Sunday, June 21, 2009

Gospel for Asia

Dear Friends in Christ,

More than four years ago, Sri Lanka was devastated by a deadly tsunami. Gospel for Asia teams were the first ones on the scene, and we pledged to stay until the lives of the people were rebuilt. We were especially concerned about the children. Today, GFA-supported workers are still there, and how God has used their efforts is amazing. I think you will enjoy this special PhotoShow about how a Bridge of Hope center is touching the lives of an entire Sri Lankan village.

Caring Christians like you are helping us touch the lives of children and their families in communities like this one all across South Asia. I'm praying that you'll be encouraged as you see how your prayers are making a difference.

Yours for the unreached,

K.P. Yohannan
Founder & President

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Pioneer Bible Translators Daily Prayer Guide

Sunday, June 21– Saturday, June 27, 2009



June 21, Sunday: “Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen.”(Ephesians 4:29) Pray that the speech of PBT missionaries will be free of unwholesome talk. Pray that their words will build up and benefit those who hear them speak.



June 22, Monday: Marsha Relyea Miles leads PBT’s church mobilization team while continuing her involvement in the translation of the Old Testament for the Aruamu people of Papua New Guinea. Thank God for enabling Marsha to spend six weeks in Papua New Guinea this summer. Pray that God will grant her rich interactions with the Aruamu people. Pray for good progress as she and the Aruamu team check the book of Genesis.



June 23, Tuesday: Steve Davis serves on the finance team at PBT’s International Service Center in Dallas, Texas. Thank God for bringing Steve to PBT with his wealth of experience as the son of cross-cultural missionaries. Pray that God will enable him to quickly learn the intricate details of his job. Pray that God will grant him much joy as he serves.



June 24, Wednesday: PBT desires to grow so that we will be a team of at least 261 adults by the end of this year and a team of at least 385 adults by 2012. Pray that God will raise up men and women to join us in taking His Word to Bible-less people groups. Pray for PBT’s recruitment team as they interact with potential new missionaries and assist them in exploring the ministry opportunities open to them in PBT.



June 25, Thursday: Pete and Amy Riley desire to serve in West Africa. Thank God for the ministry they have had at our International Service Center, with Pete leading our support services team and Amy involved in hospitality. Thank God for providing so that they can begin French school in Canada in late August. Pray for smooth transitions as they close out their time in Texas and move to Canada. Pray that they and their children Emma (14), Abel (11), and Sophia (9) will adjust well to their temporary home in Canada. Pray for God’s protection on their sons Spencer (18) and Ethan (17), who will remain in the U.S.



June 26, Friday: PBT missionaries in East Africa are preparing for their next annual translation training course. Thank God for the opportunity to further train East African men and women who are already serving their own people as mother-tongue Bible translators. Thank God for providing facilities and funding so that this course can be conducted. Pray that God will orchestrate all the remaining details before the course begins on July 20.



June 27, Saturday: Scott and Kathy Graves serve at PBT’s International Service Center in Dallas, Texas. Thank God for Scott’s ministry as Personnel Officer and Kathy’s as Director of the Media Arts Communication (MAC) team. Pray that God will enable Scott to serve well in this newly-created role, shaping it in ways that position PBT to accommodate the growth God is bringing us. Pray that Kathy will thrive in her leadership of the MAC team as she also home schools their children Andrew (9), Mikaela (8), Miriam (8), and Emily (3).





Daily Prayer Guide (e-version), compiled by Eunice Herchenroeder, is a publication of PIONEER BIBLE TRANSLATORS

7500 West Camp Wisdom Road · Dallas, TX 75236 · Phone: 972-708-7460 · E-mail: pbtprayertools@pbti.org







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Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Special Prayer Request for the Violence in Shefarmer

Marhaba Cornerstone,

As this trip to work with our Team in Israel is drawing to a close, I had hoped to bring you more wonderful stories and photographs of the people and the work. However, when I woke-up in Jerusalem this morning the local media was reporting on significant violence and riots against the Christians in the village of Shefa'amer (or Shefaram in Hebrew), just about ten miles from Nazareth.

