the volunteer july august 2014

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THE JULY/AUGUST 2014 INSIDE THIS ISSUE: THE GOSPEL GOES NORTH P4 BLESSINGS FLOW IN ZIMBABWE P8 PROJECTS CALENDAR P14 A Publication of Maranatha Volunteers International Carrying the Church to India: How YOU are building churches in the farthest corners of the earth.

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The Volunteer is the official publication of Maranatha Volunteers International.

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Page 1: The Volunteer July August 2014

TH

EJ U LY/AU G U S T 2 0 1 4

INSIDE THIS ISSUE : TH E GOSPE L GOES N O RTH P4 B LESS I N GS FLOW I N Z I M BA BW E P8 PROJ EC TS C A LEN DA R P 14

A Publication of Maranatha Volunteers International

Carrying the Church to India: How YOU are building churches in the farthest corners of the earth.

Page 2: The Volunteer July August 2014

Phot

o by

Tom

Lloy

d

Kamunlu weaves fabric

for a langzin pheisuei, a

traditional skirt worn in the

northeast region of India.

This is a common sight

in Champlai, where many

women weave all day to

earn a living. Behind her,

an Adventist congregation

carries parts for a One‑Day

Church to their new

building site.

Champlai, India

Page 3: The Volunteer July August 2014

One thing i really like about working with the Maranatha Board of Directors is their commitment to

action. If you were to attend a meeting of the Board, you might hear statements like “Let’s stop talking about it and go do it.” Or a Board member might share their conviction that we need to be more aggressive; “We must make no small plans” as we consider the times in which we live and the great open doors of opportunity that God has provided.

Last year Maranatha had the privilege of providing more than 1,000 churches and school buildings to assist with the wonderful work of spreading the Good News around the world. The Maranatha Board was grateful that God gave us this opportunity, but they decided that God was trying to tell them to commit to even more projects. As a result, the Maranatha Board stepped out in faith by establishing plans to build more than 1,600 churches and school buildings in 16 countries during 2014. With a six-day workweek, that is more than five projects per day!

The Maranatha Board works with the sincere conviction that God wants us to expand His Kingdom with memorials in more and more places. The result is always more souls for the Kingdom of God, many changed lives—and that is great news!

In this issue of The Volunteer, you will find a focus on the country of India. Maranatha is pleased to have joined the leadership of the Seventh-day Adventist Church and many other laymen to see tremendous growth in India over recent years. In the year 2000, we were told that India had 200,000 members. Today the number is more than 1,600,000, which gives India more members than any other country in the world. That is a miracle! But there are still untold millions in India that have never had the joy of hearing the Gospel story. So we, along with many others, continue to work in that populous sub-continent.

How about you? As you consider your involvement in expanding God’s Kingdom around the world, we encourage you to “make no small plans.”

Don Noble, president

No Small Plans

MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT

Champlai, India

Phot

o by

Tom

Lloy

d

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The Gospel Goes North Maranatha’s latest effort in India

By Dick Duerksen

Phot

o by

Tom

Lloy

d

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After years of focusing in southern India,

Maranatha’s work is moving to the northeast,

where the Bible is yet to be discovered in many

villages. And we’re building churches for the

courageous missionaries who are daring to take

on the Gospel Commission.

The northeast section of india is made up of seven sister states

and the Himalayan state of Sikkim, connected to East India by a narrow strip of land, the Siliguri Corridor, between Nepal and Bangladesh.

The 40 million residents of northeast India represent only 3.1% of the population of India. They are divided into 220 ethnic groups with an equal number of dialects, many of which are vastly different from the others. Some areas are strongly Hindu, others Muslim, Christian, or Animist.

Maranatha, in response to urgent requests from Seventh-day Adventist Church leaders in India, has agreed to build churches and schools in several of the Northeast states. We have begun that work and have already completed 26 churches. Additionally, we have completed a large Education and Evangelism Center (EEC) on the campus of Manipur Boarding School, and another at Northeast Adventist College in Jowai, in the state of Meghalaya.

In February, my wife and I visited the Northeast states of Tripura, Nagaland, and Manipur as part of our work with Maranatha. We heard many stories of dedication to mission outreach, but there is one that stands out in particular: the story of Pastor Tharte.

MODERN DAY SAMUEL

When we arrived in Falgunjay, Tripura, we met Tharte, who eagerly told us his story.

