Showing posts with label Africa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Africa. Show all posts

Help Equip Students, Pastors, and Missionaries in Africa

Next month, I am returning to South Africa for a mission trip. Joining me this year is a close friend from our church, Kenny Powell. I had the privilege of baptizing Kenny several years ago and later officiating in Kenny’s wedding to Merrilee. He is a good friend, a devoted follower of Christ, and an emerging leader in our church.

Back to Back to the Bible

So, I’m excited to be bringing him along for his first, and my sixth, mission trip to the Back to the Bible Training College in Barberton, South Africa. We will spend a week in preaching, teaching, counseling, and training students for pastoral ministry.

Brian with the staff and students of BBTC 

Equipping Believers by Bringing Books

I’m convinced that equipping fellow-believers in third world countries with books and tools for spiritual growth and ministry is one of the greatest opportunities that we have for using our resources for the kingdom of God.

This year I would like to help the faculty and students of BBTC in four ways:

• Put an ESV Study Bible into the hands of every first-year student and faculty member

• Serve as a partner with Desiring God International by bringing over 1000 books (which they have donated free of charge) for distribution to the students and staff of the college

• Provide for each student and faculty-member a copy of my recent book, Christ Formed in You: The Power of the Gospel for Personal Change

• Purchase new books (reference works, commentaries, and theology) to donate to the BBTC library

How can you help?

In order to accomplish these goals, we need to raise money.

• Because they are too heavy to carry or ship, we will purchase the ESV Study Bibles from a distributor in Africa. These cost about $50.00 each and we need 80 copies this year.

• Desiring God International has donated their books free of charge, but we still have to pay extra luggage or shipping fees to transport them (costing between $1 and $2 per book).

• And though we will purchase copies of my book at a steep discount, they still cost money and have to be packed and carried.

• And reference books, commentaries, and theological volumes suitable for libraries are also quite expensive.


So, I'd like to ask you to consider giving towards this need. I can assure you that every dollar you send will be used for purchasing and shipping books. None of your giving will be used to finance our actual travel costs. If you or your organization would like to help, please send your donation, payable to Fulkerson Park Baptist Church, to the following address with “Books for Africa” written on the memo line of your check:

Fulkerson Park Baptist Church
c/o Brian Hedges
1234 Fulkerson St
Niles, MI 49120

Thanks for prayerfully considering this opportunity to invest in the lives of others.

Books to Africa (Part 2)

One of the highlights of my year is the privilege of delivering bibles and books to the needy students and pastors of Africa. I really just consider myself the delivery man in this venture, because the actual purchase comes from the donations of my family, friends, and fellow-believers.

This year we were able to purchase 55 ESV Study Bibles to give to the first year students at BBTC.

It would be hard to exaggerate how big of a deal this is to them - many of whom make great sacrifices just to attend the college. (For example, I talked to one student from Zambia who is married with three children. He is so poor that he couldn't even afford a bus ticket back home for month long break from school coming in July.)

To all those who donated, here is a letter of thanks (lightly edited) from the rector of the college, Shai Mulder:

Dear Family and Friends of Jesus,


Our Bible College is a Missionary Faith College having 120 students from 16 African countries, training pastors, to win Africa for Jesus. Our College is accredited to Calvary University UK. The weakest link at our Bible College is our library. At present we have only 5000 books. These books cannot satisfy any post-graduate studies.


The visit of Rev Brian Hedges and Bro Ben Seal is always a highlight for the students for their valuable preaching and teaching. Your gift of ESV Study Bibles is so precious. Thanks a million on behalf of all staff and students. You are helping our pastors to build their own little library. May God bless you. Matt. 25:40.


Your BBTC family in Christ,

Dr. Shai Mulder

Rector, BBTC


As mentioned in Shai's letter above, the college library is really in need of development. I returned from this trip with a new burden to help the college build this library up. What we're doing for the students in providing Bibles is invaluable. But so much more could be done to help the school by getting their library filled out and up to date. I've got some ideas for how to do this that I may share later, but for now let me just say that if you are interested in helping financially, please contact me.

Books to Africa (Part 1)


Check out Ben's post about the books donated to BBTC by Desiring God International Outreach. It was a pleasure to put over 500 John Piper books into the hands of present and future African missionaries and pastors.

