Please help to ignite the Great Re-Awakening in Europe

Pioneer3mm

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Thanks, very much this is of great help. Read on a few of these links and it looks like, if I'm correct then Bosnia and Herzegovina would also be included? As would Macedonia, even though those further north in the peninsula. It's so encouraging to see this, as it seems there's already organized interest and mission focus on the Window, with a lot of forward evangelical planning to both learn from, and contribute to. One other question if you happen to know, are there actual books, or at least magazines or pamphlets also talking about this? Only bring this up, as we want to incorporate mentions and planning around the Window into our recruitment trips, and into our lectures and group talks. Part of our readings in prep for our missions, it comes from full chapters in books, with a lot of ideas that our members can read on, then chew and digest for a while when figuring their plans and specific mission proposals.

Thinking about books that would perhaps, yield some information on experiences of missions that have focussed on the Window, maybe first person accounts from missionaries who have preached and evangelized in multiple countries. Or better yet, from perspective of converts, especially in countries like Albania, Syria, Turkey, Algeria, Morocco or other North African countries, such as Tunisia or Egypt, who have turned to preach in the 10/40 Window. We did some looking up in books but it's hard to search for that info, it's buried in chapters and doesn't come in search results. Or maybe a dedicated chapter within a book that might be mainly on different subject.
'Operation World'
- Jason Mandryk
*Paperback
---
'Pray for the World'
- A Prayer Resource from Operation World.
*Kindle eBook
---
'An Insider's Guide to Praying For The World'
- inspiring faith stories
- on the ground insights
- Brian C Stiller
*Kindle eBook
 
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Inhocsigno

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"Thinking about books that would perhaps, yield some information on experiences of missions that have focussed on the Window, maybe first person accounts from missionaries who have preached and evangelized in multiple countries."

Greetings Joey,
In addition to the excellent resources and information that Pioneer has given here, there were several books and informative pieces that many of us were introduced to on the 10/40 Window back when we were in early training as missionaries and recruiters. I can't recall all of them at the moment. but as regarding your specific question here, one I do remember off the top of my head was called something like "Praying through the gateway cities" (within the 10/40 Window), author I believe is Pete Wagner from the slideshow we had back then.

The book in this case tackles what you mentioned in your question, journeying preachers going through multiple cities within the Window. And I do believe several accounts were in fact of Albania and the Balkans near where you and your team are focused, not to mention Turkey, eastern Mediterranean and the general Levant. If I am recalling correctly, I believe this was also one of the first times an overseas ministry team had mentioned the idea of a focus on converting Turkish, Albanian and North African communities in Europe, who would be especially fervent and willing to bring the Gospel back to their home countries. An approach that has been very fruitful for us not only in fortifying churches in Europe, but also in building a team of ministers to preach in some of the most important areas of the 10/40 window in SE Europe and in the near East and North Africa. Several of those books are the reason we have structured our ministries in Europe as we do, with families from ex. the US, Australia, Brazil and Canada emigrating there permanently with our families and setting up roots there (albeit often in the countries of our ancestors where we already have roots anyway). This sort of permanent commitment makes it much easier for us to fully fit in with the surrounding communities, and to work with communities of converts in a sustained manner that helps to encourage them to bring the ministry to their home countries in the 10/40 window regions.

There are a number of others that we used which were quite helpful on the same topic, and some additional pieces from magazines and tracts. I will see what else I can find out.
 
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JoeySoley

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'Operation World'
- Jason Mandryk
*Paperback
---
'Pray for the World'
- A Prayer Resource from Operation World.
*Kindle eBook
---
'An Insider's Guide to Praying For The World'
- inspiring faith stories
- on the ground insights
- Brian C Stiller
*Kindle eBook
wow thanks Pioneer3mm, thanks both of you for this recommended reading. We were chatting about some of the articles and book references, it's right up in line with a lot of the things we were thinking and talking about to help organize missions around. I guess we're in a little corner of the 10/40 Window up in the Balkans and around Turkey and Greece, but it seems to be an important one from those readings. And it makes us even more excited to be doing our part.

