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Category Archives: Orphans

I’m going to Uganda

19 Monday Feb 2018

Posted by judge525 in Orphans, Robert Sityo Uganda

≈ 3 Comments

On March 7th I am heading to Jinja, Uganda to help build a playground. The American- made playground and children’s Bible curriculum will be part of our gift to Robert Sityo’s school of 1300 students. Going to visit an East African national and the ministry God has blessed is a great privilege. We will watch a huge recycled metal playground (the container safely arrived from its 3 month Atlantic crossing last week) be installed on the grounds of a school that our friends, the Sityos founded in 2004. Check out Kids Around the World for the details. I believe that where these kids are standing posing for this picture, will be a playground by March 15.
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While travel to Africa is never an easy undertaking… flying in multiple planes, connecting to drivers that you hire online to take you to the places you need to go, finding hotels near the airport, getting 3-4 immunizations including Yellow Fever, (that somehow the USA is “out of”…how does that happen? Just got my European-made Yellow Fever shot last week). You can’t go to Uganda without a Yellow Fever Immunization since there are lots of kinds of mosquitoes to fend off in the Lake Victoria region where I will be. Yep, I’m taking anti-Malaria meds too.

I won’t go on because it will all be worth it. Since I’ve done similar trips, I know…beyond any doubt.

I have shared a few stories about Robert on this blog.  One story is connected to the school that God protected as the new high school dorm building was being built from a witchdoctor’s curse. God has been working here in awesome ways for over 10 years. Our small team of four will be going to the village where this impressive school, Fountain of Hope School, is flourishing and students are getting a quality education.

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We will meet Robert and Sarah’s 21 children and the two year old triplets, Sandra, Nathan and Chelsea. We will meet the many children who are sponsored by US friends. We will meet the hundreds of Muslim students who have found new life in Christ. We will visit a couple of new churches that Robert and his teams have planted and reached out to the Muslim families who send their kids to this school. (This Valentine’s Day week I told my two grandsons this incredible story and their mom tells me they can’t stop talking about it.)

What a sight it will be to have over a thousand kids watching the building of a playground just for them. We hope they feel God’s smile upon them in this small village of Bukeeka, Uganda. I’ll be sure to post some pictures of the Dedication Day event.

I am feeling so humbled to know a man who is spending his life reaching the unreached in his home area…many are his Muslim neighbors. He has planted 13 churches and trained dozens of co-workers in the basics in how to teach the Word of God and reach into the  community and serve their needs. He was a Billy Graham Scholar at Wheaton Graduate School in 2015. He has been the catalyst for scores of Muslims becoming Christ-followers. (Wheaton Bible Church has recently recognized this ministry with a grant to help build a new church building.)

The individuals going with me are the generous donors of the playground. They have shown their commitment to children around the world and you might be interested in getting involved as well. If you are interested in helping with the local shipping cost for this playground, we would still appreciate any gift to KATW.net (write Bukeeka, Uganda in the optional message box).

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For me, personally, it is always a joy to be back in East Africa, near where our family lived in 1990-91 in Kenya. I am still very attached to this warm and wonderful place on our beautiful planet. I won’t be able to visit Hope for Life Kenya this time, but we will go on a side trip to Masai Mara Game Park at the end of our time and see some of God’s lovely creatures. I’ll tell you lots more when I get back.

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The new way some churches do missions

10 Tuesday May 2016

Posted by judge525 in Missions Today, Orphans, Uncategorized

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I have witnessed something I will put in the category of phenomena. In April I attended 4 weeks of Sunday services at 2 mega-churches that captured the attention and the hearts of its people for serving needs around the world through a modern approach. For me, an updated missions conference was born.

Getting church people to become passionate about winning people to Christ outside our borders, the issues of poverty, and needs in the world is a tall order. We, North Americans often want to cloister in our safe places. We desire to only get as close to international issues as the evening news or maybe an extra few minutes of CNN coverage. But something happened in the month of April to help me learn that a church can shepherd its people to care about people around the globe and even the most pressing issues in the world.

