Saturday, June 30, 2018

Today in the PC-USA Mission Yearbook


The Mission Yearbook for Prayer and Study is a daily devotional with 365 inspiring mission stories that come from next door and all across the globe. It inspires thousands of Presbyterians daily as they uphold the mission of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) in intercessory prayer.

Courtesy Photo
Today in the Mission Yearbook: June 30, 2018

1001 NEW WORSHIPING COMMUNITIES - In his mid-20s with a well-paying job at a startup logistics firm in Manhattan, Chris Romine was wondering if this was all there was. Exploring all kinds of faith expressions, he kept coming back to the simple message of Christ’s life ...

CLICK HERE to read more.

Friday, June 29, 2018

In the News ... "Rainbow Room seeking donations for 2018-2019 school year"

KWES Photo
• Going on now, through July 31

By Kirsten Geddes, Multimedia Journalist
KWES-TV

MIDLAND/ODESSA/ANDREWS, TEXAS - The Rainbow Room of the Permian Basin is holding its annual school supply drive through June and July.

Donations will help foster children and those in CPS care from Midland, Odessa, Andrews and nearby counties receive the supplies they need to make their school year a success ...

 • read the rest of this KWES report ...

From @FWMission ...Friday Story: Painting Away The Days"

Founded in 2001, Free Wheelchair Mission is an international nonprofit organization dedicated to providing wheelchairs for the impoverished disabled in developing nations. Headquartered in Irvine, California, FWM works around the world in partnership with a vast network of humanitarian, faith-based and government organizations, sending wheelchairs to hundreds of thousands of disabled people, providing not only the gift of mobility, but of dignity, independence, and hope.




Friday Story: "Painting Away The Days"

Cinthia, a 14-year-old girl in Peru, loves to paint.

She first picked up a paintbrush in elementary school, where her mother, Adelina, would carry her to and from each day.

Adelina has taken care of her daughter full-time ever since Cinthia developed a disability during birth. Meanwhile, her husband, Jamie, toiled in construction to provide for the family and pay for Cinthia’s medication.

With three other children to raise, it became increasingly challenging for Adelina to carry her daughter to school every day, so they stopped going once Cinthia completed elementary school ...

read the rest of this story ...

In the News ... Reflection Ministries makes pitch to city about battling human trafficking"

Photo by Todor Tsvetkov, Getty Images
“We want to do things that are long-term.”

By Stewart Doreen, Editor
Midland Reporter-Telegram

MIDLAND, TEXAS - A local nonprofit that was established to help victims of human trafficking is seeking a build a facility to provide services for these individuals.

Reflection Ministries of Texas provided information for the Midland City Council on Tuesday, and the presentation detailed the extent of the problem and what can be done locally to help those impacted ...

 • read the rest of this MRT report

Today in the PC-USA Mission Yearbook


The Mission Yearbook for Prayer and Study is a daily devotional with 365 inspiring mission stories that come from next door and all across the globe. It inspires thousands of Presbyterians daily as they uphold the mission of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) in intercessory prayer.

Photo by Peter Prove/WCC
Today in the Mission Yearbook: June 29, 2018

NORTH KOREA - Against a backdrop of recent news events involving North Korea, members of an ecumenical delegation are reflecting on their recent trip to that countr ...

CLICK HERE to read more.

Thursday, June 28, 2018

FBR Report: "Eubank Summer and Fall Schedule 2018"

The Free Burma Rangers (FBR) is a multi-ethnic humanitarian service movement. They bring help, hope and love to people in the war zones of Burma (Myanmar) and the Middle East. Groups send teams to be trained, supplied and sent into the areas under attack to provide emergency assistance and human rights documentation. Together with other groups, the teams work to serve people in need.



FBR Photo
Eubank Summer and Fall Schedule 2018

Thank you for your love, prayers, help, and being in this with us. We just came off back-to-back missions in Iraq, Syria, and then Burma, and are now heading to the United States. You can see photos from these missions in our newsletter, the Jungle Chicken, and our schedule for the next few months is below. We look forward to seeing and thanking any of you that we can in person. We will keep you updated on any changes to the schedule below ...

CLICK HERE to read the rest of this FBR Report ...

CLICK HERE to learn how YOU can get involved in FBR and its mission ...



