Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Lutherans
inspire
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Going the Distance from Missouri to India Mission Society Grows into Valued Strategic Partner Going the Distance from Indiana to Papua New Guinea LCMS Snapshots Missouri Is on the Move!
Engaging the Church in the work of Witness and Mercy across the globe in our Life Together. LUTHERANS ENGAGE THE WORLD is published bi-monthly by The Lutheran ChurchMissouri Synod.
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2012 The Lutheran ChurchMissouri Synod. Reproduction for parish use does not require permission. Such reproductions, however, should credit LUTHERANS ENGAGE THE WORLD as a source. Print editions are sent to LCMS donors, rostered workers and missionaries. An online version is available (lcms.org/lutheransengage). To receive the print edition, we invite you to make a financial gift for LCMS global Witness and Mercy work. Unless otherwise noted, all photos are property of the LCMS.
1-888-THE-LCMS (843-5267) www.lcms.org
Unless otherwise indicated, all Scripture quotations are from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version (ESV), copyright 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
inform
engage
Thanks be to God! You are engaged!
In fact, the definition of those who receive the print version of this magazine is just that those who are active in international and national Witness, Mercy and Life Together work. Change is difficult to navigate. Our move to a single publication was decided for two reasons. First, as an engaged Lutheran, you deserve to see the total picture of all the LCMS does to vigorously makes known the love of Jesus in word and deed to make disciples of all nations. Second, it is our deep desire to take steps that result in more of every charitable dollar going out of the International Center to do the Lords work. This single publication helps do both. Lutherans Engage the World is more than a newsletter or magazine. It is intended to be an investor-relations publication, delivering awareness and accountability to our donors, rostered church workers and missionaries. You receive a print version because you choose to personally invest in the Lords mission. You generously give of your talent and treasure to carry out Witness, Mercy and Life Together work through the national and international efforts of The Lutheran ChurchMissouri Synod. We pray this and future issues of Lutherans Engage the World will, by weaving together the many stories that tell of our walking together in Christ, help you see how your engagement impacts people all over the world. As engaged Lutherans working alongside others, you are accomplishing much more than any of us could do if we worked alone. Thanks be to God for you! .
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Revitalizing Ministry in Rural America 10 Questions LCMS Disaster Response Walks the Long Road Sharing Poster Blessings by the Numbers Network Enables Missionaries to Be Fishers of Men
involve
+ Pray + Serve + Participate + Listen + Learn + Invest
executive director, mission advancement executive director, communications executive editor managing editor manager of design services staff writer designer designer
S TA F F Mark D. Hofman David L. Strand James H. Heine Pamela J. Nielsen Mark R. Bacon Megan K. Mertz Carolyn A. Niehoff Chrissy A. Thomas
Lutherans
ENGAGE the WORLD
Cover image: Papua New Guinea (PNG) tribesman at a baptism, circa 1970s; Images T to B: Lambert & Holt Line Ship carried missionaries to Argentina, circa 1905; Cart and driver, Sri Lanka (Ceylon), circa 1930s; Hospital staff, India, circa 1940s; Worship service, PNG, circa 1970s; Taxi carts, Sri Lanka, circa 1930s. Credit: Concordia Historical Institute
Members at the three churches have stepped up to lead evangelism programs, and new families have been attracted. Trinity, Hazen, has a Sunday school for the first time in nine years. Were not growing by leaps and bounds, but each year we hold new membership classes Trinity Lutheran Church, Hazen, N.D. and baptisms, RSTM helps Hartley said. eparated by more congregations become Rural and Small than 70 miles, aware of the changing Town Mission, located the North Dakota demographics around in Concordia, Mo., is a congregations them, and it provides ministry of the LCMS of St. John, McClusky; tools and ongoing Office of National Mission. leadership training St. John, Underwood; It started about 10 and Trinity, Hazen, have for pastors and lay years ago to address the formed a partnership leaders. The ministry unique challenges facing called the Highway 200 also emphasizes the rural and small-town Lutherans. Rev. Dean importance of working congregations, which Hartley leads all three in partnership and make up more than 50 congregations, with collaborating with percent of the churches the assistance of one districts and other in the Synod. Although lay minister and many congregations, said Rev. each congregation is dedicated members. Dr. Lee Hagan, interim These rural congregations different, many face director of the program. similar problems, such are finding new ways to In addition to its as shrinking populations, work together to survive, national conference aging congregations and thanks, in part, to LCMS earlier this month, lack of hope for the future. Rural and Small Town RSTM organizes events Mission (RSTM). Rural and Small Town Mission helped us to In 2012, Rural & Small Town look at the cultures [in Mission Held: our midst] and find our strengths, said Hartley. 15 webinars Now members who 11 Engaging Rural Communities Events thought their church was 2 events for seminary graduates heading dying are excited again. to rural and small-town settings This excitement produces real results. 1 national conference
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DEAN HARTLEY
>>
10 Questions
with Seminarian Eric Ekong
coaching basketball to becoming an elder and president of a congregation. He put all the maturation experiences in place, so here I am.
