R

Rev. Franklin Graham

BGEA / Samaritans Purse

Broadcasting the Gospel to Remote Alaskan Villages

Transcript

That Sunday morning, we were home, we prayed, we were able to watch a service, and then I got an email from dad. Just like dozens of previous emails about the ministry and that they still needed people, that one just hit differently. That email led Mike Arena and his wife Valerie to become full-time missionaries in Alaska.

Today, Mike serves as the executive director of a gospel radio network called Voice for Christ. You'll hear how God is using Mike's ministry to reach people in some of the most remote places in the United States. It's on this episode of GPS, God, People, Stories, an outreach of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association.

I'm Jim Kirkland. Mike Arena's calling to operate a Christian radio station in Alaska is unique in many ways, but all followers of Jesus Christ have one calling in common, and that is to share Jesus's gospel message. Here's Billy Graham explaining just how important it is for people to hear the gospel.

The greatest commission that Christ ever gave was to go into all the world and preach the gospel. Jesus Christ knew that the gospel and the gospel alone would solve the problems and ills of the world. The gospel alone has light for a world of darkness. You'll hear more on the importance of telling people about Jesus from Billy Graham a little later in this episode.

And if you're curious about how the gospel of Jesus Christ can solve the problems of the world, we have answers. You can find them at our website peacewithgod.net. That'sind peacewithgod.net. And as always, we have the link to the website in our show notes. GPS God people stories. In 2014, Mike and Valerie Arena were praying about their next season of life.

Their children were nearly grown and they realized their lives were about to look quite different. The final child, she does not like being called the caboose, but our caboose was 17. We knew she was going to turn 18 in 2015. And so that was the last of the homeschooled kids.

And there was kind of a natural point there of something could change. At the time, Mike was working in sales and busy with church commitments. He decided his family needed a reset. There just was no margin. We did a lot of things at church. And it was amazing.

I I love doing it. But I went to the pastor and told him, "We're taking a sabbatical before my nuclear family goes nuclear. We need to spend some time together." That was the beginning of May 2014. At that point, Mike and his family stepped back from their volunteering to spend time together as a family.

And uh I did the youth group. I think I was the oldest youth group pastor in Georgia. Did bus ministry. So all of those things were just very timeconuming. So we focused for a little bit. In the meantime, the rest of his family continued to meet, worship, and pray together.

And that's when that prayer, a very dangerous prayer became one of our favorites was, "Okay, Lord, what's next?" And it was through a lot of prayer and time together. We felt his leading into mission and ministry of some sort. Had no idea what. Their answer came on Labor Day weekend.

Mike, Valerie, and the kids were spending the holiday in the North Carolina mountains. That Sunday morning, we were home. We prayed. We were able to watch a service. And then I got an email from dad just like dozens of previous emails about the ministry and that they still needed people.

That one just hit differently. Mike tapped Valerie on the shoulder to come read the email saying, "You're not going to believe this." The email was about a need for missionaries for Voice for Christ Ministries, an Alaskan radio ministry that Mike's dad was involved with. He was aware of the ministry, came up and volunteered in the summers of 2010, 2011 and by 2014 they had put him on the board and he would every once in a while send out an email to just a gooble of people just telling about the needs of the ministry and kind of what's going on and I was on that list but I grew up in Florida.

Alaska is for crazy people. Little did Mike know he was about to become one of those crazy people. He and Valerie prayed about joining Voice for Christ and they filled out an application. Then a few months later, they received a phone call from someone there telling them more about how they provide Christian radio to native and rural Alaskans.

From there, he said, "You need to come up. You need to try to plan to spend several months here, and it needs to be in the winter. Everybody likes the summer here." So, Mike and Valerie braced themselves for an Alaskan winter. They arranged a fiveweek stay since Mike could leave his job for 3 months.

A shorter time frame in Alaska would just have to do. Our prayer while here was please God, no hinting, not good at hints. And this was a very, very big deal. But he was very gracious and he answered that while we were here in Alaska in that winter of 2015.

This time Mike's answer to prayer came through a phone call from his work back in Georgia. They were letting Mike go from his job due to financial issues. I did not have a job to go back to when we went back home and so we set about fundraising immediately.