Our youngest daughter’s church, Church of the City in Franklin, TN was the place I experienced watching a church decidedly choose to challenge and educate its 5000 members about Children at Risk. This is how they did it in 3 weeks. The first week (April 3) the pastor introduced the title of the emphasis, “What If?”, the concept of taking on a different subject every year and asking themselves, What if they could make a difference in a huge world issue in Jesus’ name. The pastor used Acts 1:8 to teach the concentric circles of outreach…local, regional, and international in direction and scope. We are familiar with this strategy that Jesus spoke of when it comes to missional outreach.

This year the congregation would learn about children at risk and how to help meet the needs of children orphaned by war, AIDS, poverty, and family crisis. The first week the church brought in two church partners from Malawi who operated a school and an orphanage. The congregation could be proud of what their church was doing there. After a great introduction by the senior pastor, they sat together on a couch and he interviewed this couple about the facts, complexities, and stories of the progress in caring for hundreds of kids. God was given the glory for the wonderful ministry that we heard about.

I asked myself, is this hour long experience enough to ignite the energy of 5000 suburbanites? The answer is, I’m not convinced in would be done in just one week alone. This is how it continued.

  • There would be 3 weeks to process this subject.
  • There were projects to do for young families. We picked up an inexpensive kit for kids to collect money for this three weeks and instructions for the parents of how to teach at home.
  • The church purchased a shipping container, that they would fill with care packages and school supplies for the 500 families of the school in Malawi.
  • Families could come in the evenings of the 3 weeks to paint murals on the container’s walls that would be shipped to the school, which the school would repurpose for use at the school in  Malawi (picture below).

What is also a key factor is giving the reports of how the project went a few weeks later. I copied this from the Facebook page the week after the container was launched.

Our shipping container is packed to the brim & headed to Malawi! We are so thankful for your generosity in giving to our friends in Adziwa. Nearly 500 families will receive care packages & educational supplies from this container, and then the container itself will be transformed into a science lab for Adziwa Christian School.13179424_681351798670380_1683207597664952017_n

I listened online to the next two weeks anxious to see how this would play out. The second week a couple from the area, who had moved to Haiti after the earthquake devastation were interviewed about their decision to adopt children orphaned by the earthquake. Their story was riveting. The followup mini-sermon by the pastor was full of teaching the scriptural mandates for taking care of orphans and widows.

The third week was where the rubber met the road. People were challenged to step up to apply what they had learned at home. Exploring local foster care, they heard a story about a church in Denver that had been challenged to take seriously this mandate to care for orphans. It seems that Denver churches have actually adopted all the adoptable children from their state’s foster care system. Could Franklin, TN be the next place to take on this challenge?  Because of this serious challenge, my daughter tells me that 300 couples came to an information meeting that next week about the numbers of children available for adoption in the state of Tennessee. In the next weeks, 72 families had pursued adopting children from the foster care system of TN.

My theory was validated that individuals in the evangelical church will step up to the challenge of scripture if they learn and understand how to do so. Without a vision, the church perishes. Certainly, without a vision, people sit idly by. Learning about a need and then being given ways to do something specific…is the key.

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The next week I was helping with an exhibit for Kerus Global Education at the 3 week missions conference called Celebration of Hope (COH) at my former church, Willow Creek Community Church in South Barrington, IL.   A few years ago I was surprised to learn that about 11 years ago Willow started the Celebration of Hope. It is a 3 week series to celebrate what Willow’s international partners are doing in the 12 countries in which Willow partners. (When I was on the global board of Willow Creek in the 1990’s, I must admit that I never thought this could happen. Back then Willow began its missions ventures with partnerships in 2 countries, and I wasn’t sure they would grow beyond that.)

