Monday, July 30, 2012

Thoughts on being in Thailand


Last week, I wrote down some of my thoughts about being in Pattaya and how I feel like I met the goals that I had for my time here. Here you go...

I have been given a lot. More is expected of me in return. God calls me to love the poor, the oppressed, the fatherless, the alien, the widow. How am I to do that in the United States? How am I to love the poor and oppressed who are in the United States? How am I to love the poor and oppressed in different countries? The problem seems so big, but I know that I serve a big God who can defeat poverty and injustice. I think of the story of Gideon, where God continued to make his army smaller and smaller. He can defeat with a small army…he can defeat with no army at all…but in his word, he calls us to take action. To join him in the fight against injustice (Proverbs 31:8-9, Isaiah 1:17, Deuteronomy 10). How am I fight from the US? Spread the word…give money…pray…it just doesn’t seem like enough sometimes. I want to continue to dream big. Ask God for big things and believe that he will do it.

People need to learn what love is if they are to know God’s love. Most people living in the slums and working on the streets have never experienced true love. Love that only God can bring. They have never experienced it, so knowing God’s love is something that is so hard for them to grasp. They need people in their lives to show them God’s love. To give them encouraging words, to smile at them, to hug them, to help them, to tell them about the hope that they can find in Jesus Christ. I have been blessed to grow up in a family and among friends who have shown Christ’s love for me. It’s easier for me to know God’s love because I have been shown what love is through people in my life. I am blessed beyond belief. I’m not saying that God can’t allow these people to know Christ’s love apart from Christians showing them love, but I think that God wants us to be a part of his work of bringing his kingdom here on earth.
Here were my goals for being in Pattaya and ways I’ve seen God working since I’ve been here:
1.       Know God more - see him work in a different setting amongst a different setting where the dominate religion is not Christianity

I have definitely felt the love of God more in a city of poverty and darkness. I have seen lives that are being transformed (Pu, Cream, Aom, Bam, Vit) and see God’s passionate love for them…and in them coming to him where they are at, not expecting complete transformation at once. I see God’s patience and his mercy is seeing his kingdom restored, in saving lives, one at a time. I see that he can do great things. I see how he wants us to be a part of his work. I see how he wants us to come to him in prayer, asking for big things. I see how he is passionate about people and he wants his followers to be passionate about people as well. I see how he hates injustice, how it angers him, how it makes him sad, how he cares deeply for those experiencing injustice and those inflicting it as well.

2. Learn how to engage in a culture different from my own and love people who are different from me - in the way they are brought up, their lifestyle, their economic status, etc.

I have loved the opportunity to be a part of another culture for 2 months…to eat different foods, to experience different ways of life for Thai people, to ride around on public transportation and get lost a few times. I have loved the opportunity to get to know people and to learn about their lives. My Thai is limited, but I appreciate how it has allowed me to connect with people. Obviously, I’ve loved getting to hang out with kids. Even if I can’t speak their language much, I just find joy in being around them. I hope that they were able to see my love for them and more importantly, God’s love for them. I’ve also loved the chance to spend time with girls who have formerly or are currently working in the bars. It was hard to see some of them actually on the job. It made it real and heartbreaking. These girls that I met are sweet and kind, and whether it’s a choice or not, they don’t deserve to be put through this.

I have definitely gotten more of a taste of what it is like to live in another country as a foreigner. Not a complete picture, but I have definitely have had moments of feeling the way I think foreigners do, living in another country. For the most part, I have felt so blessed by Thai people and the ways they have welcomed me, there have been times when I have felt lonely, when I have wanted to be around people and kids who I could speak more than a few sentences with. I can see how it would be hard living in a place where you didn’t speak much of the dominant language. I appreciate the way Thai people have been kind to me in spite of not knowing their language very well. I hope that it will change my perspective of how I treat others who live in the United States and speak little or no English.