Back from Back to the Bible Training College

Today Ben and I returned home after a week with Back to the Bible Training College (BBTC), the school in Africa with which our church has partnered for training and equipping African pastors.

I'll be posting more about the trip in upcoming days, but for now check out the new blog that Ben set up for BBTC. The first two posts are videos featuring highlights of our 2009 trip and the rector's vision for expansion.

One of the cool things was seeing how God has already begun providing for the expansion in remarkable ways. In fact, every time I visit BBTC, I'm struck by the school's living demonstration of faith. Their monthly expenses are something around $7000 a month (simple and meager for a school with over one hundred students), but they have only three regular sponsors whose total giving in a year probably doesn't even cover a full month. They pray in the rest, George Mueller style.

Africa 2010

In June of this year I will be returning to South Africa to spend a week serving the faculty, staff, and students of Back to the Bible Training College in Barberton. Joining me is a good friend and fellow worker in our church, Ben Seal. This will be Ben's third trip to the college, and my fifth. We will spend the week preaching, lecturing, and training students for ministry.

The cost of travel has increased over the past year, so our financial needs are greater. The total cost of our travel and lodging will be $6700. Added to that, I would like to raise another $2000 for the purchase of ESV Study Bibles for first year students at the college. (The generous gifts of many of you provided these bibles for last year’s first, second, and third year students, along with the faculty and support staff). Any additional funds received will be used to purchase other books for the students and/or the library of the college.

In our present economy, I know that budgets are tight and that there are many requests for your missions giving. I hope that you will make a priority of supporting missionaries to unreached people groups or in difficult to reach areas. This should be our top priority. But short of that, I’m confident that giving towards this Bible College is one of the best investments you can make in the church of the third world. Pastors in Africa are very poor. Even those who have the privilege of attending a Bible college are poorly equipped with the books needed for carefully studying and teaching God’s word to the church. By putting an ESV Study Bible into the hands of each student, you are helping to equip future pastors, and through them, the church in Africa.

If you or your organization would like to help, please send your donation, payable to Fulkerson Park Baptist Church, to the following address with "Africa 2010" written on the memo line of your check:

Fulkerson Park Baptist Church
c/o Brian Hedges
1234 Fulkerson St
Niles, MI 49120

Bibles for Africa!

The ESV Bible blog just wrote about our recent mission trip to South Africa where we gave 106 ESV Study Bibles away.

Books for Africa!

In August of this year, Ben Seal and I will travel to South Africa to spend a week serving the faculty, staff, and students of Back to the Bible Training College in Barberton.

This will be Ben's second trip to the college, and my fourth. We will spend the week preaching, lecturing, and training students. My focus will be on expository preaching and leadership development. Ben will be teaching through John Piper's book Desiring God.

Our travel and lodging costs will be covered in full by our sending church. But a crucial part of our ministry to the college is providing books for the students. This is where you can help. I would like to purchase 105 ESV Study Bibles, 85 copies each of the New Bible Commentary and New Bible Dictionary (because some of the students already have these), and 120 copies of a good book on preaching. We can purchase these books from a bookstore in South Africa and have them shipped directly to the college. But it is expensive. To do all of this will cost approximately $15,000. If you would like to help, please send your donation (payable to Fulkerson Park Baptist Church) to the following address, with "Books for Africa" written on the memo line of your check:

Fulkerson Park Baptist Church
c/o Brian Hedges
1234 Fulkerson St
Niles, MI 49120

Every dollar you send will be used for the purchase and shipping of books. I can think of few ways to put your resources for missions to better use. These books will equip future pastors and leaders in Africa with the tools they need to preach and teach God's word. Most of these students have very few books in their libraries - perhaps a used Bible and one or two other books. To equip them with these kinds of study tools is a wonderful investment. So, I hope you'll join in!

Update on Africa

In two days, I leave for Africa, along with six other fellow-believers! Someone commented to me recently that the most difficult part of doing a missions trip is all the work you have to do before boarding the plane - after that it's easy! That's not far from true. The last few weeks have definitely been very busy.

Here's a quick update:

The money is almost all in! We've had over $23,000 given towards this trip, and lack less than $2,000 in reaching our goal! God is so good. Year after year, I am learning that God is faithful to missions. Thanks to all of you who have contributed to this work. You share in the fruit of what will be accomplished. May your reward in heaven be great.

