All Eyes on Egypt...and our Friends

We just finished a conversation with the Oldhams-- our 3W personnel in the Middle East.  They are in great spirits, they are there usual calm selves, and they are prepared for whatever may come.  So are we.  We stand by ready to assist them in any way necessary.  We are all monitoring the situation very closely and taking embassy warnings very seriously.  The safety of the Oldhams is our primary concern.  

For those of you not following the situation in Egypt, it has been a year since President Morsi took charge as Egypt's first elected leader after the fall of the Mubarak regime in January of 2012.  Over this past year, President Morsi, representing the formerly persecuted Muslim Brotherhood, has made a number of alienating decisions that have led to widespread calls for him to step down.  June 30th is the day when enormous numbers of Egyptians are expected to take to the streets (both pro-Morsi and against Morsi), as millions call for Morsi to vacate the office of the Presidency permanently, and for new elections to be held as soon as possible.

One of the most difficult parts of our line of work is never knowing how long our temporary "home" will be home.  For many of us, there's constant uncertainty--if not about the stability of our country, then of the stability of our rental agreement or current location.  Unexpected moves and certainly traumatic evacuations are never pleasant experiences.  Fortunately, we have a large group around 3W that are prepared to help the Oldhams with anything that may come.  

We are also concerned for all of our dear friends in Egypt and the wonderful churches we know there.  As I've said to people on various occasions; the two friendliest countries I have been to are:  Egypt and the Dominican Republic.   

Egyptians should not be lumped in with the other volatile cultures in the region.  Egyptians are funny, humble, and love life and peace.  It's an amazing country with an ancient civilization and we pray that the best days are ahead.  Thank you for your support! 

What It Takes for Global Fellowship

The 2013 Global Gathering of the Church of God is in the books in both the USA and in Europe and the Middle East.  In this region (E/ME), we had churches and groups fan out across the region to celebrate the "Global Fellowship" weekend.  Early reports are that it was a great success with everyone walking away wanting greater connection and fellowship.

Jamie, Marco, 3W Intern-Jessica MacDonald and I headed South to Italy to be with our friends in the Arco Church of God in Arco, Italy.  The Church is new and small, but it is growing and there's clearly a core of committed lay people forming which will help propel it to greater growth in the future.   

Jessica and I attended the youth event on Saturday night and we were extremely impressed with the quality of the youth lesson.  Marcos Lovaglio did a fantastic job asking us what our image of Christ is and what we think his image of us is.  It was important, because as Marcos explained, that impression really sets the tone (and parameters) for your relationship with God.  It was a deep question and a thoughtful presentation.  I'm so happy to see the youth group in Arco not just existing (not easy for such a young church plant), but growing AND leading worship.  I think this is an excellent start.   

The sermon by Pastor Lovaglio was excellent.  Then we shared about the Global Fellowship and showed video of fellow Christians in our movement doing ministry.  The Arco church will continue being a part of this fellowship.

The church people expressed how grateful they were to not be left out of this big event.  The four of us were so glad we made the trip down to Arco to remind them that they are not alone!  Many of us are praying for them and want to walk alongside this special church as it grows.   

People always greatly enjoy these events that bring us together for a week from around the world.  There's always a call for more.  But one of the big lessons from "Mosaic" is that much of what we do in the Church of God actually encourages Balkanization instead of unity.  I won't go into all of that now.  Suffice to say that one key piece missing from every region to really create regular unity has been some organizational structure or mechanism that strives for regular connection. 

In the old days, the Gospel Trumpet/Vital Christianity magazine achieved that connection to some extent.  The old World Conference did as well, but that was not very frequent.  The Church of God is so atomized around the world and has such a lack of structure and authority that there's not many ways to really bring everyone together with the INTENTION of creating international connection.

That's why the third part of our 3W Prism is "creating inner-connectivity in Europe, the Middle East and beyond."  Because there has to be some organization that takes upon itself to make sure that this is happening more than just every 2 or 4 years.  Isolation is not good for the soul.  That goes for churches and countries as well.  One of the most important things Three World's does is bring people together on a regular basis.  Upon returning for Italy, it will be time to start finalizing the Summer Budapest Lectures which will be bringing together Bulgarians and Hungarians as well as Ken Oldham (3W-Middle East) for this regular event.   

