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December 2022 – Mission Director’s Report

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Dear BMAMO Churches,

I certainly hope this article finds you doing well in the Lord’s grace and mercy.

Believe it or not, we are at the end of 2022. If you will remember, I said in my last article that we would get into the weeds of the lessons that I learned from taking the challenge of raising a tomato plant for the specific purpose of harvesting the seed from those tomatoes to raise another tomato plant next year. And all along, asking God to teach us lessons through this experience about discipleship.

Before I get into this month’s lesson, I want to share something Bro. Brian Meade shared with me about this practice. A missionary once told him that you can count the seed, and you can count the plants, but you can’t count the seeds within the seeds; they are innumerable. This is so true, and has the potential of disciple making.

Let’s revisit the last article. These are the lessons I learned and am continuing to learn.

It is hard work; it is impossible without surrender; it is a daily effort; it is rewarding; it is necessary; it is a way of life.

Summarizing statement: Tomatoes make tomatoes that make seeds that will make other tomato plants that will make other tomatoes. Therefore: Disciples make disciples that plant seeds that will make other disciples that will make other disciples. Seems simple, and when you look at these lessons it is simple – but simple doesn’t mean easy.

Lesson #1 – It is hard work.

It is hard to fight the weeds. It is hard to till the ground or plant in buckets or raised beds. No matter your method it’s hard work. It’s hard to start with seed – some come up, many don’t! It’s hard to get them to the stage where they can be put outside. Have you ever heard of “hardening off” your plants before youput them in the ground? One year I lost almost half of my transplants because I did this part wrong. It’s hard work once you get them in the ground. Daily weeding, once a week watering, staking, pruning, and the list goes on.

I think you get the picture: growing tomatoes for the express purpose of propagating fruit for next year’s plants is hard work. So, what can we derive from these lessons about discipleship? Well, it’s hard work to plant seeds into the souls of men, women, boys, and girls. It’s hard work to fight the weeds of sin in our own lives, much less the sins in others’ lives to keep from choking out the seeds planted. It’s sometimes hard work to get the soul of the church right to receive new plants. It is hard work to disciple a new believer to the point that they can handle the cruel world as a Christian and take Christian stands in a hateful and hostile world. And then when they are discipling others, it’s hard work to encourage them when their disciples struggle.

Don’t lose heart, dear disciples, it is all worth the hard work. We will look at lesson number two next month.

May the Lord richly bless you,
Ben Kingston

Did You Know? The Visit of the Magi

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by Don Burke

Wise men from the east came to Jerusalem, saying, “Where is he who has been born king of the Jews?”

Did you know that the Wise Men who came to worship the new King very likely did not see Him in the manger or even visit Him in the stable?

These Wise Men – also called Magi – were from the East. This most likely means they lived in the area around the ancient city of Babylon, where generations earlier Daniel (also a wise man) had lived. It is quite feasible that these men were familiar with Daniel’s prophecies of the anointed prince who was to come, and that is why they connected this new brilliant star with that event.

The star apparently first appeared at the time of Jesus’ birth, because Herod used that appearance to estimate the child’s age (Matthew 2:16). This would mean the shepherds of Bethlehem and the Wise Men in the East were all staring into the night sky at the same time – one being invited by an angel, the other invited by a star.

Both were no doubt eager to see this new king, but unlike the shepherds living in nearby Bethlehem the Wise Men’s journey would take months, not minutes. Probably a couple of months would be required to travel that distance even at the best possible speed along the established trade routes of the day. The travel time would be greatly increased if they traveled with a trade caravan (to find safety in numbers) going about normal business travels. And all the preparations for such a journey would add yet more time. Based on all this, along with inferences from Matthew’s account, it seems quite feasible that Jesus was possibly a year old or more by the time the Wise Men arrived.

So, while the gospel accounts don’t spell it out in so many words, the implications do seem pretty clear: It was almost impossible for the Magi to have visited Jesus in the stable at His birth.

If the Wise Men then were not actually there to give their gifts to the infant Christ Child in the manger, is it wrong to include them as we depict the Christmas story in our church plays or nativity reenactments? Of course, some people may see this differently than I do, and that’s okay. But the Magi are part of the story of the infant King just as much as the shepherds. And just like the nearby shepherds who immediately left their work to visit the Child when heaven was filled with the angels inviting them to come see, the Wise Men no doubt also quickly organized a trip when they saw the star-messenger inviting them to come see. The idea that these men and their gifts should be removed from the story of the Christ Child because their travels took so long just doesn’t seem quite right to me. So, if individuals or churches decide to condense the travel-time of the Magi in order to include them in a story that they were legitimately a part of…I have no problem with that.

Christmas When I Was Young

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by Carol (McColloch) Pulliam-Mueller

(Editor’s Note: I asked Mrs. Carol Pulliam-Mueller – a personal friend who has enjoyed a few more Yuletides than most of us – to share some of her memories about Christmases of old.)

Every Christmas Daddy took us kids in his pickup to the woods to cut a tree. (Those woods where we cut our trees are now a subdivision full of houses.) I remember one year we chose a pine tree instead of our normal cedar because we especially liked the smell. When we got it home Mom tied some of the branches into place to help cover its bare places.

We did not have lights on our Christmas tree – we did not even have electricity. We made ornaments from Daddy’s shiny paper from his cigarette packages as well as some other homemade decorations. We even had a few bought decorations.

When I was really young (during World War II) the sugar was rationed so we could not make homemade Christmas candy. But my grandmother made some candy using mashed potatoes and peanut butter. It was very good.
We looked at the Sears Christmas catalog over and over every day.

At church we performed a Christmas play showing the birth of Jesus. We had a big, decorated Christmas tree. They handed out gifts to all us children. They also gave us a bag of nuts, an apple, an orange and some store-bought hard candy.

Our family was a big family, and we didn’t have much worldly things. But that didn’t matter so much, for we were loved and felt safe.
I’m so thankful for being raised in a Christian home and having a happy childhood.

This year may we be mindful that these are “the good ol’ days” we and our children will one day reflect back on fondly. That fondness will not be because of the material things we have, but from time and experiences with family and friends, and from remembering that Jesus is still the reason for the season.

Merry Christmas

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“Where is He who has been born King of the Jews? For we have seen His star in the East and have come to worship Him.”

When they departed, behold, the star which they had seen in the East went before them, till it came and stood over where the young Child was. When they saw the star, they rejoiced with exceedingly great joy.

It is our prayer that in the midst of your activities and celebrations during this Christmas season, you and your family rejoice “with exceedingly great joy” as you remember the One who was born King of the Jews and lived a life that led to His sacrifice for all mankind.

Merry Christmas

Don and Pam Burke

Merry Christmas!

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The arrival of the Greatest Gift Ever Given was announced by the Angel to the shepherds,

“Fear not: for behold, I bring you good tiding of great joy, which shall be to all people. For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, which is Christ the Lord….” Luke 2:10-11.

We pray that each of us will continue to spread the GOOD NEWS as the shepherds did after they saw the Christ child. “And when they (the shepherds) had seen it (the baby), they made known abroad the saying which was told them concerning this child… And the shepherds returned, glorifying and praising God for all the things that they had heard and seen, as it was told unto them.” Luke 2:17, 20.

May each of us find true JOY in Christ and live this next year telling others about HIM!

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to each of our readers!

December 2022

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