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Most of the world’s people live in oral cultures. They
learn about their history and transmit their values
through song, chant, story, and drama.
But when they listen to the Bible, oral people don’t
separate themselves from the stories. As they listen,
they are drawn in and find themselves walking alongside
Jesus.
When the Kabiyé people of Togo heard the word of God in
their language for the first time, their reaction was,
“God speaks our language. We don’t need a translator to
talk to God. God can address us directly.” And for so
many around the world, they’ve been told and taught that
God doesn’t understand their prayers.
Experiencing the Bible for the First Time
I wish people could go into a village and watch people
as they hear—for the first time—the Bible in their own
mother tongue. In my mind, I can still see them—people
gathering from all directions. Most are walking in
groups of three or four. Others ride bicycles, creating
clouds of dust as they come. All are dressed in bright,
traditional clothing. When they get closer, I can see
the obvious excitement on their faces.
These people, like hundreds of thousands of others
around the world, will be participating in a Bible
listening group. For many, it will be the first time
they have ever heard the word of God in their heart
language. Most of them cannot read and must depend upon
someone else to read and interpret scripture for them—at
least until now.
For the past twenty-six years I’ve had the amazing
privilege of being part of Faith Comes By Hearing, a
ministry which makes Audio Bible recordings available to
people just like these—people who otherwise would have
no personal access to God’s word. It’s awesome to watch
these people engage the stories from the Bible. Oral
learners have a way of putting themselves into the
stories that make them feel like they are actually
there. When Jesus is giving the Sermon on the Mount,
they are right there sitting in the field, listening.
When he lays his hands on people and heals them, they
can see and feel the emotion of the moment. They cry or
laugh or shout. When they hear the crucifixion, they
weep and sob. Some actually fall on their faces and
throw dust on their heads!
I’m also amazed at which passages speak to them on a
deep level—often things we wouldn’t even mention if we
were teaching. When’s the last time you heard a sermon
on a biblical genealogy? Yet look at how the New
Testament starts: “The book of the genealogy of Jesus
Christ, the son of David, the son of Abraham. Abraham
was the father of Isaac, and Isaac the father of Jacob…”
And so forth for sixteen verses. We may well be inclined
to just skip to verse 17, but oftentimes I’ve heard
listeners from oral cultures say, “Wait! Stop it right
there. Play that part over. I’ve heard of some of those
guys.” They play it three of four times, fascinated that
Jesus had a real genealogy that could be traced all the
way back to Abraham. That sort of thing is important to
them—where someone came from, and who their ancestors
were. Many have told me they accepted Christ just
because they heard his genealogy.
The Woman with the Issue of Blood Relating to the
Quechua
Some years back I was visiting Bible listening groups
among Quechua people in Bolivia. In the first village I
visited, I asked the pastor if there was any particular
story that really touched the people in his church. He
immediately said, “The story of the woman with the issue
of blood. Where the woman reached out and touched Jesus,
and he stopped and asked who did it.” Although I thought
this was strange, I didn’t think too much about it. In
the next village the same thing was the case-the pastor
said, “It’s definitely the woman with the issue of
blood.” This went on day after day until about the
seventh village.
Then I remembered a story a friend of mine, Romulo Sauñe,
told me years back. Romulo was an indigenous Indian
pastor (later martyred by the communist guerillas in
Peru). He told me that during the communist uprising,
his people had to flee their rural homes to the cities.
When they did so, they would approach the
Spanish-speaking churches and ask to use their buildings
for services when no one else was in them. They were
frequently told that they couldn’t because they were too
dirty, or had bugs and diseases. A few were allowed in,
but were soon kicked out by the city people who said
things like, “We don’t want these animals using our
church.”
So, here I am with indigenous people in Bolivia who are
crying when they hear the story of the woman with the
issue of blood. Why was she afraid to let Jesus know she
had touched him? Because she was unclean. She wasn’t
supposed to be touching people. But she was so desperate
and so certain that she could be healed that she did
what was culturally unacceptable. She touched Jesus.
All of sudden I made the connection. These Quechua
listeners had entered the story; it was they themselves
who reached out to touch Jesus. When he turned and asked
“Who touched me?” it was like he spoke to them. They
were afraid he was going to say, “You dirty Indians,
don’t you dare touch me.” But instead he said “Daughter,
your faith has made you well.” Not only did he not turn
her away, he called her “daughter”—his own child.
That’s why the Quechua love this story and why it makes
them weep. Their own culture told them they were
unclean, but they heard Jesus speaking to them in their
own language and calling them his own children.
That’s why I love what we do at Faith Comes By Hearing.
We take the whole New Testament, and make a dramatized
recording with multiple voices, music, and sound
effects. In this way, we get the pure word of God to
poor and illiterate people in their heart languages.
When they listen to the Bible in their own language,
Jesus speaks right to their hearts.
Morgan Jackson is the international director of Faith
Comes By Hearing. He began ministering to oral peoples
at age nine. He now travels extensively, speaking to
audiences all across the world, and sharing the need for
God’s word in audio.
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