“My family comes from Mizoram. One Sabbath in 1998, we invited the visiting mission director, Pastor Sanga, to visit our house after the worship service, and we enjoyed a Sabbath meal together,” Tharte remembered as he described his journey to the mission field.

“After the meal, the pastor told us how the mission had chosen to adopt our neighbor state of Tripura as our

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special mission field. I remember smiling and thinking that was a very good idea, but it would be a dangerous challenge for the missionaries. Then the pastor said he would like me to go as a missionary to Tripura. That frightened me, and yet I felt honored.” (The state of Mizoram is 90% Christian, and Tripura is 80% Hindu.)

Tharte asked Sanga if he could have a week to think about his call. He agreed, and Tharte began to pray

for God’s specific guidance. On the next Sabbath morning, Tharte asked his mother what she thought he ought to do.

“Everything is so different there,” Tharte told her. “They speak a language we do not know. They eat different foods than we do. Their houses are different, and they do not even eat their cattle! How will we live?”

“My son,” she said, “this is not really your choice or mine. You see, when you were born, I dedicated you fully to God and to the church, just like the Biblical Hannah did with her son Samuel. If God is now calling you to go as a missionary to Tripura, you must go!”

That’s how Pastor Tharte’s missionary adventure began in 1998. He gathered everything he thought he

might need and began the 150-mile trip from his home to the town of Falgunjay in Tripura.

“I came with fear, and with great hope!” Tharte said.

HOME IN THE MISSION FIELD

He found a small place to stay and immediately set out to learn the local language. The villagers resented his coming and did not welcome him, making the first months very lonely and difficult. He prayed to his heavenly Father often.

Tharte was skilled at sports and chose to see if he could make friends and learn the language by playing soccer with local young men. Before long he was teaching soccer to the local youth, many of whom had become his friends.

“It took six months for me to learn the language,” he said, “and six more to establish the first house church.”

Gradually, the village of Falgunjay welcomed Tharte and the Seventh-day Adventist message. In 1999 Tharte went back to school and studied at Northeast

Pastor Tharte

Bhakda Molsom and his wife.

The new Falgunjay One-Day Church. The walls will be finished with metal panels.

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Adventist College for two years. The Tripura Mission has affirmed his work, and he is now a fully ordained Adventist pastor, coordinating the growth of 32 congregations and shepherding more than 2,000 baptized church members in this part of Tripura. In 2013 through 2014, nine of Tharte’s congregations received new Maranatha churches.

CARRYING THE CHURCH

On the afternoon of February 27, 2014, local Falgunjay members, Maranatha staff members, and community friends carried the steel for a One-Day Church down the hill and across the pond to the building site for their brand new church building.

As the church “rose from the ground,” my wife Brenda and I talked with some of the members and visited a growing Adventist school on a neighboring hillside. Everyone met us as if we were long-lost siblings and as if our coming was finally bringing the family together.

In one home, we met Bhakda Molsom, a former guerrilla terrorist, who is now an elder in the Falgunjay church. He told us of his life in the jungle, and of how he finally decided he had to leave the guerrilla group and become a regular citizen. When he surrendered to the army police, they allowed him to be forgiven if he and his wife would move to Tripura state and become good citizens.

Bhakda and his wife Tarini moved next door to her Hindu sister in Falgunjay. Before long, they met Tharte

and were baptized. Together they now give Bible studies and lead the church music with Bhakda’s small drum.

“It’s not a very good drum,” he told me, “because it has goat hide instead of cow hide. Since the people here do not kill cows, I have to make do with a not-so-good drum.”

We bought the Falgunjay church drum, paying enough for Bhakda to return to his home in Mizoram and buy a new drum with the right hide for the right sound.•

Since Maranatha’s first project

in India 25 years ago, you have

responded to India in a BIG way and

helped us to complete more than

1,700 churches and schools.

Yet the incredible need in India

is still present. People are only

beginning to discover the Gospel,

and they need our help! In this latest

effort, we are not only raising money

for churches, but we are also putting

a big emphasis on schools. We need

to raise money to build classrooms

where children can learn about God’s

love.

In 2014, Maranatha has committed

to building 100 churches, 36

classrooms, and 1 Education and

Evangelism Center in India.

We cannot do this without you!

Please make a donation for India

projects! Your gift will not only

build a church or school, it will

awaken hearts to a new hope

found in Jesus Christ.

WILL YOU HELP INDIA?

