ThreeWorldsTV on YouTube

In an effort to continue growing and giving people a better insight into Three Worlds, we have started a channel on YouTube called:  ThreeWorldsTV.  We will be posting videos on ThreeWorldsTV.  Sometimes they may be interviews, sometimes they may be informative, sometimes they may be answers to questions submitted by churches or readers (We'll happily take your questions anytime).  And sometimes, we will put up videos that are just videos of the beautiful scenery that you can find in Europe and the Middle East.  Occasionally, there may be some pretty silly stuff we put up there too because this job gets too serious sometimes. Now, a certain occasional reader to the Three Worlds Diary sent us a funny video on facebook castigating people who film things vertically on their i-phones because they don't realize you can film horizontally.  Okay...yes, I plead guilty.  That is me.  But as all you diary readers know after 11 years of having this diary, I am world famous for my lousy photography skills.  I've since corrected the vertical issue. However, this first video was filmed in November before I got reamed out by our diary reader.  So, point taken.  :)

Overall, we'll have to see if my skills can improve in time.  Lord knows my photography sure hasn't.  But I will try to do my best to make them better.  In time, we are hoping that our 3W Teammates will be adding stuff as well.  Ken Oldham will be helping out and appearing and narrating some videos.  It's a shame I didn't do this 2 years ago since we have seen so many beautiful things and had so many great things to report on.  But better late than never.  Finding the time to do video has been the main obstacle.  We're already busy enough with the work and travel, but then when you add the diary, facebook, and twitter--it really adds up.  Now video!  But this is the world we live in and it does give people an insight into the mission-field that never would have been possible in our parents' and grandparents' day.  That is very cool.

Lastly, I really don't like being in pictures or video, but there's no way around this if we're going to bring stuff to you on video.  So, I'll just have to deal with it.

I'll be posting some of our already made videos over the coming months, and adding some stuff from upcoming winter/spring trips to the USA, Russia, Italy, Hungary, London, and Ireland.  I may even include shots of airplanes since I know you love those and always want more.

This first video is from a few weeks ago:  a response to a question submitted to us by Fairfax Community Church.

 

Mourning the Demise of African-American Music

For quite a few years, I've been promising diary readers an essay on the decline of African-American Music.  It's something that genuinely bothers me, as I grew up listening to 70's/80's soul, R & B, and funk.  That music was rooted in solid musicianship, beautiful voices, and genuine soul.  Whether it was Marvin Gaye singing meaningful and soulful songs like "What's Going On?," Funkadelic's hardcore funk of "One Nation Under a Groove," or Michael Jackson's contagious dance-pop masterpiece "Billie Jean," you could be sure that behind African-American music, there were people who were genuinely talented musicians, arrangers, and creative geniuses. From the borrowed sounds of Elvis Presley, to the global mania of Michael Jackson, to the expansion of local, indigenous non-English rap in places as unlikely as Algeria, Japan, and Australia---the world has always loved the American Jazz/Blues/Soul tradition.

But something happened. On today's radio, kids aren't going to hear the talented bass lines of someone like Bootsy Collins (Parliament-Funkadelic) or Bernard Edwards (Chic).  There's no great, innovative soul guitarists like Nile Rodgers (Chic), or great live bands like Earth, Wind, and Fire or Kool & the Gang.  (White) KC & the Sunshine Band has ten times as much soul as anything on the radio today.  Neither do we see artists like Prince that can play over 30 instruments and who has the greatest male vocal range of any singer in rock n' roll (his lowest notes are deeply resonant and full and his high notes are Mariah Carey level).  Prince always ran a tight live band with high demands as does Sting---much more so than any R & B/Hip-Hop artists out there in the last 20 years.  And the beauty of the male African-American voice as exemplified by the harmonies of the Temptations, The Spinners, the Four Tops and others is just completely gone.  Even Roger Korman and Zapp ("Computer Love") surrounded themselves with beautiful male African-American voices and solid musicians and that was in the early 80's.

