Maranatha Mission Stories

Three Angels Broadcasting Network

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Series Code: MMS

Program Code: MMS010015S


00:01 Hi, I'm Hilary Macias with the Maranatha Minute.
00:03 In northeastern India,
00:04 there is a Seventh-day Adventist School
00:05 called Jingshai Mihngi.
00:07 It boasts an enrollment of 476 children
00:10 and parents praise the school's academic curriculum
00:12 and caring teachers.
00:14 But beyond buildings that are falling apart,
00:16 there's one major complaint, the smell.
00:19 The Jingshai Mihngi School
00:20 is located right next to an open sewer line.
00:23 They've long needed a new school on a new property.
00:25 And finally after years of prayer,
00:27 the Jingshai Mihngi School got their answer.
00:30 In February,
00:31 37 Maranatha volunteers arrived to build classrooms.
00:35 Volunteers also organized
00:36 a children's program for the community
00:38 and offered an evangelistic series
00:39 at the local church.
00:41 The Jingshai Mihngi School
00:42 is just one of several Maranatha projects in India.
00:45 Currently,
00:46 local Maranatha crews are working on churches
00:48 and educational structures in other parts of the country.
00:51 If you're interested
00:52 in supporting our efforts in India,
00:54 please make a donation to Maranatha.
00:56 You can give online
00:57 or you can call the number on your screen.
01:20 Maranatha's history
01:21 is full of extraordinary moments of faith
01:24 that illustrate God's leading in the mission.
01:28 He has been faithful every step of the way,
01:31 even through what appeared
01:32 to be the most impossible requests.
01:36 Today's story looks at two places
01:37 that stretched Maranatha in many ways
01:40 as an organization,
01:41 physically, mentally and spiritually.
01:45 The first location is in the Caribbean
01:48 on an island that was closed to the world,
01:50 but surprisingly open to the gospel message.
02:00 The year is 1993.
02:03 Maranatha is energized
02:04 by the success of a large project
02:06 called Santo Domingo 92.
02:09 And has just finished
02:10 construction of 15 new churches
02:12 and three schools in Guatemala.
02:14 The leaders of the project gathered at their hotel
02:17 around the pizza to evaluate next steps.
02:21 There was a guy named Tem Suarez there.
02:24 And Tem, of course, was a Cuban-American.
02:26 He was on our board of directors
02:27 and he constantly was bringing up,
02:29 "Cuba this, Cuba that,"
02:30 and everybody's going,
02:31 "Yeah, that's Tem, he's Cuban."
02:33 So this night, he got a little bit more traction.
02:36 And Don Folkenberg was there and Bob Paulson,
02:41 we're sitting around just,
02:42 "Okay, we finished Guatemala,
02:44 what...
02:46 Where's the next big push? What's exciting?
02:48 What can we do to change some place for God?
02:52 I mean, that's really what it was.
02:54 And, of course, Tem,
02:56 "I know where we can go to.
02:58 Let's take a look at Cuba."
03:00 And somebody says, I don't remember who it was.
03:02 And he's like, "Well, you know, you can't go into Cuba.
03:04 It's closed country,
03:05 and like a lot of these countries are closed.
03:08 And giving credit completely where it is due here.
03:13 God worked through a guy named Garwin McNeilus.
03:15 The main challenge was to get our nerve
03:18 to go in the first place.
03:21 Garwin was a get stuff done kind of guy.
03:24 And Garwin says, "Have you tried?
03:28 Has anybody really tried?
03:30 You say you can't do it.
03:32 How do we know we can't do it?
03:34 We don't know we can't do it. I haven't been down there.
03:37 You've been down there?
03:38 Tem says we can go.
03:40 Let's go."
03:42 Many times you hear we can't go into a country.
03:46 And really, we haven't tried.
03:50 And we had talked about Cuba and the need in Cuba.
03:54 And I said, "Let's go to Cuba."
03:58 You know, do it.
04:00 So Maranatha did.
04:03 So we put together a team, there's five of us,
04:05 and a couple months later
04:08 we made our first trip down to Cuba.
04:13 In 1994,
04:15 when we first came over here,
04:17 the church was very, very depressed,
04:20 very demoralized,
04:21 the buildings were falling apart.