Bhakda Molsom and his wife.

Photos by Tom Lloyd

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Blessings Flow in Zimbabwe Maranatha launches latest water well project

By Julie Z. Lee

In too many parts of the world, people

are without access to safe water,

resulting in millions of water‑related

deaths each year. The solution? More

deep water wells.

A boy drinks from a new well in Mozambique, where Maranatha helped to fund and drill more than 700 wells over a period of three years.Ph

oto

by D

ick D

uerk

sen

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T he official dedication ceremony wouldn’t be for

months, but the people of Kambuzuma West in Zimbabwe could not wait a second longer to celebrate. So on May 5, 2014 the community gathered to pray in thanksgiving and then began pumping clean water from their new Maranatha well.

The informal gathering kicked off Maranatha’s latest well project. Starting this year, Maranatha will be constructing wells in Zimbabwe communities where Maranatha has already constructed or plans to construct churches and schools.

“Whenever we are involved in a country, Maranatha tries to ask what we could do to enhance the building of a church or school? And in some of these areas, a well can make a big impact on a couple of levels. One is that people really need clean drinking water. Second, a well on a church or school property is available to the entire community—so

it becomes outreach, a service from the church,” says Kyle Fiess, vice president of marketing and projects.

Maranatha built a One-Day Church for the Kambuzuma West congregation in September 2012 during an earlier construction effort. Currently, there are plans to build 300 One-Day Churches, 36 One-Day School classrooms, and an Education and Evangelism Center in Zimbabwe. Maranatha is working with Seventh-day Adventist Church leaders to determine sites for wells.

Wells in Zimbabwe need to be funded! If you would like to make a donation to the well program or sponsor an entire well, please give today! • Clean water is critical to

survival. According to the World

Health Organization and UNICEF’s

Joint Monitoring Program, a 2011

study showed that there are an

estimated 768 million people using

water that has been potentially

contaminated. As a result, millions

of people die each year from a

water-related disease.

In Africa—mostly sub-Saharan

Africa—there are approximately

345 million without access to

safe drinking water. By giving to

the water well project, you will

be helping to give thousands of

people access to clean water.

THE GIFT OF WATER

Call us if you would like to sponsor a well in full. Donations of all sizes are accepted for wells and all of our programs.

The drilling of this well is the most important and exciting event to happen in Kambuzuma West since Maranatha crews built their church in September 2012.

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Judy and Nelson Hiner

Judy hiner had only been an Adventist a few months when she

joined her church, the Enumclaw congregation in Washington, on a Maranatha mission trip to Nicaragua. Already, Judy’s decision to be an Adventist had created some resistance at home; her husband Nelson was not pleased with her new faith. “We had a really, really rough time,” she says of her first few months in the church.

Still she remained firm in her decision to participate and returned from the mission trip completely enthused for missions and rejuvenated. Over the

next year Nelson started being more “agreeable” about the religion issue and even attended services with his wife. She talked so much about the trip that when she suggested that they both attend the next church mission trip to Panama, as a birthday gift to themselves, he agreed.

“It was my first mission trip, so I was a little curious about what we were going to do,” says Nelson.

Nelson and Judy were about to be part of a team that would build the frame and block walls of a new church, hold children’s ministries meetings, distribute food and Bibles to the needy, and more. The group also designated a small team to personally invite people to the children’s programs and the church

dedication on Sabbath.

UNSUSPECTING EVANGELIST

One person integral to the door-to-door effort was Ricardo Tejada, known affectionately as Papi. “I didn’t want to go [on the mission trip],” says Tejada. “But one Sabbath the group leader showed me my name on the list of participants who had their flights paid for and everything. He said, ‘You just have to go to the airport and show them your photo I.D.”

It turned out that Tejada, a former colporteur and one of the few bilingual team participants, was integral to the outreach effort. He worked daily with Enumclaw church elder, Larry Gaser, to knock on doors in the sprawling shantytown, a large area occupied by poor families with nowhere else to build their shacks.

THE HAVE-NOTS“This is the poorest of poor areas.

You’ve seen a thousand pictures of places like this,” says Lori Noel, volunteer and member of Enumclaw church. “Their houses were just sheet metal put together. They have nothing.”

The shantytown border is just across the street from the new church property. As the mission team moved through the dirt paths, meeting men, women, and children, Tejada explained that the volunteers were there to build a church for them. It was quite a surprise. Living on borrowed space, these people don’t even have electricity, roads, or plumbing provided.

