Showing posts with label Christian Alliance for Orphans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christian Alliance for Orphans. Show all posts

Friday, June 14, 2013

Friday Little Bits: Around the World in 3 Minutes

4theVoiceless is spanning the globe today in four quick updates:

Orphan Sunday


Orphan Sunday is the first Sunday in November each year, November 3 this year.  This is a time for churches worldwide to focus on some aspect of orphan care in response to the consistent commands of God in His Word to care for orphans.  Orphan Sunday originated in a small church in Zambia, Africa,  and has grown exponentially in the years afterward.

I am one of a couple of the Christian Alliance for Orphans' (CAFO) Orphan Sunday coordinators in Mississippi.  The coordinators were introduced to some of the resources that we have available for this year at the Summit conference in Nashville last month, and more resources are being made available as we move closer to November.  If you would like any information about Orphan Sunday for your church (no matter the denomination), please contact me; you do not have to have a full-fledged orphan care ministry to do something for Orphan Sunday.

Click here to read how I spent an unforgettable Orphan Sunday in 2012.

House of Abraham


One of the new HoA bedrooms as I last saw it in March.
I communicated back and forth with Fenel last week, and they are about a week now from moving out of the current home of House of Abraham.  The new house is not completely ready, but he is trying to get a couple of the rooms completed and the security wall finished so that move-in can begin.  Please make it a matter of prayer over the coming days that the new house will be prepared (enough) and that the transition from the old house would go smoothly.

And speaking of Haiti . . .

These kids would love to meet you or see you again!

Haiti 2014


Colonial Hills Church will be headed back to Jacmel, Haiti, to serve the House of Abraham and various other discipleship programs in early 2014.  The dates are either February 7-14 or 8-15, depending on the cost of airline tickets.  This team will be limited to a maximum of 24 people.  We will be planning a meeting on both CHC campuses in the next couple of months to give you more information on this mission trip, but if you are interested in being part of this team, contact me and I will get your name on the list of those who have already let me know they wanted to go.   If you do not attend CHC but would like to go on the trip with us, you can contact me, as well.

And finally . . .


Jamaica 2013


   
A past "little blue house" dedication.
The CHC Jamaica team leaves tomorrow morning.  There are 33 from our church who will meet up with 16 more from Fairview Baptist Church in Sherman, Texas, to build four houses as a continuing part of our "Little Blue House Project" and to also serve at the deaf school there.  This is where two of our teams built a playground last year.  Pray for our team as they build houses and relationships in Jamaica this week.

Jeff Witt & a child from the deaf school.




Check out the CHC Missions Facebook page to know how to pray for the team and also for updates throughout the trip.






 There you have it: Africa, Nashville, Haiti, Mississippi, Texas, and Jamaica -- around at least a considerable part of the world in three minutes or so.  Thanks for reading.

4theVoiceless,
Al

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

5 Nuggets and 5 Questions from Summit 9


My wife, Loretta, and I traveled to beautiful Nashville, Tennessee, last week to take part in Summit 9, the annual global orphan conference put together by the Christian Alliance for Orphans.  In nine years Summit has grown from just over 30 people to this year's over 2,500 (with registration closing early due to space limitations).  At least 25 countries were represented as well as 49 states (Come on, Vermont!).  The energy, focus, and passion of this year's gathering was most inspiring and contagious, most challenging.

I will not try to summarize everything that we experienced, though much of what I learned and was challenged with will find its way through the blog in days to come.  For today, I have pulled five nuggets from my notes, each with a question to challenge you to action on behalf of the millions of at-risk children in the world.  As you consider each question, though, don't think in terms of millions; think in terms of individual orphans that you may or may not yet know.  Kids who are waiting for you to act on their behalf.

Nugget #1


Stephen Ucembe, a Kenyan pastor who was orphaned in a tragic way at age five, shared that he hated the term "I love you" because he never heard it as a child.  He recalled that when visitors came, they always picked the cutest kids to hold and to play with; he was never chosen.  His most beautiful memory of childhood was receiving a Christmas package from a lady in her 70's, a lady he had never met, from England.  In that package was a four-page letter in which she wrote, "I love you."

Many of you already sponsor at-risk children around the world.  We might think that our $25, $30, $35, $40 per month sponsorship is bringing great blessing to those children (and it is!), but would you go a step further and also write a letter to your child in which you tell him/her "I love you"?

