Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Faces of Children: Prayer Concerns for This Week

Faces of Children is an ecumenical prayer ministry under the auspices of First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas. Our mission is to initiate ministries of prayer for children in churches, communities, and neighborhoods. In doing so, we 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).

Hello Friends,


First of all, thank you for your warm welcome as I’ve stepped into the role of director of Faces of Children. If we’ve already had a chance to chat, you know that this position fits me like a glove. And if we haven’t had a chance to chat, you can learn more about me and why I say that by reading this little bio. In short, I come to this position with a heart for the needs of children in hard places and experience working on their behalf, and I’m so thankful to have the opportunity to again work at the intersection of my skills and passion. It feels like such a gift.

Prayer Concerns for the Week of 09/23/15

This week, I’d invite us to pray for:

The needs facing child refugees around the world, but in particular those coming out of Syria.
Please pray for them to find safety and refuge; for their physical well-being in their journeys to safety and for their emotional well-being in times of great chaos and uncertainty. It recently struck me that for many of these children, they’ve never known a life without war. Let’s pray for God to supernaturally meet their physical and emotional needs and for the global church to stand up and welcome these children and their families with open arms and hearts. Let’s also pray for wisdom and insight about how we can respond in meaningful ways, even though it all feels very far away. I’m attaching a prayer guide created by We Welcome Refugees, an online advocacy group seeking to help connect churches with positive ways to respond to the refugee crisis. There are many detailed prayer points for each day of the week, and I invite you to use this as you feel led.

The needs facing children who suffer neglect and abuse.
This week, the world learned the identity of Baby Doe, a little girl whose body was found washed up on Boston Harbor beach and who remained unidentified for nearly three months. Baby Doe was 2-year-old Bella Bond. “In her short, tumultuous life, Bella Bond loved cats, dancing to country music and the color green. Those were but brief flashes of happiness in a life marked by neglect, abuse and a horrible ending.” The world lost Bella, but there are still so many invisible children suffering the same sorts of horrific abuse behind closed doors; many in our own community. Pray for the abuse to stop. Pray for abusers to be held accountable and for people who notice something suspicious to report it to the authorities. Pray for our own eyes to be opened to what is happening around us, letting the Spirit show us if there are children in our neighborhoods or schools who need us to be their voice. Pray that no other child can vanish for 3 months without someone noticing.

The Dunn/Wimberly Family in the loss of their little girl, Moriah Constance Wimberly.
Moriah, a beautiful 23-month old little girl, passed away in her sleep on September 18, 2015 here in Midland. Services for her were held today, September 22. Please pray for her grieving family… for her mom, dad, and big sister. Pray for their extended family, known and loved by many here in Midland. Pray the family knows God’s love, mercy, and a peace that passes understanding as they mourn.

Children living in orphanages and the staff caring for them.
Over the next few weeks, I’m going to bring two items each time we meet to represent different prayer needs facing children who live in institutions and the staff who care for them. The kit I’m using is prepared by The Sparrow Fund and focused on China, but the prayer needs are relevant regardless of what country the orphanage is in. This week I will be bringing a tea bag and chopsticks.
Tea: Drinking tea started in China more than 4,000 years ago and is still an important part of Chinese culture. Pray for purpose. As Chinese ayis (nannies/caregivers) start their day, pray that they would be encouraged and know that what they do matters.
Chopsticks: Chinese people use chopstics or kuaizi, literally “fast sticks,” in cooking and eating. Pray for provision. There is not enough healthy food and clean water in China. Pray that God would provide these for the ayis and the children living in orphanages.
In recent weeks within the Chinese adoption community, there have been multiple instances of families traveling to adopt children and upon meeting those children, they have decided the children are too ill or too sickly or too frail to adopt. As a result, they have sent the children back to the orphanages, in many cases to situations that might lead to their demise. Please pray for those same children to receive favor and extra attention from the caregivers in the orphanages or for them to be transferred to private facilities that might be better equipped to care for them. Pray for adopting families to be able to see past the present moment and look to the future with hope rather than fear so that they can complete the adoptions. Pray for the orphanage officials and Chinese government not to respond to these incidents by refusing to allow their most vulnerable children to be eligible for adoption.

