Archive for the ‘Ministry’ Category

Manjui believers growing through God’s Word

Posted by Jason and Angie Bechtel on Tuesday, January 17th, 2012

Here is a news story from the field of Paraguay written by Ian Fallis that I loved.

Angie and I have personal friends that worked with this unreached people group for 17 years and are now living near us. Hearing how the Bible translation is coming along is thrilling to my heart. Bible translation is a vital part of reaching the unreached with the gospel of Jesus Christ, and seeing a mature church planted and established that truly glorifies God. And to hear that pastor-elders are being appointed, this is extra special!

Manjui believers searching for nugets in the Bible

All the pieces are coming into place for the Manjui church to stand and grow.

The Manjui New Testament is nearing completion. Colossians and 1, 2 and 3 John were printed and made available to believers and Bible teachers in October. With that step, 24 of the New Testament’s 27 books were printed.

Last month, 2 Corinthians was checked for comprehension, to see how well the translation was understood by Manjui people. “This now leaves only a couple of checks to go for this difficult book,” wrote Gordie and Nancy Hunt, who work among the Manjui people.

The only books left to translate are Hebrews and Revelation.

Three of the Manjui Bible teachers were recognized as pastors and leaders last May, and these men have been teaching through Romans and Ephesians.

“The Manjui church is definitely growing spiritually as the pastors have been teaching,” the Hunts wrote. “We are asking you to praise God for what He is doing among these people.”

Print Friendly

2012 Calendar from NTM Canada

Posted by Jason and Angie Bechtel on Wednesday, November 30th, 2011

For the second year in a row, the NTM@work magazine in November is a calendar. You can see the Canadian version below. If you didn’t get one in the mail, I would love to send one to you. Just email to let me know!

Print Friendly

New Video from NTM: Jason’s Prayer

Posted by Jason and Angie Bechtel on Monday, September 19th, 2011

New Tribes missionary Jason Swanson prays for the Siawi church.

New Tribes Mission seeks to establish mature churches among people who are isolated from the gospel.  After teaching chronologically in the tribes’ own language and culture, believers are discipled to lead the church and partner in the Great Commission.

Print Friendly

NTM@work August 2011

Posted by Jason and Angie Bechtel on Monday, September 5th, 2011

Here is the latest NTM@work magazine. I have gotten piles of very encouraging feedback about the articles in this NTM@work. Just to be up front, if you enjoyed anything in the NTM@work, it had nothing to do with me. NTM-USA does the magazine for themselves, and generously allows NTM Canada to reprint it. I take the liberty to substitute in Canadian specific information in the place of USA specific information (such as featured missionaries, State-side giving opportunities, etc.), but the field-related content is identical.

Print Friendly

Yagaria People: New Testament Dedication

Posted by Jason and Angie Bechtel on Thursday, July 21st, 2011

A lengthy procession of more than 3,000 people sang praises to God as they made their way to the area where they would sit through a sun-scorched, five-hour ceremony.

Print Friendly

Jungle Camp 2011

Posted by Jason and Angie Bechtel on Saturday, June 18th, 2011

Jungle Camp was the highlight of our two years of tribal missionary training with New Tribes Mission. So it is with fond memories we look forward to each summer when a new class of missionaries-in-training move into the bush for 4 weeks.

As staff at the home office for NTM in Canada, we got a sneak peak at how the students are doing. The actual open house isn’t until July 2-3. I encourage everyone to plan a day trip and see for yourself how resourceful and creative the students are.

Here are some photos from the current class:

Elisabeth and Yvon from Montreal

Picture 1 of 7

Here are some posts from our summer of 2007 in Jungle Camp

Round 1 of Questions about Jungle Camp

Jungle Camp 2007

Hot Water Plumbed into our Jungle Camp Home

Here are some photos from our summer in Jungle Camp:

Angie tying our counter top together

Picture 1 of 22

Print Friendly

NTM@work for Canadians

Posted by Jason and Angie Bechtel on Monday, May 16th, 2011

That first week after my trip to Indonesia was a killer. Not only was I battling jet lag, but I was working hard to get the May 2011 edition of the NTM@work magazine “Canadianized” and to the printer. Well, with the help of Peter and Elaine Yoon, the magazine did get out the door that first week back. And today they are being mailed.

Can’t wait to get your copy? Well you can read it here!

Along with the magazine, Elaine wrote up a fantastic article to introduce the new Leadership Team for NTM Canada.

Print Friendly

Inside Indonesia

Posted by Jason and Angie Bechtel on Monday, May 16th, 2011

Bible Study in SekadauMy trip to Indonesia was jam packed with excitement. So much so I have struggled to know how to write about it. So let me give you a run down on all that I got to enjoy, and some of the highlights along the way.

