Missions

Recap of 8/15 Ministry Event

0

This is a much-overdue post about last Saturday’s outreach event on the Omaha Indian Reservation! There were lots of status updates about it leading up to the event, followed by not much afterward, which may have left some wondering what happened! Basically… the week got really busy, especially with preparing for preaching at church this Sunday. Finally have a little free time now.

First, if you were there and are reading this, I just want to thank everyone for the time they invested in this, both in preparation and last Saturday itself.

From my perspective, this really is a story of how many unlikely twists and turns there were along the way so that God could show all of us how it was His work, and not a result of careful planning. Most of these items were never communicated to the entire group, so you may not have known about some of this (until now).

===Early Stages===
To be honest, I wasn’t sure it would ever really materialize. Started as a VERY wild idea back in June… and took off. The necessary approval from various levels came very quickly and within days of first being thought of, it looked like a “go”. That’s not to say there wasn’t quite a bit of work involved (Cary Farrington can vouch for the number of emails per day that came about that first week!)

In early July, just after the schedule was thought to be finalized, we hit a roadblock with scheduling and had to make a quick change. After a stressful day of contacting everyone involved and announcing a change, I then found out that the original date we’d planned (8/8) coincided with the tribal powwow over in Macy. We wouldn’t have known about the powwow if not first having the need to explore a different date, and in all likelihood would have ended up just coming up on the 8th and finding hardly anyone around.

Later in July, one of the team members from GRC (Omaha) volunteered to organize a school supply drive. Our church group responded with some VERY generous donations. We had at least $50 worth of donated supplies, and maybe even over $100 worth, plus items such as Beanie Babies.

===Last Saturday===
Going into last Saturday, apart from a possible chance of rain, it looked like everything was moving along smoothly. Items were purchased, signs and flyers were prepared, everyone seemed to know their role… and then we all woke up to heavy rain Saturday morning. Don’t know about everyone else, but for me that was a HUGE stress item. On the road at 7:15 AM, visibility was down to well under a quarter mile and the wipers couldn’t even keep up.

But… should have known by that point… it was just one more thing to remind that God was the one in control, not any of us. The rain stopped by 8:45. While we had a light shower or two in Walthill, it was nothing like first thing that morning. And the sun even came out by late afternoon.

Some specific things that had been items for prayer last Saturday and the way they were answered:
-Continuation of existing connections there.
–Some of the people we saw were ones we recognized from all the way back to our first trip in 2007!

-That in the morning while handing out flyers to announce the event we would be joined by kids that recognized us from VBS, who would help us reach their friends.
–Kids came out, recognized us, went along with us as we walked through town, and showed us some of the houses to go to!

-Good turnout.
–We counted sixty-five people from the community in attendance in addition to our 15 on staff!

-That the community would be blessed by this.
–Multiple people from the community expressed their gratefulness. (And it sounds like they’d like to see this become a regular repeating event each August!)

Also, the school supplies that had been donated were all distributed less than 40 minutes after being put out. During the course of the afternoon, most of the Bibles and resources for kids that we also were offering for free were also taken by various people.

Finally, though God could have sent any number of people, it seems notable that we got 65 people from the community plus the 15 of us on staff. Why? Just as a wild guess we’d decided on having 80 servings of food for lunch. 65+15 = 80. I think that just goes to show once more that it was really all God’s work and all of us just got to see how everything fell into place… maybe even despite our efforts!

So thanks again for everyone’s help. Anything to add, feel free to comment!

When I receive the rest of the photos, and have time to sort through them, I’ll be creating an album with 60 photos to put on Facebook (in addition to the photo art which I’ve started to make with some of the pictures I have so far). For those who have requested photo discs, I should be able to get those done and in the mail at least by sometime next week.

It sounds like an article covering the event may have run in this week’s Thurston County newspaper. If I find out more about that, I’ll post it as a comment.

And… don’t forget we’ll be doing the regular week-long project next June, as well this one-day event maybe becoming regular as well! So mark your 2010 calendars.

