Shifting Ground - Steady God

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Shifting Ground

STEADY GOD

From The Director Remaining Constant

While Facilitating Change

To be honest, I am a reluctant National Director of a mission organisation. I am not doing what I envisioned I would be doing with my life. My plan incorporated all sorts of ideas, including, rather naively, that I would live in such a way that others nearby might see Christ in me, the hope of glory. But our cultural imperatives demand that we take care of ourselves first. And I bought into that. The best education my parents could afford (public school), the best jobs I could attain, the best home, the best church, the best gadgets.

But I had close to zero knowledge of the big world out there. And even if I had known, the world could scrape along as best it can. I liked the status quo.

It wasn’t until my mid-20s that I came to appreciate how blessed I was to be a Christian living in Australia, and to understand the state of the world with respect to gospel access and local church presence. I learned that population scientists estimate that every day, some 63,000 people die in places where there are no churches. I was shocked, and prayed, “here I am, Lord, send me”. Change was in the air.

Send me. Not, make me a sender.

But my Heavenly Father, to whom I have entrusted my life, had another plan. A taste of church planting work in West Africa, followed by Bible College to earn my first ministry degree, and a growing desire to devote the rest of my life to making Christ known in some heretofore obscure-to-me place. Then, just as my studies were ending, came an invitation to join Pioneers to help others go and make disciples and plant churches. To facilitate the sending of others.

It is too much to say I was gutted, but I wasn’t happy with this change in plan. Based on what I had learned, now I desperately wanted to be sent.

Change is a constant.

God, in His grace, kindness, mercy, love and sovereignty, brought together multiple variables in my life so that He might be further glorified in places lacking gospel access. I am thankful for every twist and turn, every change, every opportunity to rely more sincerely on Him. I am convinced that people from places I have never visited will forever, like me, enjoy worshipping the Son of God, who gave His life for all.

My role is to facilitate change even as Pioneers remains faithful to an unchanging task. Today, we have members serving all over the world, and we have a goal to double our gospel, disciple-making and church planting impact (more workers, more networking, more giving) over the next decade. Will that come to pass?

We hope so. Either way, there will no doubt be plenty of change to come. But God will have His way as we seek to be faithful to His leading.

Sorry… I have indulged in this piece! God has blessed in ways I can hardly imagine. I am deeply thankful for change, and I look forward to what He has in store.

How about you?

Save the Humans

The Why and What of Pioneers

It is true to say Pioneers has always been in a state of flux. Change is normal. Always will be.

Our current reality – serving churches to reach nations with the gospel of Christ Jesus – had its beginnings in the merger of several like-minded mission organisations. In the late 1990s, the South Sea Evangelical Mission and the Asia Pacific Christian Mission came together to form Pioneers of Australia. This merger and the blending of other entities across the world with Pioneers-USA gave rise to Pioneers International. In 2001, Action Partners joined us here in Australia, and in 2010, Arab World Ministries joined to complete the family tree at this stage of our history.

Why? Because of a common God-given goal.

“A shared vision is not an idea… it is, rather, a force in people’s hearts… Few, if any forces, in human affairs are as powerful… While adaptive learning is possible without vision, generative learning occurs only when people are striving to accomplish something that matters deeply to them.”

[Peter Senge on the Importance of a Shared Vision]

What matters deeply to Pioneers? Saving humans. Pioneers mobilises teams to glorify God among unreached peoples by initiating church planting movements in partnership with local churches.

Today, Pioneers International comprises…

• 3,300 members (cross-cultural workers, staff, boards)

• from 88 countries

• serving on 391 teams

• in 105 countries

• among 260 people groups

These stats are constantly changing. As soon as they go to print, they change! People come and go. Work gets done. But, for sure, many, many churches and individuals throughout Australia play roles in saving unreached peoples by sending, nurturing, financing, praying, encouraging, travelling, exhorting, training,

PIONEERS MOBILISES TEAMS TO GLORIFY GOD AMONG UNREACHED PEOPLES BY INITIATING CHURCH PLANTING MOVEMENTS IN PARTNERSHIP WITH LOCAL CHURCHES.

teaching, helping, serving, and much more.

What work? The ministry of the gospel – speaking God’s Word, teaching truth, striving with precious people, and demonstrating the love of God such that people are saved, disciples are made, churches are formed, God is glorified. We are clear about what we have been raised up to do.

