We run a clean operation and so did
my dad. (More about that in a
second) Thanks for the lessons Dad!
Even though you've been in heaven
for nearly 20 years, I am still very
grateful.
Happy Father's Day!
In fact, though you are not all
fathers, you are all very much in
the role of parenting our kids,
whether you realize it or not. So,
before you do anything else, you
need to see this. It is from our
hearts!
It's
important for you to know this is
not staged or hyped but just a
selection of photos of what you have
really accomplished.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BYuj9LpFJhU
Hey, I had to have one of the
biggest
Father's Day celebrations in
the world! First, the Elders gave me
a special
tribute
on Saturday ,
June
19th;
they've
been with me for the past
12 years! It was special. Then,
on Sunday morning the
kids and the entire church at
Chom Chao
put on a tribute that
brought tears to this proud German's
eyes. They even wrote a special
song!
http://www.missionreports.com/father_day10
My four natural children
all came through as well. The most
unique was from my sanctified oldest
daughter who wrote: "Thanks for
knocking up Mom!" I simply
responded. "It was my pleasure!"
But, enough, let's pay tribute to
the wisdom of our Fathers.
wis-dom
‘wiz-d
Ə m
n
[ME,
fr. OE
wisd
Ô
m,
fr
wis
wise] b: ability
to discern inner qualities and
relationships : INSIGHT c: good
sense: JUDGEMENT
"Every dog needs a few fleas" It was
my father's way of explaining why I
should not clean the fly specks off
the light bulbs in the barn of our
Chicago
, Illinois area
dairy farm. The farm I grew
up on in the 1950's was only 60
miles from
Chicago
. So, we fell under the
control of the Chicago Board of
Health. The "Milk Inspectors" would
pull off monthly, unannounced,
examinations of the premises. The
inspectors weren't bad guys. They
just got paid to find problems. If
they easily found a few small
infractions, and every thing else
looked "spick and span" they'd be
happy, because their work was
quick and
easy; they knew the place was safe,
and their bosses would commend them
for being diligent. We would quickly
and politely correct our
deficiencies, which made them feel
important. Thus, the reason for the
fly poop on the light bulbs. Next
month we'd come up with a different
small malady, like a tiny rip in a
screen window. Dad was smart. He got
good reports. If you kept the milk
house perfect, they'd get out the
white
gloves and spend hours
looking until they found
something , and by then
they'd be "ticked" because it took
so long. You'd get a merciless,
scathing report.
Fast forward 55 years. Change the
location to
Cambodia
, and the "Chicago Board of
Health" to "
UNICEF ". They pay
government officials
to
"inspect " our orphan
facilities. These Cambodian
government officials make an average
of about $80 per month in their
official jobs. UNICEF sponsors their
"inspection trips", which can last
up to two weeks, and, of course,
need at least four people per team,
with a per diem of $15 per day per
person plus, free food and lodging
at the finest hotels in the region,
plus, as we understand, a bonus of
$30+, for every infraction they
find. The officials aren't bad guys,
but this is a bloody gold mine!
Where's our fly poop? I can play
this game!
Sing with me: "I'm not afraid of
UNICEF, I'm not afraid of the
"Beast", I'm not afraid of 6-6-6!" I
should remember that a bulldog
can beat a skunk any day
but sometimes the results aren't
worth it! I know, I should pray for
UNICEF! I will, but if they mess
with our kids, I'm willing to risk a
bath in tomato juice (the old
standby cure for skunk odor
),
So? Help me!
Pray the UNICEF workers come to know
Christ, and fall so in love with God
they will bless Cambodia , destroy
poverty, abuse, childhood disease,
trafficking, and do the things they
were designed to perform. Also, pray
our church homes are so alive with
the
power and
love of God
that no humanistic
proponent will dare come near them
without being infected with the
love of Christ. Right
now, in Cambodia, FCOP is housing,
caring for, and educating more
separated kids, vaccinating more
kids for
hepatitis, giving more
scabies shampoos, preventing more
trafficking, doing more free dental
work, running more free medical
clinics
, and helping
more people out of poverty
with agricultural projects than any
other organization I know of. What
part of that do they want to
destroy? And guess what? Not one
penny is coming from any government!
