Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Matching Names to Faces

Meet WGM’s Newest Missionary Disciples
Tracy Dubois, Support Staff
January-March 2016

If you’re like me, it’s easier to remember names when you can match them to faces. I feel more connected to the people, and, hopefully, I can say hi to them by name when we meet again. This brief introduction to WGM’s newest missionary disciples may help you recognize them and show you how you can pray for them.

Pete and Angela OlsenAnointed To Proclaim, Heal, Teach: PETE AND ANGELA OLSEN

The Olsens will serve through medical and education ministries at Tenwek Hospital in Kenya.
“From our time at Tenwek, we learned that the people who work in and live near the hospital are thirsty for more of Jesus and His truth. They want to learn what it looks like to have a real relationship with Him.”

Serving and Teaching with Excellence: Mike and Julie GaneyServing And Teaching With Excellence: MIKE AND JULIE GANEY

The Ganeys (career missionaries) will minister to children and surgical residents at Tenwek.
“We pray that the love of Jesus will be visible to the children we minister to as we serve their physical needs and that we will be a source of encouragement to the surgical residents as we help train them.”

Healing In The Name Of Jesus: 

Healing in the Name of Jesus: Eli and Krista HornELI AND KRISTA HORN

The Horns will bring physical and spiritual healing in the name of Jesus at Tenwek. “We feel called to a medical ministry in particular because healing was a primary part of Jesus’ own ministry, and we have seen firsthand how meeting the physical needs of a person can lead to spiritual healing as well.”

Loving in Jesus’ Name: Bill and Joy IrwinLoving In Jesus’ Name: BILL AND JOY IRWIN

The Irwins are called to care for women and children in sub-Saharan Africa through medical and administrative ministries at Tenwek. “We are going to Kenya to love and serve in a place where there is a great and desperate need. Our great desire is that women and children will know that they have a Savior who loves and values them.”

One Step at a Time: Esther LeiningerOne Step At A Time: ESTHER LEININGER

Esther will teach at Taylor Christian School and volunteer at Taylor Community Center in McAllen, Texas, on the Texas/Mexico border. “This is an exciting time to work on the Texas/Mexico border because of the transition that is happening. People tend to be more receptive to the gospel when they are surrounded by change, because change shakes them out of their routine.”

Addressing a Void: Dylan and Jessica NugentAddressing A Void: DYLAN AND JESSICA NUGENT

The Nugents will minister at Tenwek and the surrounding community. “The need for quality healthcare in Africa is staggering. The World Health Organization recommends five orthopaedic surgeons for every half a million people. In the U.S., the ratio is 43 orthopaedic surgeons, while in Kenya the ratio is less than one surgeon per half a million people.”

Call Solidified: Brady and Alicia SearlCall Solidified: BRADY AND ALICIA SEARL

The Searls will work with students and pastors in Kampala, Uganda.
“Although Uganda has a large Christian influence, there is still need for greater biblical truth and understanding. The people are hungry to learn more about Jesus and what it means to be a Christian.”


Stay connected through Discover Missions.
MORE: Subscribe to the weekly Discover Missions email at www.wgm.org/discovermissions to be alerted when stories are posted about new missionaries. Upcoming articles will feature Darin and Laura Arnott, Jodi Brumbaugh, and Aaron and Stephanie Kelley.

Monday, March 28, 2016

Prayer Calendar March 27-31, 2016


If you’re like me, it’s easier to remember names when you can match them to faces. I feel more connected to the people, and, hopefully, I can say hi to them by name when we meet again. This brief introduction to WGM’s newest missionary disciples may help you recognize them and show you how you can pray for them.

Pray for new Missionary Disciples who are just beginning their service in missions. p.22


Wednesday, March 23, 2016

The Portrait Project

More important than the photos given to these Albanian families by Nathan and Cydil Waggoner are the prayers being lifted up on their behalf by prayer partners in the States.More Than a Picture
Rachel Elwood, Support Staff
January-March 2016

Cydil Waggoner, missionary in Albania with husband, Nathan, and kids, Ellie and Reni, loves taking photos and has a great eye for capturing special moments. When the Waggoners moved from the capital city of Tirana to a small village, they wanted to find a way to get to know their new neighbors. As anyone who has moved to a new place knows, the task of getting to know people and building relationships can take a long time. Cydil had the idea to offer each family in the village the gift of a photo session and a canvas photo mounted on a stretch frame. Thus, The Portrait Project was born.

