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June/July 1989 Seamen's Mission: Gateway to the Unreached Peoples The World Evangelized by 2000--- But at What Cost? North Korean Church Leaders Visit U.s., Disclose New Signs Growth and Freedom Prayer: The Power That Wields The Weapon Third World Missions Association Formalized "Cord of Three Strands" Encircles the Sandawe Moving a Country---Region by Region
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Seamens Mission: Theres no questionJesus has a better deal, realized one Chinese seaman when given the chance to make a valid comparison between Buddha and Christ. He requested baptism at the local seafarers center, where the chaplain also gave him a New Testament and several Bible study booklets. By the time his ship returned to this same port three months later, eight of his Buddhist shipmates had joined him in searching the Scriptures, and two were ready to be baptized. Seafarers Old and New Yet today the make-up of the worlds merchant ship crews has shifted dramatically. Now 80 percent of all seafarers come from Asia. Most seafarers have never heard the gospel, claims Dr. Roald Kverndal, leading spokesman for ministry needs and opportunities among seafarers. Kverndal serves as executive secretary of the International Council of Seamens Agencies (ICOSA) and as maritime ministry consultant to the Lutheran World Federation and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. He points out that the Church is often not motivated or structured to reach out to seafarers with the gospel, but adds that these maritime migrantsa deprived, lonely and vulnerable groupare hungry for the Good News. Whats more, once seafarers have come to Christ, they can let their light shine both on board ship and in ports of call around the world. And they do, as the evidence shows. Koreans are taking the lead in missions to fellow seamen, says Kverndal, but we also have contact with hundreds of ministering seafarers from the Philippines, Burma, and India. One non-Westerner in full-time ministry to seafarers is Chaplain Peter Ibrahim, a native of Sudan who lives in Hamburg, West Germany. Attracted to maritime ministry while in Europe, Ibrahim fulfilled his seminary internship among seamen in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania and later returned to Europe. He now ministers in Hamburg with the Northelbian Center for World Mission and the German Seamens Mission. Ibrahim has encountered all kinds of seafarers, including Arabic-speaking Muslims, Coptic believers from Egypt, and Korean Christians. The Koreans, he says, are tremendous. Theres nothing half-baked with them. And when they go ashore, they spread the Gospel wherever they go. Kverndal points out that seafarers were the first missionaries chosen by Jesus. After all, his disciplesas fishermenwere men who made their living on the water. As doors to some countries are closing, seafarers could be our last missionaries, he says. To Kverndal, seafarers also make the best missionaries. He points to their courage, compassion, honesty, and whole-heartedness. And, he adds, they are always on the move, making natural itinerant evangelists. Kverndal should know his subject. Born in Britain of Norwegian parents, his childhood memories of Sundays go back to the Norwegian Seamens Church in London. Centuries of seafaring heritage on both sides of the family made a vocation at sea a natural choice. It was through the ministry of the Scandinavian Seamens Church in Rouen, France, that the lack of commitment into which I had drifted was challenged, and I was reclaimed by the Gospel, writes Kverndal in the preface of his book, Seamens Missions: Their Origin and Early Growth. The result of 15 years of worldwide research, this volume is considered the classic in its field. (See book review on page 7.) Kverndal has served in roles ranging from cabin boy to shipbroker to chaplain, and he has also earned a degree in a branch of marine law. Remembering his call to mission to seafarers, Kverndal says, After my renewal of faith , I received, to my surprise, new orders from the bridge. Revolution in Maritime Industry And when you start counting, you may be surprised at the number of seafarers. Tally merchant seafarers and others engaged in industrialized and commercial fishing worldwide, and they total over ten million. Their immediate dependents multiply the figure several times. And whereas a generation ago merchant ship crews were largely European and North American in nationality, now Asians dominate the common ranks. (It is still true, however, that many officers are Westerners.) The largest ethnic contingent among todays seafarers is made up of Filipinos. Next come Koreans, Chinese (from Taiwan, Hong Kong, and the Peoples Republic of China), then Indonesians, Indians, Pakistanis, and