Convo N’ Concert Livestream Dialogue 2/21: Save the date for Sunday Feb 21 at 7pm for Ekklesiae’s “Convo N’ Concert: Following Christ in an America Laid Bare.” It will be dialogue amongst Christian leaders and pastors, as well as lyrical improvisation from Ken Medema (singer-songwriter) and Jermaine Hughes (spoken word). The topic is discipleship amidst a nation (and church) under “deconstruction.” Register here.
Cana At-Home Series
Support for our Marriages: CANA has a new resource: CANA@Home! A six-part video series to experience with your spouse in your own home, intended to encourage and strengthen marriages during these unusual times. Check it out. If you'd like more information about CANA, feel free to reach out to Debbie or Dale Gish.
Pray for Pandemic Leadership at JETS in Nigeria
Sunday sends his greetings and the following letter from ScholarLeaders International, one of the organisations that God used to sponsor Sunday's PhD studies at the Center for Advanced Theological Studies, (CAST), Fuller Theological Seminary, Pasadena, CA, from 2002 to 2007.
Included in the letter is more background information about Sunday, some of his publications, and praises and prayer requests:
"With the present economic recession, raising funds for school fees will be an enormous challenge for students. We do not know what to do, but our eyes are on the Lord."
Sunday Bobai Agang in Nigeria
Dear Friends and Partners of Sunday Bobai Agang,
Over the next several weeks, the SCHOLARLEADERS Prayer Community will be interceding for Christian leaders from Anglophone Africa. Geographically, culturally, and religiously diverse, the 22 African countries that list English as an official language span the continent, from Kenya and Tanzania in the east to Sierra Leone and Liberia in the west to South Africa and Botswana in the south. In some countries, such as Kenya and Zambia, Christianity is the dominant religion; in others, like Sierra Leone and Sudan, the majority are Muslims. To learn more about Anglophone Africa, visit our Prayer Community page. This week, please join us in prayer for Dr. Sunday Bobai Agang in Nigeria.
Nicknamed the “Giant of Africa,” Nigeria has the largest population and economy on the continent. Approximately half (46%) of Nigeria’s estimated 206 million people are Christians living in the south, while Muslims in the north comprise the other half (54%). Since 2002, Boko Haram has terrorized northeastern Nigeria, killing and maiming tens of thousands.
Sunday is the Provost of Jos ECWA Theological Seminary (JETS), a client school of the Vital Sustainability Initiative. Previously he served as Provost of Kagoro ECWA Theological Seminary. In addition to teaching courses in theology, ethics, and public policy, Sunday has written several books on Christian responses to bigotry, corruption, terrorism, and other forms of violence. Check out Sunday’s 2012 InSights Essay: Does Christianity Have a Public Face?
Sunday is also the founder of Gawon Ministries, which provides humanitarian and spiritual care for widows and orphans in Nigeria. In 2015, SCHOLARLEADERS awarded a grant to support Sunday’s organization in promoting economic sustainability through ethical business practices and microloans for women. SCHOLARLEADERS also supported Sunday’s PhD studies at Fuller Theological Seminary.
Sunday shares the following message:Dear SCHOLARLEADERS Prayer Community,
Greetings! This past Christmas reminded us of God’s amazing gift of Christ. For my family and me, it brought the joy of knowing that we are beneficiaries of the labor, faith, prayer, and ministry of saints across the centuries.
I am particularly reminded of how God used SCHOLARLEADERS’ donors and ministry partners to sponsor my PhD studies at Fuller from 2002 to 2007. It was a very challenging experience because I could not be with my dearly beloved wife Sarah and our four children: Nancy (now 33 years old and married), Esther (now 30 years old and married), Kent (now 27 year old), and Dorcas (now 25 years old). Your prayers and love kept me going.
For the sake of the need for theological leadership in Nigeria, I endured the hardship. Since 2007, God has reunited me with my family and church community, Evangelical Church Winning All (ECWA). When I graduated in 2007, I returned to ECWA Theological Seminary, Jos (JETS) as a lecturer. During my time at JETS, I became the Chaplain of the institution for one year. I was then appointed the Academic Dean from 2008 to 2011.
