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Showing posts with label Christian Education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christian Education. Show all posts

Friday, March 21, 2025

Called to Love: A Christian’s Mission to Educate Children in Pakistan

Introduction
Recently, I had the privilege to host a native missionary from Pakistan in my church.  A native missionary is a person who serves as a missionary in their own homeland.  I visitied with the missionary for over a week and heard his testimony several times, learned about his culture and his ministry, and his calling from God.  Because life and ministry for Christians in Pakistan is very dangerous, I have concealed his identity.  I invite you to read his testimony, pray for him, and consider supporting his ministry in whatever ways God leads you.  You may follow and support his ministry through the 501c3 nonprofit Children's Development Mission at https://childrens-development-mission.startsites.org/ 

The following is this "Paul's" testimony: 

Greetings in Jesus’ name. I am from the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, a South Asian country with a population of over 241.5 million people. In my country, Christians make up less than 2% of the population, making them a small minority. Today, I want to share my journey of faith, ministry, and the calling that led me to serve through education.

My grandfather came to Christ through early Methodist missionaries who preached the Gospel during British rule in India. He embraced Christianity in 1942, and my family has remained devoted to our faith ever since. I grew up in a Christian home, where my father worked as a laboratory technician. In the early 1960s, a Methodist missionary nurse came to our region for medical evangelism and invited my father to assist her. When she returned to her country in 1972, my father took over the medical mission work. He served faithfully until he passed away six months before my grandfather’s death in 1999.

It was during my grandfather’s funeral that I first became aware of the discrimination Christian children faced in my native village. I was heartbroken to learn that they were mistreated by their Muslim peers simply because of their faith. Though we shared the same land and the same culture, we were still set apart. At the same time, I realized something important—Muslim children needed to experience the unconditional love of Jesus.

At that time, I was raising three small children, and my wife, a homemaker, and I were focused on providing for their education. However, when God calls, He asks us to leave behind personal interests to follow Him, just as Jesus called Simon Peter to leave his nets and follow Him. After returning to the city, I shared the burden on my heart with my wife. In Pakistan, women do not have the freedom to move alone, and even seeking medical care requires the accompaniment of a male relative. Despite these challenges, my wife—my life and ministry partner—supported my calling. My mother also joined me in this mission.

With my mother’s help, we started a small school under a tree in the village. We had no financial resources, but we bought a few candies to attract children to come and learn. With no cash in hand, I decided to sell small portions of the land I inherited from my father to fund the construction of a school for underprivileged children. As I worked with these children, I realized that girls, both Christian and Muslim, were the most vulnerable. In rural Pakistan, girls face many dangers—sexual harassment, poverty, and cultural restrictions that prevent them from receiving an education. Parents often cannot afford to educate their daughters, but I believed God had a divine plan for them.

Education became the tool through which we could demonstrate Christ’s love. The ministry began humbly in 2001 with only a kindergarten class. Slowly, we expanded grade by grade. My mother, a role model of faith, worked tirelessly to visit Muslim families and convince them to send their daughters for free education. She served until June 2013, when she passed away from cancer. Her legacy remains, as she showed that Jesus' love is free for all, without discrimination.

Despite the persecution we face as a Christian minority, our calling is to show Christ-like love. The Bible teaches us in Luke 6:27 to love our enemies. Jesus also commands us in Matthew 22:39 to love our neighbors as ourselves. This is the foundation of interfaith harmony—we are called to be the salt and light in the darkness. While we cannot openly evangelize or distribute Bibles, we can demonstrate love through our actions.

Jesus described Himself as the Good Shepherd (John 10:1), always watching over His flock. I am grateful that my grandfather found the Good Shepherd and brought our family into His fold. Jesus also taught in parables, such as the story of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:33), reminding us that ordinary people can be used for extraordinary ministry. In Matthew 4:19, He says, "Come, follow me, and I will make you fishers of people." In the same way, Jesus called me to serve, making me a fisherman—not of fish, but of children.

