July 12 is not a national holiday, but it is a "Lutheran holiday". It is the day in 1886 when missionaries first came to Papua New Guinea and began ministry and outreach. It is celebrated throughout the country among Lutherans. The church offices are closed and there are celebrations. The anniversary has been the topic of sermons for the past two weeks in our worship services. Last week, Pr. Hans Gergeire, Director of Ministerial Education, preached at St. Andrew's here on Ampo. He talked about the first missionaries who came to the Finschhafen area and encountered stark living conditions and disease. Many of those first missionaries died and, ultimately, they faced the decision--do they return or do they continue? He related that there really was no discussion. They would remain, but they moved up from the coast and began their ministry anew. The first missionaries were charged with evangelist training. In other words, they would identify people whom they would train and who would then take the Good News to the many villages. Pr. Hans related that his grandfather was one of these evangelists who was trained. Their training consisted of memorizing a sermon among other things. This was the method of achieving consistency in the message.
Pr. Hans told the story of how his grandfather, accompanied by his grandmother, came to the training. When they finished and began the long walk back to their village, his grandfather stops ands says "I've forgotten the sermon. I have to go back." So he left Pr. Hans' grandmother beside the path in the jungle and returned to re-learn the sermon. When he finally came back and found his wife waiting along the path, it was nightfall. She asked if they would sleep there along the path and he said "no, tomorrow is Sunday and we have to preach the Good News." They continued on all night and reached the village mid-morning on Sunday, called together the people, and worshipped. He preached the sermon he had learned.
As Pr. Hans told this story, you could tell that it was formative to his faith. He went on to study at Seminary, serve as a parish pastor, and serve as Faculty at Logaweng for several years, before assuming his current position where he oversees the three Seminaries and church colleges. The question he left us with that Sunday morning was "are you ready to make the commitment?"
On July 11 Pr. Timothy Luke, Coordinator of Chaplaincy in the national church, preached on the text Luke 10--the Mission of the Seventy. "He said to them, 'The harvest is plentiful and the laborers are few; therefore ask the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest.'" (vs. 2). Pr. Luke offered many examples of the work that is to be done within ELC-PNG, the "harvest that is plentiful", and challenged everyone to see themselves as "missionaries". The day coincided with the last Sunday of one of our colleagues, Miriam Lies, who will complete her four-year term this week. She lived her as a child when her parents came as missionaries; she heeded the call of the Church and came back, and she leaves now, not knowing what her next call will be but affirmed in the work that she has done here. We are all called. People come and people go----the work is plentiful and the laborers are few.
Saturday, July 10, 2010
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Just wanted to wish you a Merry Christmas! It just seem weird to be celebrating Christmas where it doesn't get cold and snow!
ReplyDeleteHope you had a great holiday! The weather has been quiet in Sheboygan. On Dec. 11th and 12th, we had 1/2" of rain, followed by 6" of snow, followed by a deep freeze. The snow-plow drivers didn't have a chance of getting that wet, heavy mixture off the roads, before it got cold, so the roads were horrible. Since then we had a couple of days in the 30s, so road conditions have much improved.
Now the east is getting clobbered, just in time for people to start traveling home. Airports are going to be closed tomorrow. It will be a mess. So, I'm thankful for quiet weather right now.