Mike and Valerie needed to raise support. A completely new experience for them. Despite Mike having never been on a missions trip before, in January 2015, he and Valerie packed up their bags and left their home in Georgia. And their reaction as Alaska's newest residents was different than you might imagine.

We absolutely loved it. And if I had known that my wife loved the cold and snow as much, we'd have done that 30 years earlier. But we landed in Fairbanks in the middle of the night cuz that's the only flight you can afford. Got in about 2 am.

That next morning, we were standing on this little balcony of the hotel where the ministry had put us up until somebody could come get us. And across the highway there was the airport and there was a little time date temperature sign on the airport and it said 42 below zero.

That frigid temperature 42° below zero caused an unexpected delay. The former director of the ministry had a nice Jeep. But here's what he told us. He says, "You're going to need to stay another night in the hotel. My Jeep doesn't run well at 35 below or colder. Tomorrow it'll be warmer.

It's only 25 below. And so we did. We stayed an extra day at that hotel and just walked around and we walked out on the China River because it's frozen solid and just very very different plastic. Uh even in a car door, if you open a car door and you've got the little plastic trays at the bottom of the door and that kind of thing at those kind of temperatures, if you bump them with a piece of luggage or kick it, it wants to shatter.

That had never been part of my experience before. So very, very different. Another adjustment for Mike and Valerie was the daylight, or better stated, the lack thereof. They had daylight for just 5 hours a day when they first got there. That means for 19 hours a day, they experienced what is known as daylight dark.

I've got a sunrise picture from January of 2015 that was like 10:45 or 10:52 or something like that in the morning and then you could get sunset pictures in the 3:00 range in the afternoon. And just very very unusual. The sun doesn't rise in the east and set in the west.

It kind of rises in the southeast and it arcs very low over the horizon. It does not come up into the sky very high and then it will set in the southwest. In the meantime, Mike and Valerie settled in a region called Nana to start working at Voice for Christ.

With a population of less than 400 people, the small city sits on flat land that's bound on three sides by a river, which makes it very prone to flooding. But unlike many remote places in Alaska, the town of Nana has access to a lot. We have modern conveniences.

We've got electricity. Nana is on the road system. And that's a phrase that you hear in Alaska a lot. Is it on the road system or not? And it's exactly as you might imagine that if there is a road, you can get a truck. If there's a truck, you can get supplies.

We're considered by many as a bush village, but not remote. In Alaska, not every village or even town has a road. Bettles is an interesting one. You can drive to Bettles some few weeks a year. That's when the ice road is in place crossing the river because there's no bridge.

And so whenever it finally gets cold enough, often it's February, then you that's when people will haul stuff to the dump and whatnot because they can cross the river in a vehicle. So access is a is a really big deal here. Mike quickly recognized another challenge that comes with the remoteness of Alaska.

It's expensive. Two or three days ago in Indiana, a regular gallon of gas was 438 for a gallon of gas. And and I say that not to anybody say poor me, but we're on the road system. places that are not on the road system, they have to barge or fly fuel in and and it can be 9 10 11 12.

So that's the bad news. The flip side of that, it's a village. There's not that far to drive a lot of times, but economically it is difficult and um many people are subsistence level. But people aren't just experiencing economic hardship in Alaska. There are spiritual challenges as well.

There's a lot of spiritist animist types of beliefs from very pretty ancient cultures that have little to do with God. And so spiritually it can be very dark. It's no darker than the heart of Atlanta and the heart of Chicago in many respects. Sometimes there's less light in these areas.

Even so, Mike doesn't consider Alaska as an unreached people group. Instead, he says it could be considered an overreached people group and that missionaries have come to the region for a long time. They came in and it was not an attempt just to convert spiritually, but there were many respects where there was an attempt at a cultural conversion as well.

Not only are you dirty spiritually, but we need to get you to do all of these things that the missionaries culture also did. There have been some people that jerked back from the gospel because of some of those efforts. But that's made Mike's work all the more purposeful at Voice for Christ.