3. Help some people/kids and show Christ’s love to them

I hope that I have communicated Christ’s love to the PSM kids. I have loved the opportunity to show love to these kids and spend time with them, playing games, taking pictures, giving a smile or a hug. I also have loved the chance to spend time with the PSM staff, Angela, Pin, Jiap, Aom, and Jacie. They have been such a blessing to me, and I have loved getting to know them more. I’ve been able to spend some time with former and current prostitutes. I have loved hearing their stories. I’ve had the opportunity to eat with them and laugh with them. I couldn’t always speak many words to them, but I am praying and will continue to pray for God’s love to become real to them.

4. Learn more about myself and what God may want me to do in the future involving missions. Learn about missions and how it works in other countries.

I don’t know where God is leading me in the future. I know in the immediate future I feel God has placed me in the United States as a teacher. And I’m really excited to be where I’m at. I don’t know if I will be back to Pattaya or to Thailand. But I do know that God is continuing to ask me to dream big. Three years ago, I didn’t have any idea about slavery that happens around the world. I had no desire to live in another country for an extended period of time. God has done a lot of work in my heart regarding this. I feel like this trip has revealed in me ways that I doubt God’s power to do big things in my life and in the world. The problems of poverty, trafficking, and prostitution are huge. When I see the extent of bars and prostitutes in the city, it is overwhelming. It seems like it is never going to end. Yet, I know that God is powerful enough to do it and I’m praying that God would increase my faith to believe more that he can stop this.

Coming to Pattaya, I didn’t really know exactly what I’d be doing. I knew I would be helping out Pattaya Slum Ministries, teaching some English, and doing whatever was needed. While I’ve been here, I’ve loved the opportunity to help out at kids’ club, plan sleepovers, teach English lessons, and help out with random projects. I’ve also had a lot of down time. I’ve spent a lot of time reading and just relaxing and taking in what’s in Pattaya. Normally, I don’t always do well with down time. I get antsy when I don’t have something to do, when I don’t have a way to help. But this summer has been really good and refreshing for me. I’ve really enjoyed this down time to rest. I feel like I have grown closer to God and just sensed his presence and love during this time. I am really thankful for this time. I think that God has been teaching me that I don’t have to accomplish anything great (or doing anything at all) to be unbelievably loved by him.

5. Learn more about injustice and ways to fight against it

I’ve definitely seen more injustice. I’ve seen more and more bars with more and more girls working as prostitutes. I’ve spent time in those bars and seen men look at these girls as objects. I don’t have an answer to stopping this. I do have hope. I have seen lives being changed here in Pattaya. I have heard kids who live in the slums say, “God loves me” and “I love God”. They are the answers to change. I’ve met former prostitutes who are met someone who shared God’s love with them and now they are serving Jesus too. They are the answers to change. Change is happening one life at a time. In many situations, people need to be shown Christ’s love in tangible ways, by the followers of Jesus, in order to respond. I am follower of Christ and I am called to love. I am called love kids who live in the slums, prostitutes, the johns, pimps, and traffickers. I know that God sees and he cares and he is calling me to continue to respond in love. I want to dream big about God would have me be involved in the fight against human trafficking now and in the future. 

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Week EIGHT Highlights


Sa wa dii ka!! 

Here are some highlights from week 8!! Next Saturday will be my two month anniversary in Thailand!

On Monday night, I went to my friend Monica's house and had dinner with girls who have come to the Tamar Center. It was a great night, eating and playing spoons. At the end of the night, several of them went back to their bars to work. Continue to pray for the women in this city to learn about the hope that Jesus can give and trust in Him. 

On Tuesday, we went to the slum, but unfortunately it started to rain. It was fun to see the kids and get to play with them for a little bit. 

On Wednesday, a team from Canada came including 22 high schoolers and adults. They led the kids club in the afternoon, where the kids learned about the story of Esther and made crowns. There were a lot of kids that came, and it was fun! On Wednesday night, I got to hang out with Pu and we read Ecclesiastes 2 and 3 together. She shared her story of coming to work in Pattaya two years ago and then finding Jesus. Such a beautiful story. I am glad to know her. At the end of her story, she tells me, "I'm thankful God saved me. But it was when I was 29...why couldn't I have known about him sooner!" 

On Thursday, the men on the team started building. I went to the site in the afternoon and cheered them on in the rain with Pin and Jiap. It rained a lot on Friday, so the team just went to hand out the chicken and milk. 

