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Saturday, February 25, 2012

Goodbye to NIBI

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

I was given the opportunity to give my testimony at NIBI’s closing chapel, and I thought you might be interested in it as well. Here are my notes. The Bible verses are included, but you’ll have to look up the passage from The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe yourselves.

I want to start with a word of encouragement, taken from 1 John 1:12-14, which I’ve changed just a tiny bit because I am speaking, not writing:


I speak to you, dear friends and fellow children of God,
            Because your sins have been forgiven on account of his name.
I speak to you, fathers,
            Because you have known him who is from the beginning.
I speak to you, young men and women
            Because you have overcome the evil one.
I speak to you, dear children,
            Because you have known the father.
I speak to you, fathers,
            Because you have known him who is from the beginning.
I speak to you, young men and women
            Because you are strong, http://www.wallpapersbuzz.com/css/clean.gif
            And the word of God lives in you,
            And you have overcome the evil one.

I thank God and all of you so much for the great privilege of living and teaching here for the past four months. There is so much I have learned and so much I have come to love about NIBI.

As you remember from the first night I came here, I love the stars and the quiet. And I love the library, too – and Bong Roon’s cooking, and the mango trees. But those are the little things.

More importantly, I love NIBI’s commitment to God’s Word. At NIBI, we wake up early to meditate on bite-sized pieces of God’s Word, fight our after-lunch sleepiness to read aloud and feast our souls on longer passages from the Bible, and pray, worship God, and share how He has spoken to us at several weekly services. It isn’t always easy, but it is an amazing recipe for growing in our faith. I know I have grown and learned so much here, and it has been so good to be constantly in God’s Word.

Most importantly, I love all of you.
I am amazed by how you’ve welcomed me into your community and into your lives.
I have greatly enjoyed watching you grow and learn, even during this short semester.
I have been amazed and challenged by your faith, courage, and love for God.

I also love how genuine this community is. We’ve talked about the things that God tells us during quiet time, even when it’s uncomfortable because He’s convicting us of our sins. We don’t pretend that bad things don’t happen to us because we are Christians. We acknowledge that a lot of tough things have happened during this semester, and we encourage each other and ask God for help.

I’ve been reading and re-reading Jesus’ blessings in Luke 6. Sometimes they’re difficult for me to understand. But one thing I’ve learned is that NIBI is blessed by Jesus. Here is what Luke 6:20-23 says:

Blessed are you who are poor,
For yours is the kingdom of God.
Blessed are you who hunger now,
For you will be satisfied.
Blessed are you who weep now,
For you will laugh.
Blessed are you when people hate you,
When they exclude you and insult you
And reject your name as evil,
Because of the Son of Man.
Rejoice in that day and leap for joy, because great is your reward in heaven. For that is how their fathers treated the prophets.

NIBI, you are blessed:
·        None of you are rich, and neither is this school – but the kingdom of God belongs to you.
·        You hunger for God’s Word and for Wisdom – and you will be satisfied.
·        As you’ve watched and continue to watch many beloved friends come and go, you may weep – but you will laugh.
·        Friends and family may persecute you because of your faith, and the Cambodian government may exclude NIBI from registration – but great is your reward in heaven!

Now, none of this makes sense. The world around us blesses people who are rich, well fed, happy, and popular. Why did Jesus bless the poor, the hungry, the sad, and the hated?

The answer is that Jesus is the King of a new Kingdom, the Kingdom of Heaven – and He is taking over the world. This new kingdom is a new reality. It is opposite and upside-down from what the world thinks is real.

Do you know, Jesus and his disciples preached the good news, the gospel, before Jesus’ death and resurrection? In Luke 9 and 10:

When Jesus had called the Twelve together, he gave them power and authority to drive out all demons and to cure diseases, and he sent them out to preach the kingdom of God and to heal the sick… So they set out and went from village to village, preaching the gospel and healing people everywhere…

After this the Lord appointed seventy-two others and sent them two by two ahead of him to every town and place where he was about to go. He told them: “…When you enter a town and are welcomed, eat what is set before you. Heal the sick who are there and tell them, ‘The kingdom of God is near you’”… The seventy-two returned with joy and said, “Lord, even the demons submit to us in your name.”

