In October, I preached
at a new church plant in Newmarket, the Journey. It was a pleasure to have an
opportunity to speak to an enthusiastic group of believers there. As a part of
my message encouraging people to share their faith, I told the story of my
conversion. I shared how I had grown up in a home where neither of my parents
was involved in church life. I attended Tereora College in Rarotonga and was
in the fourth form. One of my friends invited me to come with him to an afterschool
Christian group run by a man by the name of Brian Chitty (that is him in the
photo above). I explained how I had come to faith, found it hard to maintain
that faith through my teens and early twenties, but then recommitted my life to
Christ in my mid-twenties some ten years later. I went on with the message which
was well received.
I was stunned after
the service to be approached by a woman, Rhema, who told me that she was Brian’s
daughter. Unbeknown to me she attended this church and was equally shocked to hear
that her father had led me to Christ some forty-five years prior. She shared
with me that her dad was well and living in Auckland and that she had invited him
to church that day, but he had not come.
Anyway, I returned again
to preach in the Journey again yesterday and I did a quick summary of my former
message and further encouraged the church with ideas as to how they could share
their faith into the community more effectively. I mentioned Brian in passing
and a voice called out from the congregation. It was Brian’s daughter Rhema who
called out, “he’s here today.” At that moment, I noticed for the first time the
man sitting beside her and it was Brian! I was thrilled. I could not help
myself and left the lectern in the middle of my message causing rapturous applause
and hugged him with much agapē love. It was an amazing and emotional moment.
I felt a little like the prodigal in some way. Brian and I had connected a few
years ago, but this was a moment that transcended that.
I am deeply grateful
to Brian. He is an example of one of those evangelisers the world does not
notice but who for years has planted the seed of God’s word in the hearts of
many people in the Cook Islands and beyond. I am a Christian because of him. Any
good I do in the wold in my ministry of teaching and writing is a credit to him
and his faithfulness.
This is how
Christianity works. Humble, seemingly non-descript people, share the
gospel faithfully in small groups around the world, and some like me believe
it, and we pass it on. That is why there are over 2 billion of us and
Christianity is the world’s biggest religion. It is still growing at an extraordinary
rate in many parts of the world, even if not in our western contexts. It is
because of people like Brian.
I pay tribute to Brian
and the millions like him who are good people, who pass on their faith, and people’s
lives are transformed as a result.
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