Jim North: The Great Encourager

Jim North
1937-2010
Jim was born April 12, 1937, and raised near Detroit, Michigan, in a hardworking family. His father's fruit stand was a family effort, and there Jim learned the value of determination, singleness of mind, and commitment to family. He first became interested in Christianity when he heard that the local church had set up a boxing ring in its basement. This superficial interest in religion gave way to a sincere consideration of the claims of Christ and he gave his life to the Lord in high school. Jim didn't begin to develop a deep relationship with Christ until the late 1950s while at Sterling College, Kansas. It was there he was introduced to The Navigators. Jim became more familiar with The Navigators in the early 1960s as part of the fledgling collegiate ministry at the University of Nebraska. He learned from some great mentors, living with wonderful families like Leroy and Virginia Eims.

Jim and his wife, Carolyn, launched the Navigator ministry in Indonesia in 1968. Here Jim is teaching the "Wheel Illustration" to university students at Javanese Christian Church.
They worked on college campuses for the next five years, and by 1968, Jim and Carolyn were in Indonesia, launching the Navigator work there. His daughter, Cindy, tells friends, "Imagine leaving the States in 1968 to go to a country 10,000 miles away, whose language you don't know, for which you don't yet have visas, where you have only one contact, with two-year-old and six-month-old girls, and where you'll be just 1,000 miles from the Vietnam War. That's a pioneer!"
Jim was passionate about training Indonesians to reach their own countrymen for Christ; he vigorously pursued and trained leaders, discipling relationally. Jim and Carolyn raised three daughters in Indonesia: Becky, Lisa, and Cindy.
In 1985, Jim and Carolyn returned to the United States and developed a program for missionary care, which eventually became The Navigators' U.S. International Ministries Group.

Jim started his Navigator career in the Collegiate Ministry in the early 1960s.
For the past several years, Jim and Janice have traveled throughout the world leading Sharpening Your Interpersonal Skills (SYIS) workshops that focused on conflict and grief resolution, developing and mentoring more leaders, especially in Asia and Africa.
While on a three-month trip to Indonesia in early 2010, Jim began experiencing stomach pain and vomiting, but he chose to press on and complete his trip. The day after returning, increased pain prompted a visit to the hospital where it was discovered Jim had cancer; he passed away just seven days later.
When Jim's diagnosis came, his family created a page on CaringBridge.org, a website for those with serious illness that becomes a central location for communicating with friends and family. Visitors to the site can write a comment in the patient's "guestbook." In 10 days, Jim had received more than 150 comments. People spoke of Jim's warmth and ready smile, his love for the saints. The children of fellow missionaries called him "Uncle Jim." Many called him friend.
One person wrote, "The time you spent listening to me and asking questions after I had come back from Indonesia is still one of the most significant times in my life and one of the things that God has used to help me continue to walk with Him and labor with Him. Thank you for your patience and humility to listen and help me."
Another wrote, "How often I have told the story of your visit to us when we were feeling hugely discouraged. Your visit, your words, your counsel, your suggestions, the recommended books—all were a healing balm to our battered minds and hearts. We have thanked God for you over and over and over in the years since."

Janice and Jim North
Fellow Navigator Bruce Van Wyk wrote, "Jim leaves a big hole in our hearts and in the Navigator family around the world. He lived well and, like the cowboy he was, he died with his boots on. Well done, Jim, for setting the pace and giving us an example to follow."
Senior Vice President of The U.S. Navigators Bill Tell described Jim as "a missionary's missionary—bold, courageous, a man of faith, a visionary." Bill continued, "Most would be happy to be used of God to accomplish just a fraction of what God accomplished through Jim. Yet the overriding characteristic of Jim North that people testify to over and over, and what challenges me the most, is that Jim was a lover of people. Jim majored in two things: loving God and loving people."
Services were held for Jim on Saturday, June 26. In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations be given in Jim's honor to support the Indonesia Office. You may send checks payable to "The Navigators," designated to account #83105. Send to: The Navigators, Account Processing Center, P.O. Box 6000, Colorado Springs, CO 80934-6000.