04:23 The ministers were real,
04:25 honest and good and were down and dumped,
04:27 that would be in plain language.
04:29 I remember the first meeting in particular,
04:31 we met with all the ministers
04:34 from one end of the island to another.
04:37 It was just like the Holy Spirit
04:38 was over there, was touching us.
04:41 More than 100 people crowded into that meeting room
04:44 at the Union Office in Havana.
04:47 In the room, there was a white board.
04:49 Based on the need that was expressed,
04:52 it was determined to move ahead
04:53 with 100 new churches and 100 renovated churches
04:58 as well as 100 evangelistic campaigns
05:01 and the production of literature,
05:04 to penetrate the areas surrounding those churches.
05:07 The entire project was called, "Christ for Cuba."
05:12 Unlike similar projects in the Dominican Republic,
05:14 Mexico and Guatemala,
05:17 it would take several years to build
05:18 and renovate 200 sanctuaries,
05:21 but the work progressed
05:22 and baptisms increased ten-fold.
05:27 Maranatha rebuilt the country's aging seminary.
05:31 Students came from around the world
05:34 to take advantage of this post-graduate facility.
05:38 The seminary was lacking a sanctuary.
05:41 Again, Maranatha Volunteers International
05:43 took an empty space on the seminary grounds
05:46 and transformed it
05:47 into an inviting place of worship and fellowship.
05:52 From the very first meeting
05:54 Don Noble had with Pastor Fontaine,
05:56 it was clear that one of the churches on the list
05:58 that was growing and needed to be expanded
06:01 was the Cardenas Church.
06:03 The tiny church was filled to capacity every week
06:06 with many members forced to sit outside on the verandah.
06:12 Cardenas located about 100 miles east of Havana
06:15 is very near Varadero Beach,
06:17 a magnet of tourism on the island.
06:20 The city's leadership was not friendly to Adventists
06:23 and created obstacles,
06:25 making the construction of a new church there
06:28 next to impossible.
06:31 Fifteen years into the process,
06:33 Don Noble visited the anxious church members.
06:36 This is unfortunately
06:38 I have to tell you that right now
06:39 we have neither permission
06:41 nor the money to build this church.
06:43 And the reaction we got was something
06:47 I've never seen before, I hope I don't see it again.
06:49 It was the entire church just started crying,
06:54 wailing some of them.
06:55 It was absolutely horrible.
07:11 The congregation was crushed. Don was heavy hearted.
07:15 Maranatha had been working on a solution
07:17 for Cardenas for more than 15 years.
07:20 Could it...
07:22 Should it really be over?
07:23 Don turned to prayer.
07:25 So he says,
07:27 "Well, you know, I've seen God do
07:28 some amazing things on this island
07:30 and in a lot of other places,
07:32 so, you still have prayer left
07:34 and you got a mighty God
07:35 and I know that you believe in that God.
07:37 So, I think we should pray.
08:01 She was marching up the front, very confident, turned around.
08:04 She folded her hands, I can still see her.
08:08 She looked up, not down, she looked up.
08:10 She says
08:11 "Dear Jesus, thank you for giving us a new church.
08:15 Amen."
08:16 It was a pivotal moment in the Cardenas story.
08:20 This was about more than building the church.
08:23 It was about faith.
08:24 And I'm sitting there going, wow.
08:28 I think God's going to answer that prayer.
08:30 I mean, how's He going to say no.
09:06 In late 2015,
09:08 a small crew assembled in Cardenas to break ground
09:11 and tear down the old building.
09:13 After more than 30 years of prayer,
09:16 20 years of permit applications and an enduring test of faith,
09:20 Maranatha Volunteers International
09:22 received final permission to begin construction
09:25 on the new Cardenas Church.
09:27 Immediately construction began.
09:30 And just as quickly,
09:31 Maranatha created an opportunity for volunteers
09:35 to head to Cuba
09:36 for a two-week construction project.
09:44 Local crews worked alongside the volunteers.
09:47 They continued building long
09:48 after the volunteers returned home.
09:51 Eighteen months later, after decades of prayer,
09:54 the Cardenas Seventh-day Adventist Church
09:56 was transformed from this to this.
10:03 Thousands of church members from all over the island
10:07 came to the dedication.