I was a Unix administrator. I worked in information technology for Verizon for 10 years.
by Megan K. Mertz
ric Ekong is currently a fourth-year student at Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, where he is preparing for the ministry and following in the footsteps of his father and grandfather. But Ekongs family tree is different from most. His grandfather, Jonathan Udo Ekong, founded The Lutheran Church of Nigeria in the 1930s and spent the latter half of his 101 years planting churches and schools throughout the country. Today, this LCMS partner church has more than 80,000 baptized members. Although he never met his famous grandfather, Eric Ekong knew that he also was called to the pastoral ministry. Ekong hails from Cleveland, Ohio, and he earned his undergraduate degree from Concordia University, Ann Arbor, Mich. He and his wife, Linda, have five children.
1. Can you
Im reading Pastoral Theology by Mueller, Church and Ministry by Walther and Symbolism in the Fourth Gospel. For the most part, I read seminary books because its all I have time for at this point.
Its a tossup between Is. 6:8, the send me verse, and Prov. 24:16. A man falls down seven times and gets back up. Its only by the grace of God that he can get back up and continue on. Its a reminder that God is always with us, empowering us, picking us up and guiding us down the right path.
10. Any
hobbies?
Playing basketball, video games and card games, and just hanging out with the community and getting to know people.
MARK R. BACON/LCMS
I dont have a fantastic story. I knew for some time that I would go. There were circumstances where God was preparing me for my true calling from being diagnosed with Lupus SLE to
Missouri to India
by Edward Naumann
T to B: Martin and Mrs. Wyneken following an elephant rage, circa 1950s; Missionary Lange with Indian vicar, circa 1950s; Rev. Theodore Naether and family, circa 1890s; Teacher Melm and High School Staff, circa 1900; Lutheran hospital staff, circa 1940s.
HISTORIC PHOTOS: CONCORDIA HISTORIC INSTITUTE
Distance from
from its earliest days, the Missouri Synod has been a church of missions. The first missions were to the native Indians of North America and to the immigrants of the New World. The first overseas missionaries of the Missouri Synod, however, went much farther away. India was their destination. They and many after them in the first part of the 20th century were sent there to proclaim the Gospel to the Indian people. Thanks be to God, today, as a result of their efforts more than 100,000 souls in India believe in Jesus. The fruits of the missionaries labors may now be seen in the India Evangelical Lutheran Church (IELC), an LCMS partner church since 1971. making a difference Earlier this year, I traveled with a group of classmates and professors from Concordia Theological Seminary in Fort Wayne to visit the IELC. We saw over and over again the visible signs of the long partnership between the LCMS and the IELC in the many churches, schools, hospitals, and institutions of mercy. (Editors note:
Going the
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see the International Grant Story on page 12.) Our LCMS contributions make a big difference in India, due in part to the fragile economy and because so many live in extreme poverty. The smallest gifts were most gratefully received, an incredibly moving experience for me when I remembered the luxuries of my own life. Particularly impressive is the Lutheran school system, with its large numbers of students and thus the massive potential it holds for bringing the Gospel to the people of India. The vast majority of students are Hindu, not Christian, and yet all of them get the opportunity to learn about Jesus and the Christian faith. Everywhere we went the Indian Lutherans honored and thanked us, not only for the work that the LCMS is involved in today, but also because of what was done in the past. The many missionaries sent to India over the years are well remembered. intense loyalty Each and every member of the IELC is thankful for the sacrifice of the missionaries, asserted Rev. J. Samuel, president of the IELC, as he recounted the story of Rev. Theodore Naether, the first LCMS missionary to India. Naether watched two of his children die before succumbing
India Missionaries Group circa 1940s (above); Rev. Dr. J. Samuel, President IELC (below left); Blind Student with Braille book (below right); IELC School for the Blind (below center).
I am here today [a Lutheran pastor and church president] because of the sacrifices of the missionaries.
Darin Storkson, LCMS director for Southern Asia and Oceania, explains that the people of the IELC are everywhere intensely aware of their heritage. The result is what he calls an intense loyalty towards the LCMS. The School for the Blind in Barugur is but one example. There is a prominent display of signs for Rev. Naumann Stage and Rev. Naumann Park, in memory of my own great-grandfathers cousin, Johannes Naumann, a missionary in the region from 1929-64. His daughter, Helen, now a resident of Fairibault, Minn., has fond memories of growing up in India. I miss the people there, she told me, They were always so good to us. future opportunities The Missouri Synod does not send missionaries to India any more, at least not to serve as pastors and evangelists, but Indian Lutherans very much want the relationship to continue. President Samuel expressed two hopes in particular. The first thing that we expect: prayer. The second thing is guidance. Guidance is very important. We believe that today the LCMS is our parent and we look to our parents for guidance. That guidance is exactly what the LCMS is most happy to supply. Storkson explains that
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himself to the plague, blessing and preaching to his flock until his last breath. I am here today
[a Lutheran pastor and church president] because of the sacrifices of the missionaries.
