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	<title>Jason and Toni Stuart</title>
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	<link>http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart</link>
	<description>Working in Papua New Guinea</description>
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		<title>October 2009 Update</title>
		<link>http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/2009/10/09/october-2009-update/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/2009/10/09/october-2009-update/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 10 Oct 2009 02:14:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>jason_stuart</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/2009/10/09/october-2009-update/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Dear Friends,
We are now out in town (and will be for a month) and are enjoying a change
of scenery, having spent that last four months in the village. We
definitely have felt the need for a bit of a break, so we are thankful that
we will have a chance to get one.
As you know, Toni has [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dear Friends,</p>
<p>We are now out in town (and will be for a month) and are enjoying a change<br />
of scenery, having spent that last four months in the village. We<br />
definitely have felt the need for a bit of a break, so we are thankful that<br />
we will have a chance to get one.</p>
<p>As you know, Toni has been teaching a women&#8217;s literacy class for the last<br />
several months. Perhaps one of the biggest struggles of the class was<br />
keeping the ladies in school. They are not used to a structured life, as<br />
well as being responsible to provide the staple food for their families.<br />
So, many of them felt they could skip class whenever they wanted or needed<br />
to. We finally had to institute a system of fining people two kina (about<br />
one Australian dollar or 70 cents American) for not attending. This helped,<br />
but the course was still a typical disjointed Inaru experience. The class<br />
completed a few days before we left the village and the results were mixed.<br />
Some of the ladies who attended were already semi-literate and their reading<br />
skills were strengthened. One lady who could not read before definitely<br />
learned to read, while 3 or 4 others did not learn to read. Toni plans to<br />
continue working with different ladies one day a week when we get back to<br />
help them continue to improve. Thanks for praying for this.</p>
<p>We have been very encouraged lately with the men&#8217;s discipleship group. We<br />
have had 6 men who attend regularly with a couple new ones joining us<br />
recently. While the Inaru church as a whole is still a bit slack, the core<br />
group of men seems to be maturing spiritually and this will help the church<br />
in the long run. When we meet, we discuss issues related to the church<br />
ministry, go over the lessons to be taught in the church services, and I<br />
teach them on different doctrinal and practical issues as well. We recently<br />
discussed the Lord&#8217;s Supper when we were going over the lesson of Eutychus<br />
falling out the window and last week the Inaru church had a Communion<br />
service of their own initiative, which was very encouraging. For the bread,<br />
a sago pancake was used. For the drink, a red sauce made from the fruit of<br />
the pandanus. The sago was dipped in the pandanus sauce and then eaten. It<br />
wasn&#8217;t a typical Communion service that we would have in Western churches,<br />
but it was great to see the Inarus doing this on their own. Thanks for your<br />
prayers for the men in our church.</p>
<p>We will be in diff towns for a month doing translation checks and a one week break in the middle.  Please pray that we do have a refreshing time and can<br />
relax a bit together.</p>
<p>Thanks for your prayers for all of us. We greatly appreciate it.</p>
<p>In Christ,</p>
<p>Jason and Toni and Jedidiah and Ella Jo Stuart</p>
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		<title>May 2008 Update</title>
		<link>http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/2008/05/18/may-2008-update/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/2008/05/18/may-2008-update/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 18 May 2008 04:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Have you ever felt like you were in a TV show?]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dear Friends, </p>
