Daniel Ausbun
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3 Signs You're a Selfish Person

12/29/2012

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Do you know the secret to become friends with anyone? Never talk about yourself - only ask questions about others. People love talking about themselves, what they do, what they think, and what they plan to do. In fact, if you do begin talking too much about yourself, people will begin thinking about how they can leave the conversation.

Beyonce sums up American culture with her hit song, "Me, Myself And I."

Selfishness is dangerous, its blinding and it leads to hell (Galatians 5:19-21). Here are 3 signs you're a selfish person:

1). You think of yourself as more righteous than others. You see other people and believe you're better than they are. People who have less money, less education, less involvement in church, less success at their job, less attractive - you look at these people with less and say, "I'm glad I'm not in their shoes."

Jesus warned us our righteousness must exceed the Pharisees - meaning selfish people aren't saved (Matthew 5:20). The god of self can't save you. It's the grace of God any of us are saved (Ephesians 2:8).

2). You refuse to change, because your way is right. We call this today stubbornness - a code word for selfishness. You don't respond well when someone suggests the ongoing need for change in your life. When you see someone do something at work, you think, "If I did this..."

Hebrews 3:13 says we have to preach the Gospel to ourselves daily to prevent a hardening of our hearts. Selfish people don't believe they need to repent and change, because you're right.

3). You struggle with patience. When you see people "wasting your time," or people who "don't listen to you," you become irritable and impatient. Self-righteous people tend not to be patient and understanding with the failure of others.

Because you know what is right and best, other people are either a burdensome to you or they line-up with your right way to do things, right decisions you've made or become your friends because they're like you.

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Your Church MUST have a Good Facebook Page

12/26/2012

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1 out of 7 people on earth are on Facebook. Social media (mainly Facebook, Twitter & YouTube) could be one of the most underused evangelism, outreach & ministry tools a church has. Most people are likely to connect and look at your church's Facebook page than the church's website.

Social media is here to stay and churches must utilize it for ministry. Here are 5 tips to create and maintain a good church Facebook page:

1). Pictures sell. Nothing will draw more people to your church Facebook page than pictures. People love to see close-up funny pictures. Don't post 50 pictures and half of them being the parking lot, the pulpit or stained glass windows. People want to see other people.

I have a camera I bring to special events - VBS, musicals, and dinners to take pictures. Don't take pictures of people on a regular Sunday sitting in a pew or a classroom during Sunday School. Cameras do need to be ready for the women's conference, youth lock-in, and Upward basketball. Do not use the camera on your phone, you need a real camera you use for church events.

Post your pictures the same day. Last week's pictures are so last week - we've moved on and so has everyone's interest.

2). Update your page regularly. There are two extremes in social media - the spammer who makes 5 posts a day and the dinosaur, who's last update was the Fall Festival in October.  A church should post 3-4 times per week. Remind everyone of upcoming events (use logos) and brag about past events (post pictures), and share resources (use links to helpful sites and YouTube videos).

When I created First Baptist Moreland's church Facebook page (view it here) - there were 4 other unofficial pages. After I created the official page, I merged the duplicate pages. When people type in the name of your church, one main page should come up. Eliminate unnecessary lists, groups and pages. First Baptist Moreland has 4 official pages, and each page has "liked" the others for convenience to find.

3). Check-ins are your best friend. I love check-ins. We should make it a rule, everyone with a smartphone must check-in when coming to church. Here's why: a check-in is an indirect way of letting all your friends know you're at church. After pictures, this is your best tool for promoting your page.

4). Use a professional profile and cover picture. I bought our church Facebook cover picture for $5 on www.fiverr.com. You don't want to look amateurish, and a professional photoshop logo, profile picture, and cover picture, all for $5, will prevent this.

5). Respond to comments and questions. Social media is a conversation. It's embarrassing when I see a church Facebook page and someone asks when VBS begins and no one answers! You need to respond within 12 hours max to questions and comments.

