Wednesday, October 20th, 2010
Two years ago we decided we were pretty tired of Christmas.
Christmas is supposed to be a time to celebrate the birth of our Savior and Lord, the dawning of redemption, the good news of great joy to the entire world! But what do we experience?
Worst of all is that somehow in the midst of the celebration we feel like we may have missed the whole point.
Then we heard a story from some of our mission partners in Kigoma, Tanzania. The children didn’t have any place to go. They wanted to build a community center for the kids and for other purposes in the town. It would cost, they said, about $80,000. We thought that would be the kind of Christmas gift that would make Jesus smile: a community center for the children and youth in Kigoma. But who would write a check for $80,000? We would, by God’s grace.
We did not ask anybody to “dig deeper”. (Are you kidding? A recession was gathering steam and a lot of us weren’t feeling fiscally fit).
We simply asked one another to focus on compassion instead of consumption at Christmas and to re-direct 25-50% of what they would normally spend on Christmas gifts to a special offering for a community center in Tanzania.
So on that December Sunday morning we brought our special gifts. …and our mission partners in Kigoma kept track over the internet. And the gifts rolled in. They overflowed. We received $148,000 toward our goal of $80,000.
Now the Community Center is nearly complete (it takes a long time to build in a place where the cement is carried in a basket on your head!). And we are overjoyed. And we believe Jesus is still smiling.
So, what do you do after building a community center in Tanzania?
Whatever it was that happened through reconnect Christmas, we wanted more of that in our Christmas celebration from then on! So in 2009 we prayed. And we sent a small team of four WSC members to India to meet up with mission partners there. We went to see. To pray. To listen. To discern.
And here’s what we found:
Children – LOTS of children – in rural villages that are sold into bonded labor and, due to the high interest rates of the “lease” of a child, most often the children cannot be bought back by their parents. A lifetime of bonded labor and no way out.
Other children are left behind in the rural villages to fend for themselves while parents go to the burgeoning metropolitan areas looking for work. And many of these children end up in gangs as vandals and anti-government activists.
Still other children are taken by their parents or by someone who has bought them to beg in the streets of the city. Some of the children are purposely wounded since a wounded child’s begging is often more profitable.
Our hearts were broken. God’s heart, too.
“What is the way to break this cycle?,” we asked our partners who work in the villages with the children and their families. n“Education,” they said. b“Knowing how to read and write and preparing to take entrance exams for higher education…that is the way for a different future.” “Okay, but do you know anything about doing that? “, we wondered. “Yes. We’re doing that already and have been for years. We provide education for street children through our Alpha Schools. Some are already in what you call junior college or a regular college; a few are beyond that in medical training or engineering school.”
“So what do you want to do here?”, we asked.
“We want to build a school for the children in this district where they can learn, can be safe, and can experience God’s love for them personally.”
So when we returned to Wheatland Salem we presented what we saw and heard to the Missions Leadership Team and the Church Board and we all decided to ask the congregation, during another year of a deepening recession, to re-direct 25-50% of what we spend on Christmas gifts for the purpose of building a school in Mahbubnagar district for the children. We prayed for a special Reconnect Christmas offering of $100,000. We received $111,000. We rejoiced. We think Jesus smiled.
Then the hard work began.
We tried to purchase land – it was unimaginably expensive
We attempted to enlist other churches here as partners – but they had other priorities
And then a secessionist movement gathered steam in Andhra Pradesh that put all land deals, political boundaries, and local authorities “on hold”. And when things are “on hold” in India, it can be a very, very long time.
It looked like our plan was in deep trouble.
But God’s plan was not. Our partners in the mission were not focused on land, but on the children. The strategy remained the same, but the delivery method changed. They opened an Alpha school in leased space in Shamshabad (Mahbubnagar district) and then five more Alpha schools in another district far to the north where the situation for children is, if you can imagine it, even more tragic.
So now, less than one year later, there are nearly 600 children in school – in areas where there was no school available to them at all just twelve months ago.
Here’s something else: our mission partners launched this without a dime from us. And then they asked if our special Christmas gift of 2009 could be used for these schools. And since we were pretty clear that the gift was for the benefit of the children rather than building a building with our name on it, we said, without hesitation: “YES!”
So here’s the way it’s working out: our special gift will secures the leases on these facilities and pays the teachers for about two years for about 600 children.