What happened?  Computers happened and Rap happened.  Computers enabled producers to become the primary drivers in music.  No longer did one need to hire talented session musicians, now the studio could produce the bass, the drums, and even make tone deaf people sound like they can sing--See Britney Spears and a whole host of others.  It saves money and you can rely on one guy.  The problem is that you can hear it!  The drums don't have the same pop as if Tony Thompson were behind the drums.  The male voices are not as resonant anymore.  The guitars are a virtual non-factor.

Sadly, Michael Jackson and Quincy Jones started us down this road.  Jackson, petrified of not being able to top "Thriller" made "Bad" an overproduced, space age sounding album that had far less soul and funk than Thriller which relied more heavily on real musicians.  Compare how you feel when listening to "Off the Wall" or the Jackson's brilliant "Triumph" album with how you feel listening to a song like "Speed Demon" on Bad.  You can feel the computers winning the battle for the soul of African-American Music.  "Bad" sold very well, but not as well as "Thriller."  His next album "Dangerous" took the musicianship to new lows.  A song like "Keep it in the Closet" (See below) could just not get anymore soulless or hollow if it tried.

It was around this time that Rap really broke open.  Rap of course had been around in the late 70's with the Sugarhill Gang's "Rappers Delight," Grandmaster Flash, and Kurtis Blow.  But even this early rap was based on samples of music by bands like Chic or James Brown.  The rappers used the unbelievably catchy guitar hooks of songs like "Sex Machine" or the bass lines of "Good Times."  The soul throbbed and the rappers rapped over that soul.  Rap played upon the value of oral tradition/storytelling, which is part of the African and African-American experience, and gave it a fresh outlet.  There is value in that by itself.  But rap would be dependent on the samples of other people's great musicianship.

When rap went mainstream with Run DMC's "Walk This Way" and the Beastie Boys "Fight For your Right (to Party)," rap began to really take off.  By the early 90's, Dr. Dre, Ice Cube, L.L. Cool J. and Snoop Doggy Dogg ushered in the so-called "Golden Age of Rap."  But all of this meant more sampling, more studio production, and less live musicians.  But even the Beastie Boys (white Jews from Manhattan) valued classic soul as evidenced by their brilliant 2nd album "Paul's Boutique" and they even learned to play instruments.  Their songs on "Ill Communication" are more funky and pay more tribute to 70's African-American music than any other African American artist out there was doing at the time or since!

Hip-Hop (New Jack Swing) really took off with Bobby Brown's "Don't Be Cruel" album which was produced by BabyFace (a guy with a great voice himself) really seemed to open pandoras box as far the over-produced soul album was concerned.  Paula Abdul's smash album continued it, as did Janet Jackson's music (although she worked closely with the wonderful live bands formed by producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis of  The Time).  After that, it gets increasingly hard to find good soul music.  Terence Trent D'Arby (my favorite soul artist) released his masterpiece "Symphony or Damn" in 1993 to little fanfare.  Yet D'Arby has more musical talent and soul in his little finger than the entire R & B top 10 artists today.  D'Arby was snuffed out by the new studio produced African-American music, the sample-reliant Rap format, and by the threatened artist Michael Jackson who always felt D'Arby was the one who could truly knock the King of Pop off his throne.  Jackson's insistence that he be called "the King of Pop" (emphasis on the word "Pop") shows how carelessly he treated his soul R & B heritage:  And this from a guy who grew up in the Motown family!

It was over by 1989.  By the early 90's, Rap was the biggest form of music selling in the world.  It is only now being displaced by the over-produced artificial dance music that is all over the airwaves.  The runaway smash hit "Gangham Style" is a perfect example of the new soulless soul.  The Seoul crooner is a dance sensation.  You know it's gotten bad when the world is dancing to Korean music--the most studio produced music ever.