If you don't respond to comments, people will quit listening and talking to you.

Summary - Promote upcoming events (use logos), brag about past events (use pictures) and encourage everyone to check-in when they come to church.

Resources

Likeable Social Media by Dave Kerpen
Platform by Michael Hyatt
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How to Share Christ with Your Family this Christmas

12/21/2012

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Christmas is next week. Many of you will see family members this weekend and next week that you regularly don't talk with. Christmas provides an opportunity for extended conversations with un-churched and non-believing cousins, uncles and in-laws.

Here are 3 tips to move a conversation from shopping, Kindles and football to Christ:

First, attend a Christmas Eve or Christmas Day service at your church. Make it a "tradition" to attend the candlelight service with everyone, and then go home to eat a Christmas Eve dinner. The best traditions include Christ. This might be the only church service your aunt attends all year. Even the grandmother who cooks all day, needs to stop and attend the church service - don't allow half the family to skip church.

Second, read the birth of Christ in Matthew 1:18-25 or Luke 2:1-7 out loud to everyone before you open presents. Make it a "tradition" every year to read Jesus' birth. God speaks through His Word - it never returns void (Isaiah 55:11) - even when you think people aren't listening.

Also, give study Bibles as gifts. Here's a previous post of about my favorite study Bibles. Certain Bibles help non-regular Bible readers understand God's Word. This also creates a follow-up conversation next year about how they liked it.

Third, when talking with people, always brag about the great things God did in your life during 2012. Instead of saying, "I started a new job," you can proclaim, "The Lord was gracious to me this year, He provided a new job."

Don't say, "2012 was awful, I was diagnosed with cancer." Boldly state, "God allowed me to have cancer, but I know He's going to heal me." Place God in every accomplishment or failure of your life - non-believers are intrigued by the genuineness of a believer's faith.

Remember...
  • You cannot argue someone into following Christ.
  • Avoid useless conversations - such as the beliefs of other denominations or political Christianity.
  • Do not sell your church (listing 101 events your church did in 2012) - sell Christ - they need a Savior first, a church second.
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4 Ways to Run a Low or No Budget Ministry

12/20/2012

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Are you a ministry leader trying to plan and reach people for Christ with a low or no budget? Money drives everything...except the Gospel (Luke 16:13). God is fully capable of using you to reach others for His Kingdom without a dollar.

Don't ever say, "If only we had more money, we could ________." The deception of money is that it always makes you believe you need more of it. Jesus warned us to guard ourselves about thinking this way (Luke 12:15).

Here are 4 proven ways for you to run a ministry/class/church/mission on little to no funds:

1). Do not fundraise people to death. I hate fundraisers. I would ban them if I could. If I was a public school principle, I would run a fundraiser a week...but in a church they hurt. You can only draw so much water from a well. Fundraisers give the impression you only want money and they take from people's weekly tithe. Also, if you have a fundraiser a month or more, people will start complaining, or worse - they'll quit attending.

If you do have a fundraiser, go outside the church. Even non-church attenders will support a good cause.

2). Piggyback on church events. For example, if your church is about to hold a churchwide BBQ, have your middle schoolers play a kickball game afterwards. Teenagers eat lunch in 5 minutes, then they're bored - go outside as a class and have a 4 square tournament.

Make a mission out of the leftover BBQ. Instead of everyone taking home the extras - your men's ministry can deliver plates to people in need. Everyone loves a free hot meal.

3). Carpool to other church concerts/revivals/conferences. If the Baptist church 8 miles up the road is having a free youth conference - you need to be there with a carload of teenagers. You can enjoy all the benefits of the conference, while planning none of it.

Sunday nights are frequently used for concerts - your senior adult Sunday School class should hear the Gospel quartet down the road. Church leaders must move beyond their insecurity of members attending other churches. You don't own people, Jesus does.