The ‘movement’ activity involves at least four key ingredients…

1. Movement through the Word

Because the momentum of the gospel is in its words. According to Romans 1:16, the gospel ‘is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes.’

2. Movement through the Spirit

It is the gift of the Spirit that makes believers in Christ, making them children of God. He is the guarantee of eternal life. And so, we become Christ’s witnesses (Acts 1:8), our spiritual DNA.

3. Movement through Prayer

Prayer and fasting make crooked places straight. Followers of Jesus devote themselves to praying for wisdom, help, and direction. They pray when gathered, when ministering, making decisions, and sending out workers. They pray in physical crises, in prison, on beaches, and on the sea.

4. Movement through Suffering

According to Philippians 1:27-30, suffering for Christ’s sake is a gift that comes with salvation. When we bear it well, it gives incredible momentum to the gospel.

Change is par for the course. No surprise! What Pioneers does is help churches send and care for workers who strive to share the unchanging gospel with people in places yet to hear and understand it. We engage in this work because there are no other means by which people must be saved (Acts 4:12); it is all about the Lord Jesus – His life, death and resurrection (1 Corinthians 15:3-4).

Global Leadership in Ever-Changing Contexts

Serving alongside the Pioneers International Director are four Associate International Directors (AID) who provide godly, visionary, culturally adept, and strategic leadership as our many members serve to make the gospel known throughout the world. In this role, they foster cohesion between mobilisation ‘gateways’ (sending initiatives) and field ministry spheres.

Fred Dimado | Central Asia, South Asia, Island Southeast Asia

Steve Currey | AID Europe, Middle East, Africa

Flavio Silva | AID Americas, Asia, Oceania

Joanna Lima | AID Strategic Global Ministries

Here, Steve, Flavio and Joanna share insights about changes and challenges from their unique perspectives.

The Whole Church Reaching

One hundred years ago 80% of the Church was in the northern hemisphere, mostly spread between Europe and North America. Today, 82% of the church lies in Africa, Asia and Latin America. We have many faithful missionaries to thank for this progress! As the church expands in this part of the world, so does her role in sending missionaries to reach others. Applicants for missionary service are flooding to our Pioneers Africa offices.

Our leaders in Ghana, Egypt and Kenya are challenging healthy local churches to embrace missions to ‘the ends of the earth’ as their calling and raison d’etre. There are healthy churches across these countries… but what’s missing is a vision to send and support missionaries. In short, the African Church is wrestling with the notion that missionaries aren’t just white westerners and the conviction that God desires to raise up a sending force from Africa to complete the Great Commission.

Locally Start

After experiencing significant changes in the last century and even decades, the global missionary movement stands at a pivotal juncture, marked by both unprecedented opportunities and daunting challenges. As we strive to see lives transformed by the gospel across the globe, it is paramount to navigate the complex landscape and uncharted waters with discernment and agility.

There is no lack of challenges today in taking the gospel to unreached people groups and regions. Political

the Whole World

Sending structures are needed and our Kenyan, Egyptian and Ghanaian gateways – building mechanisms to effectively attract, train, equip, send and sustain missionaries. That’s where we need your prayers!

Until all have heard the gospel of Jesus Christ!

Scan to stay abreast of Mobilisation developments in East Africa

Scan to stay abreast of Mobilisation developments in Ghana and West Africa

instability, religious persecution, and cultural barriers often hinder access to certain regions and people groups. Additionally, the digital age brings both the boon of connectivity and the bane of distraction, requiring missionaries to adapt their methods of outreach.

On the other hand, the global missionary movement is witnessing a remarkable shift as emerging sending churches from Latin America, Africa and Asia rise to prominence. These vibrant congregations bring fresh perspectives and renewed zeal, opening doors to

culturally resonant forms of evangelism. Their proximity to unreached peoples and understanding of similar social dynamics present unparalleled opportunities for effective ministry. This surge of participation from the Global South is not only expanding the reach of the gospel worldwide but also enriching the tapestry of global Christianity with diverse expressions of faith. New, creative and contextualised approaches must be developed and tested. Wholistic methods that address physical needs alongside spiritual proved their value. Community development projects, healthcare initiatives, and educational programs can serve as bridges for the gospel when they incorporate Jesus’

& Faith Forecasting

None of us knows what the future holds. But we have to continue making decisions today that will impact tomorrow. I took a course years ago called ‘Strategic Forecasting’. The idea is to carefully explore history, current trends and realities, and speculate about what might be ahead. Of course, none of the most careful and sophisticated calculations takes God’s sovereignty into consideration. How do forecasting and faith go together?

