Showing posts with label orphan care. Show all posts
Showing posts with label orphan care. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

generous tuesday

black friday. check.
cyber monday. check.

today is generous tuesday.
let's look outward, shall we?

we're constantly trying to teach this to our kids.
there are opportunities daily to put others first.
if you don't see these opportunities, ask God to make you aware of the needs around you.
and maybe, you need to get your life messed up a bit more. . . just a gentle nudge . . . no judgement here. ;)

today while at a thrift store with my two littlest, there was a little girl who was clearly hurting.
she looked, maybe three years old, and just as full of anger and hatred as anybody i've ever seen.
she followed us around the store cursing at us and trying to hit sawyer.
my heart was/is broken for her.
i wanted to scoop her up in my arms and show her Jesus sweet, tender love for her.
i couldn't do that, but i could call her sweetie and smile at her and look at her with love in my eyes.
i keep thinking of her and praying for her.

i believe Jesus will show us the hurting and bring them right to us, if we're open to it.

if you're wondering how you can live generously this holiday season, may i suggest  sponsoring a child through compassion?
compassion is an amazing, holistic ministry, to children and families all over the world.
$38 a month is nothing compared to the changing a child's entire life.
when you decide to sponsor, you can choose a child who has been waiting the longest.
there are many children who have been waiting well over a year.
what a blessing it would be for them to find out that they have been chosen!!

you know what is awesome?
they have a compassion catalog.
you can look through it with your children and choose items to buy for children registered in compassion's programs.
you could buy a family live stock.
hello.
life. changing.


you could buy clean water.
you can buy medical care for a year for a baby.
you can buy care for a child waiting for a sponsor.
you can help an entrepreneur start a business.

i could go on and on.
but these are the kinds of gifts i want to give this christmas.

my friend, betsy, said to me once, "if we have anything at all, we have enough to share."
i have thought of that over and over.
she was actually referring to me borrowing some clothes for meliyah, but it relates to every part of life, doesn't it?

how are you living generously this holiday season?
how are you and your family looking outward?

let's share ideas, okay? ;)


Donate to Compassion International Water of Life



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Monday, October 29, 2012

generous tuesday

let's face it.
the holiday's are coming.
and i loooove them.
i'm already thinking of what christmas movies i need to watch come november first.
i need to get a good two months out of those.

i love the whole holiday season...which i pretty much consider november first through january first.
however, i am feeling that little bit of panic about all the stinkin consumerism.
oh mercy...it's hard with kids.

there is part of me that reels at all the generous acts that Christians amp up around the holidays.
i know that sounds bad.
but part of me wants to be fussy and say, we should be serving/giving/loving all year round.
not just at Christmastime so that we can give ourselves a pat on the back for doing something good and making ourselves feel better about our overspending and overindulgence.

on the other hand . . .
better now than never . . .
better something than nothing at all . . .
and good is good. 

i do want to encourage myself and others to be serving, giving, pouring out our lives every day of the year . . .

and i also want to encourage you all to be considering how we can truly love like Jesus this holiday season.

i want to tell you about generous tuesday.

we've got black friday and cyber monday . . . and now generous tuesday.
a slowing down and refocusing.
an intentional choice to give generously.

"The simple and powerful idea that Generosity can change a life has inspired Generous Tuesday. It's a day to kick off the holiday giving season that celebrates enriching the lives of others through Generosity.Join us in living generously." 

let's keep generosity at the forefront of our minds this holiday season.
sometimes i think generosity of time is the hardest of all.
our pastor always says, "are you spending your time, talents and resources on what matters?"

let's think of ways together that we can do some generous acts on generous tuesday.
i'll be thinking with my family. . . y'all be thinking with yours and we can encourage each other.
deal?

generous tuesday is backed by pure charity.
through pure charity you can:


"SUPPORT THE PROJECTS YOU CARE ABOUT.

SHOP TO GROW YOUR GIVING.

SHARE A LIFESTYLE OF GENEROSITY."

                
Change the world with Pure Charity! from Pure Charity on Vimeo.

you can browse projects that you want to support and earn money towards your favorite projects just by doing your holiday shopping through pure charity
just click to your favorite store through the pure charity website and you're earning money to give generously.

i'm excited to start looking through the projects with our kiddos.
i'm looking forward to choosing projects to support and seeing updates and photos of the impact we're making.

i want to be intentional to live. generously.
i want to push myself and challenge myself.
not so that i can say "rah, rah, go me," but so that i can take one step closer to living like Jesus did.
i want to bring that cup of cold water to the thirsty.

i look forward to being challenged by you all and the ways that you live generously.
let's encourage each other, shall we?