On Friday, we took the Canada team to a public school and they did a program of games, songs, and testimonies. They were able to talk about God to about 150 kids at the school. Walking into the school, it was interesting to see how the kids treated the farangs (white people) like movie stars and asked for autographs at the end of the program. Pray that these kids take away something that the team said about Jesus and his love for them. On Friday afternoon, I went to the building site for the 2 houses with Pin and Jiap. They got the frames up on both of the houses and most of the roofs up. Pray for the Thai people living in the slums to be able to finish up the work. 

On Saturday, we took the older kids to the beach with the Canada team. It was a lot of fun! We sang swam, played games, sang songs, and ate papaya salad and sticky rice. I really enjoyed my time with the kids today. 

This week, I had the pleasure of running into the director of Thrive Rescue Home. She was with two of the girls who have been rescued off the streets and are now living at their home. Their names are Baan and Min and they are 11 and 12 years old. Pray for their lives, that they would find healing and come to know Jesus. 

My time in Pattaya is coming to an end. It's been an amazing experience and I am really thankful to God for all that he has allowed me to do and see. I have been blessed abundantly through my time here. This Thursday will be my last time in that slum. On Friday, Tim (my fiance) arrives in Pattaya!! (i'm just a little excited about this. =) We'll stay in Pattaya until the following Thursday. After that we'll be doing some travelling in Thailand to go scuba diving and visiting Tim's friend in Vietnam. 

Pray for me as I say goodbye to everyone in Pattaya. Pray that I communicate my love for them and Christ's love for them. 
Pray for the youth sleepover next weekend. Pray that the youth would grow in their knowledge and love for Jesus.
Pray for Tim's travels to Pattaya and for our time in Pattaya together.
Pray for our travels after we leave.

I really appreciate your prayers and support. I could not have done so well here in Thailand without them. You are a HUGE blessing to me. 

Fun in Week EIGHT!!

A house being built in one of the PSM slums

Fun at the beach on Saturday! 
Me, Cream, and Benz

Benz - I love this girl! 

Jumping with Tang

Our beautiful beach

Singing worship songs

Playing some beach games

Here's the mural that team Canada painted (almost complete). 
My favorite girl is above Pin's head.

Making crowns for the story of Esther at the Wednesday slum

Having fun with Beam and Fai

Aom with Fong and Fern...so cute! 

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

What is a Slum?

This is a children's book I worked on while I was in Thailand. It's still a work in progress...

What is a Slum?

A slum is a place where people who are poor live. They don’t have enough money to live in houses like you and I live in.

 Their houses are made from scrap materials, like plywood or sheets of metal. These houses are not very secure and do not provide much protection from the weather.

     Slums are not very clean and have garbage everywhere. They often lack clean drinking water and electricity. In this kind of environment, it is easy for disease to spread.



  There are slums all over the world, especially in extremely poor countries. India, Pakistan, South Africa, Kenya have some of the largest slums in the world.


 These kids live in the slums of Pattaya, a city in Thailand. Kids who live in the slums are the same as kids who live in nice homes in the United States.

  Soda is one of their favorite drinks.

Ice cream makes them smile.

They like to ride bikes.

  They like to play with dogs.


    They like to read.


They like to play games.

They like to color.


           They like to be silly and pretend to play the guitar.

 They like to just be kids. 


    Sometimes the food they eat may be a little different, but that’s okay. Your food is different to them.



 Sometimes they might not get enough food to eat. They may have to wear the same clothes every day.

Sometimes this makes them sad.

If it makes you sad too, there is something you can do about it.

Instead of getting another new toy or a new shirt, you could give that money to an organization that helps the poor.

  There are many organizations that help the poor. World Relief, UNICEF, World Vision, International Justice Mission are just a few. Find one you like and support them.

Tell your family about what you’ve learned in this book and ask your family how you can help the poor. Tell other people about how they can help the poor too.


Your actions can make the world a better place, even if it helps one person. One person matters. You can help change a life. 

Dream Big: A Book about Human Trafficking for Kids

A while back, I was looking for a children's book on human trafficking and I couldn't find one. Tim, my fiance, challenged me to write one. This is what I came up with. I'm still thinking if I want to change anything, but it's a start. I'm thinking of having my students draw pictures for the pages. Let me know your thoughts...


