Budapest

Budapest
Buda Castle, Budapest

Monday, March 19, 2007

Encouraging the body of Christ in Serbia!

Where on a world map would you look for a country that had only 700 evangelicals in its capitol city of 2 million people? What if I added that this country recently had a civil war and is now home to 200,000 Muslims?



Mark Orcutt (right) flew over from South Carolina to travel with me. Here he is speaking to a Serbian student in Novi Sad, Serbia, during a distribution of our evangelistic magazine, "Vox."

Would you place such a country in Europe?

The country I am describing is called Serbia. Serbia is in the Balkan Peninsula and is what remains from the former Yugoslavia. Serbia shares a border with Hungary.

Before the USA was attacked on Sept 11, Serbia was the world’s hotspot. Perhaps you remember such words as Sarajevo, ethnic cleansing, Kosovo, Slobodan Milosevic.

Last week I was there in Serbia in the capitol city of Belgrade: 2 million people with less than 1000 born again believers while the Muslims multiply throughout the country, particularly in the south.

I was with Mark Orcutt, a good friend from South Carolina, who came over just to spend the week with our family and join me in my travels and ministry. Mark and I spent many hours together processing all we experienced and getting to know each other better.


Errol (left) is our Serbian country director for Campus Crusade; Mark is on the right. Goran (middle) is a psychology student who is not a Christian (yet) but enjoys hanging out with the guys in our ministry in Belgrade. They are holding up copies of the evangelistic magazine we distributed. I think it is great when our ministry attracts non-Christians!

It was asked to come to the city of Belgrade to train their new missionaries and to encourage the laborers there. Campus Crusade has 7 missionaries there, 4 are Serbian and 3 Romanian. Just north of Belgrade is the city of Novi Sad. Campus Crusade has there a team of 5 American young people witnessing on the campus. One day we helped them pass out an evangelistic magazine that our ministry created and gathered evangelistic contacts for them. The magazine looks great and is very professional!

One student approached me who was helping our American missionaries hand out the magazine. He said, “Do you remember me?”

“Yes, I do,” I replied. “You came to an outreach I spoke at 2 years ago here in Novi Sad. Your name is Evan.” Evan told me how my message impacted his life and a short while later he came to faith in Christ. Our team of Americans has helped him grow and now he is helping them reach out to other students. It was great reconnecting with Evan!


Evan, in the light blue shirt, through our ministry in Novi Sad, Serbia, went from a lost student to a Christ-centered laborer!

We returned to Budapest in time for a great outreach done each year by Campus Crusade’s high school’s ministry. “Battle of the Bands.” Amateur bands from around Budapest get a chance to perform live and compete for prize money. Entry fee is to fill out a spiritual interest survey from which our high school staff can do follow up. I have not heard yet on numbers but I saw the gospel clearly communicated between acts and I saw young Hungarians in attendance who otherwise would not have gone to a church or any “Christian” event. What a strategic outreach!


Back in Budapest, these Hungarian students attended "Battle of the Bands." Though they probably would not attend a church service, at our outreach they heard the gospel.
Thank you for your enthusiasm and your partnership in our ministry. Please keep praying for us and those impacted by the work of the gospel here in Eastern Europe!

"Therefore, having been justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ." Romans 5:1


Sunday, March 04, 2007

March Madness in Budapest!

Wow! What a few days! Our kids’ school (ICSB; International Christian School of Budapest) hosted a basketball tournament where we invited International High Schools from across Central and Eastern Europe. Friday and Saturday had around the clock high school basketball games for both girls and boys as the tournament progressed.

The teams came from Salzburg, Austria; Vienna, Austria; Kiev, Ukraine, Bucharest, Romania and our cross-town rival, the American International School of Budapest (AISB), where embassy families and business executives send their kids. While most of the high school athletes were American, the rosters from these schools contained kids from places such as Belgium, China and Iran.

While the high school boys from our school took second in the tournament to local rival AISB, our ICSB girls went undefeated in the tournament and won the girls division! The crowd was rowdy, school colors were everywhere, the pep band was energetic and the gym was loud! This tournament is certainly the highlight of the athletic year and generates the most school spirit! EB and I haven’t had this much fun as sports fans since college days at Ahearn Fieldhouse.


Our Elizabeth, AS A SOPHOMORE, brought home a whole shelf-full of awards, including: From 100+ athletes, the coaches voted her: 1) Most Valuable Offensive Player, 2) onto the all-tournament team. She was also 3) high scorer and 4) brought home the championship trophy! We are so proud!

The championship ICSB 2007 Lady Bulldogs basketball team!

On a cultural note, we had to adjust to a new way of refereeing. In America, we expect the refs to be objective outside observers of the game. In Europe, where authority is emphasized and individuality is discouraged, the refs make it clear that they are in control of the game and they will favor their calls toward the losing team. This is an attempt to make the contests fairer. Frustrating to our American minds but a fact of life here in Europe all the same.