I’m sure God has placed other needs facing children on your hearts this week. Please come prepared to share those needs so that we can pray for them as a group. And of course, please continue to lift up our local church up in prayer. You may have already heard, but tonight from 6:30-7:30, members of First Presbyterian are invited to come to the sanctuary to pray for our Session while they meet to receive a report from the discernment team regarding recommendations for our church regarding denominational affiliation moving forward.

Thank you for your continued passion for vulnerable children around the world. There are a lot of hurting and broken and dark places in this world, and I think as a church, we most look like Jesus when we show up in those places, lifting them up in prayer and extending our hands in love.

Blessings,

Carrie



If you have prayer requests about children, those who care for them, those who have authority over them, or those who harm them (the really hard prayers to say sometimes), please send them to info@facesofchildren.net

In the News ... "St. Ann’s Fair welcomes all to its 67th annual fundraiser"

MRT Photo
• Event kicks-off Thursday, September 24

Trent Johnson, Reporter

Midland Reporter-Telegram

MIDLAND, TEXAS - As the summer heat begins to dissipate, now is a stellar time to begin sauntering outdoors in search of activities to undertake. For the 67th year, St. Ann’s Family Fair will be a viable option for Midlanders in search of fried treats, carnival games and fair style rides.

“The theme this year is ‘I’m going to let it shine,’” Fair chairman Cory Rylander said. “The fair is a great family tradition,”

The fair runs Sept. 24 through Sept. 27 with proceeds benefiting St. Ann’s School. The grand event is operated by more than 150 volunteers and features a multitude of activities intended to bring families, and the community together for a good cause ...

 • read the rest of this MRT report

C.S. Lewis Daily - Today's Reading

Presented by Bible Gateway
Today's Reading

On God.

God is Goodness. He can give good, but cannot need or get it. In that sense all His love is, as it were, bottomlessly selfless by very definition; it has everything to give and nothing to receive. Hence, if God sometimes speaks as though the Impassible could suffer passion and eternal fullness could be in want, and in want of those beings on whom it bestows all from their bare existence upwards, this can mean only, if it means anything intelligible by us, that God of mere miracle has made Himself able so to hunger and created in Himself that which we can satisfy. If He requires us, the requirement is of His own choosing.

It is a poor thing to strike our colours to God when the ship is going down under us; a poor thing to come to Him as a last resort, to offer up “our own” when it is no longer worth keeping. If God were proud He would hardly have us on such terms: but He is not proud, He stoops to conquer, He will have us even though we have shown that we prefer everything else to Him.


From The Problem of Pain
Compiled in Words to Live By

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. How often have you wondered, where are the young adults in the PC(USA)? Wonder no longer. The 2014 Presbyterian Mission Yearbook for Prayer and Study is devoted to the theme of young adults in the church. Its stories, many told by young adults, lift up how Presbyterians of all ages are engaging and joining with Presbyterian young adults in reforming the church for Christ’s mission.


Today in the Mission Yearbook: September 23, 2015

MINUTE FOR MISSION: NATIVE AMERICAN DAY - Bill and Lori Picard, Nez Perce tribal members in Lapwai, Idaho, exemplify committed and visionary discipleship. In 1997, their son Quanah died in automobile accident, followed three years later by their other son, Skylin. God called them to turn these tragedies into discipleship ...

CLICK HERE to read more.

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Word from Uganda: "Rats!!"

Missionary teacher Natalie Rolfe writes, "'When He calls me, I will answer ... I'll be somewhere working for my Lord.' My call was Mbale, Uganda and that is where I have returned to serve for another year. Specifically, I am teaching phonics at Lulwanda Children's Home, an orphanage and school for 90 kids." Natalie also keeps an online journal of her service at the weblog, When He calls me, I will answer ...

Rats!!


"Because it is worth sharing (again for some of you) ...

After a month of living at Tendo in May, I came home to some unwelcome visitors who had taken up nightly residence. (YUCK!!) ..."



 • read the rest of Natalie's post ...

 • help raise funds for Natalie's mission ...