1.       I have a dream. (Maybe you’ve heard this line before?) It’s a really big dream.

2.       I want to see all of the slaves in the world set free. You may have thought that slavery no longer exists. Or maybe you haven’t thought about slavery much at all.

3.       Slavery is real. It is estimated that there are 27 million slaves around the world, including in the United States.

4.       I grew up in a world with a lot of choices. If you are reading this, you probably did too.

   5.       As a baby, my mom could choose whether to feed me carrots or spinach. When I was a baby, I’m sure I spit them out, but now I love them both (not the baby food kind though).

6.       As a child, I could choose whether I wanted to eat a chocolate chip cookie or an oatmeal raisin cookie (At the time, I thought it was crazy to choose anything other than chocolate chip). I could choose whether I wanted to wear a hot pink skirt or purple leggings. (Yes, this is what we wore in the early 1990s.)

7.       I could choose whether I wanted to play four-square or hang on the monkey bars at recess.

8.       As a teenager, I could choose what music I wanted to listen to on my radio or what television show I wanted to watch.

9.       When I was done with high school, I could choose what college I wanted to go to and what I wanted to study. I could choose when I went to bed, when I got up, and how many times a week I ate ice cream.

10.   Now as an adult, the choices seem to never end. I can choose to jump on my bed or eat straight out of the peanut butter jar (And sometimes, I do.)

11.   But what if you lived in a world where you didn’t have any choices at all?

12.   There are some kids who don’t. They are forced to work for many hours a day for no pay.  

13.   They aren’t able to go to school or learn how to read and write.

  14.   There are children in Africa who are taken away from their families and are forced to pick cocoa beans. These cocoa beans are made into chocolate, which most of them have never eaten.

15.   These children work in the hot sun all day long. The work is back-breaking. If they don’t work hard enough, they are beaten. This is their life every single day.

16.   Human trafficking is another word for slavery. It happens everywhere, including in the United States.

 17.   Human trafficking happens when one person controls another person and forces them to work for nothing. Slave labor is used to make various products around the world, including chocolate, coffee, tea, rice, and clothing.

18.   This is a big problem, right? Now, you may say, “I’m just a kid. What can I do to help free slaves?”

19.   My answer to this is, “Every little bit counts.” You have a voice. Let it be heard.

20.   Tell your parents about human trafficking. Tell anyone you know about human trafficking. Tell your piano teacher, the cashier at the grocery store, the person on the other end of the telephone. Tell them to tell other people about human trafficking.

 21.   Ask adults in your life to vote for people in the government who want to fight against human trafficking. Ask them to write letters to the government asking them to support this cause.

22.   Ask them to buy fair trade products such as chocolate, coffee, tea, rice, and clothing. When you buy fair trade, these products are guaranteed to be made without slave labor.

23.   You have a choice. You have a choice about what to do with the information you’ve been given.

  24.   The choices you make can help change lives. The choices you make can set people free. What are you going to choose? 

Monday, July 23, 2012

Week 7 Update


Sa wa dee ka! 

I can't believe another week has passed. It's been a fun week! 

Here are some highlights:

-On Tuesday, Angela, Jacie, and I taught the little kids about God's love. The kids on Tuesday are very active. (that's a nice, teacher way of saying that they are a little out of control =) In the midst of all the chaos, one little boy named Vit talked to Angela after the story and he prayed to invite Christ into his life. =) Vit lives with his grandparents, and he gets scared at night because he has nightmares. I got to sit next to them as they prayed together and he was smiling big when he was done. He wrote on his coloring sheet that God loves all people. That was really exciting! 

-On Wednesday morning, I got to meet with Pu and teach her a little bit of English. Her homework last time was to practice reading Psalm 139, and she read it for me this time. She did a great job. =) 

-I love going to the Wednesday slum (I know teachers aren't supposed to have favorites, but this slum is probably my favorite.), and this week was fun. Benz, a girl that I love, lives in this slum, and I got to spend a little bit of time with her.