If the Church of God wants to have a regular event like the Global Gathering and more importantly, see an increase in synergistic relationships around the world, they will need to create the organizational structure, but also create an "ethos" that values partnership and cooperation instead of isolation and autonomy.  

My hope is that the younger generations will push unity and synergy more.  We can all, for instance, be a part of the success of Arco.  The Kingdom expands better when we all help each other.   

 

Welcome to the New Three Worlds Website!

Greetings to our friends around the world! And Greetings to those of you attending the Global Gathering and just checking into Three Worlds for the first time.  
This week is the Church of God Global Gathering in Anderson, Indiana and the simultaneous "Global Fellowship" occurring in Europe and the Middle East.  Delegates from over 8o countries are descending on Anderson to celebrate together for 5 days.  
Meanwhile in our region (Europe/Middle East) the "Global Fellowship" is happening in cities throughout the region.  Churches from different countries are sending teams across borders to spend a weekend celebrating and worshipping God together while the larger event happens in the U.S.A.  At all of our sites (U.K., France, Italy, Bulgaria, etc.) we will be raising funds for the Persecuted Church and connecting with Church of God countries in other parts of the world.  
Consequently, we decided to unveil our new Three Worlds website this week.  This website has been active for 11 years.  It began in 2002 as www.chinatimesonline.com.  It stayed that way through the duration of our time serving as missionaries in China.  But in July 2010, we launched www.three-worlds.com.  This is our first major change from the original 3W site and we quite like the smoother look and the clarity.  
The "Diary" is our main feature.  It's a blog that has been running for 11 years with new entries on average every 3 to 5 days.  It has been a great way to record our thoughts, capture our experiences, and discuss in-depth various issues related to missionary work, Christianity in general, and Global politics and trends.  It is also a place where we post trip reports from our many trips around Europe, the Middle East, and the World.  What we can't talk about in depth at Facebook (Three Worlds) or Twitter (3WCHOG), we can delve into deeply at the Diary.  So be sure to bookmark the diary page and check in on us often.
We are very excited about the future!  Three Worlds has really taken off and we aim to continue being a place where we "Prepare the Church for Ministry in the 21st Century."  Thank you for joining us and get ready for an exciting and wild ride!

 

 

Is Evangelical Worship Superficial?

A must read article hits at why I find many worship services hollow and why I have struggled with a lot of Wesleyan-Holiness Theology over the years.  Two excerpts from Carl R. Trueman is Paul Woolley Professor of Church History at Westminster Theological Seminary:

Excerpt #1:
Entertainment has apparently become many people’s primary purpose of existence. I doubt that it would surprise Pascal that the world has increased the size, scope, and comprehensiveness of distraction. It would not puzzle him that death has been reduced to little more than a comic-book cartoon in countless action movies or into a mere momentary setback in soap operas and sitcoms. Indeed, he would not find it perplexing that the bleak spiritual violence of mortality leaves no lasting mark on the bereaved in the surreal yet seductive world of popular entertainment.

But he might well be taken aback that the churches have so enthusiastically endorsed this project of distraction and diversion. This is what much of modern worship amounts to: distraction and diversion. Praise bands and songs of triumph seem designed in form and content to distract worshipers from life’s more difficult realities.

Excerpt #2:

Of all places, the Church should surely be the most realistic. The Church knows how far humanity has fallen, understands the cost of that fall in both the incarnate death of Christ and the inevitable death of every single believer. In the psalms of lament, the Church has a poetic language for giving expression to the deepest longings of a humanity looking to find rest not in this world but the next. In the great liturgies of the Church, death casts a long, creative, cathartic shadow. Our worship should reflect the realities of a life that must face death before experiencing resurrection.

It is therefore an irony of the most perverse kind that churches have become places where Pascalian distraction and a notion of entertainment that eschews the tragic seem to dominate just as comprehensively as they do in the wider world. I am sure that the separation of church buildings from graveyards was not the intentional start of this process, but it certainly helped to lessen the presence of death. The present generation does not have the inconvenience of passing by the graves of loved ones as it gathers for worship. Nowadays, death has all but vanished from the inside of churches as well.