It's like the window is a little capsule to help explain a lot of the cultural, historical, social and geographic significance of why we set up and send the missions where and how we do. We're already prepping some talks and lessons in the window, and seems like it's already a great way to help spur some interest and recruitment of families to come to these areas, really condense a lot of what we set up to communicate.

Thank you both again. and if you have any other ideas on good articles and books, please feel free to post them up here. You've added another big and fast growing missionary team to the groups interested in spreading news about the window and all the things we can do to bring the Word there!
 
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JoeySoley

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and on this topic, we got a glorious update from back in the field in Albania, a small group of our shepherds in a small hamlet outside Ksamil. About three-quarters of the village not only converted, but actively church-going and even founding their own churches! Some of them were among our own inspirations that lit the fire under our own feet to move our family to Greece and begin evangelizing in the regions. So, it was a source of great excitement to hear that their own hard work has led to this beautiful outcome. This, I imagine is what the authors and planners of the 10/40 window missions had in mind.
 
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Inhocsigno

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Greetings Joey,
That's great work, it's truly wonderful to hear those developments as it was precisely this sort of achievement many visionaries of the 10/40 Window and the missions in Europe had envisioned. Some of us mission veterans are digging into some of our resources and texts going back into the 1990's but what you're seeing around Ksamil is indeed what was envisioned decades ago in those early planning tracts. It's a big part of why our own Sunbelt church network centered around our group of multi denominational churches in Texas, has re-directed virtually all our resources to the European missions, and shaped how those missions are conducted, which it appears you and your group ahve also adopted.

I remember as a young whipper-snapper then, our mission leader handing out photocopies of passages from one of the books talking about not only how to make the European missions more effective, but also to use them as springboards to reach into the MENA region that had been so tough for us to reach before. The plan being a form of "immersive missions" in Europe that would bring each of us permanently as a family unit from North America into Europe and make our families fully integrated into the region, generally through ancestral links and raising our children there as citizens of the nations we moved to (hence the "this is our new home" emphasis). And then, importantly, using our new ministry footholds in the EU to provide a base for newly converted circulating migrant workers (including some refugees) who were moving constantly back and forth and back again, from and back to the Balkans, Middle East and North Africa, to bring the Gospel themselves into those regions.

I also remember back in those early planning days, that observers outside the mission efforts and even outside our church network in general, being fascinated by the ingenuity, foresight and effectiveness of that system, how for the first time it's given us sustained reach into portions of the Window esp in the MENA countries. We were discussing recently what we could recall from those texts, and at least one of the authors who drafted the core ideas had been in the Foreign Service throughout the region also serving in Bosnia and Kosovo during the Balkans wars of the 1990's, used that knowledge to craft a plan that would make the missions more sustained and effective. His most important breakthrough was to realize that to bring the Gospel into MENA countries, the voices of Christ's Word had to be the sons and daughters of those countries themselves, not outsiders and certainly not Westerners identified with any kind of colonial history, as they would lack the kind of intimate cultural and community knowledge needed and spark reflexive resistance in MENA regions.

But a special opportunity came about thanks to the unique character of circular migration between EU countries and the Mediterranean, with the large majority of labor migrants returning back home to the Middle East or North Africa after building savings, and Balkans refugees staying longer but still traveling back to Bosnia-Herzegovina, Macedonia and Kosovo and Albania often. By moving ourselves to European Union countries and attending and establishing churches in Europe, especially with ancestral links and our children being raised and fully identifying with the nations there--attending the local schools and speaking the language at home as much as possible--we would gain acceptance in the community and our churches would take hold. From there, we could build the local networks necessarily to bring the Gospel to the populations involved in the circular migration, and they would go back to the places in the countries of the Window and establish a church presence where we never could. This is part of why our own churches esp down in Texas have been so heavily emphasizing missions and a permanent relocation of our families in France and Germany to advance their missions there. And if anything, our task has become even easier in the last two decades, with free movement policies in the EU allowing our relocated families to freely move across European countries and plant the seeds of new churches much farther and wider than we could before.

