15 November 2009

Harvest Dinner Story #1


On Saturday night, we were at Hillcrest Baptist Church for the Harvest Dinner. We told this story as part of our presentation:

A young Sudanese man made his way to our SIM base in January 2007. We had announced to the village that we needed help to clear land and build houses. The goal in that area was to establish a primary school for adults and later a secondary school. Jobs in this village were particularly scarce, so we had plenty of workers. The work was physically demanding. The heat was oppressive. One could work up a sweat by simply stepping out of the shade. And these young men were slashing grass with machetes, cutting down thorn trees by hand, bundling and transporting huge bails of dried grass and sticks of bamboo, and chasing away the occasional snake or scorpion.

He wasn’t much different than the other workers we had. He was part of one of the smaller tribes of South Sudan. Some had learned a bit of English from refugee camps during the years of war. They were known to be short, stout, and black as the midnight sky. They had markings carved on their cheeks that were distinct from other tribes. They were hard-working, soft-spoken, and very polite people. He told me his name – his tribal name. I couldn’t pronounce it. Then someone said, “His church name is Yuna, like Jonah.” He was just like his fellow tribesmen, but there was a difference. While some talked, joked, and even sang as they worked… he simply labored in relative solitude. He looked sad. His eyes were “dark” and his face gaunt. He had a “church” name, so perhaps he was saved. It was possible, but I didn’t think so.

After 6 weeks of work, the temperature was climbing to 110F degrees by 11am, and often up to 122F in the heat of the day. It was difficult to keep enough fluids in the body. The sweat stopped. It was evaporating off our skin as soon as it squeezed through our pores. Many of the enthusiastic new employees from January became beleaguered and ornery, just working for the weekly wage. But the money wasn’t keeping up with the heat. More than half our work force had simply disappeared. I didn’t blame them. The shade was the only bearable refuge. So the fact that I noticed Yuna’s absence didn’t necessarily startle me. But I asked about him anyway. “He’s become tired,” someone said. “It is very difficult work and the sun is very hot.” Maybe he would rest for a week and come back. Three more weeks passed and we hadn’t seen him at all; not even in the village during our visiting, not even in the market on Tuesdays. That was the day Ethiopian traders arrived each week with their donkeys. It was the only day to buy things other than coffee, tea, and sugar. The clothes they brought often reminded me of early 1990’s fashion in the USA. Everyone was in the market on Tuesdays, but Yuna was nowhere to be found.

Back at the SIM base one day I asked about him again. My question brought very concerned looks. “He’s gone to the clinic,” they said. “There’s blood.” They were motioning as if to indicate that he was coughing blood and had serious diarrhea. This was a problem. I have no medical training at all, but I had heard once that blood in the system like that was an indication of tuberculosis, a common ailment associated with AIDS. We decided to visit him in the clinic the next day. It was a long, hot, uncomfortable night. Sleep eluded me for several hours and then morning came.

We ate breakfast and made our way from the base, across the river, to town. On the way, we learned that he had been sent home after being treated for the diarrhea. His house was among a cluster of other houses, all built with wooden poles, mud walls and a grass roof – circular, nearly 8 feet in diameter. The door was typical, only about 4 feet tall. We crouched to enter the dark and very quiet house. There was one bed and he was lying on it, facing the opposite direction. He was motionless. Only shallow breathing let us know he was still alive. And judging by the smells in the room, I guessed it might only last a little longer. All we could do for him was pray… and so we did. It was simple so our translator could understand, “Jesus, we love this young man. We know that you love him too. We want him to be healed. We will know that you did it if his body becomes good.” Then we left.

It was two weeks later, early March by now. The morning sun brought its usual heat and saw the day’s workers as they came up the hill. It was more of the same: slashing grass, cutting poles, slapping mud on the walls of the houses. But that day brought an unexpected surprise. He was very thin. His clothes hung off his body, made loose with weight loss. He was almost a skeleton. He said through his friend’s translation, “I want to come and work again.” And he smiled. There was a brightness in his eyes and on his face. Something more than just physical healing had happened. He had changed inside. We let him work on a very limited basis and kept a very close watch. His friend helped him with a sort-of “parental” care. It was like this until May, when time came to open the primary school.