Read the whole thing here: http://www.firstthings.com/article/2013/05/tragic-worship

***

Criticism of contemporary worship is nothing new.  It often revolves around whether we are influencing the culture, or whether the culture is influencing us.  ”Did we abandon classic hymns so that we can sound relevant in our churches?” “Is the sound of drums and guitars less reverent than the sound of choirs, an organ, or a piano?”  And a deeper critique has been, “Are the lyrics presenting good, sound theology as many of the old hymns did?”  ”Or are they shallow, slogans?”

But this article suggests something much more troubling.  That our modern worship intentionally tries to shield us from the tragedy of our fallen world.  That we want the happy, re-assuring gospel, and not the gospel that spends a lot of it’s time not only talking about denying ourselves and taking up our cross, but that we refuse to believe there are consequences to the fall that we will not defeat in this world.

In my Wesleyan-Holiness upbringing, I never heard the Fall talked about seriously.  It was clear that there were many things that were sin, but we were to stay away from those, and with Jesus’ help, all should be okay.  It wasn’t quite Joel Osteen, but it was uncomfortably (or comfortably) close.  Our Wesleyan-Holiness tradition and Joel Osteen do have something in common.  Their theology has a uniquely American, triumphalistic element to it that seems to assure you that the good guys always win.  ”Your best life now.”  ”We can totally defeat sin.”  ”We will have the victory.”  Yes, of course we knew that there were problems in the world and that the best would come in the next world, but there was a subtle and not-so-subtle-suggestion that a good Christian is always optimistic, happy, and victorious.

The truth is though, that many of the Christians I know (myself most of all) are not always optimistic, happy, and victorious.  In fact, we can often be the exact opposite:  discouraged, depressed, and at a loss for how to manage the challenges in our life–despite our love for the Lord and our faith in Jesus.  It often leads to a disconnect in the Christian’s life:  ”All the language, music, and people I hang out with say I should feel joyful and victorious every second of the day, but I don’t really feel that way. What to do?”  The answer is either:  1) Hide the truth about your feelings or 2) Deny that you feel that way.

A theology that takes the consequences of the fall has answers for this.  This world is not currently in the state God intended.  In fact, it is far from it.  Yet through history and through the life and sacrifice of Jesus, a massive redemption process is under way that will lead to a world that will be the fulfillment of our deepest desires.  Where we will finally feel at home.  Where we will be who we truly want to be at our deepest core.  I describe it as the feeling you have when you get back to your house from a long trip away.  You enter the door, take off your shoes, and are suddenly overwhelmed by a feeling of familiarity.  This is your shelter, this is your refuge, this is where everything feels comfortable and you can truly let down and be yourself.  It’s good to be home and sleeping in your own bed.”  Heaven will be that kind of feeling, but on a much more profound level.  ”Ah, this is what I always wanted and who I really am deep down.  I am home.”

But that is the next world, not this one.  ”My Kingdom is not of this world,” Jesus said.   Yet he also proclaimed that the Kingdom had arrived.  What he meant was that the great climax of the process of redemption had started:  his work on the cross and the resurrection.  But he did not mean that this current world would suddenly be a perfect and just place.  Quite the opposite, he warned that it would get worse before it would be better.

But do we ever want to think of how it is worse now? Do we mourn for what could have been and what is?  Do we acknowledge that there are deep needs and desires in this world that will go unfulfilled in this lifetime?  I wish my Mother were alive.  I wish she could see me now.  I wish she could know my son.  But she can’t and she won’t in this life.  And that is a tragedy.  Do we sing about that in church?  Do we talk about that in church?  The Bible has lamentations, and the church fathers talk about the tragedy of the fall, and Augustine talks of the corruption of beautiful things that sin brings to the world.  But is it in our music, our sermons, and our Evangelical culture?

This article suggests its not, or it is not enough.  I tend to agree.  The more I walk the Christian life, the more I see how hard it is and how much we have to understand why we fail and why others fail.  Nothing in my spiritual upbringing really prepared me for how I would need to deal with my own failures, disappointments, disillusionments, and the failures of others.   “Perfection,” “Holiness,” and “Victory” are what I grew up hearing all the time, but I did not see it and I could not be it.  How to explain the disconnect?