I still have the stories and photos for a later time, but this morning I am asking for your fervent prayers for the Believers in Shefa'armer during this very tense time.

The fighting - initiated by a sect of Muslims called Druze - has so far resulted in the burning of at least one Christian home, injuries to a policeman trying to stop the riots, and damage from bullets and other objects on several police vehicles. There are also reports that some Christians were killed by Druze shootings, but I have no confirmation of that from the media or from our contacts in the city.

As we left the Team on Monday (with a small group from the Northampton Church of Christ in Virginia), Ibrahim was asking for all of us to pray for the situation in Shefa'amer, but I must admit to not understanding how dangerous and how close to the brink it was. And is.

This is not the first time the Druze have attacked Christians in Galilee, and it is made more dangerous because the Druze young men serve voluntarily in the Israeli army, and therefore have the legal right to have the guns and weapons that they are using against the Christians.

* Just last year a "parade" of Druze from the north traveled through a number of Christian villages after midnight shooting their guns and beating up people that complained about their behavior. A couple of young men in Eilaboun were seriously wounded and spent many days in the hosptial before recovering.
* About five years ago there was a Druze uprising against Christians in the village of Mghar (where Hanna and Line have recently been having doors opened to them for ministry). That fighting resulted in many Christian businesses and homes being burned, as well as many injuries.
* Before that there was an attack by the Druze in the village of Turan where Elias and Rose live and where Saleem and Andera lead the church. There was much property damage and a few deaths among the Christians there.

While it is easy to label all people of a group or movement, the fact is that it is the violent few that make life so difficult in this country, and peace so hard to reach. Whether talking about the Druze or Hamas or the Jewish settlers and their Orthodox brothers, these are extremists that are determined to have their way through violence and intimidation, and too often that comes at the expense of the Christian community which is an easy target because of their slight influence and few numbers.

Earlier this week we had a delightful afternoon with a Druze family not far from Shefa'amer. They were very helpful and friendly and not at all approving of their violent cousins.

Both in spite of these extremists AND because of them, this land remains full of fields 'white unto the harvest.' Please pray for the people of this land, and in particular for Saleem & Andera, Ibrahim & Ekhlas, Hanna & Lina, Hani & Shifa, Bishara & Randa, Elias & Rose, and the other Believers here that are working so hard in the face of many difficulties to bring about Kingdom glory and disciples for the Christ.

In Him, for Them,
John W Samples
American Team Leader

Please don't forget that Saleem and Andera will be back in the States later this month. If you are going to be near East Tennessee on the 25th, please make your reservations now for their presentation at the Emmanuel School of Religion in Johnson City. You can download the details from the ESR website by clicking here. They will also be in Phoenix for a couple of events that weekend, then back to Louisville for the North American Christian Convention and then to Indianapolis before heading home.

Italy for Christ (Jim and Caranita)

CARANITA’S “CARATS”
Dear Jim,

Recently we wrote about the traffic roundabouts and the Italian culture of getting around laws. Keeping in the same lane, did you know that Italy holds the world record for having 150,000 government-generated laws? How can the most law-full nation also be famous as the most law-less? My counseling colleagues explained the paradox with this Italian proverb, “Establish the law, and then find the way to cheat.” My friends qualified this quote by suggesting that Italians believe in personal interpretation of the law and call it the “spirit of the law.” Each citizen has the right to interpret the law to guarantee the survival of his family. This justifies the game of deception which in turn feeds the raging war between Rome and her citizens. For example, the Italian work force has chaotically defied government regulation for years. Rome recently lowered the boom to control small businesses. The new laws forbid volunteers to do certain jobs in their own facilities. Rome assumes that paid workers disguise themselves as volunteers to avoid income taxes. Consequently, volunteer associations should establish small businesses and pay all workers’ benefits, even to paint just one room. While I am not an anarchist, maybe Italian loop holing (let’s not call it deception) truly is a matter of survival. After all, Italy probably qualifies for the Guinness Book of Records as the nation with the most laws! Freely yours, Caranita