Prospective students arrived from up to 15 miles away to take an entrance exam. Of the 250 that came, we were limited to accepting only 35. There weren’t enough teachers, books, or other materials to handle a larger enrollment. Yuna was among the 35 with whom the school started. He wasn’t the most gifted student, but came on time every day (even in the rainy season, when they were swimming against the raging current to come). And he worked hard. Above the other subjects, he took to math; surprising, since his tribesmen called it the “the great enemy of our people!” He worked closely with a Kenyan contractor and learned to frame windows, plumb a perpendicular wall, and lay a perfectly flat concrete floor. He talked, laughed, and sang as he did. The Lord had done a miracle in him!

This past summer, some of our teammates with SIM contacted us by email. They said that Yuna and his wife had a baby boy. It’s custom in the Uduk tribe for the children to take the name of their father. Yuna’s son has a very unique name for his tribe. He is called “Nate Yuna”, perhaps a way of saying, “thanks for coming and praying for me that day.”

Harvest Dinner Story #2


On Saturday night, we were at Hillcrest Baptist Church for the Harvest Dinner. We told this story as part of our presentation:

It was one of the first showers of the rainy season in April 2008. That morning I had trudged along the path to the clinic in my rubber boots, enjoying the refreshing light drizzle and surveying the bright green shoots of grass pushing their way out of the parched brown earth. I inhaled the refreshing cool breeze, wondering when the heavy downpour would begin.

Back on the SIM compound, 2 of my teammates busied themselves with final preparations for a trip south, to Kenya, for some rest from their work and the difficult conditions in South Sudan. The airplane was expected in the mid-morning—a pilot and 2 ladies from a different SIM base along the Nile were due to come and pick up my teammates. We looked at the gray clouds and wet conditions with uncertainty. But the pilot had planned ahead, left early, and was able to safely land on our dirt airstrip at around 9 am.

After they landed, the rain gradually became heavier and they spent the morning on our compound waiting for a break in the weather. By 11 am the rain let up a bit and the pilot went out to assess the condition of the airstrip, deciding it was safe to take off. He and the 4 ladies packed their bags in the single engine aircraft and prepared to leave.

At lunch time, the clinic staff returned to the compound to eat and as we were loading up our plates with rice and beans, we heard the familiar roar of the engine as the plane taxied down the runway a short distance from the compound. All of a sudden, we heard a strange thud and all was eerily silent. Vicki, one of my teammates, came frantically running toward the dining hall shouting, “The plane’s down!” My heart sank into my stomach, fearing the worst. I grabbed Vicki by the arm and together we raced toward the airstrip, crying and whimpering “Lord, please, no!” By this time, the rain was falling quite steadily and the black cotton soil between the compound and the airstrip was becoming very slippery. We held onto each other for comfort and balance as we slowly inched our way to where the plane had fallen.

The whole village was converging on the plane—people running from every direction in the rain. The wife of a church elder caught up with us and grabbed Vicki’s other arm, helping to steady us. The fear in her eyes was the same as in ours. “Juang magde!” she whispered in the local language. “God will heal!” We still couldn’t see the plane, until we climbed a small hill. There it was, completely upside down in a clearing, the wings hanging precariously off, a total shambles. Several villagers and missionaries were removing bodies from the plane. I burst into tears as we ran the rest of the way. “They must be dead—there’s no way they could have survived this!” I thought.

The next several hours are a bit of a blur now. The rain continued to fall as we worked together to help the pilot and 4 women. Men carried traditional Sudanese beds to use as stretchers to carry the ladies through the mud back to the compound. People huddled around, trying to help in whatever way they could. As a team, we rushed from pilot to passenger, taking vital signs, giving pain killers and IV fluids, offering words of comfort and praying with them.

The Lord provided help through a friend in the United Nations later in the day. A UN helicopter arrived to take the wounded to a hospital in the state capital for initial treatment. The next day they were transferred to Kenya to receive further care.

