Team devotion

Our team devotion time Monday morning ...Psalm 29 
1Ascribe to the LORD, you gods, *
ascribe to the LORD glory and strength. 
2Ascribe to the LORD the glory due his Name; *
worship the LORD in the beauty of holiness.
3The voice of the LORD is upon the waters;
the God of glory thunders; *
the LORD is upon the mighty waters. 
4The voice of the LORD is a powerful voice; *
the voice of the LORD is a voice of splendor.
5The voice of the LORD breaks the cedar trees; *
the LORD breaks the cedars of Lebanon; 
6He makes Lebanon skip like a calf, *
and Mount Hermon like a young wild ox.
7The voice of the LORD splits the flames of fire;
the voice of the LORD shakes the wilderness; *
the LORD shakes the wilderness of Kadesh.
8The voice of the LORD makes the oak trees writhe *
and strips the forests bare. 
9And in the temple of the LORD *
all are crying, "Glory!" 
10The LORD sits enthroned above the flood; *
the LORD sits enthroned as King for evermore.
11The LORD shall give strength to his people; *
the LORD shall give his people the blessing of peace.

Praying for The Young PeopleGod our Father, you see your children growing up in an unsteady and confusing world: Show them that your ways give more life than the ways of the world, and that following you is better than chasing after selfish goals. Help them to take failure, not as a measure of their worth, but as a chance for a new start. Give them strength to hold their faith in you, and to keep alive their joy in your creation; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

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Roma Day camp 1

Andrew will be posting a more proper Roma day camp blog soon.I will just share with you some photos...

We visited some of the Roma teens today along with running a Roma settlement day camp with around 120 to 150 kids and children. It was quite busy trying to keep them busy and interested about the day camp. Weather was quite hot. We ran our program under the hot sun for a few hours... It was quite exhausted with the weather situation.

We had singing, drama, testimony sharing and craft time with many children. Then we arrange some lunches for them before we clean up and heads back to the children centre.

In the afternoon, we also visited some Roma settlement, see the progress of a church building project and visited some needy families.

In the evening, we also went out to visit some village children and poor families.

It was a long a busy day for all of us...some of us are getting a bit "ill"Please pray for our health as we have a busy day tomorrow.

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Day 5 (final) Roma Camp Photos

Late, but only because of uploading difficulties. Many thanks to Tomson, Lisa, and Bin; Tomson mostly for editing, everyone else for their support with the blog!It was at the campfire on day 4 that we did the altar call. Eight to ten kids came to accept the Lord that day, and we also did a re-commitment for kids that came last year and that returned this year.

We decided to keep day 5 casual and familiar, so we took them out for a hike to a nearby lake.

Hiking prep. Everybody needs water, and the Ukranian diet prefers lots of sugary snacks!

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The lakeside around which we hiked. Unfortunately, we don't have many other clear shots, because there are so many trees and bushes along the trail.

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We encounter on our hike an actual goat herder; further emphasis on the agricultural focus of the local region.

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We in North America don't touch fruit or berry bushes/trees because of potential pesticides that might be sprayed on them, or because they might belong to somebody. In Ukraine, public services pretty much never spray pesticides, and owners are very lax about fruits and berries being picked and eaten by passer-bys. Our kids demolish a blackberry bush's offspring that we encountered during the walk.

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After the hike, we performed a closing ceremony with some final words from the leaders and translators. We also gave some gifts both in general to everybody and to best performing kids who listened, lead, performed as groups, kept clean rooms, etc.

Bin catches the kids attention with a magic trick before the closing ceremony begins.

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Now that we cleaned up the hut and are leaving it, it feels kinda lonely looking.

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Day of Worship

Today is a day of worship for the team and House of Mercy.We get up early and eat ready for breakfast. Then headed out to church for worship. Today is The Lord's supper. Thus, we had a chance to part take communion with out Ukrainian brothers a sisters.

After worship, we headed back to House of Mercy children centre to have lunch. Then team meeting and some relaxation and of course the tradition of a friendly football game. (In Ukraine and most parts of the world, we call this football)

Football is the most important sport in Ukraine. Basically, everyone plays football since they were kids like hockey in Canada. You can imagine the intensity of such a game among Ukraine children. Winning the game is important to some of the youth and even adult players.

We had a very busy game. It was good that we split the Canadian team into both side. Otherwise, we will have a tough time to catch up with them. At the end, we tied the game and went into sudden death penalty shoot out. But still tied the game. Thus, like what Vasya said at the end of the game.....friendship won.

My muscles are quite sore after the game. Tomorrow I will see how my muscle's situation.For me, I feel like I have more exercise in two weeks stay in Ukraine than the whole year in Canada. ;)

Tomorrow, we will be starting a busy day at both Roma day camp and visitation and also House of Mercy discipleship program. Both teams were busy preparing and getting ready for another busy week.....

