New Teaching Invitation at Hill Light Seminary

I have recently received and accepted an invitation to teach third year students at Hill Light Seminary at Klee Thoo Klo (Huay Nam Khun) village which is seventeen miles south from Mae Sot, Thailand. The appointment commences on February 2nd.

Hill Light is a new seminary that has been in existence for only a few years. It has an excellent reputation of being well run with good student teachers from Naga Land, India as well as local Karen teachers and excellent leadership. Hill Light trains Karen Baptists from the “Golden Triangle” many exiled from Burma.

Attached is a picture sent to me of last year’s students. This will be my first time teaching at Hill Light. I have been asked to bring my new book on faith and ethics and lecture from it. I will have 15 students. If any one would like to purchase a book for a student at the Southeast Asian student price of $15.00 per copy,  please email me at Daniel.Age@gmail.com for more information.

Hill Light Seminary 2013

Sunday’s Preach

On Sunday January 12, I preached on the Lord’s Prayer at the International Christian Fellowship in Udon Thani, Thailand. Here follows a small piece of that message and a few pictures. Following these thoughts are my notes on a new educational endeavor taken from a discussion with the Pastor Ben McClure, the director of the ICF and founder of their new Bible College.

Sunday Preach

7 “And in praying do not heap up empty phrases as the Gentiles do; for they think that they will be heard for their many words. 8 Do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask him. 9 Pray then like this: Our Father who art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name. 10 Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done, On earth as it is in heaven. 11 Give us this day our daily bread; 12 And forgive us our debts, As we also have forgiven our debtors; 13 And lead us not into temptation, But deliver us from evil. 14 For if you forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father also will forgive you; 15 but if you do not forgive men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses.” Matthew 6

Prayer forms us before God and others in a particular way. We are changed from the outside in as well as the inside out by prayer. Form changes spirit just as spirit changes form.

In Matthew 6: 7-14 Jesus is transforming prayer. In his hands prayer is undergoing a decided change. Of course Jesus didn’t invent prayer nor did his earthly progeny David the struggling suffering shepherd Psalmist in his perilous route to the throne. Both did a lot of praying and left their mark on prayer but prayer had been around from times eternal. Almost certainly prayer emerged in history arising from those experiences, times and intersections in the human journey when humans found themselves between a rock and a hard place beyond the measure of their puny resources. In these intractable circumstances humans have always turned to higher powers however they have conceived them. When the Jews emerged into existence under Yahweh prayer went through the monotheistic purification and thanks to David, became filled with great praise as well as great passion looking to and trusting in God for help in these times of need. Despite all that David did to prayer teaching us to mix praise and confidence into our prayers in the face of trouble Jesus does something even greater

Pray “Our Father”

God and father may seem as symmetrical and logical as a lame man and a cane, as a fireman and a red ladder truck, a glove and a hand but this linkage exists only because of Jesus. It is true faint roots of this father identity of God can be traced back to the Old Testament but in Jesus’ hands it is magnified, expanded and informed. Coming to God as father transforms the one praying. Inside this basic furnishing of Jesus prayer we discover ourselves before God as son and daughter. Inside of this identity we belong, we are included in God in a particular way and just so if we are true to this form we commence to embody the proprieties that come with being a son and daughter. These include confidence, a God given dignity and freedom and imbibing the fresh brisk air that we belong. We do not earn our merit our placement with God it is our God given dignity. In giving Himself to us as father he gives us free rightful access to him. We are included in God and the circle of God. We stand and kneel praying and living inside the circle of belonging because God has shown up in and through Jesus as our Father.

Like oil in one’s bones in times of trouble using all manner of spiritual, moral and religious devices humans attempt to get into the inside circle with God where his helps can be readily accessed? Prayer that is full of fret and fever, beset by anxiety of an orphan and driven beyond oneself to promise making (most often which are ropes of sand), prayer that seeks out the holy, person, place or thing through which to mediate one’s petition, prayer which enters into intense spiritual machinations and bodily sufferings and restrictions to bend the “reluctant” hand of the Almighty all betray that the ones praying are wearing the primitive pre-Christian prayer suit. In these two words “our father” Jesus is clothing us and our praying with confidence, freedom and the dignity of a son and daughter beloved and included in the Father’s care.

