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February 2009 Issue
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Ministering
to Native Americans in Kansas
by Mickey Noah
 Daniel
Goombi is a full-blooded Native American, a member of the Kiowa-Apache
Indian tribe, originally nomads who left Canada to settle in Oklahoma.
Daniel is proud of his heritage, culture, and tradition.
"I am a Kiowa-Apache, and I do live in a tepee,"
admits Goombi with a tongue-in-cheek grin. "It's just that
it's a two-story brick tepee with central air conditioning, just
a couple blocks from Walmart. We wear plain clothes as you can
see no buckskin loin cloths. I eat meals that weren't just
running in front of me, and I don't hunt with a bow and arrow.
I don't whoop and holler or attack white men, wear feathers or
ride a horse."
Despite his self-deprecating humor, Daniel views his job as
a missionary as serious business.
As directors of Kansas Reservation Ministries, Daniel, 24,
and wife Kimberly, 23, share the Gospel of Christ on four Native
American reservations among the Kickapoo, the Sac and Fox,
the Iowa, and the Prairie Band Potawatomi Tribes throughout
Kansas. The Goombis, based in Lawrence, are Mission Service Corps
missionaries for the North American Mission Board and church planters
for the Kaw Valley Association.
Daniel and Kimberly are only two of more than 5,500 missionaries
in the United States, Canada, and their territories supported
by the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering for North American
Missions and the Cooperative Program. The couple is among
the NAMB missionaries featured as part of the annual Week of
Prayer (WOP), March 1-8, 2009.
As NAMB Mission Service Corps missionaries, the Goombis must
raise their own support among family, friends, and related churches.
Although they are self-funded, they also receive additional support
such as training, administrative support, and field ministry
assistance from the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering.
Daniel is unique among all the NAMB missionaries honored as
Week of Prayer missionaries in the past. He is the first-ever,
second-generation Week of Prayer missionary in NAMB's history.
His parents, Ron and Alpha Goombi who still minister on
Native American reservations in Nebraska were WOP
missionaries in 2003.
Daniel became a Christian at eight-years-old, during a revival
service led by his dad in Omaha, Nebraska. Although he lived in
Omaha most of the time, Daniel remembers that "we pretty
much grew up on the reservations. We traveled as much as we could
almost every weekend. And we spent almost all summers on the reservations,
working with the people."
Ministering on Native American reservations is both heartbreaking
and difficult, according to Goombi. Every tribe in Kansas is different
each has its own language, heritage, culture, and beliefs.
"There are a lot of single-parent families with single
mothers or even grandparents raising their grandkids. Alcohol,
drug abuse, and suicide are big issues. People are secluded from
the outside world and when you're on a reservation, you're limited
to what's around you and it's really not much.
"The spiritual climate on the reservations is difficult,"
Goombi said, "because Native Americans have a misconception
of who we believers are. They think they have to give up who they
are to follow God, and they believe God is still a white man's
God because of the history Native Americans experienced with organized
religion." Goombi reassures his peers that "God has
blessed us Native Americans with who we are, with our heritage,
and would never take that away from us."
Goombi's heartbreak came when he learned early on that on some
reservations, fifty years half a century had passed
without Native American children having a church or even a Vacation
Bible School to attend. Goombi changed that in 2006.
"In Summer 2006, the first time we held Vacation Bible
School for the Prairie Band Tribe, a lot of the elders of the
tribe told us that it had been fifty years since an outside organization
or church had come on the reservation. That's fifty years of children
growing, living their lives, and dying without a chance to hear
about God," he said.
Goombi says for the most part, there are no reservations with
Bible-based churches that meet on a regular basis. They meet now
and then, when a visiting pastor comes through. But as a church
planter for his association, Daniel wants to plant permanent churches
on the reservations he serves.
"Our hope as church planters is to have four self-sustaining
churches on each of the four reservations facilities that
each tribe could call their own and a place where people would
gather and worship the Lord and take advantage of the church's
programs."
Parents of two daughters, Elizabeth and Sophia, the Goombis
have a real soft spot for Native American children on the reservations.
At the Prairie Band Potawatomi Indian Reservation near Mayetta,
Kansas, Daniel recently was spotted playing dodge ball, football,
and basketball with the kids there. Kimberly spent time making
"salvation bracelets," teaching and singing with the
girls there.
The Goombis subscribe to the phrase in Isaiah 11:6: ... a child
will lead them.
"The kids on the reservation are really receptive to what
we are doing," says Daniel. "It's amazing to see the
kids grow, learn church songs, and go home and sing them to their
parents, who notice how their kids are changing. We offer them
an opportunity to learn about God and have fun in a clean environment.
"Working with the kids helps us get to the families and
get into the homes. The parents start asking questions and start
coming around, and we're able to share the Gospel with them through
their kids."
Because it's usually only he and Kimberly who cover the four
Kansas reservations, Daniel pleads for help from other Southern
Baptist volunteers around the United States. He said they rely
on volunteers who will come to Kansas for just a weekend or for
the entire summer to donate their time and talents to reach Native
Americans. It could be assisting with block parties, carnivals,
Vacation Bible Schools, or Backyard Bible Clubs.
"In addition to Kansas, there are more than 450 tribes
recognized by the federal government," said Goombi. "So
many of these tribes are going unreached. We want to encourage
churches and associations to remember these needs and take action.
We need to live with urgency and together sow seeds on these reservations
to further God's Kingdom."
Kimberly agrees.
"When people think of missions, they always think of Africa
or foreign countries. But reservations are like foreign countries,"
she says. "They are their own sovereign nations. The people
on reservations live differently and speak other languages.
"So we just want to get the word out to Southern Baptists
that you don't have to spend money to travel overseas, when we
have a mission field twenty minutes north of Topeka, Kansas."
Mickey Noah is a member of First Redeemer
Church in Cummings, Georgia, and is a staff writer with the SBC
North American Mission Board.
Annie Armstrong Easter Offering Fast Facts
Why give to the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering (AAEO)?
To support our missionary team in their efforts to reach for Christ
an estimated 251 million North Americans who do not have a personal
relationship with Him; that's three out of four people.
AAEO National Goal for 2009
$65 million
Amount of AAEO used to support missionaries and their work
One hundred percent directly supports NAMB missionaries and their
ministries.
Number of NAMB missionaries
More than 5,500 (About one-third are career missionaries, one-third
are short-term, funded missionaries, and a third are Mission Service
Corps missionaries.)
What are ways AAEO-supported missionaries use those funds?
Start new churches
Evangelize students on college campuses
Serve the physical and spiritual needs of people through
evangelism ministries
Serve in Baptist associations as associational missionary
or mission staff
Provide training and ministry in interfaith witness evangelism
Minister in resort settings such as lakes, campgrounds,
and ski areas
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© 2010 Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee
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