Saturday, December 17, 2011

Seedlings

My last post, 700 Bucks, took a look at the poverty in India.  In the few days since I wrote that I have been thinking more and more about the statistic I reported concerning malnutrition amongst children.  As a refresher, the malnutrition rate among children in India is at 47.5%, twice that of sub-Saharan Africa.  Four children die every minute in India as a direct result of malnutrition.

It seems like not a year goes by when we don’t see news reports about famine and starvation somewhere in the world.  This year it was Sudan and the images that were shown around the world were heart breaking.  Usually these horrific events are triggered by natural disasters such as draught or flooding.  Sometimes war is to blame as cropland is burned or occupied and people are forced from their productive lands into areas that cannot support them.  Other times it is the simple math that there are too many people for the area they live in to be able to support.  Finances can take a role as well when a country can simply not afford to import the food products they need for their population.

India is quite different than most of the developing nations that we typically see reports of starvation in.  India is actually a net exporter of food products including such staples as rice, fruits, and vegetables.  India’s economy is quite strong and it was one of the few economies in the world to experience growth during this recession.  Wages in India are on the rise and for the first time in it’s history, the middle class is growing in India. Though there are occasional border conflicts and terrorist attacks, India has seen no widespread conflict for over 100 years.

So what accounts for those 2,100,000 children that die annually from the results of malnutrition?

Luke 6:44 tells us we can judge a tree by its fruit.  As my friend Mark likes to say, the cult makes the culture.  India is largely a Hindu country.  Though there are a sizeable number of Muslims and people of other faiths present, most all are influenced by Hindu culture.  The Hindu belief structure is heavily based upon the concepts of fate and karma, the belief that deeds, good or bad, will determine ones destiny.  Their gods offer no real mercy or grace and as a reflection of their faith, neither do many Hindus.  A Hindu may see a starving child begging on the street and simply walk past the child and say “That is his fate in this life.  Perhaps, with good deeds, it will be better for him in the next.”  This is a classic example of the truth of Psalm 115:8: "Those who make [idols] will become like them."

It would be very hard for even the staunchest of atheists to argue that traditional Judeo-Christian values have not been good for the areas in which they are predominant.  These areas include most of Europe and the Americas.  As a whole, these parts of the world are the best fed and have the most freedom amongst its people.  Women, for the most part, are afforded equal rights, both in the home and in the workplace.  Charity and welfare programs abound as it is generally the accepted belief that the “have’s” have an obligation to care for the “have-nots.”  Literacy and education in general are valued and these nations have the best opportunities for personal advancement.  The nations heavily influenced by traditional Judeo-Christian values are far from perfect of course, but they are as close as can be had on earth.

I have been asked many times “why India?”  Initially I would say that it was because I’ve always been fascinated with India and that The Berean Fellowship, of which my church is a member, has been involved with India for a few decades.  But the more I study India, it’s people, and it’s culture, the less these reasons seem to matter.  One of the fruits of India’s Hindu culture is the easily preventable deaths of four children every minute of every day of every year.  It is my hope and goal in this trip that perhaps a few seedlings from the Christian tree can be planted in India, and with them, some hope for these children.  That has become my new answer when I am asked “why India?”.



To find out more about e3 Partners Ministry, give financially to this mission, or get information on expeditions you can participate in yourself, click here.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

700 Bucks

700 bucks.  That’s it.  That’s how much the average Indian lives on per year.

Now, I know that the majority of Indians live in poverty.  My friend Mark, who has been to India several times and is also going on this trip, has told me several times that the level of poverty is astounding and confronts you every minute you are there.  In preparing for this trip I’ve also done a lot of studying of India by reading a few travel books and the seemingly endless supply of information available on the web.  It’s easy to find things like the $700.00 figure listed above.  You can also find out that 77% of Indians actually live on less than $0.50 a day.  And you can read about the fact that about 47.5% of Indian children suffer from malnutrition.  Compare that to the sub-Saharan Africa rate of 24%.

For some reason though, that $700.00 figure seems to stick in my head.  Maybe it’s because that’s about the amount most Americans seem to be willing to spend on a television.  Just a month ago my wife and I almost did that, but then our old TV stopped doing the weird thing it was doing and came back to life so we decided to hold off a little longer.

