial support. Missionaries need a lot more than a plane ticket. But still, they really do need that plane ticket, and health insurance, and other everyday tangible items that make life in a foreign country possible. As unglamorous as they are, these items add up. But we also need your money to purchase sheep for a sick woman so that she can have a source of income to buy her life sustaining medicines. Your money allows us to do missions and it fuels our mission.

We need you to keep holding on to that rope! Once we take the leap into the well, we need you to keep hold of us or we will fall. We need your prayers. This is not an easy alternative to giving money. This is not an “oh yeah I will pray for them someday, maybe, if I remember” kind of prayer. What we need is faithful, fervent prayers. We need you to pray for our safety. I mean really pray. Last term, we narrowly escaped a rebel attack! Daily we face malaria and other tropical diseases. We need you to pray for the people we come in contact with- for their health, their fight against poverty, and their spiritual needs. We need you to pray for our family that when we come back out of the well that we will be intact and none worse the wear. We have so many prayer needs. Ask us what they are- please.

We need you to cheer us on while we are hanging on to the rope. We need your encouragement. Living and ministering in a foreign land is not for the faint of heart. I have never been so tired as when we were in Africa. I felt like my body was always fighting off some bug, my mind hurt from constantly trying to translate the flow of foreign words around me, almost every moment was spent wrestling with how to meet the overwhelming needs around me, safety is always on our minds, and to boot there is the homesickness. We also want you to cheer with us when we are excited and experiencing the many joys God blesses us with with on the mission field. Watching a plump baby leave the hospital that was once hours away from dying of malnutrition is amazing. Celebrate God's awesomeness with us! An encouraging email- (or even better-snail mail) is joyous! Once Charlie went with me to the post office and she just happened to get a card with stickers in it. Every time we passed the post office after that, she talked about the time she got those stickers! Little gestures go a long way and are appreciated way more than we can express.

There is something taboo about asking for help, a sign of weakness I guess, and it is hard for me to “lay it all out in the open” in this blog post, but listen, I am not too proud to beg. I know from our experience last time in Africa that we really need you. Will you hold the ropes for us?

1 comment:

  1. [for some reason, I can't edit or correct my comments in this space... Let me cut and paste and try again]
    Yes! To all of this. Some family matters have had me distracted the last few weeks, but I'll be sending an email soon. Love to all of you, Miriam

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