The books are packed! We just barely fit everything in our alotted luggage. Nine out of ten our check-in suitcases are packed tightly with books, including 90 copies each of two John Piper books (Desiring God and The Supremacy of God in Preaching) for every student and staff member of BBTC, and a dozen copies each of another dozen or so books for the Strategy 112 students. We've also sent over 40 Reformation Study Bibles (for first year students, the second and third year students already have them) and have purchased in Africa 90 copies each of IVP's New Bible Dictionary and New Bible Commentary. This is the most we've ever done with books, and will be such a blessing to the students at the Bible college. Most of them only have old, used Bibles and perhaps one or two other books. Now they will all have brand new Study Bibles, as well as the dictionaries and commentaries!

The lectures are prepared! I will be doing about eight hours of lectures on expository preaching next week, and Rodney Tolleson and I will together be doing another 25-30 hours of teaching on various topics and workshops on expository preaching. I think I will be speaking twenty times in the course of eight days - and all the work is done! Of course this is not all new material. In fact, alot of it is material I've taught before and have just expanded or refined. But to have it all on paper, with handouts prepared, and notebooks assembled (Thanks to my secretary, Shirley) is a relief.

The grass is cut! That was this morning's job, after about three weeks of growth. Today and tomorrow are mostly days off, for which I'm thankful. Stephen and I went to lunch today (Long John Silver's - one of his favorite places!). Holly and I have a date planned for tonight. Tomorrow morning will be my last in-house visit to Starbucks before leaving the country, for a couple of hours of unhurried reading and reflection, followed by lunch with Matthew. Tomorrow afternoon I'll finish packing. Then we leave on Sunday morning.

Obviously, I won't be posting for a couple of weeks. But you can expect a report and some photos after we get back.

Mission to Africa Update

God is good! We have seen some amazingly generous gifts towards our upcoming mission trip over the past week, with total donations and pledges now reaching around $17,000! Every year as I plan these mission trips, I am freshly convinced of God's faithfulness to his own name and purposes. As Hudson Taylor once said, "God's work done in God's way will never lack God's supply." With the gifts we've received designated for books, we should be able to supply every student at the Back to the Bible Training College in South Africa with a Reformation Study Bible, a New Bible Dictionary, a New Bible Commentary, and a book on preaching.

There are still needs and opportunity/time to give. This is what we still need: (1) $10,000 to cover all the other travel costs for this trip. (2) Six people to adopt a pastor with a pledge of $250.00. This allows us to take a dozen books to student/pastor and cover the administrative costs associated with Strategy 112. Please continue praying, spreading the word about what the Lord is doing through this missions strategy, and giving as the Lord leads.

Books for Africa Update

Great news! We discovered today that we may be able to purchase two IVP titles - the New Bible Commentary and New Bible Dictionary - in bulk prices at a significant discount in South Africa. This will save us hundreds of dollars on shipping! To purchase 90 copies of each of these titles will cost about $6300. This would provide a copy for each student at the Back to the Bible Training College in Barberton. Currently, we only have around 10% of this amount raised. Please be praying for the Lord's provision.

You will also be glad to know that we now have enough money in hand to purchase 40 Reformation Study Bibles for the first year students at BBTC. Thanks to some very generous gifts, we have provided Study Bibles for all of their students for the past two years and will now be able to do so again!

Tools for Pastors in Africa: An Investment Worth Making

Our mission trip to Africa is now about six weeks away. One of our goals this year is to equip as many students as possible with a few basic Bible study and reference tools. This is what $125 will purchase.

ESV Reformation Study Bible, edited by R. C. Sproul. This is an excellent and theologically solid Study Bible in the best English translation of the Bible we have. Most of the students and future pastors we work with will never have a Bible of this quality unless it is given to them. Over the past several years the generous gifts of believers have helped provide over 100 students with these Bibles. We are hoping to take Bibles for all first year students and any students who do not yet have one.


