Jumat, 31 Januari 2014

Tuning into the “God Channel”

Tuning into the “God Channel”


January 30, 2014
The radio program “Faith, Hope, and Love” draws listeners from Ukraine, Russia, and other countries in the former Soviet Union.
When Vladimir Lenin returned from political exile to lead the Russian Revolution in 1917, one of his first objectives was to seize control of all media. Lenin envisioned newspapers and radio as the primary tools for communicating Bolshevik propaganda. If he could “educate” the masses through media, he knew he would have control of their minds and souls.
During the Stalin era the Soviets built a radio system with a network of transmitter towers for the sole purpose of disseminating communist propaganda throughout the USSR. Small transistor radios were a fixture in Ukrainian homes. In schools, hospitals, prisons, and government buildings, citizens were forced to tune in to the “Voice from Moscow” with its latest glorification of the communist system.
All a person had to do was turn a radio on—any radio, at any location—and there was the voice. They didn’t have any options. There was only one station.
News reports heralded the latest industrial development project or brilliant scientific discoveries that outshone anything the capitalist West could produce. They spoke of homeless people in New York City sleeping on the streets, but boasted that such deplorable living conditions were not seen in Russia.
What citizens did not hear was religious programming. The airwaves were silent in regards to any mention of God or the Bible.
Freedom came to Ukraine in 1987, and with it arose the first opportunities in 70 years to openly worship God. Slavik Radchuk, a Ukrainian Christian, caught the vision to do something no one would have dreamed of a few short years before. If the Soviets could use radio to spread communist and atheist ideology, he could make use of the same system to proclaim salvation through Jesus Christ.
Radchuk knew the odds were against him, but God was for him.

"We want to use radio time for preaching."

For the past three years the energetic young preacher already had been doing the unthinkable. When Mikhail Gorbachev gave believers his blessing to celebrate 1,000 years of Christianity in the Soviet Union in 1988, Radchuk boldly asked local city officials for permission to hold an evangelistic crusade. They were stunned by Radchuk’s request, but they could do little to stop him or the wave of religious freedom that was poised to sweep across the region.
Naysayers told Radchuk not to expect much of a turnout. Instead, more than 20,000 Ukrainians came to the crusade and over 500 people received Christ as Savior.
From there his ministry expanded to include outreach to prisoners and the startup of a Bible training school.
Then Radchuk contacted the president of a radio and television broadcasting company and made a 200-mile trip across the country to Kiev to present his carefully thought out vision.
“We want to use radio time for preaching,” explained Radchuk.
Persuading officials to convert the government channel into the “God channel” was not easy. To Radchuk’s surprise, the president authorized the radio program under two conditions. First, Radchuk could not preach against the Ukrainian government. Second, he had to apply for official recognition as a Christian radio and television company.
Slavik Radchuk delivers a message for his Christian radio broadcast.
Remarkably, the paperwork was approved, and in 1991 Radchuk made his first radio broadcast. At that time he operated the only licensed Christian radio and TV company in Ukraine, and perhaps in the entire former Soviet Union.
In the early years his radio ministry received over 8,000 letters from listeners. People expressed thanks for the programs, some saying they accepted Christ as a result, or they received an answer to prayers for physical healing or reconciliation in a strained relationship.
At one point Radchuk was told the program would be canceled due to a shortage of funds. “Faith, Hope, and Love” was off the air for four weeks. After the government radio station received 3,000 letters of complaint for pulling the program, the station manager said he would return it to the airwaves.
“He said he would work out a deal with us,” recalled Radchuk. “So he gave us a lower price, and I kept preaching.”

