Showing posts with label mission. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mission. Show all posts

Friday, November 9, 2012

Hurricane Sandy Relief 11/11/2012

HURRICANE SANDY RELIEF
Are you interested in helping relief efforts for Hurricane Sandy?  In the next few weeks, APC will be sharing how you can bring the love of Christ to those affected by this devastating storm.   

This week, we have a very practical way to help. Amy Foote, a child of the church, lives in Brooklyn and is collecting items for St. Jacobi Lutheran Church,  The church is acting as a main hub for donations, cooking meals and transporting volunteers in car pools to the areas in Brooklyn, Queens and Staten Island that were the most effected.   

Bring your items on Sunday, November 11, during worship, and Amy will get them to the church in Brooklyn.  Please pass the word to folks in and outside of the church. 

These are the types of supplies they need:
  • Water! Water! Water!
  • Cleaning supplies
  • Non-Perishables (Canned goods, soups, vegetables)
  • Dry goods and ready to eat food (Cereal, power bars, granola, crackers, etc) 
  • Matches
  • Cleaning supplies
  • Ready to eat food
  • Foil
  • Cold cuts
  • Sliced cheese
  • Dish soap
  • Vinyl and latex gloves
  • Ziploc
  • Face masks 
  • Paper towels
  • Shovels and rakes
  • Power strips
  • Baby food (vegetarian, with meat/chicken, fruit, cereal stages 1, 2, 3)
  • Water
  • Evaporated, powdered and regular milk (1/2 gal. or smaller)
  • Soy milk
  • Pediasure
  • Ensure
  • Glucern
  • Ready made formula (with iron, regular/soy/sensitive)
  • Canned goods (beans, vegetables, tomato sauce, soups, tuna fish, sardines, vienna sausages)
  • Protein/granola/cereal/fruit bars
  • Apple Sauce
  • Diapers (newborn, sizes 1, 4 and 6)
  • Toddler training pants (sizes 4+)
  • Flashlights
  • Batteries (especially C and D)
  • Candles/Flashlights
  • Peanut butter
  • Sliced bread
  • Fruit (apples, oranges, bananas, etc
  • Disposable hand warmers
  • Gloves
  • Socks
  • Dry Ice (we have none and already, some residents' insulin have gone bad.)
  • Pet Food

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Annual Mainline CROP Walk

To join us walking, click here
To donate, click here.

During the 33 years of its existence approximately 5,600 participants from local churches and schools have raised over $310,000.00.

This past year caring people in some 2,000 communities in the United States joine together in 1,532 CROP Hunger Walks and other events to benefit Curch World Service in raising $13.9 million to help end hunger by providing:
  • SUSTAINABLE SELF-HELP AND DEVELOPMENT,
  • DISASTER RELIEF,
  • REFUGEE ASSISTANCE,
  • LOCAL HUNGER FIGHTING PROGRAMS,
  • FOOD BANKS, SOUP KITCHENS AND
  • COMMUNITY GARDENS IN MORE THAN 80 COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD.
The biggest enemy of health in the developing countries of the world is poverty.

The proportion of the world's population living on less than two dollars a day: almost 50% (2.8 billion).

1.1  billion people are foced to survive to survive on less than $1.00 a day - one of every six people in the world.

How do we achieve the better world we imagine?
With small steps at first, then larger ones in time. Our steps are powered by simple acts of generosity and the methodical application of intelligene, empathy, ingenuity and faith.

For the poor of the world the daily struggle to survive overwhelms all of life's other possiblities. Our satisfaction comes from witnessing the moment when people who once had no hope suddenly discover the boundless possiblities of their own existence. That's when they realize it's their world too.

We should not - in trying to thnk about how we can make a big differnece - ignore the small daily differences we can make - which over time - add up to BIG differences that we often cannot foresee.

On Sunday, October 21, 2012 you will have the opportunity to join us as a walker - or if you wish  - sponsor a walker. In so doing you will provide a positive way to respond to world hunger. Hunger is an ongoing problem. The world produces enough food each year to provide a healthy diet to everone on the plantet. But over 800 million people (almost three times  the population of the United States) are undernourished - meaning they do not do not get enough food to lead active, healthy lives.

We have the resources.
We have the knowledge.

Indivdually we cannot solve the problem but collectively we can reduce it.

Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful committed citizens can change the world; indeed it is the only thing that ever has.

Isn't it worth a try?

-Ralph Miller, Elder


To join us walking, click here
To donate, click here.
 

Friday, August 10, 2012

Labels for Education

labels for education heading 
Labels for Education :
"Get Free Stuff for Your School"

Dear Parents/Guardians and friends of APC Weekday Preschool:

The APC Weekday Preschool is now participating in the Labels for Education® program. My name is Jen Migliaccio and I am the Labels for Education coordinator for our school. Through the program, we can collect UPCs and beverage caps from participating products to earn points that can be redeemed for FREE educational merchandise!

Our goal year is to collect points that we can redeem for teaching resources. It's easy to help-simply save UPCs and beverage caps from participating products and drop them off in the box in the church.

If you have questions, or would like to help with our Labels for Education collection drive, please contact the church office at 610-642-6650 or via email at preschool@ardmorepres.org.

Thank you for your support. Together with the Labels for Education program-we can build a better school for our children.