More info on (and some of the story behind) continued involvement in Walthill

0

This is the story (so far) leading up to the planned kids ministry day in Walthill, NE next month. It is something that’s been in progress for coming up on a month but has remained secret for the most part until this week, so that its announcement could coincide with our presentation to church. This is kind of long, kind of personal in places so bear with me, but is really to be a testimony to what God has done so far in making this ministry possible and an anticipation of what else he still will be doing.

~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~

From Saturday, June 6th through Saturday, June 13th, six of us from church joined with people from two of our sister churches in Nebraska as well as staff from Mission to the World (hereafter “MTW”), our denomination’s mission agency, for a week of service projects and VBS in Walthill, Nebraska. This was our church’s third year of involvement in this project so many of the names and faces were familiar from previous years. This year, though, it seemed like we really got to know specific people better and had greater understanding of what the lives of many really consist of. We heard the kids tell of what “normal” is to them, and in many cases that involves broken families and/or a lack of positive attention and healthy role models. It had become clear that the VBS for just an hour and a half each day for five days was among the high points of the entire year for some of these kids. Each year leaving is hard because the kids are sad to see us go and in the past it’s been a full year before we can return. This year was no exception. One of the team members from the participating church in Lincoln described a child who was “brokenhearted” when told we wouldn’t be back “tomorrow” on Friday, as throughout the week when the kids would leave VBS they would ask and be told that they could come back at the same time tomorrow and we’d be there.

Saturday morning, while driving back to Omaha with a friend from church the conversation turned to the topic of stories of specific kids in the community, but after recalling things about various kids we’d met for the first time (or seen again, for me with some of the kids) and discovering we really shared in a burden for the kids of the community, it seemed pretty clear that we should try to do something. But how? There was no precedent from past trips, no invitation to come back separate from a MTW project, and it wasn’t something that could just come together… could it? Could it?

Later in the day, after I’d gone home to my apartment, started unpacking, and had the first time in solitude I’d had all week, I remember reflecting on various things that had happened throughout the week and the thing I couldn’t move on from was VBS. At some point that afternoon or evening I realized that it would not be right to just let it go after being burdened for the kids in the community, and decided to try to do something. At that point I wasn’t sure what, but I intended to try something. It seemed more clear that evening as numerous people in my small group study at church asked about the trip and for some specific highlights and I realized that right along with the deep realization of the brokenness in the community this year, the emotional needs of the kids in town were something that wasn’t going to be quickly forgotten. I vaguely recalled a time in the past, probably more than fifteen years ago, the church I was part of then organized a “kids day in the park” as a way of reaching out to neighborhood children in the Omaha suburbs. This seemed like a good enough way to reach out once more to the kids — go back and just spend time with them, serve lunch, have fun activities, play sports and games, and just hang out.

So the next morning (June 14th), mind made up to go for this as far as possible, I presented the idea to one of the elders at church (who was also the project leader for the week-long trips the past 3 years). He liked the idea and agreed to check in with MTW as well as some people on the reservation to see whether it would be feasible. The next couple days were a frenzy of email activity with questions to answer and a few concerns to alleviate. With the excitement to make the idea a reality, the waiting periods seemed to drag on forever while anticipating necessary approvals. By the end of the week the responses received so far had been favorable and it was starting to look much more like a real event that was going to happen and not just a wild idea. It was next to amazing to see how in just a week’s time an event that was really nothing more than a passing idea had become pretty close to reality. At this point the two other church groups in Nebraska that we had served with earlier in the month were notified of the intent to return in August. Although we’d been considering at least three different dates, in discussions with the local government August 8 emerged as the preferred date and this is what we decided to plan on in moving forward.

Planning activity slowed toward the end of June due to more attention needing to be put on the report to the congregation on our time in Walthill from June 6-13. This involved a Keynote (like PowerPoint but cooler) slideshow consisting of photos and info divided up into sections by topic and speaker, plus a music video of selected photos. Lots of back and forth collaboration was needed to get everyone’s sections incorporated so from the end of June right up to the day of the presentation itself — this past Wednesday, the 8th — this was the primary thing time was spent on.

We did find out that there was to be a board meeting on July 6th where our plan would be reviewed, but as the date neared that seemed like a lesser priority as it was not to actually be a decision made but just a review to inform them of our plans.

