Sunday, September 20, 2015

Beth Moore Comes to South Korea (sort of)

 When I went to Korea to visit my daughter, I wasn't expecting to attend the Beth Moore Living Proof Simulcast, but a friend agreed to take Simeon for the day and we went. 

We were about 40 women in the conference room of the "Supergym", the largest gym on base. The local Protestant Women of the Chapel had invited the groups from other bases on the peninsula. A bus came from Yongson in Seoul. They all wore little Korean-style hats to identify themselves as a group. Erika will be moving to Yongson in a few months so she was eager to meet them.

The idea was that churches and individuals would all sign on to the computer at the same time and participate in a mass event. The event was scheduled for Saturday, September 12, in Witchita, Kansas, but of course, for us, it took place in the middle of the night. So we met the following Saturday for a recorded version. Not quite the same as 150,000 women in 50 states and 19 countries worshipping Jesus at the same time, but almost. (And I suspect some of the other non-US locations viewed at different times like us.) We cheered when South Korea was mentioned as participating.

The worship was fabulous. We sang our hearts out. The theme was Audacious (title of a new book by Beth Moore giving the teaching in print form.) She challenged us to be mighty women of God. Her six "Mighty Makers," given in one morning session and two afternoon sessions) were:
  1. The AUDACITY to make the unseen Savior the supreme romance of your life
  2. The AUDACITY to live in the tension that comes with loving in truth
  3. The AUDACITY to pray for astonishing works of the Holy Spirit
  4. The AUDACITY to forgive and live forgiven
  5. The AUDACITY to hold tight with all your might to Romans 8:18, the concept that this present suffering is nothing in comparison to the glory that is to come
Beth Moore is always full of laughter as well as content. This was no exception. The local PWOC is struggling right now to work out what it means to "love in truth" in the context of the military's lumping all non-Catholic beliefs that call themselves Christian into one group. No creed or statement of faith is allowed even for leadership, and that can get messy. Some women come just because it is a wholesome place to socialize and has free child care. Yet there are women seeking to know God better and Beth Moore tells it straight. Dan and Erika are moving to Seoul, and I probably won't be back to Pyeongtaek. I find myself wondering what God wants to do in the hearts of these women I may never see again before eternity. I have no doubt that he is doing something.




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