With over 100 families living in the village, the Waggoners began to make contacts, visit homes, and take photos. Within one year, they had visited over 50 homes and matched each family with a ministry partner in the U.S. who had committed to pray for the Albanian family. At each photo session, the family was also given a personal invitation to the programs and services at the ministry center where Cydil and Nathan serve.

Partners in the U.S. who committed to pray for a family were given a postcard-size photo, with names and prayer requests written on the back. Many of the partners also contributed $15 to cover the cost of the canvas print.

As Nathan and Cydil have made their way through the village, they have come to realize that, for the families, even more meaningful than the physical gift of a family portrait was the realization that they are being remembered by their prayer partners in the United States. One lady from a neighboring village, in tears, said, “I wish I lived there so I could be part of The Portrait Project!” When Cydil assured her that they could take her family’s picture, too, she replied, “I don’t care as much about the picture. I just want someone to pray for my family!”

And that’s what The Portrait Project is all about.

Create your own portrait project.
ACT: Create your own portrait project. Ask to take photos of the families in your neighborhood so that you can pray for them. Then print the photos, and each night for the next year, commit to pray as a family for your neighbors.

Monday, March 21, 2016

Prayer Calendar March 20-26, 2016

With over 100 families living in the village, the Waggoners began to make contacts, visit homes, and take photos. Within one year, they had visited over 50 homes and matched each family with a ministry partner in the U.S. who had committed to pray for the Albanian family. At each photo session, the family was also given a personal invitation to the programs and services at the ministry center where Cydil and Nathan serve.

Pray for a family in your neighborhood that is in need of divine intervention. p. 20


Tuesday, March 15, 2016

The Good Samaritan

The Good Samaritan by Vincent van GoghJim Ritchie, Missionary, Kenya
January-March 2016

I love the painting The Good Samaritan by Vincent van Gogh. He painted it in 1850 while he was a patient in an asylum. He was struggling, and he found solace and direction in his artistic meditations.

The painting is dense with meaning. The Samaritan is himself struggling, awkwardly pushing the ambushed and injured Jewish man onto his donkey. The Samaritan has given up his place of relative comfort on the donkey and has emptied his luggage, treating the man with oil, wine, dressings, and clothes. But the Samaritan man isn’t glorified in the painting. His face is in shadow, and his leg serves as a step-stool for the Jewish man.

The injured man doesn’t even appear to be particularly grateful to the Samaritan. His countenance is heavenward, which is more appropriate. The priest and the Levite, who should have stopped to help a fellow Jew, pass by on the road, ignoring the need and the struggle.

Sometimes those who serve in missions feel like the Samaritan in the painting. Struggling, awkward, stepped-on, unappreciated. We have given up our place, our treasure, our comfort, our time. And sometimes the people we are serving seem oblivious to what we left behind or even contemptuous of our effort.

Jesus told the story of the Good Samaritan after a Jewish lawyer asked, “Who is my neighbor?” In Jesus’s story, He doesn’t praise the one being served. Jesus exalts the server. After telling the parable, Jesus asked, “Which of these three proved to be a neighbor…?” The answer was “The one who showed compassion toward him.”

Let us be compassionate toward our neighbors, regardless of where they are, regardless of their acknowledgment, and regardless of the attention of others. The One who sees and remembers our compassion is He who taught us about compassion and showed the greatest compassion of all. He is never oblivious, never contemptuous of the things we do in His name. Awkward, struggling, yes. But never unrecognized or unappreciated by the Great Servant King. Serve on.

Make an impact on your knees.
PRAY: Father, help me to be compassionate toward my neighbors. May I be sensitive to opportunities to be Your hands and feet for those hurting around me. Please use my talents for Your glory, and I will praise Your name in everything I do. Amen

Monday, March 14, 2016

Prayer Calendar March 13-19, 2016

I love the painting The Good Samaritan by Vincent van Gogh. He painted it in 1850 while he was a patient in an asylum. He was struggling, and he found solace and direction in his artistic meditations.

Pray that Christians around the world will show true, selfless compassion to those in need. p.6

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

The Sugar Cane Workers

Larry Overholt, Missionary, Honduras
January-March 2016

I first met the Siete de Mayosugar cane workers in May 2014 when Angie and I were hosting a group of agriculture students from The Ohio State University. One of the scheduled activities for the students’ study-abroad experience was visiting a large local sugar cane operation. While we were touring the fields, I noticed a group of sugar cane workers standing idly off to one side of the field.

