Sunday, June 26, 2011

Counting Down...

We are getting so excited about our trip back to Australia... and we are all counting down...

Many people have asked us when and where we will be sharing about our work at the ZOE Children's Home while we are back.  

We are so happy to have been asked to share at schools, small groups and churches as well as spending precious time with our supporters, family and friends.

Here's where we'll be sharing/ visiting on the weekends:

Bayside Church                 Sunday July 3rd         
(Big Buddies children's ministry)

Berwick Baptist                Sunday July 10th        
(Sharing at the morning service)   


Antioch House Church      Sunday July 17th    
(Sharing at the morning service)
     
Winepress                        Saturday July 23rd      
(Sharing at the night-time service)        

Village Church, Dingley    Sunday July 24th                
(Sharing at the morning service)                 

We'd love to see you there!


Friday, June 24, 2011

The ZOE Family at the ZOE Children's Homes


The ZOE Family at the ZOE Children's Home

It's Sew Great!


Remember when I wrote a few months ago about how I was asked to go and purchase fabric from the day market suitable for making some fitted sheets for the girl’s and boy’s rooms at ZOE Children’s Homes. 

Well with the sewing room in full swing now and lots of new material to play with; sewing classes are proving to be a lot of fun!

We recently had a short-term team here at ZOE from Evergreen Baptist.  Some of the wonderful women on the team were able to run sewing workshops for the ministry school students, parents, staff, children and youth.

ZOE_33 by ZOEChildrensHomes

ZOE_330 by ZOEChildrensHomes

The skills that are developing through having a sewing room and the sewing machines available to use are invaluable.

Learning to sew is a skill that even children and teenagers can be taught. Sewing can develop into a hobby or even a life-long passion.  


Learning to sew develops a sense of pride and accomplishment that comes with being able to make something on your own and one of the biggest benefits to learning to sew is the fact that it is teaching our young people here at ZOE to become more self-reliant.


ZOE_354 by ZOEChildrensHomes

Isn't that just SEW great?

Andie :)

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Goodbye Lauren!

After breakfast this morning, I asked the kids to go and brush their teeth so that we could leave for the airport... I love the simplicity of children (despite knowing that it's still a week till we leave) one of them still asked, "Are we going to Australia today?" Hee hee.
The Tang Gang: Stephanie, Rob, Lauren, Cori-Anne, Denise and Kelly
We were actually heading out to say goodbye to the Tang Family (heading back to America for the summer), but more importantly Lauren, the eldest of their four kids.  Lauren just finished Year 12 and is spending the next two months with her family but then, when they return to Thailand in August, she will remain in America and begin college.




It's a huge transition for her but we just know that she's going to be okay.
Tobi and Eli both shed their tears at different moments during the morning goodbyes.  Lauren has been like a big cousin to them for the past 18 months.  She is such a delightful, beautiful, gentle young lady with a quietly spoken way that people are just drawn to.
She is intelligent, musical and creative.  Her younger siblings also adore her.  
I had the pleasure a month or so ago to take some of her "senior" photos before graduation night.  My reflection: She really is the sweetest girl.
And so to Lauren, it is with some sadness that we wish you farewell but we know that you will be back to visit and we wish you all the very best for a wonderful 'first year' as a college freshman... is that right?  Trying to use my American English LOL.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Evergreen Short Term Team

We have team here at the moment from Evergreen Baptist Church in the USA. 
I only got to meet the team for the first time last night which is kind-of sad since they seem like a really nice bunch of people and they leave tomorrow.  I am hoping to get back out to ZOE tonight, with our kids, to see them one final time before their departure.

I find it encouraging to learn what 'short term teamers' get out of their trip as well as hearing how some of them get to be here. 

When I meet these teams, it reminds me also of our journey to get to be here and the amazing way that God orchestrates situations, bringing everything together for His purpose. 


