Mission of Joining Our Voices Ministries, Inc. 
To publish the voice of the suffering church in Sudan to the world 
and to free their people from slavery and genocide.

Vision of Joining Our Voices Ministries, Inc.
The Vision is multi-purpose and multi-dimensional in the following ways:
To call attention to the church in the Nuba Mountains of Sudan.
To rally a concerted effort to end the genocide of the Nuba people, and set them free from the bondage of slavery in their own land, that they might freely worship God through their own indigenous culture.
To glorify God through broadcasting the worship of His church in Sudan who suffer in His Name!
To publish and broadcast a message from the church in Sudan to the world, through their worship. To compose a work of modern multimedia art to express a prophetic message from the church in Sudan; a public address for the last days; using their songs, their words, their voices that proclaim, in undying devotion to Jesus Christ, a love song that is an echo of the greatest love song ever composed: The Song of Songs ~ the Bride from Kush sings along.
To join the Sudanese church in watching for Jesus Christ’s return, preparing to greet Him in the same manner they do, offering the gift of our lives through the cross.
To tell the story of these people of Kush to the world, revealing their place in the context of Biblical history and in current world affairs.
To archive and preserve their cultural expressions worshiping their Creator.






"Therefore, joining our voices with angels and archangels, and all the company of heaven, who forever sing this hymn to glorify your name, ... Holy! Holy! Holy! Lord! God of power and might! Heaven and earth are full of Your Glory! (Isaiah 6:3) Blessed is He who comes in the Name of the Lord! Hosanna in the highest!” (John 12:13)

Source: Book of Common Prayer – Liturgy of the Sacrament of The Body of Christ





Joining Our Voices is finding expression of the sounds of heavenly worship here on earth. The sound of heavenly worship will not necessarily be just what we hear in our church on Sunday mornings, nor of that heard in the new "outer sanctuaries" of fields, stadiums, and concert halls with modern "edgy" music... It will be the sound of multitudes from different tribes and tongues and nations, expressing their heartfelt worship in a blended sound of world-beat! Worship that represents much more than the church of the west which shrinks in comparison to the rapidly emerging church in developing nations! Nations such as Sudan, China, and other places where worship often takes the form of literally offering up one's life unto death.





Jack Slater Armstrong | desert wanderer


The Gift Of Music

While growing up in New Roads, La., a sleepy little Cajun settlement town on the banks of an oxbow lake called False River, I discovered my love of music and affinity for playing the piano. I graduated early from Poydras High School in 1976 and began college at age 17, studying theater at St. Edward’s University in Austin, Texas. 

My desire for music development and south Louisiana culture sent me home in 1978 to pursue music composition and piano performance at LSU, Southeastern Louisiana University, and Southern University. I completed a degree in music therapy at Loyola University in New Orleans.


The Call to Mission

In September 1986 I moved to Montana to join a mission organization called YWAM (Youth With A Mission). I traveled to Singapore, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan, Australia, Scotland, Ireland, Belgium and France, using music to share the good news of Jesus. 

While in YWAM, in 1990 I began a touring ministry called “Troubadour” to challenge the Episcopal Church to play a role in the Great Commission and taking the gospel to the people groups in the 10/40 Window.


The Call to Sudan/Kush

At the New Wineskins for Global Mission Conference in 1997, we heard from Marc Nikkel, a missionary priest to Sudan for over 20 years. Together with Bishop Nathaniel Garang of Bor Diocese and the Rev. Bartholomeyo Bol Deng, a worship leader among the Lost Boys of Sudan, he presented a child-sized, coffin-shaped box that contained a number of hand-carved crosses made by Dinka Christians. Some were ornately decorated with shrapnel and empty cartridges. They told the miraculous story of the Lost Boys of Sudan, the horrors of the genocide in Sudan, the torture and enslavement of men, women and children, and the transforming power of the Cross among the people in their suffering. It broke my heart. 

“How can this be in our day and time, and why don’t You do something about this?” I asked the Lord.

“Why don’t you do something about it?” the Lord replied. 

“I don’t have money, power or influence, not even a job. What can I do?” I asked.

“What have I given you? What do you have in your hand?” 

“Music and a heart that worships You,” I said.

“I want you to take their songs that worship me in the midst of the most intense suffering on the planet and make it accessible to the church in the West. They need to hear it!”

This is what I’ve been seeking to do ever since.



© Copyright 2008 Joining Our Voices. All Rights Reservedhttp://www.slaterarmstrong.com/slaterarmstrong/Welcome.htmlhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Roads%2C_Louisianahttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_Riverhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poydras_High_Schoolhttp://ywam.org/Default.asp?bhcp=1http://www.joshuaproject.net/10-40-window.phphttp://www.newwineskins.org/index.php?section=14http://www.dacb.org/stories/sudan/nikkel2_marc.htmlhttp://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/03/01/60II/main502594.shtmlhttp://www.foxvp.com/378658.htmlhttp://www.foxvp.com/378658.htmlhttp://www.pbs.org/pov/pov2004/lostboysofsudan/shapeimage_3_link_0shapeimage_3_link_1shapeimage_3_link_2shapeimage_3_link_3shapeimage_3_link_4shapeimage_3_link_5shapeimage_3_link_6shapeimage_3_link_7shapeimage_3_link_8shapeimage_3_link_9shapeimage_3_link_10shapeimage_3_link_11




Links



Projects:
Concerts of Peace
and Reconciliation

ENGAGE

Rivers of Kush

A Cup For Nuba

Cultural Life

SustaiNance









http://endnubagenocide.org/shapeimage_6_link_0