One of the greatest challenges when working internationally is the need to always be prepared and to think and plan ahead. If one just considers the fundraising and visa requirements usually associated with the sending of an individual or group overseas, one has enough reason to start working at least six months in advance. Of course, we are also challenged by an urgent crisis that will burst onto the scene and demand our attention.
So whether it is a manse that has burnt to the ground in Myanmar, a tsunami that has hit the Solomon Islands or something relatively simple like the need for a volunteer electrician to rewire a generator in Vanuatu, we never feel the work is done. And that is exactly where you come in. Without your support — be it through a financial gift or willingness to serve — we would not be able to achieve much at all. This edition of the Gazette features some of the challenges in greater depth. But here is a list of some of the others that may just entice you to be a Kiwi taking mission to the margins. Please contact us for more details.
As I write this, in my other life as the minister of St Andrew’s, Otahuhu, I am preparing for Pentecost Sunday. In Acts 2:36 we read how Peter explains to the crowd who had gathered that “God has made this Jesus, whom you crucified, both Lord and Christ”. Verse 37 says that when the people heard this they were “cut to the heart” and asked “what shall we do?” That is not question we need to ask. The list above alone shows there is plenty of choice when it comes to us doing and/or going in the name of Christ.
In Hope,
Andrew