There must be a ton of unemployed, great, African-American musicians.  I hear Wynton Marsalis often plays to a handful of people.  Terence Trent D'Arby is lucky to get a few club gigs in Italy, France, or Switzerland and he may be the most soulful artist left.  It's no wonder that Whitney Houston's funeral was so inspiring.  The talent is in black church choirs and African-American churches.  Occasionally we see it on display on shows like American Idol.  We miss it, but we don't even realize we miss people with a voice like Luther Vandross, James Ingram, The Stylistics, and the incomparable Whitney Houston in her prime--who herself was a Clive Davis production--but what a majestic voice!  The loss of this level of musicianship is something to be mourned.  There are bands like Roots (who still had to take a job as Jimmy Fallon's back-up band), and more recently Bruno Mars that are bringing back some of the soul, but it's not the same.  We were once inundated with talent.

How did we go from the Commodores to Gangham Style in 30 short years?  I know the answer, but I can't believe it.

********

For some examples, Check these videos out:

One of my all-time favorites:  Ray Goodman and Brown lip-syncing on a TV show in 1980.  There are live versions out there.

Bootsy Collins breaking down funky bass playing.  It makes me weep that we don't hear this stuff anymore.

Bootsy absolutely tearing it up on the bass. Notice it's at the Jazz Open in Stuttgart.  You're more likely to see appreciation of this at a European Jazz Festival than in the USA.  And yes, there's a guy wearing a diaper.  All the more cool!

 

 

Back when a band really mattered and you had to have a horn section. James Brown slamming it.  If you're not moving to this you are dead.

 

Sugarhill Gang's "Rapper's Delight" back in 1979/80 started to get rap exposure beyond New York City.  It is completely dependent on the bass line of Bernard Edwards and the Guitar part of Nile Rodgers.  Rap would play upon the oral/storytelling tradition of African American experience, but it would be reliant on samples of other people's musicanship.  I'm not sure Rap ever surpassed this.  The Chic song "Good Times" has been sampled over and over since.

 

The hollow sounds and super boring melody lines of the over-produced Michael Jackson on "Keep it in the Closet."

 

The completely atrocious, soulless, computer sounds of Usher---very emblematic of todays African American R & B music.

 

The funeral dirge of Gangham Style dance, hip-hop, soul.

Last but certainly not least, Terence Trent D'Arby combining vocals, songwriting, and musicianship.  Beautiful voice...and give him until 1:37 for him to get kicking.  My man, TTD.

Photos of the Austrian Alps

We just got back from a relaxing trip to Hallstatt, Austria in the Alps.  This is a place that has become a bit of a winter refuge for us at Christmas time.  The town only has about 800 people and pretty much shuts down around Christmas.  Internet is usually spotty to non-existant, and it forces us to really unplug from the world.  It's a great time to just enjoy being a family together.  We play lots of games, listen to music, and read books.  Then we take walks and enjoy the beautiful scenery.  It's very quiet and tranquil---except when the lovely Christmas/New Years band goes around from house to house playing holiday carols.  The focused family time is especially important.  And since we work at home, drawing the line between work and home is never easy.  In Hallstatt, all work things can really stop in a way they don't any other time of the year.  And nothing compares with the Alps anywhere in the world.  These beautifully preserved, pristine towns in Switzlerand and Austria and Italy amidst the sharp peaks and valleys are something you don't see in the Andes or Himalayas or Rockies.  It is just mind-blowingly idyllic.

A little bit about Hallstatt.  Hallstatt is a small town that hugs the cliffside of a a large lake.  It is surrounded by mountains on all side which gives it a cauldron-like feel.  There are only about 800 inhabitants in the town which is about 1 hour away from Salzburg ("The Sound of Music" area), and 2 hours from Munich.  There were no roads to Hallstatt until about 1890, so the village was quite cut off from the world.  High up above the town in a mining car track that goes into the Salt Mine that made Hallstatt an important and wealthy town.  The town is at least 800 years old, although there is evidence of settlement dating back to 5500 B.C.  Today Hallstatt is mainly a tourism town and there are numerous skiing resorts in the area.