It was only after discovering Eastern Orthodox theology in 1991 and later Roman Catholic theology that I began to even have a sense that there was a Christianity that didn’t have quick, pat answers.  Within my tradition, (the Church of God, Anderson, Indiana) it was the work of Val Clear and Gene Newberry that prevented me from thinking I was a heretic.

The irony of theologies that don’t take the fall seriously (too negative and dark, not triumphalistic enough), is that they end up being dualistic (we’re good, everything else is bad).  Only the God stuff is great.  Everything else in the world is evil.  So darkness doesn’t penetrate our lives or our worship, but it is a threat all around us.  Ultimately, to me, that’s bleaker than a world tainted by a fall.  That kind of manichean worldview is hard for Third Culture Kids to swallow and it just doesn’t seem authentic.

So the idea that our worship and faith really avoids death and loss sounds right on the money to me.  Surely, some Church of God people will say, “our theology does reflect the reality of the fall, read page XX of so and so.”  But, as this article suggests, it’s what we really proclaim daily and weekly that matters.  We’re good at proclaiming “victory.” Not so good at proclaiming, “things are not always right, even within us.”  You can even see it organizationally within the Church of God.  It’s deep in our DNA. Denial.

I’ve been in meetings with other Christians where everyone was supposed to share their true hurts, pains, and fears.  But as soon as people started doing that, the pat answers came flying out at the speed of light.  There was no freedom to really express pain and frustration.  No room to mourn.  It was almost comical how no one was allowed to really express their darkest feelings because that wasn’t perceived to be true faith.

Once, Jamie and I attended a camp for wounded missionaries.  It was one of the most incredible experiences of my life.  Only there (NOT in church) were people free to vent their deepest pains, frustrations, and sorrows.  I left wondering, “Why can’t church be this way?” It was intimate and it was real, and the effects of the fall were evident for all to see.  And they were in the Scriptures we studied.

I don’t think I was very well prepared for reality theologically-speaking.  But there were friends along the way, chief among them, my good friend Dean Abbott, who began showing me a more wholistic theological view that has brought more freedom.  And that freedom (in that paradoxical Jesus way) has brought a deeper understanding of life through death.

The German Transformation

Last night, I had the honor of getting to speak briefly to the students of the Fritzlar Bible School.  They have been here in Berlin examining the religious and historical sights of the city--including the difficult ones that are associated with World War II.  The students expressed their dismay and frustration that Germany could have been a place where neighbor turned on neighbor and a global tragedy unfolded.  It's still painful and hard to believe all that happened in World War II for Germans.  And it can be discouraging.

But as I spoke, I wanted to point out that they should be proud of Germany and of Berlin.  The transformation that has occurred in this country since 1945 is nothing short of miraculous.  First, West Germany became a place that was open to people from all cultures, ethnic groups and racists.  It became a place where multi-culturalism was supported by government and the country quickly became amongst the most peaceful of nations in the world.

The city of Berlin remained divided (Socialist East Berlin and Capitalist West Berlin) until 1989.  But then, in a mere 10 years, this divided city re-invented itself.  It became not only the capital of Germany once again, but it also became Europe's cultural center (surpassing Paris), the heart of the arts in Europe (where many of the artists are Israeli Jews) and a city with 40% of its citizens holding a foreign passport.  An extremely high percentage of children under 10 in Berlin have a parent from another country. Berlin is synonymous with tolerance, openness, and multi-culturalism.  From 1945 to the present day, Berlin is proof that societies can change dramatically for the better.  I'm proud of Germany and proud of Berlin, and I think the German youth should be too.

I've lived in countries that are truly racist and have no desire to change.  I wrote a post here on the diary not long ago about racism in other societies.  Today, Germany would easily be amongst the most tolerant, least racist societies in the world.