Rebekah and her friend won an award for the best poster. Here it is!



Tuesday, February 13, 2007

"The mission outreach of these fellows is so superb. Thank you for letting us share with them."

The above is a quote from one of our Kansas City partners regarding our Polish missionaries.

Even though EB and I are back on a plane on Sunday for a week in Atlanta, I just returned 10 days ago from nearly 3 weeks in the States. Most of that was spent in or near Kansas City. While in KC, I was with 4 of our Polish staff trying to get them connected with churches and individuals in their attempts to raise support.

Our several weeks in Kansas City (and one weekend near Great Bend, Kansas) exceeded our expectations! Praise God! I was genuinely surprised how people made sacrifices and took risks to help out the Polish missionaries with me. These people ranged from high school friends I have known for a quarter century (I grew up in Kansas City) to people I did not know before this trip.

Authentic Kansas City Bar-B-Que with our new friend Brian Doerr (2nd from the right) and four of our Polish missionaries [from left: Robert Kowalsky, Mariusz Kwapisz (country director), Marek Marcinowicz and Irek Lehwark.]

The Polish missionaries with me had the deck stacked against them. IMAGINE THEIR SITUATION! They were far from family, in a culture and country foreign to them, operating in their second language and, on top of all of this, they were support raising! Two of the men are still in Kansas City and will leave in a few days. However, when I left the US on Super Bowl Sunday, the Polish missionaries had already raised about half of the support they needed! That is good news!

Yet behind these 4 staff are another 95 Polish missionaries. And behind these Polish missionaries are our Romanian, Albanian and Russian staff. Then there are the national missionaries from the other Eastern European countries, most all of whom live financially in ways Americans would not.

Europe is the only continent in the world where the Christian church is not growing. If we are to see true Biblical Christianity come again to Europe, like it is in Asia and Africa, the first thing we must do (after emerging from prayer and fasting for Europe) is to sure up and empower what “remains of the wall” (think Nehemiah): that is, our European national missionaries.

God has not given the American church great wealth so that she can be comfortable. I believe that the Lord wants the American church to step beyond the bubble of American evangelicalism and engage her world. And as she goes to the remotest ends of the earth, she is to be salt and light to her neighbors as well.

Some of the lovely Kansas City ladies who attended a coffee that Kari (far right) hosted in order to benefit the Polish ministry.

The fact is that very little of America’s Christian wealth gets to the foreign mission field. This is not, I believe, because the American church is greedy. Rather I believe she lacks opportunity. Whenever the Holy Spirit orchestrates Eastern European missionaries to be seated at the same table as American Christians, an instant bond usually takes place; a bond that, more often than not, results in prayer and financial investment.

Mariusz sharing his life and ministry with Larry and Phyllis Vogt and Marian DeWerff of Ellinwood (Kansas) Baptist Church.

One reason books like “The Purpose Driven Life” and “Wild at Heart,” are so popular is that the flipside of American affluence is often boredom and a lack of purpose. Yet the Bible is full of offers to live lives of meaning and purpose. (Matthew 9:37, Matthew 16:24-25, Matthew 28:18-20, Luke 6:35, Acts 1:8, etc.)

Reconciling the world with the Creator is what drove Jesus to leave His home, travel to a foreign world, communicate the love of the Father and even lay down His life so that others might commune with the Father. The missionary cause is so great that even Jesus Himself left everything to pursue it. Surely it is worthy of our pursuits too.

Even though the cause of Christ cries out for those who will leave behind all that is familiar for the sake of the gospel, one can still make a difference and not leave one’s zip code by praying, sending and giving.

The foreign mission field does not need sinless saints leading perfect lives revved on caffeine and adrenaline. Rather we need wounded warriors who are so moved by a God who justifies by grace through faith, that they count Him as their greatest treasure, greatest passion, and greatest pursuit.

Repent from small dreams and come dream big dreams with us. First Europe and then lets see where the Lord leads us!

We were able to spend a few days with EB's mom who lives near Great Bend, Kansas. She lives on the farm her grandfather homesteaded as an immigrant from the modern-day Czech Republic. Here she is showing the Polish men the hogshed that she is renovating into guest quarters for her ever-growing family!

It was interesting to see what the Polish men noticed while visiting the States. They commented frequently on the creatively designed buildings (one pictured here), the large cars, wide and maintained roads, including the interstate system as well as "miles upon miles of large, beautiful homes."

When I arrived back home in Budapest, EB had a party waiting for me with our children, extended family and best Hungarian friends! For a few hours I forgot that I hadn't slept in a couple of days!

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

The Joy of Giving!

Dear Partners in Ministry,

Every year at this time, more money is given to charitable causes than any other month. And with the economy strong, we may see more money given to charity in December 2006 than any month in history. That is wonderful! America is the most generous country on earth!

