JUST ONE MESSAGE

TRAVELS
Since our last update, we traveled to the USA for Lena’s medical appointments via the Philippines to visit our dear Selly. She is learning the ropes as a freshman at L.D. Woosley/Bethany Baptist College in Manila, and is involved in many ministries in addition to her studies. It was good to see her!

In the following weeks we were in missions conferences and churches in Florida and Texas. We were especially encouraged (and spoiled!) at Capitol City Baptist in Austin, TX. Another blessing was being back at Victory Baptist in Milton, FL, which has been behind us in our translation project from the time it was just a dream. It was good to spend time with Pastor Fellure and the print shop men to talk through the next steps toward printing our Kamea John/Romans and the entire New Testament!

In December we enjoyed the wonderful wedding of our granddaughter Beth in Montana. Praise the Lord for the time with family in such a beautiful setting!

MEDICAL UPDATE
We are thankful for the medical appointments and tests that Lena has been able to get. She has three more long-awaited MRIs scheduled right after the New Year, and then (hopefully) a final appointment with her primary care doctor. Some treatments have been rough, but those of late have been helpful. She came to the USA on a cane, but now is able to move around well without it. We are grateful to those who have offered all sorts of help and advice along the way. Most of all, we are grateful for all who have kept this a matter of prayer. Please keep it up! If things continue to go well, we plan to return to PNG in January in time to begin our next Bible college semester.

TRANSLATION REVIEW
Between meetings and medical appointments, I have been able to complete final reviews of John and Romans. All that remains is to type in the corrections and to lay out the text. Please pray we can see this in print and delivered to PNG for distribution soon!

JUST ONE MESSAGE
On a weekend visit with our friend (and former co-worker) Missionary Sarah Glover, we dropped in to visit a supporting church. The pastor introduced me to Brother Joe Marshall, and I mentioned that I remembered a Joe Marshall who was a missionary to Australia back in the day. Joe confirmed that he indeed was that missionary.

Why did this mean so much to me? When Brother Joe visited our church in 1983, I was still in Bible college and had just come full-time on staff at our church. I don’t remember what his topic was, but that night changed my devotional life from that time until now. He quoted so many Scripture verses in context and gave us such a challenge that I went home and promised the Lord, by His grace and His strength, I would be consistent in my morning devotions at a specific time every day, spending real time in the Word seeking to know my Lord Jesus better. Brother Joe had no idea about it, until our providential meeting on a Sunday in November 2025, almost 43 years later.

How many times in how many contexts have I shared that story over the years! One preacher, on one Wednesday evening, with one message affected one young preacher for the rest of his life. We never know the impact the Lord will make through us, nor do we know the ripple effect of one life lived for the glory of God. For those of you who serve the Lord, take heart! It is God who works through you. Stay faithful in the Word and prayer. Keep seeking the Lord, to know Him and to enjoy His presence. Keep witnessing, keep sharing stories of His goodness. Who knows whom you might affect?

               Praising God for His Grace and Goodness,

  John & Lena Allen
Psalm 71:18

THE WEEKEND BOYS

THE “WEEKEND BOYS”
We have a group of young men in the church who call themselves the “Weekend Boys.” These young men (ranging in age from 18 through 30) come for youth ministry on Friday night, stay overnight for Saturday morning outreach at Hanuabada Village, and a few of them meet with me for Bible college classes on Saturday afternoon. Then all of them join Lena and me for dinner and translation checks on Saturday evening, and on Sunday morning, they all serve in various ministries in the church. Most of them stay on through Sunday afternoon for our Goilala Camp outreach…and they do this every weekend! It is a good place for them to mature spiritually, and it helps them learn to focus on serving the Lord in various ministries with their varied abilities.

This has been going on now (and growing) for almost three years. The last few weeks have seen fruit in the lives of two of them who express a desire to be involved in full-time ministry, and two others beginning to take turns preaching in public ministry. Praise the Lord for His working in these young men’s lives!

GOILALA CAMP OUTREACH
It’s been nearly a year since our campus was attacked by 21 armed men—and since we began a weekly outreach to their village. A few months after we began holding weekly gospel meetings with them, the police came in and moved them out to a displaced persons’ camp on the edge of the city. Their village at the city dump, called “Swimming Pool,” was then completely destroyed by excavators and bulldozers.