-On Thursday, I was met by one of my favorite little girls, Faa as she ran into my arms. She's a sweet girl. There were a lot of kids that came to the program on Thursday and it was fun.

-On Friday, we went to the local school's Sports Day. It was fun to see a lot of our kids running around and having fun. It was sad to see some of the girls wearing makeup and dancing in ways that little girls should not know how to do. 

-On Saturday, we took the kids to tae-kwon-do. (This was my last time to go before I leave.) I also got to teach an English lesson on feeling words and I lead the kids in learning how to pray for other countries. This week, we prayed for Haiti. 

-On Saturday night, I got to hang out with Pu again. She is such a joy to be around. She talked to me about how she wants to take college classes in the fall and how she wants God to use what has happened in her life to glorify him. She wants to be a translator. She says that she has "big dreams" but she knows that God can do them. =)

Next week: 
-A team is coming from the US. They will be building two houses for people in one of the PSM slums. The slum landlord is selling some of the land and making people move to another area in the slum. Pray for no rain while they are building!! 
-Pray for the team as they lead kids' club on Wednesday and Thursday. Pray for the kids in the slums to know God's love more and more. 
-Pray for me to take in as much as I can in the last couple of weeks and that I can communicate love to those I have been around for the last 7 weeks. 

While I have been in Thailand, I've had a lot of time to read, which I have loved. I've really enjoyed the slow pace of life this summer. This week, I started reading Terrify No More by Gary Haugen, President of International Justice Mission. It was so good, I finished it on Sunday. It describes IJM's involvement in rescuing girls who were forced to work in the brothels of Cambodia. These girls were as young as five and experienced abuse and torture which I cannot imagine. 

Here is an excerpt of Gary's response to this: (read if you please...it's a little long...but really, you should read the whole book. It's great...challenging and tough, but great.)
"But over time, having seen the suffering of the innocent and the crushing of the weak all around the world, my plea has changed. More and more I find myself asking not, Where is God? but, Where are his people? There are still painful things of life I find myself arguing with God about but these quarrels are less and less about injustice and perhaps more about cancer or mental illness or rains that come too late or too hard. No, for me, the great tragedies of abuse and oppression in our world are so clearly man-made sisters that I find it difficult to keep blaming God. Not only because it is men and women, not God, who perpetrate the abuses, but also because God has so clearly given men and women the power to stop the abuses. The little girls of Svay Pak were not suffering because of vague and inexplicable forces of nature. They were suffering because men and women with names and faces chose to beat them, rape them, and terrorize them. They suffered because other men and women with names and faces chose to provide shelter and protection for the abusers. And at the end of the day, they suffered because the rest of us let it happen. Given all the power and resources that God has placed in the hands of humankind, I have yet to see any injustice of humankind that could not be stopped by humankind. I find myself sympathizing with a God who, speaking the the ancient prophet, told his people, 'You have wearied the Lord with your words...by saying...'Where is the God of justice?' ' (Malachi 2:17). Increasingly, I feel quite sure of the whereabouts of God. My tradition tells of a Father in heaven who refused to love an unjust world from a safe distance, but took his dwelling among us to endure the humility of false arrests, vicious torture and execution. This is the God who could be found as 'a man of sorrows, and familiar with suffering' (Isaiah 53:3). The more I have come to know him, the harder it has become for me to ask such a God to explain where he has been. In fact, surprisingly, I don't generally hear the victim of abuse doubting the presence of God either. Much more often I hear them asking me, 'Where have you been?' "

Psalms 10:16-18 says, 
The Lord is King for ever and ever; 
    the nations will perish from his land.
17 You, Lord, hear the desire of the afflicted; 
    you encourage them, and you listen to their cry, 
18 defending the fatherless and the oppressed, 
    so that mere earthly mortals
    will never again strike terror.

Our God is a God who cares about injustice, and if I want to be more like him, I need to care more about it too.

Thanks for reading. Thanks for your prayers. 

Pictures from Week 7

Jom and me

Vit prayed to accept Christ as his Savior this week!! Praise God!! 

Tumtom knows how to photobomb! =)

A group from the Tuesday slum

It was beautiful to see Beam worshipping God this week. 

