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Subject Topic: Vietnamese Evangelist Seeks to Extend Gospel to Unreached Tribes Post Reply Post New Topic
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Posted: 10/22/2014 at 11:26am | IP Logged Quote News Room

Vietnamese Evangelist Seeks to Extend Gospel to Unreached Tribes

Amie Cotton, APR
(256) 426-4543
Christian Aid Mission
amie@christianaid.org

CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA (ANS) -- The head of a team of Vietnamese evangelists has survived torture and the threat of being killed in prison, but that has only reinforced his determination to get the gospel to ethnic groups who have never heard the message.

Evangelists pray for an ethnic Khmu
who has decided to put his trust in Christ.
(Photo credit: Christian Aid Mission)

“The biggest challenge is to reach the 22 unreached people groups, because they're on the border of China and Vietnam and there are a lot of security issues,” said the director, Su* in a recent interview.

“In order to reach them, you have to have a connection on the inside, and that can be hard to get because the relationship between Vietnam and China has had tension in the last several months.”

Su and his team have planted hundreds of churches elsewhere, especially among highland tribes, where thousands of people who once followed multiple gods and spirits now worship Christ. With assistance from Christian Aid Mission, Su and his teams have planted churches and trained tribal pastors to disciple others, continually multiplying churches.

“They always believe; they are always seeking a higher power,” he said of the animist tribes in the highlands. “When we talk about the God of all the gods, they are attracted. They worship the trees, they worship whatever, and we're saying this is the God who is a lot bigger than your god.”

One people group Su's teams have reached is the Khmu, whose traditional animism dictates refraining from violating certain taboos – touching an altar or amulet in a house, for example – that might exact the vengeance of spirits. Appeasing the rice goddess with ritual dancing is a common practice in hopes of a productive harvest.

“There was a Khmu tribal group with a population of about 60,000, and no believers whatsoever,” he said. “There was a boy whose parents passed away, and he was adopted by another tribal group, a Christian group. When he was 20, he went back to the Khmu and boldly preached the gospel. Now there is a church there because of that one young man.”

Su and his teams of Vietnamese evangelists have begun the process of making contact with unreached people groups.

“You have to have a connection. If you are asked [at a checkpoint] where you are going, where you will stay, you have to have a connection. You have to know someone there, because you will stay in their house. You have to register with the local police force, too.”

Motorcycles enable evangelists to reach
many people in remote areas.
(Photo credit: Christian Aid Mission)

Just arriving for a long-term stay where the unreached groups live, then, presents a potential risk for families that might host him or his team. Evangelists make short-term visits to the areas, enabling them to get past check-points with greater ease, in order to establish relationships.

“You have to have a connection. If you are asked [at a checkpoint] where you are going, where you will stay, you have to have a connection. You have to know someone there, because you will stay in their house. You have to register with the local police force, too.”

Just arriving for a long-term stay where the unreached groups live, then, presents a potential risk for families that might host him or his team. Evangelists make short-term visits to the areas, enabling them to get past check-points with greater ease, in order to establish relationships.

“There's always a festival or a common market where all these tribes get together and sell their goods,” said Su. “So what a pastor would do to get into a particular tribal group would be to go to this market to find specific people and get connected. And after a few times, he can ask if they can come and visit.”

Establishing such relationships is a long process, but there are four or five market gatherings and one festival each month, so there are many opportunities to meet people.

Although the government has mandated that tribal people learn Vietnamese for the past decade, they prefer to speak their own languages, and the evangelists use the short-term visits to improve their language skills.
“The communists hope the youngsters will become the new leaders of their villages by learning Vietnamese,” continued Su. “The understanding among them is that you cannot be a Christian – they will watch you and report you.”
Besides the cultural and security obstacles, the director said he also must overcome resource limitations in order to extend the gospel to unreached peoples. Sending a missionary costs $100 a month. The ministry is also in critical need of motorcycles. Three purchased with assistance from Christian Aid Mission 10 years ago need to be replaced, and another five would enable them to bring the gospel to an unreached group.

Motorcycles are crucial. Otherwise missionaries are forced to ride a bicycle or travel by foot. In those cases, they cannot reach as many people. Often they double up on one motorcycle, being dropped off in one village as the driver continues on to the next. If they reach the leader of a village and he becomes a Christian, much, or even all of the village, will convert as well.

Religious freedom remains spotty in Vietnam. Many churches eschew registration because of the controls and interference it brings, and officials have been slow to register others that do apply. Worshipping “illegally” becomes one pretext for imprisonment; the director knows of 68 Christians in northern Vietnam in hard-labor camps because of their faith, and he also has been imprisoned at various times.

“He's been through all that himself,” said one team member. “He got malaria, he got eczema from head to toe, he was beaten from head to toe in a high security prison with no light.”

Su was imprisoned for proclaiming Christ, as the government associated it with subversion from abroad.

“It was only because he was talking about the gospel,” the team member said. “The gospel was considered American religion, so it was assumed that if you brought it into the country, you supported America and worked for the CIA. The authorities began killing prisoners. There were seven cells, and he was in the seventh cell. They went in order – one, two, three, four, five, six, each one getting shot and killed. But for some reason they stopped at his cell; somehow God saved his life.”

Su said he would do it all over again.

“There is no price too high to pay for the honor of proclaiming Christ. I just do it for God.”

* Name changed for security reasons

For more information, visit www.christianaid.org/News/2014/mir20141015.aspx?SC=MIR

Learn more about indigenous missions around with world by signing up for Christian Aid Mission’s weekly e-newsletter, Missions Insider, here christianaid.us7.list-manage1.com/subscribe?u=ad362c05e7e320 f66e6a44d00&id=f17b618e6b.

About Christian Aid Mission

Christian Aid Mission is an evangelical missionary organization that seeks to establish a witness for Jesus Christ in every tribe and nation by assisting effective indigenous or native ministries through prayer, advocacy and financial support. Our focus is on reaching the unreached for Christ in areas in the world where there are few Christians, where Christians suffer because of poverty or persecution, or foreign missionaries are not allowed. We currently assist more than 500 ministries overseas that have tens of thousands of indigenous or native missionaries in the field. These ministries are engaging more than 1,000 unreached people groups in more than 100 countries around the world. For more information, please visit www.christianaid.org.

For further information, please go to:
Facebook:
www.facebook.com/CAM53
Twitter:
twitter.com/christianaid53

Source: Assist News Service

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