My ministry is about giving. I see both sides. I see a country that the Lord has blessed with abundant resources, unlike any country ever in the history of the world. Yet I frequently see many missionaries living at near poverty conditions. So I would like to present you with three reasons why we should give generously.

1) The Lord commands that we give generously: Paul, inspired by the Holy Spirit, wrote to Timothy these words, “Instruct those who are rich in this present world…to be rich in good works, to be generous and ready to share, storing up for themselves the treasure of a good foundation for the future, so that they may take hold of that which is life indeed,” (1 Timothy 6:17-18).

2) The cause of Christ needs laborers: In my travels across Eastern Europe I see doors opened wide for the gospel but no one is there to go through them. I see missionaries who want to bring the gospel to their countrymen but just don’t have the resources to support their work. I see excellent outreach strategies that never get past the proposal stage. There are many reasons why this is so, but always top among those reasons is a lack of funding. In one of the most influential New Testament passages to me, Jesus says, “the harvest is plentiful but the laborers are few…” (Matthew 9:37).

3) The words of Jesus: “It is more blessed to give than to receive,” (Acts 20:35). THIS VERSE IS RADICAL! Many of the national missionaries I work with are scared about asking American Christians for financial support. I answer by showing them this Scripture; they are a blessing to their donors! It is more important for the donor to give than it is for the missionary to receive! I believe that the biggest competitor to missions is not Muslims, secularists or foreign governments; it is materialism. When we give to the cause of Christ we are choosing to divorce ourselves from the idol of materialism. Giving, if done in the right spirit, is a high form of worship to Almighty God!

But the sad fact is that very few Christians are giving. The “Rule of 3s” helps to explain this: 1) the average Christian gives only 3% of their income to Christian causes 2) only 3% of Christians tithe and 3) of the money that is given only 3% goes to the international mission field. Yet most Christians complain of financial problems. Is there a connection? Imagine where the cause of Christ would be world-wide if merely half of us tithed!

However, I must say this: EB and I have received undeserved attention for the financial turn around of our ministry in Hungary (they still have needs but are now pointed in the right direction). We don’t deserve credit; YOU do! When we began to help our Hungarian staff, we went to THOSE ALREADY SUPPORTING US! And you all gave generously again and introduced our beloved Hungarian staff to your like-minded friends. Even recently in an email I quoted our Polish director that it will not be a happy Christmas for many of our Polish staff families due to poor support. And YOU took the initiative (I never asked). Over $20,000 thus far has been given to our needy Polish staff. Wow! YOU MAKE EB AND ME LOOK GOOD! Keep up the excellent work; you are an example to the cause of Christ everywhere!

EB and I want to live with a “kingdom mentality.” If you will be giving extra this Christmas, then please consider the needs of national missionaries (with ANY Christ-exalting ministry) before our family’s needs; also EB and I would like to recommend Samaritan’s Purse (http://www.samaritanspurse.org) Through their humanitarian work, they get the gospel into areas that mere evangelists and church planters cannot go.

Giving benefits you, it empowers the missionary and brings the Lord glory. Name another use of money that does all that! Giving generously is a WIN-WIN-WIN opportunity!

Serving with you,

Matt and EB

PS: this is a link to a talk I heard by John Piper. No other theologian has influenced me like Piper. This is classic Piper and it is a “go into all the world and lay down your life for Jesus” message. http://www.desiringgod.org/ResourceLibrary/Sermons/ByScripture/10/11_Let_All_the_Peoples_Praise_Him/

Do not seek a painless death; seek a purposeful death.

Thursday, December 07, 2006

Warsaw's Tragic History & the Death of the European Enlightenment


I was caught off guard with how modern Warsaw is. Plenty of reminders that I was in Eastern Europe (including cold and grey winter weather) yet Warsaw has skyscrapers that Budapest doesn't have.

It was July 1944. The Polish resistance, outgunned and outnumbered, was battling the Nazis for control of Warsaw. The Poles looked up and saw on the opposite side of the Vistula river, which flowed through Warsaw, the Soviet army lined up on the banks. The Poles cheered! “They have come to rescue us! They will cross over and drive out the Nazis!” But the Soviets did not cross. They stood there. Watching. And waiting. They waited until the Nazis greatly weakened themselves by pounding the Polish resistance and destroying Warsaw. Once both the Poles were decimated and the Nazis exhausted, then did the Soviet army make its move. The Nazis retreated leaving death and destruction behind. Hence, the Soviets postured themselves as the liberators of Warsaw (much like they did in Budapest). Little did the Polish people realize that they were about to be enslaved by the Soviets for the next two generations.

