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Dear Friends and Family
Several, apparently healthy, young men
suddenly died along the Voen Sai River
in a remote region of Rattanakiri early
last month. The Kavet Tribe, a small
ethnic minority group in N. E. Cambodia,
claimed the deaths were due to spiritual
attacks, and that the victims had two
small holes in their necks where the
spirits sucked out their blood. Medical
examiners claimed that the three young
men they performed autopsies on died of
strokes, but they cannot explain the
holes in the neck. "Maybe they fell on
nails?" is about the best they can do.
According to village elders the spirits
were angry because of land clearing by a
mining company in their mountainous
region. One of the elders, in the
community of around 500 people, said in
an interview, "We saw the spirits coming
down from the mountain." I heard about
this while eating lunch and listening to
a Cambodian news broadcast. I was 650
Kilometers away from Voen Sai, in Balang
,
Cambodia , covered with grease
and oil from working on a combine,
getting the machine ready for our
impending rice harvest.
http://www.missionreports.com/combine_fix
I recognized the name of the village as
we have a church/home there. I called
our District Supervisor, Krew Muth.
"Yes, it's true!" blurted Muth, "But did
you know that the entire surrounding
community is gathered at the church?"
Puzzled, and totally unaware of this
news, I queried a "Why?" Muth, surprised
at my ignorance, responded, "Because
it's the only place people are safe from
the spirits. We could use some help!
They don't have much food."
I called Mak Sou for some advice, she
said, "The ‘Young Tigers' (A group of
Cambodian pastors raised in our
church/homes) are looking for something
to do, and we have a five ton truck load
of food, Manna Pack Rice, Bibles,
‘Proclaimers' (an audio player with two
versions of the Cambodian Bible) and
three more vehicles with medical
supplies, and bottled water ready to
go." The caravan was organized.
http://www.missionreports.com/rattanakiri_trip_olalai
Sou called Pastor Peter, our National
Church President, and within an hour 28
young pastors were on the road. The
next night I called Sou for a report.
She explained that there were 551 of the
tribal people gathered at the church.
"And guess what?" she asked excitedly. I
took the bait, "What?" She came back,
"They all received Christ!" I couldn't
believe I'd understood correctly. "How
many?", I asked. "All 551 accepted Jesus
as Lord", she said.
Later, when we were all back in
Phnom Penh , I asked Naret, our
Chief of Staff, "What exactly
happened up there?" Naret started down a
chronological list. "First we cast the
evil spirits out of the people
that were possessed, then we prayed for
the sick and got them healed, then we
gave
them some
food, and then told them about
Jesus Christ destroying the power of
Satan and rising from the dead, and they
all wanted Jesus in their lives. Oh, and
we asked them how many wanted power over
the spirits, and they all did." "All
551?" I asked. "Yes, all of them Pa
Thom." I said, "This is
kingdom of God stuff!" "What's
that?" asked Naret. I said, "Look at
Luke 9:1-2 and read it to me." Naret
opened his Bible and read,
"1When
Jesus had called the Twelve together, he
gave them power and authority to drive
out all demons and to cure diseases,
2and he
sent them out to preach the kingdom of
God and to heal the sick." I
looked at Naret, "What part of that did
you do?" Without a blink he affirmed,
"All of it Pa, all of it!"
While all this was beginning Dr. Mike,
our dentist friend from
Clinton , Iowa was here. They'd
treated a number of our orphan homes in
Preah Vihear Province and went to
the provincial prison, about 50 of the
inmates received Christ, so "Proclaimers"
were given to ten leaders so they could
study the Bible. Since then, as we
understand it from our follow-up team,
most of the prison population, nearly
500 men, have decided to follow Christ.
http://www.missionreports.com/prisoner_proclaimers
Something that Dr Mike discovered was
that one of the Church/Homes seemed to
lack "Life". He commented that though
the place was clean and the kids were
healthy, he just didn't sense the
presence of the Lord as he did in
most of our homes. We decided to check
it out, but who? How? The answer was
clamoring in the background. More
"Kingdom" work was about to happen.
The "Young Lions" (our Spirit
filled youth) had heard about the
miraculous results in
Rattanakiri,
and decided that they should be
the ones to lead a group to Preh Vhear.
