Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Upon the Shoulders of Those Who Have Gone Before Us



by the ReachAcross U.S. Director
One of the drawbacks of working today in the world of Islam is the severe limitations we have in telling about it. Great things are happening, among Muslims, but it is mainly the negative news that people focus on—videos that defame their prophet, and the ensuing reactions. (For a good explanation of what is playing out in the Middle East, you might want to read what Warren Larson has written on his blog: 'Reflections on the Latest Incident: Killing and Burning in Benghazi.')

One of the advantages of working many years as a body of believers among Muslim people groups is that we have past experience to draw from. We stand, as one of our current field leaders has said, 'upon the shoulders of those who have gone before us.'


Wolfgang and Beryl Stumpf are two of those 'who have gone before.'


Because the events covered in his new missions autobiography, The Long View Forward: Looking for the Open Door, lay several decades back, Wolfgang (I use the first name because he is a personal friend) is able to tell more detail than can normally be related. Several stories in this book that not only intrigue us today, but also encourage me. Not just to keep going in the face of difficulties (even when it means driving for miles over rough terrain in reverse, because the transmission in the Land Rover is busted!), though that is certainly part of it.

The main thing is to know that Muslims are coming to faith in Christ today because of seeds that were sown back then. We see riots in the streets of Cairo, but what journalists can't tell us is how God is building His Church. Small groups—house fellowships of Muslim background believers—are forming in many parts of the world, even in the Middle East.


We learn, not only from a missionary's triumphs, 
but even more from a missionary's mistakes.
We need to know about both.

As many workers have said, 'we are being watched'—by which they don't mean so much the secret police of any particular government, but especially by the curious, among whom there are surely hidden believers. One comes away with the impression that more would like to be believers, if the cost were not so great. But we have to wonder—how many of us would follow Christ at the level
of investment that they must bring?

The record of Wolfgang Stumpf, how he went out to the Middle East, first as a single man, and then carrying on ministry as a family man together with Beryl, moves me to action, even in my Western environment. We live in a time when the first question on the minds of many Christians is, 'will I find a safe place to put my abilities to work?' 

First, we are reminded that there is not now, nor has there ever been, a 'safe' place to reach those who do not know our heavenly Father. And secondly, competency alone (as important as this is), doth not a missionary make. Even spiritual gifting is not a fool-proof indication that a worker will 'stick it out.' Nothing, not even the greatest intelligence and wisdom, can take the place of availability to the Lord and a commitment to His Word.

Wolfgang does not sugar-coat his experience. In fact, at times—for example, his brief stint at the helm of a missions boat—I found myself laughing out loud. Not at him, though, but rather because of some of my own ill-conceived attempts as a missionary in a different time and place. None of my own history comes close to exemplifying the kind of courage and fortitude that Wolfgang relates here, but the point is that we learn, not only from a missionary's triumphs, but even more from a missionary's mistakes. We need to know about both.

And we mostly need to know that God is faithful, and that those who really experience this faithfulness and His power the most are those who take His command seriously to reach all nations. I sympathized with this brave man and his companions in their futile attempts to save their sailing vessel, the Noor al-Hayat. But I'm motivated to continue because of sentences such as one on p. 73, "I began to understand that it [God's promise] did not mean we would have no problems, but He would
be with us in our troubles."


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