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EDWARD NAUMANN
We believe that today the LCMS is our parent, and we look to our parents for guidance.
plans are underway to foster a closer partnership specifically with Concordia Theological Seminary in Nagercoil, India, the sole training center for IELC pastors and the backbone of their mission efforts. The partnership includes scholarships for Indian seminarians to study at LCMS seminaries, and in the near future, the sending of LCMS theologians to teach in India as part of the Synods Global Seminary Initiative. All of this and more will help secure the close relationship that we
enjoyed in the past and lay the foundation for a long future of cooperation toward our common goal of preaching the Gospel to all nations. Finally, let us respond gladly to President Samuels request for prayer by asking our heavenly Father to remember His children in India.
Edward Naumann is a fourthyear student at Concordia Theological Seminary (CTS) in Fort Wayne. He and his wife, Monica, have three young children.
Members 114,600 Congregations: 764 Active Pastors: 210 Deaconesses: 18 Seminary: 1 Hospitals: 3 School of Nursing: 1 Schools: 85
India Facts
Religious Population Hindu 80.5% Muslim 13.4% Christian 2.3% Sikh 1.9% Other 1.8% Unspecified 0.1% Population: 1,205,073,612
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L to R: worship service at St Paul Lutheran Church, Ponvila, Kerala; Rev. Theodore Naether; Thali is a meal with many small dishes; children receive health care and educational assistance through an LCMS mercy program in Chennai.
astor, how long do we need to keep meeting with people in our neighborhood? Pastor, how much longer will the volunteers be coming? Pastor, havent we already done enough? These words, often spoken in the aftermath of a disaster, echo Peters: Lord, how often should I forgive my brother when he sins against me? Peter asked. Up to seven times? (Matt. 18:21). Peter wanted to know when forgiveness could end, when he could stop. Our response echoes Jesus: Just as My compassion and My Fathers compassion for you never ceases, neither should your love and mercy for others ever cease (paraphrase). LCMS Disaster Response takes the words of Jesus seriously. We believe that the Churchs work of providing mercy in this world should not cease until this earth itself does. Thats why the LCMS has been purposeful in coming alongside districts, congregations and partner
churches as they reach out to those who are suffering, those who know and remember the painful, deep wounds of a disaster. Thats also why, in the past 10 years, we have awarded 758 domestic and international disaster grants totaling $33,262,018. This assistance created opportunities for relief and recovery work following hurricanes, earthquakes tornados, floods and wildfires. And this is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to our work together as Synod! LCMS Disaster Response also trains districts and congregations on how to respond to disasters. Weve even constructed a new Rev. Glenn F. Merritt, director of LCMS Disaster Response, on scene program called Mercy following the severe storms that hit Henryville, Ind., in March 2012. in Action in which in a disaster and how to abandon them when the interested people in road is long. districts and congregations provide Christs mercy to their community, they are Christ came to us, took attend local training events willing, just as Christ was, on our flesh, bore our sin that encourage them while to walk along with those and still does to this day. caring for those in need. who are suffering and Thanks to Him, we in the With this training in to show them mercy, no Church can continue to hand, members are able matter how long it takes. share with Him in showing to provide lasting care to Following a disaster, mercy to this world from people who need it, for as care for our brothers and now until the day He long as they need it. When sisters in Christ and for returns. people know what to do those who still need to The Rev. Dr. Edward Grimenstein hear Christs life-giving (edward.grimenstein@lcms. Gospel may last weeks, org) was recently called to be 2002-2012 LCMS Disaster Response: the director of personnel for the months, even years. But 508 domestic disaster grants in 32 LCMS districts LCMS Office of International one thing is certain: The $20,758,288 Mission. He and his wife, Tevia, Church doesnt leave have six children. They are 250 international disaster grants in 59 countries people when times are members of Hope Lutheran $12,503,730 Church in St. Louis. tough. And we dont
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LCMS
>>
