Hand in Hand Global Mission Support Blog Digest

This "blog digest" is brought to you by the ELCA Global Mission Support team. Here you will find posts and re-posts by ELCA missionaries, ELCA Global Mission churchwide staff, and other friends.

Raising leaders #2

Posted on October 20th, 2009 by Sue Edison-Swift

The Rev. Rafael Malpica Padilla, executive director for ELCA Global Mission, sent this post during his visit in Malaysia and Singapore.—Sue

Six Young Adults in Global Mission (YAGM) serve in Malaysia with the Basel Christian Church. They offer educational services in church schools that serve the general population.

On October 14, 2009, I visited a special school for children coming from the economically marginalized rural-communities around Kota Kinabalu.

The school, Jireh House, provides residential, educational, and health programs to the participants. One of our YAGMs, Jacob Dalager, a graduate from St. Olaf College, serves here. As we met, Jacob greeted me with familiarity. I could not place him until he mentioned his parents, Pr. Karl and Holly Dalager.  We had met before!  In 1996, I was introduced to nine-year-old Jacob when his parents went to Colombia as ELCA missionaries.

God continues to raise up young and faithful leaders like Jacob and our other YAGMs. God uses parents like Karl and Holly to rear their children in the faith, instill in them a passion for service, and empower them to participate in God’s mission in the world.    Soli Deo Gloria!
—The Rev. Rafael Malpica Padilla

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Raising leaders

Posted on October 20th, 2009 by Sue Edison-Swift

The Rev. Rafael Malpica Padilla, executive director for ELCA Global Mission, sent this post during his visit in Malaysia and Singapore.—Sue

Reacting to the communist takeover in China, in the late 1940s the British government in Malaysia relocated the Chinese population to “New Villages” to the north of Kuala Lumpur in the region of today’s Ipoh.

Beginning in 1953, missionaries from the ULCA and LCA (ELCA predecessor church bodies) served the Chinese community in these villages. They engaged in “pioneer evangelism,” planting the seed of the Gospel and laying the foundations for strong congregational ministries.

These seeds found good soil and helped to root the Lutheran Church in Malaysia and Singapore.  For example:  The Rev. Philip Lok, born in the new villages and educated in the mission schools, is bishop of the church.  The leaders that were formed by our missionaries now direct the evangelical outreach in their lands.

As a result, the work of the Lutheran Church in Malaysia and Singapore among the Orang Asli is supported by the ELCA Global Mission in different ways.  One ELCA missionary, a seminary intern, serves with the Lutheran Church in Malaysia and Singapore.

At its August 2009 convention, the Lutheran Church in Malaysia and Singapore received five congregations into membership. These are congregations among the Orang Asli, the people of the land.

Congregation of the Lutheran Church in Malaysia and Singapore

Raising Leaders

On October 8, 2009, I visited one of these communities in Kampong Sekau. That morning 14 people were baptized and 12 confirmed. We gathered around water, bread and wine to witness to God’s mission of creating and sustaining community.  Made one by the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and overcoming cultural and linguistic barriers, we worship together in the Semai language.

The Lutheran Church in Malaysia and Singapore and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America walk together as companion churches.  Together, we reach out with the good news of the Gospel.
Soli Deo Gloria! —The Rev. Rafael Malpica Padilla

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