Free Burma Ranger, the film ...

This film, currently in production, chronicles the journey of an American family bringing aid to hundreds of thousands of internally displaced people caught in Burma's war zones, a bloody conflict that is one of the longest-running civil war's in the world.

Learn more about the film, and hour YOUR donation can help complete its production ...

In the News ... "Abilene mission has opened wide its search for dentist"


• Mission provides healthcare in a 19-county region

By Loretta Fulton, Reporter
Abilene Reporter-News

ABILENE, TEXAS - Finding a dentist to replace Dr. Gene Shelhamer has turned out to be an experience kind of like pulling teeth for Debra Burchett, executive director of the Presbyterian Medical Care Mission ...

read the rest of this ARN report ...

Today in the PC-USA Mission Yearbook


The Mission Yearbook for Prayer and Study is a daily devotional with 365 inspiring mission stories that come from next door and all across the globe. It inspires thousands of Presbyterians daily as they uphold the mission of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) in intercessory prayer.

FPC-Tallahassee Photo
Today in the Mission Yearbook: June 28, 2018

FOSSIL-FREE STRATEGY FOR CHURCH - After two attempts to encourage the General Assembly to go “fossil free” did not go as they hoped, First Presbyterian Church of Tallahassee, Florida, decided to take matters into their own hands, or, more specifically, their own footprint ...

CLICK HERE to read more.

Wednesday, June 27, 2018

In the News ... "Food Pantry at Westminster Presbyterian"

• Last Saturday of each month

Staff Report
Odessa American


ODESSA, TEXAS - Westminster Presbyterian Church of Odessa, 4901 Maple Ave., has scheduled the monthly food pantry from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on the last Saturday of each month.
For more information, call (432) 366-1321.

In the News ... "Local Girl Scout aiding young Kenyan girls — and there's one last way you can contribute"

Courtesy Photo
• Needs deflated soccer balls; Deadline is July 2

By Justin Hicks, Reporter
San Angelo Standard Times


SAN ANGELO, TEXAS - Mary Frances-Benes is anything but a light packer. But when you consider the cargo she's carrying, more is better ...

read the rest of this ARN report ...

more on Mary's mission to Kenya ...

Burgers & Blessings continues TONIGHT at Grace Presbyterian

Laura Up In the Clouds
Summer is here, and our annual summertime Burgers & Blessings is underway ... CONTINUING TONIGHT!

The dinners begin at 6:00 p.m. Wednesday evenings at Grace Presbyterian Church, 2801 N. Garfield Street in Midland, Texas ... and are very casual The members of Church on the Journey will be joining us this year.

Burgers & Blessings is a time to get together for fellowship, mid-week. The church provides burgers, hot dogs, fixin's and drinks. You just come, bring a side-dish or dessert, and the gift of your company. The dinners will run from June 6 through August 8 (no dinner on July 4th).

We hope to see you there!

We set up 'teams' to take turns preparing. If you would like to be on a team to help set-up our fellowship hall for the meal, please contact Suzi Thompson, Judy Brown or Cheryl Truzkowski at the church - phone number (432)-684-6542. The men's study group will be taking turns doing the grilling.

Join us?

Invitation to Prayer from Faces of Children ... TODAY


Faces of Children is an ecumenical prayer ministry under the auspices of First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas. Their mission is to initiate ministries of prayer for children in churches, communities, and neighborhoods. In doing so, they seek to provide an opportunity for people of God to join together, learn about children and their needs throughout the world, and celebrate Christ's love (especially as it relates to children).

Invitation to Prayer ... TODAY

Hi Friends,

This week, I will be out of town visiting my grandparents. My girls are eagerly looking forward to seeing their "Great Nana and Papa" and might be equally excited to see their chickens.

Faces Of Children will be meeting this Wednesday - TODAY - at 11:30 a.m., in the gym conference room at First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas. I hope you can join them to pray together for children in our community and around the world!

Since we will not be meeting for prayer on July 4, there will be no email next week... though I do have a special 4th of July prayer request included below!

Warmly,

Carrie



Dear Intercessors,

It remains a heavy and hard week for our nation, I believe, as we continue to grapple with how to respond to the crisis on our southern border. I'm grateful for President Trump's decision this week to stop separating children from their families.