t was 17 years ago when Tim Heiney began serving as the first Lutheran missionary in Guinea, West Africa. He questioned if he could provide proper theological training while dealing with all the other problems, frustrations and opportunities that go along with mission work. But thanks be to God who, through the Jesus Is Lord Mission (JILM) society, ensured that Heiney didnt have long to fret. The LCMS soon opened the Lutheran Center for Theological Education (which uses the French acronym CLET) in Togo to train pastors for Lutheran church bodies in Frenchspeaking West African countries, including Guinea. Heiney calls JILMs crucial support of CLET a ministry lynchpin. For years, JILM has been supporting the CLET and its work in West Africa, said Heiney, now an area facilitator in that region with the LCMS Office of International Mission (OIM). Today, Guinea is one of 27 countries where JILM has helped share Christs love since the mission society began in 2002. Ten years later, the group has provided more than $1.6 million to support the work of its only partner
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JILM
SHARING
by Megan K. Mertz
ore than 4,100 families from the Minot, N.D., area lost their homes and possessions when the Souris River rose during the spring of 2011. Heavy rains caused flooding there and in many parts of the Midwest, forcing thousands of people to evacuate. Since then, the LCMS, through its Disaster Ministry, has given several grants to help sustain long-term recovery efforts. Initially, grant money helped congregations in Minot provide meals, gift cards and other financial assistance to help cover unmet needs of families affected by the flooding. In addition, almost $400,000 has been given to establish Hope Village, a volunteer-services center that coordinates the relief efforts of faith-based organizations. Before Hope Village opened, volunteer
$10,200,000
National Mission Budget
$3,648,328
Eurasia Budget
$2,253,111
Africa Budget
$4,334,696
$1,532,702
1950-1959
1840-1849
1890-1899
1895 India 1896 England
1910-1919
1911 Cuba 1913 China
1930-1939
1936 Nigeria 1937 Paraguay
1950 Hong Kong 1950 Lebanon 1951 Taiwan 1952 Venezuela 1956 Portugal 1958 El Salvador 1958 South Korea
1880-1889
1882 Denmark
1900-1909
1920-1929
1940-1949
1940 Mexico 1941 Panama 1943 Poland 1946 Philippines 1947 Guatemala 1948 Australia 1948 Japan 1948 Papua New Guinea
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3. Enhance Education
MaP indicates countries where the LCMS is currently working. TiMeline indicates countries where the LCMS has worked.
Partner Churches
For a complete listing of the partner churches of The Lutheran ChurchMissouri Synod, visit
lcms.org/partnerchurches
1990-1999
1970-1979
1972 Germany 1975 Eritrea 1978 Guam 1978 Liberia
1990 Czech Republic 1991 Hungary 1991 Ivory Coast 1991 Slovakia 1992 Russia 1993 Haiti 1993 Jamaica 1993 Kazakhstan 1993 Puerto Rico 1995 Indonesia 1995 Uganda 1995 Vietnam 1996 Benin
1996 Estonia 1996 Ethiopia 1996 Guinea 1996 Latvia 1996 Lithuania 1997 Angola 1998 Bolivia 1998 Kenya 1998 Kyrgyzstan 1999 Laos 1999 Myanmar 1999 Spain 1998 Sudan
2010-Present
2010 Cameroon 2010 Malawi 2010 Mali
1960-1969
1980-1989
1980 Togo 1982 Botswana 1982 South Africa 1983 Sierra Leone 1984 Congo (DRC) 1986 Thailand 1988 Macau 1989 Canada
2000-2009
2000 Burkina Faso 2001 Belarus 2001 Cambodia 2001 The Gambia 2002 Afghanistan 2002 Cayman Islands 2002 France 2002 Pakistan 2002 Tanzania 2004 Dominican Republic 2004 Georgia
2004 Mongolia 2005 Congo (ROC) 2005 Madagascar 2006 North Korea 2007 Mozambique 2007 Senegal 2008 Burundi 2008 Peru 2008 Turkey 2009 Zambia
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by Megan K. Mertz
RECIPIENT: India Evangelical early eight years after the devastating Lutheran Church Indian Ocean tsunami AMOUNT: $659,212 claimed some 283,000 RESULT: Child and family lives and countless livelihoods, development center LCMS Disaster Response is still bearing mercy, providing aid and projects and changing lives, all the while pointing people to the One who can save lives for eternity. The grant will fund the The Synods disaster arm has development of a child-care center provided $659,212 for a five-year in a village in southern India, grant that will wrap up in 2017, where the tsunami destroyed the nearly 13 years after the 2004 cultivated land. The program, tsunami. The grant allows the with the help of the newly India Evangelical Lutheran Church planted Lutheran church and the (IELC), a partner church of the community, will reach 100 families LCMS, to operate two programs by providing education, food and to provide for the physical and health care. The program will spiritual needs of the children and also train mothers in hygiene and families in the most devastated job skills, such as pickle making, areas. This grant is one of many tailoring and embroidery. made possible by the generous The grant will also continue to donations of members of the LCMS, provide the operating costs for who gave $5,776,942 to the Indian a child-care project among the Ocean Tsunami Relief. Irula people that began in 2008.
Women in tsunami-affected areas receive skills training and sewing machines so that they can help support their families.