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Tuesday, March 1, 2011

what is our part to play?

okay so i'm going to attempt to process some of what i learned at !deacamp: orphan care this past weekend.
it wasn't really what i expected.
i wondered if we would feel out of place because we haven't adopted and aren't in the adoption process right now.
that was not at all the case.
it was not an "adoption conference."
it really was a big ol' group of people, sharing their ideas and experiences....all towards the goal of orphan care.

there were differing opinions.
there were key note speakers...who really only spoke for about 20 minutes each.
there were many different guides who spoke.
there was a whole slew of workshops that you could choose from to hear more about different topics.

it was a lot of information in a 2 day time period.
several people referred to it as a fire hydrant.
i would agree.
it was pretty overwhelming.
however, i really liked it because i felt like i came away so much better informed.
these people know their stuff.
they have researched. they have traveled. they have seen first hand the need.

a big question we were asking ourselves was, what is our place in the orphan crisis?
and we all have a place, i believe.

i really liked john sowers who is president of the mentoring project and author of the book, the fatherless generation.
he talked about mentoring the fatherless in your own city.
he said, "step into a fatherless child's life with intimacy and say, 'i'm here, you are not alone.'"
i was definitely encouraged in my work with meliyah & my potter's house girls.

aj & i both loved jonathan olinger.
we listened to him speak and also went to his workshop.
he is the founder of discover the journey which is "a team of journalists and story-tellers who expose injustices facing children in-crisis and advocate for intervention until change is realized."
he spoke of giving a platform to children's voices.
he said we must look at more options than adoption and orphanages to solve the orphan crisis.
he talked about the faith community having a lot of mercy without enough cognitive thought.
that sounds harsh....and he didn't say it in a harsh way.
i totally heard what he was saying.
we all want to do something, anything to help. to do our part.
but have we really researched what is best and most helpful?

 i'm reminded of philippians 1:9-10, "and this is my prayer: that your love may abound more and more in knowledge and depth of insight, so that you may be able to discern what is best and may be pure and blameless for the day of Christ."

my ideas on what is best were really challenged.
we no longer have orphanages in the united states because they don't work.
we know that a permanent family is the best option for a child.
so we work hard to keep children with their family or extended family then foster care or adoption.
orphanages are not good enough for our children so why are they acceptable for other countries?
why do we keep going into other countries, trying to build more orphanages?
it's like we're trying to put a band-aide on a gushing artery.
orphanages costs hundreds of thousands of dollars a year to fund...could that same money used for a better solution?
preserving the family first?
support local {global} churches in their mission to orphans?
 provide sustainable income so that they don't have to give their children up because they can't feed them? or worse, watch them die of starvation or preventable diseases.

we also went to elizabeth styffe's workshop.
she's the director of global orphan care at saddleback church.
she was also extremely knowledgeable and challenging.
she talked about preventing orphans.
obviously, this would be a long, 50 year process.
she talked about working with the local global churches to take up their place & their role in loving the orphan.
instead of us, going into another country with our western ideas to save the day.....the goal would be for us to support the local church.
get the local church involved.
the goal is a permanent home, globally.
the local church is God's plan for meeting the needs of the orphan.
the gospel through the global church is the hope of the world. not westerners.

whew, it was some good, thought-provoking stuff.
but we loved that it all centered on the church.
after all, it's the church who is supposed to be loving on the least of these, caring for the orphans & widows, etc.
she also talked about many of the children in orphanages, not actually being orphans.
we go over and build these big fancy orphanages that seem way nicer than the little hut they are living in.
in their mind, their children would be better off and taken care of in that nice orphange with clean clothes and beds.
when actually what children need is family.
they'd be better off sleeping on the floor of the hut with their mama or grandmother than in one of 30 beds in an orphanage.

okay i could go on and on. obviously i already have.
i haven't even touched on the many other areas that were raised last weekend...child trafficking, foster care, special needs children, etc., etc., etc.
again, it was a fire hydrant.
and i want to say that i am not an expert on any of this.....by a long shot.
just sharing some of what stuck with me.
there was so much information that we were praying that what God wanted us specifically to hear, would stick with us.

i welcome discussion in the comments. :) Pin It