Nepal: Digital and Mobile Bibles now available

Nepal (MNN) ― It began a few years ago when Mission Aviation Fellowship hoped to start a flight ministry in Nepal. But that may not be exactly what God had in mind, says MAF Pilot Tim Chase.

timchase Nepal: Digital and Mobile Bibles now available

Tim Chase: Bible dedication, Nepal

Speaking from Nepal, Chase says, “We came here originally to start a flight program, and about a year and a half into the process things weren’t going very well…. So my wife and I had to think. We asked, ‘Why did the Lord send us here?’”

It became clear to Chase when he visited the Nepal Bible Society. Chase says, “They wanted to have some electronic Bibles, but they didn’t have the ability to do it. So when I came in the door and said, ‘Do you want to try to do something like this?’ they were really excited.”

Chase had worked for IBM for 10 years before joining MAF. He says it took about nine months to convert files and customize software, but the project is now complete. Two new products were just dedicated: “A ‘Go Bible’ so they can have two Nepali Bibles on cell phone technology, and also an e-Bible program that [allows them] to have the Nepali Bible along with a commentary and a dictionary, all in Nepali.”

About 350 people celebrated as Chase demonstrated two electronic versions of the Nepali Bible on November 30, 2010. After the service, the enthusiastic crowd purchased 100 copies of e-Bible on CD and another 70 on flash drives. The number has since climbed dramatically. Go-Bible is available via download from the NBS Web site .

NBS leaders then honored Tim & Karen Chase for their role in developing these tools and presented them with a framed letter of appreciation. The NBS General Secretary Elder Tej Bahadur Jirel said, “With the generous help of Mission Aviation Fellowship, we are able to provide a software product that will greatly help Nepali Christians in the study of the Scriptures. This site will be updated with current information as we learn more from our users’ experience with the program.”

Chase says having an electronic version of the Nepali Bible is strategic. “A lot of Nepali people are living outside of Nepal. Some of them are living in the Middle East where it might not be popular to carry around a hard-copy Bible.”

This allows people to read the Bible in a less threatening manner. He also says the electronic version of the Bible allows them to share the Gospel by sending Bible verses to people via SMS text or e-mail.

Chase says the e-Bible for PC will have a specific target: “Pastors and Bible school students who, up until this point, have been doing a lot of their studying in English, which isn’t their first language. Having this tool available will give them a lot of power that they haven’t had in the past.”

Chase is now praying that a Nepali support team will be developed to maintain these valuable tools.

While MAF is known for aviation, MAF also provides distance learning technologies to help train indigenous pastors who otherwise would not have access to biblical teaching or leadership training. Through partnerships with other organizations, MAF supplies digital biblical reference and study materials, helps establish learning centers, and provides cutting-edge learning solutions that support the growth of the church. You can learn more about MAF-Learning Technologies.

Comments { 0 }

Win a Literary Tour of England

Celebrate the 400th Anniversary of the King James Bible

Join the 25th Anniversary of the C. S. Lewis Foundation

Write A 2000-word essay on:
Bible, Literature and Transforming Hope

cslewis1 Win a Literary Tour of EnglandStories of C. S. Lewis inspire readers to choose good, resist evil and risk suffering. This is generally true of classic English literature. In contrast, Europe’s pagan myths created a fate-and-spirit governed culture of fear that bred corruption. The Bible inspired many English writers to transform their world by inspiring firm hope. Explain and illustrate what elements of the Biblical worldview brought hope into English literature. Please feel free to use Lewis or any other writer of your choice. In order to help aspiring writers, you may post and consult questions, essays, videos, and links on www.RevelationMovement.com

Post your essay by March 1, 2011  On www.RevelationMovement.com

Ten best essayists will win All-Expense-Paid Literary Tour:

  • July 20 – 25, 2011 —- Guided Literary Tour of London
  • July 26 -August 3,2011—- Oxford and Cambridge for the C. S. Lewis Summer Institute Oxbridge 2011, “Paradigms of Hope:Transcending Chaos & Transforming Culture” (tinyurl.com/oxbridge2011)

The Summer Institute at Oxbridge is renowned for the quality of its speakers and leaders. Speakers for 2011 conference will include:

  • Os Guinness
  • Charles Colson
  • Vishal Mangalwadi
  • George Marsden

vishalbook Win a Literary Tour of England100 Essayists will win:

  • Vishal Mangalwadi’s The Book That Made Your World: How the Bible Created the Soul of Western Civilization

cons Win a Literary Tour of England

500 Essayists will win:

  • Guptara Twin’s Novel, Conspiracy of Calaspia
  • (Winners will need to pay the shipping costs)

To watch the video of 2008 Oxbridge Conference go to www.tinyurl.com/oxbridge2008

Meet The Promoters:
www.RevelationMovement.com
Sponsored by:
BOM International Inc
1605 E. Elizabeth St.
Pasadena, CA 91104 USA)

C. S. Lewis Foundation
www.cslewis.org

Schuman Centre for European Studies
www.SchumanCentre.eu

Comments { 0 }

John Macarthur: A Tale of Two Sons

Sermon on the parable of the Prodigal Son:

Comments { 0 }

Church Leadership Training – Bangladesh

The College of Christian Theology Bangladesh (CCTB) located in Savar Dhaka, is training men and women in theology and Christian ministry to serve their home communities.

Screen shot 2010 11 24 at 2.25.46 AM Church Leadership Training   Bangladesh

CCTB Lecture Room

With 700 TEE (Theological Education by Extension) students, the aim is to develop and equip national leaders for the Christian church in Bangladesh.  Students who complete the Diploma of Christian Ministry and Diploma of Theology can then progress to a Bachelor of Theology and Master of Arts in Christian Studies.  Both B.Th and MA are residential courses.  CCTB also offers discipleship courses which can be used to teach and equip new Christians.