For the 3 weeks of Celebration of Hope the gigantic atrium is full of exhibits show-casing the “technical partners” who empower and bring the expertise to the nationally lead projects and ministry in these countries. They also bring in many of the nationals who lead these efforts, (somewhat like the missionaries in more traditional missions-oriented churches do annually). To give an actual picture of the work going on, there is a weekly video of the partners on site talking and showing the work and also some live interviews with partners. The music and the backdrop set enhance the theme.

Besides the annual financial giving, Willow has found something everyone can do to contribute towards the needs of the world. During one of the weekends of Celebration of Hope, people sign up for a couple hours of packing seed packets that will go to African villagers to plant in their gardens. This year 20,000 people showed up to pack over a million seed packets that were shipped last week.

The church offers a 5K run where people find sponsors or pay to run or walk or stroll the 5k around the church neighborhood. This year that money raised went to their refugee ministry. The first week of the COH people are encouraged to collect what will be their financial gift to the COH at the end of the three weeks. I learned from some children brought to see our exhibit during their Sunday School hour that their families save up to give during the year. People can designate their gift to their interest area: Education, Health and Hunger, Leadership and Pastoral Development, Refugee and Peacemaking, or “Greatest Need”. People own this responsibility and explore the atrium for 3 weeks learning what is being done in each arena.

This year with the refugee crisis of Syria and the Congo, these two realities were emphasized. Ways to get involved with this crisis were spelled out. The pastor had recently visited Europe and reported on the Syrian refugee crisis with a personal word of challenge as to our position as believers in Christ. Connecting the dots from our biblical commitment to real situations in the world as well as the local area is the key to making this relevant to the average person.

My Opinion as a Former Missions Pastor

It is my observation that missions-minded evangelical churches around the country, find it hard to focus or showcase what their partners and missionaries are doing on the field. The tradition is often to bring in an outside speaker who is a missions enthusiast to cast the vision for serving overseas instead of hearing from those in whom the church invests.

I believe it is usually the aim of the more traditional church that this effort will challenge a couple young people or families to consider serving overseas. I think that the potential of these conferences is lost on 99% of the congregation who sit by and listen to or may even checkout emotionally while asking themselves ‘what does this have to do with me’.

There is often no challenge for actual involvement or even investment in what is happening for the average person. I think that most people from historically missions-oriented churches think that these issues are being  covered by their church’s budget or handled by the professional missions staff of the church. Having been in a leadership role for years, I have heard friends say that this special emphasis on global work is intimidating to the average person, as it is miles beyond their interests or realities. Why is that so?

I believe it does not have to be this way. I have just experienced 6 weeks of preaching and teaching and educational interviews and exhibits that have been revered as “the favorite weeks” in the church calendar in both churches I am referring to. The people from the two churches I have highlighted can proudly boast about:

  • what they see God doing overseas,
  • what they are investing in personally through their church,
  • what their churches are doing to combat the problems in the world,
  • what they personally learned about poverty or needs in the world
  • and how these ministries lead people to faith in Jesus Christ.

I have a renewed hope in the local church. I hope that leaders will take a fresh look at how to challenge and disciple their people. I have always believed that people rise to the level of the challenge they are given. Jesus never held back when he said,

JOHN 17:15 I do not pray that You should take them out of the world, but that You should keep them from the evil one. 16 They are not of the world, just as I am not of the world. 17 Sanctify them by Your truth. Your word is truth. 18 As You sent Me into the world, I also have sent them into the world. 19 And for their sakes I sanctify Myself, that they also may be sanctified by the truth.

