This from Philip Yancey
‘After listening to several dark reviews of 2014—recapped news of the beheadings in Iraq, the Ebola epidemic, racial strife, airplanes crashed or missing, ongoing violence in Syria, Afghanistan, Ukraine, and several African countries—it’s no wonder we’re glad to put last year behind us. Amid all the fear and anxiety, where can we find some good news?
After
a steady diet of cable news, you may be surprised to learn the following:
·
Violent
crime has hit a 20-year low, with overall crime falling
for fifteen straight years.
· Globally,
absolute poverty (what’s necessary to afford minimal standards of food,
clothing, health care and shelter) had reached the lowest level in recorded history.
clothing, health care and shelter) had reached the lowest level in recorded history.
· Deaths
from wars in this century are fewer than at any comparable period in the
twentieth century.
· Life expectancy continues to rise, reaching 78 in the US and 71 worldwide (up from 59 in 1970)
· Child
mortality rates have dropped dramatically in the last forty years while
education and literacy rates have soared.
twentieth century.
· Life expectancy continues to rise, reaching 78 in the US and 71 worldwide (up from 59 in 1970)
Statistics
don’t always dispel doubt, I realize. Yet over the past year, I’ve also
witnessed the good news firsthand, through my own travels and ministry.
At
a conference of Prison Fellowship International (PFI), which ministers to
prisoners in more than 125 countries, I met African Christians who bring soup
and bread to prisoners and establish schools for children incarcerated with
their mothers. In places like Brazil and Belize the government has turned over
the administration of entire prisons to PFI with remarkable results.
The most prestigious medical college in the India, Christian Medical College Vellore, honored last year the legacy of Dr. Paul Brand, who revolutionized the understanding and treatment of leprosy, and his wife Margaret, who performed thousands of cataract surgeries in mobile eye camps. Although Christians constitute a small minority in India, they provide health care for almost 20 percent of the country. In much of Africa, Christian clinics and hospitals provide the majority of care.
In
the US, I spoke before a thousand Hispanic pastors who run outreach programs for
the growing Hispanic population. I participated in a gathering of BioLogos,
an organization founded by Dr. Francis Collins, who directed the Human Genome
Project and now heads the National Institutes of Health. To help bridge the
perceived gap between science and religion, BioLogos brings together pastors,
scientists, theologians, and ministry leaders to shed light on the most divisive
issues.
At the end of the year, I went on a book tour to introduce Vanishing Grace: What Ever Happened to the Good News? Organizers arranged for a musician to round out the program: Anthony Evans, talent scout for The Voice. As we got acquainted, a holy irony sank in. Fifty years ago a young student at Carver Bible College was denied membership in the church I attended as a child, solely because of his race. That student, Tony Evans, went on to become the first African American to earn a doctorate of theology from Dallas Theological Seminary and now leads a 10,000-member church in Dallas. The church later held a service of repentance, and Tony Evans’ son and I were appearing together on stage. Not all grace has vanished. “When I hear about the kinds of things my father went through, it almost seems like another world,” Anthony said.
The most prestigious medical college in the India, Christian Medical College Vellore, honored last year the legacy of Dr. Paul Brand, who revolutionized the understanding and treatment of leprosy, and his wife Margaret, who performed thousands of cataract surgeries in mobile eye camps. Although Christians constitute a small minority in India, they provide health care for almost 20 percent of the country. In much of Africa, Christian clinics and hospitals provide the majority of care.
At the end of the year, I went on a book tour to introduce Vanishing Grace: What Ever Happened to the Good News? Organizers arranged for a musician to round out the program: Anthony Evans, talent scout for The Voice. As we got acquainted, a holy irony sank in. Fifty years ago a young student at Carver Bible College was denied membership in the church I attended as a child, solely because of his race. That student, Tony Evans, went on to become the first African American to earn a doctorate of theology from Dallas Theological Seminary and now leads a 10,000-member church in Dallas. The church later held a service of repentance, and Tony Evans’ son and I were appearing together on stage. Not all grace has vanished. “When I hear about the kinds of things my father went through, it almost seems like another world,” Anthony said.
Each
of these experiences gave a different glimpse of how God’s kingdom advances:
slowly, steadily, and mostly out of the limelight. Perhaps the most moving
moment of the year came during a visit to South Korea, when I toured the Yanghwajin Foreign
Missionary Cemetery,
built to honor 145 missionaries, mostly British and American, who died while
serving God in their adopted country.
