My own calling into Jesus’ mission to announce good news to
the poor, release to the prisoners,
recovery of sight to the blind and freedom to the oppressed has been
re-affirmed in recent months, with special emphasis on equipping and mobilizing
people towards the not yet reached.
My calling to pursue graduate studies in theology in France
happened in the midst of an intense period of leading regular Bible studies
with poor and minimally-educated peasants in Honduras. I was continually
inspired by Jesus’ teaching ministry in the Gospels, which took place in
fields, villages, and seashores as well as along the road, and in homes. Jesus’
passion was that “the poor have the Gospel preached to them” (Luke 7:22), and that
inspired my conversational search for good news in Scripture with people
outside of church settings. After a number of years we began to feel tired and
in need of input ourselves.
How could we grow in our effectiveness in bringing the
Gospel to the poor as Jesus did? Jesus offers himself, God’s beloved Son, rich
wisdom from heaven to the broken world in his self-emptying love (Philippians 2).
We wanted to contemplate these mysteries and receive more in-depth training,
somehow bringing the best we could find to those often considered the least.
I currently minister regularly in jail and prison and here
in our Tierra Nueva faith community, yet our recent Certificates in
Transformational Ministry at the Margins (CTMM) have been mostly offered in more advantaged places
(Washington State, London and Seoul)—though attendees are mostly ministry
workers serving the excluded. In October I told God of my desire to train
ministry leaders in places of greater deprivation. Within a few weeks I had received
two invitations to offer our CTMM in Kenya, and invites to Nigeria, Zimbabwe,
South Africa, and to minister in prisons in North Carolina and London.
This January Gracie and I attended a five-day listening
prayer retreat on Robben Island, organized by a Cape Town-based ministry called
The Warehouse. Robben Island was the site of an infamous prison used by the
South African governments during apartheid times to house political
prisoners—including Nelson Mandela, Robert Sobukwe and countless others. Robben
Island is now a museum with tour buses bringing groups around the island six
days a week.
Our group of about 50 ministry workers and activists from
across Africa and other continents stayed in the once minimum-security prison unit
with bars and razor wire still intact, now converted to host groups in a still
rustic setting near beaches occupied with African Penguins and nesting Oyster
Catchers.
On the second day we broke up into groups of twelve and each
went on walking tours of key sites on the island: the leper cemetery, the lime
quarry where prisoners did forced labor, the maximum security prison, the home
where activist Robert Sobukwe lived under house arrest and was kept from
speaking to anyone for years.
I was moved while we were visiting the lime quarry to learn
that inmates shared their knowledge with each other as they worked, turning
this forced labor site into an underground university where they practiced
“each one teach one.”
While visiting the now-empty maximum-security prison I was
deeply affected as I read captions in many of the cells describing the lives of
the inmates who had done time there.
As I stood and contemplated the cell where Nelson Mandela
spent 18 years of his life I found myself overwhelmed by the gravity of the
many years people spent there and continue to spend the world over suffering
the cruel and unusual punishment of confinement. I was filled with hope to see
that all these cells were now empty-- reminding me of a vision and prayer I’ve
had of Skagit County Jail being completely empty of inmates. Nelson Mandela
emerged from 30 years in prison a skilled statesman leading South Africa into a
new era with great wisdom and tact.
After our group left I stood in a long corridor of the empty
cell-block, and then walked slowly along, looking into each cell. I imagined a
man in every cell and put my hand through the bars, grasping an imaginary hand
in a gesture of solidarity. Suddenly it was like I saw all the cell doors
popping open and men with heads held high, looking somber but confident,
walking out one-by-one to freedom. Just then I heard a voice in my head: “I
want you to write a training curriculum to raise up prisoners as pastors and
leaders—agents of transformation.”
This is something I’ve been called to do for quite some time—to
put together a curriculum for leaders on the margins, a module-by-module
discipleship and leadership development course that can be used in prisons but
also outside. The call felt re-affirmed and strong. I walked into the yard and
found a member of our group who from Zimbabwe. He had spent time in prison,
suffered torture and now works as a human rights lawyer. He laid hands on me
and prayed for me there in the prison courtyard, and I have been pondering this
project ever since.
After Robben Island Gracie and I made our way to Zimbabwe
via Pietermaritzburg, where we offered the first module of our Certificate in
Transformational Ministry at the Margins to over100 pastors and leaders—all of
whom serve impoverished communities with increasingly run-down infrastructures
and unemployment as high as 90%.
We felt deeply encouraged by our time, witnessing unusual
humility and spiritual hunger, visible in an eagerness to learn, openness to
the Holy Spirit and a passion to communicate good news to the poor. We will
likely return to offer the next module of our CTMM and are in conversations
with others in Kenya and Congo about potential cohorts there. We appreciate
your prayers for wisdom and clear direction to further develop our training
programs, to recruit and raise up more trainers and respond to recent invitations
in other countries.
Note: The People’s Seminary is offering Certificates in
Transformational Ministry in the following locations in 2016.
·
Glasgow, April 21-23, and Jersey, September
17-19, see www.tierranueva-europe.org or
write info@tierranueva-europe.org
·
Burlington, Washington, October 5-8, write tps@tierra-nueva.org and see
www.thepeoplesseminary.org
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