This week, may we pray for the approximately 2,000 children who remain separated from their families.

The administration has said they want to see these children reunited with their families, but many reports from front-line consular workers, volunteer attorneys, and even some immigration officials admit this might be an exceedingly difficult task, given the age of the children. "Like unscrambling an egg," one person observed.


One little 6-year-old girl whose clear and calm voice can be heard on a widespread audio recording taken at one detention center asking for someone to call her Aunt will most likely be reunited with family because she had memorized a phone number. But many are asking, "What about the children who have no such information?"

"Memorizing her aunt's phone number gave Jimena a huge advantage over many of the immigrant children who are illegally brought across the border by their families, and who are not old enough to speak, count, or even know their parents' full names. Central American consular workers and child advocates report that, under zero tolerance, once children have been physically separated from their parents, their legal cases have been bureaucratically separated as well. The children have been treated like unaccompanied minors, even as their relatives were shipped to other U.S. detention centers. Now that the policy of separating families appears to have ended, the burden of the reunification will depend in large measure on the children's abilities to provide information that will help authorities identify who, and where, their parents are." read more here ...

This week, let's pray for a bureaucratic miracle of these children being quickly reunited with their parents.

This past week was World Refugee Day. The situation of refugees around the world frankly seems to grow more and more dire. In Bangladesh, where 700,000 Rohingya have resettled, they are now entering monsoon season.

"As monsoon rains bare down on sprawling Rohingya camps in Bangladesh, the U.N. warns that some 200,000 refugees sheltering on the swampland are at risk from landslides and flooding. Half of those threatened by the rising waters and requiring relocation are children. The first rain of the season poured over the Cox's Bazar camps and informal settlements last week, inundating most roads. One child reportedly died in a landslide, according to a statement from the U.N. Children's Fund (UNICEF).

UNICEF estimates 900 shelters and 200 latrines were either damaged or destroyed. That toll is only expected to grow as the next few months of torrential rains and high winds lash into the tent city, which is precariously perched on landslide-prone hills denuded of trees or in flood-prone lowlands. After peak monsoon season subsides in August, cyclone season begins." read more here ...

In addition to the misery these conditions introduce to the camp, we know that disease and sickness will likely increase in the wake of these floods. Please pray for the children impacted by the flooding; pray for their parents not to lose heart and for relief groups like Partners to be able to fill in the gap.


And finally -- next week will be the 4th of July!

As we are enjoying BBQs and summertime traditions with our families, let's remember the children who don't get to see their moms or dads because their parents are actively serving in our military. Over the last few weeks, my own husband has been away full-time for work, and I've found myself growing more and more aware of how phone calls do not fill in the empty places of a child's heart... and how seeing other kids having fun with their dad at the swimming pool or getting a sno-cone together can feel like a sharp barb to a young child's heart. I'm not sure how families endure separations that last years, but I know I feel compelled to pray for the children.

Finally, in closing, I find myself thinking about how different each of these prayer requests might seem. Praying for little immigrant children in US detention... praying for Rohingya children ankle-deep in rising flood waters... praying for the children of our servicemen and women.

In our humanity, we may be tempted to try and determine whose needs are greater than others. Is the immigrant child's crisis more pressing than the Rohingya child? Or is it the other way around? After all, the water is literally rising in Bangladesh. And what about the children of service people? Their grief might not garner our headline-outrage, so does that make it less important than the others? What about the kids in our own community who are quietly neglected and injured by the ones who are supposed to protect them? Kids we don't even notice or see because it all happens behind closed doors?

I do not think this is how God sees his children. They are each precious to him and each one's grief matters just as much as the next. Each one's pain hurts his heart and each one's sorrow weighs heavy on his heart. His heart is abundantly large... making space for the needs of one of his children doesn't mean he has to carve it out from what he's allotted to someone else. That may be how it works in the economy of the world, but it's not the Kingdom of God.

This week and next, as we pray for the children in our community, may we love with that same abundant spirit and seek to make space for all God's children.

Praying with you,

Carrie

Carrie J. McKean
Faces of Children Director
First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas
(432) 684-7821 x153

Today in the PC-USA Mission Yearbook


The Mission Yearbook for Prayer and Study is a daily devotional with 365 inspiring mission stories that come from next door and all across the globe. It inspires thousands of Presbyterians daily as they uphold the mission of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) in intercessory prayer.