Today, our school continues to welcome both Christian and Muslim students. When young Muslim girls enter our school, they form friendships with Christian students. As these friendships grow, barriers break down, and they experience Christ’s love in ways their families never taught them. Many of them share their meals with Christian classmates, demonstrating the very essence of Christ-like behavior. A Good Samaritan can be Christian or Muslim—what matters is love and compassion, which can transform hearts.

For the past 24 years, I have remained obedient to this call. My wife stays in the city to care for our children while I travel to the village every Monday morning, staying until Friday afternoon. Each weekend, I return home for a brief reunion with my family before heading back to serve the children of our school. Currently, we have 263 students, and I love each of them as my own, though I have three biological children.

This journey has not been easy, but God has been faithful. He provides, He transforms, and He calls us to serve. The Gospel is not just about words—it is about love and action. I am grateful to be part of this mission, and I trust that He will continue to work through us to bring His light into the darkness.

Thanks be to the Lord for this wonderful ministry.

Monday, February 7, 2022

The Beautiful Mind

Introduction
Mother Teresa once taught, “Christ has no body now on earth, but yours; no hands, but yours; no feet, but yours. It is your eyes through which Christ’s compassion looks out to the world; your feet with which he must walk about doing good; your hands with which he blessed humanity; your voice with which his forgiveness is spoken; your heart with which he now loves.” 

Mother Teresa’s words are a poignant reminder to all who follow Christ as Lord that we the Church Christ established to serve as His physical presence on the earth.  When we are faithful, Christ’s love spreads and the world becomes a better place.  

If we are to represent Christ well, we must be faithful to His teachings and way of life.  For great harm is done whenever people misunderstand Christ’s teachings or intentionally misuse Christianity to further their own selfish agendas.  Therefore, it is imperative that we study and do our best to be faithful.

We enjoy so many blessings today because of the work of Christ’s Beautiful Church over the last 2,000 years.  Consider these blessing we enjoy and even take for granted today that came into being through the work of Christ’s Church: 

  • Sacrificial Love as the highest virtue
  • Charitable giving
  • Humility as a virtue
  • Peaceful protest
  • Nonviolent resistance
  • Abolishment of slavery
  • Equal rights for women
  • Civil rights
  • Public Hospitals
  • Care for orphans
  • Child abandonment laws
  • Court Appointed Attorneys
  • Religious Freedom 

Today, I want to address one final blessing we have received from the Beautiful Church--the blessing of intellectual learning. 

1 Corinthians 2:13-16
13 
When we tell you these things, we do not use words that come from human wisdom. Instead, we speak words given to us by the Spirit, using the Spirit’s words to explain spiritual truths. 14 But people who aren’t spiritual can’t receive these truths from God’s Spirit. It all sounds foolish to them and they can’t understand it, for only those who are spiritual can understand what the Spirit means. 15 Those who are spiritual can evaluate all things, but they themselves cannot be evaluated by others. 16 For,

“Who can know the Lord’s thoughts?  Who knows enough to teach him?”  But we understand these things, for we have the mind of Christ.

Christianity and Education
When the Church is faithful to Christ, we take on the mind of Christ and we help enlighten the world with God’s wisdom and knowledge.  The Church caused the advancement of medicine, science, better government, wisdom, and education. 

In our day and age, there is a misconception that science and learning stand against Christian religion.  That is an unfortunate misunderstanding that has been perpetuated by ignorant people.  Jesus himself stated in Matthew 22:37 that the greatest commandment of all was to “…love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, and all your mind.” 

Jesus, as a 1st century Jew, came from a religious background that valued education and learning.  Jewish children were taught to read the Torah from an early age.  Many could recite the first 5 books of the Bible from memory and make logical arguments about their teachings.  

Jesus’ first followers were Jews that valued education. They spread their love of learning to the Christian Church--even as it spread out beyond the Jewish community to more and more gentiles.  The Christian faith always included a love for learning, because Christ’s followers believed their faith was logical and knowing God required Christians to study and learn. 

Even though the earliest Christians were mostly from the lower classes of society that tended to be uneducated, these believers were required to learn.  In order to join the early church, new converts were often required to attend 3 years of classes in the Christian faith before they were fully initiated into the Christian Church.  