In 2012, I was appointed the Provost of ECWA Theological Seminary, Kagoro (ETSK), where I served for two terms of three years each (2012 to 2017). I left for a sabbatical in 2018 and had the opportunity to coordinate continent-wide research on African Public Theology. As God will have it, the textbook was published by Langham with the goal of achieving the African Union (AU) Agenda 2063: The Africa We Want. Prior to this, I had written articles and books on the violent conflicts in Nigeria. Two of the books are titled When Evil Strikes: Faith and the Politics of Human Hostility (2016) and No More Cheeks to Turn? (2017).
In 2020, God deemed it fitting to take me back to JETS, where I was appointed Provost. I took over the mantle of leadership at the beginning of an extraordinarily challenging year. On March 23, 2020 all schools in Nigeria had to shut down to obey government measures to contain the spread of COVID-19. JETS had to quickly turn to e-learning to keep lectures going. However, lecturers were not really prepared for the transition. We had to train ourselves on how to do e-learning classes. Furthermore, most of the students were in areas where the Internet was either unavailable or unstable.
Due to the economic lockdown, even students who were available for the e-learning classes could not raise funds for school fees. Meanwhile, JETS employs 96 faculty and staff. I needed N9.8 million (around $25K USD) monthly to pay salaries only, not counting other overhead costs. We had to depend solely on what God’s grace provided. Of course, God did provide!
While we were preparing for the second semester in the 2020-2021 academic year, we did not expect Nigeria and the global community to experience another wave of COVID-19. So, we are now forced to return to e-learning. The Nigerian government is already threatening another lockdown. With the present economic recession, raising funds for school fees will be an enormous challenge for students. We do not know what to do, but our eyes are on the Lord.
Praises and Prayer Requests1. Thank God for all the opportunities he has given me to utilize my theological training for the benefit of my country and the continent. Thank God for a successful writing career. Praise God for using my lectures and writings to transform the lives of pastors, church planters, missionaries, public officials, and so on, to the praise of God’s glory. Praise God for the leadership privileges He has given me within and beyond my denomination.
2. Thank God for my family. In 2019, my wife Sarah completed her bachelor’s degree in pastoral theology. All of our children are graduates, and one of them, Esther Paul Moses, is completing her MA in Psychology and Christian Counseling at ETSK. Our two eldest daughters, Nancy and Esther, are both happily married with two kids each.
3. The second wave of COVID-19 has caught up with us. On Christmas day, I tested positive. Dorcas and Nancy and her family got it from me. Praise God for protecting Sarah and Kent from it so far. Praise God granting us all full recovery.
4. The Nigerian political, moral, social, economic, and religious context is very volatile. There is a high rise in crimes, insecurity, kidnapping, Fulani herders continuing to murder innocent farmers and destroy their villages, bad governance and increasing corruption, etc. The present administration of President Muhammadu Buhari is very divisive. It promotes nepotism and Fulani hegemony to the detriment of other ethnic groups. The other challenges that the country is facing are aptly captured in a short documentary (2015): Nowhere to Run: Nigeria’s Ecological and Climate Crisis. Pray that God will help the Nigerian government to delight in justice and righteousness, so that our country will be a safe place for human flourishing.
5. This year, it will be extremely hard to raise N11.2 million (around $28K USD) per month. Pray that God will raise up partners who can help us raise that amount and even more for the overhead costs of running the institution. As a pace-setting theological institution in Africa, JETS is very crucial to the theological training needed in Nigeria and Africa.
6. Our online theological education can only succeed if we have stable electricity. Therefore, we need to have a feasible solar plant. Please pray that God will also provide the funds for this crucial project.
7. In 2019, an organization in the United States approved a matching grant of $100,000 for refurbishing one of our deplorable student hostels. We have until the end of this year to raise our own part of the grant. Please pray that God will stir up the hearts of His people to give toward this critical need.
I thank you so very much for your partnership in my ministry.
Sincerely,
Sunday Bobai Agang
If you would like to send a message to Sunday, please reply to this e-mail.
Visit our Prayer Community page to subscribe or to view archived prayer letters.
New Book: The Kingdom of God in Africa
Dr. Wanjiru Gitau (LeaderStudies) and Dr. Mark Shaw just published The Kingdom of God in Africa: A History of African Christianity, which tells the story of African Christianity, complete with examples of key people, maps, and statistics. It is currently the only single-volume, up-to-date history of how Christ’s Kingdom has grown on the African continent.
