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Dear
Friends and Family,
It's
called the, "Question". "Father, how do You want to humbly
serve me today?" For many of you that may seem like a
strange (maybe arrogant
or even blasphemous?) way to start the day,
but that's what we've been doing since Beth Barone (Bethy)
was here to teach the leaders of our "Young Tigers", "Young
Lions" and Elders.
http://www.missionreports.com/beth_barone_workshop
Most Cambodians see God as the ‘Boss with a ball bat', who's
more than willing to ‘whack' you. God as a ‘Loving Father'
is a ‘hard sell', especially if you've been taught the
concept of a ‘Benevolent Dictator' for a few years, and
grown up under the concept of karma (You get what you
deserve). That is, until they see what God has to say about
the subject. I bought into the new point of view a couple
of years ago, but some things sink in slowly.
For years
I have had a scripture verse that has been, for me, one of
the most encouraging, (Rm 7:18) "For I know that in me
nothing good dwells; for to will is present with me, but how
to perform what is good I do not find." I think, "Great!
Paul was as screwed up as I am!" I also have a verse that
is the most disconcerting. You got it! (Rm 7:18) "For I
know that in me nothing good dwells; for to will is present
with me, but how to perform what is good I do not find." I
think, "Yikes! Paul was as screwed up as I am!" So, which
was is it? Both! Paul was on a journey and so am I. For all
of you injured on the path, I sincerely apologize and ask
your forgiveness.
Bethy
would call it a "Revelation", but for me it's more like the
lights getting switched on. Have you ever noticed how you
can see something for years and never really "get it"? I am
amazed at how dense I can be. I was in that twilight zone
between sleep and consciousness when I asked God the,
"Question". The answer surprised me. "I want to give you a
pure heart
". Now, I've prayed Psalm 51: 10 ("Create in me a clean
heart O God… ") for years, and hadn't realized I wanted to
keep one foot in the dirty water. At that moment, I really
wanted to be free of pride, anger, lust, deception, and the
whole grimy list, so, I simply responded, "Okay, let's do
it!" Decisions like this always get tested!
Man did we
get tested! First of all a home church was meeting in
Khampong Cham, a drunken group of neighbors lobbed in a hand
grenade and killed two of the three pastor's children, and
wounded 13 more including the pastor and his wife. It was a
dispute over a land easement. The pastor and his wife are
expected to recover from their physical wounds but please
pray for their church and healing of the loss of the
children. Two of the five perpetrators have been caught by
the police. It's a hard time for them.
Next, I'd
researched the best
rice variety
for our growing conditions, tracked it down on "Agri-Seek"
(A service that is supposed to connect buyers with reputable
sellers). I Checked out their website, ordered the rice and
herbicides from very knowledgeable agriculturist, got a
‘Bill of Lading', and a website for tracking the container,
all of which turned out to be false. We got ripped off for
$16,000US of the orphan's money. I was ticked, but those
crooks are in a real bad place! (Ex
22:22 -25) The kids have been praying. I
found some more seed in
Vietnam
. It should be here tomorrow.
I could
continue my tale of woe about land mines discovered on our
pasture land, 30 of our new hard drives being stolen en
route to
Cambodia
,
UNICEF trying to close down our church/homes
in favor of their version of foster care (which turns child
care into a profit center), our limestone quarry being
purchased and closed by a Chinese company, and on and on for
multiple minor irritations, but I quit. We won on all
fronts. The kids are in heaven, God will deal with the
crooks, UNICEF's program was deemed "Culturally
Inappropriate" for Cambodia by the local authorities, and we
found another source for limestone, so PTL! It's almost
Easter. He arose and so have we!
(Soapbox
time) A word about UNICEF
: They try to impose their, basically,
Western, humanistic, standards for
child rearing
by pumping money and jobs into the appropriate governing
ministries of developing countries. Much of what they have
to say is just common sense, but they totally ignore the
soul, and fail to recognize that man is designed for
relationship with our Creator. The only place that they have
zero traction is with the Islamic community. Muslims openly
beat women, children, and even some men that they deem
errant, and guess what? That which they (UNICEF) despise is
going to consume them. UNICEF is an endangered species. By
the time their (European humanistic) grandchildren are
though college, they will be under sharia law. Humans demand
a relationship with God, and they will settle for a polluted
version over
atheism. Cambodians resent this condescension.
I have traveled much of the world and I have never seen such
well behaved children as I have encountered in Cambodia .