<p>Have you ever felt like you were in a TV show? We had that experience <br />recently in the Philippines. The TV show was &quot;Amazing Race&quot;. We were on <br />our way to visit the village Toni used to work in and where she left her <br />heart 4 and a half years ago. Since our mission doesn&#8217;t have an airplane <br />stationed in the area anymore, we were going to fly on another mission&#8217;s <br />airplane into the village. We were supposed to be at the airport at 6:45 in <br />the morning. Being us, we started out on the 90 minute drive at 5:45 in the <br />morning:-) Toni was driving because I left my driver&#8217;s license in Papua New <br />Guinea. A few minutes into the drive we came to a police roadblock. No <br />problem! The car&#8217;s paperwork was in order, but Toni was driving with her <br />Australian driver&#8217;s license and they wanted proof that we were tourists and <br />didn&#8217;t actually live in the Philippines. Of course, we had none. They were <br />going to take away her license and return it to her after she had taken a <br />class for bad drivers! Toni chattered away in beautiful Tagalog and after <br />awhile got off with a warning, but now we were very late. Toni is usually <br />timid behind a steering wheel, but you would have all been proud of how she <br />wove the car in and out of bicycles, motorbikes, cars, buses, and water <br />buffalo all along the way. As we neared the airport, we realized we didn&#8217;t <br />know which road to onto to get there. We asked directions, which was <br />useless, since we were unfamiliar with the area. Finally, Toni pulled and <br />asked a guy beside the road, &quot;Can you get in and take us to the airport?&quot; <br />He was happy enough to do that and we soon were there. Unfortunately, he <br />took us to the wrong side of the airport, where commercial airplanes land. <br />There was only a lone security guard there at that time of morning and we <br />asked him how to get to the other side of the runway, where the mission <br />plane is. He said we could drive across the runway and go thru the gate on <br />the other side to the mission compound. So, we drove out onto the runway <br />and began searching for the elusive gate. We drove up and down the <br />airport&#8217;s paved runway and couldn&#8217;t find it. We were just waiting for <br />lights and sirens and arrests but finally found our way into the right area. <br />It was an adventure, but we made it in time for our flight. </p>
<p>All in all our trip was very good, but also very tiring. I spent two weeks <br />in Florida at a training seminar for translation consultants. Toni and the <br />kids spent those two weeks in the Philippines where Toni reconnected with <br />many Filipino friends while handling both kids on her own, which generally <br />meant travelling with them a couple hours a day in taxis:-( We were also <br />able to spend time with fellow missionaries with whom Toni was in training <br />in Australia. After I returned from the States, we spent one more week <br />traveling in the Philippines before returning to Papua New Guinea. We are <br />home in Inaru now and feeling like things have somewhat returned to normal. <br />Thanks for praying for us while we were travelling. </p>
<p>Normal life in Inaru for the next month will consist of finishing the <br />translation of II Corinthians, checking translation for another missionary, <br />meeting weekly with the church leaders, and also starting a post-literacy <br />reading group. We have felt the need (especially with the recent changes in <br />our alphabet here) to help those who are already literate to improve their <br />reading skills. So, one night a week they will come to our house to <br />practice reading&#8211;the ladies with Toni and the men with myself. We <br />appreciate your prayers for all the activities we have going on with the <br />Inaru believers. Especially pray that they will continue to place God first <br />and accept His Word as ultimate authority. A wonderful Christian woman <br />named Priscilla (Nabuwa) died while we were gone and it made it all the more <br />clear how many of the believers here are still fearing witchcraft and not <br />believing what the Bible says on the subject. </p>
<p>Thank you all for your prayers and support and encouragement while we are <br />over here. We are grateful for all of it. </p>
<p>In Christ, </p>
<p>Jason and Toni Stuart and Jedidiah and Ella Jo</p>
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		<title>April 2008 Update</title>
		<link>http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/2008/04/06/april-2008-update/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/2008/04/06/april-2008-update/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 06 Apr 2008 04:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Many of you have written and asked about the last couple weeks. When we arrived back in Inaru after conference, the Inarus were all eager to get started with the Bible school,]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="left">Dear Friends, </p>
<p>Many of you have written and asked about the last couple weeks. When we arrived back in Inaru after conference, the Inarus were all eager to get <br />started with the Bible school, but we had no other attendees from any other village. For various reasons none of them showed up. We started with <br />nearly the entire village of Inaru attending. We were teaching foundationalchronological Bible lessons, which most of the village had heard already, so <br />the focus of the teaching was on the younger people who had not heard and believed before. Attendance stayed good for most of the teaching, in spite <br />of the sensational death that occurred at the beginning of the teaching. </p>