10:35 And today in the morning, I was here and two guys came.
10:40 They were not Christian.
10:42 And they came in,
10:43 they were watching the church
10:45 and they were talking about how beautiful,
10:48 how nice the church was.
10:50 For this city is,
10:53 this church is very important
10:55 because the Adventist Church in this city is very famous,
10:59 everybody know it.
11:39 It is a sanctuary worthy of the God that represents.
11:42 The sanctuary can accommodate 500 people,
11:45 in the fellowship hall upstairs connected by video and sound,
11:49 another 250 people.
12:53 You know, this church is built clearly on the foundation,
12:58 the reality, the power of prayer without question.
13:10 And frankly,
13:12 the future is more important than the history.
13:14 The history is very valuable here,
13:17 and they've learned a lot of lessons.
13:18 But the future is what this church is about,
13:20 and it's going to be a great lighthouse
13:22 in the, in the Cardenas community.
13:29 Today,
13:30 Maranatha Volunteers International
13:32 continues in prayer and faith
13:35 to answer the call from the church in Cuba.
13:39 From our beginnings there in 1994 till now,
13:43 the Adventist Church in Cuba
13:45 remains close to the heart of Maranatha.
13:49 Christ for Cuba, then, now and tomorrow.
14:08 Coming up next,
14:10 we head to a country of more than a billion people
14:12 and a billion reasons to keep sharing the mission.
14:30 For more than a decade,
14:32 Maranatha mission stories has taken you around the world,
14:35 showing you the need
14:37 and challenging you to get involved.
14:40 Now we're introducing new ways for you
14:43 to stay informed and inspired about the mission.
14:47 Watch your favorite episode of Maranatha mission stories,
14:50 as well as other Maranatha videos
14:52 on your Apple TV.
14:54 Visit the App Store,
14:56 search for the Maranatha channel
14:58 and hit install.
15:01 You'll have access to all of our latest video content,
15:04 and you can watch anytime.
15:06 Our videos are available on demand 24 hours a day.
15:11 Our content can also be viewed on Roku and Amazon Fire TV.
15:16 The Maranatha channel,
15:17 bringing mission adventures to your living room.
15:27 There are certain events in Maranatha's history
15:30 that helped to catapult the organization
15:32 to new levels of productivity,
15:34 events that pushed Maranatha to think bigger and aim higher.
15:39 Among those is India,
15:41 a place where Maranatha has invested in the mission
15:44 to build people and communities.
15:52 The 1990s were a faith building decade for Maranatha.
15:56 God led the organization through a large-scale project
16:00 in the Dominican Republic
16:03 and miraculous construction on the island of Cuba.
16:08 But when God leads,
16:09 there are always new challenges.
16:11 This time, on the subcontinent of India.
16:15 Maranatha started in India
16:16 actually in the early middle 80s,
16:19 the campus north of Delhi called Roorkee,
16:24 but it was a common goal, do a project, leave.
16:27 It wasn't the long,
16:28 continued involvement
16:30 that started probably
16:32 a little more than 20 years ago now.
16:35 At the time,
16:36 the Adventist Church was struggling.
16:39 Adventists represented
16:40 a small percentage of the general population
16:43 and the places they had to worship,
16:45 didn't inspire others to join them.
16:49 Ron Watts,
16:50 president of the Adventist Church in India
16:53 at the time reached out to Maranatha
16:55 for help in growing their fledgling group.
16:57 I asked Ron at that time is,
17:00 "Ron how many members do you have?"
17:01 He says, "Well, in the books we have about 200,000."
17:03 He says,
17:05 "Really, I have to tell you it's not more than 100,000.
17:08 And we really need a new church here."
17:12 He said, "This is a huge,
17:15 huge area of primarily Hindus
17:19 that don't even know who Jesus is,
17:21 never heard of Him.
17:23 Don't know anything about the Creator God,
17:24 don't know anything about salvation."
17:26 He says,
17:28 "This is what we're here for.
17:29 That's what we should be doing."
17:31 Although Maranatha had previously done
17:33 a handful of projects in India,
17:36 the decision was made to establish
17:38 a permanent presence in the country
17:39 to facilitate evangelism meetings
17:42 and build churches.
