Meeting Ananias
By James Tino
()
About this ebook
Are you finding it harder and harder to keep your faith energized? Why is it that the Christian life, once so exciting and full of promise, often becomes routine and ordinary? As we follow Jesus, it is easy to get overwhelmed with the details and concerns of life, and lose sight of what God is doing in us and through us. We can become focused on the wrong things, which quickly drains the life out of our faith. We need to have our vision adjusted by the Word of God and the Holy Spirit so we can see the hand of God at work in our lives each and every day. In Meeting Ananias, our eyes are opened to see what we sometimes miss: the ordinary and extraordinary ways that God makes Himself known to us as we follow Him.
For more than 25 years, Pastor James Tino has been inspiring people in congregations and classrooms around the world with real-life examples of God's grace and power at work! Now, for the first time, Rev. Tino shares ten of his favorite stories in one volume, filled with lessons from God that he learned while serving as a missionary in Venezuela. Sometimes heartwarming, sometimes challenging, these true stories will encourage and inspire you to know God more deeply, and will open the eyes of your heart to understand the Word of God in a way that is fresh and invigorating.
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Book preview
Meeting Ananias - James Tino
Meeting Ananias – And Other Eye-Opening Stories of Faith
By Rev. Dr. James Tino
Published by Tri-Pillar Publishing at Smashwords
Copyright 2014 by James Tino
This book is available in print at www.TriPillarPublishing.com and other online retailers.
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to your favorite ebook retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Foreword by Dale A. Meyer
The Reason
Introduction
Maps
A Life of Faith (Genesis 12:1-3)
Meeting Ananias (Acts 9:10-19)
i Exam (Luke 10:30-37)
Hidden Treasure (2 Corinthians 4:1-12)
Ana’s Bible (John 5:1-9)
When I am Weak (2 Corinthians 12:5-10)
An Introduction to Hope (John 9:1-7; 24-38)
Losing Your Mind (Hebrews 4:12-16)
Powerful Prayer (Matthew 17:14-20)
My Prodigal Son (Luke 15:11-20, and 32)
God’s Mission Today
This book is dedicated to my wife Liisa, the best missionary I have ever known, and to all of those who labored together with us in Venezuela. May we all continue to follow our Missionary God wherever He leads!
Acknowledgments
Someone once said that writing a book is like a dance between the author and the editor – each needs to know when to lead and when to follow; when to step forward, and when to step back. I am blessed beyond measure to have experienced my first author’s dance
with the talented and dedicated team at Tri-Pillar Publishing:
Josephine Dibble, prayerful and passionate, enthusiastic and encouraging – you taught me how to write.
Andy Dibble, patient and watchful, measured and meticulous – you taught me what it means to minister through service.
Peter Dibble, creative and insightful – your art is a visual song.
They not only know their stuff, but they love Jesus and love to serve Him in all they do. This book is a fruit of their ministry.
Thanks to Heath Trampe and Jacob Youmans for inviting me to dance with Tri-Pillar. Your talented writing sets a high mark for those, like me, who follow.
My wife, Liisa, whom I am blessed to have as my partner in the dance of life: you shared all of these experiences with me. Thank you for your unfailing support and encouragement, and for filling the holes in my memory of people, places, and events. Thank you also for creating the wonderful maps in this book.
Thanks to Dale Meyer for writing the Foreword. In the midst of a demanding ministry, you take time for people. Your life is a reflection of the character of Jesus.
Our missionary colleagues in Venezuela became a family to us, and though time and distance have separated us, the bond we share still remains. Thank you for your ministry, your love for the Venezuelan people, and your love for our Lord Jesus. I am still learning from you.
A special thanks to the pastors, leaders, and members of the Lutheran Church of Venezuela. You opened your hearts to us and received us not as strangers, but as brothers and sisters. You taught us to love. May this book, in some small way, serve as a thank-you for all that you gave us.
Foreword
I didn’t read the book but I saw the movie.
You’ve probably said that; I have. I did read Meeting Ananias but I actually saw the movie
first. I met James Tino years ago, in the early 1990s, when I was privileged to visit Venezuela and meet missionaries, tour churches, and get acquainted with the offices of Cristo para Todas las Naciones (Christ for All Nations), the Venezuelan title for the work of Lutheran Hour Ministries. Missionary Tino and others took me to places that aren’t part of carefully-scripted, pay-thousands-of-dollars tours. We went into a barrio in Caracas. We went into homes for Bible studies. We ate at restaurants that tested my non-spicy, American conditioned diet. I remember one lunch with a local TV personality, a Christian, who told me about homeless children who searched garbage piles for their food. I heard about American military personnel who tended to keep to themselves and not get into Venezuelan communities and culture, a.k.a., squandered mission opportunities. And of course, the missionaries took me to churches – the big, cavernous cathedrals, but more inspiring was the time in the little churches where they faithfully told people about Jesus. That’s the movie
that still plays in my head. Although the names and locations escape me after all these years, I still see the pictures,
the photographs
recorded in my memory.
Life is pictures. For those blessed with eyesight, our waking hours are one visual after another. Many don’t seem memorable: taking the kids to school, walking out of work at the end of the day, cutting grass, and the like – mundane, daily things. Talk to an aged person, though, and those pictured memories are dear and can bring tears to the eyes. These days as never before, what’s visual comes not only from our moving through life but also from media. When I was a kid, the very last page in the Chicago Tribune was devoted to photos; the rest of the paper was all text. Today, photos are on every newspaper page. Television, computer monitors, smartphones, digital cameras, and all the electronic marvels of our time, flood us with images. In fact, the stream of visuals that come at us is so great that we get numb to the story each photo tells. The torrent makes us spectators, not participants in what we see. I teach preaching at Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, and regularly ask my class, What do you think is the most visual of all the media?
The students’ answer is dependable: TV or the monitor of their latest gizmo. Nope,
I say. The most visual of all media is the radio.
That draws quizzical looks back and I explain that radio, rightly done, evokes images in the listener’s mind that make them a participant in the story. Garrison Keillor is that kind of visual
radio personality. When you listen to him, you see Lake Wobegon in your mind; you’re there, you are part of the story. When I read Meeting Ananias, the images from my visit over twenty years ago started popping up in my mind. In fact, the engaging stories recalled pictures for me that I had forgotten. God blessed us with eyes, and they bless our souls.
We pastors and professors do a disservice to people when we reduce the Bible to a series of propositional truths, to one dry, dusty doctrine after another. I don’t mean to say that the teachings of the Bible are dry and dusty – anything but! I do mean that sometimes we get so caught up in the intellectual topics of the Bible – the head stuff – that we don’t serve the rich story of Jesus down into the heart. Jesus’ words are Spirit and life
(John 6:63). Sharper than any two-edged sword … discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart,
says Hebrews 4:12 (RSV). God’s Word is supposed to go into the ear, to the brain, and down to the heart. How often, and I fear to know, have we failed to go the full 18 inches from head to heart? For that matter, how often have we preached or taught or conversed using theological jargon that doesn’t even get into the head because it’s so unintelligible to the average layperson? That’s a lack of love. There’s a favorite church prayer of mine that asks, …that your Word may not be bound but have free course and be preached to the joy and edifying of Christ’s holy people.
God is so mysterious and his Son Jesus Christ so abundant in His blessings for us that we not only do a disservice but actually hinder the life-saving Word when we imprison it in theological jargon and head-only truths.
So thank God for these times