New Bible Commentary, edited by D. A. Carson, G. J. Wenham, R. T. France, and J. A. Moyter. In my judgment, this is the best one volume commentary in existence. The team of scholars who wrote this commentary are among the finest evangelical scholars of our day. I am currently reading (slowly) straight through and am learning so much. These cost close to $80 in South Africa. We can get them for $30. An African pastor (earning less than $20 a month as a pastor) owning one of these will be rich indeed!


New Bible Dictionary, edited by D. R. Wood, A. R. Millard, J. I. Packer, and D. J. Wiseman. The companion dictionary for the above commentary with the same kind of scholarly work behind it. Again, these are expensive in Africa, making something of this quality very hard for African students and pastors to obtain. We can get them for $30, providing one of the single volume background resources available.



Christ-Centered Preaching: Redeeming the Expository Sermon by Bryan Chapell. This is, hand's down, the best book on sermon preparation that I've read. It has enriched my own preaching in immeasurable ways and will greatly aid any preacher in developing homiletical and expository skills. Much of the material I teach is based on my gleanings from this book. To leave it in the hands of future pastors is just one more step towards making them future expositors of Scripture.

If you would like to contribute towards the purchase of books for future pastors in Africa, send a check or money order made payable to Fulkerson Park Baptist Church, with the words "Africa Mission: Books" on the memo line. You can send the tax-deductible contribution to:

Fulkerson Park Baptist Church
1234 Fulkerson Road
Niles, Michigan 49120

Will You Help Send Books to Africa?

Dear Friend in Christ,

One of the greatest passages in the Old Testament which prophetically captures the New Testament vision for missions is Psalm 67.

Psalm 67:1-7 (ESV)
May God be gracious to us and bless us
and make his face to shine upon us, Selah
[2] that your way may be known on earth,
your saving power among all nations.
[3] Let the peoples praise you, O God;
let all the peoples praise you!
[4] Let the nations be glad and sing for joy,
for you judge the peoples with equity
and guide the nations upon earth. Selah
[5] Let the peoples praise you, O God;
let all the peoples praise you!
[6] The earth has yielded its increase;
God, our God, shall bless us.
[7] God shall bless us;
let all the ends of the earth fear him!

Notice the connection between verses 1 and 2. Verse 1 is a prayer for God’s gracious blessing on our lives. Verse 2 gives the reason for God’s blessing: “that your way may be known on earth, your saving power among all nations.” The reason God blesses us is so that we can make him known on earth. God allows us to live in the most prosperous nation on earth, increases our the profits in our businesses, grants us salary increases, and blesses our investments with high earnings not mainly to raise our standard of living, but to raise our standard of giving. He wants to increase our capacities to be involved in making him known. One of the ways you can help make God and his saving power known among the nations is to help provide books and training materials for Bible college students in Africa.

From August 7 – 16 of this year I will be leading a team of seven people who will be working with the students of the Back to the Bible Training College in Barberton, South Africa. Our purpose is to help equip these future pastors, missionaries, and church-planters in Africa with the skills and tools they need to be effective communicators of God’s Word. This year we will be involved in two projects: (1) We will complete an intensive three-year training course called Strategy 1:12 with a select group of students and (2) we will spend one week training the entire student body (about 100 students) in the basic principles of expositional preaching.

Our time with these students is most effective when we can leave them with good resources to further develop both their knowledge of and their ability to teach and preach God’s Word. This year I hope to equip each of these 100 students with a good study Bible, a one-volume Bible commentary, a Bible dictionary, and a book on expository preaching. We are working with publishers to get the best possible prices for these books, but it still costs to purchase and ship the books. A gift of $125 would equip one student with these resources. A gift of $1200 would equip close to ten! Even a small gift of $25 will ensure that at least one student gets a good study Bible or commentary.

Would you be willing to help?

If you would like to participate in this project by giving, you can send your tax-deductible contribution to:

Fulkerson Park Baptist Church
1234 Fulkerson Road
Niles, MI 49120

Please send your gift by July 15, 2007 and write “2007 Mission Trip: Books” on the memo line.

Please join us in being a blessing to others. Thank you so much!




