Monday, November 12, 2018

Talking With The Future

Each fall, Karen and I travel to Louisville, Kentucky to represent our mission at the Global Missions Health Conference (GMHC). GMHC is the largest conference in the United States focused on medical missions. Over 150 agencies, vendors, and service providers participated in this year's conference, November 8-10. The conference is an intense time of personal interaction, relational development, networking, recruiting, and mobilization with medical professionals, and future medical professionals, interested in mission service.

Our Team: Rachel, Karen, Me, and Greg

This year our team consisted of Rachel, Recruiting Administrator; Karen, Partnership Resource Manager; me, Director of Partnership Development; and Greg, VP of Personnel. Over the course of the conference we made over 100 solid connections with individuals, couples, and families interested in learning more about joining Global Outreach Mission in revealing Christ to the world.

Greg

Rachel

Karen

Greg shares one of our ministry brochures.

Karen leads a tour of Pioneer Christian Hospital, our medical facility in the Republic of Congo, using our touch-screen kiosk.

Thank your for joining us at the conference through your prayerful and financial partnership!

Monday, November 5, 2018

To Africa With Love

You may remember my May 17 blog about making dresses for "Dress A Girl Around the World." I'm excited to share that girls in the village of Msholozi, South Africa are now wearing those dresses!


Holgar & Maria, friends of ours from Germany who serve in South Africa, connected with us prior to their recent visit to the US. When Maria learned that my friend Cindy and I had sewn the dresses, Maria shared that she worked in a camp with a group of girls that desperately needed new dresses! And to have dresses sewn by hand specifically for them and sent with Christ's love would be even more special to the girls. While Cindy and I had made 13 dresses, Maria said she needed 31!


Keith's Mom in California financed the project so I had everything needed to keep sewing. Our friends Chris and Kathy from Ohio were vacationing on the Outer Banks, heard about the dresses, and offered to stop on their way home and take them back to Coshocton. Holgar & Maria would stop in Coshocton, pack the dresses, and hand-carry them to South Africa, and the girls in the camp.

Chris & Kathy stop in Graham to pick up the dresses.

Maria delivered and distributed the dresses to her girls. Here are photos of some of the girls in their dresses. Thanks for sharing these, Maria! The smiles on the girls' faces makes my heart glad!










Here we are with the first of the dresses back in May.


Gods hands worked in North Carolina, Pennsylvania, California, Ohio, Germany, and South Africa to create and deliver these dresses to bless girls in a tiny camp in a small village. Faith relationships going back 20 years...bearing fruit in ways unimagined. Can dresses have eternal impact? Maybe not the fabric itself, but the hands and hearts that sewed, drove, stored, packed, traveled, and delivered the dresses...just might. 

Thanks for being part of this Kingdom Adventure through your gifts and your prayers!

If you'd like to have your hands and heart involved in projects like these...you don't have to be able to sew, leave your home, OR know girls in Africa!

Just CLICK HERE!

Saturday, September 29, 2018

The Blind Finch

This week our focus in Sunday School was on "awareness of creation." We were encouraged to not only spend time exploring silence but also to be outside in order to observe God's creation. To be still. To stop activity and sit or stand until we see and hear things we haven't seen or heard or paid attention to in a long time. Like birds singing or moisture dripping from leaves after a rain storm. Like crickets or bumble bees. Like thrashing branches as squirrels leap from tree to tree, invisible to the eye but vibrant to the ears. And if quiet enough, long enough, maybe even hear God's voice for a moment or sense his Spirit in the swirling morning mist. Who knew what would happen if we were silent, still, and open.

The sun had risen, though still well hidden behind the thick wood-stand behind our house. The pre-dawn fog had faded to a cooling mist as I stood in our back yard. The sky turned from gray overcast to blue. I was quiet. I was looking. I was listening. Five feet away were our bird feeders, assorted shapes and sizes filled with song bird mix, thistle, and dried meal worms. Birds are part of our landscape--a multicolored winged pallet of God's colors. The quiet, the bird food, the woods provided a wonderful place to be aware of Creation.

Those of you who follow our blog know about our birds. Birds that God loans to us each day, week, month, year...to enjoy, laugh at, take photos of, and marvel over. And the usual suspects were here as I stood there: Chickadee, Cardinal, Goldfinch, Sparrow, Tit-Mouse, Carolina Wren, Blue Bird, Brown-headed Nuthatch...and a female House Finch. But this Finch was different. I moved closer, the wet lawn soaked my sneakers. All the other birds took off for the tree line. But not this Finch.

I moved closer still. She just sat and ate her food like I wasn't even there. The woods grew quiet. I talked to her in a gentle voice. "Hello, little Finch. What are you doing today?" I drew close enough to touch her.

I noticed her during my silent time yesterday and realized she was different. Calmer. I had even prayed for her as she didn't fly well. In fact, she flew in little flutters up and down a little forward, up and down a little forward...Hesitant, yet confident. But that was yesterday and today I was stroking her with my finger as she sat there and ate. She could not see. There was something wrong with her eyes. She was blind.


God's voice. Do you want to hear God's voice? Get up early, go outside, discover a blind bird, watch her eat to her belly's limit, let her climb onto your finger, and be aware of creation.