Sincerely,
Jen Migliaccio
Ardmore Presbyterian Weekday Preschool

To see a complete list of participating products and point values, please visit LabelsForEducation.com.
labels for education

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Garden Harvest Night for Wednesday July 18th



I am writing you about tomorrow night's(July 18th) harvesting. We are without Ray and Mary Van Leeuwen for 2 Wednesdays while they visit their family in California. This is a big loss to our Wednesdays. So it is that we need all of you willing people to come out tomorrow! As always please join us even if you must insist you are no gardener. All who fit in that category can simply combine abilities to make one composite gardener between us : ) If you come to the garden you have a great chance of really becoming a gardener which could be fun. Come when you can and stay until you need to go. 

Tomorrow we will have iffy weather so I am making a few adjustments. I will be there unless it is actually raining. Hadley and I will be there at 5pm this time to start the picking and harvesting in case the weather comes early. Hopefully we can get to the bigger items that way even if we get rained out for the herbs. Please join us at 5 or 5:30-p as usual. Jeff will come and fire up the grill at 5 45p when he arrives from work. We will provide hot dogs and drinks. Please bring a dish to share if you are able to and a chair or blanket to sit on. 

I have not been over to see the tomatoes in the past few days so we will only be picking those if they have suddenly become ready. There is zucchini and peppers, okra, a few more green onions and maybe one more batch of beans. We should have lots of need for people to pick herbs as well. The garden is enormous now. If you haven't looked in awhile, you will be amazed. The efforts of a small army of APC's kids helped to make that happen this year and that is exciting.

We will have the sprinkler out with the heat so come in your suit and bring a towel and change of clothes. I often forget one of those last two things for my own child so I am writing that to myself!

We are always collecting gently used clothes and shoes for all ages to take down to Calvin Presbyterian's clothing closet. The clothes will be taken down at the same time as the vegetables on Thursday mornings. We have been made aware that Calvin will be starting a daycare for 2,3 and 4 year olds in the fall. We have taken one load of toys. learning items and books down already. They were really delighted to receive them. We hope we can help and encourage them further before they launch in the fall. If you would like to purchase or donate a usable toy, game, puzzle, book(etc) to this effort, we could accept that from you at the garden or at church on Sunday. As most of you know our own church and also Calvin also operates a food pantry. Both are needing donations at all times of the year. Please bring any donations to our own church office or any donation for Calvin to the garden and we will get it down there. We are always available to pick up these items from your homes. We mean that. We know it can be too tricky to transport things for a variety of reasons. Let  Jeff or Karen Barnes know in person or at i2thee@hotmail.com.

We are having many good times at the garden this summer as we find we have a mission field right on our church property and certainly right up the road. Come join the harvest and the chance to show the love of Christ to our neighbors and the body at Calvin Presbyterian. We pull the vegetables with the hope that someone will know God cares for their present situation but also that their neighbors(us!) care for them as well.

Blessings,

Jeff and Karen Barnes

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Mission Partnership: Calvin Presbyterian

We are still collecting any used clothing or shoes to bring down to Calvin Presbyterian. We can pick that up from you directly or you can bring it to church or the garden night. This need like food never stops, especially for children.

We have also found out that Calvin Presbyterian will be starting a daycare/preschool in the fall. We will be collecting items that would be useful for that as well. This could be new or gently used toys, games, puzzles, books,etc. Anything we could supply them with is something they don't have to buy. We can also pick up items like this from your home or you can bring them to church or the garden night. I am in the process of finding out more specifics about this new program. This might be a fun way we could bless Calvin church itself which is doing much for many with little.

Our own church as well as Calvin Presbyterian operates a food pantry for area people who are hungry. Please bring any food donations and now they will get to a place where they can be used.

THANK YOU!!

Summer Garden Fellowship -- Now with Sprinklers and Picnic Table

Hello all,

We write to invite you to join us at the garden this Wednesday. So many vegetables are coming in now there is plenty of harvesting to be done. All the weeding and watering are adding up to great things. I believe Mary may have a few more weeks of watering and weeding the garden that need covering. Let us know if you or your family is interested. There are people to show and explain what needs to be done. I use as proof that it is easy enough for anybody the fact that our family has done it : )

We have received the generous gift of a picnic table from the Rickenbach family. We are grateful. If anybody else has any lawn chairs they would like to donate to the get togethers, we would be glad to hear from you. 

In case you haven't made it out to a Wednesday night recently we have also had the generous gift of a fun sprinkler from the Hipszer family. Wear or bring your suit and cool off. This has been a fun addition to our get togethers.

We will have the hot dogs and drinks. Please bring a side or dessert to pass or share if you are able. If you are not able, come without. This is no problem.

If you have a chair or a blanket it might be nice. We have a fair amount but if it gets to be a big showing you might be glad you brought them.

We start at 5:30p and have been wrapping things up between 7-7:30p. Come when you can and stay until you must go.

The produce from the garden is continuing to be brought down to Calvin Presbyterian church in West Philadelphia for their community lunch on Thursdays at noon. This church which is a part of our Philadelphia Presbytery, also has a clothing closet and food bank available at that time. This is really three ministries in one. Mary VanLeeuwen is a great source of more information on this Matthew 25:35 project, as it is called. I am a less knowledgable but very excited about it resource as well. If you have questions or would like to come down to see where the work of the garden goes, just let someone know. Churches are joining forces to do more in West Philadelphia(minutes from here) than could be done apart. It seems to be a promising model.

This is a great ministry to invite a friend to. That includes a friend from our own church! : )

Jeff, Hadley and I look forward to seeing many of you this Wednesday.