In spite of this, the village leaders asked us to continue preaching every week. Over the last eight months at the camp, we have continued preaching and teaching the Word, taking them from Creation to Christ. Our ministry team has had the privilege of leading several to Christ, and when I was able to give a public invitation at the end of September, several more raised their hands that they had already put their faith in Christ. The village leader told me that the old men of the group want us to continue, because as they said, “these people preach the Word of God clearly, and we can understand it.” The Word of God preached in the power of the Spirit of God will always do the work of God!

TRANSLATION
My current project is preparing a John & Romans in Kamea and Tok Pisin, with the goal of distributing them next year among our people. One of our young men (who is Kamea) was back in the Kamea villages recently, and he took a printed copy of John’s Gospel with him to read and to share. He tells me he got a great response from those who heard it. I can only imagine—hearing the Word of God in your own heart language for the first time ever!

TEACHING
Last Monday I finished teaching my Bible school course on Practical Ministry. Other local pastors and church members attended some of the classes to learn about accountability and integrity in church ministry and leadership. At the end of the course, we had a testimony time for our graduates and present students. It was so good to hear of what the Lord has been doing through them—so much more is happening than we knew. I wish you could have heard their stories of the Lord’s working in places from the coast to the highlands. I never dreamed we could have such a great partnership with the local churches in Port Moresby. Thank you for the part you have in investing in the training of these preachers and teachers!

MEDICAL FURLOUGH
After counseling with our home church pastoral staff, our co-workers, and our family, we decided to return to the USA for Lena to get much-needed medical testing and treatment. We tried pressing on when we returned to the field in August, but things did not get better. The plan is for us to be here through January, when I will need to return for our next Bible college term. Please pray we can get answers and help that will enable us to stay on the field where God put us nearly 18 years ago. God knows!

               Praising God for His Grace and Goodness,

            John & Lena Allen
Psalm 71:18

GRADUATION x 2

EVER HAVE A BUSY SUMMER?

We ended the month of May with our 3rd graduation exercises for Baptist Bible Institute of Port Moresby. Acacia, Selly, Enoch, and Alex finished three years of study with both BBIPOM and Faith Bible Institute.

Acacia, Selly, Enoch, & Alex

It was also a great blessing for us to have Pastor Buddy Smith from Malanda, Australia as our commencement speaker. He and his wife Susan have been dear friends of ours for years, and they were such an encouragement to the churches and students here.

SUMMER SERVICE OPPORTUNITIES

The Lord has opened many doors of service for all our graduates. Following their recent graduation, Enoch and Alex went to Kerema to serve at Charity Baptist Church, while Missionaries John and Melissa Gray were away in the US for a short furlough. Acacia continues her work as a Christian school teacher, as well as do several of our other graduates. Two graduates are pastors, some are on staff in local ministries, and other men help their local church pastors. Recently one was working with a PNG missionary pastor in Australia, while another was serving in his home town across the country. Another is serving with Missionaries Josh and Rebecca Florence in their ministries as the financial administrator, plus teaching Sunday school and high school religious instruction.

EMPTY NEST

Selly (Pastor Ben’s daughter, who has lived with us for the last three years) graduated from both Bible school and high school in May. She traveled with us to the US for meetings, and is now settled in at Bethany Baptist College in Makati (Manila), Philippines, to study for her BS in Education. Lena and I are now “empty nesters” for the second time!

Most of Selly’s life has been around ministry, and her desire to serve the Lord has really blossomed. In the last few months, she has felt a great desire to serve the Lord in missions, and she publicly surrendered at Capital City Baptist Church in Port Moresby to do just that. We’re glad that Bethany Baptist College will fuel her desire even more, as they have a tremendous emphasis not just on talking about missions, but in doing it!

PREACHING, TEACHING, MARRYING

We had 17 opportunities to share about missions and ministry in the last 10 weeks. Our hearts were encouraged and refreshed by so many friends and prayer partners along the way!

This weekend will be the wedding of our oldest grandson, Ben, and it will be my honor to officiate for him and his bride Elise. And it will be the first time in years that our whole family has been together at one time!

By the time many of you get this, Lena and I will be back in PNG, ready to start our second term at Baptist Bible Institute of Port Moresby.

