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The
author started out as a young atomic scientist in the early 1950s.
In his years of handling radioactive isotopes, he began to hear
a higher-level call than the now infamous mushroom clouds of the
atomic age. Reading an ad that invited professionals to consider
revising their skills to aim for eternal targets, he began anew
to pursue the science of analyzing previously unwritten languages.
The final goal was Scripture translation and transformation of tribal
hearts. In 1961 he entered into the lives and villages of a barely
emerging Stone Age Waola tribe in Papua New Guinea. This article
tells a unique story of evangelism—including discovery of
a hitherto unknown cultural tool—in following the spiritual
paths of redemption of the Waola family.
Three
Revivals
The
Waola tribe rooted in the rugged Highlands of Papua New Guinea numbers
about 50,000 speakers of the Angal Heneng language. We entered this
Stone Age community in 1961 and in the next 17 years, with a limited
team translated the Scriptures and planted the Good News. By now
the Scriptures have gone into a fifth printing and its message has
birthed over 100 congregations. The last overseas staff have long
gone, but the Word of God in the vernacular continues to result
in tribal transformation.
In the
first 20 years of Gospel witness to the Waolas, there was an above
average adult interest in the new message. But revival is a Pacific
Island phenomenon, and the first surge of renewal came in 1981.
It was an awakening of hundreds of young students who learned to
read the Waola Bible in their grade school “cultural hour”
taught in tandem with vastly more difficult English. A tidal wave
of young readers became a flood of spiritual response to a Book
that touched them deeply in their mother tongue. Interest in things
eternal overflowed.
A few
years later another revival movement swept through the Waolas, but
this one reflected a more traditional pattern of Pacific Island
spiritual identity. Once again additional masses came to faith in
a deep personal relationship with their God. But both these initial
group-movements paled in contrast to a third revival that gained
momentum in 1990 and actually continues on into the present.
First
the Book then the Land of the Book
After
a unique opportunity to visit Israel in 1988, we obviously passed
on our experiences to our Waola family. The enthusiasm of their
response in the months that followed was unexpected but unmistakable.
The Scriptures became alive with entirely new understanding. Why?
We discovered
that when the island peoples first learned about biblical places
like Jericho, Bethlehem and Jerusalem, they automatically assumed
that such holy sites might be seen nowhere but heaven! Even though
Waola recognition of the Gospel gave the Bible stories higher status
than ancient folklore, these new biblical settings were never presumed
to be any more tangible than talking crocodiles or magic trees.
Old thinking patterns reflexively put all biblical geography into
that same never-to-be-encountered realm.
Thus,
when a bona fide report of visiting Israel surfaced among the Waolas,
they woke up to a depth of insight hitherto unknown. When they found
that Jerusalem was a real city to be visited, it transformed their
total biblical perspective.
After
that eye-opener, multiplied hundreds of Papua New Guineans—far
beyond our isolated Waolas—have since visited Israel and surveyed
those ancient sites themselves. But more than the places, ancient
Bible prophecies are now probed in the daily news. Amazing! Even
when the global media has little understanding of the prophetic
significance of their reports, a Bible-sensitive Melanesian does!
“Israel awareness” has now spread to the far reaches
of Papua New Guinea, not to mention other Pacific Island nations.
A stunned visitor will even find biblically re-named villages like
Judea, Antioch or Bethany.
A Hebraic Reflection
But
is this not just a quirk of medieval-minded throwback? After all,
millions of tourists, secular, religious and in-between have visited
Israel since 1948 without prompting the depth of revival mentality
that can be observed in the Pacific Islands.
This
would indeed be the typical knee-jerk reaction of a Western mind
that has little concept of the depth of moral values of most Third
World cultures. But in Papua New Guinea and most of the Pacific
there are even other observations.
Mass
meetings for cultural and religious observations date back into
their primitive days. These events include gala feasting; they include
marching and festive dances. Moreover, they incorporate extended
family togetherness, communal sharing, insight into the spiritual
world and the concept of a benevolent God who dwelt in the heavens
long before the white man ever stumbled onto their scene. Now might
not this sound just a bit Hebraic?
One
has only to think back to the million-plus congregation following
the wilderness Tabernacle, or the massive 3 times-yearly festivals
at the Temple in Jerusalem or the multitudes that came to listen
by the Sea of Galilee to feel the connection. This sort of living-faith
event seems to be far more popular in Melanesia than it might be
in Minneapolis or Montreal and suggests a unique Hebraic cultural
reflection.
So when multi-thousands gather for an Israel
march in the streets of Port Moresby or Highlands airfields, a Hebraic
rooted mindset of massive community happenings finds itself right
at home.
