Author Archives: Stokingthefires

God Alone Presents Opportunities

Making Jewelry With Friends

Making Jewelry With Friends

For several days this week, I have been trying to get ahold of a friend, calling him daily and texting him on his 4 or 5 different phone numbers, which is quite common here in PNG. We had some amazing conversations last week and I wanted to follow up with him on it, he, like many others, does not understand the Gospel of Grace and the eternal destiny of the Redeemed. Like so many others here in PNG, and even America, my friend has a veneer of truth, knowing some scripture but still thinking he has to do some type of work to receive God’s salvation. God has put him in my thoughts and prayers all week, but I believe Satan is controlling his phone and hindering us from being able to meet.

Why is it we want to play such a vital role in leading others to Christ? Yes, we are to be ambassadors and persuade men to Christ, but how many times have we said all the right words… used all the right illustrations… got them to question their own belief, and still not see their eyes enlightened? It’s a good desire, but in the end salvation is of the Lord alone. We must fall on our knees trusting Him and completely depend on Him to do His job. He is a faithful creator (1 Pet. 4:19), so lets not begin to doubt him now.

Nicole actually got witnessed to… just like in America; Jehovah’s Witnesses and Mormons exist here too. While she was making jewelry with two national friends under a little bush during the heat of the PNG sun, some ladies came to Nicole and began to ask about her beliefs. Through the conversation she learned they were JW’s, and because of that conversation she was able to witness to her other (Mormon) friends. Nicole got to share her testimony and talk in depth about the finished work of Christ, how we are complete in Him, and we cannot add anything to our salvation, it is all the work of Christ. Nicole was able to give her a Bible, and left confident she understood the Gospel, now the rest is between them and the Lord. Isn’t that exciting!?!

Once again we are just reminded of how small we are and how BIG God is; everything is of Him. The timing, the situation, the openness of others, and even how you get to that conversation. He is so far ahead of us we could never keep up. We are like kids at times, admiring our Dad and how amazing He is. Hopefully that encourages you this week, like it did us.

As always, it is our privilege to be your feet, Seth & Nicole Stokes

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Some Things Got Left…

Yep, some things got left: some food, cargo, books, a kid, and even us at one point 🙂

Sorry for the delay in giving all of you the details with our bush trip, but as most of you know we got back from our trip around 6pm on a Saturday night… about 9pm that night Seth started to get pretty sick, the next day and for several days his fever went up, body ached, and then turned into pneumonia. He had a fever over 105F. He took his medicine, listened to the doctor, and stayed in bed (mostly) doing nothing physical for 7 days. He did a lot of coordinating with supply buying and store managing, and after that week was over he has been doing well since! We attribute his speedy recovery to our Omnipotent God, Who heard the prayers of His Saints, thank you!

So, this is how the trip unfolded. We arrived at the airport ready to get into the float plane, some things had changed and so our weight allowance varied quite a bit, thus making decisions pretty hard on what to bring. Well after evaluating how much we needed for us, and the other family (1 adult male and 2 kids), and two national pastors, we got rid of some clothes leaving us 3 sets of clothes for 6+ days (Sleep, dry, and wet :)). We found out that even after cutting back more and getting rid of some water we were still too heavy, so one of the kids said “well, my brother wants to stay with my dad, Nicole you need to take care of my brother, my dad is preaching and the people need to hear God’s talk, the other men and Seth need to go and share too, so I will stay here in Wewak with my friends”. That was from a girl who is not even 10 yet, that is awesome to hear such wisdom and perspective from a young lady!

We made 2 loads for 2 trips with the floatplane and headed out. It was late in the day meaning we did not have time to hop on a canoe and take a trip up the river to our destination. We stayed with a national pastor in his traditional house on the river, you can pull the canoe right up to his house because it has been so flooded. The sun rose and we all got in the canoe and headed up the river, we sped for over 2 hours up the May river. We then turned into a small river known as the “Ni” river, we headed up that river for over 5 hours only to find out the water was getting too shallow to continue on via canoe… so that means most of us had to get out and walk the rest of the way, luckily it was less than an hour walk.