Photo by Rick Jones
Today in the Mission Yearbook: June 27, 2018

PRESBYTERIAN DISASTER ASSISTANCE: PUERTO RICO - Power comes and goes in parts of Puerto Rico that are still recovering from last fall’s devastating Hurricane Maria. While electricity and running water are slowly coming back to communities across the island, the long list of repairs, updates and recovery will keep volunteers and disaster officials busy for years ...

CLICK HERE to read more.

Tuesday, June 26, 2018

Partners Blog: "There is power in empathy"

Steve and Oddny Gumaer started Partners Relief and Development in response to the needs of refugees and displaced people from Burma, and now in the Middle East, as well. Their mission is to demonstrate, through holistic action, God’s love to children and communities made vulnerable by war in Southeast Asia, the Middle East and other conflict zones.

PR&D Photo
There is power in empathy

Something incredible happened to me early this year. It completely rocked my world and I’m not sure I’ve ever felt the kind of emotion that I felt in the early hours of this particular January morning. After 9 months of waiting and one long, intense night, everything changed. Suddenly there was another human in the room. Our family of two became a family of three and our lives would never be the same ...

read the rest of this post ...




Partners Relief and Development is a registered charity in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Norway, the United Kingdom and the United States. "We’re a small, grassroots nonprofit passionate about making a big impact in communities affected by conflict and oppression, demonstrating God’s love to children and giving them the opportunity to live free, full lives." For more information aboput Partners, visit their website at partners.ngo/

In the News ... "Midland Ministry looks to expand help for human trafficking victims"

KWES Photo
• Build new center, increase services

By Dana Morris, Multimedia Journalist
KWES-TV

MIDLAND, TEXAS - Reflection Ministries in Midland will make a special presentation to city council on June 26 in hopes the city will give them a piece of property to build an "Empowerment Center."

The organization's mission is to provide services in helping victims of human trafficking to get back on their feet and rejoin society, as well as to train local organizations such as law enforcement, shelters, and drug abuse centers on how to identify victims ...

 • read/watch the rest of this KWES report ...

Invitation to Prayer from Faces of Children ... Tomorrow


Faces of Children is an ecumenical prayer ministry under the auspices of First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas. Their mission is to initiate ministries of prayer for children in churches, communities, and neighborhoods. In doing so, they seek to provide an opportunity for people of God to join together, learn about children and their needs throughout the world, and celebrate Christ's love (especially as it relates to children).

Invitation to Prayer ... Tomorrow

Hi Friends,

This week, I will be out of town visiting my grandparents. My girls are eagerly looking forward to seeing their "Great Nana and Papa" and might be equally excited to see their chickens.

Faces Of Children will be meeting this Wednesday at 11:30 a.m., in the gym conference room at First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas. I hope you can join them to pray together for children in our community and around the world!

Since we will not be meeting for prayer on July 4, there will be no email next week... though I do have a special 4th of July prayer request included below!

Warmly,

Carrie



Dear Intercessors,

It remains a heavy and hard week for our nation, I believe, as we continue to grapple with how to respond to the crisis on our southern border. I'm grateful for President Trump's decision this week to stop separating children from their families.

This week, may we pray for the approximately 2,000 children who remain separated from their families.

The administration has said they want to see these children reunited with their families, but many reports from front-line consular workers, volunteer attorneys, and even some immigration officials admit this might be an exceedingly difficult task, given the age of the children. "Like unscrambling an egg," one person observed.


One little 6-year-old girl whose clear and calm voice can be heard on a widespread audio recording taken at one detention center asking for someone to call her Aunt will most likely be reunited with family because she had memorized a phone number. But many are asking, "What about the children who have no such information?"

"Memorizing her aunt's phone number gave Jimena a huge advantage over many of the immigrant children who are illegally brought across the border by their families, and who are not old enough to speak, count, or even know their parents' full names. Central American consular workers and child advocates report that, under zero tolerance, once children have been physically separated from their parents, their legal cases have been bureaucratically separated as well. The children have been treated like unaccompanied minors, even as their relatives were shipped to other U.S. detention centers. Now that the policy of separating families appears to have ended, the burden of the reunification will depend in large measure on the children's abilities to provide information that will help authorities identify who, and where, their parents are." read more here ...