Congregation Transformation A church family from Washington experiences the impact only a mission trip can bring

By Carrie Purkeypile

Phot

o by

Dea

n Mun

dy

Page 11: The Volunteer July August 2014

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REAL-LIFE PRODIGAL SON

Noel gets emotional talking about a young man, Juan, whom she met while visiting homes in the shantytown. “His eyes were empty and hopeless,” she says. Juan told her, “I’ve walked away from the church and I’m not going back.”

Something about Juan struck a chord in Noel’s heart. “I personally will not stop praying until I hear that you have come back,” she told him. “I will not stop. I don’t care why you walked away. But I will not stop praying for you.”

On Sabbath, the church was packed full and literally overflowing with people. Although the church only had 15 members at the time, hundreds of visitors accepted the personal invitation to consider the church their own.

“Among all those people, God turned me around just in time to see Juan walk into the church,” recalls Noel. “It was so beautiful!”

WE’LL SIT OUTSIDE

The Enumclaw group set up 120 chairs for the first service in the new church they had built, but it wasn’t anywhere near enough! The freshly built structure was completely full, with onlookers peering in and listening through the open-air windows.

“We didn’t fit into the church,” says Tejada of the full-to-the-brim Sabbath service. “Our church elder

told me, ‘We gringos will sit outside. You preach to your people!’”

Tejada was honored to give the first sermon in the new building, a message on Jesus as, “the Way, the Truth and the Life.”

Tejada’s priority at that point was that someone would continue to spiritually care for the people who were so willing to learn more. “Some were crying, telling me, ‘Don’t go! Don’t leave us alone.’” The group implored the district pastor and leaders of the local congregation to continue to guide the people in their spiritual journey and left Bible study materials in the local language.

THE TRUE JOY OF SERVICE

After many hard days of work in the heat and humidity, Nelson was cleaning the job site one evening when a young woman, who was nursing her baby, tapped him on the shoulder. “Gracias,” she said, pointing at the church.

“It just touched me,” says Nelson of his most memorable moment. “The people in that immediate area are hungry for the Word of God, and now they have a place to go and be taught.”

Judy was just as enthusiastic about this mission trip as she was the last. Maybe even more! “I have never been happier. We feel we are representing God, and we are family doing it. We eat together, go to work together, and have fun together, too! I really miss that when we get home. The closeness of the [church] family doing the mission together is great.”

As many before have witnessed, serving others does a whole lot of good for the servants, too. For Judy and Nelson, the experience even had an impact on their marriage. “We were really on the same page while we were there,” says Judy. “It really opened up communication, and our relationship

was much improved. It was the best thing that we could

have done.” •

Ricardo Tejada (left) and Lori Noel (in hat).

The new church building, coupled with volunteer

outreach immediately generated unexpected levels of interest in the community. Though the church only had

15 members, the building was overflowing with eager visitors.

Many are now studying the Bible with local leaders.

Phot

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Lar

ry G

asse

r

Phot

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Page 12: The Volunteer July August 2014

A little girl in the

remote village of Bairro

Luquembo patiently

ignores the flies while

her mother buys produce

at an outdoor market.

Maranatha built a church

in this village in May 2014.

Bairro Luquembo, Angola

Phot

o by

Chr

istin

a Llo

yd

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Maranatha Celebrates Yellowknife Project AnniversaryOn June 15, 1973, John and Ida Mae Freeman led a group of volunteers in building a church for the Yellowknife Seventh-day Adventist congregation in the Northwest Territories. More than four decades later, the Freemans returned to Canada for the Yellowknife Adventist Church’s Homecoming Weekend, June 13-15, 2015, to be part of the weekend celebration.

Maranatha was honored on Sabbath morning, during which John was asked about his memories of Yellowknife. Don Kirkman and Leon and Dolores Slikkers, all who participated on the Yellowknife project, also shared their memories of the two-week project.

The two-week Yellowknife project captured the attention of leadership at the Adventist World Church, and the event was turned into a Mission Spotlight segment, a slideshow program focused on mission stories. The Mission Spotlight feature catapulted Maranatha’s ministry into the public eye and played a significant role in the organization’s growth.

Today, the Yellowknife Adventist congregation continues to meet in the church that Maranatha volunteers helped to build.