We arrived mid afternoon, tired, worn out from the canoe, but we were welcomed with open arms. This was the first time an outsider (whitey) came to preach in this village. These people moved to this location over 12 years ago and have had no formal teaching from outsiders. The people group were taught through the Gospels and some of the New Testament, but the work was never “finished” due to health and other things occurring not allowing the missionaries to stay. They were so excited for this teaching, they built a house for any traveling speakers who ever might drop by… this house was about 6ft off the ground and maybe 9’x’9’ and it was awesome to see their excitement to have someone use it!

Now it was time to teach! The next morning several people from other villages came to hear the teaching. The teaching house (church) usually would fit close to 60-70 people (by my guess). But once the teaching started men, women, children, dogs, pigs, and cassowaries would pile in and the overflow would listen from the door and sides. I would say during the course, over 100+ came regularly. We saw it as a privilege to be there, we were with a veteran missionary, Jason, (over 20+ years on the field, completed a work and a translation) teaching and discipling other indigenous pastors to teach God’s Word in Tok Pisin to another language group. Seth had several opportunities to talk with the indigenous believers, as well as the 2 pastors from the other language group about the teachings. Galatians was taught, verse-by-verse, chapter-by-chapter, beginning to end by both Jason and the national pastors from another village. For many it was their first time hearing some of those truths. Much of the scripture was exactly what they needed to hear, so many things directly applied to them and their current situation.

Each day Nicole watched the young boy, she cooked for us (but didn’t have to cook too much because the people brought us lots of cooked food many of the days), and Seth asked many questions to the veteran missionary, as well as encouraged and challenged the nationals. It was an encouraging time for us, and we know the body of believers there in the middle of the deep jungle were also greatly encouraged and challenged. Amazing story! Gods Word was preached, discipleship was done, and believers were encouraged. The story stops there…? But wait, how did we get back? Not at all a highlight or focus of our trip or story. But we will give the short version.

How we got there: 1hr. 10min floatplane ride, 6 hr. canoe ride, 1 hour walk, and spent the night at a pastor’s house. Well, the floatplane had engine problems for our return flight, so we got stuck and left in the bush. So we came up with a new plan. It was Friday and no one else is flying at that time (no airstrips are close by). When we started the trip back, the canoe was a bit heavy so the kids and some women stayed in the boat, and the rest of the adults walked part of the way. Well the boat driver left Seth and some others to walk the whole way to the next village (unbeknownst to Seth, who is expecting to meet at rendezvous point). Seth and some other nationals walked in hip deep swamp for almost 4 hours; Seth was the first white guy to walk that trail! Arrived at the next village, spent the night and got on the boat in the morning for the remaining 5 hours to May river station. So once there, we had to find someone willing to take us across the mighty and infamous Sepik River. After hours of talking to people to find a canoe and driver, we finally found someone. We started our 10hr long trek, spent the night in a random village, made new friends, and then arrived by noon to Pagwi. Once we arrived, we waited for some of our friends to pick us up in a big open back truck, and then we began our 4hr 15min drive back to our base. We arrived around 6pm and then Seth began to sick around 9pm. And that was our trip, 8 hours there, and 24 hours back :).

Seth rested for a week, and then we jumped back into full-time ministry, getting the store cleaned up and fine-tuned some aspects of that ministry. Did lots of buying for several bush orders: food, cargo, drainpipes for a bush church, batteries, and much more. We have been getting back involved in witnessing to some of our national friends here in Wewak. God is opening the eyes for some of them (PRAY!). Thank you so much for YOUR partnership in our ministry, thank you for your prayers and sacrifice, it is our privilege to be an extension of you.

Float Plane

Float Plane

The Teaching House

Plane Load 1

Door to Door Service

Door to Door Service

Hiking

Hiking

Pulling the Canoe Along

Pulling the Canoe Along

A Sweet Friend

A Sweet Friend

Canoe Ride

Canoe Ride

The Trail

The Trail

Overnight Stay

Overnight Stay

Our Ride Home

Our Ride Home

For more pictures from the trip go to our Instagram: Get_Stoked_For_PNG

Seth & Nicole Stokes,

Your Feet to the Unreached in PNG.

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We are back…

Hello everyone! Thought we should update you all. We arrived home from our bush trip safely on our Saturday evening, just before dark. After 16 hours in a motor canoe and a 4 hour open-back truck ride we made it home! We were so happy to be home and get washed up. 

It was an amazing trip! What an adventure and many awesome opportunities. However, Seth came down the first night we got back with a cold that has turned into pneumonia. We are thankful to be back where we have the comforts of home, doctors an email away, and medicine. We will update more about the trip when Seth feels better. Pray for him to feel better soon! 