 

 

 

 

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They’re just kids wanting to go to school

02 Friday Oct 2015

Posted by judge525 in AIDS in Africa, Hope for Life Kenya, Orphans

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Throwback Thursday: They’re just kids

In 2004, I began to develop a heart for those suffering from HIV/AIDS. I am reminded of that fact in two ways today. I am thinking of some teenagers at Hope for Life- Kenya who are AIDS orphans and I am wondering if they all had the funds to start school this fall as school started for them, as it does here.

hish school students at Hope for Life

What would it be like to not have parents who can support you as you head into your teens… and your future… with no means to go to high school? The fees are high, but all these kids have tested well and qualify. These kids know what that insecurity is like. My heart breaks for those who have such an unsure future. We can do something to help. Are you able to help one of these kids?

The other reminder about how God developed my heart for those affected by AIDS in Africa comes from my dear friend and former boss at Willow Creek, Steve Haas published a piece for World Vision, where he now works as Chief Catalyst. He traces his own journey with AIDS in sub-Sahara Africa. In the early years of this millenium when mission agencies and relief organizations were first waking up to the pandemic that was infecting and affecting about 30% of all folks in sub-Sahara Africa, the church in America was barely awake. In the next eleven years, that fact changed. And the face of AIDS is changing every day. There is so much more hope.

Steve puts it this way.

Rather than attempting to charge up the mountain of Christian ignorance and stigma head-on, a sure recipe for short discussions and abbreviated advocacy engagement, we plotted a course that took the Church on a journey: passing along the story of the AIDS affected and infected children and the young families we serve. In private conversations and public presentations, and with aggressive invitations we opened up the Scripture to what has always been our call to reach out to the vulnerable and in solidarity place ourselves underneath their burden. –

Reading this article made me recall how hard it was for me, a new missions pastor at Wheaton Bible Church, to take on this challenge. We started down the information track by telling our church the facts and people listened and God opened their hearts.

There was good news by 2005 as the church gave generously and blessed our new Heart for AIDS ministry. We created a new partnership with a fledgling group of pastors and orphan care workers in Nakuru, Kenya. I could go on and on about what happened there. Revisit some former posts.  Some of you know personally as you have been there with one of the teams we have taken. Hope for Life-Kenya is still one of the healthiest ministries I know…working on behalf of its impoverished community and seeing great strides in caring for orphans, widow, and in community development.

But the good news is that, though we haven’t done it like World Vision through child sponsorships, we actually started teen school sponsorships….as of last summer, we have found 15 sponsors for kids’ high school fees. There are 15 others who need your help. Click here to learn how. 

We have taken a holistic approach to the needs of orphans and widows since 2004. And the children who came to the center we built to host after school programs and lunch time meal programs in 2006 are now teenagers doing well in school. Year after year, Hope for Life is launching committed followers for Jesus Christ into the communities who know responsibility, who know how to minister to others, who take care of their younger siblings, and who serve in their churches and communities. They are learning about God’s ways and life skills at Hope for Life that give them the courage to make good decisions and refrain from risky behavior. They are loved and cared for by adults who are committed to them. But they need our financial assistance. Please consider supporting one of these kids by clicking here. Tell a friend about supporting one of these kids. Read their stories in past pages on this blog.

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On this Mother’s Day let’s remember motherless children

08 Friday May 2015

It’s way overdue. I promised to introduce you to some high school kids from Hope for Life Kenya. On this Mother’s Day weekend, I have been thinking about these kids. So many of them have lost their mothers to HIV and AIDS. Many fathers have either died or have foresaken the difficulties of family life plagued with illness and have left. They may or may not come back, but often don’t return until children are past school age, when the kids can take care of him. It’s a common story.

