WORLD - Interview with Brother Andrew
07/07/05 - 50 years ago and today
From 20 September – 1 October, Saltmine Theatre Company will be touring the UK with a dynamic and challenging presentation of Brother Andrew’s adventures as ‘God’s Smuggler’. Venues will include Salford, Sheffield, Widnes, Bradford, Dudley, Oxford, Maidstone, London, Southampton and Guildford.
More than ten million people have bought a copy of Brother Andrew’s book, God’s Smuggler since it was first published in 1967. However, its phenomenal success meant that Brother Andrew could not return to Eastern Europe and he has since focussed his efforts in the Muslim World. Below is an interview with Brother Andrew, founder of the 50 year ministry of Open Doors to persecuted Christians.
N: Can you remember how you felt during your first trip behind the Iron Curtain on the 15 July 1955, as you travelled by train into Poland with your suitcase, bulging with Christian booklets?
BA: I remember almost every hour of that trip, because I was the only Christian surrounded by communists, about to visit a world that I knew nothing about. It was just one trip in my holidays before I would go to be a real missionary, a decent respected missionary but that day never came! It was an eye opener in every aspect. I found churches and a Bible society that we knew nothing about. I also found there was a great lack of Bibles but lots of great enthusiasm. It was there that a pastor said ‘Andrew, you being here means more than 10 of the best sermons’. I knew I couldn’t preach very well but I can be there!
I heard from the Bible Society Director, Mr Enholc, telling me stories about professional smugglers who would come to his shop, buy 10 Russian Bibles, smuggle them across the boarder to Russia and make a fortune. Something began to wake up in me. I thought, if people do that for the love of money, unbelievers, taking such a risk, how much more we should go over there and take the Bibles to the Russians. That’s where the first seed was sown.
N: Open Doors is celebrating 50 years of ministry to the Persecuted Church in 2005. Does it seem possible?
BA: It has grown to where people ask me, “If you could do it all over again, would you?” I say no, it’s too big and too much responsibility. Fortunately, God only shows us one step at a time. One step we can take. If we do that then the Lord sees how we land on one foot, then the other. If you accept responsibility and grow spiritually, then God will show you the next step. But it’s the vision that God gave.
N: What do you tell young people who ask for advice in how to organise a ministry?
BA: Always have the guts to surround yourself with people who are better than you. For me, that’s the formula for success. That’s how you grow strong as a mission. That’s why I feel Open Doors is strong.
N: You seem satisfied with the way things are going now.
BA: I feel very good about it, I still think we have a modern function. We can only do it according to the life and measure of faith that we have received. So I feel very happy about what we are doing with our limited resources. We are never possessive of knowledge, resources, and people. We always want to share for the good of the Body of Christ.
N: How do you see the future of Open Doors?
BA: Unfortunately, I think we have a terrific future, because the conflict in the world is increasing.
N: So Christian persecution will increase?
BA: Absolutely, the whole end-time theology of the Scriptures and specifically the Book of Revelation teaches about that. But we still feel happier in a state of denial rather than facing reality. That’s why we’ve created this “pie in the sky” concept – that we will somehow escape suffering. But God is a God of unity, and there are no different standards for Christians in North Korea, or Siberia, or Mongolia, or China, or Afghanistan, than for us in the West and everywhere else. We must be ready. We must be connected to the Persecuted Church and learn from them.
N: Do you think the church in persecuted countries will grow?
BA: It will certainly grow in depth, not necessarily in numbers, but the strength of the church is not determined by statistics or numbers – it’s in influence. If we have no influence in our society, then why talk about the growing church? Numbers don’t mean anything.
N: Do you think persecution is going to come to Europe and America?
BA: Yes, and we need it. Sometimes I think ‘God hasten the day’.
N: And where do you think persecution is going to come from?
BA: From Islam - not that Islam is a threat, it’s a challenge; but we are not accepting the challenge. If we do not accept a challenge, it turns into a threat. Sometimes people come to my office and they are very upset, ‘Oh the Muslims have bought another empty church, and they have converted it into a Mosque, isn’t that terrible!’ No, that’s not terrible, what’s terrible is that the church was empty.
N: What is your message?
BA: The church needs to accept the fact that there is a suffering church and repent of our lack of understanding and compassion. We have not taken good care of one another and unless we do that, there will be no change in our culture which is getting worse and worse all the time, declining in moral spirituality and church influence.
N: What is the most important thing we can do for the Persecuted Church?
BA: Our work thrives on prayer. Pray as we face this terrible dilemma of growing persecution, diminishing church influence worldwide, exodus of Christians from the Middle East where Christians are running away. God is building his Church but you and I have to help. We have to witness; we have to be obedient to the great commission, we must supply the needs, we must go and say what can we do for you? And they always say, please pray for us. And if we press the point further they probably say, and bring me a Bible, but come, come; come and encourage us so we can stay here. Until that point is reached they will leave by the tens of thousands. That’s the mission of Open Doors: like a cry of distress, an SOS from God, ‘strengthen what remains and is at the point of death’.
To find out more about the work of Open Doors or to book tickets for the Saltmine ‘God’s Smuggler’ tour, call 01993-885400, email info@opendoorsuk.org or go to the UK website at www.opendoorsuk.org.
Ends.
1,136 Words
Open Doors strengthens persecuted Christians in over 45 countries across the world by
1. Training Church leaders and Christian workers
2. Supplying Bibles, hymnals, Sunday School materials and other Christian literature
3. Providing livelihood training and self-help opportunities
4. Visiting, comforting and encouraging those who are suffering
5. Raising awareness of the difficulties persecuted Christians face and mobilising prayer for them throughout the western world.
For other articles/press releases on the Persecuted Church, go to:
http://www.opendoorsuk.org.uk/press/articles/
http://www.opendoorsuk.org.uk/press/releases/
http://www.opendoorsuk.org/media_photos/world_watch_list_pics/html/index.htm