-Nicole, for Seth too

 

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Shipping Out & Shipping Off!

Whew, now that conference is over, we are able to catch our breaths for a moment… For the past 10 days, we have helped ship off 1-3 missionary families a day to go back to their designated bush places. Helping them pack, getting their supplies, helping them plan and work out the logistics of their trips. Nicole even got to make pizza dough for one of the missionaries and got it in their planeload 30 minutes before they left. Saturday morning we took one family to the airport @ 4:30am, helped send off a boat @ 7a, and then load another family after that into a float plane as we hugged their kids good-bye. Conference is over and we are back to our different ministries, but wait! We too are heading to the bush-TODAY!

Pizza Dough For Missionaries

Pizza Dough For Missionaries

This will be very similar to our last trip back in January. Our main purpose in going is to assist a veteran missionary (Jason) travel to a remote village as he teaches through Galatians and Nicole will look after his two kids. We will be taking two other national believers from another tribe so they can join in the course as well. We leave Monday morning and come back Friday night. We will take two loads via floatplane to a main river junction. Spend the night in a bush house with one of our national friends, and then go the next morning first thing up a small river for 6+ hours and arrive in a different bush location. This place has had missionaries work there but not for over a decade. The goal is to encourage the church, teach Galatians, disciple the 2 national men coming with us and to gauge where the church is at spiritually. We will give more details when we get back.

Please pray: we get there at a good time, that the canoe situation works out, and we can get to the village. Pray for clarity as Jason teaches through Galatians. Pray we can engage the church and encourage them. Pray for safety and good health. Thank you for your partnership!

Here is a thought to consider: “Busy vs. Fruitful”, this was a title of a chapter of a book that I read recently. Please pray we have discernment in how to be fruitful during this trip and not just busy. “For the perfecting of the saints, for the work of the ministry…”

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Newsletter: February-March

 

Sending Missionaries Off

Sending Some Missionaries Off

Wow, we cannot believe it is already April!? Where has the time gone? Well, we have been extra busy lately. Check out our Newsletter below to find out what all we have been up to. Thank you for being our team mates as we serve the Lord here in PNG.

Newsletter: February-March

   Your feet to the unreached,

Seth & Nicole Stokes

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Nicole Got Her First Ultrasound!

Ha! We made you look, yes, Nicole got her first ultrasound but it was not in the abdominal section it was on her foot. 😉 The last two weeks have been really busy; we went to our headquarters mission base, saw some friends, went to the doctor just for check ups, while also getting things ready here on our own base for our big annual conference.

Our Time at Headquarters

First things first, it was the first time we did not sweat in almost a year! That felt great. The headquarter base is up in the mountains approximately 5600ft., that was a nice change for our bodies and our skin. We went to the doctor to get a few things checked. Nicole has a ganglion cyst on the bottom of her foot and we both had various skin growths that got burned off by our missions’ doctor. Sorry for no picture, it’s hard to hold a camera and get something burned off your tear duct. We basically visited with people the whole 6 days, Seth played basketball with the high school team, and it was nice to have a change of pace. One of the main reasons we went was to see our good friends Jon & Adie Leedahl. Their story is amazing and we see God using this trial to bring His name glory everywhere. (Video about Jon & Adie: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5RKzv7RRMkE). In a nutshell, our friend Jon is a pilot and was heading home from work here in PNG back in October of 2014. He was driving a motorcycle and was run over by a land cruiser. He was immediately rushed to Cairns, Australia and hanging on by grace of God. The doctors ended up amputating his leg, and their story is amazing… through much hardship and recovery and in less than 18 months later, they are back here in PNG serving our Lord through aviation. He is the first amputee pilot in PNG and it is always awesome telling the people at the hangar his story, why he has a fake leg… and the worthiness of God’s message that drove Jon and his family to come back to PNG. It was a great time of fellowship.

Jon Leedahl (our pilot) and Seth

Jon Leedahl (our pilot) and Seth

One of our great doctors!

One of our great doctors!

Getting Accustomed to Things?