4). Play team sports on the county's facilities. I'm fortunate to live in a county that offers multiple team sports. First Baptist Moreland plays men's softball, women's softball, coed softball, youth softball, coed volleyball, and youth basketball - and not a single sport is on our church's campus. We don't even have a gym.

Team sports allow numerous people to play and cheer at the games. This can also be an outreach - if someone wants to join your team, they must attend church. There is a cost for registration and jerseys. Look for a local business to pay for the jerseys if they can advertise their company on the back. We use the same jersey for every sport, every year. Its nice using county facilities - no set-up, no clean-up, and no power bill.
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3 Steps to Prevent Discouragement

12/19/2012

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Have you ever had a great idea, shared it with others, only to be ignored? Do you have God-sized plans, cast your vision, only to be told it cost too much?

Jesus warned His followers in Luke 18:1 not to be discouraged. He spoke in parables to prevent discouragement.

Everyone will experience discouragement at times, maybe many times. I remember 7 years ago trying to launch a single adult ministry from scratch at First Baptist Moreland. A big party and movie was planned, spent $100 on food, many hours in outreach - only to have 2 people show up - and one was the leader - she didn't count. I was not only discouraged, but embarrassed.

Here are 3 steps to identify and prevent discouragement:

1). Stop making comparisons. God's standard is His Word, not other people. There's always someone prettier, better, stronger and wealthier than you. Whatever you do, someone can do it better.

When you're making comparisons, you'll likely miss God's unique plan He has for you. You'll be tempted to surrender to discouragement. God calls you to faithfulness - this means being faithful to someone else - God. We're faithful by fulfilling the responsibilities He has given you. These responsibilities include a follower of Christ, a husband, a father and a employee.

2). Stop being consumed. If you're going non-stop for 18 hours everyday - your defenses become weaker and things seem bleaker than they really are. If you're tired, soon you'll gripe, grumble and groan. Burning your candle at both ends doesn't make you brighter - rather you'll be burned up sooner.

You must make time for rest. It might mean missing a church event or cousin's birthday party. If it's Tuesday and you're looking forward to sleeping late on Saturday morning - your time is too consumed.

3). Stop being a casualty. Does everything you do seem to fail? Nothing goes as planned, problems persist, people are pessimistic. When you keep being passed over for the job, its easy to become a casualty. Just when you think you can make ends meet, someone moves the end.

Failure doesn't mean you're doing the wrong thing. You could be you're doing the right thing the wrong way. If something isn't working, change it. Try a new approach, change your friends, change churches, change careers - there is no reason to live your life as a casualty to discouragement.

If you feel discouraged, its your choice, no one is making you feel that way. Recommit your life to Christ - there's incredible motivating power in faith.
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Your Church Needs to Hire a Police Officer

12/14/2012

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26 people were killed this morning at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. 20 of them were children. This was the second worst shooting in U.S. school history, exceeded only by the 2007 Virginia Tech shooting when 32 people were killed.

This horrific tragedy forces church and school leaders to question security. We live in a sinful, fallen world in which school and church shootings have become too common.

Church leaders should take necessary steps ensuring the safety of worshipers. Here are 3 steps to improve the safety at your church:

  • Have a uniformed police officer present on Sundays and Wednesdays. This lets church members and guests know you take their safety seriously.
  • Have an emergency action plan. Teachers should know what to do and where to go in case a crisis develops.
  • Be aware of and report suspicious behavior. Combative and unstable individuals should be pulled aside and evaluated.

Today reminds us we're never safe - planning and preparing for a tragedy is something church and school leaders can no longer ignore.
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The 3 P's to Doing ANYTHING Successful at Church

12/13/2012

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Are you involved at your church? Do you want to preach better sermons, become a better Upward coach, or teach middle schoolers more effectively?

Here are the 3 P's I personally use pastoring First Baptist Moreland. These are proven, positive and provide a platform for leading and teaching children, students or adults.

1). Prayer. You should be praying for God to give you the words to say. Ask God to use you as His messenger - be filled with His Spirit. Pray for the people you'll be teaching. Pray specially for last Wednesday's prayer requests. Pray for your students to bring a friend next week.