Their focus was on the youth in the
provincial homes, but in the process
managed to bring another 100 young
people to Christ.
http://www.missionreports.com/young_lion_preah_vihear/index.html
They took a load of our "Comic Bibles"
and taught under the trees, led young
people to Christ, got them baptized, and
filled with the Spirit. The young girl
pictured in the bottom left of the above
photo page came to the meeting mute and
left speaking. Three young men came down
from our Church/Home in Chom Kasan. They
were not happy and reported that the
pastor had sold off part of their church
property. The leaders of our young Lions
went to investigate, they could see
things were not right and got back to
our church leaders. They went
immediately and by the time they arrived
the pastor had skipped town stripping
the home of every item of value. The
place was devastated. This time our
staff sprang into action, they were on
the move within 24 hours with paint,
lumber, cement, supplies, blankets, food
and a good dose of the power of God.
What happened was like it came out of
the book of Acts. The home was rebuilt,
but more importantly, a rural believer
received a vision of the Church/Home and
heard God's voice calling him to "Go".
He showed up and began to round up
church members; they began bringing in
possessions and food. It took them
nearly two weeks but the place is
thriving, and the ‘Rural believer' was
appointed the new pastor.
http://www.missionreports.com/chomkasan_construction
The "Young Lions" had tasted victory,
and they were hungry! Within a week they
set out for
Kampong Speu Province and held
meetings at Phdau Penh Church/Home.
About 150 youth showed up in this very
rural area. We don't know of any who
left without receiving Christ.
http://www.missionreports.com/young_lions_kspeu
By this time the "Tigers" were starting
to feel they were not measuring up, I
told them in morning devotions that the
key to their success was to impart their
gifts and zeal upon those to whom they
minister. So, they set out on a circuit,
traveling from church to church teaching
the kingdom of God . Results are still
coming in.
http://www.missionreports.com/young_tiger_aug
, but they are substantial.
While I was wallowing in mud and grease
at the rice farm, and the Tigers and
Lions were ushering in the Kingdom of
God , Pastor Dan Boyd brought a group of
laborers and did a makeover at one of
our rural Church/Homes in Bantemeanchy
Province . They worked in rain and heat
and the entire church was greatly
encouraged.
http://www.missionreports.com/santa_rosa_kon
(on page two, 4th picture
down on left, you'll see why you might
not want to go swimming in the Tonl'e
Sap) Near the end of the week at about
9:30am, Jenny Robinson, one of our great
team leaders was painting trim and
jumped down off some scaffolding onto an
ice chest. It slipped out from under her
and she put a five inch gash in her face
exposing her jawbone. The team
contacted Dr.
Lina, and he called the
hospital in Poipet. The team rushed her
there for some emergency stitches. I
called back to her church in Eugene ,
Oregon to let her family know and
reached Bill Proulix, who gave me some
great advice. "She's a young woman and
normal stitching will leave a huge scar.
She needs to see a plastic surgeon. They
rebuild from the bottom up". I had left
for Phnom Penh at 4:00am, awaken by a
Cambodian funeral next door. I called
Sou and she and Dr Lena set out for the
500 km trip toward Poipet. I bought
tickets to Bangkok over the phone, and
called the Bumrungradt Hospital for
emergency surgery that evening. Jork,
our Cambodian
Team leader, set out with Jenny
toward Phnom Penh , they met Sou and Dr.
Lina about half way. We had her bags
packed and caught an evening flight to
Bangkok , by
11:30pm she was receiving
surgery. The Dr. rebuilt 5 layers of
tissue. Now, the stitches are out, and
you have to look for the scar. Jenny was
a "Trouper" and will hardly have a
"Badge of Courage" to show for all her
trouble.
That brings me to the "Bobs". Bob and
Christal Hollandsworth, and
Bob Richards. Bob and Christal
have been serving faithfully in
Cambodia for nearly four years.
Bob's a well driller, and put our
rebuilt rig through the paces this
month. His son Jeremiah, who just got
out of the US Air Force was here to
assist him.
http://www.missionreports.com/well_drilling_aug
The rig performed well but Bob's got it
back in the shop for more tinkering,
none-the-less, we keep digging wells!
Bob Richards, who did much to teach us
how to set up for large medical mission
teams over the past 10 years, was here
to visit the church home he sponsors at
Gaw An Doc.
http://www.missionreports.com/bob_richard_visit_kor
He's a fun guy to be around, with
plenty of stories about being a
Hollywood ‘
Props Manager' (He worked
on the
John Wayne movie, "True Grit").
He left behind some needed bicycles and
a lot of fun. One of the gifts he's
giving is a solar electric unit. They
last longer than the diesel generators,
are cheaper to operate, run lights all
night, and turn the church into a
community center. We install them as
fast as we can raise the $2000 for their
cost.
http://www.missionreports.com/solar_aug
As you can see, all in all, a very busy
month in Cambodia !
Be blessed, we will!
Pa Thom (Ted Olbrich)
Mak Sou (Sou Olbrich)
And the ones who do all the work,
Our Cambodian Team! |