Wednesday Garden Summer Fellowship

Hello all,

We write to invite you to join us at the garden this Wednesday. So many vegetables are coming in now there is plenty of harvesting to be done. All the weeding and watering are adding up to great things. I believe Mary may have a few more weeks of watering and weeding the garden that need covering. Let us know if you or your family is interested. There are people to show and explain what needs to be done. I use as proof that it is easy enough for anybody the fact that our family has done it : )

We have received the generous gift of a picnic table from the Rickenbach family. We are grateful. If anybody else has any lawn chairs they would like to donate to the get togethers, we would be glad to hear from you. 

In case you haven't made it out to a Wednesday night recently we have also had the generous gift of a fun sprinkler from the Hipszer family. Wear or bring your suit and cool off. This has been a fun addition to our get togethers.

We will have the hot dogs and drinks. Please bring a side or dessert to pass or share if you are able. If you are not able, come without. This is no problem.

If you have a chair or a blanket it might be nice. We have a fair amount but if it gets to be a big showing you might be glad you brought them.

We start at 5:30p and have been wrapping things up between 7-7:30p. Come when you can and stay until you must go.

The produce from the garden is continuing to be brought down to Calvin Presbyterian church in West Philadelphia for their community lunch on Thursdays at noon. This church which is a part of our Philadelphia Presbytery, also has a clothing closet and food bank available at that time. This is really three ministries in one. Mary VanLeeuwen is a great source of more information on this Matthew 25:35 project, as it is called. I am a less knowledgable but very excited about it resource as well. If you have questions or would like to come down to see where the work of the garden goes, just let someone know. Churches are joining forces to do more in West Philadelphia(minutes from here) than could be done apart. It seems to be a promising model.

This is a great ministry to invite a friend to. That includes a friend from our own church! : )

Jeff, Hadley and I look forward to seeing many of you this Wednesday.

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

June 6th letter from Masey's


6th June 2012

Dear Prayer Partners,

We just arrived from a month of very fruitful time in Australia. It was a time of refreshing for us. God spoke to us many times and repeatedly reminded us that he has called us to serve Him. We were encouraged and assured that He will be always with us in our times of trouble and pain and bring to fruition His purpose. Thank you for standing with us and praying that He would break through hard places and bring about victory for His Glory.

Children’s Home Building: The last time we heard from the organization was before we left for Australia that if we do not hand over the building they will take us to the court. I know many of you are concerned about this status and are standing with us. Thank you. Please continue to pray that the organization will look for the wellbeing of children and not do anything for their own gain. We are still living in the same building. Please pray that they will accept our offer to pay the cost of the construction and transfer the title to Caring Hands.



The good news is that the BOYS HOME STARTED with 8 boys this month. Praise God after many years of prayers we felt that Prakash & Hanna would the couple to take care of Boys. Continue to pray that they will adjust and settle down quickly and that we will be able to put them in the right school. We are looking for sponsors for Boy’s Home. If you want to sponsor please write to us. Thank you.



All, except two of our girls from the JOYFUL CHILDREN’S HOME passed in their exam and promoted to the next grade. Two girls completed one-year diploma course in nursing and are looking for job opportunities. One girl finished B.A. degree. Please pray for our children’s education and spiritual growth. We are expecting some more new girls to come to our Home. This month is a very busy month for Children’s Home as we need to get their admission into schools and colleges, buy uniforms, books, shoes etc. please pray that we will be able to get a good deal when we shop. Please pray for the need of workers who are truly called to work in Children’s Home.

OVERSEAS OPPORTUNITIES: Arun with our staff Mr. John Gouder (Co-ordinator of Church Ministry) and Mary (matron) attended a conference in Kenya for 15 days in April. That was a very good experience for John and Mary as they travelled abroad for the first time.

From April 31st till 2nd June Shobha & I went to Australia to attend Leadership training, and speak in meetings and visiting our friends and family. We have another opportunity to go again next year and speak in meetings in Australia.

KIDS CAMPS IN SUMMER: In the month of April and May KIDS CAMPS were conducted in five different towns for all boys and girls who attend our Churches and Share & Care Programs. All our staff under the youngest leader Shruti (21) worked hard to make it a great success. Nearly 600 boys and girls attended in Belhatti, Kittur, Halga, Jagdal and Jamkhandi. Shruti is one of the Joyful Children’s Home’s girls and is now working in Caring Hands.

YOUTH CAMP: FROM 26TH TO 28th we are conducting a Youth camp. From our churches young people will come for three days. Please pray that it will be a wonderful time of meeting with God for the young people and growing in His Word.

PASTORS’ GATHERING: Arun’s heart is to encourage pastors who work in rural areas and have no fellowship with others. We want to refresh and encourage them to do better for the Lord in the ministry. For this purpose we are organizing a Pastors’ Gathering in July. We pray that pastors who need a time of refreshing from our Lord will come and be blessed.

VISIT TO THE U.S.A: Shobha and I are planning to come to USA from August till October. Melissa has two weeks of vacation in August and her 18th birthday is on 21st of August so we want to be with her. We hope to celebrate her birthday in Dallas, TX., where Arun’s younger brother lives. Now she is working eight hours everyday in the school to cover her fees. We need not pay anything for her tuition.

We have an invitation to visit ND, CA, GA, SC, NC and VA. If, you are in any of these states we would love to meet you. Please let us if you want us to come and speak in your groups or churches.

Thank you again for your support and prayers for our ministry. Please continue to uphold us in your prayers.