Watch the 1973 Yellowknife Mission Spotlight feature on our website at www.maranatha.org

Multiple Groups Build Multiple Churches

In late March, more than 80 members of the Multiple Group team wrapped up a mission trip to the Dominican Republic. This team built two churches from the ground up, painted two churches, and ran a medical clinic where volunteers learned how to extract teeth! One of the more unique outreach activities from this group was the donation of baseball equipment. Baseball is a popular sport in the Dominican Republic, and it is a common sight to see children playing a game in the street. The equipment will be given to a local coach, who teaches sports to community children.

“We gave away 12 bats, 25 gloves, and 4 dozen balls,” says David Lopez, director of volunteer projects at Maranatha and co-leader of the Multiple Group trip. “The pastor had tears in his eyes as he was thanking us for the gift.”

The Multiple Group Project gathers small teams of volunteers who don’t quite have the numbers for an entire mission trip of their own. This year’s group mostly came from California. The majority were teenagers from various academies or church groups.

NEWS

Multiple Group Project

Yellowknife Church

Planned Giving “Exitus Acta Probat.” George Washington said these words, which mean, “the result is the test of the actions” in Latin.

Washington liked the words to such a degree that he turned them into his personal motto. Subsequently, he had them memorialized into his personal coat-of-arms and embossed into many of his books.

Washington felt it was important to leave his mark on the world and particularly set the course for the new country. He felt strongly that the results would be the determinant of whether decisions were made correctly—which turned out to be the case in the early years of the United States.

The action of building a new church and a new school engraves Christianity into the minds of many people, especially children. Christian values become the motto.

What is your motto? What will be the test of your life and your actions in the world?

Create a legacy to change the world. Work with Maranatha in planning your estate.

For more information contact the Maranatha Foundation at (916) 774-7700.

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RAJASTHAN

5

KARNATAKA

9

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Thanks for Serving!

The following Group Project teams are serving during the months of July-August, 2014:

BRAZILThe Place Adventist Fellowship

California

DOMINICAN REPUBLICWest Houston Adventist Youth Team

Texas

PANAMAMaranatha Las Vegas

Nevada

ZIMBABWECorona Adventist Church

California

Create a Project!

If you are interested in taking a team

on a mission trip, let Maranatha guide

you through the process! We’ll help

you to set a budget, find a site and

accommodations, organize your team*,

and even provide in‑country support

from our staff.

For more information, call (916) 774‑7700

or email [email protected].

*Group Project teams must have a

minimum of 20 participants; leaders

recruit their own teams.

PROJECTS CALENDAR

Young Adult Project 2014Ages 18 - 35

BARAHONA, DOMINICAN REPUBLICLeadership: Michael Paradise & Dan Klein, Sr.August 1 - 11, 2014

Black Hills Open TeamSOUTH DAKOTA, USALeadership: Dave SchwinnAugust 4 - 21, 2014

Federal Way Open TeamWASHINGTON, USALeadership: Leroy KelmAugust 18 - September 4, 2014

Amity Adventist Church Open TeamARKANSAS, USALeadership: Dave Schwinn & Roger HatchSeptember 21 - October 5, 2014

Panama Painting Open TeamCHIRIQUI, PANAMALeadership: Sadie & Ted TorrezOctober 15 - 27, 2014

Love is the Answer Mission MinistriesLA CHORRERA, PANAMALeadership: Carol HerbertOctober 16 - 27, 2014

Perry Adventist Church Open TeamFLORIDA, USALeadership: Roger Hatch & Dave SchwinnOctober 22 - November 10, 2014

Kerala India Open TeamKERALA, INDIALeadership: Bruce FjarliDecember 4 - 16, 2014

Christmas Family Project 2014 SANTO DOMINGO, DOMINICAN REPUBLICLeadership: Vickie & Bernie WiedmannDecember 18 - 29, 2014

Christmas Open Team SANTO DOMINGO, DOMINICAN REPUBLICLeadership: Jose BourgetDecember 19 - 29, 2014

Chwang India Open TeamCHWANG, INDIALeadership: Dick & Brenda DuerksenDec. 23, 2014 - Jan. 4, 2015

Namibia Open TeamKATIMA MULILO, NAMIBIALeadership: Karen GodfreyDec. 23, 2014 - Jan. 4, 2015

Ultimate Workout ReunionBONGA ABAJO, PANAMALeadership: Dan Skau & Daniel MedranoDec. 26, 2014 - Jan. 3, 2015