Maybe it’s because $700.00 is quite a bit less than our household spends on its cellular phone bill each year.  Or it could be the cable TV and high-speed internet bill that annually costs us almost double that.  Sometimes, especially in the fall, our monthly bill for gasoline in our personal and business vehicles totals to just about $700.00.  I put new tires on my pickup this last spring and that was right at $700.00.  It just so happens that the immunizations I need to get in order to take this mission trip are going to cost me almost $700.00.

Putting the average yearly Indian income into terms of my everyday expenses really seems to rattle me a bit.  Guilt, anger, sadness, and about a dozen other emotions, some that I don’t even have a name for, bounce around in my head and heart as I contemplate it.

In researching for this blog post I came across another fact that will surely haunt my dreams.  As a result of the extensive poverty in India, it is estimated that 2.1 million Indian children die before reaching the age of five.  That means that in the time it took you to read this post, about eight Indian children have died because of not having enough to eat.

Even as I type this I am fighting tears.  I have no idea how I will react when I’m actually confronted with it face to face in a little over six weeks.



To find out more about e3 Partners Ministry, give financially to this mission, or get information on expeditions you can participate in yourself, click here.

Friday, December 9, 2011

Reservations

Yesterday I received my itinerary, which included our flight reservations.

Reservations.  Yeah, I’ve had a few.

There were quite a few reasons to NOT make this trip.  I own a business, of which I am a pretty darned integral part.  My absence from that business will be a burden on my employees and most importantly, my wife.  I have some health issues and given the likelihood of a strange diet on the trip and the stresses of the mission, there is a fair chance that I could become ill in a foreign land.  There are financial concerns about raising the funds, not only for the trip, but also for sundry items like vaccinations, a visa, etc.  There are arrangements to be made for someone to take over my duties at the church.  I could go on and on.

In the course of an email to a friend I had expressed a lot of these reservations and told her I was mulling all these things over before I officially sign up for the trip.  She sent me one of the best emails I’ve ever received.  Simple.  Blunt.  To the point.  True.

This is what she wrote:

“In my quiet time this morning I read Matthew 14; it contains the famous picture of Jesus walking on water. But what I love more about this section is the picture of Peter walking on water. Out of complete impulsivity (I don't know if that's a word or not!), he steps out simply because he trusts Jesus. When the waves and wind start kicking up around him, he remembers how absurd and dangerous it is for him to be walking on water. His faith lags and he begins to sink. But of course, Jesus doesn't let him sink. He pulls him out of the water and helps him get back into the boat.

So...go to India :) If God has laid this particular mission on your heart--then He wants you to go. Abandon logic and practicalities for once and trust Jesus to take care of it all.”

I read this email.  It has been my experience that every once in a while, God has to give me a “dope slap” in order for me to catch on.  Sometimes I am simply not the sharpest knife in the drawer.  This was one of those times.  I said a quick prayer and then I immediately went to the e3 website and signed up for the trip.  The commitment was made.  I stepped out of the boat and into the water.

There are a lot of reasons to not make this trip.  Some are listed at the beginning of this post and if I want to dwell on it, I could think of many, many more.  But as the old saying goes, quantity is not quality.  The quantity of reasons to NOT go is heavily outweighed by the quality of the reason to go: God's reason. 

The lesson and reminder to trust Him is just the first of many that I know I will experience during the preparation and execution of this mission.


To find out more about e3 Partners Ministry, give financially to this mission, or get information on expeditions you can participate in yourself, click here.

Sunday, December 4, 2011

You're Here!!

So if you're here it is because you've recieved a letter about my upcoming mission trip to India.  That's good.  Over the next few days I'll be posting some of the background information about how I came to the decision to take on this mission.  Once the mission begins in February, I'll try and post trip updates if the technology in remote India allows.

Until I get to posting some more personal information, you can learn more about e3 Partners and our trip by visiting http://www.e3partners.org/.  My specific trip is located here: http://www.e3partners.org/Page.aspx?pid=1925

The area of India we will be visiting is the Indian state of Assam.  We will be based out of Tezpur which is located in about the center of the district.  You can find out more about the region here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assam