Yours in His service,

Arun & Shobha Massey.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Information about the 2012 Offering of Letters

As the memory of some of us is long enough to remember, Ardmore Presbyterian Church has a history of fighting hunger, including the work of the Hunger Task Force, going back to the 1970s, and a relationship with Bread for the World, during those years.  This year, the Christian anti-hunger advocacy organization Bread for the World again offers an Offering of Letters topic, about which church members are encouraged to write to Congress, and the topic is to continue to call for a “Circle of Protection” around the vulnerable people who would be most hurt by budget cuts that have been proposed; but it is also a first-year sort of Offering of Letters, as it has four mini-campaigns, in a potentially busy year of Congress:  protecting U.S. nutrition programs; continuing improvements to the Earned Income Tax Credit and the Child Tax Credit; protecting food aid to places of extreme need in the world; letting poverty-focused development assistance be effective in developing nations.

With Senator Bob Casey of Pennsylvania on the Senate Agriculture Committee, we here have a member of Congress, who is in a position to make a difference in a couple of these areas, and we, constituents, have a responsibility to hold him accountable, but we have other members of Congress, too, and we should be encouraged to write to all of them.

Next week [on Sunday, February 5], there will be an Offering of Letters table, here at Ardmore Presbyterian Church, appropriately on Souper Bowl of Caring Sunday, and I am going to suggest that we consider writing letters about federal nutrition programs.  These include SNAP (Food Stamps) and WIC.  These are vital programs, when someone hits a rough patch in their life, such as a job loss.  Think of some of the families that are housed temporarily in the churches of the Main Line IHN, or some of the people who may be served by our church food cupboard.

Our church is already helping, but the work of charitable efforts must be accompanied by federal efforts, as well.  A small cut to SNAP (Food Stamp) benefits would rival the amount of emergency food handled by Feeding America, the nation’s food bank network.

You can write a letter to a Senator or Representative next week [Sunday, February 5], during the soup luncheon after church.  May the letters be an offering to God, not of money, but of our voices.  This is what can make our campaign unique and powerful.  Please join me and other Christians to expand the Circle of Protection around programs that are vital to hungry people at home or abroad.

Hunger Action Enabler, Philadelphia Presbytery

Saturday, January 28, 2012

2012 PCUSA Mission Yearbook


 Waiting for you on the narthex tables - Copies of the 2012 Presbyterian Mission Yearbook for Prayer & Study with the theme: Bearing fruit and growing in the knowledge of God.  This book is an excellent way to work your way through the Scripture and also learn about what is happening in Presbyteries across our country and with Presbyterian mission partners around the world.  If you find all the copies gone from the table, please leave a voice mail for Joanne Poorman, Mission Committee (Ext. 19) and additional copies can be ordered.


Are you interested in reading today's entry in the Mission Yearbook, click here.  

Monday, January 23, 2012

(Y)Ardfarmers Update: Matthew 25:35 Project

AN UPDATE AND REQUEST FROM THE MATT. 25:35 PROJECT:

The Matt 25:35 Project ("For I was hungry and you gave me food ...") is a joint project of Ardmore, Overbrook, and Calvin Presbyterian Churches, and is located at Calvin Presbyterian, at the corner of 60th and Master Street in West Philadelphia.  Many of you will remember that Calvin Church's 'Care Closet' was the recipient of the bounty of the APC vegetable garden last spring and summer (see the APC 2011 annual report for details) and will be again this year. 

The Matt 25:35 project has now expanded to include a nutritious, sit-down, family-style meal each Thursday noon at Calvin Pres., which now attracts over fifty people.   It is called the Heavenly Harvest Meal at Calvin's Kitchen. Prepared by a professional chef, with much of the food donated by local supermarkets, this meal is accompanied by  conversations on healthy eating, which will soon be supplemented by formal presentations from the Penn State University Extension Service.  In addition, APC's Sherina Poorman is teaching a children's after-school group the basic gardening skills that will prepare them to start a vegetable garden at Calvin Presbyterian Church this spring.

The Thursday lunch project is staffed by an enthusiastic crew of volunteers, but has been so successful that they could use a few more!  Needed are people willing to come between 10:30 am and about 1 pm to help prepare the food, serve it, and clean up.  There will be a brief orientation for any new volunteers, then a task will be assigned.  A big part of the project is the participation of volunteers in fellowship, so they are also encouraged to sit down and enjoy the meal with the guests.  No one needs advanced culinary or serving skills -- just a willingness to learn and help.  Calvin Pres. is easy to get to -- only about 15 minutes drive from APC, straight east on Lancaster Avenue, across City Line to 60th St., then less than a mile south to 60th and Master St.

If this project fits your schedule and seems to be part of God's calling for you at this time, send a email with your contact information  to Kristin Jacobson at Overbrook (kristinsjacobson@gmail.com) with a copy to Mary S. Van Leeuwen at APC (mvanleeu@eastern.edu).  If you do not have access to email, fell free to call Mary Van Leeuwen or speak to her at church.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Welcoming Rev. Dave Hackett to APC

This weekend we welcome David Hackett from the Seattle area as our main speaker at the fourth annual Spiritual Enrichment Retreat.  In writing about himself, Dave says...
I work with Phill Butler and a small set of others as global partnership specialists based in Edmonds, WA at www.visionsynergy.net. My focus includes, first, advising international Muslim-outreach related networks (to my joy) such as the Arabian Peninsula Network, the Southend Partnership, and the Libya Partnership; and secondly, advising networks promoting collaboration among those doing international evangelism online, such as the Muslim Internet Evangelism Network, the Turkey Internet Evangelism Network, the Internet Evangelism Coalition for Africa, Internet Evangelism Day, and more.

