Saturday, June 17, 2017

Asia-Pacific Regional Communications Around The Region... for Saturday, 17 June 2017 The Global Church of the Nazarene Asia Pacific Region in Kaytikling, Taytay, Rizal, Manila 1920 Philippines Creative Game Changer, What Does Integrity Have to do With Trust, GA Updates Including an App for it! Plus Praises, Prayer Requests and MORE!

Asia-Pacific Regional Communications Around The Region... for Saturday, 17 June 2017 The Global Church of the Nazarene Asia Pacific Region in Kaytikling, Taytay, Rizal, Manila 1920 Philippines Creative Game Changer, What Does Integrity Have to do With Trust, GA Updates Including an App for it! Plus Praises, Prayer Requests and MORE!




Volume 5, Issue 23                           June 16, 2017

Praising God for Update from Dr. Erin Meier (Papua New Guinea) Regarding Tumor Diagnosis.

Papua New Guinea:   We are praising God for the update recently shared by Dr. Erin Meier.


On the Other Side!

“For the past 13 years, I have been the one in the “white coat,” the one who others are reluctant to come and see, who has to give out the bad news, the one who gets to make decisions on what is the best course of treatment for someone who is sick, who gets to help others negotiate their illnesses, who has gotten to use the scapel, needles, ultrasound and stethoscope as daily tools of my trade. That changed about a month ago, when an elevated blood test led to an MRI, which led to a phone call from my doctor.
Read: Doctor at Kudjip Nazarene Hospital Diagnosed with Brain Tumor.
As soon as I heard her say “there is a mass on your pituitary gland,” my mind started racing. I went from trying to remember all my medical texts and what the pituitary did and what kind of growths occur there and what it would mean, to thinking about what this meant for me and continuing to serve in PNG, to what about my trip to Yellowstone with my family, etc. I had lots of questions with no immediate answers. Like most doctors, when I don’t know something, I look it up on Up to Date. So after putting the phone down, I got on UTD and started reading all I could about what I was dealing with, reading about the kinds of growths, the various treatment options, etc. I started in my mind trying to navigate this and figure out how it wouldn’t mess up the plans I had/have for my summer at home, for my return to PNG, etc.
In following weeks, I went from being the person going into the room to see the patients, to the one in the room, waiting for the doctor to come. Instead of just signing my name at the end of a patient’s note, I now help the doctors write those notes with my medical information. I have signed my name to numerous HIPAA forms, have navigated patient portals, and have a calendar filled with various kinds of appointments in the weeks and months ahead. I went from being in control of my time and summer, to being at the mercy of all the openings at the doctors, labs, imaging places, etc.
Thankfully, I have been reassured in learning that most likely my growth (probably a prolactinoma) is benign – meaning noncancerous, that it won’t spread, and that my days aren’t numbered like you think of with others who have cancer. It is a tumor (medical term for any abnormal growth in the body, whether malignant or not) in a confined area, so continued growth of the mass can start to interfere with the other structures in that area of my brain, so it needs to shrink. The hope is that with medicine it will shrink and I can continue to serve God in PNG in August.
Obviously, my plans for my Home Assignment time have already been adjusted, and likely will continue to be so. Through this, I have had to be okay with letting go of my plans for tomorrow, next week, next month and possibly beyond. For someone like me, letting go doesn’t come easily for me, especially when it includes the possibility of letting go of what I feel God continuing to call me to (continued service at Kudjip in August).
You can pray that the medicine will shrink the tumor and for me as I continue to wrestle with God about this change of plans, and about the unknown of tomorrow, trying to be okay with it being unknown, and trusting God for the next steps to be known, in their timing.”
Please continue to keep Dr. Erin in your prayers!  You can follow her blog by following this link.

*** 25-May Update: Fighting Breaks Out in Southern Philippines City – Please Pray!

Thousands are fleeing the fighting in Marawi City, Central Philippines. (Photo credit: Ted Aljibe/AFP/Getty Images)
Marawi City, Southern Philippines:  On Tuesday, May 23rd, fighting broke out in the Southern Philippines city of Marawi. It has been reported that thousands of Filipinos are fleeing their homes amid reports of public buildings being burned and many injuries and fatalities.
Please be in prayer for those who have been impacted by this fighting and that there would be peaceful resolution.
More details will be forthcoming with regard to any impact on local Nazarene churches.
Updated details related to the nature of the fighting can be obtained through various news agencies by searching for “Philippine News Marawi City” through your preferred search engine.