Photos by Karen

Monday, August 20, 2018

August 2018 Photo Update

 Salsa Season was short but intense this year!

Our Jalapeno and Banana Pepper plants are still producing.

Our latest Candidate Orientation Class went well in Canada.

Not all training happened at the office.

 However, it wasn't all work and no play!

Avondale Dairy Bar is only 5 miles from our Niagara-On-The-Lake location.

Karen and I were blessed to enjoy a long, humidity free, walk along the Niagara River after orientation.


Thanks for being part of our ministry!

Sunday, July 29, 2018

Tucker's Take on Orientation

Hi Everyone! Tucker here. I don't usually do blogs (I try to stick to newsletter writing). However, Keith and Karen have been so busy with putting on an orientation for the new Global Outreach Mission missionaries up in Ontario I can see they need some assistance. So, I thought I'd give an update on life at home while they are gone.

You see, I DO have my own door to go inside and out but I don't have HANDS!!! That means I have to find someone that has hands so I can eat. After all, that IS the main thing in life, RIGHT!? I used to have the people across the street trained to come feed me but they moved....it's hard to keep good help! So, I sent a photo and asked if my friends Scott and Laurie would come take care of me:

Dear Scott & Laurie, Keith and Karen are leaving me again. 
Would you PLEASE come and take care of me?

When Keith and Karen are home I gobble up everything they drop in my dish or anything that falls off of "Food Island" when they are cooking in the kitchen. However, when other folks are coming to care for me I find that being a bit finicky pays big dividends! For instance, if I hesitate to eat my food when Scott and Laurie come they find some tomato juice in the fridge to pour on my food! Woo Hoo! Sometimes they even cut up a fresh tomato right out of the garden and add it to my dish! I sure do love Scott and Laurie. Life is good when the dog owners are away....as long as you find someone with hands who loves you.

YUM!!!!

So, you may ask what I do besides eat when Keith and Karen are gone. I'm 105 in dog years....

Resting

I sleep until it's time to go to the front door to greet Scott and Laurie!

It's hard work guarding the house while Keith and Karen are gone but someone has to do it and I'm the dog on duty! One day soon it will be Keith and Karen coming through that garage door and I will be one happy pup!

Look for more blogs to come. They always come home with great stories from their missionary orientations.
Scott. Laurie. Is it time to eat yet? 

Monday, July 9, 2018

How's Your Week?

SOME SUNDAYS ARE LIKE THIS:
 Narrating the story of Joseph as part of a special Children's Sermon.


SOME  MONDAYS ARE LIKE THIS:
Trying to find my way through the administrative reality of international missions.


SOME WEDNESDAYS ARE LIKE THIS:
Operating with four note pads and lists of assorted sizes.


SOME FRIDAYS ARE LIKE THIS:
Karen makes life and ministry so much better!

But no matter what each day of the week is like, we praise God for each one of you partnering with us in this eternal adventure. Thank you for your gifts and prayers which make you primary players in sharing the love and the compassion of Jesus around the world.

Monday, July 2, 2018

Thursday, May 17, 2018

Dress A Girl

Recently I became aware of an organization called "Dress A Girl Around The World".

Labels to be sewn onto our dresses

Though "labeling" people is generally something we work against, labeling on a dress can give the impression of belonging to and perhaps being watched over by an organization. That little label just might keep a little girl from being targeted for trafficking. For that reason, we'll add one to each dress.

Since I enjoy sewing and being creative I was inspired by this organization to work on some dresses that can be sent for young girls across the world who may otherwise never have a dress to call their own. God had provided some fabrics for me to use at minimal cost and my good friend Cindy was coming for her annual visit in May. Over the years Cindy and I have worked on many crafting projects together, most recently it's been quilting, but this time we decided to focus on making dresses for missions. Good friends, fun, good food, catching up on life, creating pretty things to share with those in need, what more could we ask???

Keith was sweet enough to allow us to take over the whole house for a few days with all of our sewing paraphernalia! Sewing machines moved to the living room desk and to the kitchen table. Cutting mats and fabrics covered the kitchen island. Buttons and thread of all colors lay on ottoman and sofa. Bins of fabrics had to be stepped over when navigating the hallway. The ironing board stood in the middle of the entryway. But, no worries, no one was injured in the making of these dresses!

Me at the sewing machine in the living room

Cindy and me with the first four dresses we made

 ...and four more

11 of the 13 dresses we made (some are not quite finished in this photo)

In the end we were able to complete 13 dresses before Cindy had to head back to Pennsylvania. I had to "find" the house and catch up on all things forgotten for those few days. We had a great time!

Have YOU got some cute cotton fabrics laying around at YOUR house? Why not make them into some dresses to share with little girls around the world? Dress A Girl Around The World is one organization of many who would accept dresses. Their website gives good insights into how to go about making dresses that are suitable for giving.

Thank you for the privilege of serving in missions around the world in many different ways!

Tuesday, May 1, 2018

New Blog Look, New Bird Shots!

Yes, you've arrived at the correct blog! 
How do you like the new look?

Karen and I hope you find this version easier to read yet just as easy to enjoy. 

Here are a few bird shots to launch our redesigned page.

Goldfinch

Rose Breasted Grosbeak 

Indigo Bunting

White-Throated Sparrow 

 Northern Cardinal

Eastern Bluebird