<p>On the first day a teaching, a village man named Francis (Bli), who had been disfellowshipped from the church for his constant disputes with his wife and others, took a young widow as a second wife. The next morning during the teaching, Francis went hunting with some dogs. The dogs came back in the afternoon and everyone called out and waited for Francis as day turned to night. In the morning we cancelled teaching so that everyone could go search for him. The search party found him dead in the jungle, with no marks on his body to give any clues as to why he died. This is a classic witchcraft killing to the Inaru mind. Why else would a perfectly healthy <br />man in his 40&#8217;s walk off and die for no reason? And the fact that he had taken a controversial widow (who had already lost two husbands) as a second wife the day before clinched it. He must have been killed by supernatural means. The flurry of speculation, tall tales, and out and out lies occupied everyone&#8217;s minds for a few days. I often wonder why the Lord allows events <br />that tend to reinforce the Inarus&#8217; traditional mindset, but it seems he wants us to use them as teaching opportunities. Many people came to us with <br />questions and I believe that after the dust settled, more people had more of an understanding of what the Bible says about death. </p>
<p>After the funeral we started the teaching again and went straight thru for 9 more days until it was complete. It was a very tiring and intense time for me to have to teach so many lessons a day and then study for the next day <br />and practice acting out skits with the Inaru believers and also try to squeeze in some time on translating II Corinthians. On the last day we acted out the crucifixtion of Christ and told those listening that if anyone had learned anything new or believed for the first time to please come and let us or one of the church leaders know. Then we as a family flew to Wewak to begin our travels. So, please pray for the Inaru church leaders as they follow up on the teaching and try to determine if we have any new believers as a result. I know that immediately after the last day of teaching our church elder Raymond (Keiko) sat down with his teenage son and another teenage relative and re-explained the Gospel to them and challenged them to believe. A few others gave a challenge to the crowd as soon as the <br />re-enactment of the crucifixtion was over. Probably the biggest immediate result we could see was that the church in Inaru seemed to be re-energized <br />by the teaching and many men seem keen to want to take a more active role in the church. Please pray for men like Solomon (Biga), Job (Wosu), Theo <br />(Wobuwa), Paul (Waiya), and Felix (Mabiyota), that they will continue to have a strong desire to want to serve the Lord and increase in their devotion to Him. </p>
<p>We are now in Wewak and on April 8 we will fly to the Philippines. I will drop Toni and kids off there so that she can see many of the friends she had when she worked in the Philippines and after a couple days, I will fly to <br />the States to attend a translation consultant workshop. I will be in Florida from April 12-26, so if any of you are in central Florida at that time I would love to see you. After the workshop I will fly back to the Philippines (sorry, won&#8217;t be visiting any of you in America) and we will go <br />visit the tribe Toni worked in when she was single. We will arrive back in Papua New Guinea on May 8 and will fly back into Inaru on May 12. We would appreciate your prayers on our travels, just that it would be a profitable <br />time and that we would be able to return safely to Inaru. </p>
<p>Thanks to all of you for your prayers and support and encouragement. Though we did have a death during the Bible school, our two terminally ill people <br />are still with us in Inaru and many other distractions that could have disrupted our teaching never happened. We greatly appreciate your prayers. </p>
<p>In Christ, </p>
<p>Jason, Toni, Jedidiah and Ella Jo Stuart</p>
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		<title>March 2008 Update</title>
		<link>http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/2008/03/09/march-2008-update/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/2008/03/09/march-2008-update/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 09 Mar 2008 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[A few of you have written to ask about the status of our upcoming Bible <br />school. We are planning on doing it once we get back to the village on <br />March 20.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><!--StartImportPhoto--><a href="http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/files/2008/03/1010_6316.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-104" style="margin-right: 10px;margin-bottom: 5px" src="http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/files/2008/03/1010_6316.jpg" alt="" width="300" /></a><!--EndImportPhoto-->
<p>Dear Friends, </p>
<p>We are out in&nbsp;town right now for a translation check, and then will be here <br />another week for our annual conference when all the missionaries with New <br />Tribes Mission in this area get together. We are enjoying our time in town <br />(even though I am working all day), and Jedidiah especially is loving <br />watching the cars drive past (and even getting a ride every once and awhile <br />himself). </p>