Guita with his drawing

Thearith with the Cambodian kids

Some of our kids at Sports Day

I taught English to these kids. 

This girl is fun! I love her.

Friday, July 20, 2012

Doing some reading...

This article was posted by the Somaly Mam Foundation. It describes the life of a victim of sex trafficking in Montreal, Canada.

This is not how the world should be.

I'm also started reading the book, Terrify No More, by the President of International Justice Mission, Gary Haugen. Every time I read about the work that IJM is doing, I am just amazed at the work that they are doing. I also am made aware of just how much work there is to be done to stop injustice.

Here are some quotes that stuck with me on what I've read so far:

"Imagine what would happen if you walked into your local police station with videotapes of elementary-school-age children in your community being openly sold to customers for sex. What if you gave them pictures, names, and addresses of those who were running the child-sex business, along with little maps on how to find them? What would you expect to happen? In Cambodia, we gave this information to the highest law enforcement authorities in the country, who sat in offices not twenty miles away from where the child-sex-ring was operating, and nothing happened. Nothing at all." (p. 13)

"While there are millions of girls and women victimized every day, our work will always be about the one. The one girl deceived. The one girl kidnapped. The one girl raped. The one girl infected with AIDS. The one girl needing a rescuer. To succumb to the enormity of the problem is to fail the one. And more is required of us." (p. 19)

"Standing with the oppressed, even in the face of personal danger, is simply the only effective strategy for securing change and bringing to life the deep hope that freedom is possible." (p.24)


Monday, July 16, 2012

Thai people are beautiful.

So cute! 
We sang a "LOVE" song. 
I'm sad I only got the O and the V.

Learning how to make spaghetti and garlic bread from Kru Jen-eee

And then eating! =) Most of them loved it! 
(Except for the few pieces of bread that burned on the bottom...kids are the same, even in Thailand =)

Eating dinner at Monica's! 

Yam made my favorite...sum tum!! (papaya salad)

Pu and me! 

Me and sweet Naam

Week 6...set lao =)

Sunday, July 15, 2012

Week SIX!


Sa wa dee ka! 

It has been great being back in Pattaya and getting back into the swing of things. 

On Monday night, I attended a party to celebrate 14 new people (including young teenage girls, 2 pregnant moms, and 3 lady-boys) joining the Tamar Center and leaving their former lives. The training lasts for 12 weeks. At this training, they learn how to make cards and also salon and bakery skills. They also receive teaching from the Bible that will give them the opportunity to heal from the brokenness of their past. At the party, it was beautiful to see the joy on these 14 people as they started a new journey in their lives. Pray for these 14 people with me. Pray that they are able to receive hope. Hope of a better life here on this earth. Hope of a better life in heaven. I have met and got to spend time with 2 of these girls, Nikki and Naam. Before I left for Chiang Rai, Naam came to church the week we brought the PSM kids. She saw one of the girls who didn't have very nice shoes and she went out on the street and bought new shoes for her. That really blessed my heart. 

On Tuesday, it was fun to go to the slum and see the kids again. We taught on Moses parting the Red Sea and how God fights for his people. While we were there, a couple of the older kids were hitting and yelling at each other the whole time. I told one of the boys named Get to stop many times and he didn't. After we left, I thought about how these kids don't know how to follow the rules, because they don't have people in their lives to teach them and to love them, to model how to be kind to others. Later, I found out that two of the kids who were causing most of the trouble, Get and Froi, live with a grandmother and two other kids. Their parents aren't around and aren't investing in their lives. Pray for these kids and other kids living in the slums with me. That even though they do not receive love and attention from earthly parents, they would know the love of our heavenly father. 

On Wednesday, we went to the slum in the afternoon. Every once in a while in Thailand, I feel moments where I wish I could communicate more with the kids and wonder what good I am doing when I can't really invest in their lives the way I would with kids who speak English. But then, I'm able to have moments when I ask a girl to read to me in Thai, and then she asks me to read in English (and I can throw in a few Thai phrases here and there). Or another girl comes up to me and puts her arms around my waist and I give her a big squeeze back. And I'm thankful for these little moments that I'm able to show love to a few Thai kids. 

