Thursday, March 29, 2007

Clay Pots ~ Elders Visiting From Home!


All of us Worshipping with the Tobo Church this Morning!

This past week we had 2 of our elders and their wives from one of our home churches (Oakwood church, formerly KMEFC) take the daring (and long!) journey to the Tobo tribe of Papua New Guinea!! It brought tears to our eyes just watching the Tobo believers shake hands, worship, and pray with the representatives from our church at home! Can you envision it? This is what the body of Christ is all about! This is what heaven is going to be like! All of us worshipping God together, except with no language or cultural barriers. Today the Meitler's gave their testimony to the Tobo Church and next week the Marris' will be sharing theirs. The Church just couldn't stop clapping with excitement from hearing that there are so many of you who are praying for them back in America to stay strong in the faith!! They were overjoyed to hear that you are not just praying for us, but specifically for them!

Thank you for sending us here, this is what we dreamed about for so many years. Thank you Oakwood Church for sending the elders. They have been a tremendous encouragement to us at a much needed time. Not to mention the chocolate, candy, and gifts of love from all of you kind of helps too:-)

They will be visiting for 9 days and have already been a tremendous help in preparing Hebrews lessons for Jason to translate into the Tobo language, cutting and laminating literacy materials, washing dishes, and being fill-in Grandparents for the kiddos:-)

His Clay Pots,
Jason, Kellie, Micah, Sophia, & Malachi Knapp,
Bill & Lynne Marris,
Neal & Carol Meitler,
& The Tobo Church

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Survey Results! [Flashback:2/26/2002]

As we were flying into the Tobo airstrip my partner calls out from behind me, "Look, they wrote the number of our plane on the airstrip!!"

Sure enough, there it was, burnt in big black letters: P2-NTM. We landed, got out and started hiking up the trail to the village; one of the boys grabbed my pack and started carrying it. I asked him, "Who wrote those letters on the airstrip?"

He said, "I did."

So I asked him, "When did you do it, last week?"

To which he casually replied, "No, about noon today...I wrote it, and you came."

WE HAD ONLY BEEN THERE FOR 10 MINUTES THE WEEK BEFORE, and we never said when we were coming back...if ever. The incredible thing is, we hadn't been able to get out of Madang as scheduled, we had to wait until 1:00 p.m. because of bad weather...and even as we left, I didn't think we would be able to land, the clouds were thick with thunderstorms. But when we got to the Tobo area, it was all clear; PTL.

Our time in Tobo was very encouraging...to say the least! We arrived and gathered some language info, some cultural info, and tried to find out all we could about them. That night, all the village big men (and about 50-75 others) sat down with us in the round meeting house. They asked us who we were, and what we do. So we told them. They were very excited. They have never heard the gospel in their own language, and they do not have a Bible translation in their own language. Most of the tribes around them do have a translation and so the Tobo people feel that they are left out...that they are the last ones to receive this good news. The tribe is hemmed in by mountain on 3 sides, the nearest language group over the mountains is a two days hike (for them). Down river from them there is another language group, they are only about a days hike away.

The following day, village leaders from a few surrounding villages came to us to talk with us as well. By the end of the second day, we had received a very clear invitation to live with them, learn their language and culture, and to teach them the Bible. We were blown away when they asked us, "Do your people want grass roofs, or tin...because we can't afford a tin roof for them." They were offering to build and PAY FOR our houses! We assured them that that was not their responsibility, but ours. Amazing! We also walked out of the village with 5 big grocery bags of food...they just kept going to the gardens the whole time we were there and bringing us pineapples, bananas, passion fruit, tomatoes, onions, cucumbers,... a very generous people.