They speak German in Hallstatt, but it's different than the German spoken in Germany (which itself can vary from region to region).  The Alps region of Europe is actually far more diverse than people realize.  All of these towns and valley cut off by these towering mountains often picked up a great variety of dialects.  You can hear some Italian in the German of the Hallstatt people.  Some areas of the Alps have dialects derived from German tribal langauges, and others have French dialects, Romansh--an ancient Rheato-Romanic language, and even Celtic langauge surfaces in the Alps region.  Overall, Europe is the most culturally diverse region on Planet Earth---a statistic that surprises people who might think India or Africa is more diverse.

We're back feeling rested and re-energized for a great 2013 at Three Worlds.  Lots of good things are coming this year and there's still so much we haven't shared as we continue to carefully line things up for the next few years.  So thanks for sticking with us and we're looking forward to a great 2013.  Marco's 10th birthday is coming up very soon.  I will be devastated as my little baby turns 10, but I'll also be very proud.  Get out the kleenex relatively soon.  I'll need it.

Great photos of a previous trip to Hallstatt in wintertime  here.

Top 10 Books of the Year Awards 2012

It's time for the Top 10 Books of the Year Awards!  Feel the excitement in the air as the red carpet fills up with the biggest stars in Hollywood.  Look! There's Meeno Pelucci from the early 80's TV show "Voyagers!"  And stepping out of the white limo are Tim Conway and Harvey Korman.  All the truly big stars here!  The special musical guests have arrived:  Air Supply!  And there's Charles Nelson Reiley who will be serving as the M.C.  What suspense is in the air!  Forget the Oscars, the Grammy's, or the Emmy's...it's the Patty's! After a year full of very mediocre books (2011), I made sure to stack the deck this year and put on my reading list some guaranteed winners.  That was a good idea.  I read some great books this year, but as usual, the first half of the year had the better books.  I don't know why that happens.  Jamie won our family's "Who read the most books" competition this year--as usual.  This year Marco, for the first time, was a tough competitor.  I came in third at 20 books.

So let's end the suspense.  The Top 10 Books of 2012:

10.  Boomerang: Travels in the New Third World by Michael Lewis (240 pages).

Michael Lewis travels to a number of First World Nations that have been devastated by the cheap credit crisis that has engulfed much of the world.  Lewis explores how Ireland, Iceland, Greece, Germany and the U.S.A are dealing with suddenly being close to financial collapse.  Lewis makes complicated financial instruments easy to understand.  The essay on Greece is one of the most fascinating essays I've read in the last 10 years.  Most all of these essays are available free online.

9.  Burton:  A Biography of Sir Richard Francis Burton by Byron Farewell (464 pages).

Richard Burton was one of the great English explorers of the 19th Century.  Although far less famous than Stanley and Livingstone, he traveled far more than they did.  He was an absolute travel addict having explored Sub-Saharan Africa, Egypt, Brazil, Paraguay, India, Arabia, Syria, Iceland, Continental Europe, and many other places on 5 continents.  He discovered Lake Tanganyika, traveled across the Western United States and hung out with Brigham Young, and snuck into Mecca after learning how to pass himself off as a Southern Asian Muslim.  He spoke 29 languages and wrote many books that talked about the geography, culture, language, and even sexual habits of all the peoples he visited.  He was a botanist, a master fencer, a cartographer, and ethnologist, a linguist, a solider, a diplomat, and a spy.  He was also a completely self-absorbed jerk.  The level of committment that his wife displayed toward him throughout his life was extraordinary, even if that love was never reciprocated by him.  This is a Penguin Classic book and a pretty great example of a brilliantly researched biography.

8.  Balkan Ghosts:  A Journey Through History  (368 pages).

My favorite travel writer, Robert D. Kaplan takes on the complicated cultures of the Balkans.  He travels to Serbia, Romania, Bulgaria, Albania, and Greece unpacking the complicated and brutal history of this region which has sparked a lot of the world's great periods of instability.  The levels and layers of hatred between the ethnic groups leaves one staggering for breath.  The book, written in the early 90's, has proven to be quite accurate over time.