<p>A few of you have written to ask about the status of our upcoming Bible <br />school. We are planning on doing it once we get back to the village on <br />March 20. Right now, our elder Raymond is travelling around the other villages of <br />our language group to promote the Bible school and he should be getting back to <br />Inaru this week. Please pray that we will get a good response from these <br />villages. Supposedly the pastors fromone village are out in town right now, so <br />if I happen to see them I will also talk with them about the Bible school. <br />I can think of a few roadblocks that could cause poor attendance at the <br />Bible school. Please pray for the following issues: </p>
<p>-We currently have two terminally ill people in Inaru and one young man in <br />another village was recently diagnosed with liver cancer. If any of these people die <br />before the Bible school, it would be unlikely that anyone would want to <br />attend. </p>
<p>-One man in our village wants to force the local widow to marry him and is also <br />accusing her family of killing his brother and nephew by sorcery. He is <br />threatening police action, and big court proceedings during the Bible school <br />would be very disruptive. </p>
<p>-Their is also a court case coming up regarding an unwed mother. Her family <br />want to put pressure on the father of the baby to marry her. He doesn&#8217;t <br />want to marry her because she is his cousin:-( </p>
<p>-The Inarus have recently started collecting a type of tree bark that Asians <br />buy and use as a seasoning. Everyone is collecting the bark and stockpiling <br />it and that has become their focus. We only had 12 people in church this <br />last Sunday because the rest were gone to find tree bark. </p>
<p>All of these could be problems that Satan could use against us, so please be <br />praying for God&#8217;s Word to go forward and for people to understand Him and <br />commit themselves to Him. </p>
<p>We do appreciate all your prayers for us and your <br />help and encouragement in many ways. Please keep praying. </p>
<p>In Christ, </p>
<p>Jason, Toni, Jedidiah and Ella Jo Stuart</p>
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		<title>Quick Update &#8211; Feb 2008</title>
		<link>http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/2008/02/17/quick-update-feb-2008/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/2008/02/17/quick-update-feb-2008/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 17 Feb 2008 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Just a quick note to let you know what is happening with our Bible school <br />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dear Friends, </p>
<p>Just a quick note to let you know what is happening with our Bible school <br />here. Some ladies from our village went to one of our other villages in the language group this week <br />and came back yesterday and said that no one is planning on coming this next <br />week for the Bible school because they have all gone to their gold camps <br />(panning for gold is one of the sources of income for the villages we have <br />invited). Anyway, I met with our Inaru guys last night and they decided <br />that what would be best would be to postpone the Bible school for a month <br />and then when our family gets back from our annual conference on March 20, <br />then we would do the Bible school whether anyone from other villages shows <br />up or not. This would be for the benefit of a whole new generation of <br />people (pretty much everyone under the age of 20) in our village who haven&#8217;t <br />heard the chronological Bible teaching straight thru since it was first <br />taught in 1994, as well for the people from other villages. Postponing for <br />another month will give the Inarus time to go around to the other villages <br />and promote the Bible school some more. </p>
<p>Thank you for your prayers for the Bible school. We have everything here <br />ready to go. Our mission personnel in town did a mammoth job of printing <br />up a couple hundred Scripture booklets and Bible lessons books for us. <br />Please pray that next month we will have a good crowd here for the Bible <br />school. </p>
<p>In Christ, </p>
<p>Jason and Toni Stuart</p>
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		<title>Feb 2008 Update</title>
		<link>http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/2008/02/03/feb-2008-update/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/2008/02/03/feb-2008-update/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 03 Feb 2008 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Greetings from muddy Inaru, where our airstrip has flooded twice in the last <br />week! We had a nice long dry spell, but that has ended. ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Dear Friends, </p>