17:43 And then we started talking
17:45 and we moved our leadership
17:49 from Cuba over to India,
17:53 to start overseeing those campaigns
17:55 and to start some construction
17:56 and we didn't know where it was going,
17:58 but it went.
18:00 Garwin McNeilus,
18:02 a businessman from Minnesota
18:04 was asked to get involved.
18:06 Ron Watts said,
18:08 "Why don't you come and do an Effort?"
18:10 And I said, "Sure, we'll go."
18:12 Now, I've never done an Effort.
18:15 And so I contacted my friend, Bob Paulson,
18:19 who I knew could do the preaching,
18:22 and Maranatha helped us and we set up Tenali.
18:26 We had over 3,000 people in Tenali,
18:29 it was just overwhelming.
18:31 And what took me aback
18:32 when we closed up all 3, 000 wanted special prayer.
18:37 And they just crowded around you
18:39 and the hunger and the willingness.
18:42 The success there led to the organization
18:44 of larger meetings in the town of Ongole.
18:47 I remember the big Ongole project
18:49 of over 50, 000 people are listening
18:53 to Bob Paulson stand up and say,
18:56 I want to introduce you to not just any old god,
19:00 not just another god, but the Creator God.
19:03 And they're all listening to this.
19:05 And it was powerful.
19:07 It was just overwhelming.
19:10 And Maranatha was just deeply involved
19:13 in organizing and coordinating the effort of all the churches.
19:19 But I just can't help but thank in heaven.
19:23 What it'd be like when we have India homecoming.
19:28 There'll be thousands and thousands of people
19:30 there as a result of it.
19:34 The 50,000 people in the crowd
19:36 weren't the only ones listening.
19:38 Halfway across the world,
19:40 this meeting would have an impact on a family
19:42 living in Medford, Oregon.
19:44 I had no idea about going to India or anyplace else.
19:48 I was happy to stay home on the United States
19:52 side of everything.
19:53 Didn't look forward to traveling at all.
19:55 Merlin found,
19:57 he was watching television
19:59 and he's watching Garwin McNeilus.
20:02 And they've been doing
20:04 evangelistic meetings over in Ongole.
20:08 And he's intently watching that.
20:11 When it was over, he said,
20:13 "I think we could do that."
20:15 And I was just shocked. We could do that.
20:18 Well, yeah, I think we could.
20:22 The television program they watched
20:23 was a report put together by 3ABN
20:26 highlighting the recent meetings.
20:31 Well, JoAnn and her husband Merlin
20:32 didn't know was their son Bruce was also watching
20:36 and felt impressed to get involved.
20:40 I was committed to call Don on Monday
20:42 and tell him that I'd like to go over there in India
20:45 some time and help there.
20:47 I need an opening
20:49 and just a few minutes my dad called.
20:52 And he said,
20:54 "Hey, have you ever thought about going to India?"
20:55 And I said,
20:57 "Matter of fact I have and I will go."
21:00 Six months later,
21:01 Bruce was on an airplane headed to India.
21:04 Merlin joined him on the next trip.
21:07 But JoAnn in her 70s
21:09 wasn't sure about making the long journey.
21:11 She wondered if there was anything
21:13 she could contribute to the effort.
21:15 Bruce said to me,
21:18 "You can go.
21:20 And even if you just hug the ladies
21:23 and smile at them,
21:25 if you can't understand them,
21:27 they're going to understand you."
21:29 So that's what I did.
21:31 I went to India and I gave them hugs.
21:34 I was 72 the first time I went to India.
21:38 And the culture shock was so severe.
21:44 It was like, I need to fix these things.
21:48 These poor people, they don't have anything.
21:53 And yet they're happy.
21:55 And I kept talking to Merlin about it.
21:57 And he said,
21:59 "I want to tell you something.
22:02 By coming here and helping them to know
22:05 that there is a Creator God,
22:08 that we're helping them
22:11 with the greatest thing that they can have."
22:14 The Fjarli Family was hooked on India.
22:17 Not only did they continue
22:19 to conduct evangelism campaigns,
22:21 they also helped to fund hundreds of churches
22:24 in several large school campuses.
22:26 The Fjarli Family really got involved in India
22:29 in a major way.