Miraculously, all survived! The pilot and one lady had some broken bones. Another had severe soft tissue injuries to her neck and shoulders and needed physical therapy for several months. The other 2 had head injuries—one suffered from dizziness and headaches for a while and the other felt very grateful that the only lasting effect was that she could remember nothing of the incident at all!
You’re probably wondering what had caused the plane to crash. Most of the airstrip was safe to take off from but there was a soft wet patch towards the end and we believe it slowed the plane right at take-off, so that it couldn’t reach critical flying speed. We never heard the final report about technical aspects involving the aircraft itself.

These are the obvious causes but as the Sudanese help to remind us, there are always things going on in the unseen realm that we may not be aware of. After the crash I heard a rumor that some had seen a mysterious woman dressed in black dancing around the crash site. Was she a witchdoctor who had placed a curse on the airplane? Or was she simply one of the crowd, wailing and mourning for the pain of the passengers? We’ll probably never know but we do know there is a lot of spiritual bondage related to witchcraft in the area. At one point, just after the plane crashed, the ladies were suspended upside down in the plane, hanging from their seat belts. One of them was stuck and couldn’t get out. A large Sudanese man appeared and cut her seatbelt, gently lowering her to the ground. No one knows who he was. Maybe he was a villager who arrived early on the scene. Some have speculated that he was actually an angel.

What is certain to us is that the Lord protected and spared the lives of the pilot and 4 passengers on that rainy April day. As we surveyed the crash scene, neither missionary nor Sudanese villager could deny the hand of God in our midst. We praised the Lord—we had seen a miracle.

12 August 2009

Summer Prayer Letter


Dear Friends,
Thank you for your prayers for our family over the last few months! We’ve seen the Lord answer in so many wonderful ways, which we’d like to share with you.

Amy’s US Permanent Residency
The interview in Montreal in June was successful and Amy was granted an immigrant visa the following week. On July 1st, we crossed the US border and traveled to Nate’s hometown. Amy’s permanent resident card arrived last week in the mail so it’s all official now. We’re going to be living here until early January, when we hope to return to Sudan.

Getting ready for Baby

The Lord provided a great team of midwives that we’ve been seeing for prenatal care and a hospital where the baby will be born, just south of here in Pennsylvania. We’re gearing up for her arrival—she’s due very soon now, on Sept. 3rd!
We have a place to bring her home to now as well. Last week we moved into a house that we’ll be renting for the next 5 months and we’re enjoying getting settled here. It was so exciting to finally unpack our suitcases and put clothing in drawers for a while. Several people from our church have graciously lent us furniture and kitchen essentials—it’s amazing how it all came together.

Home Assignment Ministry
We are continuing to connect with our supporting churches and some new churches here and the surrounding area. We have several opportunities to share about the ministry in Sudan or serve the church in some way during the month of August and will continue in the fall after the baby comes. On the weekend of August 8-9, we were in central NY to present at a church there. We had the Sunday school hour to share the Lord’s work in Sudan and then presented a missions drama before Nate preached in the worship service.

Financial Update
After doing a careful review of our monthly support over the last few months, we’ve concluded that we’re receiving 71% of the new “small family” level that we need to have in place before we return to Sudan. That means that we still need to raise $1694 US per month. You may remember that that is a similar figure to the one we gave in our spring letter. We’ve lost some support in the last few months but then recently have had quite a few individuals and 2 churches join our support team as well as several others that are interested so we are encouraged that the Lord is providing for us. Please continue to pray for His provision and if He should lead you to help support us, be in touch somehow. We are so thankful for the many people that stand by us in prayer and financial support!

SIM Koma-Ganza ministry in Sudan
Throughout this year, we’ve been asking people to pray for the unreached Koma and Ganza peoples of South Sudan and for the formation of a team to live among them and share the Gospel. Within the last few weeks, an exciting step forward was taken by a group of our teammates in Yabus along with 3 Sudanese church leaders. They took a trip on foot deep into the heart of the Ganza land to find where the main villages are located and to meet with chiefs and villagers. They were well received and were able to find out useful information about water sources and people’s livelihoods and begin to share about who God is. They found that the people were eager to hear and to learn. Such exciting news!
Following this trip, the team has made recommendations as to where a base for Ganza ministry might be located. Please pray for wisdom and the leading of the Spirit as the challenges are great: remote area with limited roads, very few water sources, spiritual darkness – an opportunity for the Lord to show His great power and love for these people! Please continue to pray that He will guide our involvement in this ministry upon our return to Sudan.
Thank you for your prayers!
Blessings,
Nate & Amy

22 July 2009

In the USA

We've now been in Nate's hometown for 3 weeks and we're working on setting up a house which we'll be renting for the next few months. Many people from our church here have offered various pieces of furniture and baby things for us to borrow while we're here and we feel very blessed as we see God providing for us. It looks like we'll be able to move in in the next few days.