Aside from encouraging the students about their German heritage, I also asked the question, how is it that an entire city like Berlin could change it's entire cultural DNA in 10 or 20 years, but churches often don't change anything for 50 years?   The churches that are succeeding in Europe are the ones that are willing to experiment, be out-of-the-box, and create a new culture.  It's happening in our churches in the Netherlands, it's happening in Paris, it's happening in Rome, it's happening in Budapest, it's happening in Athens, it's happening in Cairo etc.  When re-invention is welcomed and the culture can be changed, good things can happen in churches.

So I look forward to spending more time with these German students that will be change-agents.  I'll be teaching there in July and seeing them once again.

Things Heating Up in Greece...for 3W

The hot season is starting to descend on Greece.  Located on the Mediterranean, Greece is known for it’s near perfect climate and sun. But in the summer months, it starts to get quite hot.

Things have been pretty for the past couple of years as the Greek economy continues to fall apart.  It is starting to hit everyone now, and there’s not just unemployment but a lot of illness, depression, and chaos growing in the country.  Fortunately, the Athens CHOG is making a remarkable resurgence.  A year ago, the church was close to being finished off.  Today, there is a Greek service and an Indonesia service and attendance is up to 50–the most that Church of God has had in easily more than a decade.

Furthermore, new ministries and forms of outreach are happening in the community including a drug rehabilitation program and a drama event that packed the 350 seat auditorium!

This past week we had Pastor Vassilios and his wife Natasha up to Berlin to enjoy some much needed R&R and to discuss future partnership with Three Worlds.  We were all full of ideas and are getting very excited to see where all of this is headed.  We both believe in high levels of accountability and mutual accountability.  Among the things in the pipeline:

*Renovations of the Church as we configure it to host more community events.

*Creating a multi-purpose stage for church, music, lectures, and drama (which includes some equipment and work we will need churches to help with).  Already, thanks to Western Canada CHOG, we are able to configure the sanctuary better for the joint Indonesian-Greek services.  Thank you Western Canada!  We will need rafters for lighting, new lights, headsets for simultaneous translation, microphones, screens, video cameras to record events, a transparent/portable pulpit.

*Dave and Kathy Simpson will be dispatched to Athens to finalize a lot of legal and organizational issues as well as begin some of the renovation work.

*Pastor Vassilios will be joining us in Rome for the 3W Seminar on Church organization in September led by Rod Stafford of Fairfax Community Church.

*Greece CHOG and 3W will be planning an expansion into Romania in December with a trip to Bucharest.

*Kelley and Rhonda Philips will be dispatched to Athens to look at the issues of Sex Trafficking in the church’s neighborhood.

*We hope to have Tri-S become a regular visitor to the Athens CHOG.

*A 3W Seminar on Church Health that will be open to all churches in the Athens area.

*We will begin discussing plans for a youth basketball camp that will be a partnership with the Rome CHOG.

*3W Staff Meeting in 2014 will be in Greece.

*3W and Athens CHOG plan to host some special CHOG conferences in the near future (more details later).

And this is just the beginning!  We are so excited to see new life in the Athens CHOG and we are thrilled to be working with Vassilios and Natasha.

 

Racism Around the World

From Facebook:  Three Worlds Is the USA very racist? As a minority, I've always argued that the answer is a strong "no." Race relations in the United States are far better than they are in other places around the world. I used to live in South Korea--and there, all minorities were discriminated against, including me. Many other countries are the same way. Even in brown-skinned countries, a lot of time the prejudice is against darker brown-skinned people. The lighter the brown skin, the better off you are. Racism is a human problem.

Now a survey has been done exposing the racial intolerance of countries. Notice that most of Europe looks good and the US and Canada are very tolerant. India scores very poorly, so does South Korea, and some Arab States. Homogenous populations (S. Korea, Japan), places of ethnic tension (Nigeria, India), and Confucian societies are pretty intolerant.

Societies that have a lot of mixed ethnicity (Brazil, Columbia) or a strong belief in liberal democracy (Canada, UK, Sweden) and/or a Christian heritage that emphasized the value of all human beings did well (the big exception being France).

You could definitely pick through these. For instance, Brazil does have a lot of prejudice against blacks, but people are fine living next to each other (which is the question that was asked in the survey to illicit responses that gauge discomfort with people from other races.