250,000 Poles died during World War II as the Nazis and the Soviet armies battled over Warsaw. Before the war, Warsaw had a Jewish population of 400,000. After the war, there were virtually no Jews left. During my brief tour of Warsaw, I saw a wall that marked a boundary of the former Jewish ghetto. And many of the same emotions came over me that I felt this past summer at Auschwitz: emotions of terror, disbelief and disgust mixed with anger. There is nothing left of the 400,000 Jews that lived in this city 65 years ago. (Wikipedia’s page on Warsaw is a great, quick resource about the World War II battle for Warsaw: www.wikipedia.com)


This wall in Warsaw is essentially all that is left of the Jewish ghetto built by the Nazis.

The Soviets desired to colonize and make slaves out of Poland and all of Eastern Europe. On the heels of the Jewish holocaust, the Soviets either killed or shipped to the Siberian Gulags all the intellegencia of Poland, regardless of religion. (The Soviets did this as well as in the other Eastern Europe countries). They didn’t want any skilled workers, thinkers, entrepreneurs, leaders, problem solvers, or wealthy people in any of their European colonies; all they wanted was a mindless working class of slaves that they could manipulate and extract goods from on behalf of the Soviet Union.

Like our Campus Crusade staff in Hungary, our Polish staff can all tell stories from the previous generation of relatives that simply vanished or family that were ruthlessly killed. I stayed with Robert and Beata Kowalsky, a Campus Crusade Polish staff couple with 3 beautiful young girls. Of Robert’s father’s family, only Robert’s father survived the battle of Warsaw as a 15 year old boy constantly on the move to avoid capture; the rest of his family was captured and killed. Beata’s grandfather was shipped off to Siberia because he was a blacksmith and the Soviets didn’t want him making bullets or weapons for the Polish resistance.

The Enlightenment began when on a wintery day in 1618 Rene Descartes sat next to a fire and articulated the words that not only changed Europe but world history: “I think therefore I am.” At that point an era began where the shift of authority was no longer based on the Bible and the church but based on human wisdom and reason. Man set out to build an earthly utopia that was void of God and any other authority except man himself. The Enlightenment didn’t end, I personally believe, until the fall of the Berlin wall in 1991. That symbolic act was the curtain closing on the final scene of the European Enlightenment that chronicled man’s multi-century failure to build a utopia on earth.. The harder man tries to build a man-centered Christless utopia, the more tragic are the results.

The quest for societal utopia is all but gone (albeit the Muslims today think that a world-wide society based on seventh century Arab culture is the answer). Unfortunately the vacuum left by the Enlightenment in Europe is not being filled with a return to Jesus Christ; it is being filled with Post-Modern thinking that embraces a world view that is nihilistic, fatalistic and materialistic. Shopping malls have replaced universities (which had replaced churches) as the center of society. The pursuit of materialism (i.e. the pursuit of self) is what occupies the modern European mind. The tragedies of World War II are told today by the grandparents, listened to with one ear by pre-occupied parents and pronounced boring by the children. Unfortunately, the words found posted in Auschwitz by George Santayana take on a special meaning: “The one who does not remember history is bound to live through it again.”



These are the Kowalsky girls. Their parents, Robert and Beata, are on our Polish Campus Crusade team. I work closely with Robert in addressing the financial needs of our Polish ministry and staff. Above, these girls are (from the left) Carolina, Victoria and Eunice.

I almost forgot! Thanks for praying for Elizabeth! Here she is flanked by her mom and grandmother in a Budapest doctor's office moments after waking up from surgery for having her wisdom teeth pulled. There were no complications and she only took pain medicine the next day.

Friday, November 24, 2006

How can a God who is all loving send someone to hell?



We had a birthday recently. Rebekah turned 10 years old. She got one of the best presents an American kid living overseas could receive: Oreos!



Savannah, EB, Rebekah and Elizabeth (Liz).

I was drinking cappuccino in the dining car of the train that was taking me from Budapest to the Czech city of Brno, where I was scheduled to speak that night. We were passing rolling hills and small villages along the Danube river in the northern part of Hungary. We even passed the Visegrad castle perched on a high hilltop above the river. I remember praying, “Thank You, Lord, that I can take Your message of reconciliation into a country where You are largely ignored. What an awesome privilege. I certainly must have the greatest job in the world!”

The Czech Republic is a country of 12 million people, yet has the same ratio of evangelicals as Poland: ½ of 1 percent of the population. In spite of the rich Czech history of the Moravians and the Hussites, the Czech people have shown little interest in the gospel since the fall of Communism. Yet when I arrived in Brno and met the staff of this student ministry (a group aligned with but not a part of Campus Crusade for Christ), my heart was encouraged. These Czech missionaries are working the campus at Brno, along with several other universities inside of Czech. Also EB’s mom’s family comes from Bohemia, which is modern day western Czech; my wife and children all have Czech blood.

After touring the city for 2 hours, I gave my presentation to 60 students on “If God is all-loving and all-powerful, how do we make sense of the evil and suffering around us?” After my talk, which was translated into Czech, I fielded some questions. When that was over, several students wanted to ask me questions one-on-one, including one young lady with tears in her eyes. “How can a God who is all loving send someone to hell, even if that person sincerely searched for God?” I took a deep breath, smiled and attempted answer to her plea.