Where does UNICEF get their money?
It is strange how people who claim
to be humanists hate what we do
because we love God. A French
newspaper called and wanted to visit
with us because they were
doing a
"story " on "
Evangelism
in Cambodia ", since we
were the largest church, they wanted
to see what we were doing. I took
the call and the "Vibes" were not
good, but since we were taking our
friend Beth Barone out to one of our
rural homes we asked her to tag
along. She wanted to know if we
forced orphans to receive Christ.
When I told
the
journalist we
never
converted anyone, they just slid in.
I don't think she believed me
,
until she visited the home
,
and saw the whole community
show up on a
Friday afternoon.
http://www.missionreports.com/beth_visit_korng_pixay
We were delivering beds
for the kids courtesy of Swiss warm
Blankets. She saw the vegetable
production, quail project, and the
love of Christ from all ages in the
community and didn't have much else
to say. I don't read French but I'd
love to see how she "spins" the
story. One of the biggest attacks is
that
we
‘destroy
Cambodian culture'. When
our "Go Team" from
Carson City , NV
and
Folsom, CA
http://www.missionreports.com/fmi_go_team
visited
Angkor Wat
guess who was putting on
the Cambodian
cu
lture show?
The
(Christian)
kids who graduated from our
Church/Home! Now, that's divine
retribution!
http://www.missionreports.com/fcop_products
We
work 60 hour weeks to maintain the
spiritual, mental, and physical
health of our kids and church
members. Any of the teams that have
been enslaved here know that. Dr.
Mike
,
our dentist friend from
Clinton , Iowa
, just led a group up to
Preah
Vihear and
in addition to the kids
from all our surrounding church
homes, managed to treat the local
prison, where 60% of the inmates now
know Christ. The team also managed
to re-habilitate the church home in
town, as well as visit the contested
temple where two soldiers were
killed the week before.
http://www.missionreports.com/mike_con_den_team
Construction on three new
Church/Homes got a fresh kick with
an infusion of cash from our friends
at International Cooperating
Ministries.
http://www.missionreports.com/construction_july
Keeping a movement spiritually sharp
,
that has gone from nothing
to 3000+ churches in 12 years
,
is a challenge. It seems
that inevitably the second and third
generations grow less and less
zealous for the things of God. We
are deliberately attacking that
issue. Our newest addition is that
of the "Young Fisherman" they are
basically junior high students who
grew jealous of the "Yong Lions". T
he "Young Fisherman" are going out
on their first thrust in a couple of
weeks. Fresh fire has come to our
movement through
Beth Barone's teachings.
http://www.missionreports.com/beth_workshop_jun
Seeing God as
a Humble
Servant
deeply in love
with His
creation
can change your outlook,
and recharge your spiritual
batteries; especially, if you have
been serving an angry God. We should
be good for at least another
generation! Thanks Bethy!
A great deal
of
material support
still comes from donors
around the world. This month we
received shipments of rice, canned
fish, and chick peas to supplement
the diets of our kids and
impoverished church members.
http://www.missionreports.com/rice_may10
The rice came form the Far
West Rice Producers via
Glad Tidings Church
in
Yuba City , CA
. They were also
instrumental in helping secure a
shipment of Chick
Peas, and
canned fish which are both high in
protein and
a big hit with the kids and
a container of canned fish.
http://www.missionreports.com/chickpeas
Wow! I didn't think people were that
smart 3000 years ago. "
Much food is in the fallow ground of
the poor, and for lack of justice
there is waste"
(Prov. 13:
23). Man , is that
ever true in Cambodia!
Every day we drive by abandoned
fields just because fertility levels
are too low for production and water
is uncontrolled. We have been really
working on the production of o
ur 300 acres of rice land,
spraying for weeds, fertilizing for
maximum
production, and trying
new varieties. Pray it works!
http://www.missionreports.com/rice_spray
I'm off to Balang (our rice farm)
this
week to try and get ready
for the first harvest. Three crops
per year is going to make the
calendar flip over real fast!
Have a great July! We will.
Be blessed!
Ted & Sou (Pa and Mak Thom)
And all of the rest of those who do
the real work, Our Staff
!