I spent childhood years in Saudi Arabia where my father was pastor to expats, which embedded my love for Muslims and Arabs. I served as a Presbyterian missionary (Volunteer in Mission), teaching English and Economics at a Presbyterian university in Korea from 1979-1981. (My uncle and aunt are Dr. Samuel and Eileen Moffett, career missionaries in Korea and professor emeritus at Princeton Seminary. They influenced me greatly.) My seminary work was at Fuller Seminary and Oxford University. I was ordained a PCUSA pastor in 1985 and had pastoral calls as mission pastor for eight years in two large churches in Tulsa OK and Bellevue WA, and then shifted for 12 years with Presbyterian Frontier Fellowship, coordinating Presbyterian mission work among UPGs, serving as executive director there. In 2003 I was on the founding board of visionSynergy with Phill Butler and in 2005 shifted over from PFF to visionSynergy to become a staff member. visionSynergy advises networks and equips the global Church in mission partnership. My wife Sandy is also a Presbyterian pastor and we live in Bothell, WA with our youngest daughter (of three) still at home.
 Here are some articles that Dave has recently written....

1.      Lausanne Committee for World Evangelism, Cape Town 2010 “Conversations” (Partnership Subject Matter Specialist) 
a.       Networks benefit by bringing together practitioners from a variety of approaches
b.      "Partnership" in Major Global Mission Declarations
c.       The Four Key Questions of Collaboration
d.      Nurturing a Culture of Exchange
e.       Are You a Network Owner or a Network Steward?
f.       A Partnership of Two is Inherently Unstable
g.      Sure-fire ways to kill a partnership
h.      On-the-Grounders Missing Media-Generated Inquirers
i.        Crossing the Will/Skill Divide
j.        Partnerships: Scarcity-minded or Abundance-minded?

2.      Lausanne World Pulse Magazine
a.       Global Internet Users Present Vast Opportunities for Online Evangelism
b.      Casting a Global Net
c.       Partnering in Mission: A Better Way to Change the World
3.      Christian Leadership Alliance Magazine
a.       Working Together—It's a God Idea

4.      The Mission Exchange “eXcelerate” Magazine
a.       Equipping the Next Generation for Collaboration
b.      Linking Arms for a Common Cause
5.      Christian Web Trends
a.       Internet Evangelism Idea #15: 3 Creative Ideas from the Non-Western World
6.      Cause Collaboration Course (MA/PhD-level Course curriculum)
a.       The Sub-Saharan Technology Evangelism Movement (a fictional teaching story presented as a model for the main course assignment) (available on request to dhackett@visionsynergy.net)
7.      Quoted or Interviewed In
a.       Adeney, Miriam. “Kingdom Without Borders: The Untold Story of Global Christianity”, InterVarsity Press
b.      Petersen, Jonathan. “Mobile, Glocal & Evangelism”, Lausanne World Pulse Magazine
c.       von Buseck, Craig. “Netcasters: Using the Internet to Make Fishers of Men”, B&H Publishing
d.      Whittaker, Tony. “The Twenty-first Century Roman Road–Signposts along the Way”, Lausanne World Pulse 
8.  Also if you get a chance, read his blog from a few years ago.

9.  Or follow Dave Hackett today on Twitter.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

January 16th Update from the Masseys

16th Jan 2012,

Dear Prayer Partners,
Although we reached the middle of January we haven’t had time to relax. Children had practiced dances and skits which they presented at the parents’ meeting. After Christmas we took all the 63 children for a picnic to a riverside. They had a sports and essay-writing competition. The winners received their prizes in from of their mothers who came for the Parents meeting. Shobha spoke to them from the Word of God on how to bring up their children.

There was a wedding in Shobha’s family which we attended in Bangalore. The organization that supported our Children’s Home sent auditors to do check 10 years accounts. As they left we had two overseas guests from UK and USA.

Shobha is suffering from bronchitis and she needs prayer. She has a Ladies Retreat from 19th till 21st of Jan. Many are planning to come from our project areas. Please pray that God’s Spirit will move among these women. Shobha is the speaker for opening meeting and needs your prayer.

We are asked to hand over the building where our children are living to the organization that supported our Home all these years by 31st Jan 2012. We have made a written request to them to sell the property to us. Please pray that they will consider our request and will transfer the property to us.

Since some days our internet is not working and we are sending this from somewhere else. Melissa is doing all right. Her laptop is not working properly so it is very frustrating when every 5 minutes it shuts down while speaking to her on skype. Please pray that the Lord will provide another one to replace it.
We expect wonderful blessings during this year for you. May you experience them day by day.

Thank you for your sincere prayer support for us and the ministry here.

Yours sincerely,
Arun & Shobha Massey.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For more information about this ministry, follow this link.  

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Mitten Tree begins on November 27

 
Mittens, hats and scarves are needed for our annual Mitten Tree to be in the narthex beginning Sunday, November 27 (first Sunday in Advent).  Both hand knit and purchased items are most welcome.  These items will be given to our local Maternity Care Coalition to be distributed to families in their program.  These are always greatly appreciated! 

Toys for Glouchester House

When you are Christmas shopping, please remember to pick up items for The John Gloucester House "Happy Birthday, Jesus" Party.  Especially needed:  educational toys, sports/recreational items for children from 1st to 8th grades.  Gifts cards are also appropriate.  Please leave unwrapped items in the church office or bring them with you to the Sunday, December 4th Advent Family Night.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Young Adults and Families Provide Thanksgiving Dinner to Those in Need

Dear Friends;

This past Sunday, the Ardmore Presbyterian Church Young Adult and Young Family Group met to help assemble Thanksgiving Turkey Dinner boxes for families in need in the Philadelphia area. We were able to complete 8 turkey dinners—8 frozen turkeys plus a box full of fixings! The children made Thanksgiving cards to go with the boxes.