Brian G. Hedges
Pastor for Preaching
Fulkerson Park Baptist Church

Photos from Africa

Here are some photos from our recent mission trip to Africa. The first shot is of two of the buildings on the BBTC campus, in the "Valley of Mercy" in the "lower veldt" of South Africa. Beautiful country! The second picture is a side-view of me preaching during chapel one morning. Then there is a picture of me with the group of twelve students we are equipping and training, and a picture of Sam (one of the twelve) with the books we took this year. The funny shot is Ben Seal and me at Krueger National Park, striking a pose in imitation of the horn-locked impalas behind us.





Back from Africa

We are back from Africa! After a very busy but blessed week of ministry in Barberton, South Africa, and an eighteen hour flight back, Russ Simonson, Jeff Norris, Ben Seal, and I landed in Washington, D. C. around 6:30 yesterday morning. Holly's paternal grandfather passed away while I was gone, and she drove down to Athens, GA earlier in the week. So, I flew from Washington to Atlanta and reuinted with Holly and the boys. The funeral for Marion Ivey Sr. is today, and we will drive home tomorrow and Saturday to be back with our church family at Fulkerson Park on Sunday.

The trip was wonderful, the best week in Africa yet, at least from a ministry standpoint. We have been working with a group of twelve ministerial students, equipping them with books, teaching them theology, and training them in expository preaching and biblical leadership. This year the main focus was on expository preaching and biblical eldership (following the basic outline of Alexander Strauch's book, where biblical elderhship is marked by five characteristics: pastoral, shared, male, qualified, and servant leadership). The real thrill of the trip was reviewing an assignment I left the students with last year: to prepare three expository sermons (following the Scripture Sculpture method taught by Ramesh Richard in Preparing Expository Sermons, which we gave them last year). The students exceeded my expectations! It is obvious that they are grasping the concepts and putting them into practice. I may post some of their outlines later, just so you can see how well they are doing.

During the mornings at the college, I was sharing time with with Dr. Wally Malaise and "Rogers" (can't recall his last name), who represented Multi-Ministries International and served as our liasons with the college and our "guides" in Africa. The mornings were devoted to lectures on the letter of James. I covered the introduction and most of the first two chapters (finally translating my studies on James 2:14-26 from earlier this year into an actual sermon!). Dr. Malaise focused on counseling from the book of James, and Rogers preached through James 5. It was a lot to cover in only three days of lectures, but I think it was well-received. Wally also served as our driver (including on Saturday when we drove through Krueger National Park and saw ALL of the "Big 5" - leopard, lion, elephant, rhino, and buffalo) and I really enjoyed conversation with him. He is a strong evangelical and an evangelist by gifting, having worked with Campus Crusade for Christ, among other things. But he is also a Wesleyan. I didn't realize this until half-way through the trip (which says something about him - since he is a committed expositor of Scripture, his focus is on the text, not importing his systematic theology into the text). In the course of the week we talked about spiritual gifts, unconditional election, and the Wesleyan view of sanctification. The conversations were lively (!) and we often did not agree. BUT, we never got angry with each other and were able to embrace with genuine brotherly love for each other at the end of the trip. I think we also were both challenged by the other's perspectives. Brother Wally came out of a very hyper-calvinistic background and became a Nazarene. He has read historic Arminian theology more than anyone I've ever met, and the nuances of his statements were helpful for me to hear. I consider myself a part of the "new Calvinist" movement in the USA, in step with John Piper, Mark Driscoll, and the Together for the Gospel folks and as committed to evangelism and missions. This kind of "Calvinist" was new for Wally and I think will prompt further investigation and reading on his part. Mostly, I am glad that we could minister together without disabling conflict or tension - much like Whitefield and Wesley (in their mature years), or Spurgeon and Moody, or Lloyd-Jones and Campbell Morgan of years gone by.

Rogers was helpful in giving me an insider's perspective on African culture. He is a native Zulu and was able to correct some misconceptions I had. He also struck me as a very humble servant-hearted brother and as an eager student of Scripture. He asked intelligent questions about Calvinistic theology and it was obvious two days later that he had been thinking and studying, as he came back with more questions. But it was humility that struck me most. I saw Jesus in this brother.

