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The CIS Mission Board of Directors has approved Colin Campbell, chaplain with the “War on Cancer” in Charlottesville, as a special ministry project. The decision was ratified at a regular board meeting in October, 2008. [read more]
For over 30 years Dr. Bray has used the YWAM Prayer and Planning Diary as a way to stay on track with his personal piety and as a prayer guide for the whole team. "Next to the Bible, this is the most life-changing devotional book I have ever used," says Dr. Bray. "It takes you right into the heart of Jesus for the lost world-it is like walking with God. Plus it helps you plan your daily apostolic action." [read more]
THE volunteers who serve at the CIS Mission Book Table Ministry are offering two free gift books this season as part of their 2008 holiday ministry to needy students, supporters and the whole body of Christ. [read more]

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WHAT WE CAN ALL LEARN FROM
A GREAT MISSIONARY POPE

By Bro Bill Bray

            WHATEVER your Christian heritage or religious background is, there is a lot we non-Catholics can learn from the legacy and life of John Paul II.

During the coming weeks, it will be tempting to look away from his personal example as the media grows more negative and reflects on the politics and sins of the Catholic Church.  However, I urge you not lose sight of this incredible man who was such a remarkable disciple of Christ.  He is the most relative, 21st Century missionary model I know of; a great inspiration for the next generation of missionary leaders.

We would all do well to use these days as a time to pause and contemplate what is being said about John Paul II, both by those who loved him and those who hated him.  There is much in his example and legacy to apply in our personal lives and callings – whatever they are. Here are seven ways he models a good missionary:

            FIRST, you cannot begin to understand the life of John Paul II without realizing that this man was a true disciple of Christ.  He was a Mary, not a Martha.  He loved to be with the Lord and follow him wherever that took him – and he was not afraid to follow Christ all the way. He loved to meditate on the ways and wisdom of God.  Many times, he shocked and surprised us in the same way Christ shocks and surprises in the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. Where did he get that spiritual authority?  We would do well to find out!

SECOND, he was a man of prayer who surrounded himself with people of prayer. He started every day with hours of prayer. His decisions and leadership were birthed out of prayer and he remained in touch with prayer movements and people of prayer around the world.  He interceded for others and others interceded for him.

THIRD, he was above all a missionary prophet.  He understood the peoples and nations of the world from a truly heavenly perspective.  He is often mistaken as a pastor or evangelist, but there was very little pastoral about him except the office he filled. He preached to the world like Billy Graham but his message was more apostolic in the best New Testament sense – it pricked and prodded and adapted the Gospel to the painful, urgent needs of the emerging church. Like Paul, he assumed his listeners would believe.

He traveled.  He was a sent one.  He spread the message to the people of God, the burgeoning church of Christ, and encouraged it to confront the world as he did. He loved Asia, Africa (four visits), India, Latin America (five visits) and the whole world.  He made 104 pilgrimages to 129 countries. Only China, North Korea, the former USSR and Vietnam missed his visitations – and only because their liberty-hating political leaders were afraid to allow him entrance.  He knocked on those doors again and again.

            Though Polish, his viewpoint was not European and certainly not Anglo-American or paternalistic to developing nations.  He was far more concerned with the global South than the global North.  He went to the cutting edge of the church. Like Jesus, he felt pity on the masses of sheep without a shepherd and went to the spiritually hungry. He was not afraid to engage and reach out to Buddhists, Jews, Hindus, Muslims, Protestants, Secular Humanists and youth.  You simply cannot understand the life of John Paul II unless you understand that he was first and always a missionary.

            FOURTH, he was courageously devoted to truth.  He understood clearly the great apostasy and heresy of our time.  That is why he was so hated by those, even in his own church, who wanted to “vote on the ten commandments” and revise the Bible and the received faith. He was no friend of “Cafeteria Christianity.” For that reason, evangelical Christians found in John Paul II a great ally and friend.  He not only defended the great doctrines of the church but he also defended Christian behaviors and morality such as Christian marriage and sex, the sanctity of human life, and the divinely given roles of gender and authority.  John Paul II was a man of moral authority who refused to compromise the truth.  Merely because he stood so firm in adversity, he is an inspiration to all who struggle to protect families, churches and missions.

            FIFTH, he was willing to suffer for his beliefs. “Fear not” was his message, and he lived a life of risk-taking confrontation with institutional evil and political darkness. We applauded him when he faced down dictatorships, fascists, communists, terrorists and warmongers – but then our turn came when we Americans smarted as he visited friendly church leaders, Democratic politicians, and even President Bush with punishment paddle in hand!  Everywhere he went during his entire leadership as the chief executive of the Catholic Church, he was not afraid to follow the passion of Christ and suffer rejection.

In fact, he was so confident that right would win over evil that he choose, like Christ, to denounce just war and violence to extend the Kingdom of God. While John Paul II risked rejection, he was never overcome by it.  In fact, we look back on this period as a time when the Catholic Church repented and purged its own ranks of false teachers and long-secret sin among the clergy. John Paul’s leadership gave Protestants courage to exercise their moral courage and voices – and to admit sin even when we found it in our pulpits and board rooms.

SIXTH, this man displayed the compassion of Christ.  When you reflect on the life and mission of John Paul II, you can see that above all he loved as Christ loved. Like the Lord Jesus, he was attracted to where the oppressed and poor lived.

He was always concerned about the sick, the fatherless and the disadvantaged.  Often, especially in the 1970’s and 80’s, he seemed out of step with the times, reminding us relentlessly that our affluence was not so much a blessing from God as it was the fruit of our own covetousness and greed.  All the time, love beamed from his eyes.

SEVENTH, John Paul II was a teacher who used the mass media.  He was fond of saying “If it’s not on TV, it didn’t happen.”  He prodigiously wrote books, tracts, pamphlets and letters. He tireless revised and edited canon law. He was a communicator philosopher who loved doctrine and understood the power of ideas.

Though one of the most powerful men on earth, John Paul choose like Christ to restrain himself and honor the free moral agency of humankind – relying almost totally on talk, loving service, and moral authority rather than the levers of human power politics. Like Christ, he did not force his way on the church or the world.  This Pope was a perfect gentleman.

            Like King David, another man who followed after God with all his heart, John Paul was not perfect. I will leave that to his detractors to discuss. Meanwhile, there is much in his life that I need to imitate – and I suspect that to be true for anyone who has a hunger to follow Christ more closely. The road ahead is going to be hard. We are going to need this Pope’s missionary mentorship in the days ahead.

 © 2005, by Wm. Thomas Bray


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