January 12, 2018

11 Tribes: Integrating Faith and Work in Slovenia

Wait!? I thought there were 12 tribes! Don’t panic. You have indeed read your Bible correctly all these years. God did bring all 12 of the tribes of Israel out of Egypt and through the wilderness to set up life in the Promised Land to be His prized possession. While the Levites got the most attention and the specific job description of taking care of the tabernacle and the sacrificial system, the other 11 tribes were no less important.

We can use the analogy today, that the Levite tribe is akin to the small percentage of full-time Christian workers, while the 11 tribes are the majority of the population who work in the marketplace. Unfortunately, when you are part of one of the other 11 tribes, it is easy to believe the lie that your contributions “in the Land” are not important to God’s work.

The Lie: Only One Tribe Can Do God’s Work

The Josiah Venture team in Slovenia, called Društvo Več, has been doing English camps with teenagers for over 15 years. The Lord has answered your prayers and we have seen many young people turn from the darkness and walk with Jesus in the light. The funny thing about teenagers though, is that they grow up. They “age out” of youth group, go to university, and eventually step into the workplace. As these new believers are wrestling with the question of what to do with their lives, some have come to the conclusion that full-time ministry is the only real way to serve God –that the work of a project manager, a teacher, a computer programmer, or a doctor is just not the same as the work of the one tribe.

We pray fervently that God would raise up thousands of young people to be a part of the One Tribe. That they would be fully equipped and supported to give their lives to full-time ministry, serving their countries and making disciples in their churches. But we are also praying for the tens of thousands that will spend the next 40 years of their lives in the 11 tribes. The truth is that all 12 tribes are called to do God’s work.

In order to empower the next generation of believers, Društvo Več started a training program this year called 11 Tribes, specifically for Christians in the workplace. This intense program seeks to reshape the participant’s worldview around what God says about work. Students study in depth God’s original purpose with work, how the fall has affected work, how the gospel brings redemption to work, and what work will be like in the new creation.

“11 Tribes got me thinking about work and the gospel in another way. Instead of how to bring people to Jesus, we talked about bringing Jesus to people, our co-workers, clients, people we spend a lot of time with. I think it is a view we often forget to mention, yet working a job is a lifestyle most Christians live,” says Robi, a computer programer.

The Truth: All 12 Tribes Are Called to Do God’s Work

Attending two weekend retreats, meeting for two full Saturdays, and meeting weekly for three months, the young professionals in the 11 Tribes program are learning how to integrate their faith with their work. Most are between 23 and 30 years old and all of them are eager to put into practice what they are learning. The 12 people who have gone through the program this year represent a wide variety of professionals: from teachers and doctors, to make up artists, to small business owners. They are all receiving theological training and spiritual and personal development within a community of peers from diverse backgrounds and vocations.

After going through the program, Maja, a photographer and makeup artist, now sees her career as an important ministry. “I absolutely loved 11 Tribes. It was intense, hard, but so eye-opening. As a makeup artist I’ve been wondering for a long time, what does the Bible actually say about beauty, and this program gave me answers to that and so many more questions. I now work for God. What is important to me now is that every woman who walks out of my make-up chair realizes that she’s absolutely beautiful without any make-up. I’m there only to enhance the beauty God gave her.”

Maruša, a special education teacher, shares her experience in the program saying,

“The program helped me realize Godly work is not about success and accomplishments, but about the purpose of my work, and for whom am I working for. I see now that the main goal of my work is to worship God and bless people with whom I am working…God gave me the passion and love for people with special needs and I want to show them and their families the love that God has for them. I am just an instrument of His love to these people and my work enables me to be the light of God in their lives.”

It is vital for the young people in Slovenia, and the rest of Central and Eastern Europe, to understand, as Maja and Maruša now do, that they play a significant part in the kingdom of God and 11 Tribes is helping make that happen. As the 11 Tribes director, Hondo Wynn, puts it, “It has been exciting to see these young professionals get a vision for what God can do in their workplace, to have their worldviews expanded, so that they see that God is active in all areas of society, not just in the church. It is powerful to see young Slovenes take up the mantle of missionary to the marketplace.”

Pray with us that the 11 tribes in Slovenia would understand that their work in the marketplace is equally as important as the work of their brothers and sisters who are in the One Tribe. Pray that all 12 of the tribes would have God-honoring excellence no matter what their office space looks like.