Children never stop needing a mother. God has blessed these 125 children at Hope for Life with a surrogate mother, as only God could do. The director of Hope for Life (HFL) Josephine, has become “mother” to over a hundred kids. Along with her staff helpers, she chose these kids from the neighborhood because of their dire need. She keeps track of them, visits their homes (where many have grandmothers taking care of them), makes sure they have uniforms for school. She oversees their daily food needs and their health needs. She pours her life into them. She teaches them the Bible and how to live a Christ-centered life…all with a great sense of humor and calm. She loves them deeply….all in Jesus’ name. Most come to faith in Christ personally at a very young age. Her mothering and nurturing skills are amazing. hopeforlife.juliandkellyphotos-12 The kids flock to her for a hug or ask her for counsel about life issues. They need her like every kid needs a mom. Josephine is their mom, their hero. She is my hero. I want to help her help these kids. They need our help to stay in school…no they don’t have behavior problems, but they have financial problems….you see they have to pay some hefty shillings (dollars) to go to high school…they have to pass exams and apply to high schools like we do for college.  Because of Josephine and her value of education, 31 kids studied hard and have qualified for high school.

There is a simple way to help by clicking this link to Faith and Learning International.

Anyway… let me introduce you to some of the high schoolers. Most of these interviews were taken in January by the GO Team from Wheaton Bible Church and are spoken in their own words:

Kezia has been a part of Hope for Life for nearly 10 years. Since she was a little girl she feels that getting a good hot meal every day has been very impactful on her life. As she has gotten older the other huge blessing is getting help with her school fees. Now that she is in boarding school, she comes to Hope For Life on weekends and plays piano and sings at church. She hopes to be a musician when she grows up.

Kezia

Kezia

At home Kezia helps with cooking, especially loves to make chapatis and ugali. She cares for the cows and really loves animals. At HFL she works in the garden on occasion and mostly helps in the kitchen. When asked if the girls always cook and the boys work in the garden, she laughed and said the girls try to mix it up, but the boys aren’t very good in the kitchen. She has learned to knit and dress hair at HFL and now shaves the boys heads during her vocational skill training on Saturdays.

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Michael

Michael is 17 years old and has been a part of the Hope for Life family since he was 8. His 16 year old sister Kezia is also at HFL. He is in his second year of high school and likes school a lot, especially Chemistry and Math.  Someday he would like to be a cashier, as he is very good with numbers. On the weekends, Michael takes computer classes and electrical skills classes at HFL. He also helps with the children, but his greatest love and talent is in music playing at church either on the keyboard or drums. He loves to sing and is in the gospel dance troop at church as well. Michael and Kezia’s mother is HIV+ and there are 4 in the family. His mother ran away when the kids were young but has returned and reconciled with the grandmother. Once Michael was sent away from school for lack of school fees and he ran away and became a shepherd, but life was so difficult that he returned. He is back in school and growing into a very responsible and teachable young man.

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Daniel “Mbugua”

Mbugua’s  mother died when he was 4 years old and his younger sister Virginia was 2. At that time he was very sick, suffering from a severe skin problem.  After the mother died, the four children joined Hope For Life. Josephine helped with his medication to heal his skin problem. But after 6 years the father of the first 2 siblings showed up and said he wanted to take his children. He was HIV+. His older sister ran away.

Mbugua was terribly affected when his older siblings were gone and he and Virginia were left behind to live with the grandparents. Although he struggles in school because of the stressful environment at home, he graduated from 8th grade and has made it to high school. He plays the keyboard in church, sings and composes music. He is also a good dancer in church worship dance group.  Mbugua wants to be an airplane mechanic.

Josephine and Virginia

Josephine and Virginia

His sister Virginia has “adopted” Josephine as her mother and frequently leaves her grandparents to stay with Josephine. I have known Virginia since she was 4 and she has grown into a wonderful teenager with a bright and godly spirit.

God has rescued these motherless children by sending Josephine to their neighborhood. Now they are adopted into His family forever. To be adopted as sons of Jesus Christ is a concept that will take us until eternity to fully comprehend. The truth is that when I am around the children from Hope for Life Kenya, I get a glimpse of spiritual adoption from many angles. God cares about these children like the father that He is.

Galatians 4:5-7 ESV 

To redeem those who were under the law, so that we might receive adoption as sons. And because you are sons, God has sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying, “Abba! Father!” So you are no longer a slave, but a son, and if a son, then an heir through God.