Loyal listeners

Now through 1,000 towers his radio programs are transmitted from Kiev to an area encompassing 100 million people in Ukraine, Moldova, Belorussia, western Russia, Poland, the Czech Republic, Germany, and many other countries.
And the letters keep coming. Petrova from Kbmelnitskiy recently wrote: “Thank you for your programs. We are always waiting for your messages to be preached. Our neighbors come over to our house when your programs are on the air because they do not have a radio at their house. After your programs we pray together.”
Many listeners request New Testaments. Others ask for copies of messages on CD so they can pass them along to family members and friends.
The radio ministry has received thousands of letters from faithful listeners.
Radchuk said he was very moved by the story of one Christian couple. It was 9 p.m. that night and he was worn out after completing an evangelistic crusade, but a friend of the family pressed him to go visit the couple. “They really want to see you,” he was told.
They drove to the couple’s apartment and knocked on the door. A voice from inside asked, “Who is with you?” The friend replied, “The man you like to hear on the radio, whose ministry led you to be saved.”
When Radchuk entered the room, he realized immediately that the husband and wife were blind.
“This is a wonderful moment to have the radio preacher come visit us,” the husband said. “We hear your voice by radio, but now you are blessing us with your presence in our home.”
This year marks the 20th anniversary of Christian Aid Mission’s support of Radchuk’s growing ministry. In addition to radio broadcasts, he proclaims the gospel through television programming that reaches over 135 nations in the former USSR, Europe, China, India, the Middle East, parts of Africa, and North and South America.
“My message is simple,” said Radchuk. “I don’t promote a certain church or denomination. I preach the message of salvation, deliverance, of healing broken hearts and families. I just invite people to read the Bible and follow Jesus.”
Use the form below to contribute online to help indigenous ministries in the Ukraine. Or call 434-977-5650 to contribute by phone. If you prefer to mail your gift, please mail to Christian Aid, P.O. Box 9037, Charlottesville, VA 22906. Please use Gift Code: 368TVR. Thank you!

4 Lessons to Learn from One Prodigal Son

4 Lessons to Learn from One Prodigal Son



Mikhail Kalashnikov
Mikhail Kalashnikov
In 1941, a difficult 70 year long prodigal son story began to unfold in a hospital bed in wartime Soviet Union.  Nursing a shoulder wound from the Battle of Bryansk, Mikhail Kalashnikov, would set out to create weapons that would help defend his homeland from German invasion.
Over time, these weapons, the most well known being the AK-47, would be copied over 100 million times as the tool of choice for those intent on creating destruction on six continents.
A Soviet celebrity of sorts, Kalashnikov traveled the world declaring his atheism and defending the value of a material world over the freedoms and faith in Christ that hundreds of millions would immediately embrace following the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989.
The fall of the Soviet empire though did not dissuade Kalashnikov’s atheism … grace did.
And here are four things that we can take from this story of how ministry worked in this story of a prodigal son who was very far away from God but came home, started to see his life through God’s eyes, and on December 23, 2013 passed away.
When the son returns embrace him.  At the age of 90, Kalashnikov returned to the faith of ‘his peasant parents’ and began seeing his place in history through God’s eyes with the help of the Russian Orthodox Church and its leaders.
In the parable of the prodigal son, the father chooses grace and helps his son heal.
Take the time to hear the son out.  In the parable, the father does not hesitate to embrace him, placing him right back in the family and hearing him out.
When Kalashnikov decided to accept responsibility for his creation’s role in history, he wrote a letter to the Russian Orthodox patriarch Kirill detailing his concerns.  Kalashnikov received a thoughtful, personal response from the busy leader in a church that reaches millions.
Use discernment when discussing events and leave the judgement to God.  In the parable, the son who stayed loyal speaks clearly of the pain his brother caused.  His father doesn’t pretend it didn’t happen, but discerningly accepts his wayward son back into the fold.
Kalashnikov had been a very public part of the state apparatus that did its best to stamp out the Russian Orthodox Church.  He had belittled and designed many of the tools used in oppression of people of faith globally.  In his letter to Patriarch Kirill, Kalashnikov asks soberly of the weight of his role in history.  The patriarch makes clear that Kalashnikov’s work was meant to defend his country from a German invasion that killed 25 million, not to spread war globally.  You can see, the patriarch doesn’t ignore events or judge.  His response helps Kalashnikov come to terms and grow with God.
Meet people where they are with what you have available.  In the parable, the father runs to embrace his son, clothing and caring for him with the best the family had available.
Kalashnikov came to the Church looking for the peace of God’s love in the final stages of his life.  He turned to one of his church’s senior most leaders to open his understanding of God and God’s love for him personally and the leader and his church provided it despite all that had happened before his conversion.
The prodigal son’s father never let the shadows and darkness of events obscure his view of his son’s soul, the tortured light that needed healing.  Stories of resolution like the prodigal son’s and Mikhail Kalashnikov’s often contain darkness that is impossible for us to fathom but we do understand the need for souls to be healed.

