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Dear Friends and Family,
Olbrich! You are late this
month! "Yup, Guilty as charged." Sou and I've been off to
American marrying our last unattached child off to a fine
young man and attending our church annual meeting in Atlanta
. We just got home.
The nest is empty! Hannah,
our youngest daughter, was married on Sunday, May 23rd
in Littleton , Colorado . Weddings are always a little
"nuts", but trying to handle this from 10,000 miles away was
only possible because we had our older kids there to help
out. Though we all came close to homicide at various moments
God smiled on us with a beautiful day. When Sou and I
arrived a few days before the event the forecast was for
wind and rain with a 65 degree high. The wedding took place
on a calm, cloudless, 82 degree day in a garden full of
spring flowers. Everyone pulled together and it really was a
time of great joy for all of us.
http://www.missionreports.com/jhon_hannah_wedding
Hannah is my hero. She
paid a huge price in coming to Cambodia as an 11 year old 5th
grader twelve years ago. She gave up those most important
friends and lived the balance of her time in
Cambodia
surrounded by 10 foot concrete walls and double rolls of
concertina wire. A locked steel gate and 24 hour guards were
her door to the rest of the world which she could only
traverse with escorts for most of her time here.
Fortunately, she made some great friends, one of them,
Keiko, a Dutch girl whose family lives in Nepal , traveled
from her graduate school in Germany to be her maid of honor.
Hannah married John Rowley, chemistry major at the
University of
Colorado , who will be working on his Masters in
Education. They met while both working at the same coffee
shop. And my greatest surprise of all is the depth of love
that John's mother and father have for the Lord, it really
does pay to have 3000 orphans praying for you!
"Can anything good come out
of Nazareth ?" Where have we heard that before? Nazareth is
the name of a ten year old orphan
boy found abandoned at the
roundabout just a couple of hundred meters from the
Cham Chao Church/Home when he was about
two years old. He couldn't walk.
Nazareth was so weakened by malnutrition when we got him
that he couldn't walk for another three years. He's still
pretty wobbly when he walks and his greatest joy was to
finally learn to ride a bicycle in April. He missed the
first couple of years of school so we've sent him to a
private
Christian school to help him catch up. Being an
orphan in Cambodia is not exactly a status symbol, in fact,
most Cambodians consider them cursed. Despite our best
efforts to counter the culture of derision, like dust, it
seeped into every aspect of his being and inferiority is a
constant gnaw at his soul. Nazareth fights his physical
disability as well. His need for some kind of
status must be huge
, and if it can't be positive, well, "Muddy
water is better than none".
Nazareth
is good, a good con artist
that is! He could teach the mafia a few tricks.
http://www.missionreports.com/nazareth
Now,
we all know that God's ticked off at sinners, Right?
Wrong! The truth is He loves us! We just have trouble
accepting it. It's a new paradigm being introduced by Beth
Barone into our Cambodian church, and Nazareth had to give
me the ultimate object lesson. He is going to
school, and
since it is a private operation, most of the kids have
money. He began extorting money from another young man on a
daily basis about two months ago. He simply demanded. "Give
me 2000 Reil (50 cents US) or I'll beat you up!" The amazing
thing is that he pulled this off. Nazareth couldn't beat a
fly! Finally he got greed y. Pastor Peter is a
colonel in the Military Police Reserve. The orphans call him
"Dad". Nazareth went up to his "Mark" at the 7:00 am start
of the school day and demanded. "My da
d's a big shot in the police and you must give
me 1,000,000 Reil ($250) or he'll through you in jail for a
long time". This time the frightened victim had enough. He
went to the teacher. About 7:10 am Pastor
P eter got a call
from the school director, "We are prepared to expel
Nazareth
, please come and
get him immediately!" Peter went and could hardly believe
his ears. After having a long talk with the sobbing and
remorseful Nazareth , repaying the victim, and explaining
the circumstances to the director, Nazareth was allowed to
remain in school. He's working off his debt.
Here's what struck me. Was
Nazareth a sinner? Absolutely! Did he know better? You bet!
Peter has taught about the evils of stealing at least once
per month and Nazerth's been there for eight years! So, do
we hate Nazareth ?
No, we love him more than ever!
We just want him loved and encouraged and living in a good
relationship with his classmates. So why do we think a God,
who is bigger than any of us, would get mad at us over our
sin? No, He doesn't, in fact he's so much in love with us he
sent Jesus to the rescue.
We keep on building. Three
more church homes are under construction, almost completed.
http://www.missionreports.com/home_under_constr
The problem is that our partner is short of funds and we're
in a $5 3
,000 squeeze. If we quit building the contractors
leave, supplies are stolen
, and our contractual agreement violated, so
we just suck it up. That's tough when times are slow. It
usually means I borrow, but my tether is tight, so we're
feeling the pinch.
P lease pray for our
faithful
friends at ICM. Pray that those who have committed to
help would be able to complete their pledges. It would sure
make my life easier! The housing is for about 90 more kids
and worship space for about 300+ church members. We need it!