Our team from our church this year was a great one. Russ has a unique heart for people and a gift in personal relationships that pushed him right into the middle of student life at the Back to the Bible Training College. He played volleyball and spent hours and hours just talking with students, answering questions and giving good counsel and exhortation. Ben functioned as my right hand man, (and as a 13th student, so that by the end I quipped we should call this Strategy 1:13 instead of Strategy 1:12!). He did video work, took pictures, and prompted very good discussion in class with his excellent questions. But he also found a niche that I did not anticipate (although knowing him I should have) - in prayer. Many of the students meet at 6:00 AM in the mornings for a time of intercession (in the room just below where I was sleeping, so that their energetic praying was often what woke me in the mornings!) and Ben found his place among them. I think he has a special heart for prayer and a gift for intercession. He also preached about three times and his message on Jeremiah 2:12-13 was very powerful. Jeff came and served - helping with books, running errands, and serving as there was need. He also preached on Sunday and again on Monday morning. I didn't hear the Sunday message, because I was preaching elsewhere, but the message on Monday was a very Christ-centered sermon on "The Father of the Prodigal Son." But beyond all of this, Jeff served our team by his presence. The last three nights were especially meaningful to me as the four of us spent hours together talking and laughing and enjoying fellowship together. I can't imagine that these nights would have been what they were without Jeff. He contributed so much. On Sunday night, he and I stayed up talking until 3:00 AM - which might not have been smart, considering how tired we were! But it was such a blessing. Then we talked for hours and hours on the flight home, which really ministered to me personally in a special way. I consider it a special gift from the Lord to have gotten to know him better and am very glad he came.

I came home this year more eager to see my family than ever - I just love them and missed them so much. I also come back with a larger vision for Africa. The potential of teaching African pastors expository preaching and equipping them with good books on theology and the skills for studying the Bible is just amazing. I am seeing this not as a three year strategy that will impact twelve students, but as a 100 year year strategy, where a lifetime of teaching and equipping (and recruiting other churches and pastors in the US to do the same) could change the entire face of the African church, giving it a strength and depth it has not yet attained. We are already in dialogue with the college about next year trying to extend the training in expository preaching to the entire college. It is tentatively set for me to spend a week in lecturing on "homiletics" and if we could raise the funds to equip every student with a Bible dictionary, a one-volume commentary, and a good book on preaching, I think the impact could be tremendous. We'll see what the Lord does.

I am so thankful to be involved in this kind work. It is not easy work, but it is joyful work and the Lord has been good to me and to our church to open this door of ministry. Only eternity will tell what good has been accomplished, but for now we labor, knowing that we will reap if we do not faint. Thank you for your support, encouragement, and prayers. Your reward in heaven will be great!

Strategy 1:12 Book List: An Excellent Core Library

One of the most amazing things I've ever had the privilege of being involved in is "Strategy 1:12", a missions initiative that my friend Leland Johnson started. In S112, one Western pastor becomes the mentor of twelve pastors or pastoral students in a third-world country for three years. Each year involves a week of teaching and training. One of the most signfiicant things we are able to do is equip these third-world pastors with books. This year is my third year to be involved with S112, and my second year with my own group. The number of books we have been able to purchase is simply amazing! And it reminded me this morning (while I was working on this) that these books represent a very good core library that would be useful for any believer, and especially for an elder or pastor. So, here's the list (this is two of three years worth) - and with the exception of the Concordance and the Vine's Dictionary, I would recommend them all. (These books are good and valuable references for the guys in Africa who don't know Greek, but there are much better resources available with much more information).

(1) The Reformation Study Bible(Bible)
(2) Preparing Expository Sermons (Ramesh Richard)(Preaching)
(3) Matthew Henry Complete Commentary in One Volume Commentary)
(4) Concise Theology (J. I. Packer)(Theology)
(5) Basic Christianity (John Stott)(Apologetics)
(6) Preach the Word commentary (Kent Hughes)(Commentary) either:
• John
• Romans
• Ephesians
• Acts
(7) The Message of the Sermon on the Mount (John R. W. Stott)(Commentary)
(8) According to Plan: The Unfolding Revelation of God in the Bible (Graeme Goldsworthy)(Biblical Theology)
(9) Knowing God (J. I. Packer)(Theology)
(10) Nine Marks of a Healthy Church (Mark Dever)(Church)
(11) Spiritual Disciplines for the Christian Life/Ten Questions to Diagnose Your Spiritual Health (Donald S. Whitney)(Spirituality)
(12) Talk Through the Bible (Bruce Wilkinson & Kenneth Boa)(Reference)
(13) Master Plan for Evangelism (Robert Coleman)(Evangelism)
(14) God's Word Complete Concordance (John Hughes and William Mounce)(Reference)
(15) Church History in Plain Language (Bruce Shelley)(History)
(16) Each for the Other (Bryan Chapell)(Marriage)
(17) The Christian Life: A Doctrinal Introduction (Sinclair Ferguson)(Theology)
(18) The Legacy of Sovereign Joy (John Piper) (Biography/History)
(19) Spiritual Leadership (J. Oswald Sanders) (Leadership)
(20) Vine’s Complete Expository Dictionary of Old and New Testament Words(Reference)
(21) The Pilgrim’s Progress (John Bunyan)
(22) The Westminster Shorter Catechism