Burmese. Many of these crews, predictably enough, come from Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, Shinto, Marxist, or animistic backgrounds. The Needs of Seafarers Such charactersincluding brothel-keepers and pettyfogging sea-lawyers were common in the 19th-century port cities of England. Kverndal observes that the method of the crimp consisted in attaching himself to his victim from the earliest possible moment, and thereupon exploiting every peculariarity of the seamans situation and character to serve his mercenary end. Seafarers are still prey to such opportunists, and working conditions have not always changed for the better. In fact, automation makes ship crews smaller, with greater work loads, and seafarers face even greater isolation than in the past. No industry has a higher rate of suicide, according to Kverndal. Crews from countries in the Two-Thirds world are especially vulnerable to systematic exploitation, say both Kverndal and Dr. Paul Chapman of the Seamens Church Institute in New York. Separated from their families, friends, and homelands, these seafarers are deprived by their vocation of primary relationships, according to Kverndal. The flip side of this vulnerability, however, is the receptivity of seafarers to change and to the compassion of caring Christians who reach out to them. Other Advocates Chapman points out that there are no policemen on board once a ship goes to sea. Enforcement of the law is up to the captain, and this is often arbitrary. The Institute also offers training for seafarers to help them pass officers exams and obtain higher-paying positions. Father James Dillenburg of Green Bay, Wisconsin, president of ICOSA, says of Christian workers among seafarers, Were the only people who are there for the seamen. Were not there to sell to them or to take care of the ships business. Our primary goal is to share the Good News with them. Dillenburg points out that ICOSA works hand-in-hand with the American Bible Society (ABS) to make Bibles and gospel tracts available to seamen. A representative of the ABS is always present at our meetings, he says. Network Around the World The larger, global counterpart to ICOSA is the International Christian Maritime Association (ICMA), based in London, which brings together such agencies as the Nordic Seamens Missions, the German Seamens Mission, The Missions to Seamen (Anglican), and many others. The annual meeting of ICMA four years ago took place in Baguio City in the Philippines. Members took the opportunity to interact with people on all sides of the issues facing Filipino seafarersrepresentatives of unions, employment agencies, seamens families, and the Filipino national government. It made a real difference for the Filipino seafarers, Dillenburg attests. Admittedly, many of these outreach efforts are comprised of Caucasians seeking to minister to todays Asian merchant marine force. This is understandable, given the Western origin of the seafarers mission movement. But now non-Westerners, tooespecially Asiansare taking the initiative. The first indigenous, non-Western seafarers mission to be formed was Korean Harbor Evangelism, founded in 1974. Other agencies have developed in the Philippines, Indonesia, and Japan. Material on seafarers mission has been incorporated into the regular curriculum of the Lutheran Theological Seminary in northern Sumatra, and strides for regional cooperation were taken last February as Asian members of ICMA met in Sumatra for four days of consultation. Diversity Among Workers Kverndal sees the social components of seafarers ministry as indispensable, while at the same time believing that a clear, biblical stance regards evangelization as a higher priority. He points to the Tacoma Seamens Center, directed by Chaplain Ray Eckhoff, as one of the most successful in implementing this balanced model of ministry. Model in the Pacific Northwest Eckhoff and his colleagues also provide evangelistic Bible correspondence courses in many languages, audio music or teaching tapes, and videotapes of Christian drama. This Ministering Seafarers Program was first developed by Lutherans, but is now endorsed by many denominations and agencies around the world. We give follow-up literature to at least one person on the ship. He becomes a ministering seafarer, explains Eckhoff, adding that this seafarer can then distribute literature to others on the vessel. This program is one of the most promising signs that the goal to see, by the year 2000, a New Testament church with a viable witness on board every ship crossing the oceansas Dr. Donald McGavran puts itmay be more realistic than some observers might think. Simple but Valuable Services Myrna Kramer, one such volunteer at the International Seafarers Center in Long Beach, California, observes, Many people