I’m
way late getting ready for Christmas this year.
Maybe
it was the spectacle of predatory bargain hunters pummeling each other to claim
the latest gizmos before Thanksgiving Day even ended — a symbol of the pagan
orgy of consumption the “holiday season” has become.
n “Last year
on December 25, my friend told me she was going to church for Christmas,”
writes a new believer in Vietnam. “I didn’t really understand and thought it
was a bit strange. I’d heard of the holiday before but thought it foreign. Why
didn’t my friend just go to the temple like everyone else? But now I know the
truth. Now I know that Jesus was born for me. Jesus was born for everyone. Last
summer someone shared a Bible with me. I read it and knew in my heart that I
needed God. Now I can’t wait to celebrate my first Christmas as a believer in
Jesus Christ. I’m excited to tell everyone around me about Jesus, born as their
Savior.”
n “Christmas is a
time of giving, sharing and remembering the Christ Child who came to give the
greatest gift of all: His life as a sacrifice so that we might live,” reflects
a missionary in Africa. “When I look at the pastors in Zimbabwe, I see this
same kind of sacrifice. Many don’t receive a steady monthly salary. They have
difficulty paying their rent and putting enough food on the table so their
families won’t go hungry. Yet they spend their days out among their people,
witnessing to the lost, praying for them, visiting the sick and helping to bury
the dead. Often people come to the house of a pastor, looking for help with
money or food. Our pastors give to those in need, even though they themselves
could be classified as the needy ones! These dear, faithful ones aren’t giving
out of the overflow of their wealth, but out of great poverty.”
n Another
missionary in Africa writes: “The truth is … life on the field isn’t as
glamorous as one might imagine when first stepping off the plane. We aren’t
camped under a mango tree every day, bringing the Gospel to masses who’ve never
heard it before or distributing food to starving people on a daily basis. There
are plenty of mountaintop experiences like that when we just look at each other
in awe because we get to do this for a living. But the truth is … life happens,
and ministry sometimes takes a back seat when it does. Sometimes we find
ourselves broken down on the side of the road in the middle of nowhere. On our
way to the capital to collect a volunteer team one month, the engine of our SUV
exploded. Lottie Moon Christmas Offering dollars rebuilt our engine and
provided a loaner car in the meantime. Sometimes we find ourselves scooping
rainwater off the kitchen floor. Our recently renovated roof cracked in two
during a rainstorm one night, flooding our house. Lottie Moon dollars paid for
our rent and for the necessary repairs. The truth is … we need you and ask you
to pray that people will give sacrificially to the Lottie Moon Christmas
Offering this year so we can stay on the field, doing what we came to do —
glamorous or not.”
OK,
that last one was a plug for Lottie Moon giving. But what better Christmas gift
can there be than one that helps deliver the Good News of Christ to every
“one-stoplight town” on the planet that has yet to hear of Him?
(Visit
www.imb.org/offering to discover ways
you can participate in the Lottie Moon Christmas Offering for International
Missions.)
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