New Book: 1 Enoch as Christian Scripture
How do Christians decide what belongs in the Bible? In our first book of the month, 1 Enoch as Christian Scripture: A Study in the Reception and Appropriation of 1 Enoch in Jude and the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Canon, Dr. Bruk Ayele Asale, President of Mekane Yesus Seminary (VSI), describes what this can look like for Ethiopian Christians.
Profile: Dr. Yohanna Katanacho
“In suffering, we discover a new space – a space in which God is present,” says Dr. Yohanna Katanacho. As a Palestinian Israeli Evangelical, Yohanna knows this firsthand. Read this new profile on Yohanna, whom SCHOLARLEADERS honored as the 2019 Scholarleader of the Year.
ISJ: Fall 2020 Issue
How are seminaries weathering the pandemic? How will they continue to serve the Church going forward? What ongoing challenges do teachers and students in theological education face, and how may they address them? The InSights Journal for Global Theological Education just put out a new issue with articles that begin to answer these questions.
SF African American Faith-Based Coalition and Feeding 5000
The San Francisco African American Faith-Based Coalition is working with the San Francisco Department of Public Health to host:
Feeding 500 - A Citywide Collaborative During DOVID-19
Wednesday, December 9, 2020 from 9:00am-4:00pm
EP 2020: Advent Listening Sessions, Virtual Summer Gathering
Advent 2020 Listening and Prayer Sessions
Discipleship in a Technological Age: A Virtual Summer Gathering
The Ekklesia Project Board of Directors has decided not to hold our 2021 Summer Gathering at Techny Towers, Chicago.
We will miss being together in person-the hugs and handshakes, shared meals, walks with friends, children's laughter, the stimulating presentations and the rich, important conversations they generate. We know that when we are able to experience these gifts again we will cherish them all the more.
And while Zoom fatigue is real, we believe that our timely theme, carried over from 2020, offers opportunities for virtual exploration, reflection, and conversation that we won't want to miss in 2021.
So stay tuned for specifics as our plans come together over the next few months. At this point we envision a mix of recorded and live sessions with plenary speakers, worship, and guided group conversations, occurring over the course of a few weeks in the summer of 2021, with a possible meeting or two on the actual dates of the Gathering: July 8-10.
In the meantime, grace and peace to you and yours.
Alternative Gifts 2020
In the culture around us, the center of the holidays has been taken over by consumerism. The season is gauged by how much is sold on Friday after Thanksgiving. The Holidays are looked upon as the time of year where people make money and we see whether the economy improves or declines. We desire our patterns to be centered in Christ and in who he is. As a way to do this we practice an alternative way of giving gifts. Instead of buying gifts for each other, we can instead give the money we would have spent on a gift and give it to one of the ministries we support as a church. We then give a gift card to each other, sharing the gift we have given in their name.
Give by mail and check
Download Alternative Gifts Form
Fill out form and print.
Make a check to Redeemer Community Church for the total amount.
Write “Alternative Gifts” in the memo line of you check
Send check and completed form to 1224 Fairfax Ave, San Francisco, CA 94112.
Give online via PayPal
Download Alternative Gifts Form
Fill out form and email to rwongw@gmail.com.
Use the PayPal donate page to give the total amount.
On the second PayPal page, add a “note” indicating the donation is for “Alternative Gifts”.
Gift Cards
Download and print or email Alternative Gift Cards to let your gift recipients know that you made a gift to a ministry in their name.
Gift Cards suitable for printing
Gift Cards suitable for emailing
Grace Fellowship Celebrates 37th Anniversary
Grace Fellowship Celebrates 37th Anniversary: Redeemer was included in the compilation of photos, videos, and music that Grace Fellowship Community Church put together to celebrate their 37th anniversary. You can view the “Virtual Concert” here, but due to copyright restrictions please do not share publicly!
Rise Prep Job Opening for Development Manager
Rise Prep is opening up a new position as Development Manager, to help implement Rise Prep’s year-round fundraising strategy and development plans:
Responsibilities:
Work with Development Director to build and execute new donor acquisition plans
Support donor retention activities, ranging from direct engagement with high-capacity
donors to more scalable channels like publishing monthly newsletters
Lead social media strategy to drive donor awareness and engagement
Organize open houses and school tours for potential donors
Plan annual gala with planning committee, in addition to smaller events
Lead grant writing efforts as part of annual fundraising
Work with administrative assistant in maintaining donor CRM
Partner with the Development Committee on monthly basis for feedback
Email resume and cover letter to jchien@riseprep.org and dkim@riseprep.org.