As the university students walked through the fields learning about how sugar cane is planted, I was more interested in learning about the group of men and finding out why they were not working. By their gestures and the tones of their voices, the men seemed uneasy. I walked over to them, introduced myself, and explained our purpose for touring the sugar cane operations. After their initial surprise that I spoke Spanish, one of the sugar cane workers recognized me from occasionally seeing me before in the village that they walked through on the way home from work. As I talked with them, I learned that they were temporarily halted because the seed material they had been planting had run out and new material had not arrived yet. The sugar cane planters are paid by the amount of work they get done daily. When there was no material available to plant, they did not make any money.

The temperature was near 100 degrees and the men were taking advantage of the lull in the work schedule to rehydrate their bodies. One of the workers told me that they live in the mountain region above the village of Siete de Mayo where our Shalom church ministry team has been actively working for the past several years. As we talked, we learned that we had several friends in common within the Siete de Mayo community, especially Veronica, who happened to be a family member to David, one of the workers. Veronica was our key contact person when we first started a new ministry there. Without her support, it is unlikely that we would have ever been able to begin the ministry that is now growing. I was reminded how important it is to keep a positive testimony in the community and to build our network of relationships.

One of the missionaries’ major challenges is to find ways to build relationships with people. With the sugar cane workers, there were potential cultural barriers at two different levels: that of a North American and even more as an outsider from their community. The first meeting out in the middle of the field with the sugar cane workers has led to more opportunities to continue talking with the men. Someday, we hope to be able to enter their communities to share the gospel of Christ. We are continually amazed at how God opens ministry opportunities by allowing us to become friends of the “friends of a friend.”

In order to get to know the workers better, I approached them with a request to take photos of areas of interest in their lives. Each worker was given a disposable camera, and, once the pictures were developed, they chose one favorite picture to talk about.

Share the joy of pictures.
ACT: Share the joy of pictures with someone new in your life just as Larry did with his new friends. Take time to share your favorites so you can learn more about each other’s lives. The experience may have lasting memories just as it did here.

Monday, March 7, 2016

Prayer Calendar March 6-12, 2016


As the university students walked through the fields learning about how sugar cane is planted, I was more interested in learning about the group of men and finding out why they were not working. By their gestures and the tones of their voices, the men seemed uneasy. I walked over to them, introduced myself, and explained our purpose for touring the sugar cane operations.

March 6-12: Praise God for open doors to building relationships. p.16

Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Souls and Soles

Hubert Harriman, President
January-March 2016

David holds the pair of shoes he was wearing as a young boy when Pastor Jorge Pinto and the Manuelito Project rescued him from the streets of Tegucigalpa, Honduras.The invention of photography will probably remain as one of the more memorable discoveries in the history of mankind—to be able to capture a moment in time. Some pictures stay with you for a long time; they speak to powerful truths and stories. Let me tell you about one of those pictures that will always stand out in my mind.

I was participating (translating) with a youth team led by my oldest daughter, Anne, to the Manuelito Project, a ministry that saves children off the streets of Tegucigalpa, Honduras. Our trip started where the work had started—in the church that Jorge Pinto pastors. Pastor Jorge took us into his office and immediately captured our attention, and the heart of their ministry, with a pair of shoes. He told us of a poor boy named David, whom they had rescued off the streets. He had been in their program for a while when David started asking for a new pair of shoes. Pastor Jorge argued that his shoes looked fine, until other kids told him to look at the soles. They were completely gone. The shoes just looked good from the top side, but he was literally walking barefoot on the bottom side. Then, he brought David into the office. A young man now, David had been transformed by the gospel of Jesus Christ because someone had cared for his soul as well as his soles. It was a powerful moment, to say the least.

Later that year, our children were with us for Christmas, and Anne gave me a special gift. She had taken a picture of David’s shoes and had framed that picture especially for me. That picture is hanging on our living room wall as a constant reminder that we must have eyes to see not only the soul, but the whole of each human being.

The apostle John wrote: “If anyone has material possessions and sees a brother or sister in need but has no pity on them, how can the love of God be in that person?” (1 John 3:17, NIV). I want to see the soul need of every person, but I also want to see the “sole” need of every person. Someone may look good on the “top side” of their shoes, but be suffering on the “bottom side” of their shoes. I pray for an eye to see underneath the veneer of the world—to discern that, even though people can look happy on the outside, they may be walking on bare feet. The deeper hurts are often overlooked when we don’t really look.

WGM is purposed to deal with both the souls and “soles” of those around us, seeking to bring God’s healing to the whole person. That is God’s sole purpose! We can do no less.

Do you want to go to Honduras?
GO: Has God called you to serve kids in Honduras with your church, a work team, or as a volunteer? The Manuelito Project needs people interested in children’s and youth work, education, and much more! Visit www.wgm.org/honduras to learn more.