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Baerly There …

Calling the Twelve to him, he began to send them out two by two …

Month

January 2017

Baerly There … : ramping up

 

The Baers ramp up
Where are the Baers …?

We’re busy, but we’re not yet in Colombia.

As our service with the United World Mission ramps up, we’re finding fruitful opportunities while we’re still in the US. Lots of them, actually. In this issue, we’ll tell you mostly what David is up to. When you’ve had your fill of that, we’ll brief you on Karen’s doings in a soon-coming Baerly There …

Our support level =

41%

In our new work, I (David) will divide my time between the Biblical Seminary of Colombia, on the one hand, and leading the Theological Education Initiative, on the other.

Although our critical focus for right now remains raising the remaining 59% of the financial support that will get us posted to Colombia (six months) and Connecticut (six months), my days are already filled with invigorating responsibilities on both of those fronts. Let me give you some examples.

ONE: UWM leadership has given me free reign to design and develop the Theological Education Initiative (TEI). This initiative will deploy highly trained scholar-missionaries to places in the world where growing churches most need their highly specialized gifting. I’m having a blast as I work with a TEI colleague to build something that does not currently exist. I love the networking, the strategic relationship-building, and the easy access to influencers and door-opens that comes from twenty-five years in global theological education.

Every week, I find myself in deep conversation with prospective scholar-missionaries who sense exactly this calling on their lives. These are amazing people. And they trust me!

I feel as though life has prepared me to listen, to counsel, and to partner with such people via an ability to understand three things: their journey, the needs of churches and seminaries worldwide, and the missionary process.

TWO: While I was at Overseas Council (OC), one of the most exciting projects we ever developed was called the Vital Sustainability Initiative (VSI). I’ve been asked to continue working with seminaries in Beirut and Medellín to assist them in fulfilling their respective missions as part of the ongoing work of the VSI. I’ll travel to Colombia and Lebanon in February as part of this important work, which is a collaborative initiative shared by Overseas Council and a great ministry called ScholarLeaders, International. As a bonus, one of the seminaries I get to work with in the VSI is our very own Biblical Seminary of Colombia.

Got fresh flowers? Chances are, they were grown in the area around the Medellín airport in an area called Rionegro. Wanna’ know more? Read this.

FUSBC

Say what .. ? : Since acquiring university-level accreditation in the Colombian educational system, the 72-year-old Biblical Seminary of Colombia is known by its Spanish acronym: FUSBC. Say it this way:

FOOZ-BAY-SAY

 

Sometimes, when you have a little space like this left over, all you can do is put in a picture of your dog.

THREE: This gets really cool, so buckle up.

One of my God-given passions is training emerging Christian leaders to read the Bible in the languages in which it was written. There’s just nothing like watching a young pastor or leader come alive to this level of intimacy with God’s Word.

Well, the Biblical Seminary of Colombia recently struck a deal with a cutting-edge distance-education enterprise known as Bible Mesh.

We’re translating into Spanish Bible Mesh’s excellent on-line instructional materials, which are developed for English speakers. As a result, we expand access to this amazing learning material to Spanish speakers around the world. Here’s the kicker: for doing this, Bible Mesh provides all graduates of ‘our’ Biblical Seminary of Colombia with life-long free access to these online classes.

Wait, I’m not finished. In order to translate the online Hebrew instructional material, we need someone who’s fluent in English, Spanish, and biblical Hebrew. That’s me! And there aren’t many of us. ‘Makes a dude feel downlight useful.

But, wait, there’s more. I get to work with a Colombian pastor who’s a graduate of FUSBC (if you read upstairs, you know what those letters mean now). Esteban (not his real name) is a native speaker of Spanish and is pretty darn good at English and biblical Hebrew. But he’s not yet strong enough in these languages to do this work by himself. So I mentor him into accurate engagement with the language of Scripture and into communication to online students that we hope will be second to none.

I love to imagine the Spanish-speaking sons and daughters of our Lord who will be more ably shepherded because their pastores have had the very best preparation available.

Is this cool, or what?

I spend a day a week on Bible Mesh.

FOUR: Colombia is a complex, fascinating country of 48 million people. There’s no place quite like it. I spend half a day each week reading through Colombia’s history, culture, politics, spirituality, etc.

FIVE: As part of my ramp-up to writing a Spanish-language commentary on the Old Testament book of Isaiah, I’m reading Isaiah every month in Hebrew this year. This is a pump-priming exercise rather than full-contact research. But I’m having a great time blogging my thoughts as they come to me on Canter Bridge. If you have a strong stomach, check it out. A former student and colleague in Costa Rica is working with me to make the biblically reflective pieces on Canter Bridge available in Spanish.

You can also catch up with our life as UWM missionaries on our Baerly There … website.

SIX: Etc., etc., etc.

Life feels pretty fluid right now. It’s a blessed, unsettling, hopeful interlude between the former chapter of ‘regular life’ (whatever regularmeans) and the next one.