We were going over some recollections recently of one of those mission planners from the 1990's drawing a map with curving arrows leading from the European base countries, where our families would move to and settle down in, into countries of the Window from Macedonia and Bosnia down into the mountainous mixed Berber and Arab regions of Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia, on into Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Iran and especially Turkey. All places we could not effectively venture due to sensitivities about colonial histories, but where circulating migrant workers recently converted and fervent members of our churches in Europe, both established and revitalized and newly built, could go in the return migration portion of their journeys. Founding their own churches and bringing their family and friends, even village elders and leaders, into the warm embrace of our Lord and the Good Word of the Gospels.

I distinctly recall a grateful pastor from Algeria coming to speak to us and thank us for this two decades ago, who had been converted and founding his own church back in his family's home village this way. All thanks to the efforts, kindness and ministries of one of our members from South Carolina who had brought her family to France--where he had been born and worked for 15 years after schooling, but then after his conversion, feeling the calling to bring the Good Word of the Lord back to his family's rural Algerian community, that likely had not heard the Word of the Lord in at least 1,200 years, from when the Byzantine Empire had built the first churches there. And another pastor just 5 years ago from Syria doing the same--his church still growing and going strong despite the civil war there, grateful for one of our church members from the Texas German belt in the Panhandle through Oklahoma and Kansas, who'd brought his family back to settle in Germany and met him there. The Syrian pastor was a young man when he came as a refugee to Hamburg, lost and initially hostile to the Christian faith and people, until he heard our relocated church member singing Christmas carols with his family and other locals on a street corner, and finally opened his heart to the joy of the Bible and the hymns written to express the Good News of the New Testament. His conversion only fueled his love and drive to bring that same joy and faith back to his people and Syria, where he continues to minister today. This has been the joyful pattern across the region, repeated thousands of times, and in each case as the Church once again becomes a respected and cherished anchor of the MENA communities, it and its members are able to bring more of the neighboring communities into the flock.

And now decades later, we're seeing the beautiful flowers growing from those seeds planted in the 1990's. We of course do not know exact numbers with the de-localized and ground up nature of the missions, but they are significant and have had a great impact in resuscitating the Church in the Middle East and North Africa, likely for the first time and with the strongest presence in over a millennium. One of our recent speakers with a technical analysis background estimated that several million new ministers and family members from the US and Canada, Australia, NZ, Brazil, Argentina, South Africa, Chile and other nations, have been able to use their status as European diaspora to bring their families back into countries across the EU region and settle with full acceptance from the local populations, enough to revive once faltering churches and build new ones, and establish networks of Christian ministries stretching from one community to another. And then they in turn have reached millions among the circulating migrant population and provided them with the tools to bring the Gospel into the MENA region when they return home. This may well be what you were seeing in Ksamil, and the happy news is that the same phenomenon is taking hold in hundreds of other places as well. We are having a mission literature meeting again this weekend, including several who taught us the basics and developed the general system back in the 1990's, so we may be able to dig up some of those books and tracts that we ourselves used and learned from back then and still so relevant today. I will let you know any literature that we can resurface.
 
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Inhocsigno

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As has been touched upon here before, many of our ministers in Europe still celebrate the Thanksgiving holiday tradition. After all the missionaries in their new homes are pilgrims of another sort, spreading the Gospel and the love of Christ to people across the European lands who have been longing to re-connect, or (for the converts) connect for the first time with the Good News. So we celebrate in a similar spirit as our family and friends back in the US. A Happy Thanksgiving to all and God Bless!
 
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JoeySoley

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Thank you we do actually continue to celebrate Thanksgiving in Greece, same for most of us we know in Europe. And thank you again for the references and background on 10/40 window, we've been eagerly devouring already a lot of what you all have posted for us to read up on. Our early sponsors for missions have probably read a lot of those books too. They were saying a lot of the same things, getting connected to the community, reaching out to other's who were new to the neighborhoods, reminding that for Europe missions we were making a permanent move and bringing out families there, raising them as Greek and connecting heart and soul with our countries. It was a special mark of pride for us to hear our kids speaking Greek and celebrating the local holidays while they adapted, even on our trips back to the US to speak and recruit. Most of the other missionaries we met had Greek ancestry so maybe it was a little easier in that case, but our kids even with their mixed European background from a little of a lot of countries except Greece, even the older ones took to our new country and culture and feel it deep in their hearts. It's a pleasure to here that seems to be what those authors had in mind.
 
