Does God make sense of our messes?
“YES! And it happened to me,” says George Verwer, founder one of the world’s largest mission organizations.
By Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST News Service
I
first met George nearly 50 years ago when he came to speak at my
father’s little church – The Sparkbrook Mission – in Birmingham,
England, and delivered a powerful challenge for each of to be involved
in evangelism.
My
Dad, the Rev. Alfred Wooding, was completely taken with this powerful
young American preacher who has recently begun Operation Mobilization,
and was already sending Gospel teams around the world, and that was most
unusual for my father.
Since
that Sunday morning, we’ve remained firm friends ever since, and not
longer after this preaching engagement, two members of the mission, John
Miles and Peter Conlan, joined OM and began serving the Lord through
this extraordinary ministry.
It
was in 1975 that I, again, met up with George Verwer, this time in
Dhaka, the capital city of Bangladesh, where he was speaking at a Bible
study. I had just flown into Dhaka after interviewing Mother Teresa in
Calcutta, and that afternoon had interviewed Mansur Ali, the then Prime
Minister of the country, who shockingly, shortly afterwards, was
assassinated along with his family by a group of military officers.
I
sat at the back, when suddenly he noticed me and shouted out, “Dan
Wooding,” and everyone turned around and I went purple with
embarrassment, and then he continued with his study.
After
I moved to Southern California in 1982 (with Norma and our two sons),
Andrew and Peter), George and I would regularly meet up, usually at the
Movieguide® awards gala in Hollywood. George is a huge fan of faith and
family films.
He
had quite a wicked sense of humor and, on one occasion, George called
me on his cell phone and said, “Dan, I’m walking down Hollywood
Boulevard and I can’t see your star anywhere. What happened?”
The
following year, George was back and actually wearing a tuxedo, and he
spent much of his time on the red carpet, bringing over some of his
favorite movie people for me to interviews, especially Ken Wales, who
had just produced “Amazing Grace,” the film about John Newton, which he
was raving about.
Born
in New Jersey, George Verwer now lives in London, and has spent nearly
60 years leading gospel movements around the globe, and has been a
witness to more than a few failures – including his own – and can still
say, “I believe history will show that God was doing way more in the
midst of our messes than we realized at the time.” For those of you who
know George, you can hear him say this as you read it.
In
his latest book, “Mess-i-ology,” (Moody Publishers) George reflects on
his life and ministry to remind us that God works in mysterious ways.
Over the course of his years in ministry, he states, “In churches,
organizations, and ministry outlets I have often observed messes of all
sorts. Sometimes obvious sin is involved and other times it can be silly
stuff. I have said, and feel it strongly, that no matter how filled we
are with the Holy Spirit, we are still human. Our humanness has its
beautiful side and its messy side.”
And
this important message can be found in “Mess-i-ology”, but Verwer
cautions us not to become critical. Instead he urges us toward love,
patience, affection, grace…and to trust God always, even in failure.
About George Verwer:
He
is the founder and former International Director of Operation
Mobilization (OM), which is a ministry of evangelism, discipleship
training and church planting. He led Operation Mobilization for over 40
years before stepping down in August 2003. George has a burning concern
for vital, propagating and revolutionary Christianity in his own life
and in those he meets.
After
trusting Christ at a meeting where Billy Graham spoke in Madison Square
Garden, New York, George had a growing conviction to share the Word of
God on foreign soil. He began with the distribution of Gospels of John
in Mexico in 1957.
Writer
Justin Taylor once wrote, “To say that George Verwer Jr. (b. 1938) has a
larger-than-life personality is probably an understatement.” I couldn’t
agree more.
To schedule media with George Verwer, please contact Janis Backing at janis.backing@moody.edu
. If you do interview him, be prepared, as you will find him just that –
larger-than-life – but for Christ, the love of his life.
Photo
captions: 1) George Verwer all at sea onboard the Logos Hope. 2) Book
cover. 3) This caricature of George Verwer was made by Graham Donald
Kennedy. 4) The young Verwer in New Jersey. 5) Dan Wooding interviewing
George Verwer at the at a Movieguide® Gala in Hollywood. (Photo: Norma
Wooding).
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** You may republish this and any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).
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