22:31 And I don't have any question that God used them.
22:34 Merlin Fjarli, I've known since the 60s.
22:39 Tough guy.
22:41 Committed guy, generous.
22:45 Man of few words.
22:47 So I want the best bang for the buck,
22:50 that was his line,
22:51 want the best bang for the buck.
22:53 And he felt that in a society like India,
22:56 where there's so many people,
22:57 he could get the best bang for the buck.
23:01 You leave India, but it never leaves you.
23:04 And to think about going back,
23:10 I had to go back.
23:11 It was such a blessing to see that
23:17 I could put smiles on the little kids' faces.
23:20 And I just had to go back, it was...
23:25 I think the Lord put it in my heart
23:28 to treasure the times in India.
23:32 Maranatha has worked in India for more than 20 years.
23:35 Today,
23:37 more than 2,000 structures
23:38 stand as influential anchors in their communities,
23:42 monuments to a living God.
23:45 You build a building,
23:47 and those same ones that were built in the 90s
23:50 are producing souls today.
23:53 And they've spawned
23:55 and the next one, they spawned
23:56 and the church family as a result,
23:59 there will be thousands in eternity
24:01 as a result of that one project.
24:05 But the impact goes beyond the people of India.
24:09 You think you got to go there to change people
24:14 and let them know that there is a real God
24:18 that knows them and it changed us.
24:24 And it changed my husband
24:26 more than I could ever have dreamed that it would.
24:30 Merlin passed away in 2014.
24:33 But his sons Bruce and Clint
24:35 have continued the family's legacy of service.
24:39 I think dad was really blessed by going to India.
24:45 And raising the money to invest in India.
24:50 He had fun doing that,
24:53 he was blessed by doing that.
24:56 It softened him.
24:58 It exposed a soft side in his heart
25:05 that most people never saw.
25:11 It was just amazing.
25:13 From my perspective, I think it's just a miracle.
25:17 And our families has been part of it,
25:21 which is quite a blessing
25:22 that, you know,
25:25 once God's work gets rolling, it's pretty hard to stop Him.
25:29 With a little bit of help,
25:30 and we've been very blessed to be able to help.
25:33 Maranatha's commitment to India is unwavering.
25:36 As more and more people are longing to hear the gospel,
25:42 there continues to be requests
25:43 for more churches and schools in India.
25:46 And in 2018,
25:48 Maranatha started drilling water wells
25:50 in areas of great need.
25:52 And they came into India,
25:54 a wonderful reunion with a lot of people
25:59 that gave their heart to Jesus.
26:01 It's an awesome thing to do.
26:03 And I'm going to do it again,
26:07 except I would have started 30 years sooner.
26:12 As Maranatha continues working in India,
26:15 your support is needed in the country.
26:17 Please make a donation toward church school
26:20 or water well projects in India.
26:22 Call the number on your screen or visit maranatha.org to give.
26:41 Did you know that Maranatha produces a magazine
26:43 called "The Volunteer."
26:45 This quarterly publication is available free
26:47 and will be mailed to your home.
26:49 You can also access full issues on our website.
26:52 Each beautiful issue is packed
26:54 with photos and stories of faith
26:56 from countries like India, Zambia and the United States.
26:59 You'll also read essays
27:01 about missions from our Maranatha team,
27:02 along with profiles on our volunteers and donors.
27:05 In addition,
27:07 each magazine features information
27:08 on how your support has made a difference
27:10 for communities around the world.
27:12 It also gives an overview of areas
27:14 that still need your generosity and your volunteer service.
27:17 The magazine
27:18 is a great resource for families,
27:20 schools and churches
27:21 in search of current and compelling mission stories
27:24 about people who are making a huge difference
27:26 in the world for Jesus.
27:27 If you haven't already,
27:29 be sure to subscribe to The Volunteer
27:31 by sending your name and mailing address
27:33 to info@maranatha.org
27:35 or visit our website at maranatha.org
27:38 to sign up for The Volunteer magazine.
27:41 From the very beginning
27:43 and through every triumph and bump in the road since,
27:46 God has had His hand in the development
27:48 and growth of Maranatha.
27:50 They have been His volunteers,
27:53 His projects and His mission.


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Revised 2020-11-15