This is not to say that the USA and Europe are perfect (Ukraine and Poland come to mind), but most Western societies are very OPEN about their race problems which makes them seem more concrete. This is particularly true of the USA. On the flipside, there has never been a Korean Martin Luther King critiquing racism in Korea. Racism is not a moral issue in some societies. It is understood to be natural and right. "We ______ are the superior people in the world." The same goes for many other countries. A true movement against racism has been absent in many countries around the world.

I do think that the Christian value of the individual has been internalized in many countries around the world because of the Gospel impacting culture--even if the culture moved away from the Gospel.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2325502/Map-shows-worlds-racist-countries-answers-surprise-you.html

Financial Support: The 3W Way

At Three Worlds we support a variety of project throughout the Middle East region.  Donors can give to the Cedar Home Orphanage in Lebanon, the new Church plants in Russia, assist the church in Egypt during these difficult days, help the Church of God in Athens, Greece as it helps the less fortunate during the worst crisis since the 1930's,  or support the Next Generation of leaders in our region (and our interns from around the world) through the NextGen Fund.  These are just some examples of projects we have open in the region.

Some Problems with Money on the Mission-Field

In general, however, 3W is careful with money because missions and money don't often go together well.  It's very easy to create dependencies--where churches or countries don't grow on their own. Instead they just wait for the next check from the U.S.  Because the Christian culture is a high-trust culture, it's easy to have people in the system that abuse that trust and not use money as donors intended.  It's also easy for people to think that money will solve all of their problems, when often it just compounds them in new more divisive ways.  It is also a problem when things are constructed (such as buildings or schools) and there's no one there to really manage the property adequately.  Many countries can become extremely unhealthy very quickly if the floodgates are opened and money just pours in from North America.  Power battles can ensue, a sense of entitlement can be formed, and the church's mission can be more about sustaining its facilities and remittances than it is about actually doing evangelism.  Unfortunately, we have seen this too often.

Real Relationship First

At Three Worlds, we do not think the flow of funds from North America to Europe/Middle East should be our core purpose.  That, in fact, is low on the list.  We do not have many projects in the region on purpose.  New project proposals must meet certain requirements and we are only willing to open two a year for the entire region, and even that is not guaranteed.  We prefer to spend our time ministering in churches, training, encouraging and empowering the next generation of leaders, as well as reaching out to the young, and creating a regional sense of unity and purpose.  Relationship and ministry comes first.  The flow of funds from North America to our region is the lowest priority.  We have seen time and time again (especially in the Church of God), the more money a mission-field gets over the years, the less ministry you see happening.  While those countries that learn to do with what they have, tend to stay focused and grow in a healthier manner.

There is a place for financial support.  Often certain projects need to be kick-started, or an infusion of cash can help a ministry come to life or survive a turbulent time.  Or assistance for a pastor can help a church plant to get launched.  But these should be taken on a case by case basis and the deeper, structural realities should always be examined before the checkbook is pulled out.  A need is not enough.  There needs to be health underlying that need. 

At 3W, we go by an internal plan that we call "RAISE NUT (R-A-I-S-E-N-U-T).  The "Raise"principal comes from Jonathan Martin's "Giving Wisely."  However, those principles are pretty common-sensical.  Why was that book such a hit? It's because the Church of God in North America got so careless, that it started violating even those common-sense principles in their support for missions. Many people got burned time and time again.

WHAT IS RAISE-NUT?

R=Relationship First:   This means that it's vital to have a real relationship first that's based on friendship and partnership in ministry, not just an arrangement to enter into a financial agreement to transfer funds from North America to some country overseas.

A=Accountability:  There obviously needs to be some pro-active oversight over the funds with the recipients demonstrating clearly that they are using the funds as designated.  The missionaries and mission-agency must be very transparent in how they are delivering the funds.

IS=Indigenous Sustainability: The funds given should enable the mission-field to continue operating on its own and not create dependence on foreign funds.  It something new is starting, there should be a clear explanation of how this ministry will be funded without outside help in the near future.

E=Equity:  The money must not be distributed in a manner that is unequal (one village church gets a lot, the other village church gets nothing), or which begins to separate the recipient from the living standards of those they work with and serve.

