
Ivanga man from Papua New Guinea
Dream with me for a moment. As you know, my wife and I are currently in our final year of church planting training with New Tribes Mission. But dream with me 15 years from now. We will have left our official training long behind. We will have studied Spanish, moved to Paraguay, and into a tribal location. After several years of studying the tribal language and culture we will have taught this unreached people group starting in Genesis and teaching clear through to our Savior Jesus Christ. Lord-willing we will have believers in this good news which will constitute the fledgling church. While we are discipling these believers and training leadership we will concurrently be translating God’s Word into their language. After all this hard hard work, (which will probably be more like 25 years) with great smiles and indescribabale emotion we will present them with their very own copy of the Bible, for the first time in the history of the world, in their language.
But what if they can’t read or write? This is consistently is the case of people groups that we work with as New Tribes Mission. It is rare that we work among literate people. In fact, it is more common for us to work among people that have never held a piece of paper or pencil in their hands! While our unapologetic goal is always to see a mature church planted among the unreached people groups of the world, we cannot deny the need to occassionally do things that on the surface don’t seem super spiritual. Literacy is one of those things.
I have become convinced of the need for people to become literate. Having access to the scriptures is of the utmost importance if the child of God is to grow in Him. There are many examples in church history of the general populace being in spiritual darkness because they did not have access to the Word of God. They were dependant on church leaders to tell them what was true and what was false, rather than read what God said for themselves. Unfortunately these church leaders weren’t always accurate in what they shared from God’s word. Simply put: people need personal access to communication with God, and God communicates greatly through His Word.
It’s one thing to be convinced of the need for people to be literate to have access to Bible, but its another thing to actually see them become literate. Picture yourself standing in front of a group of about 30 people, in the rainforest somewhere, with bugs biting, trying to decide what to write on the blackboard. These people have never heard of reading and writing. What are you going to teach lesson one? You look back at the crowd of people staring at you. A dog chases a cat through the middle of the classroom. This is not going well…
I wouldn’t have had a clue where to begin unless I had experienced the week that I just experienced here at the Missionary Training Center. Our class for literacy has been showing us where to start with teaching, how to develop literacy materials, and all the other things that go along with that. I have to admit its been quite a challanging class for me, but fortunately thats why God gives us a helpmeet, for Jen excels exceptionally well at this subject.
Praise God for the education system that we have in our country where a large number of our people are literate. And praise God for a faithful translation of the Bible in english. We are so blessed with access to these precious scriptures. Let’s turn a dream of an unreached people group reading God’s Word into reality as we expand the reach of the gospel (and literacy!).
Jon and Jen Quast Preparing for Tribal Church Planting in Paraguay 