Challenging this generation to make a difference for Jesus Christ in this nation and beyond
Thursday, February 5, 2009
Ministry Update: February 2009
January...teaching a one-week class in Tawau
March...starting a once-a-month, March till November, class with pastors of the BM church, FGAC
April...teaching a one-week class in main campus, MBTS Penang
End April till late May...teaching a one-month class in Kiulu Baru, Tawau
June...teaching a one-week class in Ipoh, or Gopeng-Simpang Pulai
August...tentative schedule for a one-week class
October...teaching a one-week class in main campus, MBTS Penang
The class in Ipoh will be a trial class at the request of some students. The venue is not determined yet. But I'm not worried. It can be as rural as the Pawong church and yes, Chee Lock and company, I really do not mind that condition. It looks like I am slowly becoming a jungle woman. Pretty scary, right? Yesterday, the students in campus were doing some campus cleaning and someone caught a baby wild boar. My first reaction was to bbq that poor chap. We immediately plan how to lure wild boar senior to our stove. My, what jungle talk...
I recently sent a proposal to a few individual friends to ask their opinion and comments regarding a dream for a new ministry. Well, I am amazed at the encouraging response thus far. But I know I must discern for God's timing to launch this work. Even right now, I know the Lord is calling individuals to share the same passion to reach inward to the rural, jungle within Malaysia. Please continue to pray for the ministry to the indigenous community. They may be poor and lacking but their simplicity and zealousness, a lesson for all of us urban freaks. I am enjoying the fellowship of the tribal community. Perhaps I am just too fed-up with the complexities of the urban society, some filled with hypocrisy.
Please pray for my studies. I have starting my gruelling journey towards a PhD, an effort I would like to dedicate to the indigenous community of Malaysia. For this first year of study, I will be exploring all resources on the various tribal people groups in Malaysia, both in Peninsular and in Sabah and Sarawak. Later, I will narrow the study to a single tribe. The area of research will focus on the raising of local leaders in the tribal community, how age and gender impact leadership opportunities.
This Sunday I will preach at the Jelutong Chinese Methodist Church and no, I am not preaching in Mandarin. I will preach at the English congregation at the extremely early hour of 8am on a Sunday morning.
Finally, let us continue to pray for Malaysia...in particular for Perak. And once again, thank you so much for your partnership in ministry.
Thursday, January 22, 2009
Ministry Update 2 for Jan 09
The year started in an adventurous manner for me. I went to Sidikalang, about 6 hours away from
I had the intention of taking many, many pictures of our friends’ wedding. But I ended up taking more scenic pictures instead! The Batak wedding was quite an experience. I enjoyed it. It was held in a
We started our journey from Sidikalang, back to
Just a few short days to catch my breath and I hopped on the flight again to Tawau. Arriving late, about 8.30pm, the student greeting me at the airport with her husband and child, drove me straight into the jungle. But I had a fantastic dinner with a simple yet delicious prawns dish and pork soup. The Sunday morning service was at the
It was an exciting class that I taught. I taught Cultural Anthropology and the class was represented by various people groups, some of which I’ve never heard of before. There were the Murut-Serudung, Murut-Kalabakan, Dusun, Orang Sungai, Iban, Filipin, Toraja, Rungus, and Tombunuo. And of course several in-betweens. They eagerly shared their traditional cultures and worldview. There was a story someone told the class of an isolated people group. They were so isolated that during war times, food was hardly available. So, what these people did was at each morning after they passed motion, they brought their excrement to the river to wash it. Whatever solid that was left were eaten. Another story was a testimony from one of the students. He went to visit another people group and was served dinner. How was the dinner prepared? A deer was caught and it was cut opened. The inside, stomach and all were thrown into a pot of boiling water (without being cleaned first) and it was served! This student testified that he almost vomited eating that and when someone accidentally tore the stomach, the soup was smeared with the stomach content and they still had to eat it. There was also the story of how the ancestors of a student from the
I hope the students learnt something from me. But I certainly learnt a lot from them. They treated me very kindly and were often afraid that I might go hungry. So, they were feeding me endlessly. We had a barbeque in the middle of the week. It looks like it might become a tradition here during my visits. There was another home service held on Thursday night. Similar to our CG. It was then that I bite into a delicious kampong biscuit and my tooth filling cracked. I could feel the sharp pain but it was brief. The next morning after breakfast, the whole filling came off Aise…visited the dentist again
I had a fun and exciting time in Tawau, or rather Kiulu Baru. I only went to Tawau on Friday afternoon after class. I was accommodated at the guest quarters of
I came back to
This Saturday I will be preaching at BJAC and CNY will arrive. There will be ang pao collecting sessions and hopefully some lazing around, some eating, and some (unofficial) working. I will be assisting FGAC BM church to teach their pastoral team. It will be something like one morning in each month. But it still needs preparations. It will be challenging to teach in a different context and I am very looking forward to it. There is another preaching engagement on 8th Feb at JCMC and I may just stay away from going to town that weekend, which is the Thaipusam weekend.