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JoeySoley

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And on the note of celebrating holy holidays, a happy Advent season to all, as we celebrate the coming of the Light of the World, the Son of God, the Prince of Peace. Like I brought up before we have a special way of celebrating Advent in Greece, it's something we talk about a lot in our recruiting for the missions with parishioners back in the states, but it's a special season for believers in any denomination anywhere in the world. Blessings to all in this special season.
 
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Inhocsigno

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And a Happy Advent season to you too! It's been on our wish-list to give more attention and celebrate Advent more, it has such great meaning and symbolism yet been relatively neglected on the calendar at least in most of the US churches we've associated with. But slowly starting to get more attention, and we're glad to hear it seems to be taking hold more in the European missions already.
 
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JoeySoley

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Happy news that we just got wind of another recruit to help with the conversions in Albania and Kosovo, a young family we actually met and spoke to briefly from South Carolina almost three years before. It sounds like they're going to be operating out of Bulgaria instead of Greece or Croatia, apparently getting their EU wide passport through an Irish ancestor but set their sights from there on Bulgaria. but they seem to be on top of things.

One interesting bit that came out when we talked, one of the things making mission work in Europe now so practical is housing so affordable there now for Americans or Canadians moving into the EU, same for Australians going there too it sounds like. It made things much easier for us when we moved to Greece and we could afford to buy a home fairly easily even without lot of savings. Certainly true too for the Americans setting up home in Bulgaria or Croatia, same in Italy, not as sure about France or Belgium, or up in Scandinavian but the few cases we hear even there a home is getting easier to come by. I'd imagine it used to be opposite like in the 2000's, but wow this housing bubble has been all through the US that suddenly things have switched, rent and housing's more affordable in most of Europe now and any dollars you save still go reasonable well to afford it. I mean we have doctors and tech professionals in my extended family in the USA and even they are having to stay living with family now because homes are so hard to afford, same with child care or caring for family members, it affects the decisions of where they move. Sorry not really a point about how to do the missions but useful for the practical side I'd guess, figured it put some would be missionaries minds at ease, if you're bringing over kids or starting your family over there in Europe, housing and child care will actually be much less of a barrier for you and easier to get.
 
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JoeySoley

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A pleasant little reminder as we wake up each day to a new day of Advent season, that Greek tradition around Christmas goes far beyond just Greece! The tradition of Santa Claus and gift-giving date back to none other than Saint Nicholas, a Greek bishop active in the 4th century. While virtually every nation has some version of Santa Claus today, Greece is special in it having celebrations for the original Santa Claus of history, with full awareness of his Christian roots and the deeper connection of his work with faith and the love of Christ. It was one of the things that delighted our kids and the families of other North American missionaries in Greece during those sometimes difficult early days when we were first getting accultured to our new home. And if you're thinking about doing missions in Greece or in the broader Balkans and southeast Europe region, still with a heavy Greek cultural imprint, you can use the story of Saint Nicholas to help get settled in, and to help give both a local and broader historical frame to your missions and contacts with the locals.
 
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Inhocsigno

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Yes thank you for that reminder of the true story of St. Nicholas. Christmas in so much of the West has been caught up with secular and commercial pursuits lately, it's easy to forget its origins deeply connected to the early Church and the values of faith, hope and charity. St. Nicholas was indeed a great man, following in the best traditions of Paul and the early Church fathers in how he brought the Gospel to those who had not known it. It is a wonderful reminder to recall that the first true "Santa Claus" was a man of deep faith and conviction, hailing from one of the regions where the early Church was most active. And that the tradition of gift giving at Christmas has those deep roots as you say.
 
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JoeySoley

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Always glad to share it! Advent and Christmas have a special meaning in Greece, the Balkans and the broader regions shaped by Greek orthodoxy, including most of the Slavic world thanks to how the young church took it's roots here. Advent is celebrated over weeks, and in Greece that old Christmas carol about the 12 days of Christmas carol actually means 12 days!