JIM’S “GEMS”

Dear Caranita,

I don’t know about Guinness’ book, but historians agree that the Romans had a legal mind and perfected human law like no other nation. Their jurisprudence became the foundation for the civilization of Europe. I find interesting, however, that the apostle Paul addressed the inability of the conscious mind to distinguish right from wrong in the epistle to the Romans. Roman literature confirms such incapacity. So does history, since the immorality of the people accounts for the collapse of the Roman empire. Thus, the law-full-ness and law-less-ness of Rome has deep roots. Yet the battle between the spirit of the law and the letter of the law raged even before ancient Rome. A war against divine law has torn at the fabric of the human soul since the dawn of time. We can feel Paul’s frustration when he writes, “So I find this law at work: When I want to do good, evil is right there with me. For in my inner being I delight in God’s law; but I see another law at work in the members of my body, waging war… what a wretched man I am.” But oh, the victory chant we can shout with that same Paul, because “through Christ Jesus the law of the Spirit of life set me free from the law of sin and death.” Under God’s grace we find freedom to volunteer our services to Him, trusting Him to provide the way and the means to submit to the governing authorities without resentment, deceitfulness, loop holing, or cunning interpretation.

Lawfully Yours, Jim

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Pioneer Bible Translators Daily Prayer Guide

Sunday, June 14 – Saturday, June 20, 2009



June 14, Sunday: “Since, then, you have been raised with Christ, . . . set your minds on things above, not on earthly things.” (Colossians 3:1,2) Pray that PBT missionaries will truly set their minds on spiritual realities rather than focusing on their physical circumstances. Pray that they will have a Kingdom-focused perspective when they face challenges and disappointments.



June 15, Monday: Shannon Haynie ministers in Northern Eurasia. Thank God for her new apartment, which allows her to live in a village among the people she serves. Pray that God will open doors for her to build relationships with her new neighbors. Pray that these relationships will lead to opportunities to study the Bible with them. Pray for wisdom as she works on John’s epistles with mother-tongue translators.



June 16, Tuesday: Recruit Christina Friesen was introduced to Bible translation when she met PBT missionaries in Africa during a college mission trip. Thank God for using this experience, combined with her experiences as the daughter of missionaries, to draw her into PBT’s ministry. Pray that God will direct her steps as she seeks to move to Dallas to receive training for ministry as a Bible translator.



June 17, Wednesday: PBT personnel in Southeast Asia will soon gather for a strategic planning meeting. Pray for safe international travel. Pray that their time together will be productive as they prayerfully plan and prepare for the future. Pray that God will grant much fruit as they minister under challenging circumstances.



June 18, Thursday: Beth Ramos has just arrived in West Africa to serve as a literacy specialist. Thank God for enabling her to serve. Pray for smooth transitions to living and ministering in Africa. Pray that God will prepare the way for her to begin her literacy ministry later this year. Pray that God will enable her to quickly learn the basics of the branch’s bookkeeping system so she can serve in this role while bookkeeper Barb Temminck takes a short home assignment with her family.



June 19, Friday: Summer internships provide opportunity for young men and women to discover first-hand how their gifts and interests can be invested in long-term ministry as Bible translators, literacy specialists, Scripture impact facilitators, and in a host of administrative and technical roles. Thank God for our summer intern teams in East Africa, Papua New Guinea, and West Africa. Pray for good health and for physical and spiritual safety as they serve. Pray that they will establish meaningful relationships with the people they meet and that they will make enduring contributions to the ministry of their missionary hosts.



June 20, Saturday: Jill Riepe plans to serve as a translation advisor among the Ap Ma people of Papua New Guinea. Thank God for Jill’s successful completion of the Pacific Orientation Course. Pray for wisdom as she begins learning the Ap Ma language and culture and building relationships with the people. Pray for a good working relationship with mother-tongue Bible translator Maso Leko.