“First, I appreciate your heart. It shows a tender spirit. I understand this is a difficult issue. It is for me too. Second, God created hell because many people want nothing to do with God. They shake their fist at God or ignore Him their whole lives. When they die, they merely get what they have spent their whole physical lives pursuing…separation from God. Therefore God would not be just if He didn’t create hell.

Third, I believe no one deserves heaven; rather we all deserve hell due to our rebellion against God and His incomprehensible holiness. So the fact that heaven is even an option for us is an indication of God’s grace toward mankind. And God maintained His just nature not by merely waving off our sin but by extracting in its entirety the penalty for our sin. Therefore even though there is a hell, God is still the Most Just Judge and the Greatest Love in the universe. (I didn’t but I should have at this point quoted Athanasius, an influential Christian theologian, when he said back in the third century, “What kind of person must He have been to bring us the salvation that He alone could have and did bring to us?”)

Fourth, I believe in hell because Jesus teaches about hell. And I trust Jesus. I may not always understand Him fully but I trust Him. Fifth, in a direct response to your question, I believe the Lord will move heaven and earth to get the gospel to those who truly seek Him. I reject the idea that God is unable or unwilling to get the gospel to those who honestly seek Him. In fact Ronnie (my pastor in Budapest who speaks frequently to this student group) travels to Iraq several times a year to meet with 13 Iraqi pastors. 11 of those 13 pastors came to faith in Christ because Jesus appeared to each of them individually in a dream and said, “Follow Me.” No Four Spiritual Laws, no TV preacher, no Jesus film showing. The Lord is prepared to do whatever it takes to call His sheep to Himself.”

She smiled, wiped away a tear, thanked me and left. I’m not sure if my words were helpful to her or not. But the staff there said I connected well with the students and even said they are anxious to have me back again.

Happy Thanksgiving!

Matt

A view of Brno, Czech.


Sunday, November 12, 2006

Memphis to Austin to emergency skin graft surgery

It was 2 weeks ago that EB and I returned to Budapest from the US. I spent the first 10 days in Memphis with two of our Polish staff. I wish I had great news to report to you. I wish I could tell you that both of the Polish men I worked with got their support fully raised. We had several great volunteers really sacrifice a lot and work hard to open doors for these two guys (their names in English were Mark and Luke; together we were Matthew Mark and Luke!). But for whatever the reason, folks weren’t buying. Some support was raised but these men will return to Poland soon (they remained after I left Memphis) still in great financial need. The battle may have been lost but the war is not!

From Memphis, I hooked up with EB and together we went to Austin. There the President of Campus Crusade (Steve Douglas) and many of the Vice Presidents of Campus Crusade had a weekend with some of the top donors of Campus Crusade from across America. There the dreams and goals of our ministries world-wide were presented to some of the ministry’s best friends and most generous donors. Poland was given center stage one night and Marek Wyrzykowski, who traveled with me in the States this past summer, gave a great presentation on what the Lord is doing and has done in Poland. Money was raised but still not enough to meet the needs of our Polish staff and ministries.

In Austin at the conference we met one man whose business was bought out by a large corporation. I asked him, “So what are you going to do with the money? Buy a bigger house, another car or new clothes?” “No!” he said as if I had just insulted him, “I am going to use the money to fund the Great Commission!” Music to my ears! We need thousands of men like this who will invest not in the temporal things of this life but who will channel their resources and abilities toward the work of the gospel around the world. God calls ALL Christians to live sacrificially in view of the Great Commission. Not all are called to go but all are called to live passionately whether that is through sending others, giving generously, or praying continually.

EB and me at the Austin conference.

The money is out there for the fulfillment of the Great Commission; there is no doubt. The Lord has blessed abundantly the church in America. There is no greater cause, no greater pursuit man can commit himself to than the spread of the gospel. The Lord Jesus Christ is worthy of worship of all peoples everywhere. Outside of the direct worship of and communing with the Lord, there is no greater pursuit of the Christian church than missions.


Ben's foot 10 days after skin graft surgery

Perhaps the biggest news is what happened while I was in the States and EB was still in Budapest. Our son Ben suffered a third degree burn on his leg just above his foot. It required immediate skin graft surgery. It was over before I even knew what happened. I logged onto my email while in Memphis one morning and had received several emails saying, “Heard about Ben; we will be praying.” I was clueless. When I finally reached EB by phone she was with Ben at a hospital in Budapest where he was recovering nicely. The time change and an out of order phone kept EB from contacting me. Even though it will take some time, we are expecting a full recovery for Ben’s leg.