Nugget #2


U.S. Representative Michele Bachmann from Minnesota, a leading Congressional advocate for orphan care, was introduced to foster care through a friend at church.  In the years that followed, the Bachmanns brought 23 foster kids into their home, and each one graduated high school (If you have ever looked at the statistics, you know that this is an amazing feat!).  She recalled how therapeutic it was for the older children to engage with the younger children and for the younger children to engage with the older.


How will you intentionally train your children of whatever age to wisely engage with at-risk children? 

Nugget #3


Jedd Medefind, president of Christian Alliance for Orphans (CAFO), announced to the crowd in the sanctuary of conference host Brentwood Baptist Church and to those in the overflow room that Summit has always been held in a local church because local churches were the answer to the world's orphan crisis.  I'm not sure any more profound words were shared in the entire conference.

Simply, what are you doing in your local church to carry out God's command to His people to care for orphans?  If you are a part of our faith family at Colonial Hills Church and you don't know what this looks like for you, I would love to sit down and have a conversation with you about how much there is to do and how you can get involved.

Nugget #4


Bishop W.C. Martin of Possum Trot, Texas, absolutely captivated the crowd with his larger-than-life personality and the story of how his church, Bennett's Chapel in the tiny little town of Possum Trot, has adopted over 70 children from foster care.  They have not provided out of their excess but out of a compelling desire to follow God's command to care for the orphan.  Their story has put Possum Trot, Texas, on the map.  (Just in case you were wondering, Bishop Martin reports that Possum Trot is "on the other side on Coonville.")

Will you consider the needs of children at risk from God's perspective and the child's perspective before your own perspective and see how God compels you to act out in faith?

Nugget #5

"Adoption begins with a parent's initiative, not with a child's choice."
"An orphaned child (who was ultimately adopted into a family) has no idea of the pursuit that had taken place on his behalf."
"The gospel does not begin with our pursuit of Christ but with His pursuit of us."
-- David Platt

If you have been involved in any aspect of caring for orphans -- adoption, helping others adopt, fostering, local and global orphan homes, whatever your involvement may have been -- how will you use your experience and your stories to share the gospel?

Thanks for reading.  Now take action.  I would love to hear your responses to the challenges I have set before you today.

4theVoiceless,
Al

Friday, January 18, 2013

And Suddenly...Orphan Run MS


With just a simple Facebook message, bam!  This Wednesday morning, I saw a notification of message from my niece, a freshman at the University of Arkansas.  Through some connections at her church in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, she had seen a video about a 5K run in Hernando, Mississippi (where I live), to take place in April to benefit orphans in Uganda.

I clicked on the Orphan Run MS video link and realized, "Hey, I know these people!"  Well, at least I had met the race director's parents, and they had visited our small group.  Did I mention that the race director is 14 years old and new to the Mid-South?

A couple of emails later, and EmilyFaith and her mom, Jennifer, were sitting in a 4theVoiceless planning meeting that very night.  It was a call to action for 4theVoiceless through way too many "coincidences."

You will have the opportunity to read EmilyFaith's story here and in the newspaper in the days to come, but I wanted all my readers to have a head start on what is sure to be THE event to attend in Hernando, Mississippi, on April 20, 2013.

If you have a group of people (school clubs, small groups, business associates, etc.) whom you would like to get together to hear EmilyFaith's story firsthand and get involved with Orphan Run MS, contact me at al.ainsworth@mychc.tv, and I will do my best to make that happen.

Here are some links to get you started on being a part of Orphan Run MS:

The YouTube video that started this whole process.

Orphan Run MS on Facebook.  Go "like" their page!

Orphan Run MS on Twitter.  @OrphanRunMS

Sign up for the race itself!  Sign up early as the funds generated from race sign-ups will provide operating expenses for all the other really cool things that will be associated with this run.  Sign up to run the 5K or the one-mile fun run.  Or (and this is a term I learned Wednesday night), you could be a "virtual runner," one who signs up and pays for the run but doesn't actually run the race.  I am somewhat of a runner, but "virtual running" sounds much easier.  In fact, my friend Jeff ran a marathon in one minute before bed last night; what a beast!

