Posts tagged as:

missions

What I want for Christmas…

by Jessica on December 5, 2009

in Christmas

Christmas with Compassion

is to find a sponsor for Joseline Dayana Flores Medina.

Joseline is one of the many children awaiting a sponsor through Compassion International, a child advocacy that “releases children from spiritual, economic, social and physical poverty and enables them to become responsible, fulfilled Christian adults.”

Joseline is a 6-year-old, little girl from El Salvador. Not yet able to go to school, she helps her mom and grandfather by running errands–neither of whom are employed. She enjoys playing dolls and running with friends.

Since 2004, I have had the blessing of being a Compassion sponsor to two young girls from Ecuador (first Diana and currently Pamela). It is such a joy to receive their letters filled with sweet affections, learn about their lives, and share my own life with them.

What is Compassion International?

“Compassion International is a Christian child development organization dedicated to releasing children from poverty. Our ministry is two-fold: we work through local churches to provide child development programs to deliver children from economic, physical, social and spiritual poverty, enabling them to become responsible, fulfilled Christian adults. And we speak out for children in poverty – informing, motivating and equipping others to become advocates for children.” (from their website)

What are these children facing?

Living in America we are shielded from the poverty and despair that encompasses much of the world. Here, in our country, even our poorest are richer than people in undeveloped and third world countries.

Poverty…

• More than 2 billion people lack access to electricity and modern forms of energy.

• More than 1 billion (one in five) people live on less than U.S.$1 a day.

Hunger…

  • About 5.6 million deaths of children worldwide are related to under-nutrition. This accounts for 53 percent of the total deaths for children under 5.
  • More than 140 million or 25 percent of all children in developing countries are underweight and at risk from the long-term effects of malnourishment.
  • More than 6 million children die from malnutrition each year.

Water…

  • Roughly 12 percent of the world’s population, or 884 million people, do not have access to safe water.
  • Approximately 1.8 million children die each year as a result of diseases caused by unclean water and poor sanitation. This is around 5,000 deaths a day.
  • The average person in the developing world uses a little more than 2.5 gallons of water each day for drinking, washing and cooking. Whereas the average person in the developed world uses 13 gallons per day only for toilet flushing.

Education…

• An estimated 130 million of the world’s 15- to 24- year-olds cannot read or write.

• There are 781 million illiterate adults worldwide, and 64 percent of them are women.

• Of the 22 countries where more than half the population is illiterate, 15 are in Africa.

Health…

• About 1.8 million people, most of whom are children, die annually of food-borne diseases.

Approximately 37 percent of deaths among children under 5 – 9.7 million worldwide in 2006 – occur in the first month of life.

• There are 1.8 million diarrheal-related deaths per year among young children.

Just think…this list doesn’t even include child labor, HIV/AIDS, environmental and population issues, social and religious concerns, or child abuse.

What does it cost to be a Compassion sponsor?

Time, money, and prayer.

Time to write letters to your sponsored child (you can even do it online now).

Money. The cost to sponsor a child is $38 a month, that’s less than a dinner out for the family.

Prayer. You could give your time and money, but when their physical need is great their spiritual need is greater.

How does a child benefit from sponsorship?

The money given to Compassion is used to aid in the cost of education, taught hygiene and personal health, supplementary food when needed, sports activities, taught social skills through the local body, and Bible training.

So…what are you going to do? While we’re spending this holiday season celebrating Jesus’ birth in our warm, cozy homes and fuzzy pajamas complaining about the extra pounds we’re going to have to work off in the new year, there are children and families around the world just trying to survive.

They’re not hoping to get a bonus from their boss so they can buy that toy their kids really want. They’re just hoping they have food to put on the table. There are millions of children around the world just hoping for something better–for war to stop, for their parents to live, to be able to go to school. You can help.

Will you sponsor my Christmas child, Joseline?

Share

{ 1 comment }

Feeding the Homeless

by Jessica on October 27, 2008

in Homeless,Ministry

“There are thousands of people dying for a piece of bread. There are thousands upon thousands who die for a little bit of love, for a little bit of acknowledgment.”
Mother Teresa

Last night was our monthly trek downtown with the college kids to Horizon Urban Ministries where we serve and minister to the homeless. This was our fourth time down and each time gets better and better, and I think as a group we are continually growing. There’s not as much apprehension, even though you never know what will happen or who you’ll meet or what they’ll say.

