By Mark Ellis
Tyler Connell
Tyler Connell with the Ekballo Project has been touring college
campuses around the U.S., sharing stories and video from his most recent
trip to Middle East, where he documented a dramatic move of God among
Muslims, particularly with refugees.
In the last few months, he and his team visited Harvard, MIT, Iowa
State, Clemson, and the University of Georgia, among other campuses. “In
every stop we saw the presence of Jesus break in to these college
campuses and touch students, with bodies healed, people saved, and
people giving their lives to serve in the mission field,” Connell
exclaims.
College students are amazed to learn what God is doing in Iraq and
the surrounding region. “Jesus is moving in these Middle East nations,”
he says. “Many there are disillusioned and broken and just want to know
the truth. Now more than ever there is a harvest among Muslims that has
not been seen in history.”
His first film chronicles a young missionary named Daniel, 24,
originally from Vermont. Two years ago Daniel moved to Jordan to work
with Syrian refugees.
“They go house to house and visit these Muslim families and sit with
them and talk with them and find out their names, their stories, and
love them. As trust is built, they begin to open up about the Gospel.”
Tyler Connell
One afternoon Daniel walked into a white tent with a family of eight
people inside. “Hi I’m Daniel and I’m here to tell you about Jesus,” he
announced.
He wasn’t quite prepared for their reaction. “The family freaked out,
they looked at each other, almost turned white. The father was excited,
yelling.”
What’s going on? Daniel wondered.
The interpreter explained that the night before Daniel’s visit the
whole family was sitting in their tent having tea together and a man in
white opened the door to their tent and stood at the entrance. The man
was glowing.
“Hello, My name is Jesus and I am sending a man tomorrow named Daniel to tell you more about me.” Then he disappeared.
So when Daniel arrived at their doorway and told them his name, they
were completely undone. “They asked him to tell them more about Jesus
and he gave then the Gospel and the whole family gave their lives to
Jesus,” Connell reports.
The father had been a part of the Free Syrian Army. “He had known
bloodshed. He was a devout Muslim. This man and his family are now
planting underground churches in Jordan and are seeing a harvest among
Muslims.”
Recently the father was dismayed by a large cell phone bill and he asked his 15-year-old daughter about it. “It’s because I’m telling all our relatives in Saudi Arabia about Jesus,” she said.
In another Syrian refugee family, Connell felt God’s presence break
through in a powerful way. “The joy that broke out among these people
was incredible,” he notes. “Jesus’ presence was stronger than I have
ever felt, in that little dirty room, with cat pee everywhere.”
“There was about 25 people in there and Jesus’ presence was stronger
than any conference, any prayer room, any camp-high moment. Jesus was
there in the middle of the desert, in Iraq, in the dirt, with Muslims.
He is attracted to the broken hearted, the contrite, the desperate. The
King of Heaven was right there with the poor in spirit.”
Over the last 3 years, Connell and his team have responded to an
assignment from God to capture what He is doing in the most unreached
parts of the world, the 10-40 Window. “This Window has the three giants
of Islam, Buddhism, and Hinduism. Currently there are 2.9 billion
unreached, who have yet to hear that Jesus is the way to the Father.”
“We
felt God told us to go to these places, the dark places, and capture
what He is doing thru the lives of missionaries that have given their
lives, left everything they had here to live overseas. We follow them
with our camera and capture what God does and show it on college
campuses to ignite students to live for something bigger than
themselves.”
In May 2015 his team spent eight days in Iraq, going house to house
among the refugees. “They were all Muslims but they all said they were
disillusioned with Islam and they didn’t know what they believed
anymore,” he observes.
“They asked, ‘What is the truth?’ There was a perfect cocktail of
circumstances that caused them to be open to the preaching of the
Gospel.”
Going to the Middle East his team had to confront their fears. “We
realized that intimidation and fear was only a smokescreen. On the other
side of that fear was our greatest breakthrough of joy and laying down
our lives and seeing Jesus move like we never imagined.”
https://youtu.be/hfGgeiCSU9o - Watch Video
To learn more about Ekballo Project, go http://ekballoproject.com/ - here
Source: http://blog.godreports.com/ -