Human Trafficking Video
October 25, 2009 by chuckquinley
Filed under Craft, Media Light
A PSA on human trafficking, giving a face to the statistics and encouraging people to go visit www.newarrivals.co.za and learn more about the problem. Director: Shane Vermooten Cinematographer: Bruce MacDonald
Media Village is our partnering institution, helping us launch Media Light. MV is sending Shane to teach editing. Diane herself is coming as a primary teacher for three weeks. Here is a sample of their work.
Media Light! It’s happening now!!!
September 5, 2009 by chuckquinley
Filed under Craft, Media Light
How would you like to spend ten weeks seeking God and learning to produce video while living with young leaders from many nations all in an exotic location? At Media Light we believe in hands-on, immersion learning. For ten weeks you will live in community at our base in Chiang Rai, Thailand in the famous golden triangle just miles from Laos and Myanmar. Thailand is an dynamic, creative nation and a top tourist destination due to its incredible waterfalls, beaches and mountains. But Thailand is also an unreached nation (only 1% Christian), a perfect creative environment in which to sharpen your spiritual health and to develop deeper competence as a Christian communicator in a digital age.
Media Light Opens its doors in Chiang Rai, Thailand Jan 5-March 21. These ten weeks could change your life. There are only 25 slots in any school and 12 are already taken so if you intend to join this batch it’s time to get rolling! Click here for full details but in click quickly. OCT 15 IS THE DEADLINE FOR ADMISSIONS. Hope to see you there!
PS: We also have Internships available for Lee University Students starting in May 2010.
Why Missions Has to Change
July 30, 2009 by chuckquinley
Filed under Lead
Either we adjust or keep talking to ourselves.
Some things will never change about missions:
* The pathetic condition of an unreached person searching for meaning and hope without finding it.
* God’s love for the lost.
* His determination to reach them with his offer of adoption and forgiveness.
* Our clear marching orders from Jesus that reaching and discipling the lost is to be the primary focus of the church and of all individual believers.
Being a Bible-believing Christian means committing ourselves– time, talent and money– to all of this.
BUT the world has greatly changed in the past 40 years. This demands a re-designing of the church’s mission to the nations. Here are a few of the changes we must address:
Where the unreached live. We have very clear sociological data today and we know that 95% of the world’s unreached people live in Asia and the surrounding nations. Still, we continue the 100 year old habit of sending no more than 5% of missionaries and money to this region. Churches, missions agencies and individuals need to prioritize the unreached above those who have abundant access to the gospel (85% of all missions work is done in nations four hours from the USA due to convenience and long-term relational ties. The simple fact is that these nations as a whole have 300 years of Christian witness while much of Asia has never seen one missionary).
How young the unreached are. The average age in many Asian nations is less than 25 years. The harvest is young. Seventy percent of all conversions occur by age 14, ninety percent by age 25. Does your church or mission spend the majority of its funds, staff and energies reaching those under 25? All over the world we need to make a serious commitment to younger forms of communication and community.
Where cultural influence now originates. Question, “What is the most powerful force in shaping the lives of even the people of God?” Answer: Secular media. Even in the church, a pastor gets 45 minutes once a week. Then we all tune into media for hours every day. It teaches us our values, feeds us our opinion and influences our beliefs about politics, marriage, work, money, power, sex-you name it! This is even more apparent in those who are unreached. For them, media is the only voice they are hearing. The church has to get in on the conversation that is taking place all over this world on TV, radio, books, film and in the most important place of all-the internet.
How Poor and Urban the Harvest is. Today for the first time in human history, more people live in urban centers than in the countryside (up from only 10% in 1900). As Sherry and I travel through even the most remote places we find youth dressing and acting as urbanites despite being from tribal societies. Urban areas are places of great opportunity and great poverty, disease, crime and oppressive labor practices. Many of Asia’s great mega-cities have hardly any Christian witness.
Your transition moment
July 22, 2009 by chuckquinley
Filed under Lead, LeadYou
David spent his youth taking care of his father’s sheep in the outback, but on the day when he visited the battleground during a time of national crisis, he didn’t take his sheep along. He didn’t bring his shepherd’s staff either. He only brought his weapon.With it he engaged the challenge facing his leaderless people and led them to victory.From that day on nobody thought of him as a shepherd. He was David, the warrior.
He used this transition opportunity to completely reorient and relaunch his life.After that day he never went back to tending sheep.
Message: Life presents us with these transition opportunities and sometimes there is not much time to decide whether to go for it or not. You have to have thought all that out before and know who you are in your deepest heart and what your core values are. When these moments come to you, there are some things you need to stop doing immediately if you are going to get to the future that’s knocking on your door. It won’t take a number and wait. You have to be ready to go “all in” and let go of the vine you have been swinging on to take hold of a new unknown that is full of potential…..or not. It all depends on you really.
The Power of Media in Rural Communities in Asia
July 17, 2009 by chuckquinley
Filed under Craft

Here is an interview I did in Manila about my experience with using Steve Cadd’s movie, “Snatched from the Darkness” in an occult center in a remote region of the Philippines. Media is even more powerful in rural areas than in the media saturated urban world.