I had to laugh when yesterday I caught myself doing two different things without thinking that are just normal here in PNG. I will compare it to American currency so as to keep in more relatable (sorry if you’re reading this and not American). In the currency here (kina) they have 5,10,20,50 bills and 1.00 coins. And they do have the “5” cents or a nickel, but they are rare and under produced that if your bill comes to 9.95 and you give them a 10.00 bill, there is no change. Not that it does not exist, just that there are so few of them that it’s rare to ever see that change. Another thing is just the normal semi-volatile nature of where we are, on Sunday we received a text from a fellow missionary saying basically “there is a riot on this road, don’t go down there today”. Well there is only one main road in our area and so that cut off anyone who wanted to go east, we did not need to but it was just something we looked at and went… normal. Please pray for us, we had several opportunities to point to the Lord because of that riot. The riot started because one stole another mans “stim” or in English we might call it a home-brew, or alcohol made at home. So in return the man stabbed other man with his bush knife, then they returned the favor… and so on… and then families got involved and it escalated into a riot and blocking a road. Neighboring churches were praying that God would resolve this and it dwindled down to nothing rather shortly. It was just amazing to see that a riot started from taking a drink, and then someone stabbing someone for it. I was talking with a national about it and the topic of “valuing life” came up. He said you white people care and us black people do not care about another persons life, I told him its not about color but its all about how you view God. Life is a big thing to God and He alone gives it, it was really good to see him catch the difference. It’s not about skin color but who God is in our lives and what our perspective is after His impact.

We know PNG is not the “safest” place in the world, but we see that this country is so ready for the harvest. Please pray for our opportunities to witness even from day to day. Also, pray for our annual regional conference that has begun this week and will end on Monday. Many bush missionaries and missionaries on the base need to be recharged, encouraged by the Word, and they need time to be pampered and overwhelmed with friends and love before they go back to work next week. The base is full! We went from as little as 8 people (3 of them kids) to now having over 136!

Thank you for your prayers and partnership! We love, miss, and appreciate you all.

Your feet to the unreached of PNG, Seth and Nicole Stokes.

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2.5 Tons of Questions!

This week had some amazing highlights! We know many people are dealing with the snow and cold weather back in the U.S., however, it continues to get hotter and hotter here, and it feels like we never get dry; maybe that’s why they call it “wet season”? This past week Seth and his teammate he goes to jail with did a review session with the guys they have been teaching. They asked many questions trying to gauge where the men are at after receiving 68 lessons from creation to Christ. Here is a list of some of the questions asked:

  1. How does man approach God?
  2. How much belief is needed to be saved?
  3. What sins can be forgiven?
  4. How do you know you are saved?
  5. Can you lose your salvation?
  6. Why will you go to heaven?
  7. Why do we (Christians, we didn’t tell them “who” as to see how they answered) do good works?
  8. Judgments for reward vs. judgment of salvation… is there a difference?

All the questions except the last one we asked to several people; asking each person to expound more on their answer than the last person, we asked them to use Old Testament references-the Gospels (the 68 lessons were from Genesis-John) to illustrate their point. So many men gave CLEAR professions of faith; but the one who probably clearly answered most consistently was a young 18-year old young man. There were a few men who probably weren’t too clear on some points, but we were able as a group to direct them to the Truth. We gave out Bibles, we even asked permission to take a picture, they said yes! This had never been done before 🙂 . It was an awesome experience and now we are directing these new young baby believers to the book of Acts, they need to see how the early church started and functioned. Having a clear teaching of Acts here in PNG helps in so many areas, especially protecting them from the Enemy and false teachers. As you look at those questions, imagine doing that when the words “salvation, approach…” do not exist in their language, it was a fun challenge and we always feel like we are learning here in PNG.

Can you find Seth?

Can you find Seth?

Nicole has been busy in the store getting ready for our annual regional conference (expecting 130 people) and also connecting with national ladies. This past week Seth had to load…unload…load… unload (you get the picture) almost 2.5 tons worth of supplies in less than 6 hours! Nicole had to do all the paperwork and organising of the big supply load. Seth had to load and unload the new Kodiak plane with supplies for the store, for our conference in 3 weeks, supplies for bush missionaries, drums (400lbs) of gas going to different locations, even a 250lb motor. He got a workout in the sun of PNG, which means he got to sweat a good bit. Things are shaping up here at our base for our annual conference; it’s a time of refreshment for all bush missionaries. Preaching, fellowship, and food, what more is there?!