July 6th seemed like it had the potential to be disastrous when a schedule conflict came up suddenly and was to greatly alter the plans. By this point so much had been accomplished and things were moving along so well that there was no question as to whether the event was still going to happen; it was going to as long as God allowed it to; I was going to do whatever it took to still make the event happen, but it wouldn’t have been the same. It didn’t seem right either, so I started to wonder if this was really the right date for the project. Things didn’t make sense or line up. I made a few quick phone calls, not really expecting to get what I would have considered a good answer but determined to try everything first. With the first phone call I got approval on the church level to move the event a week later, to what would have been the rain/weather delay date. The second phone call, however, to someone in Walthill, resulted in a voicemail. I hoped it would be a matter of minutes or hours until I got an answer and could consider the switch to August 15th official, especially prior to the board meeting that evening, but by end of day it was pretty clear I would not. Later in the evening I decided to try sending an email message to one of the people in the Walthill village office just to check the schedule, see if they had any concerns about us making the change, and see about just finalizing the change if there were no other concerns.

The thing I now see about this in retrospect is that somehow during the few weeks of planning and preparation that had transpired between the start of the project and then was that the focus had started to shift away from God working out the details of something that he had clearly been involved in from the start, and instead to a reliance on planning and organizational skills. It took a while for me to “get” this because throughout Monday, especially in the evening when I wasn’t hearing back from anyone in Walthill, my attitude was not one of waiting or trusting but instead frustration that things weren’t “on track” for the project. God’s hand in the project has been evident so far, with reminder after reminder of this. So why was it so hard to just believe?

Ever have times when it’s almost funny to see how things work together? Tuesday morning was pretty much amazing to see how things happened. I got a response to the email I’d sent the night before and discovered that there was a major tribal event from August 6-9. That’s right, it would have completely conflicted with the plans for the 8th. We could have gone up to hand out fliers on the 6th or 7th and seen nobody, or gone on the 8th to set up the events and not had much turnout. Certainly wouldn’t have seen the tribal kids we’d really wanted to go back to. It would have ended up being a big disappointment and without the sudden need to change the schedule there’s a good chance we would have never known.

This wasn’t the last “bump in the road” as preparations for the presentation to the church on July 8th ended up being uncertain due to problems with the projectors at church that came up late morning Tuesday and threatened to not be resolved even by the time of the presentation Wednesday evening. Ended up having to modify a color profile on the computer to artificially alter the color being sent to the projectors (once they at least got a signal to begin with) resulting in things not being quite as sharp as desired… but it still worked out.

During the presentation we finally got to announce the August 15th(!) event to the church and were amazed that within thirty minutes of completion of the presentation, we’d already hit the suggested quota of additional volunteers! Despite a small turnout to see the presentation, the interest level was high in this continued work.

The music video, which has been posted in a couple places and linked to my Facebook profile (so check back in my posted items or videos to see it; there’s also a link to the presentation file itself there) featured photos of many of the kids we spent time with during VBS. Set to the song “Give Me Your Eyes” by Brandon Heath, the lyrics and photos went really well with the message we were trying to communicate.

“Give me your eyes for just one second
Give me your eyes so I can see
Everything that I keep missing
Give me your love for humanity
Give me your arms for the broken-hearted
The ones that are far beyond my reach
Give me your heart for the ones forgotten
Give me your eyes so I can see”

“Well, I want a second glance
So give me a second chance
To see the way You’ve seen the people all along”

Also please refer back to the note I posted right after returning from Walthill (mid-June) recapping the trip in more detail including info on some of the specific kids we hope to see again.

At this point the event specifics have not been worked out for this second trip to Walthill this year. We’re planning food and games, but haven’t really gotten more specific yet. There’s still time, though the goal is going to be to have most of the details set before the end of this month. We would appreciate prayer as planning really picks up within the next couple weeks, and if the last few weeks are any indication there might be more unexpected hurdles to overcome. It’s seeming clear that with the ups and downs and all, there’s more going on than just the project in Walthill alone. There are spiritual lessons being taught through this effort as well. With so much already having happened so far as this event has progressed, it is going to be fun to see what God does and how he uses it in Walthill next month!

