Friday 22 February 2013

A Lovely Week

For most of last week, this was my view....


Not bad, right? We spent a lovely 6 days at a resort with Darnell's parents. What a blessing to be able to holiday with them and enjoy the sun, the sand, the pool, the food and the company! For Darnell and I, it was very nice to get away from the city and our work and just be fully relaxed. It was also nice to have another two set of hands to help with the kids... without Darnell's parents it might not have been a very relaxing holiday with our two busy boys!

Here's a few more photos from our time at Coco Grove Resort on the Island of Siquijor....







We went on a glass-bottom boat so that we could all see the amazing
coral reefs and fish below us... beautiful!
\


he spent hours doing this!

yes, we took our son on a motorbike ride around the
 island! when in Rome....


Cody was incredibly excited.... he kept saying over and over,
"Mommy, Cody riding a motorcycle with Mommy and
Daddy! We racing so FAAAAAST!"

first time with his own seat! 

To get to this beautiful island, we took a taxi, bus, plane, van, boat and jeepney! On the way home it took a full 10 hours to get from the resort to our apartment and we had a pretty bumpy hour-long ferry ride because of a typhoon coming in- we were just glad our flight didn't get cancelled! But it was worth the long travel and thankfully our boys are such good travellers. We had a lovely holiday!

Monday 11 February 2013

Meet Bryan...

I'd like to share  the story of our dear friend, Bryan Paler.  I've often mentioned him in posts, as he is a big part of our lives here, but its high time that he were properly introduced. 


Bryan was once a youth leader in the Communist Party of the Philippines and, feeling that violence was not an effective response to injustice, he left the party and became active in a large church.  After getting involved in his church, he became concerned that their programs did not address the needs of the surrounding community where unemployment, malnutrition, drugs and gang violence were rampant. As a leader in a mega-church in Manila, Bryan proposed a plan to help out-of-school youth in the community. When the church rejected his proposal, he became even more determined to serve the populate he deeply felt needed to know Jesus. He began getting to know the gang leaders and youth on the streets. He welcomed them into community. 

Around this time he was also studying at Asian Theological Seminary and took a course with Jack Suderman, former Mennonite Church Canada General Secretary. The Anabaptist, Christ-centered, faith in action Jack spoke of deeply attracted Bryan. He had always known that the Good News of Jesus was bigger than only “saving souls,” and hearing an articulation of this holistic, all-transforming Gospel excited him. 

With Bryan’s deepening relationships with gang leaders and out of school youth, he decided to start a church community and also an NGO, Evangelical Youth for Social Action. Through Jack, Bryan was introduced to Dann Pantoja (Mennonite Church Canada worker in Davao, Philippines) and later Dann, with Peacebuilders Community, trained Bryan's volunteer youth. 

Bryan became a vocal and active advocate for peace and he quickly began intriguing people around him with his radical love for all. He had gang leaders and drug dealers joining his church community, many of whom had been ostracized from other churches. Several leaders in Bryan’s church are gang leaders who turned to Jesus’ way of peace and are now building peace in their neighbourhoods. 

When Dann Pantoja told Bryan that we would be arriving in Manila soon to help start a Peace Church, he was instantly committed to this vision. He had been waiting for more people, like Jack, who expressed Jesus' teachings on peace and reaching out to the poor and oppressed.  When we arrived in Manila, Bryan was there, ready to be our best friend and partner in ministry. And over the last months, that is exactly what he has become. We daily have meaningful discussions on faith and how to be an active follower of Jesus. Bryan endlessly and tirelessly teaches us about the Filipino culture, the politics, the struggles and their worldview. We learn from each other and are constantly encouraged by one another as we seek to gain a closer relationship with Jesus and a deeper understanding of how He is calling us to live out our faith. 

We cannot imagine where we’d be without our trusting friend and partner and we are so thankful for how God is using him to spread His message of peace.

Monday 4 February 2013

feeding the hungry

On December 4, 2012, Typhoon Pablo hit Mindanao, resulting in the deadliest and costliest storm ever to impact the Philippines. Over a thousand people died, hundreds of thousands were left homeless, millions were left without a livelihood and over 5 million people were starving. 

Peacebuilders Community (where we interned in 2008/2009) initiated a major relief operation during the two months to follow, delivering food to thousands of families. When my parents came to visit, my Dad and Darnell went to Mindanao for five days and participated in one of the relief waves. There was also terrible flooding in Davao on their last day there, so instead of a relaxing day, they helped distribute relief once again. 

Here's a few photos of their experience...

The people were organized and ready with tickets in hand. Peacebuilders Community
 staff are very experienced in relief delivery and they efficiently organized and distributed
goods for 300+ families within 2 hours. Many people walked 6 hours to get here.
An example of the distruction brought about by flooding. The problem isn't just the
flooding but the debris, rocks and trees in the water that does so much damage.
Many helping hands!
Darnell used his muscles to help distribute goods.
Dann Pantoja, Gerd Bartel and Darnell. My Dad is a close friend of Dann's and was a
co-founder of Peacebuilders Community.  Its always special for them to reunite. 
The morning after the relief wave, they woke up to news of terrible flooding in Davao.
They drove around Davao scouting out the needs with Peacebuilders
Community field staff, deciding where the remainder of the donated goods would go. 
By midnight around 1000 families, from 3 different evacuation centers,
had been served by PBCI. 

We are so thankful for Peacebuilders Community and the way God is using them to help provide food and shelter to people in need. While they are not a relief distribution center, their "community seeks to actively embrace people through wholistic ministries regardless of faith and views because [they] believe that Jesus Christ who is the core of our mission cannot be separated from Peace. In his life, Jesus Christ fed the hungry, healed the sick and comforted those who mourn." Amen to that, right?!?!?