Loading and Unloading

Loading and Unloading

We will be going next week to our main base in the mountains to get some supplies for our store, and to catch up with some friends; we will share about that more in depth later. We also are having fun connecting with other missions, fellowshipping and encouraging one another, as well as growing in our connections here in Wewak. Seth has made 2 new friends; one is an ironman athlete from PNG, and another is in the military. Pray Seth gets opportunities to witness to these guys and for Nicole to also have opportunities to witness to the national ladies she has been spending time with. It is awesome to see God answer YOUR prayers in growing our relationships.

Seth's Swimming Group

Seth’s Swimming Group

Our Friend's Pet Tree Kangaroo

Our Friend’s Pet Tree Kangaroo

Thank you so much for your faithful support and prayer, we are honoured to be YOUR feet to the unreached of PNG,

~Seth and Nicole Stokes

 

 

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Newsletter: January, 2016

Cooling Off & Washing in The River

Cooling Off & Washing in The River

Our Motor Canoe Ride

Our Motor Canoe Ride

It has officially been ONE YEAR since we have been in PNG! WOW, that was fast. Thank you everyone for joining us in this journey! We could not do it without YOU. Click on our newsletter link below to hear more about how things have been going lately.  Looking forward to another year and all the wonderful things to come…Stay tuned for more…

 

Newsletter: January, 2016

Your feet to the unreached in PNG,

~Seth & Nicole Stokes

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Back From the Bush & Back to Work!

Well, what can we say about our trip other than it was quite an experience! We had an awesome time, learned a lot, and we feel like we had a very official Sepik river style “bush orientation”. We have gone to places in the bush before where a nice American-style house was already set up; but this was very different, rather unexpected, and a great story to tell. We apologize in advance for any run-on sentences, and the length, but we kind of want to tell the events as they happened 🙂 . We will also post more pictures than normal as to share the story more vividly.

 

First and foremost, we want to thank all of you for your prayers! The 3 main points we asked for prayer were achieved: 1. Teach a group of young believers the principles in Acts so that they know better how to conduct themselves as a body of believers. 2. Train two other men from another people group as teachers through these teachings. 3. Show/Teach two different people groups and two different churches that we ought to come together and worship our Lord, and that the stronger group of believers should go and help the younger until they are more mature in the Word. As far as goals go, these were accomplished! Thank you for playing your part in accomplishing this task! Regarding to the other 7 prayer requests, we can tell you we all got back safely, those who were faithful in the church came to the meetings, God got glory through the fellowship, we definitely had our eyes opened to many new experiences, for those to apply the teaching and us being healthy are still topics we will wait upon 🙂 .

 

So this is how the actual events occurred, we will try to be succinct. We left Thursday morning after 10:00am (we were supposed to start before 8am). We had 2 shuttles at about 2.5-3 hours each, the second shuttle on the floatplane arrived after 3:30pm. We immediately hopped on a dugout canoe, roughly 40ft long with a 40hp engine. The canoe ride to our destination was easily over 5hrs long and traveling after dark isn’t really a good option, so we knew we were going to have to stop somewhere for the night.

 

The Float Plane-Samaritan Aviation

The Float Plane-Samaritan Aviation

Our Motor Canoe Ride

Our Motor Canoe Ride

Around 5:30pm, we arrived at a village, we knew we needed to ask for a place to stay, yes we showed up unexpected and not knowing anyone. One of the men welcomed us into his home and invited us all to sleep there. Our group consisted of us, the other missionary and his 2 kids, a national elder from one language group with his wife and 2 kids, another national elder with his wife and kid, along with one other elder-both national families were from two separate language group. We all were welcomed, all 13 of us slept in a room with about 20 other people (babies through elderly), in a space about 18ftx30ft., with one section being the cooking section (that is a typical house for that area). Sorry for no pictures of inside this house, but it was late, dark, and we did not want to make a spectacle of ourselves. We brought ourselves 1 mosquito net (as a back up/just in case), and our 2 nice hammocks with built in mosquito nets. We were not planning on staying in a national house so we were not prepared for the trip. Many national houses do not use big beams in their construction, so to find 2 posts close together that can hold 180lbs is impossible 🙂 . We piled things under us and a layered it with a tarp, pillowed the 1 mosquito net around us and listened to the sounds of night…including babies crying, and people yelling at one another. After the restful sleep we took off by 8am the next day.