Will you help us get to Colombia so those people at the beginning of this email can relax?The Lord has prepared us for this next step, immersed us in vision for nurturing emerging Christian leaders and their families, and filled our tanks with the training and experience this vision requires.

Maybe you haven’t thought of yourself as a financial partner that would help bring this vision to fruition. But you could be. Please pause and ask yourself—and your Maker—whether this has your name on it. Or your church’s or small group’s name.

Let us know what you think.

And thank you.

Click here to join our financial support team.
In other news:
√ Karen has come through an unexpected health crisis with the support of our intercessors group (The Guardians) and some superb medical professionals in Indianapolis. She’s well, but there was a little peering over the cliff before we got things backed up to the clearing where the campfire burns.

 

√ In our next Baerly There …, we’ll get you caught upon what Karen’s up to.

√ Selling our beautiful home in Indianapolis is taking longer than we’d hoped. This is an obstacle to taking our next steps. Please ask God to bring a great family who will buy this house and thrive in this space as we have. And soon!

√ Karen and I will be in Costa Rica and Colombia on TEI and FUSBC work from January 19 through February 6. Please ask our Lord for ‘traveling mercies’, as that venerable old expression puts it.

√ You’re the best. Thank you for caring. Unsubscribe when it’s time (This is not Hotel California.). Otherwise, just hang on!

Until our home has sold, our mailing address remains:

124 West 64th Street
Indianapolis, IN 46260

David’s contact details: 317-809-0483david.baer@uwm.org
Karen answers here: 317-997-8432karen.baer@uwm.org

United World Mission
205 Regency Executive Park Drive
Suite 430
Charlotte, NC 28217

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hurried heart: Isaiah 35

Biblical reflection like this appears next door on our Canter Bridge blog.

  *        *        *

Chapter 35 of the book of Isaiah initiates a bridge of sorts between the large section of the book that precedes it and the section or sections that follow. This short chapter is intensely lyrical, profoundly hopeful, and unshrinkingly exuberant.

As any large bridging element must do, it features themes that are familiar to us from glimpses we’ve enjoyed in the darker first section, themes that are developed widely and at times wildly in the chapters that follow.

Consisting of only ten verses, chapter 35 demands quotation in full.

The wilderness and the dry land shall be glad; the desert shall rejoice and blossom like the crocus; it shall blossom abundantly and rejoice with joy and singing. The glory of Lebanon shall be given to it, the majesty of Carmel and Sharon. They shall see the glory of the Lord, the majesty of our God.

Strengthen the weak hands, and make firm the feeble knees. Say to those who have an anxious heart, ‘Be strong; fear not! Behold, your God will come with vengeance, with the recompense of God. He will come and save you.’

Then the eyes of the blind shall be opened, and the ears of the deaf unstopped; then shall the lame man leap like a deer, and the tongue of the mute sing for joy. For waters break forth in the wilderness, and streams in the desert; the burning sand shall become a pool, and the thirsty ground springs of water; in the haunt of jackals, where they lie down, the grass shall become reeds and rushes.

And a highway shall be there, and it shall be called the Way of Holiness; the unclean shall not pass over it. It shall belong to those who walk on the way; even if they are fools, they shall not go astray. No lion shall be there, nor shall any ravenous beast come up on it; they shall not be found there, but the redeemed shall walk there. And the ransomed of the Lord shall return and come to Zion with singing; everlasting joy shall be upon their heads; they shall obtain gladness and joy, and sorrow and sighing shall flee away. (Isaiah 35:1–10 ESV)

The chapter is a hymn to the return home of an exiled community that by all rights should have perished in captivity, as exiled peoples of the day were expected to cooperate in doing. It takes up and luxuriates in themes that have become the best-known tropes for readers of Isaiah. In so doing, it hints that those early glimpses of such promise are to become agenda-setting and panoramic in short order.

At the risk of singling out just one or two of these themes, the chapter transforms the death-dealing barrier between here and there that is a desert into a security-assured highway back home. All that is dead and dry blooms and waters. What once murdered the innocent with its savage heat now beautifies their path home and hydrates their dry tongues.

Yet it is a particularly tender turn of phrase that I wish to highlight here:

Strengthen the weak hands, and make firm the feeble knees. Say to those who have an anxious heart, ‘Be strong; fear not! Behold, your God will come with vengeance, with the recompense of God. He will come and save you.’

This declaration shows that the news of return—brilliant and catalyzing as it looks from our distance—was not necessarily to be welcomed by those who had made their discouraged peace with exile. Such people, who deserve our sympathy, are possessed of ‘weak hands’ and ‘feeble knees’ that will require some strengthening if Return is to become more than a promising song. The devil one knows, after all …

But hands and knees are not the only deficient body parts among captive Judah. The text reaches out to those who have an anxious heart (so ESV). A more literal reading might produce this:

Say to the hurried of heart (alternatively, ‘the racing of heart‘), ‘Be strong; fear not!  (Hebrew: נמהרי־לב)

To some readers, this rather poetic diagnosis will be instantly familiar.

