Monthly Archives: April 2024

🥖 Special Weekend Edition: The Power of Bread

What’s your earliest memory of something smelling good? I mean really good? Mine is the now long departed Colonial Bakery in Muncie, Indiana. We took a field trip there in early elementary school, but even driving by, the aroma of plain, soft white bread baking was intoxicating for a pudgy young boy like me! It ministered to my senses and my soul. 

The Colonial smell has never been topped, but it has been challenged. As I’ve traveled and lived in various parts of the Muslim world, food in general and bread in particular, has been a consistent component of the joy a place and its people bring. 

In northern Jordan, I discovered that fresh baked pita delights whether it holds shawarma or boiled eggs. During a summer in Izmir, Turkey, one of our breakfast chores involved a two minute walk to the local bakery where I traded 50 cents for a loaf so fresh it was nearly too hot to hold! 

A short bike ride from our home in Holland, an immigrant bakery introduced me to the rest of the tasty corpus of Turkish bread. 

Though I found it in Fresno and it’s at the edge of what many of us might call “bread,” Ethiopian Injera is wonderfully sour and spongy. 

Chapatis baked on the inside wall of a tandoor in Pune, India cheered my team after a two hour train ride went pear-shaped and lasted until midnight! 

High on the very long list of things that make Malaysia wonderful, Roti Canai is bread at another level and a favorite of my friends who love that land and people fiercely. 

Since Jesus called himself the Bread of Life and Paul says his followers are the aroma of Christ, with bread on your mind, I have a two fold challenge today: 

1. Bake one of the breads. Smell the smells and pray for the people. (I’m planning for this one. Feel free to join me.) Send me pics so I can pray with you! 

2. Go buy one of the breads, smell the smells, share the bread and THE Bread with Muslims in a neighborhood nearby or city far away. (I’m dreaming of a roti spree in a downtown KL street market with the aforementioned!)

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3 Data Points and a Beautiful Image

This Muslim Connect email is emerging as I sit in a Q & A session at a big church with Larry Osborn. Do you know of him? The guy’s pastored a cool church for decades and has the scars to show it. He also seems to have the sort of humility (with an amusing dose of cynicism) you love to see in long-term followers of Jesus. I’d encourage you to buy one of his books and watch some talks on YouTube.

Fascinating and Heartbreaking Migration Data Points

Increased numbers
According to the UNHCR, as of April 14, 2024, a total of 48,618 refugees arrived in Europe via one of the Mediterranean routes. Of these, 46,629 used one of the three main sea routes and 1,379 came overland. An estimated 473 died or went missing trying to reach Europe.

Increased deaths
According to international media outlet Deutsche Welle, a total of 8,565 migrants died in 2023, 20% more than in 2022 and the highest total since 2014. The Mediterranean remains the deadliest route with more than 3,100 deaths. A little more than fifty percent of the deaths worldwide resulted from drownings.

Who’s Hosting Syrian Refugees?
Statista reports the top three nations hosting Syrian refugees in 2022 are in the Middle East: Turkey, Lebanon, and Jordan which collectively hosted over 5 million Syrians. In Europe in 2022, Germany, Sweden, and Austria hosted the largest number of Syrians with a combined total of nearly 708,000 people. 

Beautiful Image
Violins, violas, and cellos made from the wood of boats used by refugees to reach Italy were premiered at Milan’s La Scala opera house in a concert performed as a tribute to those who perished trying to reach Europe. The violins used in the performance were made by inmates at one of Italy’s high-security prisons. The performers at La Scala hope to perform at other concert halls across Europe.

Thank you once again to the good folks at Dimitrov Research Center for the Crescent Reading email from which these points were drawn. 

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Me Forgive Them? For That?

I just returned with the family from 50 hours on the road for two precious days with my mom in Indiana and an amazing four minutes of total solar eclipse. 

A trip such as this, like a microcosm for life, doesn’t happen without some offense, resulting in a need for forbearance or even forgiveness. I need it for sub-par attitude and driving decisions. Similarly I need to forgive the parade float driver who gave my son a light up whistle! 

Forgiveness, both asking for it and extending it, is a big part of Ramadan, which has just finished. Abeda Ahmedsays, “Throughout Ramadan, the dua (prayer) that we make the most is, “O Allah, you are Forgiving and love forgiveness, so forgive me. . . .”

The Quran also encourages Muslims to pardon those who’ve wronged them and to endure patiently and forgive, saying, “surely this is a resolve to aspire to.”

While Muslims are taught to pursue the forgiveness of God through diligent and timely prayer, the Bible tells us we’re freely forgiven through the sufficiency of Jesus’s death. At the very center of our faith is the conviction that a person can’t earn the forgiveness of God. We can only appropriate what is graciously offered. 

That said, Jesus taught and taught us to pray, in a way that links our willingness and capacity to forgive with our saving faith. John Piper comments on this, “What destroys us is the settled position that we are not going to forgive, and we have no intention to forgive, and we intend to cherish the grudge. . . . It feels good. . . . because he legitimately wronged me.”

As I was writing this, I was convicted of the need to forgive a brother. Maybe someone comes to mind you need to forgive as well. Please take a minute to post your desire to forgive them on this google doc. Be as discreet as is prudent. As others visit the page, they’ll be invited to pray with you for grace to forgive. 

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Acts Chapter Ten, Again?

Who’s your favorite person in the Bible? (After Jesus, of course!) One of mine is Cornelius. Luke makes quite a deal of him in Acts as the head of the household through which the good news bounced out into the non-Jewish world. 

You know the story: An angel appears to Cornelius saying, “Your prayers have been heard. Go get a dude named Peter. Here’s his address.” At about the same time, a sheet full of squirmies shows up to peckish Peter. He gets the point, answers a knock at the door and heads off to Caesarea. After a wonderfully awkward introduction, Cornelius says “Lay it on us, brother.” Peter barely begins his talk when the Holy Spirit shows up and all heaven breaks loose! And then, way down the road, you and I get saved! 

Why Cornelius? We can only speculate really, but Luke does give some interesting background on him. He tells us twice that Cornelius prayed and gave to the poor. He adds amazingly, that those things “have come up as a memorial offering before God.” 

God receives an offering from a soldier of the empire oppressing the children of God? Stunning. 

Here’s why this is rolling around in my head today: Ramadan, which wraps up next week, is known for fasting and feasting. It’s also an increased time of praying and giving for Muslims. 

Could there be some Cornelius’s out there named Siddiq, Fatima, or Rasheed who are praying and giving with sincere hearts? Is it possible God might receive their efforts as an offering and send them an angel to say, “Go get this person and listen to what they have to say?”

There are Peters out there. I know it. Women and men, full of grace, love and the Holy Spirit, ready to answer a knock on their door. Please join me in praying that will happen as many times over as God gives you faith for. 

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