One of the great attractions of the Church to common people was the opportunity to receive an education.  Education was not commonly available to the average person in ancient times.  The Christian Church valued education as a road to deeper understand of and devotion to God.  Therefore, the Church believed all people should be able to receive an education and worked diligently to provide educational opportunities for everyone—rich and poor alike. 

The earliest Christians began as a small minority in a sea of other religions that were often hostile to Christianity.  However, the early Christians refused to use violence to defend themselves or advance their cause.  Instead, Christians said, “Let’s debate the issues and let group with the most compelling arguments stand.  And over the course of 2 centuries, more and more people in the ancient Roman world—from all walks of life—found the Christian’s ideas most compelling.  And so, in the face of violent persecution, and a myriad of competing religious ideas, Christianity rose to prominence as more and more people were won over to the Christian Church by the reasoning of Christian arguments about faith in Christ.

The early Christians knew what they believed and why they believed it and they lived out their beliefs even in the face of persecution, torture, and death.  For they believed because they knew what Scripture said:

Romans 8:37 – “No, despite all these things, overwhelming victory is ours through Christ, who loved us.”

1 John 4:4 – “You have already won a victory over those people, because the Spirit who lives in you is greater than the spirit who lives in the world.”

The early Christians could willingly embrace the loss of property, freedom, and even their life because they really did believe something greater was already won for them--the Kingdom of Heaven and eternal live.  This world had nothing for them.  Their hope was in the coming Kingdom of God.

 

Christians and Scripture
Christians as a people of the Book, highly valued reading and writing.  They set about recording the life and teachings of Christ, which was no small task in the ancient world.  Today, we take for granted our access to the Holy Bible.  Most Americans have multiple copies as well as access to the Bible through the internet and a computer or smartphone.  We forget the tremendous cost expended to preserve the Bible for us. 

The printing press, which automated the book printing process, was not invented until 1436.  So for 1,400 years, all books had to be copied by hand—word by word, letter by letter.  The cost of materials  and labor to manufacture a book in the first few centuries after Christ’s birth was incredible.  The cost to reproduce just one Bible—from Genesis to Revelation—was the equivalent of 30 years of wages for the common person.  How much money have you earned in the last 30 years?  That's how much one Bible would cost to produce in the first few centuries of the Church.  Consider that for just one moment...

The early Christians valued Scriptures so much they set their hands to copying them so that future generations would have these sacred words to guide our minds and our faith in what we need to know to be faithful to God through Jesus Christ.  They sacrificed the time, resources, and energy to preserve God's Word because they knew this Word holds the key to wisdom and life and eternal life. 

Early Christians were even willing to die in order to protect their sacred texts.  Two female deacons of the early church, Catalina and Micoclius, were arrested and interrogated by Roman authorities who demanded they give up their sacred texts to be burned.  Catalina and Micoclius refused to tell where the books were hidden and were therefore put to death (Bullies and Saints by John Dickson). 

One might think it a waste of human life that these two women would sacrifice their lives for the sake of a book.  However, you must understand these early Christian really believed with all their hearts what their book said—that Christ has already won the victory.  The main purpose of this life is to further the purpose of Christ coming Kingdom.  We who follow Christ have already died to our selfish ambitions, and to die a physical death for Jesus is only to begin our eternal life in Christ heavenly Kingdom.  These are not just words.  They are Truth.  Early believers were willing to sacrifice their life for the cause of Christ's Kingdom with the sure and certain knowledge that what was to come was far better than this life.

When you hold your Bible, I want you to remember the hundreds of thousands of Christians who dedicated their lives and livelihoods to preserving the words of these texts so you can read them today.  It was a tremendous sacrifice they willingly made. 

The early Christians efforts were not limited only to Christian texts.  They also believed other important documents of classic learning should be preserved as well.  The reason we know so much about philosophers like Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle, (as well as other important ancient texts) is because the early Christians preserved their ideas by copying their texts and teaching their philosophies through the centuries.