On Wednesday night, I got to hang out with my friend, Pu and teach her some English. She is really excited to learn English, especially so she can read the Bible. She just has so much joy when she talks about her relationship with God. While we were there, she told me that she just moved into a new apartment, and she is seeing ghosts at night. Pray for Pu and she continues to learn how to trust Jesus in her life. 

On Thursday, we went to the slum for just a little while. It had rained the whole day and the ground where the kids normally sit was wet, so we just went  and played around for a little bit and gave them their snack. 

On Friday morning, I got to have coffee with a missionary from the US who has started a rescue home in Pattaya. I got to hear about how she and her husband started the home. They don't have any girls yet, but they are ready and waiting. Then on Saturday, I learned that they went on an outreach and found a teenage boy and girl who were being sex trafficked. The girl also had a young baby. They are now looking for jobs for them, as well as a proper placement, which could potentially be at their home. Pray for this new ministry, that God would send them girls from Pattaya who can be rescued and redeemed from a life of prostitution. Here's their website if you want to learn more about their ministry. 

On Saturday, we took the kids to Taekwondo and then back to the center for youth club. I got to teach some of the kids how to make spaghetti and garlic bread, and it was fun! Most of them thought it was delicious. =) They also got to watch "The Emperor's New Groove", which they loved. On Saturday night, I got to have dinner with 7 girls from the Tamar Center training and my missionary friend, Monica. I already have spent time with 2 of them (Nikki and Naam), and I'm glad I got to meet a few more. They are really sweet girls. On Sunday night, I got to hang out at Monica's with Nikki and Naam and a few other girls who have come to the Tamar Center. We ate papaya salad and sticky rice together and celebrated one girl's birthday. I really enjoyed spending time with them.

On Sunday, as I was reading my Bible, I came across these verses in Luke 15, 
Then Jesus told them this parable: “Suppose one of you has a hundred sheep and loses one of them. Doesn’t he leave the ninety-nine in the open country and go after the lost sheep until he finds it? And when he finds it, he joyfully puts it on his shoulders and goes home. Then he calls his friends and neighbors together and says, ‘Rejoice with me; I have found my lost sheep.’ 

Among the many, the many people in Pattaya I see who need Jesus, he is rejoicing over the few who are finding him. I am thankful to see that and be a part of that here this summer. Even if it's just to give a smile or a hug. 

Thank you for your prayers. God has been so faithful to me in my time here. 
This week, you can pray...
-For Jiap and Pin, as they teach the older kids about relationships
-For Angela, Jacie, and I as we teach the younger kids 
-For the Tamar Center group as they continue their 12-week training

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Deafeating Poverty

My favorite reporter, Nicholas Kristof, recently wrote an article called "Doughnut Defeating Poverty". It was about helping the poor help themselves by equipping them to start businesses and find dignified forms of work.

He talked about poverty being a vicious cycle. Poverty is caused, in part, by people in despair. Not knowing what else to do, they try to cover this despair with drugs, alcohol, sex, and other various means.

Kristof highlighted an organization called CARE, which provides the poor with loans and coaches them about how to start businesses.

He says, "Assistance succeeds when it gives people a feeling that a better outcome is possible, and those hopes become self-fulfilling as people work more industriously and invest more wisely."


As a Christian, along with this hope of a better outcome, I want to see the poor receive the hope that only Jesus can give. Along with helping the poor find hope spiritually, we need to help meet their physical needs. 

Here in Pattaya, I have loved seeing how the Tamar Center is tranforming lives. They not only provide women and men with the hope of Jesus, but they also teach them skills that will allow them to earn an income in ways other than prostitution. 

On Monday night, I attended a party to celebrate 14 new people (including young teenage girls, 2 pregnant moms, and 3 lady-boys) joining the Tamar Center and leaving their former lives. The training lasts for 12 weeks. At this training, they learn how to make cards and also salon and bakery skills. They also receive teaching from the Bible that will give them the opportunity to heal from the brokenness of their past. At the party, it was beautiful to see the joy on these 14 people as they started a new journey in their lives. 

Pray for these 14 people with me. Pray that they are able to receive hope. Hope of a better life here on this earth. Hope of a better life in heaven.