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Pandemic in the Heart

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By Vince McCarty 

Times of crisis like the one we are living in now with COVID-19 can bring out the best and the worst in human behavior. While some people rise to the occasion and bless those around them, others manifest attitudes, reactions, and prejudices that do not represent a proper response and that do not honor the Lord.

When I was six years old, my parents accepted the pastorate at an Open Bible church in Macon, Georgia. The year was 1967, and I will never forget seeing for the first time three toilets in all the restaurants, stores, and public parks. One was for white females, another for white males, and the other for people of color (African American). I remember asking my parents why there were three restrooms in this strange place because I had never seen anything like that before. My parents tried to explain as best they could, and they always taught me that prejudice against anyone because of the color of their skin or ethnicity was biblically wrong and immoral. 

The Bible tells us in Genesis 1:27 that man and woman were created in God’s image (Imago Dei). However, throughout the history of humankind we see how, contrary to God’s heart, different ethnicities have been mistreated and even abused.

Leviticus 19:3 reads “The foreigner residing among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself, for you were foreigners in Egypt. I am the Lord your God.”  

For us in the United States, most of our ancestors came to live here by emigrating from other countries. This enrichment of cultures, languages, and customs is what makes our country so great. However, because of the COVID-19 virus, serious instances of prejudice against and mistreatment of Asians and Asian Americans and other immigrants living in the United States have occurred.

We have the pleasure today of hearing from Rev. Ricky Poon, who is the Chinese Academic Dean for Inste Global Bible College, about some of these issues which he and his wife, Irene, and many more Asian Americans in this country have experienced.

 As the Church, the body of Christ, we need to reflect God’s heart in several ways: 

  • Recognize that racism is alive and well in our country, speak out against it, and model proper behaviors and responses.  
  • Consider the narrative that brings us together – the Gospel. We need to seek Shalom and restoration, call out sinful reactions and unfair judgments, and repent.  
  • Model empathy so we can be part of the solution and not part of the problem. As we see that one part of our Body is suffering, we should all show empathy and concern.  
  • Remember the lessons Paul learned and then taught in his letter to the Galatians: “There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Galatians 3:28). 
  • Live out what we preach and believe. Remember our endgame isn’t just this life, but way beyond it. Revelation 7:9 says, “After this I looked, and there before me was a great multitude that no one could count, from every nation, tribe, people and language, standing before the throne and before the Lamb. They were wearing white robes and were holding palm branches in their hands.” I am looking forward to that day! 

Around the World

From the Field: Updates from Open Bible Missionaries

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Have you ever wondered, What in the world are our Open Bible missionaries doing now? We wish we could visit every church or sit down over coffee and share what God is doing where we serve—but that isn’t always possible. 

So this month, we’ve gathered brief notes from missionaries around the world. As you’ve read these updates from around the world, we invite you to pray for our missionaries—their families, their ministries, and the communities they serve. Please also share these stories with your church so others can join in prayer.

Use the interactive map below to see the updates:

Trouble seeing the map? Click HERE


About the Author

Tammy Swailes is passionate about cross-cultural Christian education, so working with INSTE Bible College to disciple and equip leaders throughout Europe and beyond is a great fit! Tammy has lived in Europe since 1999 – first in Hungary and now Ukraine. Before that, she was in Japan, as well as Spokane, Washington. She now serves as INSTE regional director in Europe, assisting INSTE programs in five languages. Tammy has her undergraduate degrees in both Missions and Christian Education and a MA in Intercultural Studies. Photography, good coffee, multi-cultural experiences, and the family’s Yorkie are some of Tammy’s favorite things. 

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Around the World

Global Harvest Offering 2026: Building Hope in Africa

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Ask Open Bible pastors in Africa what the biggest problem in their church is and most reply with one word: REVIVAL! Just as Saul once ravaged the early church in Acts 8, our African brothers today face similar conditions: harassment, arrest, and even death for following Christ. But in the face of persecution, our churches are experiencing rapid growth in thirteen African nations.  They’re calling for our help, not to alleviate the suffering, but to build new church facilities to serve their expanding congregations and communities.

The Global Harvest Offering of 2026 is “Building Hope in Africa,” and it is our opportunity to participate in this revival. In this initiative, we will partner with our missionaries and national directors to fund thirteen new church building projects across the continent. God is using faithful missionaries and nationals to plant churches, raise leaders, and reach communities with the hope only found in Jesus!

… in the face of persecution, our churches are experiencing rapid growth in thirteen African nations.

Our missionary partners are many: the Godwins, the Kopps, the Parkers, Okon Obot, Peter Mahoye, the Moores, the Welches, and our brothers and sisters throughout the Antioch Network.

Thirteen churches.


Thirteen countries.


One goal:
to raise the $200,000 needed to
cover the costs for all thirteen projects.

With over 230 Open Bible churches in the United States, we can meet the financial goal of the Global Harvest Offering if each church gives $875. Alternatively, just 2,000 people giving $100 this year would meet the goal. Your support in this effort helps build more than walls; it builds hope, community and the Kingdom of God. Look for the QR code or this link to give to Building Hope in Africa  today. Thank you for your partnership to build hope for Africa.