<p>Greetings from muddy Inaru, where our airstrip has flooded twice in the last <br />week! We had a nice long dry spell, but that has ended. We are all healthy <br />here with nothing worth complaining about. I know that is an answer to many <br />of your prayers and we thank you for praying. Actually, it is not just <br />because of your prayers. Almost every time our more faithful Inaru <br />believers pray publicly, they pray that we as a family will stay healthy and <br />will be able to live with them until we have finished our job here. </p>
<p>We are in the midst of preparing for our two week &quot;Bible school&quot; that is <br />coming up in the last two weeks of February. At times, I feel a bit <br />overwhelmed by the thought of it and wonder if we have bitten off more than <br />we can chew, so we really need your prayers to see this come off well. Some <br />items to pray specifically for would be: </p>
<p>-Pray that the Inarus would gather enough food to feed all the extra people <br />who will show up in our village. The Inarus are not generally well-known <br />for their hospitality and I am praying that the Bible school doesn&#8217;t close <br />down halfway thru because everyone is hungry. </p>
<p>-Pray that I would be organized and have all the preparations done in time. <br />Right now we have a bunch of girls coming each morning to string traditional <br />beads to make a rope of over 6000 beads, one bead for every year since <br />Creation. We will use this on the first day of teaching to show how long <br />this world has been around and then show when God did key things like the <br />Flood, the Ten Commandments, the Birth of Christ, and some significant <br />events in Papua New Guinea history. Also, I will be doing some skits along <br />with some of the Inaru believers, including a dramatization of the arrest <br />and crucifixtion of Christ. The Inarus have not done drama before as such <br />(though they are great storytellers), so this could end up to be a big flop <br />or a big success. </p>
<p>-Pray that the Holy Spirit would be convicting and preparing the hearts of <br />those who attend, so that they would be open to learn new things from God&#8217;s <br />Word. Pray also that I would be sensitive to the leading of the Holy Spirit <br />as I teach to have wisdom to answer questions that arise and the right <br />illustrations at the right time, etc. </p>
<p>-Pray also for the Inaru church, which seems to be in a spiritual slump right <br />now. Maybe the Bible school will be the shot in the arm they need, but <br />right now most of them are focussed on interpersonal conflicts in the <br />village. Church services have been poory attended lately, though when we <br />meet there are always encouraging little things. Today, for example, a <br />widow named Duwei gave a testimony. Awhile back she was involved in <br />immorality and our elder, Raymond, asked that she not come to church until <br />she was willing to change her behavior. Earlier this week she came to us <br />and said she was very concerned that she felt she was &quot;outside the flock&quot; <br />and wanted to make a change and be involved with the church again. She gave <br />a very nice testimony this morning of how she wanted to do what was right <br />and didn&#8217;t want her children to grow up ignorant of the Lord. So, even <br />though many people are in a slump, the Holy Spirit is continuing His work. </p>
<p>Thanks again to all of you who pray for us and are involved in the work here <br />in many ways. Please at this time also remember to pray for the missionaries in the <br />nearby villages of the&nbsp;Inanbimali people and the Blackwater people, who are teaching God&#8217;s Word for <br />the first time to these people. </p>
<p>In Christ, </p>
<p>Jason, Toni, Jedidiah and Ella Jo Stuart</p>
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		<title>December 2006 Update</title>
		<link>http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/2006/12/02/december-2006-update/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/2006/12/02/december-2006-update/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 02 Dec 2006 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[I was recently reading a publication that gave some prayer requests for the church in general in Papua New Guinea and I was thinking how the Inaru church measured up in the areas that they mentioned. I thought that I would share a "report card" of the Inaru church with you so that you could know some more specific areas in which to strengthen the Inaru believers with your prayers. <br />]]></description>
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<p align="justify">Dear Friends, </p>
<p>We hope you are all enjoying your activities leading up to the Christmas&nbsp;holidays.&nbsp; We are in the town of Goroka now, but will soon be returning to the village and we will be spending Christmas there.&nbsp; A couple other missionaries who work in other locations have accepted our invitation to spend the holidays with us, and a few others will be arriving by boat from a neighboring village just to spend New Year&#8217;s with us, so we certainly won&#8217;t be getting lonely. </p>
<p align="justify">
