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“Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom.” — Luke 23:42

Mission Connections
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Anne Blair
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John McCall

Read Letters from John McCall

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2016
March - A Quiet Easter Story
February - A Table of Trust
January
- Fields Being Transformed

2015
Autumn - Abai's Missionary Call
September
- A Taiwanese Retreat
August
- A Lesson in Teamwork
June
- Graduation Retreat
Spring
- The Artist God
January
- A Saturday in China
Winter
- A Parable for Our Time


Older Letters

Autumn 2014 - Surprised By Joy
October 2014
- Henry John McCall's Story
September 2014
- Outreach and Renewal
Fall 2014
- A Full Circle
Summer 2014
- An International Week
Summer 2014
- Alang's Story
Spring 2014
- Interpretation Assignment
October 2013

July #2 2013
July 2013

Spring 2013

March 2013

Winter 2013

Christmas 2012

Thanksgiving 2012
Autumn 2012

Summer 2012

March 2012

January 2012

December 2011
October 2011
August 2011

The 2015 Presbyterian Mission Yearbook for Prayer & Study, p. 253

Rev. John McCall

Mission co-worker in Taiwan
Presbyterian Church of Taiwan

Give to John's Ministry

Meet John in a short videoDownload John's prayer card

Contact: John McCall (john.mccall@pcusa.org)

John will next be in the USA, based in Black Mountain NC, in 2018.  Email him to extend an invitation to visit your congregation or organization.

About John McCall’s ministry
John McCall has been serving in Taiwan for almost 20 years.  He spends a lot of time on trains, buses, and subways as he travels throughout Taiwan teaching courses on ministry and spiritual formation at the three seminaries of the Presbyterian Church of Taiwan. John leads groups of pastors in different parts of Taiwan that meet monthly to find encouragement and challenge.  “I have the privilege of accompanying both seminary students and pastors as they seek to be Christ’s light and salt in this land,”   he says. Most every weekend John is in a different church or presbytery teaching and preaching and equipping the leadership of the Taiwanese church.  Many of these churches are indigenous, located in the high mountains, on the coast, or in Taiwan’s teeming cities.

Country context
Taiwan, the size of Maryland and Delaware combined, has more people than Australia.  It is located south of Japan, north of the Philippines, and just 100 miles from the south coast of China.   The Portuguese called Taiwan “Formosa,” which means “beautiful island.”  From its rugged coasts to its high mountains to its bustling cities, Taiwan truly is beautiful.  It is a high-tech country with many folks involved in the computer and smart-phone industry. It has a number of different people groups with at least 14 indigenous groups.  Scholars believe that some of these groups may have been on Taiwan for at least 10,000 years.  There are also immigrants who arrived from southern China over 400 years ago, Hakka people who also emigrated from China, and those who came over with Chiang Kai-Shek in 1949.  The diversity of people groups, languages, and cultures makes Taiwan a dynamic multi-cultural country. There are also many folks from Vietnam, the Philippines, and Indonesia who have come to Taiwan to find work. On any given Sunday in the Presbyterian Church of Taiwan one can hear at least 15 different languages being spoken in worship.  The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)'s partner church in Taiwan, the Presbyterian Church of Taiwan, is the largest Protestant denomination on the island. Only 3 percent of the population is Christian in this predominately Buddhist country. Presbyterian missionaries from England arrived in Taiwan about 140 years ago and were soon followed by Canadian Presbyterians. The PC(USA) began work in Taiwan after World War II.  The Presbyterian Church of Taiwan seeks to share Christ’s love through ministries of evangelism, health care, student work, social justice, and theological education.

About John McCall
John McCall's experience demonstrates that the mission legacy of Presbyterians casts a light that crosses time and cultures.

“I served as pastor of the Black Mountain (North Carolina) Presbyterian Church next to Montreat Conference Center, and we had about 40 retired mission co-workers in the congregation,” John says. “They had an amazing ability to cross cultural boundaries.”

Their adeptness at building relationships across cultures was evident when the Black Mountain congregation worshipped and worked alongside ethnic churches, John says. Their commitment to service showed when volunteers were needed to tutor at the local elementary school or fill some other community need.

“I learned a great deal from them, and God used them to cause me to ponder international mission service,” John says.

John sensed that God had called him to follow in the mission tradition that had been modeled for him so powerfully. In 1996 he accepted an appointment to serve in Taiwan.

Read: From Taiwan to Taize
John McCall leads Taiwanese students on sacred pilgrimage

Download: a bulletin insert that lifts up the work of John McCall in Taiwan

John became fluent in Mandarin Chinese, taught seminarians preaching, worship, and spiritual formation, and preached regularly in pulpits throughout Taiwan.  He also wrote three books on spiritual formation in Mandarin that have been published in Taiwan.

“I have fallen in love with Taiwan and its people,” John says. “There are different people groups that bring such rich gifts to Taiwanese society. Their hospitality and welcome of people from afar is amazing.”

John has spent a considerable portion of his time in Taiwan working with the island’s aboriginal people, who are believed to be of Malayo-Polynesian origin. They make up less than 2 percent of Taiwan’s population, but about 70 percent of the aborigines are Christians. They are the most marginalized group in Taiwan and have limited employment and educational opportunities.

While the aboriginal people face many challenges, John finds them to be unselfish and committed followers of Christ. “The generosity of the aboriginal people continues to teach me,” he says.

About half of the churches in the Presbyterian Church of Taiwan are aboriginal.  The 230,000 members of the Presbyterian Church make up about one-third of the island’s Christian population and 1 percent of the total population. Though a tiny minority of the population, their impact in Taiwan is much bigger than their numbers, and John says the faithfulness of the Taiwanese Christian community inspires him.

John worked for 13 years in Taiwan before returning to the United States in 2009 and serving for two years as pastor of Westminster Presbyterian Church in Greensboro, North Carolina. A “renewed call to serve again” in Asia led him back to Taiwan, John says. “God has given me a missionary’s heart, and it is such a privilege to learn from and serve with folks in a cross-cultural setting.”

John’s philosophy of mission stems in part from a theology of incarnation that he draws from John’s Gospel. “I love the way Eugene Peterson translates John 1:14: ‘The Word became flesh and moved into the neighborhood,’” John says. “As Christians and mission co-workers, we are called to move into the neighborhood to live with and love the folks to whom we have been called. It’s a privilege and a wonderful opportunity.”

In a sense, John’s return to Taiwan is a return to the neighborhood. “I grew up in the United States, but I feel just as comfortable in an aboriginal village on a mountainside overlooking the Pacific Ocean, sharing with Christian friends around an open fire.”

Birthday:  December 29

 

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