Do your and my prayers betray spiritual machinations to get inside the circle with the Almighty in order to gain some leverage with Him or do they reflect the freedom and confidence of one who is by the grace of God already inside that circle? Or maybe neither, maybe we stand outside looking in wishing we had a way to the Almighty’s care. Here follows my definitive word ‘You can’t get there from here’. We start from inside because that is where we find ourselves saint, sinners, the good, bad and ugly!

If the shoe fits wear it and if this prayer shapes and forms your humanity before God in a way that is right and good then go with it. It is Jesus’ gift to you. Not because of our own righteousness nor by natural birthright, but by grace in and through the Christ – messiah, God made his way to us as Father. “Father” is costly grace, an adoption maneuver and just so when we, wandering nomads and orphans, utter this appellation it is our doxology and praise and the frame and prelude to all our petitions. Instantly we are no more alone – God is our father and we, looking out through this prism of truth, begin to see many brothers and sisters all around us.

“Our father” is the big deal in this prayer…

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A New Christian Bible College Comes Into Existence In Udon Thani, Thailand

The following is taken from my discussion with Ben McClure director of  International Christian Fellowship (ICF) and founder of ICF’s new Bible College.

Pastor Ben started working in Laos 20 years ago. Christianity is limited to three official expressions in Laos, Catholic, a branch of the Evangelical spectrum of Protestantism and the Seventh day Adventists. Any other Christian group was and still is not allowed the rights of assembly. These three groups persisted from an earlier period by virtue of their pre-existing establishment before Laos became communist. Working under an NGO status doing teaching and beneficent work by day and meeting and teaching Laotians the way of Christ by night had its limitations – there was no good way to build believing communities. Their NGO status was closely monitored. Just across the border in Thailand religious liberty existed. This led to pastor McClure’s call to ICF in Udon Thani in the northeastern sector of the country and building the multicultural congregation that exists today. But part of Ben’s heart remained in Laos and this affection led him to start the Bible College. Now with about 10 students, many from Laos he has commenced classes. He has a vision and a fine partner and many native helpers to see it forward. He has his eye on purchasing land and piece by piece, the Lord willing, developing a school where students can become bi-vocational missionaries, going out with the ability and training necessary to plant churches leaving their training period with both a BA degree and the ability to support themselves and support their mission work. It is his hope as well that in time and in a rural location the school will be self-sustaining by developing agricultural horticultural endeavors. I assured him that from time to time I would bring my short-term intensive courses to help him as I have to other fledgling educational endeavors in Southeast Asia.

Photo: Pastor Ben McClure with members of the International Christian Fellowship

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The Story of the Conversion and Calling of Pastor Zhang

For the last three years I have traveled to Beijing and taught courses in Pastor Zhang’s seminary. On my last trip in the late summer of 2013 we went out to dinner together and I noticed his limp was more pronounced than the previous time I visited so I inquired. The following story came to me from this encounter here written with accuracy by Peter and Jennifer (their English names), two young converts from pastor Zhang’s Ministry.

This is the story of the conversion and calling of Pastor Zhang an evangelist in Central China for the last thirty-five years.

Pastor Zhang was born in a rural area in the central part of China in a locale where people had never heard about the story of Jesus. But things can be changed by the extraordinary grace of God.

When he was sixteen, he was very ill. He could not move any part of his body, just like a human vegetable. The doctor at the hospital told his parents they were powerless to save him, and he would die soon. This feeling of helplessness was terrible to him. The only thing he could do was to cry for help from all kinds of supernatural powers.