Every Leader Needs a God-sized Ambition

Every Leader Needs a God-sized Ambition



Road Ahead
Many leaders never achieve the level of influence they could potentially have because they drift through life on autopilot, maintaining the status quo, without a big ambition. They have no master plan, no big purpose, no dreams pulling them along. But if you’re going to be a great leader, you need to dream great dreams.
When you stop dreaming, you start dying. If you have no goals, you have no growth. God put it in your mind the ability to think great thoughts and dream great dreams and to have great visions. When you’re stretching and growing and developing, you’re a healthy human being. We grow by being stretched. We grow by facing new challenges. In fact, I would say that if you’re not facing any challenges right now, you need to go find one quick.
There are three common misconceptions that keep people from having a great ambition in life, and these are especially prevalent among Pastors and Christian leaders.

We confuse humility and fear

God wants you to be humble, but He does not want you to be fearful. And fear will prevent you from accomplishing meaningful things. Every leaders is unique, with an individual make-up of spiritual gifts, passions, abilities, a unique personality, and unique experiences. And God’s desire for how a leader will influence the world around them is closely tied to that uniqueness. But however God has uniquely shaped you, you need to desire all the influence He will grant you in your leadership so that you can make as large an impact as possible for the Kingdom’s sake.
Humility is not assuming that I can’t be a great leader and have a meaningful impact. That’s fear. And fear will strip us of our ability to do great, world-changing things. Humility is rightly understanding my identity as I am defined by my Creator and my relationship to Jesus. While fear holds us back, genuine humility propels us forward because we believe that we serve a really BIG God!

We confuse contentment with laziness

In Philippians 4:12 Paul says, “I have learned to be content in every situation.” But that does not mean I don’t have any ambition, that I never set any goals. Many leaders believe that because of this verse they should never have any goals for their church, but should be content with wherever it is. Paul was not saying, “I don’t have any desires about tomorrow. I don’t hope for the future. I don’t have any ambitions.”
As a pastor, you need to learn to be happy while your church is at its current stage of growth. There’s a misconception that says, “Once my church has 300 members (or 500, 2,000, or some other number) then I’ll be happy.” No, you won’t. If can’t find joy in the place where God has you right now, you won’t be happy as it continues to grow because you’ll always fall into the trap of “when and then” thinking – “When I get such and such, then I’ll be happy.”
On the other hand, if everybody used contentment as an excuse for laziness, who would work intentionally to build churches that reach people? Who would care about world hunger? Who would fight for justice and equality? We cannot confuse contentment and laziness.

We confuse little thinking with spirituality

Some people use God as an excuse, and Satan is an expert at getting us to think small. There’s the old myth that quality is the opposite of quantity. Actually, they’re both important. In a ministry, you want to reach as many people for Christ as possible and you want them to grow as deeply as possible.
Don’t confuse little thinking with spirituality. I encourage you in your prayer life to start saying, “God, enlarge my impact.” We who serve a great God should have great expectations of what God can and wants to do in, around, and through a surrendered leader.
Go even deeper into this with today’s devotional via The Daily Hope: Dream Big!
photo by Matt Gruber