In the News ... "Religious persecution a persistent problem, speakers say"

• Interfaith Event spokespersons address range of issues

By Bob Campbell, Reporter
Odessa American



MIDLAND, TEXAS - Representatives of five different religious faiths agreed Thursday night that everyone in the U.S. and the world could do something to stem the persecution that results in hundreds of thousands of damaged lives and deaths each year.

Posing a series of questions during the two-hour Fifth Interfaith Event at the First Baptist Church here, moderator Russell Meyers asked how all faiths could work together to make religious freedom a universal right ...


read the rest of this OA report ...


C.S. Lewis Daily - Today's Reading

Presented by Bible Gateway
Today's Reading

TO MARY WILLIS SHELBURNE: On how to rehearse for death and how to diminish fear.

17 June 1963

Pain is terrible, but surely you need not have fear as well? Can you not see death as the friend and deliverer? It means stripping off that body which is tormenting you: like taking off a hair- shirt or getting out of a dungeon. What is there to be afraid of? You have long attempted (and none of us does more) a Christian life. Your sins are confessed and absolved. Has this world been so kind to you that you should leave it with regret? There are better things ahead than any we leave behind.

Remember, though we struggle against things because we are afraid of them, it is often the other way round—we get afraid be- cause we struggle. Are you struggling, resisting? Don’t you think Our Lord says to you ‘Peace, child, peace. Relax. Let go. Underneath are the everlasting arms. Let go, I will catch you. Do you trust me so little?’

Of course, this may not be the end. Then make it a good rehearsal.

Yours (and like you a tired traveller near the journey’s end) Jack.


From The Collected Letters of C.S. Lewis
Compiled in Yours, Jack

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. How often have you wondered, where are the young adults in the PC(USA)? Wonder no longer. The 2014 Presbyterian Mission Yearbook for Prayer and Study is devoted to the theme of young adults in the church. Its stories, many told by young adults, lift up how Presbyterians of all ages are engaging and joining with Presbyterian young adults in reforming the church for Christ’s mission.


Today in the Mission Yearbook: September 22, 2015

PRESBYTERY OF THE JAMES, VIRGINIA - We make this road by walking it.” This Haitian proverb well describes our presbytery as we launched an exciting initiative with Haiti, one that united every congregation in a bold vision to fully fund a new mission coworker. Cindy Corell of Staunton, Virginia, was selected by Presbyterian World Mission to take up this call. The presbytery then confirmed God’s call to Cindy and commissioned her to serve in Haiti “on behalf of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and in partnership with the Presbytery of the James and all its congregations” ...

CLICK HERE to read more.

Monday, September 21, 2015

In the News ... "Minister leads effort to reunite churches"

OA Photo by Courtney Sacco
• 'Grace changes our orientation of why we serve God,’ he says

By Bob Campbell, Reporter
Odessa American


ODESSA, TEXAS - Housed in the old Odessa Country Club complex for the past 10 years, New Life Church is making progress with its mission to help reunite the Churches of Christ and Disciples of Christ (Christian Church), who split in 1906 over the use of instrumental music and other issues.

Senior Pastor Tim Halstead averages preaching to 240 people in the 7184 Club Dr. church’s 10 a.m. Sunday services, and he says New Life’s emphasis on grace is its foundation. Starting Sept. 20, the service times will change to 9 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. ...

read the rest of this OA report ...


C.S. Lewis Daily - Today's Reading

Presented by Bible Gateway
Today's Reading

On God

As a great Christian writer (George MacDonald) pointed out, every father is pleased at the baby’s first attempt to walk: no father would be satisfied with anything less than a firm, free, manly walk in a grown-up son. In the same way, he said, “God is easy to please, but hard to satisfy.”

I think every one who has some vague belief in God, until he becomes a Christian, has the idea of an exam or of a bargain in his mind. The first result of real Christianity is to blow that idea into bits. When they find it blown into bits, some people think this means that Christianity is a failure and give up. They seem to imagine that God is very simple-minded! In fact, of course, He knows all about this. One of the very things Christianity was designed to do was to blow this idea to bits. God has been waiting for the moment at which you discover that there is no question of earning a pass mark in this exam or putting Him in your debt.