At that time, a believer who he knew nothing about nor had ever met, living far away, came to his village by God’s leading. This believer had lost her twin daughters 30 years earlier (i.e. they were separated from her and lost in the great masses of humanity that characterize China). She was a believer in Jesus at this time. Over a long period she kept on praying to Jesus and searching for her daughters insistently. Finally she got a message about where her daughters were. So she came to see her children and by coincidence, one of her daughters was Pastor Zhang’s neighbor. After knowing Pastor Zhang’s story, the older sister told him about Jesus and prayed for him every day. Zhang chose to believe God and swore that if he could walk again, he would pledge his life to Jesus.

Amazingly, he stood at his feet again! All the doctors who had ever treated him were shocked. From thenceforth he walked but always with a limp perchance to remind him forever of the Lord’s amazing grace. Immediately after this healing he began to read the Bible and soon he trained to become a worker of God. By the way, the Bible was not available to every believer in those days. He had to borrow a Bible from a brother and then he wrote out a copy of the New Testament by his hand for himself. After he began to work for God, hundreds of people believed Jesus because of his preaching and story.

Noticeably, preaching was forbidden in China at that time. Pastor Zhang was put in the jail for 2 years. After being set free, he went on with the work. Furthermore, some other works he has done are very profound, such as connecting Chinese churches with the churches around the globe and building up the seminaries.

All the above is what we know about Pastor Zhang. May God bless his workers around the world, especially Pastor Zhang and Daniel Age.

China Fall 2013 Photo Essay

The following pictures were taken between China and Malaysia during the months of August and September 2013. I invite you to meet my students, friends and get a taste for my teaching travels.

The three pictures below were taken on August 23rd in a seminary located in the top of a non government church located in a village not far from the South China Sea. It is a new endeavor started by a “Brother Chen” who recently used his well developed organizational enterprise skills to launch this little college/seminary endeavor. The teachers come and go like myself from a list circulated by the underground church leaders and educators.

These pictures were taken August 22/13 in a seminary located in the top of a non government church located in a village not far from the South China Sea

The first day we convened I wore a tie as is my habit but no other student came wearing a tie. The next day 12 guys had a tie on. No word was ever mentioned about class attire.

Master Students

Not all but many of these masters level students traveled long distances to do their degree.

Master Class  - Beijing

Zhang’s Beijing Truth Masters Class in Beijing. September 25, 2013.

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During break time students administering recovery therapy to the Galatian’s teacher doing like the Galatians did for Paul when he sought sanctuary with them the first time. “Revive comrade we’ve only 2 chapters and three verses to go.” Union Seminary September 25, 2013.

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Student dish washing clean up crew at Union… Near the South China Sea, September 26, 2013.

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My Union Seminary Galatians class. China September 27, 2013.

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After sitting front and center three feet from my table all day everyday transcribing my Galatians lectures she required a picture shoot before presenting me with her gift a full size home made paper rabbit in spite of care warning got squashed in my suitcase. September 27, 2013, Union Seminary China.

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My Union Seminary Galatians class. China September 27, 2013.

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Fixing dinner the old fashion way. China September 2013.

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More traditional dinner prep. China September 2013.

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Dr. John Ong president of MBTS with his wife at dinner. Thanks to Dr. Ong’s leadership this school runs well. It is a place where mission and education come together. Carved into a ridge overlooking Penang Bay MBTS is like a precious pearl in the grip of the sea. Truly God has blessed this school and gifted it with a visionary mission minded leader of no small talent.

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“Red sky in the morning sailor take warning, red sky at night sailor’s delight”. My guest room a few miles from MBTS overlooking the Penang Bay in Malaysia at around 6 AM just before the call to prayer heard from the mosque a few blocks away. Malaysia, September 5, 2013.

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This is a great nation on route to become considerably more powerful no question about it. But could have the Chairman envisaged his people out ‘capitalizing’ the West’s greatest capitalist. Capitalism’s energy here, especially Shanghai and South staggers the mind! Yes some of it is tied to the public purse but now Jeanne’s out of the bottle independent business tycoons are multiplying like the frogs of Egypt.