YHWH’s promise comes to anxiety-ridden, racing-hearted captives. It becomes good news to the adrenaline-rushed, panic-attacked little ones, the cowering and the self-sheltering. It dares them to reconsider the terms they have negotiated with their terrifying world and to accept a new and rather boisterous name, one with a slightly in-your-face confidence over against the jackals and bandits who used to patrol this road: the Redeemed.

Merry Christmas from David and Karen

Best wishes at Christmas from the Baers.

David and Karen wish you a truly merry Christmas …

This little Babe so few days old
Is come to rifle Satan’s fold.
All hell doth at his presence quake
Though he himself for cold do shake
For in his weak unarmed wise
the gates of hell he will surprise.

~ Robert Southwell, 1561-1595

… and a richly blessed New Year.

 

 

Our mailing address is:
124 West 64th Street
Indianapolis, IN 46260
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United World Mission · 124 West 64th Street · Indianapolis, IN 46260 · USA

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But is it safe?

Everybody wants to feel safe.

But is it safe?

Colombia has a reputation. The city of Medellín, even more so.

Let’s face the facts bravely: for years, the Colombian city in which we plan to live was the homicide capital of the world. The decades when Colombia and Medellín were awash in civil war and the thuggish violence of the drug cartels are long past.

Yet the notoriety lives on and, the farther away we live from the facts on the ground as they now are, the more vividly those bad old days linger in our minds. Especially when our crazy family or friends tell us they’re actually going to go live there.

What has got into these Baers???

Colombia’s people and its spaces are beautiful, diverse and unequal. And, very occasionally, frightening.
We take this concern seriously. We’re fortunate to be surrounded by friends and family who love us. You deserve an explanation.

You want to know: ‘Will you be safe?’

So here goes …

√ Medellín is a big, Majority-World city. Levels of crime are higher than they are in the leafy suburbs of Indianapolis, a place that we’ve loved calling home. One continuously updated source ranks Medellín as a little safer than Spokane, Paris, and Tucson; and a little less safe than San Antonio, Winnipeg, and San Francisco.

√ Colombia is attempting to close the curtain on a fifty-year civil war. Active conflict of significant scope and scale is over. Yet civil war always drag a tail of dysfunction and violence by those who have been demobilized with no reliable future ahead of them.

√ The seminary’s campus is a paradise within a walled compound. Yet the neighborhood outside is a tough one and rather poor. Many of those neighbors have a soft spot for the seminary as a good local citizen. This sentiment mingles with the kinds of low-level threats that are common to such marginalized communities.

√ Local knowledge is everything. Portions of Medellín are as safe as it gets. There are other areas where you don’t wander.

Yet all this is circumstantial. Things in Colombia and Medellín are on an improving arc. They’ll probably get better. They may get worse.

Mostly, safety and peril lie on a different axis than this. Let me see whether we can explain:

Karen and I have no stomach for unnecessary risk. But our true security rests with God, who has placed a call on our lives and is entirely reliable. Our times are in his hands.

Our decision to serve in Medellín has the characteristics of a calling. It remains a decision, and we could have made a different one. Yet the direction of our lives leads so organically to service in Medellín that to opt for something else would be to swim against the current of God’s own guidance.

Our times are in his hands.

A truism sometimes heard on the lips of Christians is that ‘there is no safer place than right in the center of God’s will.’ Truisms grate on my ears, but they are truisms for a reason: they communicate something that is real.

There is work for us to do in Colombia that is, in our estimation, an opportunity like no other. God has knit our hearts together with the hearts of our future colleagues there. The opportunity to leverage a lifetime of preparation and experience is a door swung wide open. There are emerging Christian leaders there whom we can help to shape and encourage and make strong. Their lives will bear fruit for a generation or more.

We move towards Medellín with a growing love for Colombia’s people. We are aware of the risks. We are confident that we do not go alone.

If words like these do not still your worries, then please pray for us. Pray that we will be safe. But pray more, please, that we will bear the love and grace of Jesus to a continent that weeps too often and—even when it laughs—does so with cheeks still moist with tears.

Our support level = 34%
Click here to join our support team
Did you know … ?
… that you can catch up on our Baerly There … and Unfiltered communications at our Baerly There … website? You can also scroll to the bottom and click to ‘follow’ that site, which will then subject you to an email alert every time we post more twaddle, claptrap, balderdash, or mumbo jumbo.
Until our home has sold, our mailing address remains:

124 West 64th Street
Indianapolis, IN 46260

David’s contact details: 317-809-0483, david.baer@uwm.org
Karen answers here: 317-997-8432, karen.baer@uwm.org

United World Mission
205 Regency Executive Park Drive
Suite 430
Charlotte, NC 28217

800-825-5896

Reference: ‘Baers, account #31538’

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