Panama Open TeamCHANGUINOLA, PANAMALeadership: Merrill & Diane Zachary & George AlderJanuary 28 - February 9, 2015

Manipur India Open TeamMANIPUR, INDIALeadership: David Lopez & Terry SchwartzFebruary 4 - 16, 2015

Dominican Republic Open TeamSANTO DOMINGO, DOMINICAN REPUBLICLeadership: George CarpenterFebruary 12 - 23, 2015

São Tomé Open TeamSÃO TOMÉLeadership: Karen GodfreyFebruary 18 - March 4, 2015

Multiple Group ProjectDOMINICAN REPUBLICLeadership: Steve CaseMarch 19 - 29, 2015

You can serve on a mission trip with Maranatha! From

construction to cooking to outreach, there are many ways to

help, and no experience is necessary. Simply look through the

opportunities listed below or visit the online Project Calendar

at www.maranatha.org. For more information, email us at

[email protected] or call (916) 774-7700.

Phot

o by

Dick

Due

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ANDRAH PRADESH

1,295

UTTAR PRADESH

37

UTTARAKHAND

1

ODISHA

50

JHARKHAND

39

RAJASTHAN

5

MADHYA PRADESH

1

MAHARASHTRA

15

PUNJAB

30HARYANA

66

MANIPUR

14TRIPURA

25

2ASSAM

MEGHALAYA

24

BIHAR

76

WEST BENGAL

37

TAMILNADU

23

KARNATAKA

9

KERALA

15

138,188,240MUSLIMS

827,578,868HINDUS

19,215,730SIKHS

24,080,016CHRISTIANS

4,225,053JAINS

THE MISSION SCENE

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INDIA

In the years that

Maranatha has

been building in

India, giving has

exploded.

Offering in India

has jumped from

$118,280.73 to

$702,521.25

Tithe has increased by

604%

Maranatha has built a total of

churches in India

1,766

a closer look at

The majority of churches built by Maranatha in India are in the state of Andra Pradesh.

When Maranatha first began work

in India there were 200,000 Adventists in the whole country.

In 2014 there are now 1.6 million Adventist Christians in India.

2000 2014

Despite this exponential

growth, the huge majority

of Indian people have never

heard the Gospel message.

In 1998 there were

50,000 Adventists in Andra Pradesh. By 2013

that number had grown to

950,000 people–a direct correlation to the mission

work done in that state.

7,955,207BUDDHISTS

MULTIPLY THAT BY 8.

1998

50,000 Adventists

= 10,000 people

2013

950,000 Adventists

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Dick

Due

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n

HIMACHAL PRADESH

2

Page 16: The Volunteer July August 2014

ON THE COVER: Members of the Falgunjay church in India carry the steel for their new One-Day Church. Photo by Dick Duerksen.

990 Reserve Drive, Suite 100Roseville, CA 95678

Non-ProfitU.S. Postage

PAIDRoseville, CA

Permit No. 111

About Maranatha

Maranatha spreads the Gospel

throughout the world as it builds

people through the construction of

urgently needed buildings.

All notices of change of address

should be sent to the Maranatha

Volunteers International United States

address.

Julie Z. Lee, Editor

Carrie Purkeypile, Managing Editor

Heather Bergren, Designer

United States Headquarters:

Maranatha Volunteers International

990 Reserve Drive

Suite 100

Roseville, CA 95678

Phone: (916) 774‑7700

Fax: (916) 774‑7701

Website: www.maranatha.org

Email: [email protected]

In Canada:

Maranatha Volunteers

International Association

c/o V06494C

PO Box 6494, Station Terminal

Vancouver, BC V6B 6R3

CANADA

MARANATHA VOLUNTEERS INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION

with

ADVENTURE CHRISTIAN CHURCH6401 STANFORD RANCH ROADROSEVILLE, CA 95678

Wintley Phipps

FRIDAY AFTERNOON SEMINARS BEGIN AT 3 P.M. CHILDREN’S PROGRAMMINGREGISTRATION RECOMMENDED

M A R A N A T H A . O R G / C O N V E N T I O N9 1 6 . 7 74 . 7 7 0 0

FRIDAY, 7 P.M. · SABBATH 9:30 A.M. & 1:30 P.M. (FREE LUNCH)

where:FREE ADMISSION

E E

featuring musical guest

SEPTEMBER 19-20, 2014