Let me give you an example. No surprise here, but one of the realities cross-cultural workers and mission agencies like ours have to give attention to is finance. That’s even more true now than it has been in the past. Trends in giving have changed; bi-vocationalism is more and more the norm; as the global work force is changing, the needs are changing. For example –did you know that for someone to fly from Brazil to Thailand is the cost equivalent of four months’ rent in Brazil? We see more workers being raised up in what is referred to as the ‘Global South’ – and we need to explore whole new models of finance. Is it realistic to expect workers from an economy like that of Brazil to have to raise all their support in the traditional way? On average, that takes about seven years in Brazil! Are there better ways?

Pioneers is committed to keeping administrative costs at a minimum. We get creative, and in many cases, we operate on a shoe-string budget. Our international

message into their routine, demonstrating Christ’s love in action.

For Australians considering taking part in God’s global mission, I would say: “start locally!” Engage with diaspora communities at home or support missions through prayer and giving. Consider short-term missions to gain firsthand experience. Stay informed about global trends, be prepared to think creatively, and experience the privilege of becoming a tool in God’s powerful hands.

budget is comprised of 2% of support brought in by our global workers. But as our workforce increasingly diversifies, that 2% isn’t keeping up with the demands for infrastructure and leadership. For example, 2% from an Australian who has raised support is very different from 2% of an Egyptian worker’s budget. These are the kind of realities we must wrestle with. They are often not considered ‘urgent’ to resolve, but they are important. We have a think-tank working through innovative ideas for creative future financial models. We need new, fresh, disruptive innovations for how we think about missions and money.

What are the significant trends we are observing? What might we expect in the next 10 years in the context of God’s amazing sovereignty? When I first started raising support, I could not imagine that more than two decades later I would be able to testify that I have always had sufficient funds to do what I’ve felt God has been calling me to do. In fact, I would have forecasted financial ruin within five years! It’s easy to be all doom and gloom in the forecasting space as we look at global security challenges, the dominance of digital surveillance, and so on, but we are hopeful for what lies ahead. We are asking questions to be as prepared as we can possibly be, poised for growth as we trust God to continue to build His global Church.

Flavio Silva| AID

Less Important But Vastly More Precious

Do you remember during the pandemic when we all said, ‘‘I can’t wait until this is over and everything is back to normal’’? I look back on that and laugh at myself – what is normal anyway? I find that the world is a different place now, not just from the pandemic, but because of social changes, environmental changes and many more.

I am in Australia for home assignment at the moment, and I realise that the country I have returned to is different to the one I left. The person who left Australia is different to the one who has returned. Yet as I share with churches about what God is doing on the field, I realise that whatever is going on in the world, God is working the same as He always has, in complete control of everything. We fight for some changes and fight against others, but in the end, change will happen despite or because of us. But none of these changes are out of God’s hands.

As I reflect on my previous term, I can see how God has changed and grown me. There have been times of great rejoicing and times of deep sorrow. There have been times of quiet rest and times of hard work. Times of fellowship and times of loneliness. Times when I feel like I am crushing it and times when I feel a complete failure.

Yet through it all, God is sovereign and present. His love never fails. He weeps and rejoices with me. He gives me gifts of both rest and work. He gives me good people for fellowship and is enough for me when I am alone. He doesn’t care whether I succeed or fail – His love is constant.

God has taught me that I am less important and more precious than I can ever know. This is because He is a constant Father. He does not judge me on my success or failures. He does not judge me on my theological prowess. He does not judge me on my mission strategies. He invites me to love and be loved because I am a precious child of His. God is a constant Father and His greatest command never changes:

‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind’.

Matthew 22:37

AM | Pioneers Member

Relations and Transitions Can be Costly

‘It is the LORD who goes before you. He will be with you; He will not leave you or forsake you. Do not fear or be dismayed.’