Please continue to pray for us and our team work to keep up with the mission and program.

Some of us are quite tired physically. Thus, we really need your prayers to sustain us all.Here is quite summary for next week:

1. House of Mercy discipleship program for full week.2. Roma day camp for Monday and Tuesday ( say around 150 to 200 children in total)3. Visitation for both Roma and House of Mercy team4. House of Mercy staff retreat for Wednesday and Thursday.5. Mission team cooking dinner for everyone for Friday dinner.6. Talent night on Friday.7. Departure on Sat. to Budapest. Overnight stay in Budapest.8. Early morning flight on August 11, 2013 Sunday morning from Budapest to Amsterdam to Calgary.

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Pride and Roma

You will have seen the Day 4 photos by now, but there is unfortunately one event that morning that marred an otherwise perfect day.Note that the below is related to us in a first person view from the kids involved in it themselves. It is the final "revision" that we counselors have agreed to accept as what actually happened, but we only arrived at it after several people involved in it changed what they said. And there is obvious disagreement between the people involved on account accuracy.

One of our younger participants felt that another older one had been disrespectful to one of his family members; it is unclear whether he means one of his sisters/relatives attending the camp with him, or another relative that he or his brother shared about at bedside on Wednesday night. He confronted the older participant Thursday morning in the elder's room, while all the camp leaders and translators were doing devotions. The younger asked the older participant to take back what he had said or done. The older one refused.

At this point, we do not know who pushed who first, but there was a physical confrontation. The younger participant's neighbor heard the commotion and rushed to defend him; the older participant's two friends, who came from the same Roma camp as him, also noticed what was going on and did likewise, escalating the confrontation until the younger participant and his neighbor left the room.

We would not receive word about this incident until breakfast time, when three boys refused to show up at breakfast.

This has been heavy news on the entire Roma team. I personally have fellowship with the three older boys at the same table everyday, every meal, and am a role model for them; the other leaders have similar or deeper levels of relationships with all five boys.

We have asked the younger participant to apologize to the older one for fighting with him, and asked the older one to apologize for disrespecting the younger's female relatives. Both have complied. But the older one has refused to accept the younger one's apology, and when asked, also refused to apologize to the younger one for fighting with him. He instead asked to leave; to call his camp to provide a ride for him. When Lisa tried to convince him to stay, he declared he would walk if he had to, so he could return to his camp. His two friends also asked to leave after he did so.

In the end, we granted the requests of all three boys. But it is with burdened hearts that we do so.

Upon hearing about this after the Roma camp, Vasya himself noted that the outcome of the confrontation was to be expected. Despite having much of their culture, their identity, and their very dignity as human beings stripped away, the Roma remain fiercely prideful. In fact, their pride forms a mental protection and coping mechanism for dealing with how unfair the world deigns to treat them; but this same invulnerable shield is a terrible wall that blocks out forgiveness, mercy, grace, and the immense love that comes from the saving message of Christ's resurrection.

It is a tragedy, that pride is one of the few things that the present Roma share in common with other humans. And where it concerns missions, they would be better served without it if they are to willingly and sincerely come to Christ and mature in His character.

I don't intend to sound like I'm pontificating or self-righteous. If I am, I apologize. But I am all too familiar with pride, and it's destructive results to both the self and to everyone around it. To see it here, with only trivial differences between it and my past experiences, has saddened me, angered me, and put me on my guard. My fellow teammates also had strong reactions to this, though I will respect their thoughts and not attempt to detail them here.

On Monday, we will be visiting the camp that the three elder boys came from, to host a day camp. We expect the pastor of that camp will ask us why those three will be sent back, and we will have to recount our story. Though my fellow team members may have some idea of what will come, I have no clue what kind of fallout the confrontation will create, or if we will even get a chance to communicate with those boys, who need our prayer and intervention by the Holy Spirit.

Please pray for us, as we battle with our emotions and our reactions to this storm. Please pray for the continued mission to the Roma, that God will work boldly through it to bring his children back into his family. But most importantly, please pray for the Roma themselves.

Pray specifically for the five boys who fought each other, and pray for the Roma as a whole, that humility would become a virtue, and not a vice to them.

Pray that the godliness that Christ and the servants of God show become a role model for young and old Roma alike, displacing their old, prideful sin nature.

Thank you, for your time in reading this, and in what care and thought you might have for our progress.

House of Mercy's new kitchen

There has been many improvements each time we come back to House of Mercy. Over the last year, they have been renovating the kitchen and building a new kitchen.This new kitchen is bigger. it has the six stove commercial range tops with two ovens along giant freezers and fridge, big counter tops and many upgrades.