The First Village

The First Village

Stayed here first night

Stayed here first night

Typical Inside-Mosquito Nets

Typical Inside-Mosquito Nets

Typical Inside-"kitchen"

Typical Inside-“kitchen”

We were heading up river for about 3 hours when a neighboring village stopped us and told us our canoe is too big to make the trip, but we can use their canoe and make 2 trips out of it. After heeding their warning, Peter (our skipper and a national elder/pastor) put all the people on the first canoe and sent us away with another skipper while he stayed at canoe 1 with our cargo. We went up river, moving logs for about 2 hours until the skipper said that if we want our cargo by tonight we will have to get out here and walk (it’s not too far from here… that’s what they always say). We did, and thus started a 2-hour, muddy, slippery, river-crossing (3 times) hike with women and kids. By the end of the trip we ran out of water (keep in mind we have been traveling for over 32 hours and only expecting to travel for 10), and we ended up having to drink straight from the not so clean river…our water filter wouldn’t come in until later that night with the rest of our things.

The Tropical River Adventure

The Tropical River Adventure

Hiking-Crossing Rivers

Hiking-Crossing Rivers

Our Final Destination!

Our Final Destination!

We arrived to our destination around 3pm…or did we? We originally told everyone we would be doing the teaching in one location (about an hour away), but to carry cargo and kids that far would be a waste of time. We were originally suppose to have the women, kids, and cargo dropped off on the neighboring airstrip, but the airstrip was not maintained well so we had to go with plan B with less than a day notice. One of our brothers in Christ offered a place for us 11 to stay, it was about 100sq ft. and it was above of the place where they cook, so smoke right up throughout the day and night, but they graciously gave us a play to stay and for that we were thankful.

Where Nicole Cooked Meals

Where Nicole Cooked Meals

Where We Stayed

Where We Stayed

Our Hammocks/Beds

Our Hammocks/Beds

We had a good time of fellowship with all the believers, sad to say though, many believers strayed from the faith and fell into the snares of two occults present in this area. These believers heard the Gospel but were never discipled to maturity, and when a new teaching came, it took them away. This is always a BIG topic in our minds, many people think that giving the Gospel and getting people saved is enough, but building others into maturity, seeing them complete in Christ, discipled to make disciples, that is the main thrust of the New Testament; God builds His Church, and we build up the church. The missionary and two other national pastors preached through the book of Acts, and within the first couple of chapters the principles shared overcame the perversion of these occults, and men nodded their head, agreed, and were encouraged by the teaching. Knowing that these words are the Truth, and that God’s Word is what they need, not some occult and promises of riches and special abilities, but just the pure Gospel that grows us into the image of Christ.

 

The Teaching House

The Teaching House

Some of the Believers & Elders

Some of the Believers & Elders

The National Elders Co-Teaching

The National Elders Co-Teaching

Another thing that occurred during the teaching was that the missionary found out that the two guest elders he brought to help co-teach, never really taught in Tok Pisin (the national language), they have taught in their heart language (tribal) innumerable times, but not much in the trade language. That was a great time of training for these elders to be cross-cultural ministers.

Getting Ready to Teach

Getting Ready to Teach

National Elder's Wife & Daughter

National Elder’s Wife & Daughter

National Elders

National Elders

Another task of this trip was to set up a radio near the airstrip where we originally would have stayed. I (Seth) prepared all the components before the trip, and now I had to go on a 2-hour hike with two other national guys through a swamp to bring a battery, solar panel, and radio to the believers, so that they can communicate with other churches and our Wewak base, be encouraged, ask questions, stay connected with missionaries, and so much more. It really was a blessing and a great tool to do that for them.

Off To Go Set Up The Radio

Off To Go Set Up The Radio

The Radio Up & Running!

The Radio Up & Running!

