In
1894 Bill and Elizabeth Pettigrew, American Baptist missionaries
from Ireland, brought the gospel to the spirit-worshipping headhunters
of Manipur who inhabited the northeast corner of India. Their initial
foray brought them to the Mao people, one of several Naga tribes
who originated from China many centuries ago. The Mao people rejected
the Pettigrews and their gospel message. Eventually they turned
to a neighboring Naga tribe called the Tangkul who welcomed the
gospel. When the Tangkul gave up their animistic practices to enter
into a personal relationship with Christ, God blessed them with
a standard of living and health that became the envy of their neighbors,
the Maos. Eventually many Mao people accepted Christianity to get
these outward benefits without understanding the priority of spiritual
regeneration. The anticipated benefits didn't materialize and the
Mao people remained backward and weak. Seventy years later
The four
of us settled into our front-row seats in the cavernous Mao church
in Manipur, India. The large choir of Mao women had assembled directly
in front of us. The Mao people had written a special song to honor
and welcome us to their village. As they began to sing, an unforgettably
haunting wail pierced my heart. Translated into English, their words
were
Among
the races God created
He gave the white man
Love and the desire to love
To herald the gospel of Jesus
To all four corners of the earth
Despising
their very own lives
To bring the gospel of life to the Mao people
They come bringing the good news
But our
revered forefathers
Did not accord them happy welcome
Therefore our ancestors
Lived a life of head-hunting
Not seeking the Giver of Life
But the boast of worldly living
This is
why the Mao tribe
Suffers backwardness and weakness
Today we look forward
To the kind visit by you
We wait to welcome you
You who come to bestow with blessings to bless
May the Holy Spirit work healing in and through you
According
to a Mao leader, by the late 1920s the Mao tribe knew they had made
a mistake when they refused the white missionaries. But those who
became Christians did so just to get material blessings from the
Lord. And since they lacked solid Bible teaching their Christianity
became just another thread in the fabric of their predominantly animistic
culture. Their faith was lifeless, powerless, and institutionalized.
To make things worse, the government had sealed off the area from
foreigners because of violence between tribes. No foreign missionary
had ever spent more than a day among the Mao people to teach them.
But God had not forgotten them. In the Mao tribe He had kept a remnant
of believers who would humble themselves before Him. Among them was
a prominent medical doctor and his wife, Dr. Lorho and Apin.
These
believers, the leaders of the churches, were convinced that the stubborn
backwardness of their tribe was due to their ancestors' rejection
of the gospel. They set aside land for a House of Prayer and a Prayer
Mountain. During a week of prayer and fasting in 1994, these Mao
leaders dedicated their entire tribe to God in repentance for the
sin of their ancestors. The Lord heard their cries.
In October,
1999, God sent Brent K., Steve K., and their team from Window of
Opportunity into the area. During this one-day trip they led the
Mao leaders in a prayer service of identificational repentance to
God for the sins of their ancestors. Brent repented on behalf of
the British who had colonized the Nagas and the Maos on behalf of
their forbears who had rejected the gospel. The curse was broken.
The stage was set for the outpouring of the Holy Spirit during Window
of Opportunity's return visit in March 2000.
God assembled
a "special" team for the mission. Joining Brent and medical
missionary Steve were Ann J. of the U. S. Center for World Mission
and myself with The Elijah Challenge. The Maos always refer to missionaries
as "the whites." They were surprised to see among "the
whites" two missionaries who were not white but rather looked
very much like them.
That first
night, as I sat listening to the Mao women welcome us with their
eerily beautiful hymn, I felt that God had brought us to the Mao
people on an historic mission. "Today we look forward to the
kind visit by you," they sang. "We wait to welcome you,
you who come to bestow with blessings to bless. May the Holy Spirit
work healing in and through you." They had waited decades for
God to send someone to bring healing and restoration. Were we the
ones?
The Maos
had scheduled three full days of ministry for our team. Morning and
afternoon we conducted outdoor crusades in a large field, and in
the evenings the team split up to minister in different local churches.
God poured out His Spirit in a way the Mao people had never seen.
Thousands came forward, sometimes nearly every soul in a meeting,
to give up animism and institutional religion to receive Christ as
sole Lord and Savior. During these meetings, Steve K., Ann J., and
local doctors conducted free medical clinics in a tent on the edge
of the field.
Hundreds
of people came forward during the meetings to be healed by Jesus
of their infirmities. On the first day I stood in front of them and
asked Jesus to show His power and grace to them. I asked the people
to wave their hands at me if they had been healed after the prayer.
A sea of hands went up to testify that the Holy Spirit had released
His power. Immediately, people testified publicly about what the
Lord had done. Young people said they had been delivered from the
spirits of pornography, profanity, and depression.
On the
morning of the third day, Brent K. and Simon Haqq ministered to a
crowd of five to ten thousand people. Many of these came forward
to receive the empowerment of the Holy Spirit. Cripples were touched
by the power of God and stood up to walk as the Holy Spirit came
upon the people.
The climax
of the three days for me was the last crusade meeting. We had come
not just to win souls, but to set a revival fire that would spread
after we left. At this meeting I taught about the impartation of
God's power for all believers to preach the gospel. I invited those
who wanted this power to come forward. Hundreds of Mao believers
stepped forward. Laying my hands on each one according to 2 Timothy
1:6-7, I prayed for the impartation of the spirit of love, power,
and a sound mind. I challenged them put to use immediately what God
had just given them by faith. I asked those in the crowd with eyesight
problems to come up for ministry by the believers. People streamed
to the front. I instructed the newly-empowered believers, some of
whom had just been saved during the meetings, to lay their hands
on these blind and visually-impaired. In Mark 16:17-18 Jesus promises
that believers will lay hands on the sick, and they will get well.
In front of that great crowd of people, Jesus kept His word and performed
powerful miracles through "ordinary" believers. Blind eyes
were opened
people whose sight was severely impaired testified
that they could now see clearly! The testimonies multiplied. The
lame walked and other miracles took place as believers ministered
in the name of Jesus. Among these believers was an exuberant Dr.
Lorho. That day God equipped His Mao army to win souls with power.
God heard
the believers who had come together in unity to repent and seek healing
for their tribe. He sent us, giving us the privilege of bringing
blessing, healing, and restoration. Let us pray that God will send
more workers to the Mao people to help the leaders teach and disciple
the believers in preparation for an even greater endtime harvest.
Luke
10:9 "Heal
the sick who are there and tell them,
'The kingdom of God is near you.’"