This week, let's pray for a bureaucratic miracle of these children being quickly reunited with their parents.

This past week was World Refugee Day. The situation of refugees around the world frankly seems to grow more and more dire. In Bangladesh, where 700,000 Rohingya have resettled, they are now entering monsoon season.

"As monsoon rains bare down on sprawling Rohingya camps in Bangladesh, the U.N. warns that some 200,000 refugees sheltering on the swampland are at risk from landslides and flooding. Half of those threatened by the rising waters and requiring relocation are children. The first rain of the season poured over the Cox's Bazar camps and informal settlements last week, inundating most roads. One child reportedly died in a landslide, according to a statement from the U.N. Children's Fund (UNICEF).

UNICEF estimates 900 shelters and 200 latrines were either damaged or destroyed. That toll is only expected to grow as the next few months of torrential rains and high winds lash into the tent city, which is precariously perched on landslide-prone hills denuded of trees or in flood-prone lowlands. After peak monsoon season subsides in August, cyclone season begins." read more here ...

In addition to the misery these conditions introduce to the camp, we know that disease and sickness will likely increase in the wake of these floods. Please pray for the children impacted by the flooding; pray for their parents not to lose heart and for relief groups like Partners to be able to fill in the gap.


And finally -- next week will be the 4th of July!

As we are enjoying BBQs and summertime traditions with our families, let's remember the children who don't get to see their moms or dads because their parents are actively serving in our military. Over the last few weeks, my own husband has been away full-time for work, and I've found myself growing more and more aware of how phone calls do not fill in the empty places of a child's heart... and how seeing other kids having fun with their dad at the swimming pool or getting a sno-cone together can feel like a sharp barb to a young child's heart. I'm not sure how families endure separations that last years, but I know I feel compelled to pray for the children.

Finally, in closing, I find myself thinking about how different each of these prayer requests might seem. Praying for little immigrant children in US detention... praying for Rohingya children ankle-deep in rising flood waters... praying for the children of our servicemen and women.

In our humanity, we may be tempted to try and determine whose needs are greater than others. Is the immigrant child's crisis more pressing than the Rohingya child? Or is it the other way around? After all, the water is literally rising in Bangladesh. And what about the children of service people? Their grief might not garner our headline-outrage, so does that make it less important than the others? What about the kids in our own community who are quietly neglected and injured by the ones who are supposed to protect them? Kids we don't even notice or see because it all happens behind closed doors?

I do not think this is how God sees his children. They are each precious to him and each one's grief matters just as much as the next. Each one's pain hurts his heart and each one's sorrow weighs heavy on his heart. His heart is abundantly large... making space for the needs of one of his children doesn't mean he has to carve it out from what he's allotted to someone else. That may be how it works in the economy of the world, but it's not the Kingdom of God.

This week and next, as we pray for the children in our community, may we love with that same abundant spirit and seek to make space for all God's children.

Praying with you,

Carrie

Carrie J. McKean
Faces of Children Director
First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas
(432) 684-7821 x153

In the News ... "Red Cross serving the Permian Basin in need of more volunteers"

KWES Photo
• Introductory event set for TONIGHT in Midland

By Jolina Okazaki, Multimedia Journalist
KWES-TV

MIDLAND/ODESSA, TEXAS - If you want to help people in disasters and emergencies, the Red Cross of the Permian Basin is having a training event in Midland on Tuesday, June 26.

It's for anyone who's ever been interested in gaining a full understanding of volunteering with the organization ...

 • read/watch the rest of this KWES report ...

In the News ... “Midland Habitat dedicates 150th house"

MRT Photo by James Durbin
• Home ownership has an impact on the community at-large

Rich Lopez, Reporter
Midland Reporter-Telegram

MIDLAND, TEXAS - Midland Habitat for Humanity reached a milestone on Tuesday with the dedication of the 150th home built by the local nonprofit.

The house in the 800 block of Tilden Avenue is the new home for Run Lian Ceu and Run Nuam Bawi and their three children, who are from Myanmar. The house is an Apostle’s Build project of several local churches and other entities, said Alynda Best, Habitat executive director ...

