Thursday, October 24, 2019

Ministry Spotlight: Harbour City Church - 10/24/2019

Ministry Spotlight:

Harbour City Church

Harbour City Church is the primary ministry of the MTW Sydney team. HCC's beginnings were in small groups starting in 2008; two years later, HCC began weekly public worship services in space rented by the hour in the heart of Sydney, with a view (if one was in just the right spot) of the famous opera house and the slightly less famous harbour bridge. As a young, growing church, there have been several moves into larger spaces, with the church now worshipping a bit farther out in the Sydney suburbs at a local community center.

Jim Jung is the original church planter and lead pastor. He and his wife, Claudia, started the Sydney MTW team in 2006, and have recruited a missionary team currently consisting of the Goodrich family from Texas, and two single men both hoping to arrive in Sydney in January (Kooi and Choi!). In addition to leading HCC, Jim oversees Student Outreach to the World (SOW -- to be spotlighted next month), City Sanctum (spotlighted last month), and is the MTW regional director for Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific Islands.

Harbour City Church is led by two MTW ordained pastors as well as several elders, mentored and trained at HCC. There are active ministries for men, women, and children, as well as mercy ministry, and the aforementioned Student Outreach to the World (university ministry) and City Sanctum.

HCC is a member of the Westminster Presbyterian denomination; the first church in the denomination was planted by American missionaries from World Presbyterian Mission, the predecessor of Mission to the World, in the 1970s. The denomination currently consists of just 15 churches, most of them in Perth in far western Australia.

In addition to my primary role with City Sanctum, I will have a role at HCC and in assisting Jim Jung in his leadership of the various local ministries and within the Pacific region.



Support Raising Update

God has provided for 84% of my monthly support!

The process of raising the additional support to serve in Sydney has sometimes been a step or two backward and a step or two forward as I've lost a little support here and there as a result of changing mission fields.

Support raising is a daunting task: working to make contacts, but waiting patiently on God to bring in the funds. A number of people and churches that have shown interest in partnering with me, but have not yet made that official. Committee decisions are often slow; please pray!

Due to excess one-time gifts over and beyond my one-time budget, these funds will be disbursed through my four-year term in Sydney. This is currently about $400 per month, leaving about $1,500 in needed monthly pledges. Additional one-time gifts will increase this reserve fund. Monthly or annual pledges get me to 100% funded more quickly.

If YOU would like to partner with me, you can make a pledge by any of the following methods:
If you have any questions, please email me. If you would like a hardcopy of my prayer card sent to you, please let me know. (You can tear off the bottom half of it to mail to MTW with a contribution and/or pledge as well.)

Thank you for your prayerful consideration!

Support Goals/Timeline:
  • 90% by the end of October; it's possible!
  • 100% by the end of November
  • Apply for resident visa in December
  • Depart for Sydney first week of January


Jackson, MS area Event!

If you are in the Jackson, MS area, you are invited to Cultivation Food Hall THIS SATURDAY, October 26, for lunch and a presentation about the new ministry in Sydney. This event is open to all friends, current supporters, and anyone interested in missions. Children are welcome and encouraged to attend!

The presentation will start at 12:30 pm. I suggest you come around 11:30 to noon in order to order lunch from one of several great vendors in the food hall, then bring your lunch to "The Living Room" event room.

I hope to see you there!



Calendar

October 26
• Jackson, MS event (see above for details)

October 27
• Ethnos: Prayer for the Nations meeting (event is at a private home in Jackson, MS area. Email me if you'd like info.)
• 6:00 pm

Nov. 26 - Dec. 3
• Thanksgiving with family in Washington state

December 8
• City Life Church
• St. Paul, MS
• 10 am worship



Prayer Points

Pray for the upcoming events on my calendar, that God will use them to bring additional partners, but also that God will use them to call others to serve overseas for the gospel.

Pray that God will provide 90% of my support by the end of October.

Pray whether God would have you be a financial partner with me in the gospel.

Pray for Harbour City Church:
• for Jim Jung as he leads the church, as well as his many other responsibilities;
• for the elders and various ministry leaders;
• for Westminster Presbyterian denomination, that they will be faithful to scripture, engaging in the culture, and effective in bringing many people into relationship with Jesus Christ.

Pray for my own preparation for ministry in Australia. I am reading several books on ministry and on Australian culture.













Friday, October 18, 2019

My Only Comfort In Life and in Death - 10/18/2019

This morning I learned of the death of a college classmate.  Celebrating their 30th anniversary, she and her husband were vacationing in Italy when the wife died in a tragic accident.  While students at Dordt College, I knew who she and her boyfriend -- and then husband -- were, but I really did not know them.  He was a basketball jock, and she was a musician, if I remember correctly.  Unfortunately I didn't hang out with athletes at all, and very little with many serious musicians.

On a very cold and snowy January this past year, I finally got to know this couple just a bit.  They are members of a supporting church in Sioux Falls, SD, and led the junior high/high school Sunday school class to which I had been invited to share about my ministry in Japan.  Harry is a very kind man, with a gentle spirit I hadn't expected.  He treated the students with patience and a little humor, despite how squirrelly these young teens may have been.  Dori was an exceptionally gracious woman.  It was soon apparent that she was not only highly knowledgeable of the Bible, but her gentle spirit reflected her love of Jesus Christ and of those around her.  Although my time with the class was brief, I regretted having such a limited circle of friends while in college.

My heart breaks for Harry and his children.  How utterly horrible to lose a loved one who is so full of love and life one moment, and then gone the next.  Her loss leaves a gaping hole in the hearts and lives of her family and her church.  How does a spouse, family, church, go on?

Death comes to each of us, sometimes much sooner than we expect.  It's so final;  so scary;  so unnatural -- but that's a blog for another time.  So I pose the question again:  how do we go on with life following the death of a loved one?

In the first letter from the Apostle Paul to the Christian church in the city of Thessalonica, he says to them, "But we do not want you to be uniformed, brothers, about those who are asleep, that you may not grieve as others do who have no hope.  For since we believe that Jesus died and rose again, so even, through Jesus, God will bring with him those who have fallen asleep" (1 Thessalonians 4:13-14).

Some Christians may say we shouldn't mourn the death of a saint;  after all, they are now with Jesus.  Considering that Jesus Christ himself mourned at the loss of his friend, Lazarus, these Christians could not be more wrong in their calloused attempt to comfort the mourning.  The verses above say that we should not mourn in the same way as those who have no hope.  We do mourn, but we mourn with hope.  And what is that hope?  That Jesus Christ himself died to take the punishment for sin that you and I deserve, but that he then defeated death, rising back to life so that we too may have life that never ends -- life with God in heaven, where there is no death, no pain, no tears.

Perhaps you too have lost people you love.  In the span of just 13 months, in 2015-2016, I lost both my dad and my sister;  I know the sting of death.  Perhaps especially those of you who have lost a spouse or a child can attest that you don't "get over" the death.  But if you know Jesus, and especially if your loved one loved Jesus, you also can attest that your mourning is not without hope.

If you do not feel the sense of hope that persists even through life's most difficult times, I plead with you to pray to God, to confess that you are a sinner in need of salvation, and to trust that what you could never accomplish on your own, God has already done for you.  If you want to ask questions, or seek guidance in any of this, please reach out to me or to another trusted Christian friend or pastor.

Life is hard.  But in Christ, there is a hope that does not disappoint.