Rev. Luis Sanchez of True Vine Church Community in the lower northeast of Philadelphia came to pick up the dinners for distribution. I know and work with Luis, through Project HOME and the distribution of Welcome Home Kits (which our congregation has also helped to put together, at times). This was a large contribution to his efforts of outreach.

Thank you to all who were able to help! I look forward to working with everyone on such a project next year, once again! Thank you so much!
Sincerely,

Schaunel Steinnagel

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Su Voz: Are We Alone?

Su Voz is a devotional produced by the Evangelical Theological Seminary in Cuba.  Elisa Menocal is a member of Ardmore Presbyterian Church, and she is serving this year as a translator there.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
ARE WE ALONE?
MATTHEW 28:16-20
“…I am with you always...
Matthew 28:20

The composer Tchaikovsky was a celebrity in his own country as well as the world over. And yet his success could not free him from the unhealthy anxiety which tormented him.  He felt alone and in great distress.  He wrote about the score of a melody in D minor. “Only the lonely heart can understand my anguish.”
 

Many people suffer from loneliness:  the widow who spends many long hours by herself, the prisoner who lies in his cell, the husband whose wife left him, the woman left alone in her apartment, the child whose parents are about to divorce, the mother whose children have left her side, the patient in the hospital at night, etc.
 

Are you one of those who feel alone?  Do the hours seem to go by in slow motion? 

Are you waiting for something without knowing what it is? God knows.  He is sensitive to your loneliness.  During the hours on the cross, the Lord Jesus knew what it meant to feel alone.  He was hanging between the sky and the earth and was receiving the punishment that our sins deserved.  And in the anguish of the moment he cried out:  “My God, My God, why have you forsaken me? (Matthew 27:46)  His cry was left unanswered.  But He was there only so that you and I never would have to.  Never again has he been alone.  Jesus Christ lives, He knows you, He loves you, and He is always at your side.

PRAYER:  Receive our prayer, beloved Christ, because we feel your company at all times.  Amen.

Translated by:
Elisa Menocal, M.A.
Visiting Professor of English
Evangelical Theological Seminary
Matanzas, Cuba

Thursday, November 10, 2011

With Love from Cuba # 7-The Seminary, Matanzas, Monday, October 24, 2011

All my money was stolen on Saturday. I’m still a bit too upset to properly state just the facts, but I’ll try.  A week ago, my daughter had wired me money to the local Western Union office in Matanzas (there are 2) which was automatically converted into convertible Cuban pesos (CUCs).  This is by far the best way to exchange US currency into Cuban currency, because the exchange rate is nearly 1:1 minus a Western Union fee of $80 per transaction.  I had left most of the money inside of a zippered colorful Guatemalan fabric wallet, which I had placed on a wall-mounted shelf where I kept everything other than clothes: all of my books, folders, teaching materials, jewelry, mosquito repellant, etc.  The outside door of the apartment was bashed in hard enough to completely break off the entire lock and chain, which were on the floor behind it.  The break-in took place in broad daylight, sometime between 11 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. 