Matthew 18:5 ESV 

“Whoever receives one such child in my name receives me,…”

   

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Posted by judge525 | Filed under AIDS in Africa, Hope for Life Kenya, Orphans

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Celebrating the story of adoption

07 Tuesday Apr 2015

Posted by judge525 in Orphans, Uncategorized

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This week the Stromberg and Judge family will celebrate the 3rd birthday of our granddaughter, Lydia DanQing Stromberg. This little sweetheart came into our family from China last January 26, 2014. On that day she arrived with her adoptive parents (our daughter, Katie, and son-in-law, Lars) at O’Hare Airport from China to her two brothers, Quinn and Albin and the rest of us.

The story is a beautiful one. Hundreds of people followed the adoption process through their blog. The story will make you smile and weep with joy, as we continue to do; we realize that God has given our family this beautiful gift of little Lydia to love and nurture. The sunshine she brings into our lives is warm and wonderful….every single day. And we are blessed to live nearby.

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The redemptive nature of earthly adoption stories helps us humbly accept our own adoption story into God’s family…an act of grace that still shocks me when I consider the depth of how much God loves us. As believers in Jesus Christ, every one of us experiences adoption, though often we don’t appreciate or understand it…our life and our destiny is changed in every way when we put our trust in Him. With the story of Easter ringing in our ears, the sacrifice of Christ that allows us to be adopted into this eternal family of the body of Christ is precious. By His sacrificial death on the cross on our behalf, we receive an eternal family, as we accept this gift.

Just minutes ago, I heard a radio interview with Brian Evie, who wrote and filmed a movie called The Drop Box. The website describes this story of redemption like this:

“The Drop Box tells the story of South Korean pastor Lee Jong-rak and his heroic efforts to embrace and protect the most vulnerable members of society. It is a heart-wrenching exploration of the physical, emotional and financial toll associated with providing refuge to orphans that would otherwise be abandoned on the streets. ButThe Drop Box movie is also a story of hope—a reminder that every human life is sacred and worthy of love.”

The Award-winning Director of “The Drop Box” talks about how his life was changed by making this movie. Watch the YouTube interview (under Documentaries). The movie will be out on DVD this summer. And a book is coming as well. What an incredible story.

In this world of ours there are more than 150 million orphans who suffer the loss of parents through violence, war and disease. Jesus said in John 14:18, “I will not leave you as orphans, I will come to you.” It is incumbent on us to understand and relate to this issue as we are the hands and feet of Jesus.  As Paul dictates in James 1:27, “Pure and undefiled religion in the sight of our God and Father is this: to visit orphans and widows in their distress…”

As you are aware if you are reading this blog, I am involved with an orphan care center in Kenya called Hope for Life. Orphan sponsorship was introduced to me by World Vision and Compassion and Jim and I continue to sponsor children in Africa through both of these organizations as well as Hope for Life Kenya. Supporting these children through their school years is one of the most effective way to change a life, something each of us can do. Then there is the much larger commitment of adopting either domestically or internationally.

And to address another angle, I want to say something about the wonder of young families in adopting. We all know that the desire of anyone to adopt requires a serious commitment to rescuing a child. It is also a commitment to lengthy research and study.

My favorite blogger, Jen Hatmaker has adopted two children from Ethiopia. During their process, she blogged about the pitfalls of adoption when agencies are not trustworthy and children are actually trafficked away from their parents in order to be “sold” to well-meaning westerners, who don’t have any idea this is happening. Their good intentions are sometimes ripping children away from their parents. Jen writes about what she has learned about this reality. It can be a complicated subject.

It is a sobering thought and one that can be prevented by performing the due diligence in the process. If you know anyone beginning this process, a good place to begin would be to read the three-part blog/story of the Hatmaker’s learning curve.

Please consider how you can become more commited to understanding and supporting the most vulnerable among us…orphaned children.

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