25-May-2016 Update:
Philippine- Micronesia Field Strategy Coordinator (FSC) Stephen Gualberto confirmed that while we do not have Nazarene churches in Marawi, we have 2 churches in Iligan City, more or less 35 kilometers away from Marawi.
Leody Echavez III, Philippine-Micronesia Field Coordinator for Anti-Human Trafficking, thanks everyone for the prayers. Their local church in Iligan are assessing the condition of the evacuation centers in their area to check for immediate needs. He will give us updates from time to time.
Please continue to pray for peace and safety.



Cavite, Philippines:
Rev. Stephen Gualberto, Pastor of GMA Church and Field Strategy Coordinator for the Philippines-Micronesia Field, has implemented a new strategy in the church he pastors that is a real "Game Changer!"

His goal is to incorporate children and youth into the church and intentionally disciple them in a personal relationship with Jesus.  

Read more about his unique ministry that Gualberto is championing in his home church and that he hopes will be implemented soon by the NYI across his field.

Game Changer

Cavite, Philippines:  Incorporating children and youth into our churches and intentionally discipling them in a personal relationship with Jesus, is a key component in growing our churches across the globe.
Pastor Stephen Gualberto of the GMA Church in Cavite, Philippines has taken this approach to a whole new level.  Gualberto is not only the Pastor of the GMA Church, he is also the Field Strategy Coordinator (FSC) for the Philippines and Micronesia Field.  As such, he is putting into practice this “game plan” in his own church  and community before encouraging those on his field to do the same. By doing this he hopes to demonstrate the effectiveness of such an approach while inviting the churches across the field to engage in similar approaches to intentionally involve and disciple children and youth.

“Every player is a disciple, every coach is a catalyst and every court a church.”
His approach is simple: Involve the youth in a sport with the following plan for each team.
  • 1-Coach – A young leader that is mature in his/her faith with a love for a specific sport.
  • 1- Assistant Coach – An emerging leader being mentored by the coach.
  • 6 – Players – individuals that are unchurched, non-Christian or pre-Christian.
    • Limited to 6 players on each team to make it easier for the Coaches to follow up with them on a personal level.
    • Players are recruited personally by the coaches or referred by other players.
    • Players on a team need to be the same age or younger than the coach as they will have more influence with them.
Teams are encouraged to meet during the week for practice, team building exercises, and fellowship as well as one on one discipleship. Saturdays are reserved for coming together for worship, study of the Word and fellowship along with the games.  They call this “SAMBA-LARO” (Worship and Game).
To be sure that all coaches are equipped to disciple their players, attendance in a weekly discipleship coaching group is a must, which includes the church’s Child Protection Policy training.
Gualberto’s church now has 6 basketball teams and is planning to start at least two volleyball teams next month with this same model.  His daughter, Dash, put together the video to help explain this unique approach to discipleship and involvement. Gualberto plans to roll this model out through the NYI across his field soon.
Please pray for those leading this new intentional model as they work out the details and encourage other churches to participate.
Pray for Pastor Stephen Gualberto as he leads his Field by example.

Global:  Whether you are going to be attending the 2017 General Assembly in Indianapolis or not, you are going to want to download this App!  

Not only does the App have the daily schedules, it includes a map so you can find where you are going!  

Another great feature of the App that will be a benefit for those not attending in Indianapolis is a link to the live stream so that you can enjoy all that is happening from afar!


Global:  A Delegate Orientation ahead of General Assembly business meetings sponsored by the Board of General Superintendents in cooperation with the General Secretary's Office will take place from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. Saturday, 24 June, in Halls ABC of the Indiana Convention Center.
A "Prayer and Commissioning Service" for General Assembly delegates is scheduled for Monday morning, 26 June. Time and location will be announced at the Delegate Orientation.

Translated reminder notices for the Delegate Orientation were sent to all General Assembly delegates.

Member Care: 

B is for Boundaries.
R is for Reliable.
A is for Accountable.
V is for Vault.
This is # 5 in a seven part series we're working through on TRUST. Because Trust is Braving Relationships, we've been taking a look at sociologist and thought leader, Dr. Brene Brown's acronym, B-R-A-V-I-N-G in her teaching on the Anatomy of Trust:
 
We've talked about how Trust is vital for all of our Member Care Priorities: Trauma Awareness, Resilience, Fulfillment, Engagement, and Family relationships.
 