After leaving Toronto, I had to connect through Seoul on my way to Jakarta. I didn’t have alot of time, so before landing in Seoul, a stewardess allowed me to move to a seat closer to the plane’s exit so I would be one of the first ones off. Then as I was going through security, the airport staff came looking for me and wisked me off to the gate for my next flight. I felt like a VIP.

Once in Jakarta, I had a couple of days to get over jet lag before the rest of the team arrived. While waiting in Jakarta, I tagged along with a very outgoing and adventurous missionary who took me on the public bus system across the city to the National Monument.

The first two weeks of my time in Indonesia, I was the token white guy on a Korean missions team. There were 5 Koreans and yours truly. The aforementioned adventurous missionary was Jiseoung Lee. He and his family are part of the church planting team amongst the Sekadau people of West Kalimantan. Peter Yoon and his family are going to be starting the Missionary Training in Canada this coming August. Then there were three young men from Korea: Jay, Duane and Paul. Jay’s background is in the special forces in South Korea. Duane owns and manages a children’s clothing design business. Paul teaches computer-aided-design at a vocational school.

Once Peter and the guys from Korea arrived, we spent a couple days in the community where new missions to the field spend their first 1-2 years learning the Indonesian language and culture. We learned about NTM’s approach to tribal church planting and how large the need is. Maps were shown of where we have missionaries already, and now many more tribes are waiting for missionaries.

We also visited one of the seven wonders of the world, Borobudur.

Then we headed off to West Kalimantan to visit 3 different tribal groups: the Sekadau, Semandang, and Gerai.

Sekadau Tribe

To get into the Sekadau tribe, we took a Cessna 209 on a 50 minute flight into the jungle. This was super exciting. So much so that even though I had taken Gravol/Anti-Mo, my looking around with boyish excitement ended up getting me sick. Thankfully I didn’t heave, and was able to sleep it off once on the ground again.

During our 4 nights in the Sekadau tribe, we attended churches services in three villages where we shared our testimonies and did some special music. We sang “I have decided to follow Jesus” with verses in 3 different languages: English, Korean, and Sekadau.

Semandang Tribe

From the Sekadau tribe we flew to the Semandang tribe. But the airstrip we landed on was not in the same village as the church we were visiting, so we had to take motorbike taxis (ojeks) through the jungle. We got caught in a downpour! After carefully negotiating huge washouts in slippery red clay, we turned on to a newly paved road. We were going to so fast I thought my shirt was going to dry – except that it was raining so hard I had to use my ojek driver as a human shield to protect myself from the sheets of rain that felt like bullets.

The one night we spent in the Semandang tribe was the start of a large Bible conference. Hundreds of people from about 15 different tribes from across Indonesia had gathered for this conference and to dedicate a new church building.

As we were heading to bed, Jiseoung mentioned that the keynote speaker for the following day was not there, and that the conference conveners may ask Peter or myself to preach in the morning. Whether it was Jiseoung’s style or Indonesian style I am not sure, but we were getting used to being ready to teach in season and out of season. So we both went to bed planning to teach the next morning. It turned out that another missionary was cornered and asked to teach, so we though we were off the hook. Halfway through the morning Peter and I slipped out to pack up our clothes and prepare to move to the next tribe. Wrong move. Jiseoung came running with a message: they had just announced that we were going to be sharing. So we grabbed our Bibles and headed back to the church where we were both given an opportunity to share from the Word.

Gerai Tribe

After lunch we hired some ojeks to taxi us to the Gerai tribe where we shared in another church service and spent the night. While walking around the village with one of the church elders, we asked about the state of the church. The elder explained that when the missionaries phased out of their leadership responsibilities, giving the responsibility of shepherding the flock to capable men from the Gerai tribe, that attendance at the church was cut in half. When we asked about why so many people stopped coming to church, he responded with a very profound answer: the missionaries had become like gods to the people. With the missionaries no longer there, there was no reason to come to church anymore.

Lauje Bible Dedication

Having done all that we had planned on doing in West Kalimantan, we headed back to Jakarta. Jay, Duane and Paul headed back to Seoul, but Peter and I just transferred to another flight for Central Sulawesi. After one night at Alan and Rachal Whatley’s home, Peter and I, along with Shane and Karen Whatley, took the helicopter into the Lauje tribe. The rest of our group went by road.

As was customary, I took my gravel, maybe a bit too much. I remember taking off, and then someone woke me up when we were about to land 40 minutes later. At least I was awake for the exciting parts of the heli ride!