Now they can prepare food without worrying about the oven fuse will burnt or over heated...nor that the kitchen will be or crowded.

They are also improving the playground for the children. A Sweden company donated the playground equipment. They are in the process of building this playground for them.

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Saturday Hiking/BBQ photos

Today was a hot, hot day but full of fun with the kids.  We spent it hiking through some property that the House of Mercy owns & then finished it off with a BBQ with the kids.  Below are some pictures that highlight some of the things from the day.Vasya hiking

Here Vasya is showing us the land that House of Mercy owns.  You can see the expanse of land that we've partly hiked over :)

Hiking

Here are Vasya, Lisa & Colin hiking up the hill in the hot sun with many of the kids already ahead of them.

Josefs

On the left is Josef Matolchi & on the right is Josef Silakova enjoying their time out at the BBQ.  Our team loves both of these boys as they've grown up to be very respectable, helpful & mature young men.

Berries

The top left picture shows plums that the children pick & eat along the hike.  On the right are some juicy berries, also safe for eating & very delicious!  The kids would pick them for us constantly & encourage us to eat with them :)  Below is a photo of what we ate for dinner tonight- Kolbasa sausages, potatoes & some tomatoes & cucumbers.

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Roma Camp - Our incredible translators and helpers....

In order to run the Roma camp, not only we need lots of prayers but also many translators and helpers to support the whole ministry.Thus, we like to salute all our helpers no translators from Ukraine. We could not do this without their dedications and inputs.

So...our Big thank you to Lera, Joshua, Andriana, Mark, Sasha and Joshua. They are the one who translates for us with the Roma teens. Without them, this Roma Camp will not be possible.

We thank God for their faithful ministry. By the way, Lera took the time to help us during her critical time of law school entrance exam. And Andriana had to spend her birthday in the Roma Camp instead spending time with her family. Joshua, a missionary pastor son from Korea, spent his time at Roma Camp and missed his sister, Esther's birthday. He is on fire for God and is one of the most mature spiritually 15 years old I met.

Of course, we are thankful for Mark and Sasha's multi talents. Sasha, our super power hero that can drag most of the firewood in one go up the hill all the way to the camp fire pit. He can carry three large pieces of luggage up the house of mercy stairs with ease, knit and be a handy man.Mark can sing, dance, translate, play guitar and knit.....They made our Camp so much more meaningful and fun.

We are truly grateful for all of them.

Picture time:Lera enjoying the card craft timeMark and Sasha both excel in their multi talents including knitting......Mark and Sasha checking out the quality of the craft materials....Andriana spent her special birthday with us in the Roma Camp.Joshua trying the guitar.....

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Roma Camp Day Four Campfire!

You want a real campfire? Come to Ukraine.We Canadians have sissy campfires that only come up to our hips at best. Ukrainian campfires though...

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That kid in the background is Zhenya, the smallest kid at the camp coming up to no higher than my shoulder - so four and some feet? Whatever. Big Brother Campfire looms over him.

Uncle Tomson isn't in the picture, but he and Sasha have just stepped back from lighting it. The branches piled in the campfire come up to their heads easily. Here's Sasha checking the tinder before the campfire gets lit:

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And once the fire gets going?

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Firebird Suite time; heh heh heh...

Here, have some more pictures of us preparing and enjoying the campfire.

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Roma camp - Day 4 (Action hero - Bin Wang)

Day 4 ... More pictures of Bin in action.Bin is alone without the teens.....Bin is proud showing off the workmanship of the wooden tool boxes.Bin is helping teens with their craft project.Bin is doing a solo act on the message of the crossBin is starting a fire for the Camp fire (but later had to stop due to not meeting the Ukrainian's bonfire specifications)Bin is in a drama with the Roma teens.

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Roma Camp...Is Almost Over?

A crazy fourth day. That's what I have so far off the top of my head.It's like the kids themselves have realized internally that everything is about to end, and they are putting everything into it. They're more talkative, rowdy, inquisitive, and sometimes even a bit more naughty. But they are also more energetic in worship and incredibly active in crafts and lessons - even more so than in previous days. In the end, our altar calls for confession after presentations and for re-commitment after campfire night was incredible.

Even as I pray for our fellow House of Mercy colleagues, my mind also comes back to our kids at the Roma Camp, and I feel the need to pray for them as well. May God keep their minds on love, and their hearts on His word. May God protect them from the aggression of others, and shield them from their own pride and the self-centered sinful nature that infects all mankind.

We are all ultimately equal in God's eyes, but some of us need His grace more often, and in larger quantities - especially when they themselves don't realize it. And so I pray, as yet another day ends.