Then comes another discovery. Every faculty you have, your power of thinking or of moving your limbs from moment to moment, is given you by God. If you devoted every moment of your whole life exclusively to His service you could not give Him anything that was not in a sense His own already. So that when we talk of a man doing anything for God or giving anything to God, I will tell you what it is really like. It is like a small child going to his father and saying, “Daddy, give me sixpence to buy you a birthday present.” Of course, the father does, and he is pleased with the child’s present. It is all very nice and proper, but only an idiot would think that the father is sixpence to the good on the transaction. When a man has made these two discoveries God can really get to work. It is after this that real life begins.


From Mere Christianity
Compiled in Words to Live By

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. How often have you wondered, where are the young adults in the PC(USA)? Wonder no longer. The 2014 Presbyterian Mission Yearbook for Prayer and Study is devoted to the theme of young adults in the church. Its stories, many told by young adults, lift up how Presbyterians of all ages are engaging and joining with Presbyterian young adults in reforming the church for Christ’s mission.


Today in the Mission Yearbook: September 21, 2015

MINUTE FOR MISSION: INTERNATIONAL DAY FOR PEACE - Every day of my internship, I walk by the flags of the UN member states waving in front of the UN General Assembly building. I am consistently overwhelmed by the global efforts for peacemaking they represent.

At the Presbyterian Ministry at the United Nations, alongside the updates on current events and the measures taken to address international issues, I learn from building relationships within the network of peacemakers—people with unified hearts who work together for a world of love and freedom ...

CLICK HERE to read more.

Friday, September 18, 2015

From ServLife International: "Childhood Restored"

ServLife International is a movement defined by values of God’s kingdom, not programs built around human efforts and activities. The reign and rule of God should be made apparent to every person on the planet, despite their religion, race or socioeconomic status. We believe that issues of justice are inseparable from the good news that Jesus Christ came to proclaim. ServLife exists to take the gospel of Christ and the hope of a better, more just, world to the lives of people we touch. This happens through individual contributions of time, creativity, resources and dreams.



ServLife Photo
Childhood Restored

At age six Deepa was cleaning and working for her family instead of attending school. Following her father’s tragic death in a road accident Deepa’s mother was left with few options and put her children to work, joining her at her job as a janitor. Deepa’s older brother refused to work and left the family to make his own way. Her mother decided to move away and make a fresh start at life. Many widows in her situation would leave the children to live on the street and fend for themselves, but fortunately for Deepa and her sisters, their mother brought them to a ServLife children’s home ...

CLICK HERE to read the rest of this post from ServLife





Adam Nevins 
From Adam Nevins
Executive Director
ServLife International Inc.


Join Our Mission

ServLife International propels reconciliation and justice by building global community to plant churches, care for children and fight poverty. Compelled by the message, life and love of Jesus Christ, we seek to care for the spiritual, physical, social, and economic areas of life in northern India and Nepal.  Learn more about our latest news, featured stories, and how to get involved at servlife.org

Support a Pastor

Our church planters spread the love of Christ in some of the most difficult
 environments in the world.
Support Them ... 

Sponsor a Child

For only $30 per month you can help give a child food, education, care and, most importantly, hope.
Sponsor Now ... 

Fight Poverty

The HOPE Fund, our micro-finance program, provides start-up funds for a small business, paving a way out of poverty for families in need.
Learn More ...



ServLife International, Inc.
P.O. Box 20596
Indianapolis, IN 46220
USA


In the News ... "Poverty Simulation in Odessa Hopes to Reveal Global Issue"

• Begins Friday, September 18 at 1st Baptist-Odessa

Staff Report
KOSA-TV


ODESSA, TEXAS - From September 18 through 21, people can come on a self-guided journey where they are immersed in the life of children from Ethiopia or the Dominican Republic in poverty ...

read/watch the rest of this KOSA report 


Tuesday, September 15, 2015

Word from Uganda: Yes Lord ..."

Missionary teacher Natalie Rolfe writes, "'When He calls me, I will answer ... I'll be somewhere working for my Lord.' My call was Mbale, Uganda and that is where I have returned to serve for another year. Specifically, I am teaching phonics at Lulwanda Children's Home, an orphanage and school for 90 kids." Natalie also keeps an online journal of her service at the weblog, When He calls me, I will answer ...

Yes Lord ...