When we got back to Budapest our hot water was out, the heat didn’t work and our internet phone (with a USA phone number) was broken and there were 21 new mole hills in our front yard (I have been battling a mole for a year). Eventually everything came back on line but it took several days of repairs.

Thank you for your love and for standing with us in ministry; you are valued and needed. As you pray for us, please remember the four Ps:

1) passion: we will passionately follow the Lord Jesus

2) protection: from our kids and teenager to us as we travel, may the Lord watch over us and protect us.

3) provision: may the Lord provide abundantly for the work of the gospel across Eastern Europe

4) Poland specifically; may the Lord give us wisdom, strategy and energy to help raise people to fund the work of the gospel in Poland.


Everyone is costume for our office fall festival party: EB is a cowgirl, Rebekah is a hula dancer, Quentin is a cowboy and Savannah is a super model.

Here Elizabeth is helping with one of the games at our fall festival party.

Saturday, October 07, 2006

Bringing in the Hungarian Harvest Project (BHHP) opens doors for our Hungarian ministry!

“It was one of the best evangelistic mission trips I have ever been on!”

Brent Harrison, Director of "Experience Missions Intl."

Here I am contending for the faith with Akos, a Hungarian student at Budapest's ELTE campus. With me is Mitch who before this mission trip had never been out of Georgia or Florida and he got on a plane (for the first time) to join us in Hungary.

During BHHP week the Lord chose to both use us and work in us in a wonderful way! 21 Americans from Atlanta, Dallas and Memphis all came to Budapest to labor alongside our Hungarian Campus Crusade staff team. Wow! Here are some of the highlights.

*We distributed 1400 SSKs (student survival kits;) that contained evangelistic materials and invitations to several of our outreaches. Over the whole month of September, our campus ministry team distributed over 10,000 of these kits across Budapest.

* Over 40 students came to our English Clubs on Business Ethics. The recent meltdown of integrity within the Hungarian government added a thirst for this topic.

* Over 200 students attended our “Personalities Profiles” evangelistic event at Karl Marx University. (I always love it when we share the gospel inside this school named after this influential atheist!) This presentation spurred conversations about Christ that continued long after the event ended.

* 20 kids from a middle school met us at a McDonalds to hear more about Christ. The school invited 8 of us to speak in classrooms all morning. We then invited the students to meet us after school to hear more about Christ. The promise of free ice cream certainly was a draw too! Although Campus Crusade in Budapest does not have a middle school ministry, this is an open door we just must pursue!

* initiative evangelism: The American “BHHP”ers, many of whom had never shared their faith before, jumped at the chance to fan out across a campus and witness individually with students. Honestly, I was skeptical about this outreach. But the project participants displayed great faith in the midst of their own fears. We had meaningful conversations and even led several to Christ!

I had a long talk with a college student named Andras. He said he was mad at God and the church. “Why?” I asked. “Because I could not live up to all the rules and expectations. Then they kicked me out of the church.” “That doesn’t sound like my God,” I told him. Then I spent the next 15 minutes talking through Ephesians 2:8-9 and how salvation is not by works but by faith; salvation is a free gift from God!

It is an affront to the holiness of God if we think we can work through a checklist of activities that ensure our salvation. Our good works come from our salvation; those good works do not lead to our salvation. Centuries of people doing evil in the name of the Lord and ignorance of the meaning of the cross has caused a lot of hardened hearts across Europe. The body of Christ must serve tirelessly and selflessly, pray, and fast in order to reverse this trend.

It was also great being able to speak during BHHP to the weekly meeting of our high school ministry. About 50% of the 100 students who attended were unchurched. Using quotes from popular music, I pointed these students to the glory of God and the privilege we have through Jesus Christ to call Him, “Father.” Most of these kids come from homes where “father” is not an endearing term. Once again, I had conversations after my talk where I was able to explain in more detail the meaning of the gospel.

I even had serious talks with two of the participants who are genuinely considering moving their families here to be involved vocationally with the spreading of the gospel!

Europe is a hard continent for the gospel. But what we [American short term missionaries] can do is to build up a bank account of contacts for the national ministry. What BHHP does is to gather contacts and opportunities that the Hungarian staff can mine for the whole school year. Short term missionaries, mostly because they are either native English speakers or Americans, can open doors and gain respect that are sometimes difficult for our Hungarian staff to achieve.”

Quoted from David Coles. (He and his wife Nancy are from Atlanta and stayed an extra week after BHHP ended to help begin the follow-up process. I asked him to share some of his insight from their 2 weeks here.) Here he is below sharing his faith with a student after a morning of distributing Student Survival Kits.

Jay from Atlanta illustrates jokingly the intensity needed to make phone calls to Hungarian students to follow up from an outreach. Csilla is not sure whether to laugh or pray!

Roland (left; one of our Hungarian staff), Jean (BHHPer from Oklahoma City) make friends with two Hungarian students during the Survival Kit distribution.