Finally, a very King Xi Fa Chai to all of you and thank you for your partnership in ministry.
Friday, January 2, 2009
Ministry Update: January 2009
A very blessed new year to all of you, partners in ministry. 2008 came and went so swiftly. I do not know how the year had been for you, but for me it was a (spiritually) turbulent season. I felt pushed so far to the edge of giving up in ministry and even active Christian living. It seemed tempting to just lead a normal nominal Christian life and indulge in worldliness just like everyone else. After all, what is the difference between secular work and the Christian vocation? I have discovered that there is none.
December was a lazy month. Festivities and holidays filled the air. It was difficult having to discipline myself to focus on preparing my entrance exam which I plan to sit on the 3rd week of this month. Besides the festivities, were a special wedding between Nix and ST. Attending the auspicious occasion, I met friends from
Before new year’s eve I was invited to visit a friend, someone who used to be a member of the Young Adult’s Ministry in
I know I should be actively serving in a local church and I want to be able to actively serve in my home church. However, the nature of my ministry just cannot afford that. I cannot commit a regular attendance and I have to be available to go here and there. Although this is my “wish” – to be serving the local church (while ministering to the universal church), I realized that as I looked back at 2008, hey, I’ve been doing that. It just did not fit my perspective of serving the local church but I’ve been ministering through the teaching and preaching ministry. And that is my gift and I was using it to worship God through the local church. I saw myself ministering in churches of various denominations in the urban and rural contexts, in the English and BM congregations.
I also realized I have become more “relational.” I mean, I was a person who was so task-oriented and result-oriented that I often disregard the people in between while focusing on accomplishing a quality result as a worship to a great God. So, why on earth did I ever take the trouble to plan a trip, all the way to
I’m traveling to
In case I can’t find the opportunity to write you again, a very Kong Xi Fa Cai to everyone and once again my signature log off line: Thank you for your partnership in ministry.
PHP 1:3 I thank my God every time I remember you. 4 In all my prayers for all of you, I always pray with joy 5 because of your partnership in the gospel from the first day until now, 6 being confident of this, that he who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus.
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Reflection & Projection
I remember entering 2008 with fear. And I do not know fear of what. But as the year progressed, I realized it was an attempt of the enemy to prevent me from entering into a new spiritual dimension. During those fearful days, I was confronted with several issues. I was pushed to the edge of giving up on ministry & return to “normal” life (of nominal Christianity). I had to confront the difficult question that if my health failed, will I still love God? And 2008 is the year I entered the big 4-0. It is a phase where (bodily) machinery begins breaking down. I used to hear stories of failing health about my friends’ parents, but I have reached the stage where the stories come from my friends themselves. I hardly receive wedding invitations from friends these days. Instead, I receive wedding invitations of my friends’ children. Somehow the big number 40 bears some significance in regard to an entry to the next phase of life.
2. A senior Christian minister insisting that Christian ministers must be able to plan what he/she wants to be/do in 5 year’s time. Does that sound like secularism here, leaving God & prayer out of the picture and become “I” & “me” centered instead? New Age Christianity, perhaps? In fact this person can actually make a statement like, “I will make sure this person never have the chance to serve in this organization.” What was the “crime” of “this person”? Simply being from another denomination & was in some disagreement with his peers. And this so-called senior Christian minister wanted to prevent “this person” from entering another denomination (?!?...that appeared in my thoughts too)
3. A senior Christian minister promising this & that, apparently, to gain respect/popularity but never keeps his word. Utterly untrustworthy.
4. A senior Christian minister who cringed and started to pacify a foreigner who just needs to raise his voice to get things his way
5. A foreigner who never prepares her work and complaints come from affected people, locally & overseas. Claiming to be a missionary? Looks more like a long-term tourist
6. A foreigner who is so obsessed with a title that he never bothers to know anything else other than securing a title. I thought ministry is about effectiveness, not titles & positions. Recently I discovered that those foreigners coming in to serve here are actually working in “lowly” jobs back home. They were grave-diggers, dish-washers and came here, often “berlagak” around because there are still Asians who actually idolize westerners. No, I’m not suggesting that we look down on foreigners. Instead, I’m implying the need for the Christian community to actually treat each other equally, just like what the Bible has been teaching all these while. Unfortunately, some people just can’t get out of their inferiority complex and become obsessed with the need to have a title to “feel” secure
7. A colleague lacking integrity. While we should not be calculative in service, better be careful or people may just take advantage of us. I learnt that the hard way. I obliged a colleague to do her job as she claimed to be busy with year-end tasks but when the reason expired she refused to take back the job
Thursday, December 4, 2008
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
Ministry Update: December 2008
Right now, I'm juggling two tasks. One, is preparing for the class in Tawau from 12-16Jan. Two, is preparing for my entrance exam into the PhD Missiology program. Honestly, I do not know how to finance myself through this program. I'm simply stepping out in faith. And I want to pursue this because I know I can achieve only as far as I dare to dream and I can only take the people I lead to where I've been.