"Last January I was at a conference and the worship leader shared the Lord’s challenge to her. “Will you say ‘YES’ to the Lord, even before you know what the question is?” Because He is always good and always faithful, I have said a major “Yes, Lord” with hands surrendered and a heart open to what He has in store in this upcoming season of my life.

I will be going on a sabbatical for six months, departing Uganda October 3rd (and returning early April 2016) ..."


 • read the rest of Natalie's post ...

 • help raise funds for Natalie's mission ...

Monday, September 14, 2015

In the News ... "Religious leaders shared wealth of perspectives at Thursday's Interfaith Event"

MRT Photo by James Durbin
• Promote understanding, respect among faith groups

Trent Johnson, Reporter

Midland Reporter-Telegram

MIDLAND, TEXAS - Leaders from varied religions and denominations met to discuss a range of topics at Thursday’s fifth annual Interfaith Event held at the First Baptist Church.

Moderated by Russell Meyers, CEO of Midland Memorial Hospital, the event served as a think tank for leaders from different faiths, and allowed those in attendance to get a different perspective on a diverse range of issues including the Supreme Court’s recent ruling on same-sex marriage ...

 • read the rest of this MRT report

Friday, September 11, 2015

From ServLife International: "Eager to Learn"

ServLife International is a movement defined by values of God’s kingdom, not programs built around human efforts and activities. The reign and rule of God should be made apparent to every person on the planet, despite their religion, race or socioeconomic status. We believe that issues of justice are inseparable from the good news that Jesus Christ came to proclaim. ServLife exists to take the gospel of Christ and the hope of a better, more just, world to the lives of people we touch. This happens through individual contributions of time, creativity, resources and dreams.



ServLife Photo
Eager to Learn

Sweltering heat couldn’t squelch the joy and excitement in west Nepal this July as 130 teachers from 11 schools gathered for a three-day Teacher Training Conference. ServLife partners with local schools to provide education for over 350 children in India and Nepal through our child sponsors. Teachers from these schools asked ServLife to improve their teaching skills by bringing U.S. teachers to help them, leading to the first conference in 2013 ...

CLICK HERE to read the rest of this post from ServLife





Adam Nevins 
From Adam Nevins
Executive Director
ServLife International Inc.


Join Our Mission

ServLife International propels reconciliation and justice by building global community to plant churches, care for children and fight poverty. Compelled by the message, life and love of Jesus Christ, we seek to care for the spiritual, physical, social, and economic areas of life in northern India and Nepal.  Learn more about our latest news, featured stories, and how to get involved at servlife.org

Support a Pastor

Our church planters spread the love of Christ in some of the most difficult
 environments in the world.
Support Them ... 

Sponsor a Child

For only $30 per month you can help give a child food, education, care and, most importantly, hope.
Sponsor Now ... 

Fight Poverty

The HOPE Fund, our micro-finance program, provides start-up funds for a small business, paving a way out of poverty for families in need.
Learn More ...



ServLife International, Inc.
P.O. Box 20596
Indianapolis, IN 46220
USA


FBR's Dave Eubank coming to Midland

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). Ethnic pro-democracy 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.



First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas welcomes to the pulpit, this Sunday, Dave Eubank, Founder of Free Burma Rangers (FBR).

FBR has worked since 1997 bringing God's Kingdom to bear on the difficult situations ethnic groups in Burma are facing. They provide assistance in the form of basic necessities, health care and training. Recently they have also been able to work with some of the displaced people of Iraq. Dave's wife, Karen, and their three children, Sahale, Suu, and Peter, are also visiting this weekend.

Sunday, September 13 at 1st Presbyterian-Midland
Sanctuary: Dave Eubank, 8:15 and 11:00 a.m.
Scriptures: Psalm 77:16-20 and Luke 4:16-21
Sermon title: Why Does God Allow Pain and Suffering?

WATCH 11:00 A.M. SANCTUARY WORSHIP LIVE AT WWW.FPCMID.ORG

In the News ... "Texas Tech professor mends fences between science and faith"

Courtesy Photo
• FREE lecture Sunday at Midland College

Trent Johnson, Reporter

Midland Reporter-Telegram

MIDLAND, TEXAS - Religion and science are sometimes at odd with each other on the societal plane of existence. Often times these two sects of life square off in television debates, magazine articles and books to refute one another’s findings. Constantly the two studies are at each other’s throats, but why?