Marilyn from our sending church in Atlanta initiates with a college students a conversation about Jesus Christ.

Pat from Memphis witnesses with middle school girls at McDonalds after we spoke at their school that morning.

Thanks for praying for us and thanks for those that gave up vacation and family time and spent their own money to join us for a week. Most of the participants had no previous experience in sharing their faith; they just had a willingness to try and an abiding faith in Jesus Christ.

Thursday, August 31, 2006

Poland, Czech and Auschwitz

“In four years the subsidy we receive from Campus Crusade will have been phased out and we will be responsible for 100% of our own funding. This is putting much fear into us; we must act now so we don’t lose our staff.”



Here I am with our ministry's Polish director Mariusz who oversees 100 Polish staff sharing Christ in a country about the size of Texas. Those are 3 of Mariusz's kids, all of whom are growing up speaking both English and Polish.

Above the photo are the words said to me by Mariusz Kwapisz, the new country director of Poland. Unfortunately it is a scenario repeated many times in our ministries throughout Eastern Europe. EB and I spent a week with our Polish staff at their annual conference and I met with Mariusz and other Polish leadership to put together a plan to help our staff there. It was good to be with our Polish staff and get to know them and worship together.

Auschwitz: EB and I spent a day at this tragic place, not far from the location of the Campus Crusade Polish staff conference. To see one location where over a million were murdered was overwhelming. Emotionally I was doing okay until I saw the displays with the personal items of those murdered. Seeing the actual clothing taken from children before they were executed made me both curse the Nazis and cry.

I was also particularly moved when I visited the cell where Father Maximilian Kolbe died. Another prisoner received the sentence of death by starvation and Kolbe, himself already a prisoner at Auschwitz, volunteered to take his place in the starvation cell. The Nazis allowed this substitutionary death as a fulfillment of their law while obviously missing (and rejecting) the Truth to which Kolbe’s sacrifice pointed. No man would have done what Father Kolbe did unless they not only understood but greatly treasured what Christ did for us on the cross. May Father Kolbe’s faith and pain be a witness to us all!



At first, Auschwitz was used by the Nazis to murder Polish and Soviet prisoners of war as well as those of other nationalities and Gypsys. Yet when the Nazi plan was put into effect to exterminate all European Jews, Auschwitz became the setting for the most massive murder campaign in history. No one knows with certainty how many died at Auschwitz; the best guesses range from 1.1 million to 1.4 million.



A display of many of the shoes taken from prisoners at Auschwitz.



The entrance to the gas chambers and ovens.

Czech: We dropped our kids off at a camp for missionary kids in the Czech Republic on our way to Poland. While traveling between the two locations, EB and I visited the small Czech village of Olomouc. Today it has cobble stone streets, a village square, churches centuries old and a rich history. We discovered that Olomouc has a dark side as well.

Jon Hus was a Czech Christian who in the days before Luther and the Reformation, called attention to the abuses of the Catholic church. Hus was eventually burned at the stake in Prague. Two of Hus’s followers were burned at the stake in Olomouc in 1415. The city then rebelled against the Czech king (who was pro-Hus) and gave its allegiance to the Catholic king of the then Hungarian empire, Matthias Corvinus. Ironically, today in Budapest the evangelical church we attend meets in a building name after King Corvinus.

EB and I are learning how much suffering this part of the world has had. Both the Polish people and the Hungarian people (and other peoples of Europe as well) have long, tragic histories of oppression and war. Christians likewise have suffered greatly in Central Europe. Yet today the enemy both within and without for Christians is not persecution but indifference.


Saturday, August 19, 2006

Elizabeth's life changing summer in Uganda



My eyes get big as we step off the bus into the Ugandan slums, the community where the poorest people live. I look around me and feel like I am in a dump.

Essentially, I was in a dump. There is garbage and human waste everywhere. The smell is almost unbearable. Rags cover the tiny, skinny black bodies of the little children. They are running and playing around the shacks they live in, pieced together with cardboard, cloth, and anything else they could find. Tears come to my eyes as I try to take it all in and ask myself, “How could anyone live like this? Why, God, do they have to suffer like this?” I have never seen a place so poor in my life. We play with the kids, and feed them their one meal of the day: beans and mush.

The kids smile and laugh as we lead them in duck duck goose and red light green light. We sing songs and their little hands clap along. They grab our hands and the little ones all want to be held. As the boys start a game of soccer, we girls go talk to the other teenage girls living there. They are very eager to talk to us, and we get to share the gospel with them, and many of them come to Christ. As the bus comes back to pick us up, they cling to us, and beg for us to return soon. I hug them and tell them I will pray for them. As we drive away, I watch all the kids running after us, and my heart breaks for them. I know that my life will never be the same again.

The slum outreach was part of the work our team of 90 did in Uganda. We also worked in high schools and in orphanages. I got to work in hospitals and with AIDS patients.