Year Two

(1) Systematic Theology (Wayne Grudem) (Theology)
(2) Christ-Centered Preaching: Redeeming the Expository Sermon (Bryan Chapell) (Preaching)
(3) New Bible Commentary, 21st Century Edition (edited by G. J. Wenham, J. A. Motyer, D. A. Carson, R. T. France) (Commentary)
(4) New Bible Dictionary (Reference)
(5) The Mortification of Sin (John Owen) (Spirituality/Puritan)
(6) Basics for Believers (Stephen Olford) (Sermonic)
(7) Desiring God (John Piper) (Spirituality)
(8) What’s the Difference (John Piper) (Biblical Manhood and Womanhood)
(9) Evidence for Christianity (Josh McDowell) (Apologetics)
(10) The Holy Trinity (Robert Letham) (Theology Proper)
(11) The Cross of Christ (John Stott) (Theology: Christology/Soteriology)
(12) Keep In Step with the Spirit (J. I. Packer) (Theology: Pneumatology)
(13) The Message of Romans (John Stott)(Commentary)
(14) The Religious Affections (Jonathan Edwards) (Spirituality/Puritan)
(15) ESV Thinline Bible (Bible)
(16) The Hidden Smile of God (John Piper) (Biography/History)
(17) The Message of the New Testament (Mark Dever) (Biblical Theology/Exposition/Survey)
(18) The Deliberate Church (Mark Dever) (Church)
(19) The Peacemaker (Ken Sande) (Counseling/Ministry)
(20) The Message of Acts (John Stott) (Commentary)
(21) Biblical Eldership (Alexander Strauch) (Leadership)
(22) The Gospel According to Jesus (John MacArthur) (Soteriology/Gospels)
(23) Instruments in the Redeemer’s Hands (Paul David Tripp) (Counseling/Ministry)

Hotel Rwanda

Last night Holly and I watched Hotel Rwanda, a powerful and emotional film about a hotel manager in Rwanda, during the atrocities of 1994. The story is about Paul Rusesabagina (Don Cheadle), who manages the four-star Hôtel des Mille Collines, in Kigali, Rwanda. The hotel is owned by a Belgian company and is something of an oasis for Europeans, Americans, and wealthy Africans. In the spring of 1994, the Hutus massacred the Tutsis, and Rusesabagina (a Hutu married to a Tutsi), desperately attempts to save his family and 1200 Tutsi refugees housed in the hotel, as the rest of the world turns a deaf ear and blind eye to the cries genocide of nearly a million people.

The sheer terror felt by the Tutsi people in the face of such barbaric hatred and cruelty, the betrayal and inhumanity of the West in ignoring the entire situation with political double-speak, the courage and fortitude of Paul Rusesabagina amidst such hopelessness and death - are all vividly portrayed. One walks away from a film like this in shock and disbelief, utterly convinced that human beings are totally depraved - and, that in the grace of God, some people are capable of incredible depths of compassion, courage, and love. See the film - you'll be glad you did. (Caveat: this film includes some heavy violence and strong language. It is not a film for children.)

Scenes from Africa





Here are a few photos from Africa. The top picture is of our team with Shai Mulder (registrar of the college where we ministered) and Cecil Kleu (an evangelist representing Multi-Ministries). We are in Krueger National Park. The second shot is of me teaching the twelve students we adopted for Strategy 112. The bottom photograph was taken in the Johannesburg airport - the team with Harold Peasley and Erroll Wesson of Multi-Ministries.