Some
of the gravestones date back more than a hundred years, and the caretakers have
added stainless steel plaques to recount the stories of the missionaries buried
there. Some faced persecution for leading protests against the brutal Japanese
colonial rule. A couple with the Salvation Army began the long tradition of
caring for Korean orphans. A scholarly Presbyterian contributed greatly to the
Korean translation of the Bible. Two women pioneered education for girls by
founding schools and ultimately a women’s university. Another American woman,
who came to Korea as a medical missionary, developed Braille suitable for the
Korean language and established a school for the blind.
My
favorite story was of S. F. Moore, who gave medical treatment to a butcher
deathly ill with typhoid fever. The butcher survived and became a Christian,
only to find that no church would admit him. (Korea’s rigid class system
scorned butchers, who dealt with “dead things” such as meat and leather, as
the lowest social class.) Moore supported a freedom movement to fight such
discrimination and organized a Butchers Church for outcasts and social
underdogs. He died of typhoid fever at the age of 46.
Typhoid,
tuberculosis, dysentery, shipwreck—each plaques spelled out hardships of the
men and women buried there. Many of the missionaries also lost children, buried
in small graves beside them. Yet the fruit of their work lives on, in schools,
libraries, hospitals, and church buildings dotting the landscape of modern South
Korea.
One
of my uncles served in the Korean War in 1953. He said he never saw a paved
road. Now Seoul is a metropolis of ten million, one of the most technologically
advanced cities in the world. Yanghwajin Cemetery has been preserved in downtown
Seoul, an oasis of green amid high-rise buildings. The sounds of traffic drifted
in as I stood at the gravestones, their Korean characters now weathered and
worn, and imagined a very different culture and landscape a century ago.
To a nation steeped in hierarchy and dominated by its powerful neighbors China and Japan, the men and women buried here brought a gospel message of justice, compassion, and transformation. In comparison with much of Asia, South Korea has been unusually receptive to the Christian message; 30 percent of South Koreans identify as Christian. I spoke at one impressive church with 65,000 members—yet it is less than one-tenth the size of Seoul’s largest church.
“What shall we say the kingdom of God is like, or what parable shall we use to describe it?” Jesus asked. “It is like a mustard seed, which is the smallest of all seeds on earth. Yet when planted, it grows and becomes the largest of all garden plants, with such big branches that the birds can perch in its shade” (Mark 4:30-32).
For this reason, I do not fear, despite all the alarming news: a shrinking church in Europe, secularization in the US, persecution of Christians in the Middle East and China. As we enter another year, I remember how Jesus chose small things as images for the kingdom of God. It’s like a tiny seed that falls in the ground and dies, only to grow into a great bush that nourishes life all around it.
As G. K. Chesterton said, “Christianity has died many times and risen again; for it had a God who knew the way out of the grave.” Evidence lay all around me, beyond the walls of Yanghwajin Cemetery.”
Philip Yancey is an author, most recently, of Vanishing Grace: What Ever Happened to the Good News?
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For more: follow on Twitter @jefflampl
To a nation steeped in hierarchy and dominated by its powerful neighbors China and Japan, the men and women buried here brought a gospel message of justice, compassion, and transformation. In comparison with much of Asia, South Korea has been unusually receptive to the Christian message; 30 percent of South Koreans identify as Christian. I spoke at one impressive church with 65,000 members—yet it is less than one-tenth the size of Seoul’s largest church.
“What shall we say the kingdom of God is like, or what parable shall we use to describe it?” Jesus asked. “It is like a mustard seed, which is the smallest of all seeds on earth. Yet when planted, it grows and becomes the largest of all garden plants, with such big branches that the birds can perch in its shade” (Mark 4:30-32).
For this reason, I do not fear, despite all the alarming news: a shrinking church in Europe, secularization in the US, persecution of Christians in the Middle East and China. As we enter another year, I remember how Jesus chose small things as images for the kingdom of God. It’s like a tiny seed that falls in the ground and dies, only to grow into a great bush that nourishes life all around it.
As G. K. Chesterton said, “Christianity has died many times and risen again; for it had a God who knew the way out of the grave.” Evidence lay all around me, beyond the walls of Yanghwajin Cemetery.”
Philip Yancey is an author, most recently, of Vanishing Grace: What Ever Happened to the Good News?
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For more: follow on Twitter @jefflampl
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