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Canadian helps hope survive in South Pacific nation
"Ordinary"
man delivers hundreds of Bislama Bibles to locals
Patricia
Paddey
Ontario Correspondent
ontario@christianweek.org
NELSON,
BC-When the ninth edition of the reality TV series "Survivor"
kicks off its fall season this month, millions of viewers will be introduced
to the South Pacific archipelago nation of Vanuatu.
In typically
dramatic television-show fashion, the producers are likely to highlight
the fact that cannibals once inhabited some of the 80 islands that comprise
the country today.
But
Canadian Dave Dever knows that in the reality that extends beyond television
screens, it is people who are hungry for the gospel that inhabit the Vanuatu
of the 21st century.
For
years, Dever has made it his personal mission to raise the money to purchase
and deliver Bislama-language Bibles to the people of Vanuatu. (Bislama
is a form of Melanesian Pidgin, declared by the countrys constitution
to be their national language.)
Inspired
by the story of Scottish-born missionary, John Paton-who went to
the island of Tanna, now part of the independent republic of Vanuatu,
to preach the gospel in 1858-Dever and his wife Abby took their first
trip there in June of 2001.
"I
bought a Bislama Bible at the Bible Society of Vanuatu [to learn] the
language better," says Dever. "I took it with me and I showed
some of the natives my Bislama Bible."
Dever
says they kept meeting people who were in awe of their Bible-the
largest single document ever written in Bislama-and they left with
the overwhelming impression that most of the islanders had never seen
the Scriptures in their own language before.
"It
kept impressing on our hearts that there was a need there," Dever
says.
Returning
home to Canada, the Devers began a Bislama Bible fund. Soon, they were
planning a second trip; this time, to deliver 700 Bislama-language Bibles,
purchased through the Bible Society of the South Pacific.
In September
2002, Dever personally handed out the Bibles he and his wife had saved
to purchase.
"There
was one man crawling. He had never walked. The first time I saw him, he
was crawling through the jungle all alone. I gave him the first Bible.
He was [literally] jumping on the ground," remembers Dever.
When
the Devers returned to Vanuatu in July, 2003, they purchased and distributed
229 Bibles. They hope to deliver another 571 in December. "That would
give us a total of 1,500 [Bibles distributed] for the three trips,"
Dever explains.
Dever
is not a wealthy man. A labourer all his life, he insists he is an "ordinary
person" who happens to believe he has been called by God to give
out Bibles to those too poor to purchase them on their own.
He and
his wife, who live and work as custodians at a Bible camp in Nelson, recently
established a registered charitable organization called Bibles For The
Poor (www.biblesforthepoor.org)
to help them fulfill that calling. Dever says that 100 per cent of financial
gifts given to his organization are used to purchase Bibles, unless otherwise
directed.
And
what of the man who crawled through the jungle to receive his Bible? Says
Dever, "he has someone come and read it to him every morning, and
he prays every morning. He says, I am going to crawl with all my
might for God. One day, I will have perfect legs in heaven.
"The
word of God brings hope; eternal hope to those who are thirsty,"
says Dever. "We want to share this hope that we have been given with
the world.
"What
could be better than to give people eternal hope?"
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