Daily Prayer Guide (e-version), compiled by Eunice Herchenroeder, is a publication of PIONEER BIBLE TRANSLATORS

7500 West Camp Wisdom Road · Dallas, TX 75236 · Phone: 972-708-7460 · E-mail: pbtprayertools@pbti.org

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Jesus for Jews as reported in the Jerusalem Post

Feb. 12, 2009
Larry Derfner , THE JERUSALEM POST

The melodies of the prayers sound like Christian country music, but the words the congregants are singing with such feeling are in Hebrew. About 80 Messianic believers - about two-thirds of them Jews, the others evangelical Christians - are gathered for their Friday afternoon worship service at a hall in a Jerusalem commercial center. The leader is "Yonatan," who grew up in the capital in a traditional Jewish home, then found Yeshua - the Messianics' name for Jesus - some 30 years ago after a spiritual search that took him through Eastern meditation, Kabbala and other teachings.

At Yonatan's side are two burning Shabbat candles. On the other side, a guitarist, two keyboard players and a vocalist are sending up big, lush, emotional harmonies. The music builds and the worshipers start to rise from their chairs. "I want to fall before you, I want to fall at your feet," they sing. Their eyes are closed, some look like they're going to cry, some murmur "hallelujah." They raise their hands in a typically evangelical Christian gesture of surrender.

"There is no difference between the God of the Torah and the God of the New Testament," preaches Yonatan, a bantam-built man with a shaved head and commanding presence. "Yeshua is the embodiment of the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob - in a new time."

A few congregants come up to the microphone to give their "witness." The children are sent off by their parents to another room for Bible class, then brought back in at the service's end. Yonatan announces the upcoming Hanukka party, then invites anyone who's interested to stay afterward to pray.

"Shabbat shalom," he says.

One cold afternoon in front of Tel Aviv's frenetic Dizengoff Center, three young men wearing red T-shirts reading "Yehudim L'ma'an Yeshua" - "Jews for Jesus" - are handing out leaflets. The brochures are designed like the Israeli flag with the message "Yeshua is salvation" printed in blue on white. Many passersby accept the leaflet without breaking stride, as if it's for a restaurant or clothing store. "Most Israelis don't know who Yeshua is," says Dan Sered, 30, the Herzliya-born head of the organization's Israeli chapter.

Despite what most people think, the terms "Jews for Jesus" and "Messianic Jews" are not interchangeable. Jews for Jesus is an organization made up of Messianic Jews who actively proselytize, handing out leaflets and taking out newspaper ads. Their proactive approach makes many if not most Messianic Jews, at least in Israel, uncomfortable.

Outside Dizengoff Center, the Jews for Jesus get the occasional hostile reaction. A few fellows stop to argue religion, a teenage girl with her friend says, "Sure I know Yeshua. I slept with him." One guy calls the police, but this doesn't worry Sered because he's not breaking the law, which only says you can't try to convert people by giving them money or other material favors, and you can't convert minors without their parents' consent.

"Even if the police come," Sered tells the upset bystander, "all they'll do is take my details and go away. You can give them my number, they know me. Tell them to be in touch." Sered walks off with his two partners - not out of fear of the police, he says, but because it's getting too cold.

Jews for Jesus, which has been operating here since the 1980s, has an office in Tel Aviv with 15 paid staffers. Its main work is one-on-one Bible study with people who take a leaflet or see an ad or otherwise get interested in Jesus and want to know more. "We get about 40 or 50 people coming in every month," says Sered. "Last year I'd say nearly 100 people made a profession of faith in Yeshua. Not all of them stay with it, but I'd say dozens of them did."