I'm not sure what 2009 has in store, especially with the uncertainty clouding almost every facet of our lives. But I'll be looking forward to spending a whole month (Apr/May) in Tawau, teaching at PLAB (Pusat Latihan Alkitab Baptis) where we've initiated a "twinning" program. I hope to visit various ministries of our students and to encourage the work in the interior. I'm free (from teaching) throughout the BM Module in STCM next year. This will give me more time to spend with the students in various activities. Most of all is, I'm looking forward to the new work among the Semai people in central Malaysia. I'll share more as the work progresses but as for now, it's at its very infant stage.
At the close of the academic year, someone asked me how I cope with students leaving after a year or two in campus. I'm actually very ok with that. In fact, I think it'll trouble me if I see a person continously, endlessly...I mean, students come and students go. And I have built friendships with many nationalities. I have invites to various places throughout Asia and beyond: there's invites to Thailand, Myanmar, Cambodia, China, Hong Kong, Sudan, Nepal, Indonesia, Singapore. Unfortunately my invitation to South Korea is no longer valid as my Korean brother & family is now in Malaysia (?!) And within Malaysia, of course there's invites to almost every state, except Kelantan/Trengganu.
Before I close, I'd like to send you my warmest Christmas & New Year greetings to you and your family. And again I'd like to thank all of you for your partnership in ministry.
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Ministry Update: Nov 2008
I'm preparing for my entrance exam into the PhD (Missiology) program. It's kind of slow. Most drivers will agree that when we slow down acceleration, our car pick up is faster than when we arrive at a complete stop. For the past year or so, I've been preparing lessons and grading student assignments/tests, thus, to accelerate into full gear to study...it's slow. Please pray for me. I really have no idea how the funds are coming in. The school is not supportive of my studies. They quote this & that policy but reading between the lines, they are simply trying to tell me, "you're not a man!" But the hiccup will not stop me. In fact, I'm still believing in God who has called me & invited me to enter into a big, huge dream of ministry possibilities. And because I know my God is a big God, I will keep dreaming big. After all, we can achieve only as far as we dare to dream. And why I'm bothering to go further academically, it's because I know I can only raise those I teach up to where I am. I believe them to be so full of potential, they can arrive at the furthest possible. It's just like when God sacrificed His Son for me. Though I was a sinner, a wretched sinner with no hope, He believed in me. In a similar way, I want to believe my fellow brothers and sisters that they can be all they can be in Christ our Lord.
Who in their reasonable, logical mind could ever dream that someone who failed almost all subjects in school could enter university? It was already beyond my wildest dream that a terrible student in school like me can enter a prestigious university in Malaysia but the Lord took me further. I could still remember the day I walked beside the man-made Tasek Universiti in UM campus. I could still remember the still, soft voice that spoke firmly into my heart to pusue a master degree. I could still remember my fear at that moment. Hey, who wouldn't? If you know yourself as someone who barely pass all public exams, and even university exams. But I could still vividly recall that afternoon walk beside Tasek Universiti during my first year in campus. It's already a miracle in itself that the Lord took me to university. And truly, it is beyond my wildest dream that I can possess an honors bachelor and three master degrees & am now preparing to enter the PhD program. I can really testify of how good and faithful God truly is. He provides and provides the best. And I can keep dreaming big for a big God.
It's convocation week this week. The academic year is winding up and soon there'll be a new year approaching.
Ministry-wise, things are progressing well. I'm very excited when told of a new OA work developing among churches of various denominations. Main line churches are involved with a renewed interest following a change of leading heads. Please pray for this effort. I can't reveal much right now but it looks like the past years, the Lord has called His people in various capacities & raising them for a purpose and for a time such as now. The pieces are still fragmented but I believe they are slowly falling into place. Please pray for this new emerging ministry. It is 100% effort of the Malaysian church.
November is not as exciting as October or maybe December. But it is a busy month for the school here as we wrap up the academic year. December is usually a month of rest before the Christmas season approaches. I almost have a vacation planned. Well, I'm not someone who enjoys a holiday. I can only do "working holidays" but this was an attempt. However, my friend from Hong Kong encountered some complications with the immigration & has to return by late November. So, the holiday was cancelled. Perhaps, that's God's way of telling me that I need to focus on preparing my entrance exam & spend more time with the family instead. (Maybe the savings can afford me a new laptop! Yay me!) Once again, I thank you for your partnership in ministry.