CP 277 Vietnam Report March 2017
CP 277 Vietnam Report March 2017
What could fifteen or so farmers have in common with a
fisherman, a builder, a game hunter, a barber, a couple of motorbike
fruit-sellers, a man who milks rubber trees, two woodcutters, a factory hand, a
motorbike-taxi driver, a former orchardist and a former watchmaker? They are
Pastors or preparing Pastors of the fledgling Evangelical Lutheran Church of
Vietnam (ELCV). Throw in a couple of other fulltime pastors, an English
language translator, a specialist in collecting and reselling junk, a wedding
caterer, a beautician, and a couple of other occupations and you have this
amazing mix of 36 participants at the 3 day Vietnam Australia Lutheran Bible
Institute course (VALBI) held in Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon) from March
14-16. I was privileged to have been the teacher on this occasion.
You can gather that the vast majority of these pastors work
at other jobs to stay alive. That is why Asia Focus commits to completely cover
the cost of travel and food and accommodation. During the time they attend the
course some must forgo their regular income. Simple as that. Last month many of
you contributed almost $4500 toward the running cost of the March VALBI.
Brilliance which honours our gracious Father.
The Bible Institute meets every second month, and brings together
Pastors and trainee Pastors from all over Vietnam for intensive teaching. The
teaching is provided through Australian Pastors, and the course is organised by
the leaders of ELCV in conjunction with Asia Focus Australia, headed by Pastor
August Fricke from Gympie in Queensland.
On this visit the bulk of my teaching was about Jesus Christ
in Isaiah. My driving passion is to enable people to know how to read all
scripture, especially the Old Testament, through the lens of what has been
established through the coming, life, suffering, death, resurrection and
ascension of Jesus the Christ. I don’t have the words to describe the moment
when the eyes and face of a pastor reveal that a ‘truth connection’ has been
made. Teaching about the gracious righteousness of our Lord, knowledge of Him,
faith and trust in Him, and of the Spirit, was pure joy in this scenario.
Also included in the teaching time was a segment on being a
Pastor, and another on the first 15 Articles of the Augsburg Confession. There
is a real challenge in sharing with a group whose background is cultural
Buddhism, and who know practically nothing about Popes and Europe, let alone
Germany and Wittenberg. But, for heaven’s sake, did they ever cotton on to,
‘Justified by grace, for Christ’s sake, through faith.’ My hearers had no
trouble ‘getting’ that the God who reveals himself as Father has provided
something that no other faith can or has provided, that is, a Lamb of God who
takes away the sin of the world! No other faith system has such a grace
mechanism which allows forgiveness to be extended and righteousness bestowed.
We also had a great time thinking about Luther’s catechism
material on daily bread. This was so good because many of these Pastors live
close to subsistence level and know perfectly well what it means to trust our
Father for essential needs. We had a great laugh too when we ended that session
with an acknowledgment that a good clean toilet is part of daily bread too!
(One soon discovers that you can’t be precious about toilets over there,
especially in outlying areas.)
Before we commenced teaching for this VALBI class I had
offered to oversee a prayer time on Wednesday evening for course participants.
Every single person attended. More than 30 came forward for prayer. Their needs
are not so different from ours, but I had a far stronger sense of their
‘receiving’ than I usually get at home. Next morning they began to share what
had happened to them. Unashamedly they stood up and spoke of physical healing,
of fears stilled, of encouragement received, of the Lord’s speaking to them in
the night, of worry overcome, and being able to trust the Lord for a way
forward, of an infilling of the Holy Spirit.
I’d lead such prayer times again at the drop of a hat.
My Vietnam friends do life and ‘church’ in the raw. I spent
my last full day in Vietnam in the Mekong Delta going to the locations of
small, village churches. In each case it was the Pastor’s own house. No airs
and graces, no smugness or bragging. The church building is usually the nearest
room to the front door. (Can you even imagine up to 30-40 people meeting in
your lounge room with part of it open to the elements, with the dogs and chooks
coming in and out?) Food hospitality was amazing. Cooking was done over open
fires inside the kitchen, and in some places most floors were bare earth. But
the joy! I know it’s just my comment, but I could sense, even almost touch, the
glory of God in these humble and lowly circumstances. (Yes, I know. I should expect
that given that our Lord specializes in shining in situations like this.) In
each place there came spontaneous requests and prayers for blessing and
healing.
It was a joy to return to the orphanage at Phu Ly and see the
rooms your support built. Our support was sufficient so that money was
available to begin a second building and an inspired donor from Italy (I think)
enabled them to finish that and do some more, Just as well because there are
now more than 80 children in residence.
Your support enabled so much to happen. There is now a
dedicated fund to help resource strapped pastors and churches to access Study
Bibles. The orphanage has been blessed. There are funds available for
translation work. And more than $4000 was contributed to underwrite the course.
What now? First, I have
been asked to teach another week in November this year and I will be going. Humanly
speaking, I know in my heart before the Lord that I have done some good stuff
in my ministry over the years. These teaching stints in Vietnam are way up
there in my experience. It is an open-door, once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to
be part of setting in the hearts and minds and spirits of pastors, in a new,
young, uncluttered church, a way of reading, knowing and interpreting the whole
of scripture through that remarkable grace-filled lens of the person and work
of the Lord Jesus Christ. (I’ve been thinking about why Vietnam tugs so
strongly on me. I think it’s because I have known so many men of my age who
spent a good part of their early 20’s in that country!)
Second, your support for the VALBI course, not just for the
weeks I teach, but for all of them, is welcome. Other teachers going over this
year are Chris Reardon from Cairns (May) Pastor Peter Steicke (July) and Pastor
David Christian (September). Any help is appreciated. If you feel a call to
make this a priority of it then get in touch with me or Google ‘Asia Focus
Australia’.
Well, the Lord Jesus bless you, the Father embrace you in
hard-won grace, and the Spirit reveal more of the Glory of the Kingdom to you.
Fred
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