We estimate that the tribe, as a whole, has no less than 3000 people, and possibly up to 5000. All within probably a 4 mile radius. They are located in the mountains north of Lae; almost 6000 ft. above sea level, so there are no mosquitoes and no malaria. Contrary to what you might think, it is COLD at night. It was probably in the 50s at night, but nice and warm during the day. (So we are going to have to break out the long sleeves:)

ANNNDDD, the other news you all have been waiting for! It looks like we have some wonderful partners!!! They come to us from the Sepik region where they had originally planned to go. But they heard about this area that we were looking at, and we both felt it would be worth looking into. So they were on the survey as well... You want to know their names, don't you? Are you in suspense? There names are Chad and Janeene Mankins. Chad is the son of Dave Mankins, the hostage that was taken and killed in Panama...the ones we have been praying for for many years. Chad has been through SIL linguistic training, and he will be the main linguist/translator on our team. Janeene is also an MK from Columbia, her parents were missionaries with SIL when she was younger. We are very excited to have team members. We have been praying for partners for a couple years now, and it is awesome to see how God has brought us together with a common goal of reaching this particular tribe. The circumstances that have brought us together are truly of God, and none of us.

We want to thank you for your continued support and encouraging letters, emails, and packages. Your prayers are felt, and appreciated. God is definitely using all of you! When I look back to where Kellie and I were a year ago, I just marvel at all that the Lord has done: churches, support, prayers, friends, partners, a tribe...all point to an awesome God who loves tribal people and desires that they hear about HIM so that they can glorify HIM! What a privilege! What a testimony of the awesome love, power, and working of God!

We are planning on going back into the tribe in the next couple of weeks to walk from village to village and to spend time building relationships; mostly letting them know that we are there to teach the whole tribe, and not just one village. Our next update will hopefully be after all of that is finished. Keep praying, we have a lot of work ahead of us.

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Found! ~ Zango



“My whole life I knew I had to believe in Jesus, but I also thought I had to be perfect or God would send me to hell. Now I am at peace because I know that I cannot make myself perfect, but in God's sight, I am perfect now because I simply believed in Jesus. And Jesus' blood washed all my sins away.” ~ Zango

Zango is our village doctor. He is 70 years old. He has been to the universities, been well educated, gone to "church" his whole life, but had never found grace. He struggled his whole life to keep God's law because he thought that if he disobeyed, he would be sent to hell. He thought that Jesus had died to wash our sins away, but that he needed to constantly live a good life, or all would be lost and go to hell. So he lived in fear, with a constant burden to "perform" or God would strike him down.

But now this man is at peace. During the phase 1 teaching, he found the grace of God. Jesus did it all because Zango couldn't do it. Jesus paid it all because Zango couldn't pay it. Jesus died so that Zango wouldn't have to. Zango is now resting in what Jesus did for him, and he can't understand why the rest of the people just don't "get it together" and listen to this message and believe. "This is eternal life, and they are searching for food that will die with the man who eats it," he says.

Pray that Zango would continue to grow in faith and in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. Pray that he would not "default" back to works as a means of maintaining his salvation.

His Clay Pots,
Jason, Kellie, Micah, Sophia, and Malachi Knapp & The Tobo Church

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Found ~ Paulas



“By the grace of God, Jesus has washed my sins away, and I am now clean (righteous) in God’s sight. I believe, and do not need to do anything else to gain it! No one can ever tell me again that my sins will separate me from God, because even my future sins are washed away by Jesus’ blood! Thank you Jesus!”
-- Paulas

Paulas has been a pastor in the local religion here for the past 15 years. He has been studying the Scriptures and trying to apply and preach them accurately; but his theology was off a little bit. He didn't understand what the death of Christ meant for us: that Jesus died once for all, so that all our sins could be forgiven; that salvation was not based on works, but by grace alone through faith alone in Christ alone; and that all he had to do was believe it! Have you ever read the story in Acts 17:24-28? It is a great story of Apollos, who was greatly used of God, but his theology was off a little bit, so Priscilla and Aquila came and "explained to him the way of God more accurately." Apollos took the correction, and became even a greater evangelist for the Lord. I think this is the case with Paulas.

A month and a half ago, before he was saved, I finished talking to Paulas on one occasion, and he said, "What you are saying seems very short, but powerful. What I have been saying seems very long, and difficult." Then he went home and thought about it for a week or so.