Specific details / FAQs.
–This is not a MTW-sponsored or MTW-sanctioned event. It’s being done at our own risk; MTW is aware of the event but is not formally backing it.
–This is being done with session oversight, as the elder at church who also served as our team leader is providing the necessary approval when it is needed as well as serving a a liaison with the local governments.
–At the moment, however, it is not an official church activity but rather an activity being taken on by members of the church. It is also not just “my” project though I am in the leadership and organizational role.
–Church groups from Lincoln and Grand Island will likely participate as well.
–Signup is now full for additional volunteers from Omaha. Depending on response from Lincoln and Grand Island, there could possibly be a few more positions available later, but in all likelihood the numbers from Omaha are complete.
–All can be part of the team through prayer, despite the hands-on positions being very limited.

Recap of Service Project in Walthill, NE

0

This is a modified version of a note I put up on Facebook today highlighting last week’s project in Walthill, NE with Mission to the World.

THE TEAMS:
6 from Omaha, 5 from Lincoln, 3 from Grand Island… plus a couple more from Lincoln that came up for a day or two… plus MTW staff from Missouri and Georgia.

Recap:
Huge blessing working with the teams we had this year, all from Nebraska PCA churches. Everyone worked well together and came together as one big team. This is the first year we’ve really had that happen to the degree that it did this year. Having unity among the team members allowed us to really focus on the service projects and VBS due to not having to be concerned about also working things out among ourselves.

THE SERVICE PROJECTS:
The main project this year was renovating the third floor of the Picotte Center in Walthill. The Picotte Center, built in 1912, was formerly the hospital started and operated by Susan LaFlesche Picotte, the first female Native American doctor (in “modern” medicine). Two years ago we did quite a bit of work on the exterior of the building, as well as drywall repair in the basement. As seen in the photos, the third floor was really transformed by the end of the week. Other projects involved repairing a retaining wall adjacent to a basement (and actually under a deck that a team had painted last year!), and fixing a gutter that hadn’t been properly repaired by another group in the past.

Recap:
On Monday morning we started chipping away at the loose, old paint on the walls of the third floor rooms. We had a huge task ahead due to the paint being in terrible condition and everything covered in decades-old dust, but the teams got to work and by the end of even the first day had made significant progress on scraping away the loose paint and preparing for wall repair and then primer.
Tuesday’s project left the walls looking a whole lot better. It was on this day that we saw the biggest transformation, as the cracks had been patched and with a coat of primer the walls actually looked pretty much white!
On Wednesday we began the finish coat of painting, as well as repairing and texturing the ceilings. Huge improvements! Some also worked outdoors on painting a wooden lattice outside the basement. Early in the week a few also worked on some landscaping — weeding and planting flowers.
Thursday consisted primarily of floor cleaning, scraping up paint that had dripped as well as old paint that was stuck on the floor from paint jobs many years ago. The dust was still so thick that when we got the floors damp to scrub and clean, the dust turned into a slimy mud that was almost like an outdoor project! On Thursday, as the work at the Picotte Center started to wind down, some team members left to work on the retaining wall as well as a gutter repair job that we’d been notified about by one of the people working at the Picotte Center, now used to house an organization that works with youth.
The work was finished in good time on Friday morning. It was amazing to contrast the finished project Friday with the photos we’d taken during orientation Sunday afternoon! It had been pretty hard work, especially with all the cleaning involved, but seeing the completed job was rewarding.

VBS IN THE PARK:
Monday through Friday in the afternoons from 2:30 to 4:00 we conducted a Vacation Bible School in the city park and American Legion building. We had 14 kids both of the first two days, and then around 8-9 kids the next three days, ranging from about age 3 to 13. Monday through Thursday some of us also played basketball with local kids on a nearby basketball court. I’m pretty sure us out-of-shape and mostly-out-of-practice white guys actually won more often than we lost — which is saying something as the local kids were really good and competitive!