Christians love for learning flourished even more after the Roman Empire officially converted to Christianity.  With the support of the Empire, Christians were able to establish great institutes of learning that helped advance government, science, medicine, writing, wisdom, philosophy, and mathematics.  Ironically, the so called “dark ages”, which modern enlightenment thinkers like to blame on the Christian Church, was not caused by the Church.  Rather, it was caused by the collapse of civilization with the fall of the Roman Empire and its Christian institutions of learning. 

Christian Scientists
Christian education and love for learning inspired scientific discovery throughout the ages.  In fact, the most influential scientist during the enlightenment period were Christians.  Their love of God and desire to know Him and His creation inspired them to delve deeply into scientific investigation to discover the mysteries of God’s universe.  A list of Christian scientists included such lauded scientific pioneers as:

Galileo Galilei, who discovered the earth revolves around the sun.

Robert Boyle, who defined elements, compounds, and mixtures and the first gas law.  Boyle said that a deeper understanding of science was a higher glorification of God.

Isaac Newton was a passionate Christian who spent more time on Bible study than math and physics. Newton profoundly changed our understanding of nature with his law of universal gravitation and his laws of motion; invented calculus; built the first ever reflecting telescope; showed sunlight is made of all the colors of the rainbow.

Michael Faraday was a devout member and elder of the Sandemanian Church. Faraday discovered electromagnetic induction; discovered the first experimental link between light and magnetism; carried out the first room-temperature liquefaction of a gas.

Werner Heisenberg was a Lutheran with deep Christian convictions and the primary creators of quantum mechanics who formulated the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle.

Louis Pasteur was a Christian, a biologist, microbiologist and chemist renowned for his discoveries of the principles of vaccination, microbial fermentation and pasteurization. 

These scientists and countless others believed deeply in Jesus Christ and were faithful members of His Church.  Their love of learning and the drive to search the mysteries of God’s creation were not deterred, but rather enhanced, by their faith in God.   

Conclusion
The Christian faith challenges us to love the Lord our God with all our heart, soul, and mind.  God gave us our intellect as a tool to help us know Him better and to bring His heavenly Kingdom upon the earth.

Therefore, let us not shy away from learning.  But let us join with Christians from throughout the centuries who have helped make our world a better place by promoting education and intellectual pursuits for the glory of God.  Let us rebuke the slanderous idea that the Church is only for the ignorant and unlearned.  Let us show the atheist that true knowledge comes from God through Christ. Furthermore, let us be eternally grateful to God and His Church for the incredible contributions over the centuries that have made our world a better place. 

Communion and Welch’s Grape Juice
I want to end my message with a true story about a man named Thomas Bramwell Welch.  Welch (1825-1903) was a British–American Methodist minister and dentist. He pioneered the use of pasteurization as a means of preventing the fermentation of grape juice.  This grape juice, which millions enjoy today, was not practically available before Welch use pioneered a way to pasteurize it (using an adapted method created by Louis Pasteur).  Prior to Welch and the advent of refrigeration, grape juice would turn to wine within a few days due to natural yeast found in the air.  

During the 1800s and early 1900s, churches were fighting against an epidemic of alcoholism and encouraging Christians to abstain from drinking alcohol.  However, at Sunday morning communion services, the Church had no option but to use alcoholic wine for their sacrament.  Welch wanted to provide the Church with a non-alcoholic option for the sacrament of Holy Communion.  Welch's grape juice, pasteurized to prevent fermentation, was the solution.  When sales to churches were low, the graoe juice was made available for general use to the public for secular consumption.  Sales skyrocketed and Welch's grape juice is one of the most common brands available in grocery stores today.  However, the grape juice we love so much, was originally intended for sacred use.  

In my church, we use grape juice for Holy Communion.  Whether it uses real wine or Welch’s grape juice, the red color of the beverage is a reminder of the sacrifice Jesus made for us, shedding His precious blood to atone for our sins.  The sacrament also reminds us that Jesus is here with us in spirit even now.  His presence nourishes us and strengthens us to be His Church, joining with the countless saints who have gone before us.  When we are faithful to Jesus--the Way, the Truth, and the Life--we are the Church, Jesus physical presence on earth.  

So, let's be His feet going. 
Let us be His hands serving. 
Let us speak His words of truth.
Let us offer His grace, love,  and forgiveness.