7.  Stories I Only Tell My Friends by Rob Lowe (320 pages). 

Hey, no laughing!  I'm an 80's kid!  Well, I loved this book.  The autobiography of one of my favorite 80's personalities, and West Wing actor (great show!) Rob Lowe.  Lowe was from Dayton, Ohio but mostly grew up in Malibu.  He crossed paths with lots of famous people throughout the 80's, and those are some of my favorite moments.  The book spends way too much time on his period making "the Outsiders" and barely mentions his tempestuous relationship with Melissa Gilbert, but we'll let that pass.  You get the feeling this is the pretty sanitized version of his life, although he's very candid about his struggle to overcome alcoholism (which he did).  A fun read for 80's kids.

6.  Eastward to Tartary: Travels in the Balkans, in the Middle East, and in the Caucuses by Robert D. Kaplan (384 pages).

Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Lebanon, Syria, are just a few of the often neglected places that Kaplan covers in this book which unpacks the culture, history, and geography of Central Asia.  Once again, Kaplan does a fanstastic job of exposing how ancient beliefs and history completely saturate the current governmental situations of these various nations.  I had read this before, but reading it as the Regional Coordinator for Europe/Middle East was a whole new experience.  The current situation in Syria is completely forseen and broken down by Kaplan nearly 2 decades before it happened.

5.  The Right Stuff by Tom Wolfe ( 352 pages).

The story of the foundation of NASA and the beginning of the exploration of Space.  Beginning with Chuck Yeager and the pursuit to break the Soundbarrier, the book takes you through the process of choosing and developing the astronauts and chronicles how they were lauded and exploited by an America desperately searching for heroes in the 1960's.  The incredible risks that these pilots took are remarkable to read about.  Their level of skill and bravery is astounding.  And one gets totally absorbed by the waiting game as they all await their turn to be launched into space.  Although I'm not a Wolfe fan, in this book  he brings each astronaut to life and describes the technological aspects of space travel in a way that is understandable and highlights the incredibe risks taken with each flight.  This was an amazing moment in American history and there really hasn't been anything this audacious since.

4.  Shogun by James Clavell (1152 pages).

The classic novel about an English Sea Captain that is shipwrecked in 17th Century Japan.  In Japan, mostly closed to foreigners, Captain Blackthorne finds a society that in most ways is far more advanced than Europe, but in other ways is more brutal than anything the sailors have ever seen.  Blackthorne falls in love with a Japanese woman and through her, learns about the ancient customs and complicated worldview of the world's most inscrutable country:  Japan.  Full of action and great insights into the differences between the West and East, this is probably the best novel about East Asia in English.

3.  Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson (656 pages).

I'm not a techy guy in the least, and even though I own an Apple, I pretty much hate it.  Nevertheless, this book was impossible to put down.  Isaacson does a masterful job of chronicling the rise of Apple and why Steve Jobs was such an innovator in a way that anybody can understand.  Three things really stand out in Isaacson's book:  1) The incredibly competitive tech environment which calls for companies to be incredibly flexible at all times  2) The artistry behind many of the ideas that Jobs' Apple had and how they gambled that aestethics would matter to people and 3) Steve Jobs complicated personality---a genius visionary who was not necessarily a very nice or mature person.  Jobs death shortly before the book came out is covered in detail.  It was a huge loss.

2.  Goat Brothers by Larry Colton.

This was my favorite book of all-time until this year.  I first read it when I was 27 years old and was blown away by it.  Now re-reading it as a middle-aged geezer, I couldn't quite say that it's my favorite book of all-time anymore, or of this year.  However, it remains one of the best books I've ever read and is certainly hard to put down.  Goat Brothers follows the story of 6 fraternity brothers from Berkeley as they go through college and then head out into the world.  They come of age during the tumultuous 1960's (starting college in 1960) and find that the whole United States is shifting its ground underneath their feet.  The social upheavals, the sexual revolution, the women's lib movement ushers in an age that these young men are not quite prepared for.    One becomes a baseball player, another an Astronaut, another fights in Vietnam, another becomes a hippy, and another struggles with mental illness.  The book is really about life's unpredicatable curve balls and within that--is the story of how American began to change in the 1960's.