ONE MORE THING, PLEASE

Could I ask you again to pray with us for my wife’s health? Between our meetings, she had several tests and doctor’s appointments. She is in need of serious lower back surgery sometime in the near future. Would you pray with us that God would make a way for her to avoid having to have the surgery? The pain is constant, but she is working on ways to live with it without being heavily dependent on pain medicines.

                Praising God for His Grace and Goodness,
            John & Lena Allen
Psalm 71:18

Hanging Out at the Pool

February 2025

As fascinating, exciting, and exotic as missionary life can be here, few things stir our hearts more than the opportunity to take the Gospel to a new place.

The Papua coast was first reached with the Gospel in the late 1870s by the London Missionary Society. William Lawes and James Chalmers began their ministries in what would eventually become our city, Port Moresby. Since that time the tide of Gospel preaching has ebbed and flowed in Moresby. American Baptist missionaries began to arrive in the 1960s, but most of them went on to the Highlands or the islands of PNG. Some good missionaries ministered in Moresby over the years, starting some good churches which are still going strong today. Yet like any urban area in the world, our city has grown exponentially in recent decades with people continually coming to find work in a woefully depressed economy.

Because of the constant influx of new people, there is always the necessity of Gospel outreach. But I have to say it is rare, in a city like ours, to find an entire village without Gospel knowledge or influence.

That is, until we went to the Pool. More accurately, “Swimming Pool”—the name of the village literally at the city dump. I mentioned previously how our son Matt and some of our young men began an outreach in this village right after our campus was attacked back in November.

Since that first Sunday, we have met every week on the top of a knoll in Swimming Pool Village. The view on one side is the port of Motukea, with its constant flow of cargo ships coming to unload their burdens or to be drydocked for maintenance. The view down the opposite side of the ridge is acres and acres of our city’s rubbish.

But why the name, “Swimming Pool”? Well, right on the edge of the village is an old, 50-yard-long rough cement swimming pool half-filled with algae green water. The locals say it was built in World War 2 by Americans who camped on the site, using the area for resupply and recuperation. One thing is certain—that old cement pond is still standing strong after all these decades.

And so are the people of the village. Most are from the Goilala tribe in Central Province. A few dozen come each week and sit with us under the big shade tree as we sing songs, read Scripture, pray, and preach the Gospel. Some sit on cardboard, some on the roots of the tree, others on the edge of the pool. The children know a few bible songs, but few adults do. Yet they come, and they listen.

The people of Swimming Pool Village with our friends Steve & Selena

We are working our way from Creation to the Cross. We have taught about the origins of sin and the judgment of God, repeatedly showing it is God Himself who makes a way of salvation for the people in each lesson. We have also walked through John 3:16 and Romans 3:23 and Romans 5:8 and Romans 10:9-13. They sit quietly, listening to the Word. When we open up for questions, some have sincere questions that demonstrate they are grasping the Gospel. Thus far, one man has trusted Christ. Pray that there will soon be many more who join him.

I know I said in our last update that I’d talk about the translation project, but I’ll save that for later. I did finish Hebrews at the end of December, and right now I’m working through Romans. More on this later. I promise!

We’ve also been blessed to see some dear people profess faith in Christ lately in church meetings, and we are encouraged in the spiritual growth of those with whom we labor. Thank the Lord for the work He does in all of our hearts.

I love the public reading of Scripture! Shalom Baptist Church does it every service.

We continue to covet your prayers for Lena. At present she has serious issues with pain, and under her doctor’s care, she is making cautious re-use of NSAID medicines because of serious complications she had a few months back. In spite of her pain, her help in our study bible project has been amazing. Her care and feeding of our 15-person translation team is such a joy to her each week. She did a big Christmas meal for them in addition to the regular weekly spread she sets before us. I am so grateful to the Lord for my wonderful helper in the ministry!

Christmas dinner 2024 with our translation checking team

Thank you all for standing with us, and for your prayers for the Lord’s work here.

Praising God for His Grace and Goodness,
John & Lena Allen
Psalm 71:18

Enjoy some photos from the last few weeks!

How can you not love these kids!
Our weekly Faith Family meeting in Boroko
Boot Camp for Youth January 2025
with Pastor Tau Abary & Pastor Holmes Tako
Our young men love to sing!