Even when our kids are visiting family back in the US we continue to celebrate it, and everything from the decorations to the spirit of giving and the original Santa Claus are celebrated well into January and right through Epiphany in Greece. Missions are special anywhere but there's something specially unique and heartwarming particular for kids to celebrate the Nativity in a place where many of these traditions got planted.
 
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JoeySoley

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And while we're on topic of the 12 days of Christmas and Greece, worth noting that today is the feast day for a favorite ancient Greek figure and heroine of the church, St. Anysia of Salonika! She was also in the tradition of the historical St. Nicholas, using her wealth to provide gifts and food for the poor in Thessaloniki. She was martyred at the age of 20 in the 4th century, for refusing to renounce her faith and she's still revered by Greeks today, of all denominations. So a happy St. Anysia day, on the 6th day of Christmas!
 
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Inhocsigno

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Greetings Joey,
Thank you for that concise but informative little lesson on St. Anysia. I must admit that even with all our ministry training and exposure over our missions including several important feast days, we were unaware of this inspiring story and history. Our ministers in Europe love what they are doing wherever they are, from the parish churches in the small villages of France to the newly built suburban metro churches in Sweden and Belgium. But there must be truly something special about witnessing and helping to bring the Gospels back to a cradle of the faith with such ancient connections as in Greece or Italy. where the Church itself first took hold from the earliest missions of St. Paul. And you'll be happy to know we have incorporated the lesson and example of St. Anysia into our mission teachings!
 
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Inhocsigno

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Greetings Joey,
I promised I would supply more reading suggestions on Balkans evangelism and the 10/40 window generally as I could dig up our references during my own group's training years ago. Here is another reference worth checking out, it's called Strongholds of the 10/40 window, and authors I believe (based on my poorly handwritten notes from those years ago) are Otis and Brockman. This book I recall was written a goodly while ago, I believe from the 1990's back when my team and I were young whipper-snappers just getting our own feet wet in missions. But one of our mission teachers had himself been active in Greece and the Balkans at that time, particular in Albania and Kosovo I believe and had referenced several pages on the Balkans missions and general philosophy. I suspect you could probably find a copy in a good local library so it's worth checking it out if you can.
 
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JoeySoley

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Thanks for that book recommendation! They didn't have it in any of our nearby libraries but I was able to get it ordered on inter library loan and they were even able to send a digital preview I think they called it, excerpts from some of the chapters. Right up our alley for mission preparations. already planning to work in some slides with some of the things I've seen from the previews. It's great how the authors were so systematic about where to focus our attention in the missions and from the contents, it does look like there's good material for the work in the Balkans. Again thanks and please send any other suggestions! We're putting together a little library of materials for our prep sessions
 
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JoeySoley

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Any suggestions on books or pamphlets on the 10/40 Window with specific focus on Turkey? Asking for a friend, her family was able to move from South Carolina to Croatia based on ancestors but been mainly active since then in missions in Germany and Austria from what I can recall, and one just year in France. But she says she and her husband want to move closer to their roots in the Balkans, and Turkey is a natural area of mission focussing for families based around the Balkans.
 
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Inhocsigno

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Greetings Joey,
Just wanted to let you know I do believe there is a book or long article from our early mission training classes with interest on the topic you have brought up, that is with a ministries focus on evangelizing in Turkey. It's been a while but I recall it was in one of our mission group courses that talked about "the geography of evangelism" and pointed out that Turkey, with its Byzantine heritage and central importance in early Christianity, was a lot more surprisingly receptive than many had realized. We of course had not digitized most of those notes or course lists from the 1990's so we're doing some digging, but will try to provide something a bit more specific on the topic as we can.
 
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wow big thanks for that! Anything you guys dig up would be great, books or even just little articles or excerpts. There's a couple mission teams from some of our brother and sister churches talking I think a lot about urban ministries, like in Istanbul but I think we've already had a small scale mission going somewhere in northeast Turkey, if I'm recalling. I think you were saying this too but our mission counselor said already a lot of people there from Greek, Armenian, Georgian or Italian heritage anyway, due to the rich history of that whole region so already built in interest. we're trying to avoid re-invent of the wheel so we're up to hear what the previous missionaries have figured out and advised for the missions there and nearby areas of the 10/40 Window.
 
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