We spend two nights in Laujeland, and were there for Easter Sunday. Now it doesn’t take much to make Easter Sunday special. He is alive! But this Easter Sunday was extra special because over 600 Lauje had gathered to receive their own copies of the New Testament. And this Easter Sunday was extra extra special, because after the Bible dedication service, 25 people were baptized in the river!

While we were there, one of the Bible teachers from an outreach deep in the mountains shared a story with Barrie Williamson, the Bible translator. This Bible teacher explained how a man from a neighbouring tribe had come to him asking for a missionary to come and teach them the Word of God! New Tribes Mission has over 100 of these invitation to bring the Gospel to lost people – we just need more missionaries!

To get a well-rounded experience, Peter and I took the road home. So instead of a quick trip in the heli, we set out on foot. We walked for several hours before getting picked up by ojeks, which took us further down the trail towards the coast where we hired a taxi to drive us back to Alan and Rachel’s, a several hour drive!

Korea

Early the next morning Peter and myself started our trip back to Canada. On the way we spent 3 days in Korea with Peter’s family. Again I was treated like royalty, as Peter and Jay took me to the War Memorial of Korea, among other places.

Here are some pictures from inside Indonesia.

The Cessna

Picture 1 of 9

Print Friendly

Jet Lag

Posted by Jason and Angie Bechtel on Monday, May 9th, 2011

Big Planes Equal Big JetlagI am not sure about this jet lag thing. Last Saturday morning I woke up in Korea about 5:30am, slept about an hour on the plane, then another hour in Durham, and went to bed at 11pm EST. 5:30am-11pm is 17.5 hours, right? wrong. Add in the 13 hours in the plane, and I was up for more than 30 hours with only a couple of naps.

So let’s just say that I slept well Saturday night, from 11 till 6:30am. Then on Sunday, I did have a hour long nap, and stayed up till 11pm. But Lorelei had trouble sleeping, so I was up a couple of time with her till she finally settled at 3am. I on the other hand was wide a wake, so got up at 4:30, and got some work done.

This pattern of one good night followed by one bad night repeated itself a couple of times. So maybe the jet lag will hit me later. As it is, I don’t mind that my body seems to have flipped the nights and days really quickly. So will I have to endure the “one day for every hour of time-change”?

How do you get over jet lag?

Print Friendly

Inspiring Advocacy with a Cause

Posted by Jason and Angie Bechtel on Tuesday, March 29th, 2011

causeThis week I was reading. Yes, I can do that. I finished reading the book Talkable by Guy Richards. One of the ideas Richards shared, which got me thinking was, and I paraphrase, “To inspire advocacy, cause should not be replaced by profit.”

Here’s the actual quote:

“Money is not a solution, nor does it inspire belief. Money is a by-product of a great cause. If you are solely driven by profit, you will most likely succeed, but you will have a disengaged staff and a lethargic, transient client base.

I am not saying profitability isn’t important. Planning your organization for sustainability insures your cause. But the cause should not be replaced by profit … if you want to inspire advocacy.”

p. 27, Guy Richards, Talkable

So I was thinking (yes, I can do that too), if this is true (and I wholeheartedly believe that it is) then Partnership Development (aka deputation) is not, or should not, be about getting funded. It should be about inspiring and gaining partners in our cause of tribal evangelism. Partners who yes, are investing in our ministry through prayer and finances, but who are also advocates for our ministry.

So what is our vision that inspires partnership? The hardest-to-reach people coming to know God on a deeply personal level. These people don’t have a grandmother praying for them. They are steeped in endless generations of Satanic deception and miss-aimed worship.

Yes, the inner-city is home to countless gang members who are hardened criminals, murderous to the core. The people Angie and I are helping to reach with the gospel are in many ways similar to these. Tribal people have been calloused by incredible hardships. Rape and revenge killings are a way of life.

But the difference I see is that those in the inner city are physically within reach of God’s love. There are billboards proclaiming God’s love. There are prison ministries. There are radio stations and tele-evangelists who are targeting these very needy people, and in their heart language. The tribal people Angie and I are helping to reach with the gospel are NOT similar in this way. For many reasons, remoteness and language barriers being just two of the bigger ones, these people have never heard the name of Jesus Christ, not even as a cuss word. Tribal people will NEVER hear about the God who loved them enough to send his only begotten Son to die in their place, they will NEVER hear unless we tell them.

Romans 10:13-15

For “everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.”

How then will they call on him in whom they have not believed? And how are they to believe in him of whom they have never heard? And how are they to hear without someone preaching? And how are they to preach unless they are sent?

As it is written, “How beautiful are the feet of those who preach the good news!”

Print Friendly