I was recently reading a publication that gave some prayer requests for the church in general in Papua New Guinea and I was thinking how the Inaru church measured up in the areas that they mentioned.&nbsp; I thought that I would share a &quot;report card&quot; of the Inaru church with you so that you could know some more specific areas in which to strengthen the Inaru believers with your prayers. </p>
<p>BIBLE TEACHING-&nbsp; The Inaru church is being taught successively thru different books of the New Testament. In this area, I would give them a high grade.&nbsp; It is our conviction that expository Bible teaching is what makes for a mature church, and from my point of view the Inaru Bible teachers are doing a good job of presenting the truths of the Scripture to the rest of the believers. </p>
<p>CHURCH LEADERSHIP-&nbsp; We have one ordained elder in Inaru and one other Bible teacher as well as several guys who help with leading songs in the church <br />
services.&nbsp; Though the church is not awash in mature leadership, the current leaders do seek to encourage the other men who are faithful and to include them in serving in the church when possible.&nbsp; In this area, maybe the Inarus would only get an average grade, but we are certainly not discouraged with the current church leadership. </p>
<p>TRANSLATION AND LITERACY-&nbsp; Although the Bible translation is progressing well, I would have to say that the Inarus must get a very low score in the area of literacy.&nbsp;&nbsp;We have a couple dozen literate men and less than a handful of literate women and no progress being made to help the rest of the church become literate. There are literacy materials available and different men have taught the literacy program in the past, but the church as a whole doesn&#8217;t seem to have the heart to do what is necessary to get an active literacy program going.&nbsp; Of course, we can&#8217;t fault them too highly in this, as reading and writing has not been part of their culture in the past and they will not place the emphasis on it that we do.&nbsp; <strong>However, we do ask your prayers that they will see the importance of it and that they will hunger to read God&#8217;s Word for themselves and desire that everyone else be able to read it too. <br />
</strong><br />
FELLOWSHIP WITH OTHER CHURCHES-&nbsp; Most of the Inarus&#8217; contact outside of their village is with villages that do not have a clear Gospel witness.&nbsp; There are some tribes in the area with strong churches that could experience mutual strengthening with the Inarus, but the contact with them is only sporadic.&nbsp; The Inaru church would only get an average grade in this area as <br />
well.&nbsp; <strong>Pray that we can strengthen the ties between the Inaru believers and other believers in the area. <br />
</strong><br />
REACHING THE NEXT GENERATION-&nbsp; I am afraid that in this area, as well, the Inarus don&#8217;t get a high score. The last complete chronological Bible course to lay foundations for salvation was taught 12 years ago, and a whole generation of children has grown up without that teaching.&nbsp; They know some of the truths of Scripture, but there are gaps in their knowledge.&nbsp; <strong>Please pray that the Inarus will make a commitment to see God&#8217;s Word taught to their young people. <br />
</strong><br />
OUTREACH-&nbsp; This is another poor grade for the Inaru church.&nbsp; Our language group has 3 other villages.&nbsp; One village is nominally Catholic with no real knowledge of God&#8217;s Word.&nbsp; Two other villages have an evangelical <br />
denomination and some believers, but also much confusion and much mixing of&nbsp; the old beliefs about sorcery with the parts of the Bible they have heard.&nbsp; In two of these three villages, women have been executed in recent years on suspicion of being witches.&nbsp; In all three villages, the main topic of conversation on any given night is witchcraft and sorcery.&nbsp; The Inarus have <br />
the potential to bring light to these villages.&nbsp; <strong>Please pray that they get a vision for that and see that God can use them to do a miraculous work in these other villages. <br />
</strong><br />
In looking this over it strikes me that the Inaru church is very similar to our Western churches&#8211; very good at maintaining the status quo, but short in the areas that require personal sacrifice.&nbsp; When you pray for your own <br />
church, will you please remember to pray for the Inaru church as well.&nbsp; They&nbsp; are fellow believers in Christ, struggling with the same things you do, and you can do a tremendous service to them by praying. </p>
<p align="justify">We do appreciate all of you who pray and help us in so many ways.&nbsp; We certainly can&#8217;t thank you sufficiently for what you do for us. </p>
<p>In Christ, </p>
<p align="justify">
Jason and Toni and Jedidiah Stuart </p>
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		<link>http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/2006/11/23/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 23 Nov 2006 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Please pray for the Inaru church, as we are out of the village for a month. Pray that they will be growing in the truth of God&#8217;s Word as they are taught from Revelation.