Prayer reveals your dependance on God. A pastor, deacon, or Sunday School teacher faces a great temptation to depend on prior knowledge and experience rather than the power of God. You must make time for prayer, it will never "just happen." Praying in the car driving to work is not dependance on God.

2). Preparation. Do you write "Saturday Night Specials?" Do you plan your Sunday School lessons during the worship service? God knows if you're not prepared. The people you're teaching will know as well. You'll begin repeating yourself, or begin proclaiming Christian Cliches, such as, "Don't put God in a box." Or, "When God closes a door, He opens a window." Facebook and Twitter are overflowing with Christian Cliches.

You want to bring a fresh, prepared message from God every Sunday and Wednesday. You can be prepared by diving into God's Word every day - searching the Scriptures about the topic you're planning to teach. You want to push 1-3 main points of your lesson. If you did an exit interview of everyone leaving the classroom, asking them, "What did you just learn?" How you answer that question should shape your preparation.

3). Promotion. You must be continually inviting new people to attend, contacting missing members, evangelizing students, using social media to promote your message, and informing your audience of upcoming messages and events. You're the walking billboard for the single adult ministry in Hope, Arkansas - every single adult within a 10 miles radius should know your plans. It drives me bananas when someone says, "Daniel, I had no idea that was going on."

I believe the church has the best and only life changing message (Romans 6:4). You must promote your message with passion, purpose and plainness.

This is challenging for many leaders, because you feel you're promoting yourself. You have to view promotion as conviction of your message. If you've prayed and arrive prepared to preach - you'll find joy in promoting a message from God.
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We're 8 Days Away from the End-of-the-World!

12/13/2012

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Notice - immediately go to the store and buy milk and bread! Pictured above is the Mayan calendar which ends on December 21, 2012. In 8 days the world will end because of the above stone inscription.

What should you do? Here are 3 facts about December 21, 2012:

1). The 5,125 year Mayan calendar is coming to an end in 8 days. The calendar with either reset itself, or the world will enter into a void of nothingness, aka The End-of-the-World.

2.) Mexico's Mayan Tourism is Booming. Here's the Mundo Maya 2012 tourism website promoting the Mayan World in Southeastern Mexico, including a countdown to the end.

3). Here are 3 Safe Zones for December 21, 2012. Book your flight ASAP to France, Serbia, or Turkey to survive the end. If you want to celebrate Christmas - a Safe Zone might be your key to seeing Santa!

Resources for the End-of-the-World

The Official Website for December 21, 2012
2012 The Movie
Did the Maya Predict 2012? (History Channel videos)
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3 Signs it's Time for You to Change Churches

12/11/2012

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Because of my job I'm not able to church hop - but changing churches has become the norm. In this USA Today article, it claims 80% of people who join megachurches will be gone in 2 years, even if they complete a new member's class.

Church hopping is truly the "all about me" experience. Attend the Beth Moore study at First Baptist, Youth Group at First Methodist, and the Saturday night Weekend Worship at Community Church. Why attend one church when you can pick what you want from 3 churches?

When you change churches frequently, you avoid the ABCs of church membership: Accountability, Buildup (a "B" word for Growth), and Commitment.

If you do change churches, here are 3 signs it's time for a change:

1). Your church doesn't preach or teach the Bible. I could stand up on Sundays and Wednesdays and read the newspaper, share about a book I'm reading, tell funny jokes I found online, complain about the Democratic Party, and share illustrations of great Americans from the past.

Jesus did not preach this way in His most famous sermon in Matthew 5-7. He quoted Scripture, taught against sin, and boldly shared the narrow way of salvation. The church you attend must preach and teach God's Word.

2). Your church isn't engaged in ministry and missions. The church in Acts 6 was so involved in ministry, they had to appoint deacons. Why? Because there was too much work for the disciples. The Bible says the number of disciples multiplied greatly.