Deuteronomy 31:8

I served in Isaan, Thailand, as a single man from 2013 to 2024. In August 2023, it was time to begin procedures to renew my visa, which was due to expire in October. All documentation was submitted satisfactorily, as well as an interview and inspection at our team office a week later. My team, located about 70km from the immigration office, chased updates, but we were notified just two days before expiry that my visa would not be renewed. The reason given was ‘incorrect procedures’. I applied and paid for an extra seven-day stay.

All my Thai ministry partners and friends were shocked that I was obliged to leave the country imminently but were supportive and flexible to forgive me from commitments and responsibilities. It was particularly upsetting to part from dear Thai brothers and sisters given the ministry journeys God had us on together. Yet, their trust in the Lord was amazing and genuine. “God’s plans are bigger than we can know, and we trust that in it He will receive glory, and that He will do good. God is always good,” they said. I taught English at a local school and upon hearing of my predicament, the school director and another senior teacher very kindly took me out to dinner to thank me for my work in the school, They even drove me to the airport on the day I flew out of the country.

It was a strange circumstance that while one Thai institution (the school) was embracing and affirming

my ministry and presence in Thailand, another was not. It seemed a cold-hearted response, yet it is my belief that these officers were performing their duties as immigration officials according to their laws and customs. I thank the Lord for them and pray they will receive God’s grace and saving hope.

I returned to Sydney in October last year. After thorough debriefing and reflection, God enabled me to determine my health status and to confront the truth that I was not thriving in Thailand as I should be. I had been serving in Thailand for 10 years, but during that last term, I had reached exhaustion levels of the ongoing relational transitions as workers joined and left teams in Isaan. Our teams are family and fall-back relationships as we engage with national communities and build relationships. We share common struggles as we grow in language competency, adapt to customs, and make plans together. As people left the region, I grieved the loss of relational intimacy. This accumulation of grief was a big factor in my compromised wellbeing, having an effect of how I was serving the Lord.

God showed me that if I had kept going in Isaan as I was, it is quite possible I would have ‘crashed and burned’. I came to trust that it was my loving Father who orchestrated circumstances to bring my visa to a close, move me away from my team and ministry, and give me opportunity to stop, confront pressings needs, and to heal. How kind, how amazing is God’s love for us. He knows us better than we know ourselves and gives us grace to restore our faith and vigour for His service.

Global Mission through overseas aid and relief projects

OARF

Some Pioneers workers are involved in aid and development work through OARF projects that reflect an acknowledgement and understanding of the UN Sustainable Development Goals through a Christian faith perspective. These projects work with communities, seeking to improve conditions in a sustainable way and redress inequalities by promoting fairer and impartial systems of services, often for the least privileged and most marginalised members of that society.

Rumginae Health Centre

The end of an era, a healthy transition

As the Overseas Aid & Relief Fund project at Rumginae draws to a close, we pause to give glory to God and to acknowledge the faithful labours of many people over many years.

Rumginae Health Centre was established in the 1960s by Asia Pacific Christian Mission medical professionals from Australia and New Zealand, and for over 50 years has been an important part of the ECPNG Health Services. Since the very beginning, Rumginae has been a place of training and discipling young men and women to become Christian health-workers and, for many years, was the only training school for Community Health Workers in the Western Province of Papua New Guinea. Students travel to remote aid posts to provide the first level of health care for the country. Their presence in those communities saves lives and brings relief from suffering. Some 15 peripheral facilities also provide health care for about 30,000 people. The Centre has historically worked closely with Mission Aviation Fellowship, providing vital transportation of personnel, patients, and medical supplies to and from aid posts and smaller health centres.

The Overseas Aid and Relief Fund was established by APCM 35 years ago to support the work of the ECPNG Health services. Many missionary doctors and nurses gave years of service at Rumginae with OARF support funding from generous donors. OARF funds for lifesaving projects such as MAF medical evacuations, practical projects of essential medical equipment, and hospital generators have also been raised. Over the years many other projects have been supported by OARF, now a vital ministry of Pioneers Australia. Praise to God for all His blessings!

After decades of remarkable service, this project has ended, and the ongoing work is fully handed over to PNG authorities and healthcare workers. This outcome, after much prayer and deliberation, is a natural outworking of the UN Sustainable Development Goals through a Christian faith perspective.

We are incredibly thankful to God…

• For the many workers who have contributed to positive health outcomes for countless people and communities.