The Solar Panel For the Radio

The Solar Panel For the Radio

The teaching ended on Tuesday morning, we felt encouraged as we left, the missionary contracted dysentery while there, but he still managed to preach in between each of his sections by Gods grace. By the time we got into the boat he curled into a ball and slept the bulk of the trip, we watched and played with the kids so that the dad could rest. We went down the river for about 7 hours or so, arrived at our skipper, Peter’s, house (which is right next to where the float plane would come in the morning), unpacked and got ready for bed. Fun fact about this place: we literally have not seen so many mosquitoes (the malaria carrying type) in one place before! Wow! If we don’t walk away (incubation is up to 14 days) with any sicknesses, it is only by God’s grace. The floatplane was delayed and it did its first pick up around 12:30pm on Wednesday. The missionary and his kids, along with Nicole took the first trip, and Seth would take the second trip along with all the cargo. It was a hot day, but I (Seth) got to make many good connections while waiting in that area, I even got to share with a national doctor how the Gospel can change lives, and make you look completely different (I used a testimony of someone we both knew). He seemed amazed that the person changed, and changed so drastically. It really impacted him to know that the Gospel has that much power, not for wealth, but for transformation. I found out the floatplane was 10 minutes away from its cut-off window for not being able to pick me up that day, because it cannot fly past dark. I am glad that it worked out and I could come back to my wife. We went right back to work starting that night on through Friday night in order to catch up from our time away.

Cooling Off & Washing in The River

Cooling Off & Washing in The River

Our Little Buddies

Our Little Buddies

Jason and the Kids

Jason and the Kids

Thank you for your partnership! We learned so much on this trip, made some good relationships, and feel more equipped for life in the bush! We love and appreciate you all!

Your feet to the unreached in PNG, Seth & Nicole Stokes

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Heading to the Bush for a Week!

Ready to Go!

Ready to Go!

By the time most of you read this we will have begun our trek into the bush. We have to drive to the airport, hop on a floatplane (because there isn’t a land-able airstrip currently), land in the river, take a small canoe up river for about 5 hours, and then….we will arrive where we will be staying for the week.

We might stay right there and live in one persons house, or we might go for a 2 hour hike and stay at another persons house…we are not sure yet. We have to take two plane trips to bring us in and the other family we are going to help (you can’t bring much weight on a float plane). That means we will start our canoe trip after 1pm, and it gets dark around 6:30pm here on the equator. The reason we don’t know where we are staying is because we are not sure where the people want to do the teaching, we might teach on this side of the mountain or that side, we will find out when we get there. Typically a local and their family will leave their house and move in with a family member to let us use their house. Yes, we are staying in a national house. No water, no electricity, no bathroom, just four walls (hopefully), and a roof. Should be fun! You can see everything we are bringing; 4 bags and a box. Clothes for a week, back up medical supplies (just in case), our canopy-tent-hammocks, food, water purifier, cooking equipment, cleaning equipment, everything for the week. We even have some games and crafts for the missionary kids Nicole will be looking after.

One of the main reasons why we are going is to assist our missionary friend, Jason, is to help look after his two kids while he is teaching (his wife passed away this past year due to cancer, and yes, he is still here in PNG serving Jesus, so amazing!). Jason and two national men will be teaching through the book of Acts during our time in the bush. They hope to get through the teaching in about 5 days. Seth will be shadowing Jason to see how this job is done, he will also get opportunities to talk through the teachings with men (in Tok Pisin) after the main teaching. One of the days Seth and Jason will have to hike and set up a battery, solar panel, and a radio to another bush location about 2 hours away.

The audience is a fairly small people group, they live on the famous Sepik river, they have had missionaries come and go for years. Only 2 of the missionaries ever learned the language. Teaching wise, they got through the life, death, burial and resurrection of Jesus, and some other teachings, but not too much though, and this was all done about 15 years ago. God had put it on Jason’s heart to go there with a 3-fold purpose: 1. Teach a group of young believers the principles in Acts so they know better how to conduct themselves as a body of believers. 2. Train two other men from another people group as teachers through this process. 3. Show these two different people groups and two different churches we ought to come together and worship our Lord, and that a stronger group of believers should go and help the younger until they are more mature in the word.

All in all, there are a lot of uncertainties about this trip, not knowing what to expect…but we are excited for the opportunity! This trip is much needed; it will give us a shot in the arm until we move into the tribal location God leads us to.

Pray:

  1. Safety for us and the other family going in and out of the tribe.
  2. That many people come to hear the truths of Acts.
  3. For those that come: they would apply the teachings after we leave.
  4. That all 3 teachers preach the Bible accurately and are led by the Spirit.
  5. God is glorified in this process, seeing many people from different locations coming together to worship Him through preaching.
  6. We get our eyes opened more to the culture of PNG, and what is needed to do this process of Tribal Church Planting.
  7. That we all come back healthy 🙂

 

Thank you! Your feet to the unreached of PNG, Seth and Nicole Stokes

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