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February 2008 Issue
Reaching
the Lost in Paradise
by Mickey Noah
 For
most Americans, and even for world travelers, Hawaii is the ultimate
exotic tourist destination. After all, it's paradise.
But for Southern Baptist missionaries Chris and Monica Woodall,
Hawaii is not just a paradise, but islands inhabited by the lost
and hurting.
While visitors crowd Waikiki Beach in Honolulu for sunning
and shopping, surfers invade Oahu's North Shore for some of the
world's most dare-devil surfing, and tourists enjoy the green
flora, dark-sand beaches and blue Pacific waters of Maui, the
Woodalls see Hawaii's underbelly.
"When you get behind the glitz of Waikiki, you find a
lot of needs," Chris says. "When you get away from there
and get back into the communities, it's just like anywhere else
in the world. There are real people who have real problems, real
hurts and needs. They just happen to live in a place that others
like to come to on vacation.
"Yes, the beaches are beautiful. But Hawaii is home to
many, many people. These people have names and souls and are in
need of the Gospel," said Woodall, director of prayer and
evangelism since 2005 for the Hawaii-Pacific Baptist Convention,
headquartered in Honolulu. He also heads up the convention's disaster
relief and chaplaincy teams.
Chris' friend, Robert Wittekind, a pastor at Waianae Baptist
Church in Honolulu County on Oahu, knows of the poor and illiterate
in the Waianae community.
"There are a lot of broken homes here," said Wittekind,
who the locals call "Kahu," the Hawaiian word for pastor.
"According to statistics, six out of ten prisoners have relatives
in the Waianae area. We have a lot of drugs, a lot of homelessness
people just running the streets. We have a lot of broken
families and marriages. Many are not married but just live together.
One of the highest populations of teenage pregnancy is on this
coast."
Chris met Monica while they both served the International Mission
Board in East Asia. After they returned from overseas, they married
and, a year later, became the parents of their first child, Moriah,
now almost two years old. They're currently expecting their second
child.
"Because of what God has put on my heart," said Monica,
"we wanted to live our lives somewhere where the Gospel's
not being readily accepted or abundantly shared, and not where
there's a church on every corner.
"Although Hawaii is a hard place to live, we want to live
where we can be salt and light, and Hawaii is definitely one of
those places."
Monica, who first served in Hawaii as a semester missionary
after college, says her experience in Hawaii has taught her that
people here are spiritually searching, and to get them to talk
about spiritual things is fairly easy.
"But then when you start talking about Jesus and Jesus
being the only way, that's when it gets a little bit more complicated.
While it's easy to get into spiritual conversations, I was heartbroken
by how that never meant Jesus."
Woodall says his and Monica's role is to "support pastors
in doing what they do.
"There are 115 churches in our convention, worshiping
in fifteen different languages," he said. "Our convention
is not made up of just Hawaii, but includes American Samoa, one
thousand miles away, and Guam, Okinawa, and Saipan, more than
3,800 miles from Hawaii. Of course, we have churches on all of
the Hawaiian Islands (Oahu, Hawaii or the Big Island, Maui, Kauai,
Molokai, and Lanai)."
As if the spiritual challenges were not enough, Woodall and
Wittekind agree that Hawaii is very much a closed society among
the state's indigenous residents.
"This community is a tight, local Hawaiian community,"
Woodall said. "We just don't ease our way in after a few
short years, or even ten, fifteen, or twenty years. This is a
hard culture to get into. It's tough. I'm a minority, and so is
everybody else who comes from the mainland."
Another challenge is that Hawaii is a very expensive place
to live. Usually, a husband and wife both must work because it
may take one of their entire paychecks to pay the mortgage on
their home. Honolulu, for instance, is one of the most expensive
places for housing in the United States. A four-bedroom house
worth $303,000 in Atlanta would cost $738,000 in Honolulu.
"In Hawaii, there are people working multiple jobs,"
according to Woodall. "You have people working the night
shifts, so it's important to have churches that hold services
when the night shift is over. That may be at 4:00 or 5:00 in the
morning. Or you have worship services in the middle of the night
when people have time to attend."
Despite these cultural and economic challenges, Southern Baptists
have also used the state's natural disasters and disaster relief
as a major way to demonstrate the love of Christ to the local
population.
Woodall describes Hawaii as "just a little speck of dirt
in the middle of a big ocean." It's a geological and meteorological
time-bomb. One or more of the state's six inhabited islands is
constantly ripe for hurricanes, flooding, earthquakes, tsunamis,
or volcanoes.
"The next earthquake here is not 'if' but 'when',"
says Karl Ragan, senior pastor of First Baptist Church, Waimea,
and another close friend of the Woodalls. Waimea is on the Big
Island.
On Sunday, December 15, 2006, an earthquake measuring
6.8 on the Richter scale hit Hawi and Kapaau, small towns
on the north Kohala coast of the Big Island around 7:10 a.m. For
forty-five seconds that seemed like an hour, the earthquake rattled
local homes. All of the three thousand homes in the area suffered
damage. Most of the homes were jilted off their post- and pier-foundations.
"Since last January, we have been working along side our
partners in California to assist families whose homes were either
heavily damaged or destroyed by the earthquake," said Woodall.
"This has provided many opportunities to minister to families
who have never set foot into a church."
"Most of the houses shifted about two inches off their
foundations," said Ragan. "We didn't try to put a house
back in its original position, but put in new piers and cement
posts. We wanted to do that quickly before the next quake,"
he explained, adding that Hawaii records hundreds of little quakes
each month.
Ragan said the work was done by Baptist Builders who rushed
in from California and Utah. Southern Baptists also have the only
feeding unit on the island for assisting volunteers and victims
of disasters.
"People were just amazed that Baptists would come over
from the mainland, at their own expense, and help," he said.
Ragan said folks were also amazed that Southern Baptists would
help anyone, not just other Baptists. It's opened the doors wide-open
to share the Gospel.
"Chris has been really wonderful," said Ragan. "He's
on Oahu, which is two hundred miles away so we have to rely on
airplanes. He's been really great in facilitating and connecting
with the North American Mission Board. He's assured us that bills
will be paid and has helped us get volunteers from the other islands."
With such a significant list of challenges and needs, Woodall
said the congregations in Hawaii must have the support and financial
assistance that the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering brings.
"The Annie Armstrong Easter Offering provides a
means by which we can help the churches do what God has called
them to do share the Gospel, equip leaders, and start new
churches all over the Pacific."
Mickey Noah is a staff writer with the Southern
Baptist North American Mission Board.
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© 2008 Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee
SBC Life is published by the
Executive Committee of the Southern Baptist Convention
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