 • read the rest of this MRT report

Today in the PC-USA Mission Yearbook


The Mission Yearbook for Prayer and Study is a daily devotional with 365 inspiring mission stories that come from next door and all across the globe. It inspires thousands of Presbyterians daily as they uphold the mission of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) in intercessory prayer.


Today in the Mission Yearbook: June 26, 2018

ECONOMIC AND CLIMATE JUSTICE - An ecumenical panel that includes leadership of the World Communion of Reformed Churches has taken further steps to determine, in its words, how “to build a world that better resembles God’s true kingdom” ...

CLICK HERE to read more.

Monday, June 25, 2018

From @chinaaid : "Human rights advocate to stand trial"

The China Aid Association is a non-profit Christian organization - based in Midland, Texas - with a mission to uncover and reveal the truth about religious persecution in China, focusing especially on the unofficial church. They do this, they explain in their website, by exposing the abuses, encouraging the abused and equipping the saints to advance the kingdom of God throughout China.

ChinaAid Photo
Human rights advocate to stand trial
Distributed by ChinaAid, June, 2018 ...

MIANYANG, SICHUAN – Human rights advocate Huang Qi will stand trial at 10 a.m. on Thursday in China’s Sichuan province, according notices received by his lawyerse ...

more on this story from China Aid


In the News ... “Big Brothers Big Sisters moves forward with Ector County expansion"


• Mixer planned for June 26, TOMORROW

Staff Report
Midland Reporter-Telegram

MIDLAND/ODESSA, TEXAS - Funds have been pledged or raised to open a Big Brothers/Big Sisters office in Ector County, according to BBBS Midland Executive Director Kay Crites. The organization will be located at the new nonprofit space at Connection Christian Church in Odessa once construction is completed in mid-August ...

 • read the rest of this MRT report ...

Invitation to Prayer from Faces of Children ... Wednesday


Faces of Children is an ecumenical prayer ministry under the auspices of First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas. Their mission is to initiate ministries of prayer for children in churches, communities, and neighborhoods. In doing so, they seek to provide an opportunity for people of God to join together, learn about children and their needs throughout the world, and celebrate Christ's love (especially as it relates to children).

Invitation to Prayer ... Wednesday

Hi Friends,

This week, I will be out of town visiting my grandparents. My girls are eagerly looking forward to seeing their "Great Nana and Papa" and might be equally excited to see their chickens.

Faces Of Children will be meeting this Wednesday at 11:30 a.m., in the gym conference room at First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas. I hope you can join them to pray together for children in our community and around the world!

Since we will not be meeting for prayer on July 4, there will be no email next week... though I do have a special 4th of July prayer request included below!

Warmly,

Carrie



Dear Intercessors,

It remains a heavy and hard week for our nation, I believe, as we continue to grapple with how to respond to the crisis on our southern border. I'm grateful for President Trump's decision this week to stop separating children from their families.

This week, may we pray for the approximately 2,000 children who remain separated from their families.

The administration has said they want to see these children reunited with their families, but many reports from front-line consular workers, volunteer attorneys, and even some immigration officials admit this might be an exceedingly difficult task, given the age of the children. "Like unscrambling an egg," one person observed.


One little 6-year-old girl whose clear and calm voice can be heard on a widespread audio recording taken at one detention center asking for someone to call her Aunt will most likely be reunited with family because she had memorized a phone number. But many are asking, "What about the children who have no such information?"

"Memorizing her aunt's phone number gave Jimena a huge advantage over many of the immigrant children who are illegally brought across the border by their families, and who are not old enough to speak, count, or even know their parents' full names. Central American consular workers and child advocates report that, under zero tolerance, once children have been physically separated from their parents, their legal cases have been bureaucratically separated as well. The children have been treated like unaccompanied minors, even as their relatives were shipped to other U.S. detention centers. Now that the policy of separating families appears to have ended, the burden of the reunification will depend in large measure on the children's abilities to provide information that will help authorities identify who, and where, their parents are." read more here ...

This week, let's pray for a bureaucratic miracle of these children being quickly reunited with their parents.

This past week was World Refugee Day. The situation of refugees around the world frankly seems to grow more and more dire. In Bangladesh, where 700,000 Rohingya have resettled, they are now entering monsoon season.