• For the tireless efforts of boards, workers, hospital staff, leaders and more.

• For the financial partnership through sacrificial giving by many people over many years, including some of you reading this edition of Xpress.

• For the prayer of the saints who have remembered this ministry and cared enough to bring needs, patients, caregivers and opportunities before the throne of God.

There is remarkable stability and faithfulness at the hospital even today. Hospital and Training School staff and ECPNG pastors and friends are still serving faithfully in the face of challenge. They are still labouring, showing compassion through practical action in a Christian hospital which has been serving the needs of local people from a clearing in the dense sago swamps, beside a river, a road and an airstrip.

This change in status (from OARF Project to full local leadership) is a good one. It is a healthy transition. Please join us in prayer for the ongoing work of RHC. May many people continue to be blessed through this outstanding heath care facility!

More Changes Than We Can Count

We arrived on the field for language and culture learning during Covid, somehow able to get a visa as well as fulfill the requirements to leave Australia. Yup, there were changes, many expected, and some eagerly anticipated. A new place to live, new team, new friends, new church, new school, new cultures, new weather to adjust to. Some changes were super difficult, some just wore down our patience, and some confused us. Amid countless change, we have annoyed some people, and some people (can I say this?!) have annoyed us.

We have been training in a country outside the restricted access country where we one day hope to serve. But the borders haven’t reopened yet. So, we are asking God for guidance. It looks to us like every step from here will bring more change. And commensurate exhaustion. So, we are working out how we can get some routine for our family and how we can help our children build their lives on God’s plan for the world.

One thing we do is stay grounded in God’s words, His promises; reminding ourselves of what Jesus did for us, and all the stories of God providing for His people. We also pray specific prayers: prayers for guidance, prayers

for help. God chooses to answer some of our prayers in the ways we like, and He continues to guide and provide for us. This helps us focus on what Jesus has done, what He is doing now, and what He will do in the future.

Even though we keep holding onto Christ and His promises, that doesn’t mean we are always free of some anxiety and stress.

The same way I still can’t go on roller coasters without tightly gripping the safety bar, we cling to Christ until our fingers ache.

Life is short. Although full of grace and wonder, it is full of change and pain. Just like winter here – the snow is harsh, slippery, and dangerous, but when you step back to see the big picture, it is breathtakingly beautiful. In the world we live in, amid sin and suffering, we hold out Christ to those around us, wherever we are. We present, with tears of sadness and joy, a never-changing message: God’s word stands forever, by His Spirit He dwells with us, and Jesus is our only hope.

‘There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens...’

Ecclesiastes 3:1

From – and to – every Nation, Tribe, People & Language Orientation Week 2024

During our annual week-long orientation, a diverse group of individuals, each of whom has made the bold choice to leave behind comfort and security in pursuit of a life filled with new challenges and new experiences, gathered at a campsite east of Melbourne. This event is a time for new and potential members to connect more deeply with Pioneers, and to find their community among fellow ‘misfits’. It is not unusual for attendees to feel they have finally landed among ‘their people’.

Twenty-nine adults and 16 children originating from eight countries joined our team to get to know us and for us to get to know them. Participants shared how the Lord is calling them to Africa, Asia, the Americas, and Australia. From remote island villages to North African metropolises, the Lord has been walking ahead of His workers, preparing them to use their unique skills and gifts to bring glory to His name! Not only their skills, talents, and strengths, but also their weaknesses, vulnerabilities, and challenging life experiences will influence their ministry among those who have yet to hear and understand the gospel of Jesus Christ.

Through worship, each morning presented a beautiful taste of John’s vision in Revelation 7:9-10

‘After this I looked, and behold, a great multitude that no one could number, from every nation, from all tribes and peoples and languages, standing before the throne and before the Lamb, clothed in white robes, with palm branches in their hands, and crying out with a loud voice, “Salvation belongs to our God who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb!”’

This is a future reality we enthusiastically anticipate and earnestly work towards. This glorious, Christ-exalting heavenly scene is one which every follower of Jesus Christ will enjoy, to say the least! Our experience this week was a foretaste of that which is to come – and it was beautiful.

Over the week, we gained a richer understanding of many topics, including how Pioneers came into being, how we care for our members, church relationships, keeping children safe, and how we steward resources, including people, relationships, finances, and opportunities. Each morning, we spent time meditating on the biblical principles that underpin our core values.