 

1.  Lennon:  The Life by Philip Norman (864 pages).

I'm a huge Beatles fan that's read a lot of book about the Beatles, but even so, this one was chock full of new information.  This was a very well-written biography and I couldn't put it down.  Norman previously wrote the best book ever written on the Beatles:  "Shout."  I wondered how much new light could he shed on the Beatles and Lennon after that masterpiece.  But Lennon is full of new details and information about his life, their songs, and his background.  This is a very three dimensional view of John Lennon and one can see in every era of his life, how much his father's abandonment and his mother's early death affected him.  I didn't realize how very personal all his lyrics were---pretty much uncensored inner thoughts.  Some songs like "Mother" have always been obviously personal, but "Help!" for instance, was written when Lennon was struggling with the ridiculousness of Beatlemania.  All of John's material from the White Album is directly related to their disillusioning experience with the Maharishi Yoggi--not just "Sexy Sadie."  Norman's book was full of fascinating new tidbits for Beatles fans.  But it was also a genuinely moving story of a guy wrestling with his demons from childhood.  Paul is my favorite Beatle (and Paul's songs are my favorite songs), but John was certainly the most complicated and colorful character.  Well done, Mr. Norman!

Honorable Mention:

Richard Burton: Prince of Players by Michael Munn.

Not Richard Burton the explorer, but Richard Burton the actor---who was best known for being a great Shakespearean actor and marrying Elizabeth Taylor twice.  Most of Burton's life is filled with sadness, regret, and alcoholism, but it is fascinating to read about English theatre in the 50's and 60's as well as all of the Hollywood melodrama in the 60's and 70's.  "The Robe" was always one of my favorite movies as a child.

Biggest Disappointment: 

Amexica:  War Along the Borderline by Ed Vulliamy.  I eyed this book in the bookstore for a year and was very excited to buy it.  After reading the novel "the Power of the Dog" about the drug wars (which won first place 3 years ago), everything else about the drug wars is kind of a let-down.  I'm not entirely sure why this collection of gripping stories of people struggling with the Mexican cartels was so disappointing.  It's an important subject and he covers a lot of ground, but there was something about the writing style that really took the punch out of this.  Maybe it was reading too much Robert D. Kaplan this year.  After Kaplan, nobody else feels that interesting when they dissect history, culture, and current events.  I'd actually recommend this book to anyone interested in learning about the drug war.  I'm not sure why it felt like a misfire for me.

***

Well that's it from the Shriner's Auditorium in Los Angeles.  The stars are leaving as the press surrounds Philip Norman after winning his "Patty."  Erik Estrada is jumping in his limosine.  There goes Randolph Mantooth and next to him is Cathy Lee Crosby.  We'd like to thank all the A-list stars that attended this year's Book Awards.  Next year's books also promise to be interesting.  A book on Democracy in Haiti, a novel by Ken Follet set in WWI Europe, and an autobiography from a member of Duran Duran are just some of the exciting books that sit on my shelf awaiting to be read.

 

A Closer Look at Religion in England and Wales

Thank you to Belinda Kendall for sending this in about Christianity and other religious beliefs in England and Wales.

 

This video shows how Christianity is in decline in Britain and Wales particularly between 2001-2011.  But actually, the situation is worse than the video suggests.  This is because a lot of people "identify" with Christianity while not being active Christians, believing in Christianity's theological beliefs, or attending church.  Church attendance is about 4%-6%.

Notice that the Northwest (where Zach and Audrey will be going for 3W) seems to have quite a few Christians.  But actually, these are nominal Catholics and the churches are empty.

London, which really is the heart of secularism, according to this survey, has many people identifying themselves as Christians (but that's because it's full of immigrants that brought their Christianity with them from the Caribbean or Africa).