As you may have guessed, we received my immigrant visa at the end of June so we could finally cross the border and I became a permanent resident of the US. Up until now we've been staying with Nate's mom and catching up with people around here and doing all the errands involved in moving me to a new country.

We're getting very excited about our baby coming--the due date is only 6 weeks away now! We have a great midwife and have been through the childbirth classes at the hospital. Grandma Kidder has been collecting baby girl clothes and we've received some beautiful gifts. We're excited to get settled in our house and get things set up for the baby.

Plans for the next few weeks: We're starting to make plans to share in various churches in the area, as we continue to prepare to return to Sudan in January. Please pray that the Lord will provide the remaining financial and prayer support that we need. We're really thankful for the new people and churches that have joined our support team in recent weeks as well as the many who have continued to support us throughout our home assignment.

Please pray for us as we make the big transition into parenthood in just a few weeks!

05 July 2009

Happy Anniversary Sweetheart!


Today, July 5th, Nate and I are celebrating our 1st anniversary! I can't believe we've been married for a year already! We've had a wonderful year, a year of learning and growth, laughter and tears, joys and challenges. I calculated that we've called 9 different houses or apartments home during our first year or marriage, in Kenya, Canada, and the United States. Sometimes it's been for 3 months, sometimes for 3 weeks. It hasn't always been easy and neither of us prefers such a transient lifestyle but I think we've learned to be "home" for each other in a unique way, a way that we'll need during our years in Africa. All year I've carried around in my suitcase a framed wedding picture of us, which I take out and put by our bedside when we get settled at each location. That has also created a little bit of home for me, wanting to remember our main reason for being in North America this year, and that is to build a strong marriage before we return to Sudan to begin a new ministry.

The beginning of July also marks a different anniversary for me--2 years ago I arrived in Nairobi for the first time on July 1st as a new missionary to Sudan. As a single missionary, I believed God had me in that position in life for His own purposes, to glorify Himself through my life. I felt fulfilled in Him and enjoyed my early days of learning in Sudan. However, it didn't take me long to begin sensing that the Lord wanted to do a new thing in my life, and that that might involve marriage. The more I interacted with Sudanese mothers and children, the more He gave me a deep desire to minister to them as a wife and mother myself. I waited...

I didn't need to wait long! I met my wonderful husband Nate on an airstrip in Sudan at the end of that October. If you'd like to read the whole story, see my posts from Oct. 23rd, 2008 and following, written a year after the exciting events!

So here we are, married a year and expecting our first baby in about 8 weeks! I believe the Lord has given us to each other and wants to glorify Himself through our marriage and our family. When you pray for us, please pray for His blessing and protection over our marriage and our little baby as we get ready to return to Sudan.

18 June 2009

U.S. Immigration Interview in Montreal

Thanks to all who prayed for us while we were in Montreal. Amy's interview was successful and she is now a permanent resident of the USA. After a 9-month process, we are finally done! Please email us or leave a comment if you would like more information.

Our plans still involve time in the US extending until shortly after New Year, upon which time we will return to Sudan to work with the Koma/Ganza tribes. Our support level has reached 72%, with about 4-5% of additional support committed. Thank the Lord with us for His provision and keep praying for the additional 23-24%. Have a wonderful day!!

12 June 2009

Learn about the Ganza people

I just wanted to direct you again to one of our website links down the page and to the right--a blog called Loriann in Sudan. Loriann is one of our SIM Sudan teammates, beginning a new work among the Ganza people, one of the 2 people groups that we're praying about for our future ministry. She's recently written some very interesting posts and I thought you might enjoy reading them. I particularly enjoyed the 2 most recent posts called "Reveal Your Love Oh Lord" and "Ready in 5 Hours". The Lord is really working among the Ganza!