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before rev. jeffrey Horn accepted the call to serve as an LCMS career missionary in Papua New Guinea, he considered the challenges: z leaving the parish ministry and a beloved flock after 15 years. z ensuring that his wife, Lora, also wanted to make the dramatic leap from their Garrett, Ind., parish Zion Lutheran to a remote mission field with a new culture and more than 900 spoken languages. z asking the couples children to say goodbye to friends, grandparents, pets and snow. But even as Horn, 42, weighed the hurdles, he says a pressing need weighed on his heart. The need in Papua New Guinea is strong, he said. Their system for training pastors has broken down in many ways, and if . . . they dont find a way to get that going again, they wont have pastors to help the
churches; the churches then will struggle, and lots of the people who came to faith in the last 20 to 40 years might not have that faith preached to them. longtime desire Since his childhood in Los Angeles, Horn has longed to serve as a pastor and a missionary. He remembers hearing a sermon when he was around age 6 about the need to reach all people with the Gospel. He felt the pastor was speaking directly to him. Growing up with an international mix of friends fueled his desire to be a missionary, Horn says, making him a person who enjoys other cultures and people from all over the world. But when he graduated from Concordia Theological Seminary
The LCMS began work in Papua New Guinea in 1948, at the invitation of a Wauni tribal leader in2012 NovemberDecember Yaramanda, Enga Province lcms.org/LUTHERANSengage
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Above (R to L) Rev. Dr. Timothy C.J. Quill, LCMS director seminary education, and Rev. John Mehl, LCMS regional director for Asia Pacific, with a leader in the Gutnius Lutheran Church. Above right: two members of the Gutnius Lutheran Church.
(CTS) in Fort Wayne, he and Lora decided the parish provided a better fit. He loved serving in the parish, Horn says, but conversations about Papua New Guinea with Rev. Dr. Timothy C.J. Quill, director of LCMS Theological Education, and Rev. Dr. John L. Mehl, LCMS regional director, Asia Pacific, reignited a longsimmering aspiration. Lora was not surprised when
Film-reel photos (T-B) circa 1970s people gather for a worship service; 1978 patients waiting to enter a Lutheran hospital; 1978 native workers with nursemissionaries Denman and Kremeyer and Dr. Klomhaus. Rev. Ron Rall, pastor, Timothy Lutheran Church, St. Louis, Mo. and former missionary to Papua New Guinea.
HISTORIC PHOTOS: CONCORDIA HISTORICAL INSTITUTE ALL OTHER PHOTOS: LCMS
her husband expressed interest in Papua New Guinea. Even when the couple was dating, she knew Horn wanted to serve as a missionary. Likewise, she felt a pull toward the mission field. Its the ability to meet my brothers and sisters in Christ across the world, Lora said. Its giving that experience to my children, too, that I think is important. hen their parents first told Chris, 15, and Maggie, 10, about the call, the siblings understandably needed time to adjust. Im excited about it, but Ive been in Indiana all my life, so its a bit hard to leave, said Maggie, who accompanied her parents at the missionary orientation this summer at the LCMS International Center in St. Louis. Maggie said she knows Papua New Guinea is a tropical country near the equator. Thats so-so, she said, because I like
playing in the snow. Her greatest uncertainty is leaving behind the familys dog and two cats. (Papua New Guinea has restrictions about pets entering the country, Horn said.) Jeff Horn understands that the familys move, scheduled for May, poses a huge transition for the children. Maggie and Chris have shown a lot of courage, he said. It hasnt necessarily been easy for them, but they have adjusted very well and have taken up saying, If this is what our family is going to do, then lets do the best we can. new opportunities A resurgence of a false teaching called the spirit movement looms in the Enga province, the home of many congregations of the Gutnius (Good News) Lutheran Church (GLC), an LCMS partner church. The Gutnius Lutheran Church leaders understand that if they do not raise the theological
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Rev. Jeffrey and Lora Horn with their two children, Maggie and Chris
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level of their clergy, the church is in danger of losing her Lutheran identity and will cease to exist that is, it will be Lutheran in name only, Quill said. Horns combination of extensive experience as a parish pastor along with ongoing theological studies have prepared him well for this missionary position, Quill added, noting that Horn completed a masters in sacred theology at CTS. The new missionarys call is to train and support GLC pastors, teaching at Timothy Seminary and traveling to villages to provide continuing education. Rev. Horn will have the opportunity as a seminary professor to teach what he has done. He will be able to bring real examples into the classroom, Mehl said. As Horn learned more about LCMS work that began in 1948 in Papua New Guinea, he was amazed by the courage and persistence of pioneering missionaries who went into the
mountains and jungle to be among the tribes and bring the Gospel at the invitation of the Enga people. The missionaries worked and worked for nine years to prepare the Enga for the first group baptism, Horn said of the Rev. Otto Hintze and the Rev. Willard Burce, the first LCMS missionaries to reach out to the Enga,
a primitive people who still used stone axes and whose only religion was a cult of the dead. On a single day in 1957, the missionaries baptized 79 men, women and children; a second group baptism followed, of 298 people, both milestones in the life of the GLC. The church now operates health centers and schools and has grown to a baptized membership of more than 54,000 in some 550 congregations. Horn bid farewell to Zion Lutheran Church in July in order to prepare for the mission field. Zion congregants were sorry to lose their pastor but supported his desire to serve in the mission field. I think they really have helped train me to go, Horn said of the Zion congregation.
