Saturday, December 22, 2012

Staff Christmas Party!


The Adoption Ministry staff gathered on Friday for a Christmas lunch and gift card exchange.  Staff and volunteers from our domestic and Ethiopia teams brought delicious food to share…
food1
We did also have turkey, roast beef, spinach salad and other healthy and delicious dishes. 
No photos of those!

For the gift exchange, everyone brought a $15 gift card and a prize was given for the card that was wrapped the most creatively.  I use the term ‘wrapped’ loosely because there were some pretty unique wrappings – including in a half gallon of ice cream, hidden in a gingerbread house and in a fish bowl (with a fish)…

hide

We have a truly amazing team of people and it was such fun to spend the afternoon all together!

IMG_6842

IMG_6843

open1

Merry Christmas
from all of us
to all of you!

Glory to God in the highest!
.

Friday, December 21, 2012

Incredible Kids!


KidsShopping
The Monahan kids made a unanimous decision (it had to be unanimous!) to forego Christmas presents this year and instead to choose gifts for people who have less than they do. Each of them spent a lot of time looking over the YWAM Gift Catalog and each chose what they thought would be the most important things for others to have. 
 
Abdi (6 years old and adopted from Ethiopia) chose soccer balls and food. 

Ireland (10) chose food, bags of charcoal and a water filter and she went in with Kelden on a “Small Business Opportunity”. 

Kelden (12) chose a Bible and food. 

Aiden (7) chose a bed, a house, a donkey, food, charcoal and a Bible.  (Dad says “We had to postpone buying the house and Aiden was worried that the people would have a bed but no house.”) 
need3


Reagan (3) was emphatic to give to the “Greatest Need” because the child in the Gift Catalog picture was one she would go back to again and again and point and say, “Baby, Me”.
 
 


Brandon and Dawn are understandably very proud of their kids.  “Each of these gifts is a reflection of our children’s personalities and it was awesome to see them reach out and decide to give first.   We are getting them very small gifts out of our pocket money.” 
 
The best gift of all for each of them will be delivered to their house right after Christmas.  Dawn will arrive in Ethiopia on Christmas Day to pick up Samuel, their second Ethiopian son.  “Our kids have been praying for him for a long time and they were very excited to see their prayers answered with a very fast embassy appointment and having him arrive before the new year.” 

sammy
Samuel with his dad and sister in Ethiopia for the court appointment 

THANK YOU to all five of the Monahan kids!  What a huge blessing you are – to your parents, to all of us who get to hear about your giving hearts and especially to some very grateful people in Ethiopia who will receive your gifts with much happiness!
.





Monday, December 17, 2012

Child’s Christmas Gift Box


We don’t ever get tired of or feel embarrassed to share with you opportunities to make a difference in the life of a needy person.  Here is another one of those wonderful opportunities!

In the rural area of Debre Zeit, Ethiopia there are many children who have not yet heard of Christ’s love for them.  It is a daily struggle for their parents to provide even their basic needs. 

god loves you

Samy and Ruth are YWAM missionaries serving people in this remote area.   These two have incredible hearts to bring the Good News to men, women and children.  Many on our mission teams have met them and had the privilege of serving alongside these two saints of God.

samyruth

You can touch the kids in this village with the love of Christ by giving them a small gift box for Christmas.  Ethiopians celebrate Christmas on January 7th so there is still time to do this!  Each box costs only $5.50 and includes:

gift box

Toothpaste, toothbrush, soap, Vaseline, comb, bath tissue,
spoon, cookie biscuits, candy treat, a boiled egg,
a pen, a small toy and a New Testament

If you’d like to bring a huge smile and bless a child in this way while opening a door for the Gospel to be shared, please donate this week via our website here or call our office to give your information over the phone – 253-770-2283.

Thank you on behalf of all the grateful recipients of these Christmas boxes!

.

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Finishing up your Christmas shopping?


giftcatalog
Many of us are using this weekend to get everything checked off our Christmas shopping lists.  What if your list took a radical turn, including gifts that would meet very real needs?  That kind of shopping is truly satisfying, knowing that your gift will be greatly appreciated.  100% of your donation goes to help a new believer, a widow, an orphan or a desperately poor family in Ethiopia.

In our YWAM Gift Catalog, you’ll find ways to give that fit every budget.  And it’s not too late to give a gift in someone’s name – just let us know and we’ll send your friend or loved one a beautiful card telling them what you’ve given. 

Visit our website at:  www.ywamethiopia.com

Happy Shopping!
.

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

A Concert for Food

Lisa has never been to Ethiopia, but her friends have. Their stories and pictures broke her heart into little pieces and she determined to do something about it. Music is her passion, so she decided to gather some artists together and put on a benefit concert to raise money for food that would be used by Adoption Ministry of YWAM to feed the people they serve.
 
_MG_0722
Basic Food
$15 will buy one month of basic staples for a family of four, and another $15 will see that the family has fresh vegetables and teff flour (Ethiopia wheat) for bread.
 
baby2
Formula for babies
One medium can of formula costs $5.50 and $93.50 will feed one child for a month. The demand for formula is high because mothers infected with HIV whose baby is not HIV+ cannot breastfeed due to the high risk of infection, so it is extremely important that we get formula, bottles and bottled water to these women. In the capital city of Addis Ababa, formula is available for sale, but no poor person would have the ability to pay for it. In the outlying areas, it is not possible to find formula at all.
 