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Around the World

Seventy Years Strong: The Past, Present, and Promise of Japan Open Bible

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On October 31 – November 5, 2025, Japan Open Bible Churches celebrated their seventieth anniversary. Global Missions Director Vince and Lois McCarty, Open Bible President Michael and Julie Nortune and I were honored to join them for this celebratory occasion.

My own connection with Japan goes back to my twenty-third birthday when I boarded a plane to Kobe with two suitcases, only five words in my Japanese vocabulary, and a heart full of missionary zeal. During my six years there, the Japanese church shaped me deeply as both a missionary and a person. When I left Japan thirty-six years ago, I left a piece of my heart. Joining them again to celebrate seventy years brought me real joy! 

When I left Japan thirty-six years ago, I left a piece of my heart.

Japan Open Bible has become a true partner in ministry with Open Bible Churches globally, a partnership especially visible across Asia. The anniversary celebration honored the legacy of Japan Open Bible missionaries and the heritage of churches they planted while also affirming the importance of today’s smaller, community-based congregations. We visited, preached in, and celebrated with churches and pastors in both eastern and western Japan.

A celebratory dinner in Japan Open Bible West.

Japan’s geographical isolation and a 250-year ban on Christian missions in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries gave Japan a reputation as “the missionaries’ graveyard.”  Yet, after World War II some US veterans, having seen the spiritual vacuum in Japan, returned as carriers of the hope of the Gospel. The Jake Collins, Eddie Carnes, and Phil Rounds families were among the first in the 1950s era to be sent by Open Bible Churches.

From a handful of missionaries and new believers in the early years to a network of Open Bible Churches across Japan today, God’s presence has been a steady flame of hope in the darkness.

From a handful of missionaries and new believers in the early years to a network of Open Bible Churches across Japan today, God’s presence has been a steady flame of hope in the darkness.  Even though fewer than one percent of Japanese identify as Christian, today across Japan we see our churches, large and small, alive with joy and power of the Holy Spirit.

The Rounds family, some of the first Open Bible missionaries to Japan.

One of the early converts, now ninety-year-old Yaeko Yoshinaga, is likely the oldest surviving member of those first Japan Open Bible congregations. As an eighteen-year-old, she lived with the Rounds family helping in the home. She loved their children and learned to love potatoes (more than rice) as they did, but even more, came to faith in Jesus Christ.

Yaeko says, I would not have believed in Jesus if I had not met Mr. Rounds, the missionary.  She and her husband later pastored for 45 years, and today her son and wife pastor the flourishing church. Decades later, the flame of God’s love still burns brightly in Yaeko sensei. Her love, joy, humility, and faith impact every generation in the church. She remains a powerful reminder of how one relationship can change the direction of an entire life.

The first missionaries to begin Open Bible’s work in Japan.

Pastor Yoshio Ishikawa told me the story of how he came to Jesus as a young boy. In the late 1960s, ten-year-old Yoshio’s family lived near an Open Bible Church in the Sumida neighborhood of Tokyo. He recalls, When I was ten, I saw a TV drama about an incurable disease. It scared me, and without really knowing why, I walked into the church in my neighborhood that I had passed by many times. That church was Sumida Open Bible – the church I now pastor.”

Today, Pastor Ishikawa uses his talent as a skilled musician to reach people in new, non-traditional ways. He teaches a group ukulele class as a bridge to the gospel. Students learn to play the ukulele, then hear a teaching from the Bible and join in prayer. Other approaches, like book clubs, English lessons, and choirs, give churches relational ways to connect and open doors for evangelism.

Worship during the JOB (Japan Open Bible) 70th anniversary celebration.

In fact, many “unconventional” forms of evangelism are used to touch lives in churches in Japan. Often, churches and Christians invest years building trust and relationships before someone decides to follow Jesus. In my own experience, I saw that converts under my ministry were often a result of groundwork laid by others before me.  

Looking ahead, Japan Open Bible embraces a bold vision: to plant ten new churches throughout the country in the next decade. I, for one, believe it can happen! God has not abandoned Japan. The hope of the Gospel that the missionaries brought with them back in the 1950s continues to burn brightly in our brothers and sisters of Japan Open Bible. May God fan that flame as they carry His hope across the country in ways we have not yet imagined!

Open Bible leaders pose with JOB young people after a youth service at Trinity Square Church in Machida.

As I leave Japan once again, I reflect and am grateful to have shared in the celebrations of what God has done, excitedly anticipating what He will do next!

Listen to Yaeko Yoshinaga’s testimony:


About the Author

Tammy Swailes is passionate about cross-cultural Christian education, so working with INSTE Bible College to disciple and equip leaders throughout Europe and beyond is a great fit! Tammy has lived in Europe since 1999 – first in Hungary and now Ukraine. Before that, she was in Japan, as well as Spokane, Washington. She now serves as INSTE regional director in Europe, assisting INSTE programs in five languages. Tammy has her undergraduate degrees in both Missions and Christian Education and a MA in Intercultural Studies. Photography, good coffee, multi-cultural experiences, and the family’s Yorkie are some of Tammy’s favorite things.

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