Please pray for us next week. We'll be driving to Montreal this Sunday for my US immigration interview on Tuesday morning. Please pray that all will go smoothly there and that they will send me my visa soon afterward. We're anxious to get to the States to share in several churches that have invited us to come and of course to prepare for the birth of our baby in September!

30 May 2009

BBC Interview with Sudanese President

On 14 May 2009, BBC aired an interview with the current president of Sudan. We thought many of you might find it interesting. We watched it from Calgary, AB Canada during one of our visits there as we continue to raise support. We're now in Southern Ontario and will move to the USA upon the completion of the immigration process.

We covet your prayers about the additional 30% of support that we need to raise. Thanks... here's the link... (copy and paste it into a new window).
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/hardtalk/8050309.stm

23 April 2009

5 Loaves and 2 Fish


On a recent trip to Alberta, we were blessed with several opportunities to share about our ministry in Sudan. In one such instance, we told the congregation about all the material things they'd have to eliminate from their lives to better relate to the Sudanese (particularly the tribes with whom we'll be working).

Schools, hospitals, books, roads, cars, churches, and snow (which most of them were quite happy about!) were some on our list.

We returned back home with the friends we stayed with and had a wonderful discussion over lunch. We talked about the need in Sudan and they read to their children from a Kids Devotional Bible. It was the story of the miraculous events in John 6:1-15. This really impressed their 5-year old son. The wheels started spinning in his mind. He was thinking of a good answer to his dad's question, "what could you give to Jesus?" His recent birthday and Easter gifts had left him with $15... which for a boy his age must seem like a million bucks!

After a few minutes, he said it would be good to give $5 to help the people in Sudan. I glanced at my wife... her eyes were welling up with tears. We were touched. The Lord was taking care of Sudan through this young boy. And so here it is, pictured above. The five dollar bill that I carry with me serves as a reminder that Jesus can use any size offering to produce miraculous results. One day, you'll see this five dollars in the hands of some Sudanese person. I promised I would hand deliver it!!

28 March 2009

Franklin Graham Interview

We just want to share a very interesting video that includes Franklin Graham (Samaritan's Purse) on the Al-Jazeera television network.

The discussion involves the ICC's decision to issue an arrest warrant for President Omar Al-Bashir of Sudan. Is it beneficial to advance the peace process in Darfur and South Sudan? Or is it detrimental to alienate such a major player in the implementation of the CPA (Comprehensive Peace Agreement)?

You'll find it very interesting! Copy and paste this link:

http://link.brightcove.com/services/player/bcpid1534611823?bclid=900701426&bctid=15256243001

Enjoy... and check out the sermon from the blog entry below (Support Raising). God bless!

24 March 2009

Support Raising

www.fbcpa.net/sermons-online/recorded-sermons/


Sorry that it has been a month since we last updated everyone. We've been very busy raising support so that we can get back to Sudan. During the last 2 weeks, I've been able to preach at 2 different churches here.

If you're interested, the sermon from this last week can be found at the site below the photo... and you'll notice SIM Sudan as one of the options further down the page. We are praying about churches and individuals who could come alongside us financially and in prayer. God bless!

28 February 2009

Sudanese friends are never far away!



Nate and I have had the opportunity to get to know a family here in Prince Albert from the same tribe in Sudan where I was serving. In fact, Martha, the wife and mother of 4 is from D. area, the very village where I was! It's a small world! My parents got to know them while we were in Sudan and then introduced us when we arrived. We've had some good visits with them, practicing our Arabic (Nate) and M. (me) language skills a bit and talking about familiar people and places in Sudan that we all know.

The other day I went to visit Martha and 2 other Sudanese ladies that I've met before were there visiting her too. They began making kisera, the Sudanese flatbread (thin like a crepe) that is eaten on special occasions, usually with a meat stew. They don't have sorghum flour available here, so instead they used a mixture of wheat and corn flours. Here are 2 pictures for you to compare, one of a Sudanese lady making kisera in Sudan and one of these ladies making kisera in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan! People definitely bring their culture with them when they come to North America and find ways to adapt it as well. Can you spot some of the differences and similarities between these 2 photos?