So I went back and talked with him again, this time with Tingon. After we went through key stories from Genesis to Christ, Tingon pointed out that salvation has always been by faith and not by works. And Paulas finally said, "I believe it! It is true. Jesus did it all, and there is nothing left to be done. Jesus said, 'It is finished' because he had finished it. Now I am one with God. Your way is short and powerful, because it is God's way."

This man's testimonies in our meetings have been amazing, and he has already been applying scriptures which he knew to his life in brand new ways. Pray for his continued growth, and for continued zeal for the Lord.

His Clay Pots,
Jason, Kellie, Micah, Sophia, and Malachi Knapp

Friday, March 09, 2007

Wanted ~ Rigo



Name: Rigo
Family: wife and 5 kids
Village: Dapilu
Stats: Rigo is a great friend of ours. He has been Chad's main translation helper from the beginning, and he has done a super job. But I talked to him a few weeks ago, and he is struggling with the job of translating because he believes one thing, but God's Word is saying another. He is a part of a religion that does NOT believe: 1) that Jesus is God, 2) that God is a trinity, 3) that there is a hell, 4) that Jesus could forgive all our sins, 5) or that God would punish unbelievers to eternity in hell (they would just cease to exist). So he sees that God's Word says one thing, but he is afraid of the leaders in his religion, and what it would mean if he started to or tried to believe something else. For him it would mean banishment and ridicule. Not to mention, he would have to admit that his belief which he has held for many years is false (even though supposedly founded on Jehovah's Word).
Pray: I talked to Rigo and shared the gospel with him as clearly as I could. Also one of our believers, Paulas, came with me, and he too shared many important things from the Scriptures with him. Pray that the Spirit would be working in his heart, and that he would believe the gospel of grace. His heart is in turmoil right now, and we need prayer that he would choose to believe in Jesus' finished work on the cross.

Monday, March 05, 2007

Clay Pots ~ Literacy Program On the Road to Becoming Indigenized



This past week Jason held another Literacy Teacher's Training Course for 4 of the literacy graduates who were interested in teaching the next batch of literacy classes. At the same time, he was able to train/disciple 2 men to take over the Teacher's Training Course (they will teach it themselves next time around). It's an exciting time in our ministry when we are now able to take something like the Literacy program and begin to take steps towards handing it entirely over to the Tobo church to be in charge of! Literacy classes will be started again in various villages in the next couple months.

Also, at every believer's meeting Jason gives the believers opportunity to take turns reading the verses out loud. Even though it is painfully slow to our American standards, it is a joy to hear them reading and helping each other when they stumble through it. They have very little material written in their own language to practice reading from, so what better way to practice than with Scriptures in their own language?!

Continue to pray for the maturity and growing of the believers. They are being introduced to newer concepts such as prayer and worship. They know what prayer and worship is, but the average person usually doesn't do it... it is only for the religious "elite". So they are extremely shy and uncomfortable doing things publicly in front of others and this is going to take some time getting used to. Pray that we can be a good example to them of these things. And that our times together would not look "westernized" but "Tobo-ized" or, in other words: indigenous. That is what we want, an indigenous Tobo church in every way.

His Clay Pots,
Jason, Kellie, Micah, Sophia, Malachi & The Tobo Church

Saturday, March 03, 2007

We send and receive our e-mails through a very slow remote radio link which isn't always reliable. At this moment we have a loaner radio modem while ours is in Australia to be diagnosed and fixed. Would you be willing to sign up for our updates on our web page? Each new post will be automatically delivered to your e-mail. We will go ahead and keep sending you our update via our e-mail address but if something were to happen it would be really helpful only having to send out 1 update to our web page and that way no one's e-mail would get lost while we deal with technical problems:-)

For those of you who know of people who don't have e-mail or internet access, we do send out a snail mail newsletter twice a year. Just let us know and we can add them to the list.

Thanks so much!
Knapp's


Note: To subscribe to the email address you can enter your email address in the box in the sidebar and click submit.
Be sure to follow the directions on the page that will come up when you click the "Subscribe" button and follow the directions in the confirmation email you will receive shortly after.