In Other 4tV News:


CAFO Membership

We received notification this week that Colonial Hills Church has been accepted into membership of the Christian Alliance for Orphans.  CAFO is an umbrella organization for many churches and para-church organizations doing great work for the world's orphans, and I am pleased to be "officially" associated with them. I serve as an area coordinator for Orphan Sunday (sponsored by CAFO), so if your church has never recognized Orphan Sunday (first Sunday in November) and would like to do so this year, please let me know.  I have found the resources offered on the CAFO site to be plentiful and helpful.

PATH Training at CHC

Interested in fostering or adoption through the foster care system?  Harden House is providing the training that you need on January 26 and February 2 at CHC.  Email Lauren Johnson or Heather Wright (who will actually be leading the training) for more information or to let her know you are coming.

Countdown to Haiti Mission Trip: 56 Days!

 


Thanks for reading.  Your feedback is always welcome!

4theVoiceless,
Al

Friday, January 4, 2013

Walking Away from the Fiscal Cliff: Two Victories


I'm not a fan of media-or publicist-created terms that are then propagated by the media themselves.  Are you as tired as I am of hearing about the so-called "fiscal cliff"?  As far as the politics of the whole fiscal cliff mess, I guess I have lived long enough to recognize political frenzy to accomplish a task that could and should have been accomplished weeks earlier.  It's the term fiscal cliff  itself that has bugged me.

However, perhaps because of the general good cheer of the Christmas season, I have found a couple of victories to claim from the fiscal cliff frenzy:

A Word Correctly Used


Victory #1: The word fiscal itself, used correctly.  I can't tell you how much it has bugged me for years to hear otherwise very intelligent people talking about the end of their company's physical year.  Perhaps the fiscal cliff talk will lead to a more proper use of the word fiscal in general.  Here's hoping.

Disclaimer: Although I have not been an English teacher for over 10 years now, the misuse of the English language still bothers me.  I have gotten better about correcting people, but you have to understand how far I had to come to get to this point: I corrected my wife's first love letter to me -- she didn't think it was funny like I did, but I digress.

Fiscal is not the only word that otherwise intelligent people butcher:
  • School administrators (all intelligent individuals) who sought recognition from accrediting agencies called the process accredidation.
  • I know that Alzheimer's is not the easiest word to say, but as many people as not say Alltimer's instead.  I think the etymology of this mispronunciation can probably be traced to some originally referring to the disease as "Old-timers."  (This is one that you and I should be careful not to correct in conversation because, chances are, the person saying this word is dealing with a family member with this cruel disease.  Having had a family member who had Alzheimer's, I can say that dealing with the disease with love and compassion is much more important that pronouncing it correctly.  See, I try to not be a chump.)
  • Here's my current #1 language pet peeve: "all of the sudden."  I don't know when the proliferation of the misuse of the phrase "all of a sudden" began -- I first noticed it about three or four years ago -- but it has spread like wildfire.  (Interestingly enough, the phrase began in the 1500's as "the sudden."  Maybe everyone saying "all of the sudden" is just trying to get back to the roots of the phrase. . .you think?)
See how easy I can still get off track with grammar issues?  Remember, I'm still in recovery.  Be patient with me.  I have probably misused some part of the language in this post itself.  Now, where was I. . .

A Second Victory


Oh, yes, there was a second victory from all the fiscal cliff pandemonium.  This one is serious and meaningful to the movement of Americans toward orphaned children both in the U.S. and around the world. 

The adoption tax credit has been made permanent!


Jedd Medefind, the president of Christian Alliance for Orphans, has written about the specifics of this part of the American Taxpayer Relief Act (How many of you knew the fiscal cliff bill had a name?) on the CAFO blog.  It's well worth the minute or two that it will take for you to educate yourself on this important piece of a much-maligned piece of legislation.

I'm not typically much of an advocate on political issues -- call me a cynic -- but I wrote both of my senators and my Congressman on the specific issue of preserving the adoption tax credit.  I did not get a response from one of my senators, and I received a poorly copied and pasted email from the other.  However, I got a personal phone call (that I missed) and a voice mail from Rep. Alan Nunnallee's office that laid out his recognition of the importance of the issue to his constituents. 

The message also reminded me that the adoption tax credit would be part of a much larger bill that might affect how the Congressman voted on the overall bill.  Understood but still not a comforting thought. Regardless of our confidence in the rest of the "fiscal cliff" legislation, orphan care advocates must say specifically on the adoption tax credit portion of the law: They got this part right!

Thanks for reading.

4theVoiceless,
Al