I was honored to sit with Pam Noritake at the traditional Thai dinner restaurant last night.  It was so wonderful to share some conversations with her and also enjoy a couple of laughs.  Despite coming from totally different parts of the world, we actually had quite a lot in common.
Here's what Pam recently wrote about just a day after being here in Thailand:


We’ve only been in Thailand for slightly over 24 hours and God has already revealed what breaks his heart.  As short term missionaries, we blow in, blow up and blow out...but to see what breaks God’s heart will stay with us for a lifetime.  Our desire is to share this “burden” with you our family, friends and supporters so we can understand more of who He is and why we’re here.
 Last night as we were adjusting to our jet-lag, we saw a child on the streets who had fallen victim of a beggar’s ring where the child was drugged until she was unconscious.  As this child is lying on her “mom’s” lap, the woman was actively asking for money and portraying herself as being homeless. As we walked passed them and rounded the corner to where we’re staying, we saw a little boy with his sibling also on the streets with their mother.  This second scene was different.  This truly homeless mom was taking care of her children and not asking for money.  The poor and vulnerable have a real need here in Thailand and yet there are those who will use this need to fulfill their own greed.
Seeing what breaks God’s heart first hand gives us such a better understanding how to fight human trafficking.  He commands us in Matthew 12:29 to “take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart and you will find rest for your souls.” We want to help those who have fallen victim to human trafficking so that they may find rest in Jesus. This fight is vast and dangerous…being here, seeing with our own eyes can be overwhelming. This “burden” is not impossible with God.  He promises in the same breath in the following verse:  “for my yoke is easy and my burden is light.”  Our team is here to do all we can that is humanly possible and then God will do what is impossible!

I want to say a big "thank-you" to the Evergreen team.  Thanks for your encouragement to the missionaries, willingness to serve and for your commitment to keep Thailand in your heart and prayers.  Bless you guys!
Andie :) 


And I thought I re-post this old video of a short term team here about a year ago.  I can't believe how little Tobi and Eli look! 

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Our Home Away From HOME~ Thailand

it's bustling yet relaxed
hot and mainly sticky
crazy but peaceful
dirty and yet so beautiful
complicated and simple
at the same time
a mixture
a blend
a land full of smiles






Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Inner City Slums

Photographer: Noelle Shumer (ZOE Short Term Team)
Author:  David Cross    
I still can’t get the images of last week out of my mind.  I was trailing through one of the many inner city slums here in Chiangmai with a local social worker.  As I was following along in the slushy mud, I looked down to see a crippled boy dragging his body through a dirty puddle that I had so easily tiptoed over just seconds earlier.

The evidence of recent flooding brought the frustrations of the heavy rain at my own home briefly to mind.  It had been inconvenient to me, but as I viewed this situation from the perspective of another person, who also calls this city their home, my concerns flailed in to insignificance.

It had rained a lot in this slum.  It had rained so much that the nearby river had risen and blocked the narrow entry/exit for two days causing many people to feel isolated and uncertain.

Poverty is complicated.  And it’s confronting.

People boiling their water in used oil tins, heating it on tiny coals.  

My thoughts raced.

In one of the slums I visited, the area designated for all the children to come and do their homework, was smaller than a 1 metre x 2 metre rectangle.  It was pretty much just a bamboo platform. Children would come and sit there each night to complete their schoolwork and afterwards go off to work at a nearby cultural show as child dancers.  I remember going to that show over a year ago and I recall wondering what circumstances had occurred to allow these young children to perform in an evening show, seven nights per week.

The social worker, that I was with, has a rotating schedule so that he can get around and help as many children as he can with their homework. Volunteers from local universities also come and sit with the children to help them learn and assist them with their homework.

It was as we arrived for one of these ‘homework shifts’ that I’d found myself staring down at puddles, awkward and confronted by the young crippled boy before me.

As the children gathered with their homework, my hairy arms and white skin quickly acted as a distraction.  And soon enough, I was “the entertainment” for the kids who did not have any homework that night. The children were happy just to pat my arms like I was a Persian rug (something I have now got very used to) but not before too long, I noticed an animal poster hanging up.  So, with that, I became a stand-in teacher and did what I could do to help them with their English pronunciation as well as run some simple games and show them all how to play with the video device I had in my pocket.  

The boy, who had dragged himself through the puddle earlier, now pulled his body up the steps and came and sat in the room to see what all the laughter was about. Playing with the kids was fun.  Seeing them laugh, temporarily lifted me out of the environment we were in and in to another place.  But each time I met eyes with the crippled boy with the wet mud on his legs, the harsh reality was felt.

My heart continues to break for these children.

And I just wish I could somehow fix the problem!