Messianic Jews have a terrible name in this country. Israelis who don't know any of them personally tend to be afraid of them. The community is widely viewed as a secretive cult that picks off vulnerable Jews and converts them to Christianity. There are at least two haredi "antimissionary" organizations, Yad L'achim (Hand to Brethren) and Lev L'achim (Heart for Brethren), that go to the limits of the law, if not beyond, to expose and harass them. The haredi activists try to get Messianic leaders ostracized in their neighborhoods by putting up pashkevilim, or attack posters, with their photographs. (Sered says there was a pashkevil campaign against him.) Yad L'achim fully acknowledges sending undercover spies into the Messianics' congregations, reporting on them to the Interior Ministry to prevent members from entering the country, making aliya or getting citizenship. (Yad L'achim also does this with Hare Krishna, Scientology, Jehovah's Witnesses and other religious or quasi-religious sects that proselytize in Israel.)

My own impression of the Messianic Jews, though, is that they are a benign bunch - native Israelis and immigrants who usually came from outside society's mainstream, who were spiritually hungry and found a new "faith community." Of the estimated 7,000 Messianic Jews here, as many as half are recent Russian immigrants who were not raised Jewish. "There are very few of what I call 'kosher Jews' - regular Israeli Jews with a Jewish-born mother and Jewish-born father - in our congregation," said "William," a Christian Zionist from the West who's lived here many years.

The Messianics aren't a cult, either. They have no single leader or even a leadership team, and none of them is considered by any means divine, or closer to God than others, or possessed of divine powers. Each of the 100 or so congregations is effectively a community unto itself, with "a great deal of 'congregation-hopping' going on," says William. They maintain no closed commune or retreat where new converts are brainwashed or "love-bombed," the newcomers are not kept away from their families or friends and anyone who wants to leave the community, leaves.

While Jews for Jesus are the only ones who proselytize strangers in the street, Messianics are candid about talking up Jesus to any Jew (or gentile) who shows an interest. "I believe that Yeshua is the messiah, the savior of mankind, and if I refused to tell anyone about him, it would be like knowing the cure for AIDS but keeping it to myself," says Yonatan.

Their religion and fellowship appeal to spiritual seekers, often to those in personal crisis or economic distress. Many of them followed a husband or wife into the community, naturally bringing the children along. In the end, the Messianics operate within the bounds of the laws limiting proselytizing; they don't coerce or brainwash Jews into joining them anymore than Chabad, Aish Hatorah, Bretslav or other Jewish "outreach" movements do. And between the harassment from Yad L'achim and Lev L'achim, the antagonism from the Interior Ministry and the occasional acts of violence members have suffered, Messianics seem more a persecuted minority than a menace.

However, their enemies are right about one thing: The religion these people believe in is not Judaism, it's Christianity. The belief that Jesus Christ was the son of God, that he rose from the dead and that he's coming back one day to save mankind - that's not Judaism, that's the essence, the creed, of Christianity.

Messianic Jews believe that the New Testament Jesus is the messiah spoken of in the Tanach. For evidence, they quote passages from both books, which are combined in one volume as their Bible. They celebrate Jewish and Israeli national holidays, not Christian ones. They have their sons ritually circumcised according to Jewish tradition. But nearly all of them get baptized "in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost." In terms of identity, those born and raised Jewish are Jews. Beyond that, they're all passionate Zionists and Israeli patriots, with army service being very important to them. But their religion is indistinguishable from evangelical Christianity; they speak of themselves as "Messianics" or "believers" more than as "Messianic Jews." They pray in evangelical Christian churches and evangelical Christians pray in their congregations - they prefer not to use the term "synagogues" - with no changes in text or ritual necessary.

"There's no difference between Messianic Judaism and evangelical Christianity, although most Messianic Jews wouldn't agree," says Eitan Kashtan, an Israeli Jew who, with his wife, accepted Jesus 18 years ago and now publishes Messianic literature and leads a congregation in Rishon Lezion. "If the Israeli establishment didn't cast such doubt on our Judaism," he continues, "we wouldn't work so hard to emphasize it. I'm a Jew by birth, but in faith, there's no difference between me and an evangelical Christian."

