Monday, January 21, 2013

PNG Looking Back and to the Future




Papua New Guinea even today is one of the most remote places on earth... Not to mention back in 1948 when the Missouri Synod arrived.


The Enga Provence is located in the highlands between 7,000 and 9,000 feet above sea level.



From the International Airport at Port Moresby, no roads exist to reach the Enga Highlands. Light aircraft and by foot are the primary ways to reach the remote regions.


Where there are roads, travel can be treacherous with frequent wash outs, giant potholes, and other hazards. If this is true today, how much more so in 1948?

Yet by the mid-1960s an elaborate system of mission stations had been established, complete with electrical generation facilities, repair shops, even a wood shop for furniture so both the missionaries and the Good News Lutheran Church could have tables and chairs for classrooms and for the missionary homes. Hospitals and schools were established... The missionary task operated along the lines of Witness, Mercy, Life Together -- body and soul care.

The largest and strongest partner churches of the Missouri Synod are the ones where we had the largest and longest presence. Walking along side someone over the long term is much more effective than short term endeavors.



A map from the 1960s of the Lutheran Mission Stations.


A text description of the mission stations.



Still much potential and much work in PNG. For instance, the GLC-PNG hymnal in Tok Pisin and Enga has been out of print for 25 years. The entire Book of Concord has never been translated into either of these languages. Yet the congregations are taught the Lord's Prayer, the Creed, and the Small Catechism.



A picture of the Third Commandment with meaning in a GLC-PNG school.



Governor Ipatas requested that the LCMS send teachers to teach in the schools, and for missionaries to return to help shore up the institutions established by the LCMS 40-50 years ago. Many people in PNG government and business were the products of Lutheran schools originally established by the Missouri Synod.



While we visited The Good News Lutheran Church, time and again people said the children are the future. We need to teach them to be the leaders of the church.

The GLC-PNG is a product of the LCMS mission endeavors. The people of the GLC-PNG clearly see that The Lord sent the Missouri Synod to bring them the Gospel. Let us remember how The Lord used us and look to the future on how he may continue to use us.

- Posted in Tokyo, Japan, by Rev. Dr. Albert B. Collver, Director of Church Relations.

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Enga Governor Ipatas




After traveling from the Enga Highlands to Mt. Hagen, then flying to Port Moresby on the coast, we had the opportunity to meet with the Governor Ipatas of the Enga Provence. He was in Port Moresby to meet with Parliament. The governor was pleased with the LCMS' recent visit and asked us to consider sending more missionaries and teachers to Papua New Guinea.



Currently, Governor Ipatas is overseeing the construction of the Enga Teachers College. The governor was educated in LCMS mission schools and has been a strong proponent of education connected to the church ever sense.

It was a privilege and honor that the the governor took time to meet with us.

- posted 22 January 2013 by Rev. Dr. Albert Collver in Hong Kong.

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Sunday, January 20, 2013

Wittenberg and PNG




When Bishop Nic and General Secretary Ezekiel Peter visited Saint Louis last fall, they heard about the Wittenberg Project. Upon returning to Papua New Guinea, Bishop Nic asked the GLC-PNG to raise money for the Wittenberg Project.



During the service on Saturday, 19 January 2013, where more than 2,000 people attended, the GLC-PNG collected an offering for the Wittenberg Project.



GLC-PNG Church Council Members counting the offering for Wittenberg.



On Sunday, 20 January 2013, we worshiped in a local congregation in Irelyia, where Rev. Dr. Willard Burce established a school for children and where Rev. Dr. David Birner once had been stationed, also collected an offering for the Wittenberg Project.

In total the GLC-PNG raised about $3000. This is incredible.

In the book of Acts, the Macedonians took up a collection for Jerusalem. Here something similar occurred when the GLC-PNG took a collection for the Wittenberg project.

- Rev. Dr. Albert B Collver in Mambisanda, Enga Provence, PNG.

- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Friday, January 18, 2013

GLC-PNG National Pastors Conference


On 18 January 2013, the Confession of St Peter, approximately 1,000 pastors, evangelists, and lay people attended the Good News Lutheran Church National Pastors' Conference.

Rev. Drs. Albert Collver and John Mehl were welcomed by a crowd of several hundred who line the street at Wabag Lutheran Church.

The youth choir and mamas group sang songs of welcome.
One of the songs went something like this:

"Enga was in Darkness but the LCMS brought the Gospel to us in 1948. Things were getting dark again in Enga, but in 2013 The Lord sent the LCMS again to bring the Gospel once again to Enga. We do not deserve this grace. We are unworthy. We give thanks to The Lord."

Dr. Collver presented to the pastors on the Book of 1st Corinthians.

Dr. Collver presented to the pastors on the Book of 1st Corinthians. 
152 GLC pastors attended.

It was truly an incredible experience. Solo deo Gloria.

- Wabag, Enga Highlands, PNG, Rev. Dr. Albert Collver.

Lake Birip in Enga Highlands

Today, after the National Pastors' Conference of the Good News Lutheran Church (GLC) in Papua New Guinea, we walked to Lake Birip. The lake is above St Timothy Seminary in Birip. The lake is about 6,500 feet above sea level.