By the way, in both situations I was asked to try my hand at making kisera. In Sudan, I mildly burned my fingers, to the great delight of my friend's children! In Prince Albert, I managed to make a few lumpy pieces of something that probably can't be called kisera, but at least I didn't burn myself and a great time was had by all! Afterwards, I got to sample some of the kisera and stew made from okra and beef and it was delicious. If I wasn't sitting in a Prince Albert apartment looking out the window at the snow, I would have thought I was back in Sudan!

25 February 2009

The Man, The Myth, The Legend






1. Meeting Wayne Gretzky... though he wasn't very talkative! (click to enlarge)







2. Outside the arena where the Edmonton Oilers play (NHL Hockey).

3. PLEASE read the post below for our REAL purpose in Edmonton!!

Our REAL Purpose in Edmonton!

What are Sudan missionaries doing in Canada? I'm glad you asked because we need your prayers. Today it's -9F outside and we're happy to be inside. But over the weekend we were out and about, taking a trip to Edmonton, Alberta for Missions Fest 2009. The roads were like the one pictured here... snow-covered and slick.

We heard that a missionary to Columbia would be the keynote speaker... a man named Bruce Olson. If you're unaware of his story, allow me to strongly recommend his book "Bruchko" from Amazon.com or your local Christian bookstore. It will change your life... really... it's that good. After one session, we were able to meet him briefly though we missed a perfect photo opportunity.

During our trip, we were able to connect with some dear friends in the area and plant a seed to connect with a church. And there's your answer... what are Sudan missionaries doing in Canada? Connecting with churches. Most of you know that we are raising support ($1927/month) before we can return to Sudan. Many of you don't know that we are praying about 4 churches with whom we have been in contact recently. Please pray that these 4 (2 in NE United States, 1 in Alberta, 1 in Saskatchewan) will feel the Lord's call to support us. We have been encouraged by the possibility of being supported by a Southern Baptist Church in the area and are praying about a second in SE United States.

Please pray for us. And if you're reading this thinking, "I'd like to help support this family" or "I could help them connect with my church"... please be in touch. The Lord will bless the gift and the giver. Thank you! And another "thank you" to all who have made this decision already.

23 February 2009

Prayer Request

Hi Everyone,
We got an email from our director recently asking for prayer concerning Sudan's National Election in July.

"Please be aware that the July national election mandated by the CPA (Comprehensive Peace Agreement - see link below)...

http://www.issafrica.org/AF/profiles/Sudan/darfur/compax/index.htm

will certainly have an effect on our ministries. I believe that people must vote in their home areas. This fact I have gathered from GTC principal Phillip E. who is allowing his students to return home in July for the purpose of voting.

I advise all project managers and administrators to plan for students and/or workers to go to polling places as the time for the election approaches. Specifically Community Health Worker training, Basic Education Learning Centers, and Secondary School should plan the school year to allow for this disruption."

Pray that the election process would be peaceful and that ministries currently running would be allowed to continue. God bless!

19 February 2009

Our Recent Prayer Letter


Dear Friends,
Proverbs 16:9 says, “In his heart a man plans his course, but the Lord determines his steps.” In this letter we’d like to tell you a bit about the journey we’ve been on and how the Lord has been directing our steps for the future.

Past Journey
This is our first official prayer letter as a married couple! Before we got married, Nate spent a year and a half in Yabus, South Sudan serving in SIM’s adult primary education program as an English and math teacher. Amy spent almost a year in Doro, South Sudan helping to start SIM’s primary health care center as a children’s nurse. We met on the Yabus airstrip in October 2007 and were married on the coast of Kenya on July 5th, 2008.

Present Journey
After we got married, our mission leadership felt it would be best for us to spend a year at home building a strong marriage and sharing with people the vision the Lord is giving us for the future. This is exactly what we’re working on, as well as applying for Amy’s permanent residency in the US. Until now, we’ve spent most of our time in Canada due to immigration restrictions but we hope to move down into the US in March if possible.

We also have some very exciting news to share with you! We’re expecting a baby in early September! We’re thankful for this gift the Lord has entrusted us with and look forward to becoming a family of 3.