"As monsoon rains bare down on sprawling Rohingya camps in Bangladesh, the U.N. warns that some 200,000 refugees sheltering on the swampland are at risk from landslides and flooding. Half of those threatened by the rising waters and requiring relocation are children. The first rain of the season poured over the Cox's Bazar camps and informal settlements last week, inundating most roads. One child reportedly died in a landslide, according to a statement from the U.N. Children's Fund (UNICEF).

UNICEF estimates 900 shelters and 200 latrines were either damaged or destroyed. That toll is only expected to grow as the next few months of torrential rains and high winds lash into the tent city, which is precariously perched on landslide-prone hills denuded of trees or in flood-prone lowlands. After peak monsoon season subsides in August, cyclone season begins." read more here ...

In addition to the misery these conditions introduce to the camp, we know that disease and sickness will likely increase in the wake of these floods. Please pray for the children impacted by the flooding; pray for their parents not to lose heart and for relief groups like Partners to be able to fill in the gap.


And finally -- next week will be the 4th of July!

As we are enjoying BBQs and summertime traditions with our families, let's remember the children who don't get to see their moms or dads because their parents are actively serving in our military. Over the last few weeks, my own husband has been away full-time for work, and I've found myself growing more and more aware of how phone calls do not fill in the empty places of a child's heart... and how seeing other kids having fun with their dad at the swimming pool or getting a sno-cone together can feel like a sharp barb to a young child's heart. I'm not sure how families endure separations that last years, but I know I feel compelled to pray for the children.

Finally, in closing, I find myself thinking about how different each of these prayer requests might seem. Praying for little immigrant children in US detention... praying for Rohingya children ankle-deep in rising flood waters... praying for the children of our servicemen and women.

In our humanity, we may be tempted to try and determine whose needs are greater than others. Is the immigrant child's crisis more pressing than the Rohingya child? Or is it the other way around? After all, the water is literally rising in Bangladesh. And what about the children of service people? Their grief might not garner our headline-outrage, so does that make it less important than the others? What about the kids in our own community who are quietly neglected and injured by the ones who are supposed to protect them? Kids we don't even notice or see because it all happens behind closed doors?

I do not think this is how God sees his children. They are each precious to him and each one's grief matters just as much as the next. Each one's pain hurts his heart and each one's sorrow weighs heavy on his heart. His heart is abundantly large... making space for the needs of one of his children doesn't mean he has to carve it out from what he's allotted to someone else. That may be how it works in the economy of the world, but it's not the Kingdom of God.

This week and next, as we pray for the children in our community, may we love with that same abundant spirit and seek to make space for all God's children.

Praying with you,

Carrie

Carrie J. McKean
Faces of Children Director
First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas
(432) 684-7821 x153

In the News ... “'Duck Dynasty' women to talk family, faith at RTD benefit"

Courtesy Photo
• Supporting "a fantastic ministry to reach our youth"

Rich Lopez, Reporter
Midland Reporter-Telegram

MIDLAND, TEXAS - Rock the Desert 2018 Christian music festival will feature Tenth Avenue North, Switchfoot and Matthew West, as well as the women of Duck Dynasty.

"We wanted to do something for those who want to support Rock the Desert but may not go to the festival," event co-chair Victoria Printz said of an event presenting members of the reality TV show family.

Printz and co-chair Janna Hoffman will host the "Ladies of Duck Dynasty" luncheon with Miss Kay, Korie and Missy Robertson on July 31 ...

 • read the rest of this MRT report

Today in the PC-USA Mission Yearbook


The Mission Yearbook for Prayer and Study is a daily devotional with 365 inspiring mission stories that come from next door and all across the globe. It inspires thousands of Presbyterians daily as they uphold the mission of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) in intercessory prayer.


Today in the Mission Yearbook: June 25, 2018

SEASON OF PRAYER AND REFLECTION IN THE KOREAN PENINSULA - In the early dawn of Sunday, June 25, 1950, without any warning, the Soviet-backed North Korean armed forces crossed over the 38th parallel (an arbitrary line chosen by the World War II victors in Potsdam) and pressed swiftly southward toward the city of Seoul, defying the orders of the Security Council of the United Nations to cease hostilities and withdraw back to the 38th parallel. So began the Korean War, which was one of the bloodiest and most destructive in modern history, leaving millions dead (including some 36,000 Americans) and roughly 43 percent of industrial capacities and 33 percent of residences of South Korea demolished. An estimated 150,000 Christians were also either killed, missing or taken by the North Korean Red Army against their will because of their faith ...