The "least Christian" places, are areas like Tower Hamlets that are overwhelmingly Muslim.

So what this survey captured was people's "identification with religion."  It does not capture whether people actively worship in a particular faith and whether they live their lives according to a particular theology.  Had that been the case, the results would have been ever worse than they are in this video.

We would find that very few whites in England believe in God.  Even fewer base their lives on the theological teachings of a particular religion.  The few active Christians we would find, would be amongst immigrant communities.  And the most religious people in Britain would primarily be Muslims and Hindus.

 

 

3W Seminar III: London

I just returned from spending a week in London where Gary and Belinda Kendall joined me for our 3W Seminar at the Church of God in Tottenham.  The subject for this 3W Seminar was:  "The Vision Ladder:  Making Your Church's Vision Become a Reality." Gary and Belinda brought their years of experience and success in Pastoring, church management, and church planting to the material and it was an eye-opening, fascinating presentation.  Three joined us from the Birkenhead (Liverpool) Church and attendance was very good.

All of us were riveted throughout this presentation.  Every comment was deeply pertinent to our church situations and Gary's presentation was so easy to follow.  After the first 45 minute section, I was already hearing rave reviews from the Seminar attendees.  By Sunday afternoon when it all concluded, everyone unanimously agreed that this was an outstanding presentation that brought tons of clarity to our UK churches and to me personally.  Everyone seemed to be taking notes furiously.

One of the things that I think Gary and Belinda embody (like Kelley Philips, Rod Stafford, and others I've admired) is their very clear investment in the next generation of leaders.  When they could be hoarding power or creating inward ministries that keep them on top, they do the opposite and find young people to invest in.  This is the 2nd seminar that I've done with the Kendalls (Rome in February 2012) and I always feel overwhelmed by the encouragement that they give me personally and the support that they give to Three Worlds by allowing themselves to be resourced.  So thank you Gary and Belinda for being who you are.

And Sister Sadie and Pastor Mascall did a wonderful job of preparing things on the ground for this seminar.  I greatly enjoy working with the U.K. churches who have been so supportive of Three Worlds from the beginning.  We've had 5 seminars there and are in the process of  putting Zach and Audrey Langford as Career Missionaries to the UK for 3W.  I'm very grateful to both the Birkenhead Church and Tottenham for their support and cooperation.

Lastly, we did have some free time for the Kendalls to explore my favorite place in the whole world:  London.  While we saw some sights and I got to do some of my favorite things (visit Covent Garden, go to the travel bookstore, do some Christmas shopping for Marco and Jamie), a lot of that extra time allowed me to pick Gary and Belinda's brains about the work that they have done and what we at 3W can learn from it.  There's a lot.  So that time together is always extremely valuable and, as with the 3W Roundtable, gives us ideas on how to make Three Worlds even better.

I'll be back in London in March when we do a 3W Seminar on "How to Successfully Plant a Church."  I'm very much looking forward to that one as well.

Thanks to all involved in the 3W Seminar London and thanks to all of you who support Three Worlds.

 

Prayers for Egypt

We continue to follow the events in Egypt and ask for your prayers that the situation will not get worse.  Ken and Keli Oldham's blog is a great source of information to all that is happening in this fast-moving situation.  Check it out here.

Also Michael Koplow discusses the danger of Egypt's re-engagement amidst this turmoil here.

Isobel Kolman discusses the problems with the new constitution here.

The Guardian looks at Egypt's problem with authoritarianism and highlights the loss of credibility as Morsi sees advisors and ambassadors resign or distance themselves here.

Washington Post gives us 5 Take Aways from Morsi's speech last night here.

 

Video: Arco Church of God

As Three Worlds continues to develop, we're going to utilize video more and post our videos on our own YouTube Channel "ThreeWorldsTV."  Some of these videos will be interviews, some will be about events (like our 3W Seminars), some will be videos of the beautiful places and scenery in our region.

Here's our first video showing the beautiful location of the Arco Church of God on the Lago di Garda in Northern Italy.