When working to build trust in relationships, or repair a relationship where trust has been broken, this acronym can serve as a guide, helping us to identify the broken places, so we can pursue intentional and effective healing.
 
I is for Integrity

B-R-A-V-I-N-G Trust… I is for Integrity


B is for Boundaries.
R is for Reliable.
A is for Accountable.
V is for Vault.

This is # 5 in a seven part series we’re working through on TRUST. Because Trust is Braving Relationships, we’ve been taking a look at sociologist and thought leader, Dr. Brene Brown’s acronym, B-R-A-V-I-N-G in her teaching on the Anatomy of Trust:

We’ve talked about how Trust is vital for all of our Member Care Priorities: Trauma Awareness, Resilience, Fulfillment, Engagement, and Family relationships.

When working to build trust in relationships, or repair a relationship where trust has been broken, this acronym can serve as a guide, helping us to identify the broken places, so we can pursue intentional and effective healing.

I is for Integrity

What is it?
noun  in·teg·ri·ty  \in-ˈte-grə-tē\
1:  firm adherence to a code of especially moral or artistic values :  incorruptibility
2:  an unimpaired condition :  soundness
3:  the quality or state of being complete or undivided :  completeness

Integrity according to Brene’ Brown: “You choose courage over comfort. You choose what is right over what is fun, fast, or easy. And you choose to practice your values rather than simply professing them”.
“Integrity stems from the Latin word ‘integer’ which means whole and complete. So integrity requires an inner sense of ‘wholeness’ and consistency of character. When you are in integrity, people should be able to visibly see it through your actions, words, decisions, methods, and outcomes. When you are ‘whole’ and consistent, there is only one you. You bring that same you wherever you are, regardless of the circumstance. You don’t leave parts of yourself behind. You don’t have a ‘work you,’ a ‘family you,’ and a ‘social you.’ You are YOU all the time”. (Huffington Post, Aug. 01, 2016)

Wow. Integrity a really big idea. I get the picture that a ‘person of integrity’ is, brave, grounded, and lives a life completely in alignment with his or her values. I want to live like that. And I want to have people like that in my life, don’t you?

What does it have to do with trust?

I believe INTEGRITY is the absolute cornerstone of trust. All the other aspects we’ll explore in this series on trust have to do with how I relate to others. Integrity is about how I relate to me. Here is where the soul-searching work of building trust begins. If I am going to be trust-worthy to others, I have to first know that I can trust myself.
Integrity is about knowing who I am and then walking who I am… every.single.day.

When I know that you won’t betray yourself, I know you won’t betray me… and I can trust you.

“Choosing courage over comfort…choosing what is right over what is fun, fast, or easy” (Brown), means I will do the hard thing when that is what is needed in order to not betray myself. I will be brave, take risks and make sacrifices in order to be true to myself. (Who wouldn’t trust a person who does that?)
“And you choose to practice your values rather than simply professing them”. In the book Unoffendable, author Brant Hanson writes, “a recent study found that people who join causes online are not more apt to actually do something, they are less likely to take action…we’re positively in love with ‘taking stands’ that cost us absolutely nothing”. So I’ve been asking myself… “if I never spoke about my values, would someone be able to tell what they are by following me around and watching my life?” Because if the answer is, ‘not really’, then how can I ask you to trust me when I talk about values?
What can we do about it?

Integrity is the soul-searching work of building trust. So, how do we do this work?

  • Know My Values: Have I taken the time to struggle through and identify my core values? This takes work, but how can I be true to my values if I’ve not done the work of identifying them? Here’s a values clarification exercise to get started.
  • Identify the obstacles: What gets in the way of my living out my values? How often do I look for the comfortable, easy, fast or fun way forward instead of doing the hard work of “walking my talk”.
  • Get Aligned: What are the areas in my life where I’m not aligned with my values? What changes can I make to bring more integrity through Values Alignment?
  • Do it with Someone: This is a journey we don’t have to travel alone. We can ask a trusted friend to walk with us. Or we can get a coach. One of the most energizing benefits I experienced from my work with a professional coach had to do with Values Clarification and Life Alignment. If you’d like more information about working with a professional coach, contact me.