god will provide Along with learning the Pidgin language, Horn is working to raise financial gifts to help support the family while they serve in Papua New Guinea. (See story below.) Horn says he and Lora feel comfortable knowing God will provide. At the same time, they understand that a lot of hard work is needed from a missionary couple even before they leave home. If it comes down to a choice between saying theres no money [to support a missionary family in Papua New Guinea] and staying home, wed rather be out raising the funds, Horn said.
Kim Plummer Krull is a freelance writer and member of St. Pauls Lutheran Church in Des Peres, Mo.
ven longtime LCMS members may be surprised to learn that part of an LCMS missionarys work involves fundraising. Before Rev. Jeffrey Horn heads to Papua New Guinea this spring, he must raise $164,000 a sizable chunk of the ever-growing cost to support a missionary family in the field. While Horn calls the figure somewhat intimidating, he also views it as a very effective investment in the life of the church. Hes spending a lot of time these days visiting
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oon, 29 new LCMS missionaries will venture out onto mission fields across the globe. Standing behind them is a network of support designed to go the distance in meeting each missionarys needs so that nothing impedes the proclamation of the Gospel. Why does the LCMS rely on this network?
From our earliest days, a portion of the offering dollars and donations to the Synod was budgeted to cover missionary expenses. Key groups like the Lutheran Womens Missionary League and the Lutheran Laymens League eagerly provided additional funds for mission work. Missionaries home on furlough visited congregations, made presentations and encouraged missionfocused gifts for the Synod. Individuals, congregations, church groups and various Lutheran organizations have always provided a network of support for LCMS mission efforts.
individuals, congregations and groups to share the story of their work and encourage people to engage in that work with their prayers and financial gifts. Their message is Help our Synod send me to share Christ with the world. Once deployed, our missionaries stay connected with their support network through regular communication. Then, every two years, a missionary comes home for an extended period
supplied by individuals, congregations, and strategic partners. These gifts are received by the Synod and credited to the individual missionarys account and are used only to cover the missionarys salary, benefits and living expenses.
The LCMS set aside $13.3 million in its 2013 annual budget for mission work, most of it funded by designated gifts. These
officers in each of five world regions along with funds for program and projects. This $13.3 million is provided to the LCMS by individuals, congregations, districts and other groups who desire to walk and work together as a Synod in our global witness and mercy efforts. I know from my own familys history and from seeing this work firsthand, it
Individuals Congregrations
[Mission [Together-inSenders] Mission) [Mission Central, Iowa]
Salaries, Benefits, Living Expenses Logistics, Resources, Communications, Fundraising
(Districts/ Foundations)
Strategic Partners
B Projects, Program
of time that includes vacation, reconnecting with family and touching base in person with their network supporters. By Gods grace, they also connect with new individuals and groups who join this important network of support. What is the result?
This year, $6.2 million in donations will directly support individual LCMS missionaries as a result of their personal fundraising. Offerings are
dollars fund the logistics, planning and resources for the recruitment, training and launching of missionaries onto the field. A dedicated team back home at the LCMS International Center supports our missionaries with strategic guidance, communication and fundraising assistance along with logistical aid including dealing with foreign governments and, at times, personal security issues. Synod budget dollars also cover senior directors and business
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takes a Synod, says Mark Hofman, executive director of Mission Advancement, as he describes the benefit and need for a broad, strong network of support for LCMS mission work. Reflecting on the reasons for forming the Synod in 1847, Hofman says, We came together to do what no single congregation or individual could accomplish alone. Together, we share Christ with the world.
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= $19.5 Million
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#LCMS|SNAPSHOTS
Rev. Peter Bender sings the National Anthem at Chicagos Wrigley Field before a Cubs-Astros game. Bender was given this opportunity after returning the ball from a players first home run earlier in the season. He has served as the pastor of Peace Lutheran Church, Sussex, Wis., for 21 years. The Rev. Nelson Rodriguez (center front) was ordained into the pastoral ministry on the same day his wife, Perla Gil de Rodriguez, was commissioned as a deaconess. The two serve Comunidad de Gracia Lutheran Church, an urban church plant in Houston, Texas.