have been led to the Lord. Fifty-seven nationalities frequent the Southern California ports of Long Beach and San Pedro. They include Burmese, Japanese, Brazilians, Greeks, Dutch, and many others. They come from just about everywhere, says Myrna. Starting Close to Home The best place to begin, chaplains say, is with friendship. Invite seafarers into your homes and church services. Take them shopping, sightseeing, and to sports events. Give them good reading material, suggests Kverndal. He adds that mission to seafarers must be patiently conducted with the attitude of being an ambassador of Christ, without coersion or arrogance. Missiologist Daniel Bloomquist observes, Our seaports are gateways through which fellow-humans from all over the world come to us by centripetal movement, after which they are spun back to all parts of the world again by centrifugal movement. What a unique, God-given opportunity to give them the Gospeljust where these two movements intersect! Seafarers mission is indeed a strategic gateway to the nations, including many of the worlds 12,000 unreached peoples. Could God be calling you or someone you know to such a ministry? For further information, write or call: A Rich Tradition of Social and Spiritual Ministry Seamen's Missions: Their Origin and Early Growth, by Roald Kverndal, William Carey Library, Pasadena, Calif., 610 pp., plus 292 pp. of notes, appendices, indices, bibliographies, etc. $29.95 retail, $25.50 discount. Reviewed by John Holzmann, staff member with Caleb Resources. "Any attempt to evangelize... seamen [in the early 19th century had] to contend with two particular forms of public prejudice. Many, not least in evangelical ranks, saw seamen as totally irredeemable; having been beyond the pale of church and society for centuries, they were now, as a class, considered to be utterly impervious to spiritual or moral impressions. Others... held that a converted sailor would, by definition, make an inferior sailor; anything more than lip-service to religion would simply soften the 'hardy tar.'"--- Seamen's Missions, p. 51. Roald Kverndal's Seamen's Missions is the fascinating story of the development of Christian ministries to seamen. Focused primarily on British activities, but highlighting the early development of missions to seafarers in North America as well, Seamen's Missions takes readers from the time of the early Church on through the heady seamen's mission start-up years of the mid-19th century. Along the way, we're also treated to a view of the social, spiritual and historical roots of significant movements in the Christian church (the international Bible societies and tract distribution, for instance) and of changes in society at large. For a book that began as a doctoral dissertation, Seamen's Missions is surprisingly easy to read ("only" a 12th grade reading difficulty) and profusely illustrated (close to 200 photographs, woodcuts, and other illustrations). Still, people who are unversed in (especially British) naval terminology will have a difficult time with many passages. This reader, anyway, would have appreciated a "ready reference" card that explained what, for instance, a "74" is, or the difference (or similarity) between a "Jack" and a "Tar." With a simple two- or three-page glossary, the book could have been made more accessible to a far broader audience. The Naval Journal overstates the case when it comments that Seamen's Missions holds "surprises on every page." But there are still enough surprises and points of interest in the book to hold the attention of 'most any serious student of Christian history. As far as this reader is concerned, one of the more inspiring sub-themes Kverndal develops is the interplay of social and spiritual ministry among our evangelical forebears. As he puts it, "[T]he dawn of organized seamen's missions was heralded by ministry to the seafarer's social needs to be followed... by a ministry to his spiritual needs--- not vice versa" (pp. 50-51).In describing the social conscience and resultant ministries of evangelicals 150 years ago, Kverndal gave me insights into my evangelical heritage, insights my teachers--- both secular and spiritual--- either never knew or were pleased to overlook. Highly recommended not only for students of naval history (for them it is required reading), but also for those concerned with social and moral reform today. Gives hope that God's cause--- righteousness and justice--- can win over immorality and injustice. Order your copy of Seamen's Missions by using the order page in this issue of Mission Frontiers. MF readers should also note that Kverndal is preparing an abbreviated, updated version of Seamen's Missions for future publication. [ FRONT PAGE ] [ MEET OUR STAFF ] [ USCWM ] [ SEARCH ] |
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