Screen shot 2010 11 24 at 2.24.35 AM Church Leadership Training   Bangladesh

CCTB Library

“The greatest need that the church in Bangladesh has right now is for national leaders, for pastors who will lead their people.” says Nikhil Halder from the Mohakhali Baptist Church.  He said that one difficulty for the church in Bangladesh was that people were not aspiring to lead the church – “maybe out of 100 people we will have 1 person who is feeling called to lead – but the church cannot afford to pay them enough and that person needs to feed their family, so what do they do?”.

We need to pray that the Lord will call leaders to lead the church in Bangladesh and that training and discipleship courses will continue to be available to ensure they have solid Biblical foundations and can teach others.

While the courses available from CCTB are not expensive in western terms they are still out of reach for many in the church.  Some scholarships are available but students are still required to fund a portion of their courses even when the church who sends them is contributing towards fees and costs.

Screen shot 2010 11 24 at 2.19.34 AM Church Leadership Training   Bangladesh

CDC, Gazipur, Dhaka

Christian Discipleship Centre in Gazipur is also training church leaders and runs a residential 1 year discipleship course which CCTB accepts as entry to their Diploma courses.

A common need shared by these training organisations is for resources in the Bangla language.  Different groups are translating what they need and while some are willing to share there doesnt appear to be a platform established for the sharing of resources and information.

Comments { 0 }

Home of Hope – Dhaka

Home of Hope is a school and orphanage outside of Dhaka accommodating children from disadvantaged backgrounds. Many are orphans. Some have only one parent and some come from homes of great need where sickness or other misfortunes have left their families unable to care for them. It was started in 1991 with 7 boys in two rooms – now has grown to 240 girls and boys on a campus which includes a school, aquaculture, agriculture, poultry farm, play grounds, technology labs, accommodation and dining facilities.

homeofhope Home of Hope   Dhaka

Home of Hope

Their shared goal is training children to be leaders in all aspects of life: business, religious, education, and family life. Building up the next generation of leaders, transformed in Christ’s name, with Biblical principles at the heart of what they do.  Children attend and participate in their own church and are taught to tithe from their allowance (from which the Pastors salary is paid) and also as a dorm room they decide how much they will contribute to the building fund.

The school caters for students from preschool up to year 10, they can then attend a transition training before continuing onto possible university studies. Students attend the school from Sunday through Thursday, 8am – 4pm and are also in “work” teams led by coordinators to sustain the operating of the campus.

The school day includes times of lessons and work and weekends enable sustained work on some tasks. Students are paid an allowance up till age 14 but some tasks are considered chores that just need to be done for the “family” – much like any other household. From age 14 students need to be more independent and seek work for their own income. One 17 year old student recently opened a computer shop.

hohschool Home of Hope   Dhaka

Home of Hope School

classroom Home of Hope   Dhaka

Classroom

There are teams involved in work and maintenance tasks: agriculture and aquaculture, developing building components for kitset churches, operating a poultry farm preparing “fryers” and “layers”, doing garden maintenance, as well as all the chores that a typical family requires completing in order to function smoothly.

biplob roofgardens Home of Hope   Dhaka

Biplob - rooftop gardens soon to be planted with lettuce

Biplob Bairagee, Co-ordinator for Food and Farm, leads teams of students in areas of gardening (from seed to harvest), poultry (1 day old chicks are bought and reared to fry or lay stages), aquaculture (two ponds grow fish up to 2lbs in size – choosing three different types of fish which live in varying depths of the pond).  Teams also are involved in food preparation (harvest/kill, prepare, cook), serving meals and cleaning up.

I was really impressed by the way the leaders are equipping and teaching the children to contribute by doing their part to keep the family running. Changing attitudes of dependency and reluctancy to work hard, by instilling into these children the understanding that God wants us to work and apply ourselves and take dominion over the Earth as God intended.

In “Truth and Transformation“, author Vishal Mangalwadi writes, “The consequence of Adam’s sin was that man who was meant to be the ruler became a slave on earth, not only to Satan and sin, but to nature as well.  The earth began to grow thorns and thistles, and man had to eat of the sweat of his brow.  In his struggle with nature , man ultimately lost, died, and became dust.  Physical creation won over its ruler – man. Death became the master. But by defeating death and giving eternal life to those who repent and believe, God is restoring to man his authority over the world”.

By working on practical tasks alongside learning, students are developing the understanding that they are contributors, creators and developers themselves, in God’s image.  Recognising that they have authority and dominion over the earth with the responsibility to manage it and enjoy its fruits -

He causes grass to grow for the livestock
and [provides] crops for man to cultivate,
producing food from the earth,
wine that makes man’s heart glad—
making his face shine with oil—
and bread that sustains man’s heart.

Psalm 104. 14-15

At the Bible College students also work and develop understandings and practical experience which they can then replicate in the areas they live in as pastors – able to teach and equip their church agricultural skills, building skills, technical skills. 85% of the Bible College graduating students are in ministry.

aquaculture Home of Hope   Dhaka

Aquaculture pond

construction Home of Hope   Dhaka

Building concrete pillars for construction

By providing access to online tertiary education opportunities, these students can have an option of studying at university level in areas that they know well through their life experience and can use their learning to contribute to the transformation of their nation.

Students studying online degrees in aquaculture for example may have already been practically involved in rearing and harvesting fish under the leadership of older students when they were younger, and leading others when they were older. By increasing their knowledge through a university education with some of the best teachers available around the world the depth of their potential contribution to transforming Bangladesh becomes even greater.

Comments { 0 }