AsiaStories

Posts Tagged ‘God’

coffeefarmer

Farmer finds Jesus in coffee

Many men and women in rural areas in East Asia have few options for income. Ted Wong* is committed to using business and entrepreneurship to teach believers in rural areas how they can support themselves and their ministries. His vision is to provide rural farmers with a cash crop. This could provide an additional source of income as well as allow more time for ministry. Zhe Wang Hu* and Jia Liang* are two of the men Wong works with.

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by Caroline Anderson

Feb 20, 2012

gamalanphoto16x9

Instruments play on own, Christian owners conquer spirits through prayer

When David and Regan York heard music in their living room in the middle of the night, they discovered an instrument playing on its own. The couple used traditional instruments to connect with local Southeast Asian culture and create opportunities to share their faith, but they didn’t expect spirits to inhabit their means of ministry. Once they prayed over the instrument, it stopped playing, proving God’s power in the spirit world. The local villagers, however, didn’t see it that way.

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by Shiloh Lane

Feb 06, 2012

asday5

New Year’s Symbolism Teaches Me about God’s Love, Grace for Family

As I spent days immersed in Chinese New Year symbolisms in Hong Kong, one stands out above the rest — food, or more specifically the dinner table. Sitting around the dinner table with family, for me, is a symbol of the importance of relationship — which is the point of this whole journey. Understanding my own culture has been the guide, but in the end, relationships are what matter the most.

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by T.Y. Po

Jan 24, 2012

Saying Goodbye

Students give out first Arabic Bibles

Faruq Jamil, a Saudi Arabian, stopped in the middle of a Southeast Asian market to listen as American teenagers worshiped outside a hostel. Before long, he began a conversation with three International World Changer students about the differences in Islam and Christianity. Soon they gave Jamil an Arabic Bible, so he could study on his own. Only two weeks prior to this meeting, missionaries had arrived with the city’s first supply of Bibles in Arabic.

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by Shiloh Lane

Sep 12, 2011

Reading Stories

Love through physical affection

When International World Changer student Haley Wathen met 10-year-old Hadi Ibrahim, her heart melted. Ibrahim lived in an orphanage with a staff that barely had time to interact with him, and therefore, he received very little affection. He also never talked. Yet, after Wathen held him and played with him, Ibrahim began to speak.

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by Shiloh Lane

Sep 08, 2011

Laughing Together

Finding God in Southeast Asia

International World Changers student Jessica Newberry planned to visit Southeast Asia with her church and work with orphans. The only other Christian in the Newberry family, her mother, Jan, worked tirelessly to raise funds for her daughter’s trip. But, when Jan died in March 2011, Jessica found herself traveling to Asia without her main support system. God, however, blessed her in the midst of tragedy and used the death to begin to change the heart of her non-Christian father. Months later, she flew to Asia and let God heal her further through the grins of a disabled young woman.

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by Shiloh Lane

Sep 08, 2011

Playing Goalie

Birth defect becomes ministry tool

International World Changers student Aaron Powell visited Southeast Asia this summer. Powell was born with a a congenital defect, a half-formed arm. For the past couple of years, Powell felt God’s calling him into the mission field and his hand had become one of his greatest witnessing tools. It opened up conversation and allowed Powell to talk to strangers about God’s glory and mercy.

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by Shiloh Lane

Sep 08, 2011

diana-guitar-postImage

Saying goodbye to my ‘Spiritual giants’

A five-year journey of emotional ups and downs comes to an end for a Christian worker in China. Diana Huang* says her own special “goodbye” with a recording project, sharing testimonies about her friends and their unique walks of faith.

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by C.S. Stanley and Susie Rain

Jul 04, 2011

Am I Chinese or American?

Am I Chinese or American?

I will never be Chinese enough to enjoy chicken feet or innards or sharing a bed with four other girls in the summertime. What they see isn’t how assimilated or “Chinese” I can be. What they see and remember is how I cared, loved, embraced, engaged and shared life with them.

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by Diana Huang*

Jul 04, 2011