We are more eager to get out and have conversations with people rather than simply serve them. All in all, we’re becoming involved in their lives. Getting to know them by name, their stories, their families, their likes and dislikes–after all, they’re not just homeless, they’re people too.

(L-R: Coy, Bryan, Pastor Joe, Jace)

Our ministry has expanded over the last few months. We originally started off fixing a meal and inviting people in the park to come. Now, our time downtown includes preparing a meal, decorating: set-up tables/drinks/cutlery, going out to the park praying for and inviting people to come for dinner, foot washing and handing out new socks (homeless people love clean socks), praying for them, worship, and we even have a chiropractor come down and do adjustments for people!


This was probably my last trip downtown for at least a couple of months. I’d like to continue going after Joey is born, but we’ll have to see how that will pan out. I wanted to take some pictures to show you guys, they’re not the best (due to lighting and I didn’t want to just snap pictures of unsuspecting people).


I’ll miss going down seeing the people and serving them. Coming home last night what it felt like, for me, was when Jesus sent his disciples to go get lunch and he ended up talking with the Samaritan woman at the well (John 4). When the disciples returned Jesus said,

“My food is to do the will of Him who sent Me and to accomplish His work.”

That phrase kept going through my mind and even though I was tired and a little bit hungry, I felt satisfied.

Share

{ 1 comment }

Do We Know the Poor?

by Jessica on August 1, 2008

in Uncategorized

an excerpt from Mother Teresa’s Heart of Joy: The Transforming Power of Self-Giving

A few weeks before my trip to the United States, someone came to our house by night and said, “There is a Hindu family with eight children, and they have gone several days without eating.” I took a bit of rice and went immediately to their assistance. The mother took the rice from my hands, distributed it into two equal servings, and went out immediately.

When she came back I asked, “Where have you been? What have you been doing?” “They are hungry too,” she answered. Right next to them lives a Muslim family with the same number of children. The Hindu mother knew they had been out of food for several days. She did what Jesus does: she broke bread. She broke her love and shared it with her neighbors.

I cannot describe to you the faces of those youngsters. When I went it, I knew they were suffering. I could see their little faces. I could see their eyes shining because of hunger. When I left, their eyes were shining with joy because both the mother and children were able to share their love with others. What impressed me most in that instance was that the woman knew. Do we know our poor people? Do we know the poor in our house, in our family? Perhaps they are not hungry for a piece of bread. Perhaps our children, husband, wife, are not hungry, or naked, or dispossessed, but are you sure there is no one there who feels unwanted, deprived of affectation? Where is your elderly father or mother?

One day I visited a house where our sisters shelter the aged. This is one of the nicest houses in England, filled with beautiful and precious things, yet there was not one smile on the faces of those people. All of them were looking toward the door. I asked the sister in charge, “Why are they like that? Why can you not see a smile on their faces?” (I am accustomed to seeing smiles on people’s faces. I think a smile generates a smile, just as love generates love.)

The sister answered, “The same thing happens every day. They are always waiting for someone to come and visit them. Loneliness eats them up, and day after day they do not stop looking. Nobody comes.” Abandonment is an awful poverty.
On one of our nightly walks through London, I discovered a teenage boy, with long, well-groomed hair. He was sitting, thinking. I said to him, “You shouldn’t be here at this time. You should be with your parents. This is not a proper place for you to be at this time and on such a cold night.” He stared at me and said, “My mother doesn’t want me because I have long hair.”

There was no other reason. A young man, a mere teenager, rejected by his own people, by his own mother! I reflected for an instant. “Maybe his mother is concerned about the hungry people in India, in Africa, or in the third world. Maybe she desires to meet the needs of all except her son. She doesn’t know that poverty, hunger, exists in her own house. It is she who provokes such hunger.”

That’s why I ask: “Do we know our poor people? Do we know how poor we ourselves are?”

A nation that destroys the life of an unborn child, who has been created for living and loving, who has been created in the image of God, is in a tremendous poverty. For a child to be destroyed because of selfishness of those who fear they may not be able to feed one more child, fear they may not be able to educate one more child and so decide that the child has to die–that’s poverty.

*
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...
Share

{ 0 comments }