Sitting in the publishing office he rents at Kibbutz Givat Brenner, Kashtan, 48, is a typically relaxed, outgoing Israeli who was raised secular and who, along with his wife, "found Yeshua" after being convinced by reading the texts of the Tanach and New Testament. "I'm a computer systems analyst, I have to be persuaded by logic," he says. "For nine months I spent hours a day studying the Bible - and I couldn't find any bugs [in the Christian belief that Jesus is the messiah written about in the Tanach]. I thought this couldn't be just any old book. I'd grown up believing that religion was just rules and regulations, but in the Bible I found love, strength and holiness."

His awakening came at an American evangelical Christian community where his father-in-law had converted, and where he had taken a job designing the community's computer system.

That was in 1991. Today the Kashtans' two older sons are Messianic Jews serving in elite army units, whose members know of their beliefs. The family's two younger children haven't yet adopted the faith.

In a cafe on Dizengoff after leafleting for Jesus, the affable, energetic Sered says he was raised secular but began wondering who the messiah was while studying for his bar mitzva. At 19, he decided that Jesus was the messiah after being told this by a Messianic Jew named Dina, who later became his wife. He was baptized in a New York Protestant church.

Sered's more serious, intense colleague, Ofer, says he accepted Jesus about two years ago "in a time of hardship when I had a true desire to find God," hinting that he'd been living a pretty dissolute life. Born to a traditional Jewish family in Jerusalem, he was working as a security guard when he bought a used copy of the Gospel of John, began reading it and by the time his shift was over, he'd become a believer. His wife followed him. Three months after reading that book he was baptized at Yardenit, the baptismal at the site where the Jordan River flows out of the Sea of Galilee. "I couldn't wait," he says. "It's a public profession of faith. You go under the water and the old you departs, and you come up from the water with new life through Messiah Yeshua."

Generally, Messianic Jews say their families were shocked to hear of their religious conversion, but eventually got used to it. "We spend every holiday with our families," says Kashtan. "I have the same friends I met in the army. We disagree about religion but everything else is the same."

Kashtan, Sered and Ofer live with their families in secular neighborhoods, they neither advertise nor hide their beliefs, yet they report no antagonism from their neighbors or any kind of ostracism or taunting of their children at school - even, in Kashtan's and Sered's cases, after being denounced in pashkevilim. The Messianics say it's only militant Orthodox Jews who give them problems; the mainstream Israeli Jews they live among are completely tolerant.

It wasn't always like that. David Tal, who grew up in a prominent Messianic Jewish family in Rishon Lezion and Bat Yam during the 1970s, says he was "persecuted terribly as a child. I was spat on and beat up in school. They called me a 'stinking Christian.' Once there were 300 haredim demonstrating outside our house, and some of them broke inside." He says his teachers never treated him badly. "Although it was interesting, you could say, to study history and hear that Jesus was a terrible person," he adds.

Since then, the community has grown so that Messianics, while still exotic, aren't seen as Martians, and mainstream Israelis have become a lot more worldly. "Society accepts Messianics a lot more today than when I was growing up," says Tal, 46, who is still friends with many in the community even though he left it as a teenager after deciding he didn't believe in God.

Although society leaves the community largely to itself, when interest is shown, it's usually negative. When I began approaching Messianics for this story in December, I ran into a lot of suspicion. People seemed worried that I was either going to write about them as brainwashed weirdos, as many media accounts have done, or that I was working undercover for Yad L'achim or Lev L'achim. I came armed with references from the community, but even my references were wary.

The US State Department, for one, says they have good reasons to be. "Harassment of Messianic Jews... by Orthodox Jews increased during the reporting period," according to the State Department's section on Israel in its 2008 Report on International Religious Freedom. "Orthodox Jewish groups published announcements in religious newspapers calling Messianic Jews 'dangerous' and calling for their expulsion from Israeli areas."

The Bnei Brak-based Yad L'Achim, which considers Messianics to be law-breaking "missionaries" and "cultists," makes no bones about doing everything legally possible to make these people's lives miserable. In an interview in 2005, the organization's aged leader, Rabbi Shalom Dov Lifschitz, told me: "When we find out about a missionary, we'll publicize his identity on posters, newspaper ads, by word of mouth. We don't even have to phone up his place of work - a lot of Jewish employers don't want to be involved with missionaries... So seeing an ad in the newspaper is enough for [the employer] to fire him. But not all employers will do this."