The Cuban police are a work of art.  This would make for a great new CSI- Special Edition: Cuba episode.  They were finger-printing and taking photographs and interviewing me until 11 p.m. and were back again today for another hour or so, with the prosecuting as well as the defending attorneys already assigned to the case.  The first thing the district attorney wanted to establish is how long I planned to be in Cuba, for when the case comes to trial.    The police detective who interviewed me and wrote out the entire report longhand for me to sign on Saturday night also returned today and I kept staring at him because he reminded me of someone.  The four of them were invited to join us for lunch in the Dining Hall, and after one more look at him I had it figured out.  I asked him whether he had ever heard of the American comedian Bill Cosby.  He had!  I told him he looked almost exactly like the actor who played the role of the teenage son in the long-running television series titled “The Bill Cosby Show.”  I asked them if they had internet access and they did, and told them to Google it to find a photo of the actor, whose first name I think is Jerome.  
Who can tell me the full name of this actor and how old he is today?  Send me a photo, please, so that I can show it to the police team.  They will be thrilled.
 Tuesday, November 1, 2011:  Yesterday I moved all of my belongings for the second time since the break-in, into another much larger, much more secure, and more modern apartment.   It is the apartment that the Seminary has been using to house the specially-invited foreign guests for short periods of time.  It is quadruple the size of my first apartment.   Most of the walls have fresh paint, a color of which my daughters might approve, i.e. not ‘eggshell’.  The floors are all 12”x12” ceramic tile, white and beige.  The bathroom’s walls and shower stall have square foot blue ceramic tiles,  an American showerhead with good 2nd floor water pressure, a pedestal sink and mirror, and a toilet with a push-button flush on the top of the tank which actually works (most of the others around the seminary do not)  and with minimal rust stains in the bowl.   The bedroom has a nice double bed and a large air-conditioning unit.  The living room is furnished with a typically Cuban matching set of 2 rockers and 2 straight-back chairs, with woven seats and backs, and glass-topped coffee table.   The eat-in kitchen has another carved-wood table and set of 4 chairs, which I am using as my desk for now as I type this.   There is a microwave!  The refrigerator is a good size but only the top freezer part is working and I have to keep the bottom part slightly open so that it doesn’t roar.  There is one electrician who comes to work at the Seminary one day a week, and he has a huge backlog of broken fans, air-conditioners, rice-makers, washing machines, etc. to fix.    Luckily, the only thing I have to cook and refrigerate is my own homemade cat food.  And the dining room ladies love me because when they asked me,  I had antacid tablets and Ibuprofen and ballpoint pens to give them, and the I showed them the baby books Ashley made of the grandbabies, so they give me lots of leftovers to feed Semi.   Oh—and the Dining Room Lady in Charge, who is called “Mamita” by nearly everyone, told me that her real name is “Julia” and she hates it.  So I took my laptop over to the Seminary Kitchen and played John Lennon’s song for her, and the rest of the kitchen staff gathered around to listen, and since John Lennon is an iconic martyr only second to Che Guevara in this country, you can imagine the outcome.  She now proudly answers me when I call her Julia, British pronunciation, of course.
 I am told that this will be my home until the end of my stay at the seminary.   My new little Cuban Siamese kitten loves the new place.  There is a brick-floored outdoor laundry patio off the kitchen with an old-fashioned double-sink.  I just found enough plastic-covered old wire to attach to the aluminum slats in the windows diagonally crossing between the living room and the kitchen, to create a clothesline.   I feed the cat on this outdoor porch, because of the ants.  (One drop of anything edible, liquid or solid, on any surface anywhere, will immediately attract literally hundreds of little ants.) 
 Last night Semi caught something that looked like a cross between a flattened slug, a huge leech, and an enormous cockroach.  He brought it inside to play with it.  I took one look at the thing and picked him up with it in his mouth and put them both outside.   By the time I came back with a piece of toilet paper in hand to flush the thing away, it looked like Semi (short for Seminario) was literally licking his lips.  When I described the disgusting creature to my neighbors, I was told that it was todo muslo “all muscle, highly rich in protein, a healthy treat for a cat.” 
Also last night, I and several others experienced the worst thunder and lightning storm of our lives.   It lasted for hours and was followed by torrential downpours.   Today it was all that people were talking about.  We are more susceptible to lightning and thunder because of our location at the highest point of land, combined with a lot of very tall trees.   At my house in Haverford, I would grab a daughter or a cat and run out to enjoy any summer or winter storm from the comfort of a porch swing and the relative safety of a covered balcony.  Last night, I grabbed the cat for dear life.
By the way, Semi knows who broke down the door and robbed my money.  I had left him behind to nap. A friend and I went walking down to the farmers’ market over the bridge at the bottom end of our street, then alongside the river San Juan to the Matanzas Bay.  We walked along the bay to eat lunch at a state-owned restaurant (it takes moneda nacional, Cuban pesos, and is thus affordable even for a student) overlooking a small half-moon beach.
The Rector (who is the CEO of the Seminary) had been traveling abroad during the robbery, but upon his return he immediately called me to his office to discuss the robbery.  The Seminary does not carry insurance, but he offered to try to raise enough to reimburse me.   Instead, we recalculated the sum totals of expenditures directly related to my stay, such as monthly fees for the religious visa, transportation to and from the airport in Havana, and paying back the deacon for the money he had loaned me to hold me until my daughter wired me more money via Western Union.   The totals were close enough to one another and we agreed that it was a fair arrangement.  The Rector feels that even if the police catch the thief, the money will have been spent.  The police told me that the thief has to pay the money back a bit at a time. 

I am thankful that all that was taken from my apartment was cash.  My laptop was untouched right on the desk; my digital camera right next to it.  The case with my jewelry had been opened but nothing was taken.  The thief took my Spanish-English dictionary and my bible off the desk and placed them on the floor behind the broken door so that it would not be entirely open.   So what I saw when I returned to little apartment was my Semi sitting, quite calmly, right inside the opening of the broken door left slightly ajar. 
My life is just now beginning to get back to whatever was starting to become normal before the break-in.  The next episode will have to do a bit of back-tracking so that I can finish telling you about the Cuban Pony Express, the 3 days spent at our grandmother’s house on the beach in Varadero with my cousin Alicia,  the visit from my 4 students so that we could go ‘swimming in English,’  and last week’s class where I decided to show them the documentary film made in 1992 about my aunt.  We discussed their reaction to the film in today’s class.  Tomorrow they turn in something in writing.  Thus far, since I’m making up the course as we go along, the emphasis has been mostly on verbal communication.  The end of the trimester is already on November 25th and I have yet to give them a grade for any written work. 

I apologize for the mass-mailing, but if you write to me individually, I will of course email you back in private.

With love from Cuba

Elisa

Thursday, October 27, 2011

God Created the Family

Su Voz
GOD CREATED THE FAMILY
GENESIS 2:15-25
“Anyone who listens to the word but does not do what it says is like a man who looks at his face in a mirror and, after looking at himself, goes away and immediately forgets what he looks like.”
Genesis 2:24
God did not just create man, he also created the family. Because the creation of the woman the creation of the man is nothing other than the creation of the family and of the home.

Our Lord also blessed the formation of the family. His presence in the wedding at Cana symbolized his approval of the formation of a new family.

Today more than ever there is a need for Christian homes, created by the Lord and in which the Lord is served and praised.  A home in which each day God’s presence is sought through family worship, through unity and respect for the family, and through the Christian life in action.

We all want to enjoy a home where we live in peace, where tensions and difficulties are resolved under the loving eyes of its Divine Creator.

PRAYER:  Eternal Father and Creator, today I place my home life in your hands, praying that you bless each one of its members and that you allow us to always walk in your paths.  Amen.
 
