Category Archives: Missions: Latin America

How God Gave Me a Heart for Missions One Christmas

It was while Norma and I were living in a small town on a remote stretch of New Mexico desert, and I was reading a book by an Asian preacher, that God gave me my heart for missions.

In 1995, I was in my fourth year as minister of Central Christian Church in Portales, N.M. Norma and I had come to love the many great Christians who made up that church, but we were crying out to God to point us in a new direction.

Portales is a town of about 11,000; except for Clovis, it is about two hours in all directions from planet Earth. When we accepted the call to minister to the Portales church, Norma and I knew from the start that it was unlikely that we would stay there for more than a few years. We had both spent our entire lives in big cities. We felt no attraction to the tiny town or the desolate terrain, and the church also had its problems. The previous minister had been fired, leading to the loss of several members and a deep rift among those who stayed. But we accepted the church’s invitation to pay them a weekend visit, fell in love with the people there, and we came away with a strong sense that God wanted us to go there to help that church find its way back to a better place.

We had a very successful ministry at Central Christian Church. Attendance grew from about 125 to more than 200. The youth program, under our leadership the first year and then with the help of a full-time youth minister, grew by leaps and bounds. The church had five elders, most of whom had held their positions for years; I set out to recruit and train new elders to join the existing ones, and we succeeded in involving the next generation in leadership.

By the end of our third year in Portales, I believed that our work at Central Christian was mostly done. I began to inquire about other ministry opportunities. That is another story entirely, and an amazing one that I will have to tell some day — but during the summer of 1995, I was actually hired by three different churches, one after another, but each time God slammed the door shut in the most unusual ways.

After those events, Norma and I were emotionally wrung out, feeling lonely and a bit lost. Continue reading How God Gave Me a Heart for Missions One Christmas

Missions: The Next Generation

Bill & Karleen Crandall serve in Guayaquil, Ecuador. Their most recent newsletter is here. Bill & Karleen served in the ministry at Yukon, Okla., many years ago, and much of their support is provided by Christian churches in Oklahoma. Their daughter Jennifer and her husband serve in Krasnodar, in Russia. Jennifer is hospitalized in Krasnodar awaiting the birth of her second child. The Crandalls are headed there.

This is an amazing family. They were able to turn their backs on U.S. materialism and security, which the rest of us take for granted and treat as our rights, rather than our privileges.

If you are tired of supporting mega-churches and mega-charities that never seem to do more than add to their own wealth, here is the alternative: real missionaries and real people living adventures the rest of us only dare read about.

The Joshua One Manifesto

I have completed the text of The Joshua One Manifesto, which is subtitled: “Ten Things U.S. Christians and Churches Desperately Need in the 21st Century.” This document identifies the things Joshua One Ministries was formed to promote, and identifies the main topics we wish to discuss on this blog.

Please take a moment to read the Manifesto. These things are important to us, and I hope they are to you, too. Take a moment to give us your feedback on these priorities in the comments section below.

Actually, at the time of this writing, we have only nine items on the list. Recognizing the likelihood that we have overlooked some point of great importance, we have called this a list of “Ten Things…” What important point or principle should be added to the list? If you have a suggestion, please make it in the comments section below.

To read The Joshua One Manifesto, click here, or on the link in the upper right corner of this page.