Students use American Sign Language to interpret portions of the liturgy during the Church Interpreter Training Institute (CITI). CITI is a two-week program held on the campus of Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne, that equips students to share the Gospel with the deaf.
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A team member from Messiah Lutheran Church, Lakeville, Minn., helps a woman fit new glasses during a short-term mission trip to Guinea, West Africa. The team of eight held eyeglass clinics through Mission Opportunities Short Term (MOST Ministries) and gave out nearly 600 pairs of glasses during their trip.
Murell Sanders (center) describes Fuzzy Friends for Haiti, the mission project of the Vacation Bible School at Christ the King Lutheran Church in Memphis, Tenn. This organization, which was started in 2010 by Meredith Johnson (left), collects stuffed animals for children in Haiti. During the last three years, 3,235 toys have been collected.
Patti Anderson and Susan Hawthorne fill bowls with food for Haitian children with special needs. The two women were part of an 11-person team from Iowa District West that traveled to Haiti to share Gods love through Vacation Bible School and other activities.
Rev. Shauen Trump, LCMS missionary to Kenya and Tanzania, preaches at a worship service in Uganda. Shauen and his wife, Krista, have served in Africa since 2008. They have two sons.
Rev. Clarence Pannier, 90, of Davenport, Iowa a 1962 graduate of Concordia Theological Seminary, Springfield, Ill. has gone the distance, leading a breakfast Bible study each week for 30 years in a local restaurant.
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Involve
PRAY:
Lord God, You have called Your servants to ventures of which we cannot see the ending, by paths as yet untrodden, through perils unknown. Give us faith to go out with good courage, not knowing where we go but only that Your hand is leading us and Your love supporting us; through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen Pray for Us monthly prayer calendar: www.lcms.org/ prayforus z Missionary Prayer Cards: www.lcms.org/ prayercards
INVEST:
OUR FINANCIAL GIFT is an investment in the global mission and mercy work of The Lutheran ChurchMissouri Synod. To make a gift, please use the enclosed envelope, contact mission. advancement@lcms.org or call 800-248-1930.
SERVE:
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New magazine
August 2012
to debut in September
Districts
report on conventions
Czech Lutheran,
LCMS leaders sign agreement
reporter.lcms.org
augusT 2012
LCMS First Vice-President Rev. Dr. Herbert C. Mueller Jr. congratulates deaconess student Rachel Powell during the July 6 sending service for new missionaries at the Synods International Center in St. Louis. Powell, a student at Concordia University Chicago, will be serving her internship as a missionary in Lima, Peru.
missionaries; the others, as GEO (Globally Engaged in Outreach) missionaries, serving one- to twoyear terms. The latter group includes two deaconess students who will be serving internships on the mission field. Rachel Powell, a 22-year-old from Concordia University Chicago, will serve in Lima, Peru, and Katie
By Joe Isenhower Jr. GREENSBORO, N.C. Participants in the 2012 Black Ministry Family Convocation here July 11-15 heard plans for a new association of congregations and individuals in black ministry to stay connected and remain as a driving force in the Synods mission and ministry. This convocation sponsored by the LCMS Southeastern District Coalition of Lutherans in Black Ministry and drawing some 225 registrants was the first one since restructuring resolutions adopted at the 2010 Synod convention led to elimination of the Synods Board for Black Ministry Services (BBMS). Previously, that board planned and sponsored the biennial convocations, which would continue with the new association. Sing to the Lord a New Song (from Psalm 96:1) was the theme as convocation-goers gathered at North Carolina A&T State University for worship, Bible study and hymn singing, presentations by speakers including Synod President Rev. Dr. Matthew C. Harrison, interest centers, meals and other fellowship opportunities. The A&T campus holds
< lcms.org
Ziegler, 27, who attends Concordia Theological Seminary in Fort Wayne, Ind., is headed to Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. Both will serve human-care ministries caring for the physical and spiritual needs of the poor and both say God opened doors for them to serve as overseas missionaries.
Care and Compassion Teams Complete human-care projects experience life in remote areas work sideby-side with locals. Average trip cost $2,500-$3,000 per person + project costs. Teams needed year-round more in the spring. Teaching Teams Host youth camps teach the faith to young people teach specific skills (English, music, etc.) Average trip cost: $2500 per person. Teams needed year-round more in the summer. Contact Jennifer Prophete: 314-996-1311 or Jennifer. Prophete@lcms.org. The LCMS is accepting applications for ALL missionary service! Opportunities exist for 1-2 weeks, 2 months, 1 year or career missionary service. For more information: www.lcms.org/service. Questions? Contact mission. recruitment@lcms.org or 800-THE LCMS (843-5267).
