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3 Lane 269, Section 3, Roosevelt Rd
Taipei City, 106
Taiwan

02-2362-1395

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Newsletter

Thoughts on faith and life at Friendship Church

From the Desk of Pastor Kim

Peter Brown

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Fall is here! The season of typhoons, cooler, windy weather, and yet still very humid.

It is also a new season here at FPC. There is a new set of students coming in, new people coming into Taiwan and deciding which church to be at, and a new group of potential members!

That’s right! We have another membership class going on currently, and it is exciting to report that we have 20 people who have joined the class.

In addition, we have changed the way that we do membership classes wanting to provide more opportunities for people to become members. How has the membership class changed?

1. We are offering the membership class 3 months in a row from September to November and later from March to May (instead of twice a year).

2. Each membership class will be divided into four 1-hour classes spread over 4 weeks (instead of 5 hours over two days).

3. If an attendee misses one class, they will have the opportunity to make up that class the following month (except in November and May, in which case they will have to wait for the next season).

Why do it this way? Originally, there were many who shared with us that they wanted to become members, but they could not because of schedule conflicts. So, we wanted to provide a way that people can more easily become members by providing more opportunities. Secondly, we were also hoping that the classes would be smaller so that we could get to know the new potential members better (which, hopefully, will happen once we get this new method going).

Lastly, it is because we at FPC believe that membership is extremely important. If a person has committed to FPC for the duration of their stay in Taiwan, then it is practically the same as becoming a member. For all these reasons, we encourage everyone who has committed to being at FPC, even if for as little as 3 months, to join the membership class and get involved in the life of the church. This is the best way to find accountability, to find community, and to grow in the Lord.

We hope you will join us! The next membership class starts on October 6.

5 Questions With...Hendri Sutrisno

Peter Brown

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1. How did you first get involved with Friendship Presbyterian?  I used to attend a Presbyterian-like church in my home country of Indonesia. Then, three years ago, I came to Taiwan to study Industrial Management/Operations Research, and I looked for a Presbyterian church in Taipei. The distance mattered. Fortunately, I found FPC through Google. Interestingly, I lived in the same room with three of FPC’s regular attendees, and it helped me get to know FPC faster. I enjoyed my time at FPC and also its international feel.  

2. What do you do Monday through Saturday?  G.K. Chesterton once said, "You cannot evade the issue of God. Whether you talk about pigs or the binomial theory, you are still talking about Him." I take the quote deeply. As a Ph.D. student, I spend my time mostly for research. Not because there is a requirement to have academic publications, but because doing these things remind me of how great is our God.

3. What is something people might be surprised to know about you?  Two things. First, people find me to be like a pro in repairing a computer, when what I did was only operating-system installation and hardware cleansing. Second, my mood changes my handwriting. One time, I ended a three-hour lecture with five different writing styles!

4. What do you find most challenging about being a Christian today?  I find the practice of evangelism to be the most challenging issue, especially for a millennial like me. Millennials do not like separation, whether political, spiritual, or otherwise. On some occasions, practicing evangelism is viewed as an effort to separate.  

5. What is one of your favorite books of the Bible?  I like Luke the best. Luke warned of the danger of materialism, which is relevant to the living style in Taipei. People are relatively wealthy, and often distinguish themselves through their expensive lifestyles. Another reason is that the book elaborates the cost of following Jesus. People must be aware that following Jesus is not an easy task!

Sanchong Church-Plant ("New Blessings") Update

Peter Brown

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Photo by Dilip Bhoye (dilipbhoye.com)

by Kalan Spencer

When Kayt and I first moved to Taiwan, we were recent college grads and newlyweds who wanted to teach English abroad for a couple years. We had no plans to stay long-term or do full-time ministry here. But over our first two years in Taiwan we met a handful of remarkable OMF missionaries serving in Wanhua and we also discovered the City to City church-planting network. In the place we already lived, a place we had grown to love, we saw great need and opportunity. As we prayed about staying in Taiwan and how we could serve, a number of different people (from a variety of backgrounds and experiences) said, “We need more churches and we need them in Sanchong. It is the least churched area per capita in all of northern Taiwan.”

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Moving from prayer to planting was not very straightforward. Since we did not originally have plans to stay in Taiwan long-term, we had not really learned any Chinese. So, we started with that, but I had to keep working part-time as an English teacher to keep my visa. After two years of classes at NTNU, we moved to Sanchong with only our family and lots of prayer. At this point, we had three kids under age four. I had just one contact in Sanchong who owned a cram school, and our preliminary goal was to get to know the area and as many people as we could. I taught English classes, ran Bible story events, did language exchange, shared the gospel on the street, and prayed a lot. Kayt hosted English story-time at the library, threw parties for neighbors at our house, and did Bible storytelling, all while pregnant with our fourth child.

It was slow, steady, and tiring. But God was faithful, and we loved seeing glimpses of the Holy Spirit at work in gospel conversations with neighbors and coworkers. One night, at a Chinese New Year Employee party (尾牙), a Taiwanese woman recognized Kayt from a mutual friend’s birthday party five years before. This woman and her husband were both Christians who lived just a five-minute walk from us in Sanchong! A friendship was born, and then a mission. The four of us launched an outreach group to serve Sanchong and to help people meet Jesus. For months, it was just the four of us. Occasionally a non-Christian friend or two would join us, but they rarely stuck around.

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Slowly, however, the group grew. We met Christians who did not have church homes and lots of people who were fascinated by our families’ dynamics (two Christian families with four kids each). We saw several people come to know Christ after attending the group regularly. After a year, we had a core group of members. Last fall, we transitioned from outreach group to house-church. Then, in the spring, we moved into a local pre-school to have morning worship.

The day we launched morning worship we looked at our group picture afterward and said in amazement, “Wow, we have a little church here!”

Everything that has happened is a testimony to God’s glory. In many ways, we are the least qualified people to do this: different language, different culture, different history. But this is ultimately God’s project and we just get to join Him for what He is doing.

Our church seeks to develop healthy family relationships, meaningful work, and missional living, all out of the richness of the gospel. In short, we want to bless others because of the blessing we have in Christ. Everything we do grows out of that truth. Last year, Kayt launched Mothers of Pre-schoolers (MOPS) Taiwan to train local Christian leaders and to reach out to the community. There are about 10-15 adults and 10-15 kids each week at Sunday worship and we are beginning to train deacons and elders.

Someone once told me that if I served in Sanchong, I would need to pray every day because “Sanchong belongs to the temples.” I know what he meant, and his warning is well-taken. But what has happened, and what is happening, shows that all places, like Sanchong, belong to the Lord.

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For the LORD Most High is awesome,

the great King over all the earth.

—Psalm 47:2