Ted N. C. Wilson, president of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, speaking with Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah in the ornate Chief Minister House in Karachi, Pakistan, on June 9, 2019. Photo: Andrew McChesney, Adventist Mission

Seventh-day Adventist Church president Ted N. C. Wilson prayed and shared biblical advice with an influential Pakistani leader even as he encouraged church members to shine as a light in Pakistan.

Wilson, who was making his first visit to Pakistan, and an accompanying delegation were warmly welcomed by the leader of Pakistan’s Sindh province to his ornate Chief Minister House in Karachi, the country’s largest city and commercial hub, on June 9, 2019.

Wilson thanked Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah for the religious freedom that the authorities grant people of all faiths, and he highlighted the Adventist Church’s efforts to build the society and relieve suffering through the Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA), Karachi Adventist Hospital, and Pakistan Adventist Seminary and College.

“We want to provide assistance in every way as we follow in the ministry of Christ,” Wilson said.

“I hope, Your Excellency, that Adventists — although we are small in number in comparison to the general population — are the very best citizens possible,” Wilson added, smiling. “If they are not, tell me.”

Shah, a graduate of Stanford University in the U.S. state of California, chuckled and expressed familiarity with the 138-bed Karachi Adventist Hospital, established in 1947.

The Adventist Church has about 13,000 members in Pakistan, a country of 204 million people.

Sharing Leadership Advice

Wilson asked Shah whether he could share some leadership advice from the Bible. With the chief minister’s consent, he recited Micah 6:8 from memory, saying, “What does the Lord require of you but to do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God?”

“Your Excellency, I would like to commend that to you,” Wilson said.

“Thank you very much,” Shah replied, smiling broadly.

Motioning to an aide for assistance, Shah draped an Ajrak scarf over Wilson’s shoulders and placed a Sindhi cap on his head. The scarf and cap are the traditional attire of the Sindh people in Sindh province and are presented to guests of honor. Shah also gave scarves and caps to those accompanying Wilson on his visit, including Wilson’s wife, Nancy; Samuel Saw, president of the Southern Asia-Pacific Division, whose territory includes Pakistan; Adventist world church associate secretary Claude Richli; and Michael Ditta, president of the Adventist Church in Pakistan.

Wilson presented the chief minister with several gifts, including cakes and a rolled-up carpet.

“The carpet can represent a place of prayer to ask God to help you to walk humbly with Him,” Wilson said softly, adding, “Inshallah,” the Arabic word meaning, “God willing.”

Inshallah,” Shah said.

An Offer to Pray

As the 15-minute meeting wrapped up, Wilson offered to pray for Shah and his work. Shah immediately agreed and requested a special prayer for Sindh province, which he has led since 2016. It is one of four provinces in Pakistan.

The closing prayer caught the attention of Pakistan’s main newspaper, Dawn, which published a 12-paragraph news report about the meeting on June 10.

“The president of the church also prayed for the prosperity and development of Pakistan, particularly Sindh and its people,” it said.

National television also reported about the meeting.

Wilson arrived in Pakistan on June 7 for a four-day visit meant to encourage church members in Karachi; in Lahore, where the church headquarters of the Pakistan Union Section is located; and at Pakistan Adventist Seminary and College, which was founded in 1920 and has 400 students. The college, one of 15 schools operated by the church in Pakistan, is located about 60 miles (100 kilometers) east of Lahore.

Shine Like a Candle

Speaking at an Adventist church in Lahore on June 7, Wilson urged church members to shine like a candle in Pakistan and the world.

Opening a Bible, he read Jesus’ words in Mark 16:15, “Go into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature.”

“That means to every one of the 204 million people in Pakistan,” Wilson told 100 church leaders and others in attendance.

Wilson challenged church members to think carefully about how they spend time and where they focus their attention.

“Sometimes church members spend a lot of time writing angry emails to church leaders,” he said. “Sometimes they even go to court against the church. The devil loves that. He wants to distract Adventists from the mission of the church.”

No Angry Emails From Jesus

He noted that Jesus never sent an angry email.

“He died naked on the cross for you and me,” he said. “And He tells us, ‘Follow Me.’ If He suffered, you might suffer. You might have trials. But don’t be part of the problem. Be part of the solution.”

“Don’t be distracted,” he said. “Shine like a candle for Jesus.”

Wilson also directed church members to focus on the church’s mission of proclaiming Jesus’ soon coming in speaking to a crowd of several thousand people for the Sabbath worship service at Pakistan Adventist Seminary and College on June 8 and to about 2,500 people gathered in an enormous white tent outside Karachi Adventist Hospital on the evening of June 9.

“We are not here to fight for position,” Wilson told attendees at the tent meeting. “We are not here to fight among ourselves. We are here to prefer others before ourselves.”

Many hands went up in the crowd when Wilson asked listeners to commit to keeping their eyes on Jesus and sharing Him with others.

“You are the best sermon that can ever be preached in Karachi,” Wilson said. “God is calling you to be part of the wonderful proclamation that God has provided a way through Jesus for salvation. Jesus is coming soon to take us home.”

The original version of this story was posted on the Adventist Mission site.

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