National Association of Lutheran Mission Agencies Conference Jan. 31Feb. 1, 2013 St. Louis, Mo. www.almanetwork.org 314-780-3553 Contemplate For those college age or older considering church work; March 79, 2013
2013 Mercy Medical Teams Medical professionals/ students service abroad clinical and health-related settings. Primary Care Clinical Teams (PCC): Clinical experience pharmacists, physical therapists, general volunteers and ordained LCMS pastors are needed. Community Health Education Teams (CHE): Health or medical educators public health educators ordained LCMS pastors are needed. Madagascar, March 1424 (PCC) Kyrgyzstan, April 1121 (CHE) Haiti, May 1019 (PCC) Kenya, July 1121 (PCC) Madagascar, Aug. 111 (PCC) Peru, Oct. (CHE) Kenya, Nov. 717 (PCC) Learn more: www.lcms.org/mercyteams Contact: Jacob.Fiene@lcms.org or 800-248-1930 ext. 1278.
where it has never been before. n the Rev. Gregory K. Williamson, the Synods chief mission officer. Williamson spoke about the Synods mission statement, its Witness, Mercy, Life Together values, its mission priorities, and its vision (with goals of being globally integrated, culturally focused and seamlessly unified). n the Rev. James McDaniels, pastor of St. Luke Lutheran Church, High Point, N.C., who was instrumental in planning and making the convocation a reality, along with his wife, Janis. n the Rev. Dr. Victor Belton, pastor of Peace Lutheran Church, Decatur, Ga., and a member of the Synod Board of Directors. n Nikki Rochester, chair of the Southeastern District Coalition of Lutherans in Black Ministry. She (See Black convocation, Page 4)
Members from several congregations sing in a choir for the opening Communion service of the 2012 Black Ministry Family Convocation, July 11-15 in Greensboro, N.C. Sing to the Lord a New Song was the convocation theme.
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LISTEN:
800-325-3040
KFUO Radio Worldwide KFUO: We Are Where You Are KFUO-AM 850 Lutheran talk radio in St. Louis, Mo. KFUOam.org and Classic99.com streaming classical music online 24/7.
PARTICIPATE:
Youth Ministry Symposium Jan. 78, 2013 Irvine, Calif. www.lcms.org/youth/ symposium
National NADCE Conference for Directors of Christian Education Jan. 810, 2013 Irvine, Calif. www.nadce.com LCMS Life Conference (with special youth track) Jan. 2526, 2013 Washington, D.C. www.lcmslifeconference.org
Concordia Seminary, St. Louis: admissions@csl.edu 800-822-9545 LIVELOVE[D] 2013 National LCMS Youth Gathering July 1-5, 2013 San Antonio, Texas www.lcmsgathering.com/ registration
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lcms.org/LUTHERANSengage
NovemberDecember 2012
Missouri Move!
by Randall L. Golter
Such an assertion
Missouri moves toward the lost because she is connected baptismally to the One who is moving. Lets get this straight: Mission for Missouri is not done because she is commanded to do so, to follow the Great Commission. Look at the Great Commission. Youre not doing it. Jesus has forgiven you. Now you need to get out there and do it! Christs goal for the Church is not greater obedience to His commandments but faith in Him, an explicit trust in the One who gives Himself freely. Owned by such a Savior, Missouri from its beginning could not and cannot but give of herself to others, in witness, mercy and life together. That is how it is when owned and enslaved by this gracious God (Gal. 2:20; Rom. 12:12; Acts 8:4; 9:31)! Luther writes in his 1 Peter commentary (AE 30:11):
We have no other reason for living on earth than to be of help to others. If this were not the case, it would be best for God to kill us and let us die as soon as we are baptized and have begun to believe. But He permits us to live here in order that we may bring others to faith, just as He brought us. This issue of Lutherans Engage the World details Christs work through Missouri over the years, from America to Papua New Guinea to India and beyond. This movement by Missouri presents a cause to rejoice and give thanks, and it encourages the same aggressive work now and into the future. The Lutheran Church Missouri Synod has confidence because Christ owns her and the mission. He is the One planning, doing, working, fretting as a mother hen over wayward chicks (Matt. 23:37). What a distinct privilege and absolute joy to follow, to work alongside the Master!
Rev. Randall Golter is the newly installed Executive Director of the LCMS Office of International Mission. He is the former president of the Synods Rocky Mountain District and served as parish pastor for four LCMS congregations.
is on the
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Dont let another 40 years pass with another 54 million babies aborted. Join us for the LCMS Life Conference, Jan. 25-26, 2013, in Washington, D.C. Learn how to use your voice through specially designed adult and youth tracks! You, your friends, your youth group get ready to take your stand on this milestone 40-year anniversary of Roe v. Wade. www.lcmslifeconference.org
facebook.com/lcmslife #lcmslifeconf Learn more: lcms.org/life Give now: www.lcms.org/givenow/life
Register Today!
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