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April 11, 2001
Sawatdii Pii Mai! (Happy New Year)
We send our New Year greeting this year on the traditional Thai
New Year. This year, Easter happens to coincide with the Thai
New Year, thus we wish you a Happy Easter, too. Christian churches
around Thailand will have a doubly blessed holiday. Thai New Year
is celebrated for several days. The young honor the old during
this time. Families are together and share food and time together.
We wish you and your family a similarly joyous time to celebrate
the glory of Easter.
Our work at Payap University continues to be challenging. Every
day we encounter new opportunities that test our abilities. We
are both involved in administrative work that requires us to attend
many meetings, create new programs and solve problems associated
with the personnel and programs we oversee. This can be challenging
in a U.S. setting, but add to that work environment the factors
of a language and culture different from one's own and you have
our situations. The longer we remain in Thailand, the more we
recognize and try to understand "the Thai way." Hopefully,
as we now near retirement, we are "getting it right"
in the eyes of our host employers and we can make useful contributions
during our last five years of service to the university.
It has been some time since we last communicated. The academic
year (June-March) has just ended. During that time, it seems we
are constantly on the go. John teaches in both the Thai program
of the seminary and in the English program for exchange students
under the International Programs Office. His major job, however,
is serving as Director of the Institute for the Study of Religion
and Culture. This year he went to Seattle with two Thai colleagues,
one Buddhist and one Christian, to speak at Christian churches,
Buddhist temples, and various NGOs about inter-religious relations
and inter-religious dialogue in Thailand. The three also attended
the Sixth International Conference of the Society for Buddhist-Christian
Studies. While at the conference, he invited the Society's executive
committee to consider coming to Payap University and the Institute
for its next international meeting in August 2003. In November
last year, he learned that the organizers accepted this invitation.
It will mean lots of work, but a wonderful opportunity to introduce
the work of the Institute to a much larger international audience.
(About 500 persons participated in the last conference, and John
hopes that approximately that number will be coming for the 2003
conference!) John also believes and hopes that hosting the conference
will have a major impact on the way Thai Christians view other
forms of religious faith and on how they relate their Christian
faith and mission to others.
Last August Martha was promoted to become Payap University's
Vice President for International Affairs. She is doing much the
same work as before, but now chairs more committees and attends
more administrators' meetings! Her biggest challenges for the
new academic year will be to establish the International College
and a Development Office. We both need your prayers and encouragement
for these responsibilities.
Home assignment
This July and August we will be in the U.S. on "home assignment."
The assignment will begin with our attending the meeting of the
presidents of Presbyterian Colleges and Universities. Martha will
represent Dr. Boonthong Poocharoen, the president of Payap, at
the meeting, which this year will be held in Edinburgh, Scotland.
John will be using this opportunity to tell others about the Institute.
Following the meeting in Edinburgh, we shall spend about two months
in the States visiting family and some of our supporting churches.
We shall also be attending, along with other mission personnel
on "home assignment," the missionary sharing conference
that is sponsored by the Worldwide Ministries Division of the
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). This year's conference will be held
in Louisville. During our time in the States we plan to be mainly
on the East Coast and in the Midwest. We shall be writing congregations
in those areas about the dates when we shall be available to visit
and speak. If you would be interested in having us come to speak
at your church, please let us know and we shall try to include
you in our schedule. As you probably know, according to the policy
of the Worldwide Ministries Division, congregations inviting mission
personnel to speak are responsible for travel and lodging costs.
In August we shall be attending to some health matters and then
returning to Thailand for the beginning of the new term for the
International Division. (Payap now operates on two calendarsthe
Thai calendar, which begins in June and runs through the end of
February, for Thai students, and the American calendar, September
through the end of April, for our international students.) This
year we are expecting an enrollment of almost 100 international
students and about 9,000 Thai students. John will also be busy
preparing for the next Sinclair Thompson Lecture Series, which
will be held in June 2002, and for the International Conference
to be held in August 2003. In addition, several international
resident scholars will be coming to the Institute next year.
We greatly appreciate your thoughts and prayers for our work.
Although we realize that we do not write to you as often as we
would like and should, we assure you that we think of you often
and we are most grateful for your prayers and support. We also
enjoy receiving messages from you and occasional visits.
In that regard, we urge you to think about arranging study tours
to see Christian work in Thailand and to learn about the mission
of the Church in this part of the world. The Institute is pleased
to arrange special programs focusing on what it means to be Christian
and do Christian mission in a religiously plural world. These
programs range from two to three weeks and can accommodate groups
as small as ten persons and as large as thirty persons. At the
present time, the total cost, including international and domestic
travel, lodging, food, lectures, etc., is about $2,000 per person
for two weeks and $3,000 for three weeks. We think that the programs
are special in giving you not only an exceptional learning and
spiritual experience but also an entertaining and enjoyable travel
experience.
May God bless and lead you in your local ministries as well as
in your participation in the worldwide mission of the Christian
Church.
Peace and Love in Christ,
Martha and John Butt
The 2001 Mission Yearbook for Prayer & Study, p. 171
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