CLICK HERE to read more.

Sunday, June 24, 2018

Burgers & Blessings continues this week at Grace Presbyterian

Laura Up In the Clouds
Summer is here, and our annual summertime Burgers & Blessings is underway!

The dinners begin at 6:00 p.m. Wednesday evenings at Grace Presbyterian Church, 2801 N. Garfield Street in Midland, Texas ... and are very casual The members of Church on the Journey will be joining us this year.

Burgers & Blessings is a time to get together for for fellowship, mid-week. The church provides burgers, hot dogs, fixin's and drinks. You just come, bring a side-dish or desser, and the gift of youe company. The dinners will run from June 6 through August 8 (no dinner on July 4th.

We hope to see you there!

We set up 'teams' to take turns preparing. If you would like to be on a team to help set-up our fellowship hall for the meal, please contact Suzi Thompson, Judy Brown or Cheryl Truzkowski at the church - phone number (432)-684-6542. The men's study group will be taking turns doing the grilling.

Join us?

In the News ... "Red Cross to host volunteer recruitment, training event"

KMID Photo
• This Thursday evening, June 26

Staff Report,
KMID-TV


MIDLAND/ODESSA, TEXAS - Have you ever wanted to serve with the American Red Cross?

A local chapter of the organization - Red Cross of the Permian Basin - may have just the opportunity you are looking for ...

read the rest of this KMID report


Today in the PC-USA Mission Yearbook


The Mission Yearbook for Prayer and Study is a daily devotional with 365 inspiring mission stories that come from next door and all across the globe. It inspires thousands of Presbyterians daily as they uphold the mission of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) in intercessory prayer.

Photo by Paul Jeffrey
Today in the Mission Yearbook: June 24, 2018

SEASON OF PRAYER AND REFLECTION IN THE KOREAN PENINSULA - Tomorrow members of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) will join in prayer to commemorate the beginning of the Season of Prayer and Reflection in the Korean Peninsula. The annual observance will conclude on Aug. 15 ...

CLICK HERE to read more.

Saturday, June 23, 2018

In the News ... "The Rev. Archie directs rebuilt church"

OA Photo by Mark Rogers
• Rose of Sharon Missionary Baptist Church observes 67th anniversary Sunday - TOMORROW

By Bob Campbell, Reporter
Odessa American


ODESSA, TEXAS - Destroyed by an air conditioning system fire almost four years ago to the day, the rebuilt Rose of Sharon Missionary Baptist Church will burn its mortgage and celebrate its 67th anniversary at 3 p.m. Sunday - TOMORROW - at 1615 E. Murphy St., where the Rev. Windsor Archie has been pastor since July last year ...

read the rest of this OA report ...

In the News ... "Lubbock Faith Briefs"

Courtesy Photo
• What’s going on in area churches

By Erica Pauda, Reporter
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal

LUBBOCK, TEXAS - From the Avalanche-Journal, news of special events and programs from Lubbock-area houses of faith ... ...

 • read the rest of this LAJ report ...

 • more from the LAJ's "South Plains Faith Calendar" ...

In the News ... "Abilene Church News"


• Special programs and services around the Big Country

Staff Report
Abilene Reporter-News

ABILENE, TEXAS - From the Reporter-News, news of services, special events and programs from Abilene-area houses of faith ...

read the rest of this ARN report ...

In the News ... "San Angelo Faith Briefs"


• Today, and in the days ahead

Matthew McDaniel,, Reporter
San Angelo Standard Times


SAN ANGELO, TEXAS - From the Standard-Times, news of special events and programs from Concho Valley houses of faith ...

read the rest of this SAST report

In the News ... "Odessa Church News"


• Today and in the days ahead, in Odessa-area houses of worship

Staff Report
Odessa American


ODESSA, TEXAS - Coming events include worship services, classes, Bible studies, community outreach, fundraisers, mission opportunities and more ...

read the rest of this OA report ...

Including updated VBS guide!