Recap:
The team from Lincoln organized VBS this year, providing the curriculum and music. The songs chosen were primarily VBS/children’s songs from a couple decades ago, but with a little practice we had the songs brought back to recollection. They included “I Just Wanna Be A Sheep”, “Who’s the King of the Jungle”, “Praise Ye The Lord”, a newer song – “Every Move I Make” (a very popular hit with our church youth here in Omaha), and a couple more that I can’t remember right now while typing this up! Each day was organized into a theme for the day — the “Main Idea, WHOAA!” — and a memory verse. Snacks and crafts were also chosen to integrate with the topic. The time with the kids would conclude each day with an active game. Having played basketball Monday, Wednesday, and Thursday, I didn’t see a lot of the VBS events this year, but from what I have heard — and what I saw Tuesday and Friday — it went well.

THE KIDS:
This year was a mixed bag working with the kids. We still haven’t seen the same numbers the last two years as the first year, when a couple times around thirty kids came. That first year we really got to know a lot of the local kids, learning their names and a little about them, and seeing some of them make professions of faith. Still, it’s been good to see a few of them back the next couple of years, and for the most part we had a good group of kids — definitely on the rowdy side, but still a good group — this year.

This year as we started to find out more about the stories of some of the kids — and how in many cases the parents simply aren’t around, or aren’t sober, to be there for their kids and the kids end up growing up having to fend for themselves and learn life lessons without a strong family influence — we’ve decided we really want to be able to help in whatever limited way possible. Sometimes that’s just taking some time to go and be there — even for part of a day — to let them know there’s still people who care. I remember in the first year there was a little girl, maybe six or seven years old, who said she couldn’t think of the idea of God as a father because if God were her father then he would probably beat her. This is the kind of stuff some of these kids grow up knowing nothing different from!

Some information has been cut from this public version due to its sensitive nature.

DAY TO DAY STUFF:
Each morning started for the group somewhere between 6 and 7 AM, when the breakfast crew would rise first to begin preparing the meal, followed by the early risers and the coffee-seeking crowd. Breakfast would conclude by 7:30 AM and teams would then prepare to leave for the work site by 8:00.

As with previous years we had lunch and dinner at the Senior Center about a block away — generous portions of good rural Nebraska-style cooking! Each evening after VBS was finished we had “gang showers” up at the school — no one’s favorite thing but a necessity nonetheless. Some of the evenings we also had special speakers: on Monday, a college professor from Blair, NE (native Omaha) spoke on overcoming misconceptions about the native people. On Wednesday, we had a Christian speaker talking about how she was adopted as a little girl, raised in white culture, and her return to the Omaha and Winnebago people. On Thursday, a tribal police officer spoke about his history as well as elements of the native religion. And on Friday, we watched a documentary about the legal challenges to the problems in Whiteclay, NE just south of the Lakota reservation — especially the severe toll that substance addictions are taking on the Lakota reservation. Though not dealing specifically with the Omaha reservation, we could clearly see some parallels and how the similar problem also is devastating the Omaha culture.

Later in the evenings we also met for large group worship — a debriefing, singing time, prayer time, and message — followed by small group time, where each church group would meet to talk more specifically about the day, individual highlights and needs, and our small group focus devotional.

What down time was available between projects or evening activities was usually spent either looking for wireless Internet signals, processing photos, playing cards, debating theology, or reading. I also had some client work projects that I had to get done to stay on schedule on a few of the earlier days of the trip. There wasn’t a lot of free time available but it seemed like there was enough so that most people were able to not get overly stressed or tired.

Toward the end of the week plumbing problems resurfaced in the church… similar problem as happened the past year… resulting in all restroom activity having to be in the Senior Center a block away. Fortunately that was just for the last evening and morning… and also fortunately there are no photos of the backup in the church basement! As if anyone really wanted to hear about, see, or remember that! So moving on…

INTERACTION AND CONCERNS:
In addition to the already-stated concerns about the needs of the local kids, we also saw the effects of depression and addiction on the community. Broken families almost seemed to be the norm rather than the exception. Kids roam the streets late into the night because parents aren’t home. We’d only been in Walthill for a couple hours on Saturday when the first intoxicated man came over to the church seeking counsel and/or help. On Thursday a friend (or relative?) of his also came over, having been referred by the first man. There was also a guy that I talked to for a minute or two outside the church about our work in town in answer to his more direct request to get inside. The saddest thing, though, was to see a man who two years ago had come to the door late on the Tuesday night and who we’d worked with quite a bit that week… and then who last year had been doing great and worked along side us on projects… struggling again, family life on the ropes, spending most of the waking hours of the day intoxicated and again knocking on the church door late at night, coming in sick and intoxicated, and seeming to be stuck in a never-ending cycle of promising to do better and then getting drunk again and not being able to be around his family.