As it does every year, the week went by too fast! We all wished we could have added a few extra days together. There is something particularly special when likeminded global-mission-aware people gather. Everyone ‘gets it’. Everyone is a little ‘out there’. Everyone is ‘pushing boundaries’ to make Jesus known. Please join us in praying for everyone who attended Orientation 2024.

May they trust the Lord’s plan for their lives, step out in faith, and embrace their loving Father’s provision and perfect faithfulness. May His outworking through His servants strengthen and grow His kingdom. Amen.

Orientation Program

During the week, we discussed the various elements that undergird Pioneers and shape our priorities and practice. In addition to the content below, each participant shared snippets their Spirit-led mission story.

Our Core Values – The values we cherish what they look like in action.

Caring Matters – Our Member Care & Development team pastorally care for members and help their churches do the same.

Families, Kids, Singles – Team life and the outworking of the gospel is considered through these lenses.

Money Matters – Pioneers facilitates finance resourcing and stewardship for every donor and member.

Multi-Cultural Teams – As God sends from everywhere to everywhere, our teams are wonderfully multicultural.

Counting the Cost – Taking the gospel to people in places with little access to it is costly in all sorts of ways.

Church Partnerships – Everything we do, from sending to partnering to church planting, relates to local churches.

Church Planting – We glorify God among unreached peoples by making disciples as Christ builds His church.

Prayer – Don’t leave home without it! Praying for the nations and gospel workers is a vital work.

Leading as a Servant – Even our Lord Jesus did not come to be served, but to serve others.

Keeping our Children Safe – The safety of children is one of our highest concerns as we serve globally.

“When God comes calling in our lives, we often have to push our way out of the safe harbour, lose sight of land, and trust Him to lead us to places where we have never been before.”
Ted Fletcher, 2001

Learning from David: Finding God in the midst of change

David, son of Jesse, was familiar with peripatetic living, starting as a young shepherd, then later fleeing in the Judean wilderness. He was able to flourish amid transition, loss, and instability, by giving expression to his interior life of faith through song and repeatedly reminding himself of the truth.

‘God, the one and only — I’ll wait for as long as He says. Everything I hope for comes from Him, so why not?’

(Psalm 62:5 MSG)

It is in God alone that we learn to trust, when all our support structures are removed. We have the privilege of leaning heavily on the Giver rather than on His gifts.

We are invited to wait on Him for resolution of many things that are out of our control. We’re invited to grow in that beautiful fruit called patience (long-suffering).

‘He’s solid rock under my feet, breathing room for my soul. An impregnable castle: I’m set for life.’

(Psalm 62:6 MSG)

When everything else is moving, we remember the Rock on which we stand, whose character never changes. Before our circumstances are steady, we can breathe easy. His steadfast love and faithfulness become to us more precious than a fortress. As we reset our compass on these truths, we are set daily for life and ministry in precarious situations and unstable political systems.

‘My help and glory are in God — granite strength and safe-harbour God — So trust in Him absolutely, people; lay your down on the line for Him. God is a safe place to be.’ (Psalm 62:7 MSG)

Many of us have lost a sense of status and honour, by leaving careers in our passport countries. It is good for us to be reminded where our true glory resides. In the midst of enhanced dangers, God is truly a safe harbour for us, body and soul. We can continue to embrace risky change, and even lay our lives on the line for Him without being crippled by anxiety.

Surprisingly, amid war and enemy pursuit, David asked not for safety, but intimacy.

‘I’m asking God for one thing, only one thing: To live with Him in His house my whole life long. I’ll contemplate His beauty; I’ll stay at His feet.’

(Psalm 27:4 MSG)

When the security of a permanent home is removed, we have a unique opportunity to lean into our true home, our heavenly Father. As we resolve in our heart to make Him our One Thing – our noble pursuit – we discover that our good Father will lovingly lead us to many other good things.

If you are in the midst of transition of change we invite you to consider incorporating these verses in prayer or song on a daily basis. May they be an encouragement to you!

Brendon and Wendy served with ACCI in Indonesia for 7 years. Wendy currently serves on the Pioneers Member Care team and Brendon continues ministry to Indonesia and is applying to join Pioneers

Brendon and Wendy

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