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I have made a number of trips to China now and not with my head in the sand. They love American culture forget politics that for the professionals to worry about. Here in Beijing out for stroll one evening I came upon the Happiness Mart. Somewhere they picked up the idea that a business must mix a feeling experience with their product service. Dropping all subtly this business opted for a one line ringer that would fulfill the new advertising ethos. It was just a simple Seven Eleven type market.

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Charles my assigned interpreter for one seminary told me he was exceptionally gifted. Time will tell but for now one thing I can safely say is that he is plagued with angst and guilt so much so that he was twisting with existential conflict whilst translating my words into Mandarin. Early on he confessed he was not only translating my words to his comrades but arguing with their logic and claim for how he was living his life. He could not look at the class directly without translating their learning faces into faces scorning and shaming him.Projections of the soul I assured him. I found it humorous and never withdrew from his obsession to try to talk his way free. Charles my friend its hard to kick against the pricks.

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Mr Chen a quite humble man actually is the wheel that turns ever other wheel in his neck of the Christian woods. It was this man who moved a small mountain and launched a seminary where I taught my 2 Corinthians 5:7 ethics course this August.I found him disappear then appear. At one moment he was doing my washing and chasing down food for me, the next moment tending to his fledgling seminary project all the while never letting anything slip at his enterprise running a small factory in town. Every time he talks you think he is ready to break into a full laugh but to conclude that he is not reading and judging everything with a very careful discerning eye would be to make a gross mistake

Swimming right into hungry bellies

Waiting for the five minute transition from live happy swimming fishy to a Chinamen’s warm belly. The setting here is a century old restaurant where fish pace up and down a ditch directly behind the cooks kitchen. A night out with the Union President for an old fashioned meal.  China September 2013.

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During my Galatian lectures in southern China [“Union”] Stephen sat on the back row smiling all the time. It wasn’t until 20 hours into the course when he passed me a question written in perfect English that I realized he could speak and write English well and was getting everything I said two times at every blow. In time we chatted and I learned more about his work. Married with a child he is plotting his mission project. Almost all of the students are cooking up a mission outreach project of some kind rather than graduating to an established church based ministry. Students rarely come to seminary here to matriculate directly to a church ministry. Stephen has his eye on Japan and knows Japanese. I have connected him to my old Japanese friends from bygone days studying in St Andrews and they are chatting. I am thinking this mission model would serve seminary and ministry in the West well. Ministry is too soft and cushy in the West where a kind of post missionary ministry that lacks verve and nerve has thrown its shroud over the church and the land. Ministry purified by mission clarifies what is transmissible in one’s faith if anything. China at Union September 27, 2013.

Dr Dan’s Teaching Mission Update: China – Fall 2013

Dr Dan’s Teaching Mission Update: China Fall 2013

There are over 100 underground seminaries currently flourishing in China. A few operate out in the open in the south but most carry on in the shadows. To date over the last three years I have a served a little less than ten. There are Government approved and co-opted churches in which the government has ultimate restrictive control and say and then there are the underground churches. The former derive their permission to exist from the state and the latter from God. The former I call churches organized around top down power and the latter underground church is organized around bottom up power. The mere fact of the relocation of power in the underground movement accounts for a good deal of the new energy that is released.

I am writing this having just returned from China to Chiang Mai in Northern Thailand where I will attempt some R&R and do the final editing for the long over do book “Existence and Faith: The Doing and Undoing of Religion in America”. Circumstances beyond my control have delayed the final editing until now. Here follows a brief report of the five legs of my mission teach in China then out to Malaysia and back in again. Of the five stops three were especially skittish about pictures and any precise blogging that would draw attention to their location and identity. In many places the situation appears to be loosening and it is but then just about when one thinks that calm has at long last arrived here to stay the corpse of old zealots suddenly starts kicking and flagellating.