It was no earthquake or
tsunami, but for the residents of the
Rung Reung Church/Home it was a
scary night when the wind took off much of their roof and
sent the ceiling crashing down on the sleeping kids. No one
was seriously hurt, but it becomes one of those devilish
attacks we could sure do without.
http://www.missionreports.com/storm_hit
It has been a busy month at our medical clinic with a lot
of kids battling various diseases from all over Cambodia
being transferred in for treatment. Our Doctors have been
busy guys!
We have gotten significant
help from a number
of sources. Our
drought and flood damaged rice crop from last year is going
to leave us short. Thanks to the Butte County Rice
Producers, Far West Rice, Lou Binninger of
Glad Tidings
Church , and Gleanings for the Hungry, forty tons of
solution to our problem showed up!
http://www.missionreports.com/rice_may10
Thanks friends!
We've invested a small
fortune in ditching, dike building, irrigation, modern
varieties, modern seeding practices, fertilizers and weed
control. These pictures are a month old but they show some
of what we've done. Pray for our harvest.
http://www.missionreports.com/rice_growth
Churches keep
growing. Our training is focused on the practical, not the
programmed. We stick our spiritual toe in the water each
month and sense, "Is this what
we need?
" (Three pages, three locations:
http://www.missionreports.com/pastoral_training_jun10
) It really is driven by the
Spirit of God. I couldn't help but notice a great
difference between what we see in the US church verses
Cambodia . We depend on the
Holy Spirit
out of desperation. He shows up or we're dead. In the US it
often seems there "Options". "We've got a financial problem
so we need a better business plan!",
It took a 90 year old missionary
to remind us that God's work done God's way will not lack
God's provision, In Cambodia the first place we look is at
our mission. We ask, "Where are we missing something?" We
are a Pentecostal denomination , but back home
it often seems our attitude is: "Holy Spirit, please show up
because it's our tradition." Or more sadly, "Holy Spirit,
please sit in the back and be quiet because we want to be
respected ,
and we don't want to seem weird
, or offend anyone". Uhuum, was Jesus
offensive? "Naw, He just nailed himself on the cross!"
Anyway, I'm not trying to beat anyone up, but here is our
reality, and maybe that's why the church outside the US is
growing while America is in decline. We need the Holy
Spirit, and you have options. We hate trials as much as
anyone, but we've found due to zero options
, that trials purify our faith.
Pastor Metry
is an orphan boy turned pastor, and is a leader in our
"Young Tigers". He pastors in Pasar Cha and has been boldly
proclaiming the power of God. In the natural he might be
4'10" tall and about 100 pounds soaking wet, not exactly a
giant. He's experienced some noticeable miracles and
healings
through the ministry of
this church ,
and his reputation has spread through the province.
Unbeknownst to him, up in the mountains a community was
being terrorized by a demonized giant of a
man whom
no one could control.
He'd get tied up
and break
loose, bust up things and people, and no one
could control him. The monks had tried everything when they
hear about Metry. They sent for him. Metry was unaware of
this 6 foot plus, 200 pound monster
, and assumed he would be facing a simple
person troubled by the demonic elements at work in the
region. As Metry approached the "Giant" he lost his nerve as
he got within 100 yards. He could see that
this guy was
huge, unclothed , unwashed, and unshorn. Metry
began to shake with fear and was only propelled forward by
what he knew God had done through him in the past. He took
one step and this giant cried out, and fell over as dead.
Some wondered if he'd been shot. Metry said, "No, God did
this so we can clean him up!" The villagers began working on
him and now that entire extended family is serving the "God
who sets free!"
"And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward
love and good deeds."
(Heb 10:24) I
figured out how this works. The, "Young Tigers" produced a
jealously in the youth. "We can do that!" So, they formed
the "Young Lions", now the younger teens are jealous of the
"Young Lions" so, they are forming the "Young Fishermen". We
already have the "Granny Brigade". It seems most of the
church is being mobilized in specific evangelistic ministry
with the
power of the Holy Spirit at the core. It is a wonder
to behold! The "Lions" went to Sway Reing for a weekend. 91
received Christ, 91 were baptized in water, and 91 baptized
in the Holy Spirit. Not a bad score for a weekend of kids in
ministry!
http://www.missionreports.com/young_lion_sv_june
This may be
the understatement of the year, but Mak Sou is a strong
woman. The daughter of a royal line from Southern Laos , she
still carries that
natural
authority. Many misunderstand her and are afraid, or
think her controlling, but she is wise and gentle when
you get to
know her, and though it pains me to say it,
usually right! The orphan kids know that no one can pinch
them like Mak Sou, but they also know that no one loves them
more. Mother's day showed their love for her!
http://www.missionreports.com/motherday_10
That's it for this month!
Be blessed!
We are!
Love,
Ted Olbrich, (Pa Thom)
Sou Olbrich, ( Mak Thom)
And those doing all the
work!
The Cambodian & Foreign
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