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Translated by Elisa Menocal.  Elisa is a member of the Ardmore Presbyterian Church, sent to the Evangelical Theological Seminary in Cuba.  She is spending the year there teaching English and translating for the school.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

The Beginning of a New Day in Immokalee

The Beginning of a New Day in Immokalee

By Rev. Schaunel Steinnagel

Hunger Action Enabler, Presbytery of Philadelphia



From September 15-18, I had the tremendous opportunity to travel to Fort Meyers and Immokalee, in southwest Florida, and learn first-hand about the situation faced by tomato pickers there.  Immokalee has been called “America’s Tomato Capitol,” because if you have eaten a tomato in the winter, chances are, it was picked in or around Immokalee.  We are in a relationship with the people in Immokalee, every time we eat a tomato that they have picked.  In response to injustices in those fields, Presbyterians are among people of faith who are being asked to do any of the following things: 



·         Start a conversation with their grocery store’s manager about where their tomatoes are coming from;

·         Sign and mail a postcard to a grocery store CEO, asking them to work with the Coalition of Immokalee Workers;

·         Pray with and for the tomato pickers for intervention and justice.



There are exciting developments to report from the fields of Immokalee, but for a long time, tomato pickers have had to work in virtual sweatshop conditions, in the fields.  The lectionary reading for Sunday, September 18 was Jesus’ parable of day laborers waiting to be picked up to go work in the vineyard (Matthew 20:1-16), and far from fiction, in Immokalee, there is a central parking lot, where each day, bus drivers get to choose which men and women they will take to work in the tomato fields.  Near the lot are trailers, near bare of furnishings, but the rent that is charged is an outrageous $500 per month, and ten men will live together, at $50 each per month.  At the extreme, nine cases of actual slavery have been prosecuted, in Florida’s fields, since 1997.  For those not in slavery, there have been unpaid work hours, capricious employer requests, and unsafe working conditions, such as lack of water or shelter in heat and thunder storms. 



Tomato pickers have organized themselves, in the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW).  Through the years, CIW has chosen to concentrate on the issue of wages, stagnant for some 30 years at one penny per pound, because as horrible as housing and other conditions are, it is the wages, they feel, that can give them the opportunity to make more choices, about where they will live, about obtaining a bicycle or car to be able to “commute” to work and not be forced to live in strategically placed trailers, about how they will be able to take care of their families. 



Since 2002, beginning with the endorsement of a boycott of Taco Bell restaurants, the Presbyterian Church (USA) has been a supporter of the organizing for “Fair Food” by the CIW.  Fair food refers to tomatoes that we know come from fair working conditions, similar to “fair trade” coffee and other items, which we may seek to buy. 



The Taco Bell Boycott ended in 2006, with the signing of a landmark agreement, YUM! Inc., owner of Taco Bell, pledging to pay an extra penny per pound and support a Code of Conduct.  Further organizing has brought on board McDonald’s, Burger King, Subway, Whole Foods, and other companies, eventually bringing the total to nine restaurant and food companies.  What is being hailed as a “new day” began in just this past year’s growing season, when the major grower companies agreed to implement the Code of Conduct and pass on the additional penny per pound:  Now, workers can actually see in their pay checks the line items that represent additional income, when the tomatoes have been provided to any of the nine companies; they receive trainings on their rights as workers, on company time; they can clock-in on time clocks and be paid for all of the hours in the fields (rather than being required to show up in the wee hours of the morning, wait for fields to dry, and begin to be paid, when the picking begins); and being implemented is zero tolerance for sexual harassment, slavery, and other worker abuses.

           

What could stop such progress?!  The Code of Conduct can only be as strong as the number of companies that agree to support it. 



Currently, grocery store companies are the stopping place.  Major grocery store companies have been refusing to dialogue or sign the Code of Conduct with the CIW.  Trader Joe’s is one such company.  Despite an image of social responsibility, treatment of workers in the fields has not made it to executive consciousness.  Ahold, a Dutch company, which owns Giant and Stop & Shop grocery stores and is actually the biggest grocery store company in the northeastern United States, is another important company, from which support of the Immokalee workers is desired, but not yet forthcoming.  Grocery stores are big sellers of tomatoes and therefore important targets.



If we want to fight hunger, then we need to be concerned about what people are being paid.  If we want to know where our own food is coming from, then we need to pay attention to the conditions facing farmworkers.  If we read Genesis 1, reminded that each person alive in the world gives us an image of God, then we cannot deny them their rights.



Presbyterian partners are being asked to do a couple of good things, in support of the CIW. 



First, if you shop at a Trader Joe’s or an Ahold grocery store, download, print, and sign a Manager’s letter, and bring it to the Manager of the store, when you shop.  Grocery store manager’s letters are available at the Presbyterian Church’s Fair Food website:  http://gamc.pcusa.org/ministries/fairfood/take-action-fair-food/#meet.  If the manager provides you with any sort of written response, would you please share it with me?  There may be ways to continue the conversation!



Second, postcards, to Mr. Dan Bane, CEO of Trader Joe’s, and Mr. Lawrence Benjamin, COO of Ahold USA, are available for you to sign and mail.  There will be postcards available around Ardmore Presbyterian Church, approved by the Mission Awareness Committee.  Take one!  They will remind the reader of “sub-poverty wages…no read raise in 30 years…cases of modern-day slavery uncovered since 1997.”  Such shopper advocacy can be very influential.



Third, this movement has been a journey by the CIW for the long haul, so please pray for them, and for justice.  Some people are choosing to pray while they are in the produce section of their supermarkets, when they find themselves in the closest relationship with the workers. 



Finally, if you have further questions or would like to know how else you might be involved, please speak with me, because lots of things are happening, and there is opportunity for even more engagement!