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Please pray for the Inaru church, as we are out of the village for a month. Pray that they will be growing in the truth of God&#8217;s Word as they are taught from Revelation.</p>
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		<title>Nov 2006 Update</title>
		<link>http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/2006/11/05/nov-2006-update/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/2006/11/05/nov-2006-update/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 05 Nov 2006 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[NEW BIBLE TEACHER- While we were gone, Raymond decided that one of the other man named Matthew (Weba) should be involved in the Bible teaching. <br />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><!--StartImportPhoto--><a href="http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/files/2006/11/1010_6318.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-104" style="margin-right: 10px;margin-bottom: 5px" src="http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/files/2006/11/1010_6318.jpg" alt="Raymond teaching from the book of Revelation" width="300" /></a><!--EndImportPhoto-->Dear Friends, <br />
We have been back in the village for 2 weeks and have another two weeks&nbsp; before we leave again to involved in some more&nbsp; linguistic/translation workshops. Its hard to feel settled when we are in&nbsp;and out so much, but hopefully that will slow up soon. While we were gone last time, there were some interesting developments in the Inaru church. </p>
<p>NEW BIBLE TEACHER- While we were gone, Raymond decided that one of the other men named Matthew (Weba) should be involved in the Bible teaching. <br />
Matthew was the first believer in our village and has always been faithful to attend the Bible teaching. I personally have had some reservations about him being in church leadership because of some moral lapses and troubles in the past (not too distant past, in my mind). However, Raymond feels that it is all right for Matthew to start and I will trust Raymond&#8217;s judgment on the issue, as he is the elder/pastor of the Inaru church. The truth is that Raymond is feeling a bit &quot;burnt out&quot; from being the only teacher for so long and is just glad to have someone to help him. Anyway, please pray for Matthew, that we will see integrity of character and faithfulness in his new ministry. </p>
<p>TEACHING ON REVELATION GOING AHEAD- In general, the believers are very interested in the teaching from the book of Revelation (where else can you hear about 7-headed beasts and dragons and stuff?). When Raymond does the review, he gets lots of good answers, especially from our usually silent women. Toni ordered a picture scroll from a missionary in the Philippines that goes thru the events depicted in Revelation and having colorful pictures is a real asset to keeping people interested. Our booklets of <br />
Revelation are some of the most in-demand Scripture portions that we have had printed for a long time. We are thankful for the interest and do pray that the teaching will bring conviction to some people and encouragement to <br />
many. </p>
<p>Otherwise, we are keeping busy with the usual. I am translating Acts and also spending time nursing along our sick, elderly, pretty much senile tractor. We are thankful to all of you who pray for us and help us in so <br />
many ways. </p>
<p>One more prayer request of an urgent nature: In our last letter, I mentioned a neighboring tribe where missionaries were starting to translate Scripture portions in preparation to present the Gospel. Last week, one of the missionary wives was taken ill with an undiagnosed illness and was medivaced to Australia. The doctors still are not sure as to the problem. <br />
We know that our adversary the Devil doesn&#8217;t want God&#8217;s truth to spread and I think that this is one example of how he tries to thwart God&#8217;s work. <br />
Please pray for recovery for Andrea Holmquist and their family&#8217;s quick return to the tribe and that the darkness of the tribal people will soon be lifted (the missionary team is hoping to start teaching in April). </p>
<p>In Christ, </p>
<p>Jason, Toni and Jedidiah Stuart </p>
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		<title>Oct 2006 Update</title>