In Psalm 139, God allows us the privilege of listening as David walks this sacred soul-searching journey to integrity. This is what it sounds like for me in my daily pursuit to integrity:

Search me… again today, Lord,
you know me…
you know my deepest values, my driving purpose, my most challenging obstacles.
You know when I sit down and when I stand up;
But you don’t just see everything I do…. You know what I’m thinking!
You discern my motives and desires as I go about and when I stop going about.
I’m no stranger to you… you know how I’m wired… how I’m designed.
Before I speak a word, you know the thoughts behind it.
yes, Lord, you know them completely.
So can we do this together, Lord?
Search me, God; talk to me about what you see and help me to know my heart;
Let’s look at everything… what are my values and how do they show up?
Where am I in conflict? How might I be dishonoring your name by a lack of integrity?
I look to you… you are my life source and I want my life to reflect all of who you are to me. [Submitted by: Cindy Schmelzenbach – Member Care Coordinator, Asia Pacific Region]

Christianity Today: People who don't go to church, don't want to go to church. They're not rolling out of bed late on Sunday morning wishing they had somewhere more churchy to be.

In fact, a growing number of people who do go to church don't want to go, either. If we don't give them something worth committing to, they'll be gone soon.
It's not that people are less capable of making commitments than they used to be. They just commit differently. But too many churches haven't caught up to that reality.

So how do we get people to commit to the church we pastor? Especially when our church is small and struggling?

It's not about doing things BIGGER; it's about focusing on doing church BETTER!

7 Steps to Start Becoming a Church People Want to Commit To
A lot of recently unchurched people are like some of the rowdy kids in school. They’re ditching because they’re not being challenged. by Karl Vaters   
People who don’t go to church, don’t want to go to church. They’re not rolling out of bed late on Sunday morning wishing they had somewhere more churchy to be.
In fact, a growing number of people who do go to church don’t want to go, either. If we don’t give them something worth committing to, they’ll be gone soon.
As I mentioned in my last post, People Aren’t as Loyal to a Church Or Denomination Anymore – Good For Them, it’s not that people are less capable of making commitments than they used to be. They just commit differently. But too many churches haven’t caught up to that reality.
So how do we get people to commit to the church we pastor? Especially when our church is small and struggling?
I don’t have all the answers, not by a long shot. But I’ve learned a handful of principles over three decades of ministry that have helped our church become a place people are excited to be committed to.
These steps won’t cost you any extra money and very little extra time – the extra time because of the learning curve. It’s not about adding to your already limited schedule and overtaxed budget. It’s not about doing things bigger. It’s about focusing on doing church better. Working smarter, not harder.

Where Our Focus Needs to Be

But first, despite the title of this post, the challenge before us isn’t about getting people to go to church.
It’s about inspiring people to commit to
  • Worshiping Jesus
  • Genuine relationships with God’s people
  • Making disciples
  • Doing ministry for those in need
If your focus is trying to get people to commit to your Sunday service schedule, your denominational preference, maintaining your church building or anything like that, you might as well stop reading right now. In fact, you might as well close your church right now.
The days of people going to church for anything less than a genuine relationship with Jesus are over.
The days of people going to church for anything less than a genuine relationship with Jesus are over. Yes, there’s still a residue of those people, but they’re dying out – literally. And they won’t be replaced by a new group. Nor should they be.
But if you want people in your church because you have a passion to help them connect with Jesus and God’s family, read on.

1. Clear Away Anything that Isn’t Jesus

If people continue to go to church, it won’t be because they feel a sense of loyalty to a tradition most of them have never had in their lives to begin with. And it won’t be because they want to be entertained. They have better entertainment on the phone in their pocket than we can ever compete with.
The only thing that will get them out of their house and into our churches is if we give them a cause worth living (and dying) for. Namely, an authentic presentation of the gospel of Jesus – through our words and our lives.
If your generational traditions or your hip, new staging helps people do that, great! Keep doing it. But if not, don’t let your church’s personal preferences keep people from seeing Jesus.
Whether he’s hidden behind stained glass windows or laser lights and fog machines, anything that obscures Jesus instead of revealing him needs to be ditched.

2. Emphasize Relationships Over Spectacle or Tradition

For small churches especially, being a church that people want to commit to starts and ends with relationships.
We need to help people make connections to Jesus and each other.
We need to help people make connections to Jesus and each other. Then work together to build bridges with those outside the church walls.
Long after our traditions have grown stale and the spectacle has been replaced by a bigger show somewhere else, genuine relationships with Jesus and people will last.