In the high schools, we did assemblies, and also interacted with the students through sports and sharing our faith personally. As I interacted with these students, they would often share their questions and struggles with me. They were dealing with a lot of tough issues, and so I could really feel the Holy Spirit speaking through me and giving me words to say. One girl came to me, and told me about how she was orphaned at a young age, and now she and her siblings lived with her grandma, and they had no money for school, food, or anything. As she shared this with me, she burst out into tears, and my heart ached as I listened to her story of great suffering and pain. I was able to give her a small comfort by telling her how Jesus is the father to the fatherless, and also showing her the verses in Matthew 6 that talk about how not to worry, Jesus will provide for our needs. She thanked me and hugged me, and it felt good to have been able to give her some comfort.

Another amazing experience I had in Uganda was doing a clinic for children with HIV/AIDS. A group of us went to the hospital, and sang songs and played games with these children. They seemed like completely normal children, but their lives had been affected drastically by this horrible disease. Many of them were very young, and my heart ached knowing that they will die much too early. We shared testimonies with them, and then did a gospel presentation, and the majority of them received Christ. I took comfort in the fact that God had saved the souls of these children, because there is not much other hope we can give them.

One day, we got to shadow a doctor going though his rounds in the maternity ward. Unfortunately, I was repeatedly mistaken for a medical student, and was asked to perform medical procedures such as removing catheters, removing cesarean wrappings, and sterilizing medical equipment. It was definitely an unforgettable experience.

I want to say a big thank you to everyone who gave toward my summer in Uganda and prayed for me and my team. I had an amazing time there, and God taught me wonderful things. He is awesome!


Decisions to receive Christ at a church in the slums


Face painting at a school


My ministry team

Sunday, August 06, 2006

"Come over to Macedonia and help us!" Acts 16:9



Macedonia (flag pictured above) is a tiny country, about the size of Maryland, that was carved out of the former Yugoslavia after Communism fell. Macedonia was not recognized as a sovereign country by the USA until the opening days of George Bush's second term.

This is why I am a missionary,” I remember thinking.

I was sitting with my 14 year old son Ben, on a beach on Lake Ohrid, Macedonia, witnessing to two Macedonian guys not a whole lot older than Ben, named Ottas and Vladimir. Even though they did not receive Christ with us, they were able to clearly articulate back to us the message of the gospel and why Christ had to die. They communicated in good English even with cigarettes hanging out of their mouths while they were wearing Speedos and drinking beer.

For the last two weeks of July we were at the “Lake Tahoe of the Balkans” for a classic Campus Crusade for Christ summer missions project. There were 80 American Campus Crusade staff and students along with 40 Macedonian Campus Crusade staff and students. The project had been going on for all of July but we received an invitation from the project directors, Don and Kathryn Mansfield, to jump in for the last half. For me it was refreshing to be in a similar environment that knitted my heart to missions when I was a college student. These are the reasons why our July in Macedonia was such a great missionary experience:

*faith filled environment
*international missions experience
*emphasis on initiative evangelism
*exhortation to take the gospel to the entire world
*training up of college students
*developing national (Macedonian) leadership
*(relatively speaking) family-friendly environment of Lake Ohrid
*exposing our children to all of the above!

If I had more time I would gladly tell you the story of the water pump going out in our van in the middle of nowhere where we already did not speak the language! And how we had to talk our way through 6 international border crossings (it worked 5 of the 6 times) without the correct car papers, even though we were 100% legal.

Thank you for enabling us to live and serve in Eastern Europe in doing what the Lord has called us to do! We cannot do it without your partnership in our lives!

Pictures say much more than words (and are more fun!) so here are some pictures of our time in Macedonia.



Beaches like this one along Lake Ohrid were perfect places to meet students and share our faith.



Lake Ohrid was a surprisingly clean little village with cobble-stone streets, water front coffee houses and cafes along with beauty and history.



This windswept lakeside point on Lake Ohrid with an old Christian Orthodox church was a picturesque and made a great place for a quiet time.



During one sunrise devotional time three young believers (one from Moldovia, another from Bulgaria and the third from Macedonia) came forward for baptism.



Here is EB sharing Christ with Natasha who described herself as an athiest yet attentively listened as EB explained about Jesus who is real, alive and gave Himself up for mankind. Our Lord says that His Word does not go out without accomplishing His purposes (Isaiah 55:11).



The capitol city of Macedonia is called Skopje. We drove through Skopje twice. At one stoplight our van was mobbed by begging gypsy children. Even though the city is dirty and poor, there are some faithful missionaries with Campus Crusade (and other missions agencies) in Skopje. It is also a place where Muslim and Christians live side-by-side in peace. Many mosques, like the one above that we photoed from our car, are located throughout Skopje.



And I had to end with this one. Our 14 year old son Ben has this desire to hurl his body through the air. Here he is jumping off cliffs along Lake Ohrid.