That’s a question Dr. Katharine Hayhoe, atmospheric scientist and director of the Texas Tech Climate Science Center, ponders often. As the daughter of a teacher of faith and science, Hayhoe has been successful in marrying her religious beliefs with her scientific endeavors.

In advance of her Faith and Science in Harmony presentation at Midland College on Sunday, sponsored by St. Nicholas Episcopal and Midland Lutheran Church, we talked to the professor about global warming politics, how science and religion stem from the same place and the amount of hate mail she gets ...

 • read the rest of this MRT report

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

WAW Wednesday: "... and they got it for peanuts!"

"The Word at Work is a ministry that mobilizes churches and individuals to answer God's call to minister to those in need," writes Rev. Tim Tam, Director of the Amarillo, Texas-based ministry. "Through our relationships, God reveals needs and opportunities for service. As we come along side the poor, new friendships develop and doors for ministry open. As we serve, God provides the resources to supply for the needs he reveals."


... and they got it for peanuts!

Hi Friends -

Healthy Peanuts & Healthy Partnership!

I recently wrote about the importance of holding to the "iron rule” in mission work i.e. Never do for others what they can do for themselves.

Here is an example of a healthy partnership between two churches, 
First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas and House of Praise Church of El Progresso Belize.

Both churches were putting their resources and their labor into finishing the floor and the walls of the new church building.



Then it came time to put on the roof. Generous team members from Midland wanted to see the project finished and could easily have written the check.

But wisdom prevailed. Rather than taking over ... the partnership continued. Midland agreed to match whatever El Progresso raised.

Taking stock of the local assets ... Though they could not match Midlands financial resources, they are truly hard-working farmers. So Midland also made them a loan to buy seed, which the church planted and now they'll be harvesting thousands of pounds of peanuts.


When the peanuts are sold they will be able to pay for their half of the roof and also repay the loan.

If I remember correctly they got their foundation by planting a field potatoes. And now they got the roof for peanuts. Yep, I said it again!


There is a time and place for charity, but if you move too quickly and apply it where it is not really needed, the locals lose their pride of accomplishment, the sense of ownership that comes with sweat, and the joy that comes from relationships and meaningful partnerships.

Good News

Solar project at the King's Home is nearing completion. Friday is the big day when we flip the switch on. Praying all goes well.


More Good News

Friday is also the day to pour the foundation for the Omega Church outreach building in Shawville. This will be a multipurpose building that facilitates a variety of ministries. Woman's shelter, kitchen for feeding program, sewing, computers, and music groups.


One More Thing ...

If you opened this looking for an opportunity to help, please click on the link below. Domestic Violence looms large in Belize and we need to support those who are trying to address the needs of women and children.

Mary Open Doors is one of our ministry partners and they can use your financial help to acquire a facility to be used as a shelter. Your contribution can grow on Bonus Day, September 16, when Global Giving will match all donations made!

Follow this link to find out how

Blessings,

TT (Tim Tam) The Word at Work

ps: Our Ministry Associate team gathers school supplies, toys, and stuffed animals through out the year ... we've discovered blankets are an ongoing need as well, so please be saving them, too. Click here to learn more about becoming a TW@W Ministry Associate, or get in touch with Tim Hagen for more information!


EDITOR'S NOTE: Speaking from my own first-hand experience - working side-by-side with Tim, Kenny and our brothers and sisters in Belize - won't you give thoughtful, prayerful consideration to supporting the efforts of Tim, the Word At Work staff and their partners? Please please fill out this Commitment Card and return it to their office!

Also, remember that you can follow The Word At Work on their Facebook page!

Peanuts in Belize


Hi Belize Teams,

I just wanted to share this picture with you. It's Julio with the field of peanuts the church has planted to raise money to pay back the loan we gave them for the construction of the roof. It is really exciting to see the way we've been able to cooperate with them on this project. They expect that the proceeds from this crop of peanuts (hopefully about 4,000 lbs. of peanuts) will cover the total amount of the loan.

Peace,

Walter Thompson
Associate Pastor of Mission and Evangelism
First Presbyterian Church, Midland, Texas