3. Be Genuine

People are far less naïve than they used to be. A teenager can spot bad CGI in a movie that would have blown their minds a few years ago. And they can spot phoniness in people even quicker.
This is especially important for church leaders, because we have a culture in which respect for leadership is lower than it has been in a loooong time – and mostly for good reasons.
Respect doesn’t come with the position of pastor any more. In fact, it’s more likely to be viewed with skepticism than honor. That skepticism will only be overcome by practicing what we preach.

4. Discover Your Calling – Then Be Good at It

Every pastor and church needs to discover who you are and what you’re called to do. Then, do that and be that!
Giving people something worth committing to isn’t a matter of competing with the big church down the street. It’s not about offering nicer facilities, bigger events or even better preaching. It’s about discovering what God has called you and your church to be great at, then being great at that.
Excellence isn’t limited to churches with big budgets.
There’s no excuse for shoddiness. It costs no more time or money to do it right. It just takes a full commitment.

5. Don’t Just Talk – Hang Out and Listen

No one wants a relationship in which one side does all the talking. We have TV and movies for that.
But even TV and movies are giving way to social media. One of the best parts about watching a show that has some social media buzz is chatting about it on Twitter and Facebook as it airs.
People want to engage with others, not just sit passively while someone else talks.
People want to engage with others, not just sit passively while someone else talks.
Sadly, the church does not have a reputation of being open to dialog – or to hard questions. And definitely not to criticism.
No, you don’t have to turn your sermon into a discussion group (although, some churches do that with great success), but there needs to be an easy and obvious way for people to engage, dialog, chat, hang out and feel like their life and their opinion matters.
And pastors, especially pastors of small churches, need to be engaged in those conversations. Listening, participating and learning, not just teaching.

6. Keep Learning and Getting Better

I communicate, minister and lead much differently today than I when I started in pastoral ministry 35 years ago. In fact I do it differently than I did just ten years ago. And I expect to change at least as much in the next five years.
I now have over 30 years of ministry experience in addition to my formal ministry training. But that experience matters less today than it ever has. If I’m not constantly learning, listening and growing, I’ll fall behind very quickly.
But that shouldn’t intimidate us. Learning and growing is Discipleship 101. It’s central to being a follower of Jesus, let alone a church leader.

7. Offer People a Challenge Worthy of Their Time and Talents

Jesus never made discipleship easy. He always inspired people to a bigger commitment by calling them to a greater challenge.
Too many pastors limit the expectations they have for their members to sitting in a pew and filling gaps in existing ministries. We think we can’t ask more of them because … well … they’re not even doing that!
But a lot of uncooperative church members and recently unchurched people aren’t as disinterested as we think. Like some of the rowdy kids in school, they’re not ditching class because we’re asking too much of them. They’re acting out because they’re not being challenged.
People are deciding that leaving church is better than being bored in church. I don't blame them.
People are deciding that leaving church is better than being bored in church. I don't blame them.
If we don’t challenge people through a genuine experience of worship, fellowship, discipleship and ministry, they’ll do one of four things: 1) go to a church that challenges them more, 2) go to a church that entertains them better, 3) show up physically, but disengage in every other way, or 4) stopping going to church entirely.
People want to go to a church where they’re challenged by something bigger than themselves and where their gifts are being used to further that cause.
If you ask small, you’ll get a small commitment. Ask large and your joy might be full.


Here are the stories featured in the latest WMC News:
          • Church Builds School
          • Blessed to Bless
          • Serving the Needy
Photos linked to Youtube / Descriptions linked to Vimeo for easy download!


 




 
 
WMC News 134: Iglesia Construye Escuela, Bendecidos para Bendecir, Sirviendo al Necesitado



Thanks so much for watching our news videos! Your feedback is greatly appreciated!


Malaysia: Dynamic Language Centre is accepting applications for full-time language teachers in their English language center in Penang, Malaysia.
The newly renovated center has been in operation for over 15 years. While they teach many languages, children's and adult English are their main focus.

If you are an experienced children's teacher, enjoy a wide mix of cultures from Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa, and are looking for a rewarding career- we have an opportunity for you!
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Asia-Pacific Regional Communications
Ortigas Avenue Extension
Kaytikling, Taytay, Rizal, Manila 1920 Philippines
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