The ministry has been broadcasting out of Nana for 40 years and offers radio coverage across Alaska. It was founded by a man named Bob Eldridge, a local pastor and pilot who would fly to remote places to preach. Oftent times his journey was thwarted by the weather. Bob had places that he would try to fly to preach, but one particular instance he left Nana was flying to his destination, radioed ahead as he got close to the destination and they said, "You can't land here.

The weather's too bad." And so he aborted, circled back, headed for Nana, contacted his wife on the radio when he got close to Nana. She said, "You can't land here either." And so he ended up diverting to Fairbanks or somewhere where he could actually land the airplane. But that happened so many times it became very frustrating.

And he said that's when God gave him the idea of using radio. That idea turned into the development of a Christian radio station called the I am radio network. The nonprofit ministry behind the station is Voice for Christ. Today, the IM radio network has several Christian radio stations with many translators and radio repeaters to reach the different Alaskan tribes and peoples all in their heart language.

So now there are three full power FCC stations. KIAM was first in Nana. KYD was second over in the western part of Alaska, Bethl. It's the largest village over there, 6,500 people, something like that. But remote, you can take a boat there only in the summer and you can fly there.

There's no roads to any of the remote villages, but Bethl supplies content for many of those uh Eupic and Cupic, some of those speakers in that part of the state. And then about 10 years after that in either 04 or '05, Voice for Christ built a radio station in Houston, Alaska, and that's K Av.

And so there are three main stations and then all of the satellite transmitter stations. There's about 26 of them now total. The radio stations partner with local Bible believing churches to reach Alaskans who otherwise might not hear the gospel. If there is a local congregation that is we'll call it scriptural then we come alongside them and so we have the 24/7 365 when everything's working like it's supposed to content that our job is to come alongside that pastor.

We don't take a take the place of any preacher anywhere. There are many places where we don't have that solid gospel presence and then we become the source of that through the preaching, teaching and music ministry that we broadcast. Even in the dead of night when everyone is sleeping, people can flick on the radio and hear the light of Jesus Christ.

I think Dr. MacArthur is preaching at 2:30, at 4:00, it's Adrien Rogers. So in the middle of the night you can get that comfort in that scripture. It will never take the place of a local body whether it is organized or not. The goal is for people to be able to get saved and discipled without ever changing the channel in I think there's four villages left where there is no other radio channel.

Not even NPR. But our goal is to be able to put Jesus words on the airwaves. And so radio has been the way to do that. Voice for Christ is actively expanding in Alaska thanks to the help of funding from other ministries. Recently they've added a new radio station that proclaims the gospel 24/7.

We hope to continue growing with that. God has blessed us to be in a state out of the 49 other states, there are zero of them where you can easily get a class D as in Delta license from the FCC. The airwaves in Alaska are so relatively uncluttered, especially in those areas that we're targeting.

I call it the least of these kind of a ministry where they will still grant you a class D station license. Mike's home base for ministry is Nana. However, he sometimes travels by small plane to work on radio equipment in the surrounding areas. We have a pilot here in Nana who has his own flying ministry.

And as long as we're able to coordinate with him, then a lot of times we have to go put hands on the equipment to see what's going on. If we've got somebody that's not afraid to turn a wrench, we'll do our best to talk them through it in order to not be flying out.

Right now in Nana, I'm the only full-time guy doing the radio and so it's it can be restrictive and when can I leave. Short staffing is a common issue in remote parts of Alaska and because of that Mike isn't able to travel much. It's a highlight for him when he does get the chance.

When we do make those trips, that's when we get to meet listeners. And this ministry is not about equipment. It's about the people. And um we've been praying for years now to be able to do more of the people rather than the products that exist in those village areas.

Mike has seen God answer prayers and provide for their needs. Even when support has been hard to come by, the ministry gave us a dollar amount that they wanted us to raise on a monthly basis to be able to live here. We hit that amount for only the sixth time in our 84 months in Alaska.

But to see what God has done and allowed us, it it's been plenty. It's been enough. Sometimes God's provision for the couple hasn't been financial. It's been a physical gift. One of our former board members, he's gone to heaven now. He called me one time in 2018 and said, "Uh, I've got this old Suburban that a church gave me and the engine blew up.

