Showing posts with label Men of God. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Men of God. Show all posts

5.21.2009

Malatya, Turkey...Martyrs for Christ

Last night Robert brought a movie/documentary home which we proceeded to watch. It was on the lives and deaths of 3 christian workers in Turkey in 2007.

Tilmann Geske, Necati Aydin,(Pastor of the church) Ugur Yuksel

The following is from a little booklet that came with the dvd....

The Martyrs
Necati, Uğur, and Tilmann are not larger-than-life icons. They are three real men with very different stories, backgrounds, and personalities, united by the bond of Jesus Christ and the courage to die for His Name’s sake.

The Church
Before the killings in Malatya, Turkish Muslim background Christians had faced constant pressure, media slander, and even torture, but no one had paid the ultimate price. Since the martyrdom, attacks and attempted murders have increased all over the country, strengthening the resolve of some and compelling others to flee. These killings mark the beginning of a new age of persecution and purification for the Turkish Church.

The Enduring Faithfulness of God
The Malatya martyrdom has challenged the most fundamental assumption in Turkey (to be Turk is to be Muslim) and has forced the public to acknowledge the presence of the indigenous Turkish Church. In the midst of much grief and suffering, God has brought great opportunity, as the lives of just 3000 Christians are put on display before a country of 72 million. Those we spoke with testify with a unified voice that God is working for His glory and their good and this fact has brought the Church great joy in the midst of persecution.

This movie is truly moving and compelling. It leaves you admiring these men and those they left behind, praising God that they were 'faithful unto death' and asking yourself, "Do I have the spirit of Paul when he said "For me to live is Christ and to die is gain"?

We are very comfortable in our middle class society here in the US. We have no fear, yet, of being arrested or tortured for our faith. All we have to worry about is, what will I make for dinner? What color of paint will I use? Will I find a husband/wife? What college will I go to? What doctrinal book will I read next? Not that these are not important and necessary things to think about but in the big picture of the Kingdom of God they are momentary and passing.

I realise that for mothers at home we have priorities and God glorifying ones at that. Our children and our home are what God has called us to first and foremost. Our hearts and our prayers, however, can be for those who face the powers of darkness daily. We can instill into our children, hearts for God that put Him first, hearts that "Seek first the Kingdom of God".

I am reminded of the words of Jim Elliot, another missionary martyr, who died at the end of an Auca Indian spear.....

"He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose."

3.27.2009

John Harper - Titanic Hero and Man of God

I found this article when I was looking for a picture of John Harper.


(click each page to read the article)
When my husband, Robert was born his parents attended Harper Memorial Baptist Church, Glasgow, his father was a deacon there.
John Harper was the first Pastor of that church. He eventually left to take up a charge in London but after he died the church decided to remember this man of God.

Such was the affection and esteem in which he was held by the church members, that, when the present stone building was opened in 1922, the church was named
“Harper Memorial Baptist Church”.


I was going to write some excerpts from a book by Moody Adams called 'The Titanic's Last Hero' before I found this article. It is an account of John Harper's life from comments of acquaintances and converts that his brother, Pastor George Harper requested be written. I would recommend the book as it covers more of his life than the last few tragic hours. I will finish with a quote from it.





"When the flames of other ambitions flickered and died,
John Harper's burned even brighter
as he sank to a watery grave.
When death forced others to face
the folly of their life's pursuits,
John Harper's goal of winning men to
Jesus Christ became more vital as he
breathed his final breaths"