 The good news is not just that Jesus’ death and resurrection saves individual persons from their sins. The gospel is that the Kingdom of God is here! Jesus is not just saving some people’s souls from hell – He’s taking back the entire universe from the power of hell. Jesus is Lord, and He is turning the world upside-down, bringing everything back from death to life. And just like the twelve disciples and the 72 others, we get to participate, to join in God’s work.

Let me give you an example of what this looks like. The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis (which may be found in NIBI’s library and read over vacation, hint hint…) is about Aslan returning to Narnia. This is a Christian fantasy book, so Aslan is a lion, but he represents Jesus. Narnia is a country that has talking animals and many other creatures, and Aslan is Narnia’s true king. At the beginning of the story, an evil White Witch rules Narnia. She uses her magic to make it always winter there – it is always cold and covered with snow, the flowers never bloom, and the trees look dead because they have no leaves. The animals and other creatures are treated cruelly by the White Witch. Some are turned to stone by her magic wand. But all feel imprisoned indoors because of the cold and their fear of the White Witch.

But as Aslan returns to Narnia, he melts the snow, brings the flowers and trees back to life, and takes Narnia back from the White Witch little by little. But he doesn’t do all of it by himself – he allows others to participate, to join in his work of freeing Narnia from the White Witch.

In this part of the story I’m about to read, Aslan and two little girls named Susan and Lucy break into the White Witch’s own castle – her own house! There they find all of the animals and creatures that the White Witch had turned to stone. (P. 183-188, abridged)

Now, let me point a few things out:

1) At first, the animals and creatures are under the White Witch’s control – they are stone statues. It’s just like the control of the world, the flesh, and the devil keeps people enslaved, imprisoned, in fear, helpless, and dead to God. But then Aslan’s Kingdom comes. Under Aslan’s control, the statues turn back to life! The life that God offers is as much better than enslavement to the Devil’s kingdom as coming alive is better than being made of stone.

2) Only Aslan can change the statues back to life, but once they come to life, they all get to participate in spreading that life – they find more statues and call on Aslan to turn them to life. Like them, we have no power to change others or the world, but only participate in what God is doing.

3) Finally, Aslan doesn’t bring the strongest warriors of Narnia with him to break into the White Witch’s castle; in fact, he doesn’t bring any warriors at all. He brings two little girls. Aslan doesn’t need mighty warriors.

In the same way, to show that His Kingdom is coming only by His power, God also uses the foolish, weak, lowly, despised… even the non-existent. 1 Cor 1:27-30:

…God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise; God chose the weak things of the world to shame the strong. He chose the lowly things of this world and the despised things – and the things that are not – to nullify the things that are, so that no one may boast before him. It is because of him that you are in Christ Jesus…

So, you see, the poor, hungry, sad, and hated are blessed in God’s Kingdom because they are the ones God chooses to join in His work. You are blessed because God has chosen you to join in His work of turning the world upside-down, bringing everything back from the power of death to the power of Life.

Let’s pray.

Dear Lord,

We praise Your name because of this good news: The Kingdom of God is here! Thank you for bringing us and the whole world out of death into your wonderful life, and thank You for letting us join in Your work, even though we are often poor, hungry, sad, and hated in the eyes of the World.

Thank you for NIBI – for all of its students and teachers. Thank You for the great love, faith, and courage that you have given them. I pray that everyone, students and teachers, use the gifts that God has given to the fullest to build up and encourage each other and the Church. I pray that everyone would study and teach diligently, but without too much business. May they also take time for rest, leaving room for Your voice to speak quietly. May NIBI change and develop as You speak, and may you call the people who You want to NIBI, especially new students and committed teachers.

I pray that the eyes of everyone at NIBI will be on You, and that you will continually widen and heighten and deepen their understanding of You and Your great Love. I pray that a spirit of joy, thanksgiving and prayerfulness remains and grows in this community.

And I pray that as students from NIBI are drawn more and more into Your life, that they would go out into the rest of Cambodia and the rest of the world, joining with You in Your work to turn everything back from the stone of sin to the life of God. In the name of Jesus we pray. Amen.

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