Future Journey
Because of the baby’s arrival in September, we are due to return to Sudan in January, 2010. We feel like the Lord is leading us to participate in a new ministry to either the Koma or Ganza, 2 tribes south of Yabus who are largely unreached by the Gospel.

We can’t do it alone! We trust the Lord to raise up many more prayer warriors to stand with us. Also, before we return to the field, we need to raise an additional $1927 US per month for our support account and $280 US per month for our ministry account. This increase is due to a shortfall in our support as singles and to increased costs for a small family. If you have any questions about this, we have a detailed outline of our support needs that we can share with you. We trust that God will be faithful to provide for us, as He has in the past. We will attach a gift form to any email, which will explain how to support our ministry, should the Lord lead you that way. Or give online at:

http://www.sim.org/index.php/content/donate

Thank you so much for your prayers and financial support in our journey thus far! We intend to send out a prayer letter 4 times a year through CRISTA Missionary Letter Service (so open mail from them!!), and keep you updated for prayer requests by emailing our prayer team. Please send us your postal/email address if you’d like to receive things. God bless!

02 February 2009

Canadian Conversion on "Super Sunday"

Many of you know that yesterday was a national "holiday" in the USA. In fact, there were a couple of reasons to call it "Super Sunday". For starters, the preaching went really well and the Lord blessed us all with His Word. Part of my calling as a missionary is to teach the Bible, and so any time I have that chance, it is a wonderful experience (whether in Africa or North America). I've had the chance to preach a few times using Arabic in Sudan and have really enjoyed it.

Of course, the Super Bowl was a great game as well. I knew at the end of the first half that the Cardinals would be haunted by that interception return touchdown. I just didn't know they had that much fight in them to come back the way they did.

Preaching wasn't the only ministry happening though! Ok, I tread close to the shoreline of heresy here. But I believe I witnessed a true conversion throughout the last few weeks. As the NFL playoffs went on, my Canadian wife slowly turned from "reading a book during the game" to "sweaty palms enthusiastic fan". She went from "those big guys just fall on each other" to "throw the ball deep to Fitzgerald!"

It was her first Super Bowl... her first Super Bowl party... her first "gut ache" from pulling for the underdog that almost won such a well-fought battle. Or was that the "nachos-brownies-cheese puffs-Dr. Pepper" combo?

At the end of the night, she was converted... fully... passionately... and irrevocably to NFL fanship. It was a Canadian Conversion of monumental proportions. Next we'll work on NASCAR!!

29 January 2009

New Additions

We just wanted to say that our prayer letter is coming out soon. Within the next few weeks, look for it in your inbox/mailbox... unless you haven't given us any contact information. Thanks!

We're still freezing in Saskatchewan... looking forward to becoming a family of 3. Please pray for me (Nate) as I'll be preaching on Sunday. The sermon is titled "Caught Between 2 Kingdoms" from Colossians 3:1-4. We'll be in touch again soon!

22 January 2009

The Amusing Mail Mis-Hap!


We were asked by an immigration agent to give our address in Sudan in order to prove that we work there. How do you give an address for the house pictured above? I almost burst out laughing... wanting to say, "Tukul #4; Rural Riverside Rte. 1; Village "Y"; Blue Nile State, South Sudan 2Ha L0L". Surely any postal service in the world would find me, right?

Well, thankfully... most of you have a mailing address that works. So if you'd like to get our prayer letter, please send it to us as a comment (again, it will NOT be published). I'll double check our files and add you if you're not there. OK? Thanks... hope to have those to each of you within the next month. God bless!

17 January 2009

GREAT NEWS!!


We've just returned to Saskatchewan from a month-long trip to visit family and supporters in Alberta and the USA. We have some tremendous news... 2 items in fact, but it's a bit sensitive. Please leave a comment with your email address and we'll get back to you. We won't publish the comment (so don't worry about your email being shown on the web).

We're so excited to share what God's been doing... please be in touch!!!

Our trip to the US was really good and we got to visit the mission headquarters. We found out that we need to raise an additional $1,900/month before returning to the field. Please join us in prayer for that. And if you're reading this and can help us network with churches/individuals, please let us know.

Ok, leave your comment so we can get back to you. We've had 7 so far, unpublished to protect emailers. Thanks and God bless!