If your church isn't making disciples of all nations, it's not a Great Commission church (Matthew 28:19).

3). Accepted Immorality. If you attend a church and there are open homosexuals telling everyone they were "born gay" and there's nothing wrong with their lifestyle - and the pastor and church leadership refuses to confront it, instead pretending it doesn't exist - 1 Corinthians 5 offers instructions on how to address immorality within a church.

If a church won't discipline people, the people won't grow as God wants them to. Hebrews 12:11 says God disciplines us for our own benefit - and it produces fruit.

Resources

9 Marks of a Healthy Church
Movement towards Larger, Contemporary Churches (LifeWay article)
When Is It Time to Leave a Church? (Albert Mohler audio)
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4 Reasons Calvinism is Popular in the Southern Baptist Convention

12/6/2012

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Calvinism is a popular topic in Southern Baptist life. In fact, an advisory team met about it last month. Calvinism, aka Reformed Theology, is the belief in John Calvin's TULIP system. This is such a hot and divisive topic, that an evangelist once told me Calvinists were ruining the SBC because churches aren't having revivals anymore.

Why is a 400+ year old systematic theology so controversial? The fear of non-Calvinists is that Reformed Theology is going to cause a decline of evangelistic and missionary zeal from Southern Baptists.

Here are 4 reasons for the popularity within SBC churches:

1). Wayne Grudem's Systematic Theology book. If you go to a SBC seminary, you're going to own and read this book. General atonement believers don't have a mass produced text like Grudem's. His beliefs would be considered Reformed Baptist - a clear, well-organized, and well-published textbook that has shaped a new generation of SBC pastors.

I'm a 3 point Calvinist (Irresistible Grace and Limited Atonement aren't scriptural) - but do reference Grudem's book frequently because its ease of use.

2). John Piper. Its amazing how a General Baptist Conference pastor in Minneapolis, Minnesota has had such an impact on Southern Baptists. Piper has written hundreds of books, articles and headlines large conferences. His resource website, Desiring God, provides over 5,000 resources - a toolbox for any church leader. John MacArthur, Mark Driscoll, R. C. Sproul, and Timothy Keller have all been influential in SBC life.

3). The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. The SBC's flagship seminary has key leaders in SBC life who adhere to Calvinism: Albert Mohler, Don Whitney, Mark Dever (trustee) and Tom Nettles (who wrote a book stating that James P. Boyce, the first president of SBTS, was a Calvinist).

4). The Young, Restless, Reformed Movement. In September 2006, Christianity Today published a must-read article labeling the rise of Calvinism. This "new Calvinism" of today is more hip, cool, trendy, and appeals to 20 & 30 year olds.

Resources

Is Calvinism Biblical?
Whosoever Will: A Biblical-Theological Critique of Five-Point Calvinism
Founders Ministries (the pro-Calvinism group within the SBC)
SBC Today (the anti-Calvinism group within the SBC)

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5 Steps to Grow Your Sunday School Class

12/5/2012

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Do you attend Sunday School? Are you ready for your class to explode in growth? Any class averaging 15-20 people every week can easily jump to 35-40 in 4 or 5 Sundays with these 5 simple steps.

Once a class hits 40, it needs to split - it bumps a glass ceiling. Implement these 5 steps to relaunch your class in January 2013:

1). Build a Leadership Team. Your class needs:


  • Director
  • Teacher (and assistant)
  • Outreach leader
  • Prayer leader
  • Social leader
  • Communication leader
  • Hosts (see below)

2). Be specific with your class' identity. I'm 34 - do I attend the young adult class, median adults, young married adults, or couples class? Your class needs to be "status specific." People best connect with others within 15 years of their age. A 23 year-old doesn't need to be in a S.S. class with a 58 year-old. Have a target and gear your lessons and outreach towards it. Also make sure your class develops an identity of starting and stopping on time.