Binyamin Klugger, then head of Yad L'achim's Jerusalem office, told me he went undercover among the Messianics for several months (until they found him out), and once prevented the aliya of an American Messianic Jew by informing the Interior Ministry, which denied his citizenship application. "Yad L'achim knows all their plans," said Klugger.

Calev Myers, a Jerusalem attorney who represents many Messianic Jews, said the Interior Ministry is still heavily staffed with Orthodox Jewish bureaucrats appointed during the years when Shas was in control, and these clerks work hand-in-glove with Yad L'achim to get around the law and deny Messianic Jews their rights.

For example, he told me of one of his clients, an American Christian woman who married an Israeli Messianic Jew and has been living with him here for nine years, yet her application for citizenship hasn't been granted when by law, it should have been granted more than four years ago. "The Interior Ministry has been stalling them interminably," he said, e-mailing me a ministry receipt they received in December that showed written on the back: "To Anat, the file of this woman was sent to you since there was a problem with the examination by Yad L'Achim as to whether she is actually a Messianic, and the file has not been returned to me yet. Ilona."

Myers said a ministry clerk, Ilona, accidentally wrote that message on the back of the receipt she gave to the Messianic couple before sending them on to see another clerk, Anat.

By press time, the Interior Ministry had not responded to my questions about Myers's claims.

At times Messianics have been targeted for serious violence. Congregation buildings in Jerusalem and Kiryat Yam have been firebombed, both times in the middle of the night, causing no injuries. The Beersheba community's baptismal was once stormed by haredi activists, while in Arad, Messianics on their way to prayer on Saturdays are often spat on and cursed by local haredim, says Myers.

Last year there were two especially severe attacks, both cited in the State Department report. A campaign against Messianics in Or Yehuda, led by Shas-affiliated Deputy Mayor Uzi Aharon, culminated on May 15 when he "sent a group of students from a local haredi Jewish school throughout the town to collect the New Testaments [distributed by Messianics], which were subsequently burned in front of a synagogue while 'hundreds' of students danced around the burning books," according to the report, quoting a Ma'ariv story.

And on March 20, following a pashkovilim campaign against Messianic Jewish pastor David Ortiz in Ariel, his 15-year-old son Ami was badly injured when a pipe bomb hidden in a "Purim basket" and left at the family's doorstep exploded.

No one has ever been brought to trial for any serious act of violence against Messianic Jews, and Yad L'achim strenuously denies any involvement in such crimes. When I told Lifschitz that the Kiryat Yam congregation suspected that Yad L'achim was behind the 1997 firebombing of its warehouse, he replied, "They're lying, it's all lies. For all I know, maybe there was a fire there, but that doesn't mean we started it. Maybe they started it themselves so they could blame it on us."

The bomb that put Ami Ortiz in the hospital, though, is the most grievous attack on the Messianic community ever. Police investigators were quoted in the media saying they suspect it was done by the same people who left a pipe bomb on the doorstep of leftist Prof. Ze'ev Sternhell last September, and, over the last two years, on the doorsteps of three Arab activists.

Myers, whose car was twice spraypainted by unknown vandals not long before our interview, said he doubted that Yad L'achim was behind the Ami Ortiz attack. "They incite, they foster the atmosphere that leads others to do such things, but they themselves don't go in for such heavy-duty violence."

One night in Jerusalem, before the start of a concert of Messianic music attended by about 1,000 people, a congregation leader in the lobby was being very guarded about answering my questions, until I pulled out my wallet and showed him my government press card. "I don't think they give these to Yad L'achim," I said to him, and he began to loosen up. "It's probably a good idea for you to show that to people when you talk to them," he suggested, insisting that his name and the concert's location not be mentioned.

