Posts Tagged ‘pai’

Goddard Grapevine – October 2009

Friday, October 30th, 2009

ggoct

Read below our ministry update for October 2009.

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Acércate a los Pai Tavytera video clip (español)

Friday, August 21st, 2009

Watch this video clip in Spanish about the Pai Tavytera people!

The Pai give their input on mobilization

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Mike visiting with tribal people

“We can\’t always be begging our wives for their chickens!” was the comment of a Pai Tavytera community leader and faithful church member to my question about the funding of their church outreaches.

“We will either have to have outside funding or stick to outreaches that are within our budget.”

After returning from a 5-day trip to the bush in northern Paraguay and just a few kilometers from the Brazilian boarder, I\’m confronted with even more questions than when I first set out. What role are tribal churches and their members to play in the Great Commission in Paraguay and beyond? Does the completion of the Great Commission lie solely on the shoulders of wealthy and educated people groups? Are the poor exempt from the responsibility to take the Gospel to the “ends of the earth” because of their financial limitations and lack of education? (more…)

Are you a jealous husband?

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Pai church

How many times have you walked into church and wondered to yourself “people will think I’m a jealous husband if I sit next to my wife, perhaps today I’ll sit with the guys instead”?

This is a real question for Ruben, a Pai Tavytera believer from Paraguay, as he steps through the doorway of the church each Sunday and scans the scene that lies before him. On his right, he sees mostly men and boys seated intermittently on the back-less hard wooden benches, and to his left are the young girls and women with their infants. His feet kick up dust from the dirt floor of the church as he makes his way to the middle and decides that today he will sit next to his wife. He knows there will be talk among the people because what he just did is not considered the actions of a “normal Pai man.” But Ruben is not sitting by his wife because he is afraid that another man will single her out and run away to another village as is an all too common practice, but they are together because they enjoy one another’s company and he is proud that she is his wife.

The outward behavior of Christianity in an animistic society will look much different then what many westerners are accustomed to observing. Some form will take on similar and familiar traits, but genuine expression of Christianity takes place first at a worldview level and is observed through small yet significant choices made on a daily basis by husbands and fathers like Ruben.

As you step through the doorway of your church this Sunday, remember to pray for Ruben and other Pai men as they are faced with choices you can’t even imagine or comprehend, yet are significant to the furthering of the Gospel.