		<link>http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/2006/10/05/oct-2006-update/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/2006/10/05/oct-2006-update/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Oct 2006 04:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[After a week of making a trip to several villages around Inaru, I am now back with my wife and son. For a long time I have been thinking about how to encourage churches in villages where our mission used to have missionaries, and last week our Inaru pastor Raymond and I had a chance to visit churches in 3 villages. <br />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><!--StartImportPhoto--><a href="http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/files/2006/10/1010_6403.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-104" style="margin-right: 10px;margin-bottom: 5px" src="http://www.ntm.org/wp/jason_stuart/files/2006/10/1010_6403.jpg" alt="Canoe travel" width="300" /></a><!--EndImportPhoto-->Dear Friends, </p>
<p>After a week of making a trip to several villages around Inaru, I am now back with my wife and son. For a long time I have been thinking about how to encourage churches in villages where our mission used to have missionaries, and last week our Inaru pastor Raymond and I had a chance to visit churches in 3 villages. </p>
<p>Raymond and I planned on first hiking from Inaru over to Wenim. Raymond had been there many years before and felt he could find the way all right, but at the last moment the Lord brought two Wenim men to Inaru and they were able to go with us and show us the trail. First we paddled about 3 hours in Raymond&#8217;s canoe and then began hiking. The hike took 4 and a half hours over a small ridge of mountains but a lot of that time was spent chasing fish, turtles, birds, and anything else that looked like it make a good supper (at the end of the day, we have 4 large fish, one large eel, one water bird, and 2 turtles; I ended up carrying the bird besides my bag; the other guys were all heavily loaded with fish and canoe paddles besides their bags). On the other side of the mountains, we found Solomon, one of the church leaders from Wenim, waiting for us with a canoe. He had gotten the message that we were coming and was waiting at the right place at the right time (not usually the way things happen, but I was glad because that hike sure let me feel how many extra pounds I have put on since marriage:-) </p>
<p>We had a good meeting with the Wenim church leaders that night, and the next day Solomon paddled us downriver to&nbsp;the next village&nbsp;(in spite of a painful boil on his leg; what a servant!).&nbsp;Hopefully our meeting with them was an encouragement and the next day Solomon continued paddling us downriver to another village that had had missionaries but had since phased out. The missionaries there never had the opportunity to do Bible translation before they left and the church does everything in Pidgin English, the trade language in Papua New Guinea. They have always been a struggling band of Christians, but I was encouraged to see them stronger on this visit than any other time I had ever visited there. I know the believers in each of these villages would appreciate your prayers as they stand on their own without a lot of encouragement from the outside. If you would like to know more specific prayer requests for each village, we would be glad to send them to those who request it. </p>
<p>From that village , a boat then picked us up and we drove for 4 hours to the Blackwater people, where we currently have missionaries working.&nbsp; While I was there, we checked the first Scripture translation in their language and the missionaries hope to start teaching the Word after the New Year. Could you please pray that the darkness in this area will be overcome by the light of Christ? </p>
<p>Toni and Jedidiah and I are now in Goroka, where we will be participating in a seminar for missionaries who are just starting Bible translation. We will return to Inaru on October 18. This letter had no prayer requests for the Inaru church, but most of you already know how to pray for them. It was encouraging that while Raymond was with me visiting these other villages that two Inaru men (Job and Matthew) took over the Bible teaching in his absence. Though they still are not to the place of being ordained as church leaders, it was a good positive step. </p>
<p>Thanks to all you for your faithful prayers for us and the Inarus and for the support and encouragement. </p>
<p>In Christ, </p>
<p>Jason, Toni, and Jedidiah Stuart</p>
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