The crowd was not a typical Israeli gathering by any means. There were a lot of fair-skinned blonds and several Asians and non-Ethiopian blacks. A lot of Russian and English was spoken. But the emcee, a heimishe Israeli Jew in his 60s, spoke in Hebrew. The song lyrics were in Hebrew, spelled out in phonetic English on a big screen so people could sing along.

"Yeshua, I cannot glory except in you. Yeshua, who am I without you? Take control, Yeshua, so that i will not be seen, only you."

Sitting near the back of the darkened hall, I could see hundreds of straining, raised hands silhouetted in black against the bright lights from the stage. Choir members had their eyes closed and their hands raised, too. A thousand Messianics, many of them Jews born to Jewish mothers and fathers, were gathered at night in a kind of safe house, singing to Jesus. They didn't seem threatening, they seemed innocent and vulnerable. Out of the public's sight, they were giving voice to their freedom of religion.

This article can also be read at http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1233304759140&pagename=JPArticle%2FShowFull
Copyright 1995- 2009 The Jerusalem Post - http://www.jpost.com/

Thursday, June 11, 2009


Spur Ministries Newsletter- June 2009

Statistics state the fact that Native Americans are faced with some of the worst housing and living conditions in the United States. Spur Ministries and other ministries that work on Arizona reservations see these facts firsthand on a weekly basis. Other facts that factor into the state of poverty are *50% unemployment rate, **low income per capita ($7500 annually), minimal existing jobs or new jobs created and lack of public utilities. Tribes are unable to fund new housing needed for existing families and the list is growing continually. Existing housing funded by the government back in the 1950- 70’s are now in dilapidated conditions. One area on the Navajo Reservation where Spur Ministries is doing missionary work has been set back in development by a ***federal freeze that had been in place for about 40 years. Even if the freeze was immediately lifted there still remains the fact that affected families would have 40 years of catching up to do. Here is where Spur Ministries and partnering ministries are making a difference for families on the reservations.
Our foremost work is in spreading the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Our desire is that individuals would make a commitment of faith and baptism to our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. We are using the Navajo Hogan Project (subsidiary of Spur Ministries) as a tool to make inroads onto the reservations and as a testimony of our faith and commitment to the peoples of the reservations. Along with ministry partners from Florida and Pennsylvania we completed our first project in December 2008. We felt the Lord’s hand upon us during the duration of the project because local businesses donated needed supplies, equipment and manpower at crucial times. Still, there were times when we didn’t know if the funding would be there, but the Lord provided in His time. Since then word has spread about our work and we have been inundated with requests for help building more homes for Navajo families. With much prayer we are now ready to take on our next hogan project.
Ray Johnson, a single father from White Cone, Arizona, is raising 2 of his 4 children with help from his mother in a wooden shack strapped together with little or no insulation. Ray is an unemployed carpenter who drives 100 miles one way when work is available. With lack of jobs in the White Cone area Ray has turn his attention to raising his boys and caring for his mother’s property. Mr. Marty Etsitty a Navajo Pastor in White Cone estimates that there are less than 80 jobs available for an estimated population of 1600 in an area covering 300 sq. miles. Spur Ministries accepts God’s calling to take the reins in providing Ray and his family with adequate housing.
Currently, we have 5% of the estimated $23,000 needed to make the hogan (house) a reality. In faith we will soon be going to White Cone to stake out the foundation for Ray’s new home. We are asking for prayers and support from you. Please pray for us as we follow Gods’ leading in ministry. Pray that God will touch the hearts of people who will help with finances and work teams. We also invite
individuals or mission teams that are willing to come out and help build new hogans. Please write donation checks to Spur Ministries- in memo put Navajo Hogan Project. Contact us at:
Spur Ministries
C/O Steve Thompson
3453 Spur Lane
Show Low, AZ. 85901
(928) 205- 1279
azspur2002@yahoo.com
www.spurministries.com
View video on youtube.com @ URL- spur ministries Navajo hogan project
Spur Ministries is a non-profit organization with 501(c) (3) status