3). Create opportunities for your class to connect. You need to have your best friends in Sunday School. If you're teaching a 45 minute lesson and leaving little to no time for discussion - your class might feel like they're sitting through another sermon. Sunday School shouldn't be round 2 of church. Use discussion, sit at tables, work in teams, testimonies, interview class members and group homework allows your class to connect.

4). Establish a communication forum. You need someone following up with guests, reminding everyone of prayer requests, and inviting people to come to Huddle House for lunch. Contact with your class throughout the week is a must. Closed Facebook groups, email or text lists, calling tree, or a postcard in the mail keeping everyone in the loop. Important - make sure every single person (including first-time guests) are on the contact list.

5). Use hosts. Remember when churches use to have a "Greeter Ministry?" This might have been THE most important ministry (after nursery). Every class needs 3 or 4 hosts (the post-modern word for "greeter.") These men and women welcome late people, speak to all guests 2 times, give up their chair for others, purposely sit at tables with "lone rangers," remember every person's name, and give coffee and donuts to guests (without asking if they'd like some, assume they do). A host goes above and beyond making all new people feel welcome - they secretly single out first and second time guests. Hosts also use guest cards to follow-up later in the week.

Resources


  • TeacherKit - every Sunday School teacher should download this free app to keep track of attendance on their phone. Why fill out paper reports?
  • Sunday School Leader - a blog for S.S. leadership
  • LifeWay Sunday School
  • Teen Sunday School Place
  • Kids Sunday School Place
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3 Signs Your Husband/Boyfriend is Viewing Porn

12/3/2012

5 Comments

 
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43% of people who use the internet are viewing pornography. And of the 43% of internet users looking at porn, 67% are men.

What does this mean? 4 out of 10 people are viewing porn online and 2 out of 3 of them are men.

9% of Americans use illegal drugs - which means someone is 4 times more likely to view porn than use drugs.

Here are 3 signs your husband/boyfriend could be viewing pornography:

1). Your husband will not let you look at his laptop or phone. You have no idea what his passwords are, he keeps his computer locked, his phone is for, "work only" and no one is allowed to look over his shoulder when he's online. Total privacy - remember, if there's a secret, there's something to hide...

2). There's no web history. Laptops and phones have histories to make pages you've viewed in the past download faster when you look at them again. If the history of your boyfriend's phone is always clear, something's fishy. If your Google web history on the family computer has been turned off, why? Why would your browsing history be deleted?

3). Your husband is married more to his phone and iPad than you. You go to bed at night, and he stays up playing Angry Birds or checking football scores. After about 15-30 minutes online, you can easily check Facebook, ESPN, Twitter, Email, Favorite Blogs, and FOX News. 2-3 continuous hours for a man on the web is temptation. There's not that much worth reading online.

Resources

Why Are So Many Men Hooked on Internet Porn & Video Games?
Eyes of Integrity (outstanding book to read if you're struggling with porn)
X3pure (30 day online workshop to be set free from internet porn $99)
Covenant Eyes (Internet Accountability & Filtering System - $10 month)
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3 Tools to Help You Pray for All Nations

12/1/2012

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Tomorrow begins the International Mission Board Week of Prayer. Jesus told His disciples to make disciples all "all nations" (Matthew 28:19). One of the ways you can make disciples is to pray for specific needs missionaries request.

Here are 3 outstanding websites to assist in your prayer life:

1). International Mission Board's CompassionNet - click on "Today's Prayer." For children - they can use Kids on Mission to pray for MKs.

2). Operation World - this is the most exhaustive prayer guide for all nations available - there is a book available I highly recommend.

3). Joshua Project - this website leads prayer for Unreached Peoples of the world - the statistics are outstanding on this site. As I type this, 41.7% of the world lives among unreached people groups - little or no access to the Gospel.

Pray for Somalia - in 1991 there were 150 believers - in 1997 there were 4 - even this missionary's son was killed. Nearly 10 million people live in Somalia. The video below is why your prayers are needed.
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