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You’re Not Alone in the Battle

When you’re used to leading, serving, and pouring into others, what happens when you suddenly can’t? What happens when the person who normally encourages everyone else wakes up and realizes she has nothing left to give? That’s where I found myself last year. I’m naturally a driven person. I love to see progress—to watch people grow, ministries flourish, and God’s work move forward. But last year, right before a major conference I had been preparing for—a mental health summit for nearly 700 youth leaders and church leaders—everything stopped. I got sick, and my normal pace of life vanished overnight. Suddenly, I couldn’t do what I thought I had to do. At first, I tried to stay positive, to find purpose in the pause. I told myself God was teaching me patience, humility, or to delegate better. But underneath those thoughts, a more dangerous narrative started to form: “God is disappointed in you.” “You’re not strong enough.” “You’re failing as a leader.” “Maybe God is holding back because you don’t deserve his help.” Those are the kinds of lies that can take root quietly—and quickly. It’s the same old whisper the enemy used in the Garden: “Did God really say…?” (Genesis 3:1). The serpent’s goal was never just to tempt Eve; it was to make her question God’s heart. And he still uses that same strategy today. He wants us to believe that God is distant, that we’re alone, unseen, and unloved. I’ve seen this pattern not only in my life, but in the lives of so many young people and leaders I’ve walked with. The moment things get hard—disappointment, exhaustion, relational conflict, failure—the enemy twists the truth. He tells us we’re forgotten, that our prayers don’t matter, and that no one really understands. And slowly, we start to isolate ourselves. But isolation is one of his most effective weapons. Once we withdraw, our vision blurs. We stop hearing the truth clearly. We start interpreting everything through the lens of fear, shame, and self-pity. Even Scripture is full of people who felt this same ache. David cried, “Turn to me and be gracious to me, for I am lonely and afflicted” (Psalm 25:16). Elijah, after a great victory, ran into the wilderness and said, “I have had enough, Lord” (1 Kings 19:4). Job sat surrounded by friends who misunderstood him. And even Jesus—our Savior—experienced complete abandonment in Gethsemane and on the cross. Loneliness and lies are not new, but neither is God’s response to them. In my own season of weakness, when I couldn’t find the strength to pray, others prayed for me. When I felt unseen, people showed up with meals, with text messages, and with quiet presence. Even my unbelieving neighbors said, “We think someone up there cares about you.” That was God reminding me: You are not forgotten. You are not alone. The truth is, the Body of Christ was never meant to function in isolation. Strength in God’s kingdom doesn’t mean independence—it means connection. It means letting others carry you when you can’t walk and trusting that God is at work even when you can’t see progress. This experience also helped me recognize a pattern: the enemy always attacks identity and connection first. He wants to disconnect us from God’s truth and from God’s people. But the way we stand firm is by returning to both. When I start to spiral now—when I believe I have to prove my worth or carry everything alone—I stop and remind myself of what’s true. I reach out to trusted friends and ask for prayer. I ground myself in simple spiritual and physical practices that bring me back to reality: breathing deeply, reading a psalm, or stepping outside to notice beauty. These small moments become declarations of faith. Romans 11:33-36 says, “Oh, how great are God’s riches and wisdom and knowledge! How impossible it is for us to understand his decisions and his ways!” That verse anchors me. I don’t have to understand everything; I just have to trust the one who does. Maybe you’re in a similar place right now. Or maybe you’re walking with young people who feel lost, invisible, or stuck in lies about who they are. The battle is real, but so is our victory in Christ. So, here’s my invitation to you: Would you take a moment to pray—for yourself, for your friends, and for the next generation—that we would recognize the lies of isolation, stand firm in truth, and live connected as the Body of Christ? You’re not alone in the battle. And neither are they.

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The Unseen War

Three years of conflict and still no peace. The war in Ukraine has returned to the forefront of the news as world leaders clash in a spin cycle of opinions. Those in the country feel the weight of years of exhausting conflict, with no clear end in sight. But behind the scenes, another battle is raging for the spiritual soul of the nation.  Amidst pain, hardship, and struggle, God is still at work and our JV team of 27 staff are pressing forward to take ground in the fight. During the last weekend of February, they gathered 450 young people from local churches across Ukraine for an innovative “Spring Fest.” Good Bible teaching, powerful worship, and personal testimonies were woven together to point people to the resources they have in Christ. He is the only firm anchor for our souls in the midst of a raging storm. The storm is particularly fierce for these young people. Some of the youth groups meet close enough to the front lines to hear the sound of bombing all day and live with the constant threat of evacuation and displacement.   One youth group from Kharkiv, en route to the fest, had their main youth leader forcefully conscripted into the military. Can you imagine if that happened to a youth group from your church?  Yet, our sovereign God is always working to accomplish his purposes despite the evil and failures of man. In fact, he often uses these unwelcome trials to accelerate his work. Our team is experiencing an unprecedented response to the gospel and a passionate hunger in young people to grow deep in their walks with God. With the exodus of leaders out of the country or into the military, there is a huge need to equip a new generation of leaders, and our training events are packed. Other JV countries are using the crisis to mobilize their young people into mission. Recently, our JV team in Slovakia held a series of events for 250 youth leaders called “Glow and Go.” Their goal was to inspire, mobilize, and energize young leaders into personal transformation and bold outreach.  As a result, 12 Slovaks traveled into war-torn Ukraine to serve at the Spring Fest.  They led worship, organized eight workshops, and served in numerous practical ways. But most of all, they told these young people that they were not forgotten and not alone. More teams from Slovakia and the Czech Republic will be assisting with evangelistic camps. When under pressure from the enemy, the best strategy is forward motion. Thank you for joining us in the spiritual battle for Ukraine.