FINAL THOUGHTS:
On Monday night, our guest speaker (the college professor who teaches in Blair) reminded us that while the societal ills are so visible on the reservation, we shouldn’t think that just because we don’t seem to have them around us they don’t exist. We need to remember to not think we have it all together where we live and that the problems are just “out there” somewhere, or that we can go to the reservation to see brokenness but we’re all healthy in our urban neighborhoods.

The thing is that on the reservation it just tends to be more visible. Nonetheless it’s all around us, and in many cases is directly affecting us. But we tend to do a really good job of masking it. For example, how do we usually respond when someone asks the simple — but actually very deep — question of “how are you?” Usually it’s something like “good, and you?” — basically no different than a casual “hello”. But are we really being truthful at those times? Are we really doing “good” when we come to group settings with nice, happy, smiling faces as if we didn’t have a care in the world… but when we leave the group setting we’re back to family strife, broken relationships, deceit, uncertainty, tension, and a whole bunch of other things we’d love to run from because we can’t fix? The fact is we’re really a broken people too. Reminders of the curse of the fall surround us. (Incidentally, the very presence of the snake and a typical human reaction to it is but one example that should always serve as a reminder!) But what is the cure to the curse? The solution isn’t in looking better by fixing the facade. The fix isn’t in curbing bad behavior and just choosing good behavior. The solution is only found in Christ’s completed work. Not in our works helped along by His, but in His completed work. Only Christ has the power to reverse the curse. Only when he makes all things new will the curse be reversed. And only in his power and by his grace can our brokenness be healed. We sure don’t have the solution. This is what our communities need, both here and elsewhere — not lots of good works and striving to fix something far beyond our control — but instead total transformation; the spreading of the Kingdom not only throughout all aspects of our lives but throughout our communities, our regions, even to the whole world!

Friday update

0

Aside from unforeseen events later this evening, this will be the last
update from this year’s MTW Omaha Tribe project.

All of the planned work projects were completed today. One painting
project carried into the afternoon but some had time to do it then
while others did VBS, so as of 5:30 everything is now done. One of the
projects today involved repainting the front of the Senior Center and
building and mounting two flowerboxes underneath two of the windows.

More than ten kids came to VBS in the afternoon. While it wasn’t as
large a group as last year (there was also a VBS in a nearby village)
we had an attentive group today. After a water balloon fight the kids
were gathered together to sing a song once more and then staff handed
out Bibles as the kids left.

After VBS we went over to the home of a Winnebago Christian living in
Walthill for a brief talk, photos, and “Indian Tacos.”

Ongoing prayer items:
– continued correspondence over the year
– growth of “seeds planted”

Thursday update from Walthill

0

Projects were back to normal this morning as the stormy weather had
passed out of the area. The eaves repair is nearly done; all that
remains is to paint the repaired areas tomorrow. Other teams also made
progress on their painting projects.

VBS attendance was lower again today, below ten. Overall attendance
this year is lower than last year, but some have moved out of the area.

Last night D. came to the door again, this time highly intoxicated.
Continue to pray for him and his family.

After VBS some of us were invited to play basketball with some local
teens. We lost badly but it was one more opportunity for contact with
the community.

Tonight is the community board meeting to discuss the alcohol abuse
problems. Please be praying for the situation.

Wednesday update from Walthill

0

We’ve had rain intermittently today, so only a few people were able to
make progress on their projects. Work did continue on the eaves repair
but the wind and rain prevented the painting tasks from continuing
today.

Twenty-one kids came to VBS today. Good report — generally speaking,
all were attentive and well-behaved.

Prayer items:
–completion of projects we’ve committed to
–continued attentiveness at the VBS
–upcoming community board meeting (which we opted not to be involved
with) in which the local alcohol abuse issue will be discussed and
restrictions may be imposed… meeting is Thursday at 6.

Go to Top