But what then?
A new partner has emerged: Bright Point for Children (brightpointforchildren.org). Our new friends at Bright Point, an experienced ministry that has been developing Christ-centered sponsor relationships in several countries including India, have committed to finding sponsors for all of the children in the schools over the next two years so that the ongoing costs for leases, materials, and teachers will be provided after our seed money is used up.
Jesus has got to be grinning from ear to ear!
We’ve been sent together under the influence of the Holy Spirit for the healing of the world in Jesus’ name.
What’s next for Reconnect Christmas?
This has been too exciting so far.
Some of our families have adopted a new Christmas tradition of re-directing 25-50% of what they would have spent on themselves for the purpose of a special Christmas gift on behalf of the least and the last in other parts of the world.
Posted in Kigoma Community Center 2008, Mahbubnagar School Project 2009, updates | No Comments »
Friday, December 18th, 2009
Wow!
Our goal was $100,000 in one special “Reconnect Christmas Offering” on December 13th. The economy has been in the tank. A number of our church families have either lost their employment, fear they might lose their employment, and/or have already seen their compensation reduced as their company seeks ways to avoid layoffs. And besides, with all of the hurt here at home, why raise a boatload of cash to send to the other side of the world?
It seems more than the usual number of comments have been spoken, e-mailed, and voicemailed that “this will never work” because of the economy, or people are “worn out”, or “we need to focus on ourselves.”
Well, it’s true. The economy is still shaky and people are worn out (I’m pretty singed myself right now), and we have a bundle of big challenges before us as a congregation. No doubt about all of that.
So, did I want to “pull the plug” on the Reconnect Christmas project…in September, October, November, last week? Nope. I was hanging the whole thing on what we had all told one another over the past two years of congregational self-assessment. We said that a core value of our congregation, something that is true at all times and in all situations, is that we are a missional church. Taking away the “missional” component of our Christmas celebration would be like taking down the Christmas tree on December 20th or cancelling Christmas Eve services because it would be dark out, or deleting the Christmas carols from our worship these weeks because, well, there are other songs to sing and, besides, some of the carols are hard to sing. Foregoing a “special offering” on December 13th would be like denying ourselves. It is something we simply cannot do.
I had no “inside information” on the outcome. Just a confidence that we actually are a missional congregation. It isn’t marketing or wishful thinking. It is who, by God’s grace, we have become.
So the preacher preached (and cried a bit, too — at least at 9:45 service), the songs were sung, and the offering was taken: $106,000+ (with a bit more dribbling in this week). And, remembering that there indeed are children nearby in need, we also brought to worship over 1,200 toys for them.
I don’t know about you, but I am very proud of Wheatland Salem Church for being true to ourselves. The other challenges remain and the needs are still enormous here and around the world. But I feel much more prepared for Christmas now that we have given our attention to things that Jesus himself said were most important.
–Pastor Scott Field, Wheatland Salem Church
Tags: India School Project 2009, Mahbubnagar India
Posted in Mahbubnagar School Project 2009, updates | No Comments »
Friday, November 6th, 2009
Where is Mahbubnagar?
Mahbubnagar is not a town or village. It is district within the state of Andhra Pradesh (aka A.P.). Andhra Pradesh is located in south central India. A district is somewhat equivalent to a county in the U.S.
You can check out the maps of India website to get your bearings for the country, state, and district.
http://www.mapsofindia.com/maps/andhrapradesh/districts/mahbubnagar.htm
Mahbubnagar: Just the facts
Mahbubnagar district is a poor rural area with frequent drought, subsistence farming, difficult living conditions scattered across almost all of the villages, low literacy levels, and poor public education.
http://www.indianetzone.com/43/mahbubnagar_district.htm
The side of India untouched by economic progress: subsistence agriculture
Rural agriculture in Andhra Pradesh state of India was profiled in a New York Times article on September 5, 2009. Read the article here:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/05/world/asia/05drought.html
Tags: Info, Mahbubnagar India, Mahbubnagar School Project 2009
Posted in Info, Mahbubnagar School Project 2009 | No Comments »
This year Reconnect Christmas is much closer to home.
Throughout our nation’s economic recession we, as a congregation, have stretched, scrimped, gotten by, and, often, barely made it – but we have been constant in pouring ourselves and our resources out for others. Well, the recession grinds along. And the impact on individuals [...]