At Three Worlds, we also added three more key pieces in 2011 based on our observation that these things can also be problems:

N=Next Generation.  Is the country empowering the next generation?  Are they putting emerging leaders into positions of influence? Are they doing the things that it will take to make sure that the country will have churches 20 years from now?  In some cases, leaders intentionally block young people from leadership (and by younger I mean under 50 even)!. We are very intentional about partnering with countries that are serious about reaching young people and having a future, not just preserving and protecting the past.

U=Unity:  Does the project bring unity to the country or the churches?  Or does it cause division?  Furthermore, if a country is already suffering from a lot of division and divisive behavior, we are highly unlikely to start a project there, which will only exacerbate the problems.  There's no reason countries or churches should get money when they have no interest in being united in fellowship with each other.  We only work with countries and churches that are committed to unity or willing to work toward unity in humility.

T=Timeline:  We want a concrete time-line that tells us when the project will end.  We have phased out open-ended projects because it becomes too tempting for mission-fields or churches to become dependent on those funds.  In special circumstances, the project may be extended, but only after a careful review; and that review will happen with someone on the OUTSIDE of 3W to give us better perspective and objectivity.

Of course none of these guiding principles mean anything if they are not taken seriously or enforced.  A non-profit organization must have standards that it insists on if it is to protect its donors, not create dysfunction on the mission-field, and stay on the right side of the law.  But it's easy to get wobbly in the knees when people are making personal pleas.  There's a place for compassion, but there's also the need to be fair, ethical, and not become enablers.

For 3W, having standards that we all agree on (donor, missionary, national) makes things run far more smoothly.  All of us must be challenged to some extent and reigned in at times.  A system designed to do that is going to work better than a purely subjective, unplanned process.  Ultimately the thing we value most at Three Worlds is health, because once you lose that, it really damages your witness.

We're happy to be working in this region and happy to see that we are all doing our part in a healthy, accountable way.

 

Another Time to Laugh: Charity

I'm back from a whirlwind trip to the USA where I had 3W presentations to make in Ohio and New York City.  Both of them went very well and the trip was so worth it.  I was on the move constantly, and greatly enjoyed catching up to some of the 3W boys (Kelley Philips, Daniel Kihm, and Zach Langford) in Columbus.  We had a lot of good laughs, and as always there's great chemistry and synergy.  My drive took me past the homes of some friends in Connecticut and New Jersey.  And because of the jet-lag, I didn't drive later than 6PM at night, so I made Pittsburgh my stopping place. As you two diary readers know, I absolutely love Pittsburgh.  This time I saw new areas I hadn't seen before, and fell in love with it even more.  I had one evening to myself just walking across the bridges of the city.  It was so relaxing.  So many parts of the United States are just so beautiful.  The Southwest, New England, Pacific Northwest, amazing California, and the hills of Pennsylvania.  And then there was the joy of driving through downtown Manhattan as I used to in the old days when we lived in Connecticut.  The city looked wonderful.

And then there was that fatty American food!!!  So delicious.  Congratulate me as I only drank water on the trip.  And tea.  Unsweetened except for once.  And I'm glad to see that a lot of the healthy stuff on the restaurant menus is actually getting really good.  I really like Applebees lemon shrimp and rice dish.  Oh America....you are such a delicious, saucy, tart.

Now I'm back and jet-lagged (which seems to get worse with age), so before I get to writing on the diary again, here's one more laugh.  A video poking fun at Millenial charity works.  Enjoy.

Time to Laugh: Sports Mascots

I'm off to the USA for a very short trip.  I have a meeting in New York City and a meeting in Columbus, Ohio.  I'll be flying into NYC, picking up a rental car, and then driving back and forth.  Since I have friends in Connecticut and New Jersey, just outside of NYC, I hope to get to see them this week.  It's been quite a while. Meanwhile this week, I will be meeting up with 3 of the 3W gang of boys (Kelley Philips 3W-Berlin, Zach Langford 3W-Liverpool, and Daniel Kihm 3W-The Netherlands.  Should be a great time as we kick it South-Central Style.....in Central Ohio.

Well, it's time to laugh again.  The other day Marco was asking me why sports mascots are so stupid?  I don't know, but here they are being stupid. Enjoy and take time to laugh.