I've been in America and
Europe
, and if any place on earth needs help raising kids, its
there! UNICEF should export Cambodian child rearing
philosophy to Europe and America not vise-versa. And, "NO!"
we do not beat children, but neither do we worship at the
altar, or cash coffers, of UNICEF or their unwitting
lackeys. "Ok Ted. Put the box back!"
Our
ability to raise rice is the key to long term
sustainability. So, we're slinging dirt, digging canals,
throwing up dikes, and building roads as fast as our
bulldozer and excavator can work. We even bought our own
fuel tank truck to keep them running. We will soon be
planting our rice and, with the help of improved varieties,
limestone, fertilizers, and improved water and pest control,
we hope to more than quadruple our production this year.
http://www.missionreports.com/rice_farming_improvement
Cambodian
youth are "counter cultural". Maybe it stems from the past
generation's abuse under atheistic communism? I can't
explain it, but they get radical about their faith. The
adults keep trying to infiltrate their meetings. In
Rattanakiri an 80 year old granny snuck into their youth
meeting and received Christ, was baptized, and filled with
the Spirit. In Pailin three young children came up and asked
for the full treatment. They got it!
http://www.missionreports.com/pailin_youth These
"Young Lions" won't even allow old "Geezers" like me to tag
along. They do like to receive training, so we opened up a
meeting with Bill Norton and Sonny Weimer when they were
here, and many were challenged to reach for new levels of
ministry.
http://www.missionreports.com/empower_young_lion
They clamor to get involved, and press for opportunities
to travel anywhere at any time to present Christ. It is
truly amazing. They'd like to bankrupt us just keeping them
traveling but they leave hundreds of new believers in their
wake every trip.
Annual
meetings are being held at the District levels this year for
two reasons. One, we no longer have a facility large enough
to accommodate the numbers, and two, transportation is too
expensive. So far, three meetings have been held and the
church is being encouraged by their leaders coming to them.
http://www.missionreports.com/conference_district
We've learned that we really do need to connect with the
local church.
I fear
that teams sometimes feel we are using them only to help us
make improvements to physical structures. They do help to do
that, but what they fail to realize is the encouragement
they bring to a community that sees people from half way
around the world coming to their aid. They leave behind
re-vitalized congregations, full churches, and greatly
encouraged leaders, plus wonderful help for the orphans,
widows and the communities they serve. Karen Davis brought a
team to a church that was started ten years ago by a
repentant cattle rustler. Their soybean crop failed last
year and they were discouraged. One member of the team,
Chris Taylor, who was a great help with our Women's dorm,
brought his son. He stayed on the job even though he
suffered from Amoebic
dysentery.
I was upset that we were not alerted to his condition, but
Chris
just plain wanted to stay in the action. We prayed, pumped
some pills into him, and hopefully he is happily recovered.
The entire team is truly a group of servants of the highest
order.
http://www.missionreports.com/karen_davis_team
Of our
unsung heroes few get as little credit, and do so much, as
those who send food and supplies to the kids. Warm Blankets
Orphan Care Int. has paid to ship dozens of containers of
food through Lou Binninger at the
Glad Tidings
Church . They put together a fantastic team of
supporters through Gleanings for the Hungry, The
Butte County
Rice
Producers , Feed My
Starving
Children , and many others. I wish you could
see the blessing they bring! Maybe this will help?
http://www.missionreports.com/rice_meal_10
Thanks! You guys saved our necks! When we were being
criticized for the amount of money we spend on food, we
showed the governmental "experts" what we supplied for free.
They apologized.
You
probably have not seen many Palm Sundays like this. Pastor
Peter called me and asked about the significance of the day.
We talked, and I mentioned the road Jesus traveled being
strawed with palm branches. He literally did it. I don't
know how many palm trees he "trimmed", but the effect was
electric. His sermon on our expectations of God and His role
as a loving Father brought a little girl, who couldn't go to
school because she collected scrap plastic and steel to feed
her aging grandmother, to the alter. It was a good day!
http://www.missionreports.com/palm_sunday
I
understand many of you have not been receiving our updates.
We are trying a new mailing system. If you have not received
the past updates you can get then on the left column of the
following link:
www.missionreports.com/cambodia This new program
will also allow those of you who are receiving this and
don't want it to, "opt out".
Have a
great month! We will!
Blessings!
Ted (Pa
Thom) Olbrich,
Sou (Mak
Thom) Olbrich
And the
Cambodian Team |