I will avoid a chronological order and share bits and pieces freely of this six-week run. The visa process is sometimes daunting and from my standpoint inflicts unnecessary burdens. In order to fulfill my assignments I had to go in and come out and then return  – always as a tourist.

At least one school I worked in has achieved a working sharing relationship with an approved government church and enjoys greater freedom. I have included with their permission a number of pictures from my time with them. There are cities in the south of China from Shanghai to Hangzhou where little government resistance occurs. My impression is that schools from the North and West have migrated to these cities and set up shop but remain very careful perhaps far beyond any caution due. Within 10 years the situation will be radically different, the Chinese are can do people extremely aggressive and undaunted at this time in history. Traveling to many Asian countries I feel this distinction sharply. The day when Mainland Chinese underground churches will educate their own teachers cannot be far away. Several of my students are going abroad for M Div’s. One leader told me within ten years itinerant teachers from the west and other Asian countries will not be needed.

In Beijing I asked one leader what the key to his success in planting and building churches was from a human standpoint and he simply said the government loosened the chokehold on us just a little and we immediately exploited this slight easement. He has been working for thirty years building underground churches and his story is amazing. It is being written up for me and will be posted soon.

I taught again in Beijing, stayed in a modest hotel and walked to the ‘school’ located in business high-rise office building. Here I met up fifteen older students working on their master degree. The course was Christian Ethics. The challenge during this week was translation. The translator that was originally planned fell through the last minute so two young guys were immediately drafted. English to Mandarin takes an experienced translator to pull off, these guys were not trained and still in the early stages of learning English. Many things could not be translated so I invented stories and suborned them into my service like mules enlisted to carry one’s luggage. I would spin a story and then show where the idea was in the story. Straight concept was way out of reach. But it was the heart these two guys nicknamed King David and Joseph the favored son. While one translated the other manned the computer word search back up post. The second day Joseph said he was whipped his brain had never worked so hard – and he looked haggard. I was like Pharaoh’s taskmaster lashing them to deliver the goods. But they had heart – and prayed, really embracing the challenge with spirit and this proved the tipping point I am sure. Spirit and grace salvaged the week and in fact this is true. And on the last day the students demanded that I share something from my own story in life and ministry so I told a few personal stories with no agenda whatsoever. So grateful were they to see my ‘in the trenches real person identity trying to work out my calling juggling the fatherhood duties of not so distant bygone days that they secretly pulled their RMB’s and gifted me a small send-off – a brisk and sweet embrace of their kindness and gratitude to me for my sojourn to their school.

Master Class  - Beijing

This time, as always, it was a steady culinary struggle. Chinese eat many things at one meal. One meal where I went out with the surrounding pastors to a restaurant I counted 37 dishes on the table that turned in the middle. I am gastrointestinally challenged and did not look forward to school mealtime. Often I thought how to come up with a good excuse to legitimize my absence at the table, perhaps resort to the tried and true method – cut my toe off or run into a building face first. In spite of gastrointestinal disturbances by the grace of God I kept one foot out of the net and kept laying up new bounty on my ‘new’ ethics insights and also on my ride through Galatians. In Paul’s faith – sight polarity [2 Corithians5:7]  there is an ethical well of pure water so deep and fresh as to be inexhaustible.  In my course through Galatians I paid attention, to D G Dunn, Wright and Sanders gathering many insights [‘The New Perspective] but then went on to show that their Covenantal Nomism paradigm disintegrates under post exilic Hasidim separatism which infected 1st Century Judaism with legalism coming through  the back door. After working through this book time and again I have never understood Paul so well. Even now Paul, who is the radical thinker and theologian Apostle, is domesticated by the church. In order to unhook Christianity from the train called Judaism and set it free to go into the Gentile world unencumbered by food laws, Sabbath days and holy rituals like circumcision and the other 600 plus laws he reshaped the people of God identity and the ethics that would carry it. Thanks to Paul the Christian way is ‘extra nomos’ – outside law. These insights and ‘new’ ideas I will put in my theological discussion column in this blog in 2 weeks.