Understanding
the Greek Worldview
Revival
movements of the Third World are often misread and much underestimated
by the “developed” Western mind. Individualistic humanism
versus the worldview of the extended family creates a great valley
that classically divides the secular West from a much more spiritually
cognisant Third World. That same giant gulf lay between the ancient
Hebraic outlook and today’s Western cultural viewpoint that
has surfaced over the centuries from the anti-God concepts of the
ancient Greek philosophers. Ironically, it is the identical chasm
that is tearing apart modern Israel today between those Israelis
who still fear God and those who do not.
Greek
pagan culture began its attack upon the Hebraic worldview some 2
centuries before Christ. The brave Maccabees resisted the godless
influence of the Hellenistic mindset but it was never entirely overthrown.
We can note its effect upon the Sadducees who denied the spirit-world
(Acts 23:8). We can also see a marked gulf between the Jewish apostles
and the later non-Jewish, Greek-oriented Church Fathers who took
precious little persuasion to jettison their Jewish roots.
While
Judea was the destined cradle of faith, a pagan Europe devoid of
Hebraic heritage, offered little sensitivity to the divine legacy.
In contrast with Abraham who got his information on a hotline from
heaven, the wisdom from Greek thinkers accepted little insight from
the supernatural level.
Unfortunately
the Western wound was never healed. Recent scholars even swept such
Hebraic texts as Romans 9,10 & 11 under a Greek inspired carpet
because it failed to fit their favored garden-path diversions. To
miss Paul’s centrality of Romans is to miss God’s indissoluble
love for half His family—the Jewish half with whom He began
the redemptive process.
Moreover
popular end-time theories that reflect much more Greek individuality
than Hebraic hope have been invented over the last two centuries.
If the matter is honestly and biblically studied, however, the assumption
that God is about to cancel His end-of-days promises to redeem His
beloved but errant Jacob at this high-point of history, is seriously
short of Scripture. One has only to read the Hebrew Prophets.
Ironically, a Western civilization that obediently
sent messengers of the Gospel to the ends of the earth [read: Pacific
Islands] now has the opportunity to learn some non-humanist clues
from our more Hebraic oriented family in the Third World!
Tools
of Historical Truth
Unfortunately
there has been a lack of insight by much Western scholarship into
a vast amount of Scripture that focuses exclusively on natural Israel.
It has failed to note the significance of the final regathering
and redemption of Israel at the winding down of the Great Commission
to the nations. Fortunately this has hardly been lost on Papua New
Guinea and Pacific Island believers.
Indeed,
if our experience with the Waolas is to be usefully understood,
one dare not miss one of the most useful tools in getting a last-call
message out to a lost world. If even the Jews are now coming home,
it’s certainly high time for everyone else to get involved!
Underlining
this point, we can see that many Pacific Islanders have begun to
reflect to their former mentors what God is now demonstrating, but
this is an awareness that is not only in Melanesia. We have also
seen an above-average drawing of South American, African and Asian
Christians to visit Jerusalem in Israel-related ministry over the
past 2 decades. Linking world outreach to Israel’s final hour
is a growing awareness in much of the Third World. Excitement among
believers has a powerful appeal to those yet on the sidelines, but
unfortunately, this same stirring in a Hellenistic oriented West
still lags somewhat behind.
So
What Have we Seen?
Herein
is our discovery. While modern Europe and the West—initial
champions of evangelism in ages past—have nevertheless bourn
the brunt of Greek scepticism, humanism, the profane and the secular
over the ages, a more fortunate Third World has largely escaped
much of Hellenism’s hindrances. A growing awareness is that
the future of evangelism now lies within the Developing World’s
very own spiritual awakening. May spiritual enlightenment forever
flow in both directions!
Moreover,
an identity with the Hebraic roots of Israel is having a depth of
meaning within this last-call message. As the prophetic hope for
a biblically restored Israel is being fulfilled before our eyes,
the Third World is grasping a vision that a Hellenistic mindset
does not. While sceptical theologians have long overlooked this
reality, it is hardly going unnoticed throughout most of the Pacific
Islands. The Good News, presented within the context of Hebraic
thinking, is awakening the soul of Melanesian culture, and pointing
them to a more spiritually controlled universe than the ancient
Greek philosophers ever knew!
Thus,
it is most appropriate for the Waolas and their neighbours throughout
Papua New Guinea and the rest of the Pacific, to proudly proclaim
where their spiritual heritage and culture lies. Like some in the
Western church who are also now discovering an added depth in the
Hebraic foundations of the Gospel—the simplest road to Jesus
just happens to run through Jerusalem!
Victor
Schlatter, Bible Translator and Senior Advisor to the Tiliba Christian
Church, Nipa, SHP, and current Director of South Pacific Island
Ministries, Inc., Cairns, Qld. Australia.
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