I put a new engine in it. Do you want it?" God gave us an old 99 Suburban that we still drive today. had a volunteer that was using it while we were back in Georgia at a wedding and he hit a moose with it. It looks like it's been through the war, but it was a free vehicle that God just gave us.

And God has continually worked other miracles in the ministry. Seeing God provide the technology that we need, trailing edge as it may be, if it gets audio where it needs to go, we're good. And I have told people a lot that the miracle is that there's one watt of gospel coming out of any antenna anywhere because I know the devil hates it.

Mike says there are even technical issues that somehow suddenly are fixed. So a lot of those kinds of things have just been indications to us that God is still working here and he wants us to stay. And even though the Alaskan wilderness may sound daunting to many people, Mike is so thankful he was obedient to God's calling, it has not always been easy being a missionary, but it has been worth it.

We love the climate. We love the people that are here. I don't like the earthquakes or the fire season or the mosquitoes or the floods, but if you live in Africa, there's things you don't like there either. So, it's part of what you do to be able to get God's words to where we believe he wants us to to take him.

And that's places where it's very difficult to send and keep a pastor in some of these remote villages that are 150 miles from getting a tooth pulled or going to the doctor. They fly to do all that. And so, in spite of all of those things, he has never failed, not even once.

If you've been listening to the episode and don't think there's a moment in time when you've placed your trust and faith in Jesus Christ, now would be an excellent time to do so. Go to find peacewithgod.net. Once again, findpacewithgod.net. You can also find that link in our show notes.

In just a minute, you'll hear how you can join Mike's ministry through prayer. You're listening to GPS, God, People, Stories, a podcast production of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association. The greatest commission that Christ ever gave was to go into all the world and preach the gospel. Billy Graham.

The commission that Christ gave is couched in very simple language. Notice the little word go. A little word but worldwide in its sweet. This little word should be the watchword of every true follower of Christ. Jesus Christ knew that the gospel and the gospel alone would solve the problems and ills of the world.

The gospel alone has light for a world of darkness. The gospel provides the only satisfaction in the universe for man's spiritual nature. The gospel recognizes the tremendous fact of sin and proposes an adequate remedy. It shows them their wounds and brings them the healing remedy of the gospel.

It shows them bondage and it brings the hammer to break away their chains. It shows them their sins and it brings them to the savior. The gospel of Jesus Christ is good news for everyone. If you'd like to know more about what the gospel means for your life.

We have answers at our website, find peacewithgod.net. When you're there, click on begin a relationship with Jesus. That's peacewithgod.net. and we have a link to that site you can click on in our show notes. Our guest on this episode of GPS is Mike Arena. He and his wife Valerie moved to Alaska in 2015 to operate a Christian radio station broadcasting the gospel of Jesus Christ to some of the most remote areas in the USA.

As you'd imagine, that is a tough job. And Mike has a quick prayer request for you. The prayer request is for the finances to continue keeping all the lights on and then um not just financial resources but the human resources as well. And that that can be tricky for our particular ministry.

You don't have to be a preacher. You don't have to have Bible training. Our job is to keep the guys on the air. They tend to be more well-known ministries that have been around for a long, long time. Our job is to keep them doing their job. And some of those guys, Adrien Rogers and Jay Vernon McGee and RC Sproul, long after they've gone on, they're still preaching here.

We have Dr. Grahams. We've got the Billy Graham in it. So even after they're gone, they're saying so many things that will catch hearts and minds and especially spirits. And so our job is to kind of behind the scenes keep it going. We're grateful for Mike Arena joining us on this episode of GPS.

Mike's firm conviction to bring Christian music and teaching to hard-to-reach areas and his reliance on God for provision overcome the challenges of remote Alaskan life. If you'd like to join in on the mission of sharing the gospel, think of someone you could share an episode of GPS with.

You never know how someone's faith journey can be affected by hearing of the powerful work of Jesus Christ in another person's life. We've got another new episode coming in just two weeks. So, make sure you're following GPS so you do not miss out. I'm Jim Kirkland. Thanks for listening.

This is GPS, God, People Stories. It's an outreach of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association. Always good news. Heat. ((music playing)) ((music playing)) Heat. ((music playing)) ((music playing))