After my first August run in China I went to Penang, Malaysia to meet the president of MBTS and speak to the student body and take a three-hour lecture with the D Ministry students on the foundation of Christian Ethics. The president Dr John Ong is a prince of a man and able leader of this school. I am honored to have bumped into him and liaise with MBTS to help out in their China seminary education mission. Beyond their service to Malaysia, China is their main mission field and they are coordinating teachers for underground seminaries all over China ranging from 40 students to a hundred or more.

The last school I served in southern China, ‘Union’ (September 18 to 27) had 46 students terrible as an army with banners. Before class started they sang and then prayed and when the appointed student prays he or she pauses between complete phrases at which moment the entire class provides a resounding a refrain – “amen”. It stirs the blood to say the least.  I found the students spirited, full of questions and so full of youth’s verve trying their best to calibrate their devotion with what is true in the Christian faith.  I am sure I fielded over 150 questions during this one week, eight hour a day course on Galatians.

Many students come to Union from far away some from the Mongolian border. In the middle of the week the president took me out to dinner in the mountains with my translators to a restaurant that dates back to the old way of raising one’s own food, cooking in a kitchen that dates back to the 1800’s with a little ditch outside the kitchen where live fish await their destiny so that from swimming to eating is a matter of a few minutes.

At dinner I learned about the president’s history. During the Cultural Revolution they confiscated all Bible’s all around China also in the city I was teaching in threatening imprisonment and hard labor for those who did not surrender them. He told me how his mother salvaged the only Bible in the area wrapping it in plastic and hiding it between a rock crevice under the stone bridge in her neighborhood much later when the heat resided she recovered it and it survives to this day. And true to her devotion her son now the president and founder of Union became an evangelist and traveled China for years building little clandestine house churches eventually ending up in prison. Such is the salt behind this school’s beginning by this family.

At Union one girl sat on the front row 20 years old with the maturity far exceeding her years.  She had a natural way of keeping everything real and the questions she asked revealed her mind. With dead seriousness wrapping her question in a beguiling smile, as if it was a bit humorous and serious at the same time, she asked me why unlike her classmates the Christian message didn’t wind her up with zeal and feeling, surely there was something fundamentally wrong with her she implored. I told her to sit easy with feelings and flux of zeal and devotion and close to the teaching that made sense and spoke to her. She said “I think what you teach makes sense to me”. She was one of three out of the entire class who spoke English. She traveled 40 hrs by train from a city in the northwest close to Russia.

I went again to the motorcycle prison seminary. This is the name that I penned on it because when one goes into this school (once a motorcycle factory) there is no coming out until you served your time. This year about 70 students attend and live there male and female. The school is as obvious as a bird’s nest in a thicket. You can be looking right at it and never see a school. Once inside walks outside are prohibited. Inside an intense routine of worship, study, classes, and (in keeping with their habit) fast eating occurs like clockwork. Romances are not allowed. But who is surprised when 10 minutes after graduation ‘friends’ transmute into bride and groom and start ringing the wedding bells.

In my upcoming blog posting I will share a few thoughts and stories from the other seminaries that I taught at in China during this August – September 2013 run. Attached are a few Union pictures and a few others from 2 other schools plus a couple shots from my street walks. With these there are a couple shots from my visit to MBTS.

I must confess I am spent totally. Lecturing all day every day including morning and evening refocusing the lectures ends up a 12 hr day. I emptied the bucket again and again until there was not a drop.  Chiang Mai is my appointed R&R town in northern Thailand. Here I will spend a couple weeks making the final, long over do, changes on my book before submitting it to MBTS then return to teach at a new Karen seminary along the Thai Burma border [Masters students only

God Bless you

Daniel

Don’t miss more photos from the road posted in the following China Photo Essay Post.