IMG_2368
The trouble with food is …. it runs out! People have to eat every day, and babies demand a lot of formula to fuel all the growing they do. Each month, Adoption Ministry needs about $2,000 just to supply food to babies, families and the elderly; that includes the transportation cost to purchase and distribute the food.

On December 1st musicians gathered at a church and offered their talents to the Lord. A very talented jazz band highlighted the evening, and the band director said afterward, “Seeing the faces in the slides and hearing their values caused me to appreciate the things I already have with less focus on the things I don't have.  That's my Christmas present.”

Lisa Boyle-Davis (our hostess) and Miriam Aflakian added their beautiful voices to several of the band’s numbers and made the evening extra special. The little children were called forward and a jolly man in a Santa cap read The Night Before Christmas to their delight. An 8-year-old girl played the piano with amazing maturity, and a mother/daughter duet with the flute and violin was also very lovely. It is always joyous when children perform, and we were not disappointed with the rendition of The Lord God Made Them All performed by Cornerstone Classical Academy students. The evening ended with an acapella group harmonizing Christmas carols that ushered the audience into December with all the wonderful sounds of the season.
 
Eth Christmas
January 7th is Christmas in Ethiopia according to their Julian calendar. Every penny of the money given at this concert will go towards making their Christmas month extra special. We will supply meat and basic food staples for 100 families and formula for at least 12 babies.  (Meat is rarely, if ever, available for the poor.)  The extra boost from this concert might allow us to give a Christmas treat of coffee and sugar to many of the elderly and sick that are so dear to God’s heart. Of course, if there are more babies that need formula, fewer people will get the luxury of meat and coffee. Our policy is to collaborate closely with the people working on the ground in Ethiopia to make the final determination of where the finances should best be used.

“Thanks” doesn’t begin to express our deep appreciation to all the people who came out on a chilly December Saturday to offer their “fishes and loaves” to the Lord. Mark Wolbert, Adoption Ministry’s Mission Director, and Joy Casey, the Executive Director, shared poignant stories of elderly widows, throw-away malnourished children, and mothers unable to feed their children. It is these unfortunate people that the proceeds from this concert will serve.

We give our Lord Jesus Christ all the glory and honor. We thank all the musicians for sharing their talent. And we are extremely grateful for those who attended the concert and gave generously.


Monday, December 10, 2012

Sharing Christmas Stories


Curled up together on the couch by the Christmas tree...
Slowing things down when excitement ramps up...
Discussion starters for the family table...
Tucked into bed right before sleep...

A good story is priceless!  I thought it would be fun to share – via comments – some of your favorite Christmas books for kids.  Let’s focus on the ones that have a wonderful Christ-centered message.  You can find these at many public libraries!

Here are a few to get us started…

trees
Why Christmas Trees Aren’t Perfect by Richard Schneider
~
A perfect little pine tree is ‘damaged’ by helping others.  The last line of the book sums up the message:  “For, as have many of us, the trees have learned that living for the sake of others makes us most beautiful in the eyes of God.”


wintry night
One Wintry Night by Ruth Bell Graham
~
Ruth Graham is the author of this really unique version of the Christmas story that begins with creation and ends with the resurrection.


11. toomey cover

The Christmas Miracle of Jonathan Toomey by Susan Wojciechowski
~
The illustrations alone are worth the time you’ll spend in this story of how a woodcarver’s broken heart is touched as he carves a nativity for a special little boy and his mother.

__________________________________

Now it’s your turn… please leave a comment telling the title of a book your family especially enjoys reading at Christmas!  All ages are welcome.
.

Saturday, December 8, 2012

Earthly Food and Heavenly Food


Samy&Ruth
 
Samy and Ruth and their two little girls, Abi and Becky, have been serving as YWAM missionaries in Ethiopia for three years.  They are from India and received their missionary training in their homeland, but followed God’s call to serve in Ethiopia.  Samy and Ruth work with local churches and pastors to bring the Good News to children.  They help establish churches in outlying areas, have started intercessory prayer teams in their town, and are great encouragers of local pastors.  Samy grows a huge garden and gives away a lot of food to the hungry.
 
PB151328
PB151343
Samy loves to cook and his food is so tasty! He and Ruth decided to bring food and Bibles to two prisons in their town.  Prisoners in Ethiopia survive only if they have a friend or family member to bring them food and other basic necessities, so it was a glad day when Ruth and Samy set up a soup kitchen in the prison and started dishing out hot, fragrant food for the men. 
 
PB161357
PB161354
 
Along with their plate of food, a Bible in Amharic was given, and the prisoners received The Word with joy. They are hungry for food, yes, but also for God.
 
PB161351
 
PB151341
The prison guards and police inspectors received their food and Bible as well, and expressed their heartfelt appreciation to Samy and the other volunteers for coming to a population that is mostly overlooked and rarely visited. 
 
PB161374
Samy reports that they fed about 40 prisoners in each compound and about 20 police officers.  There are a total of four prisons in their town, and Ruth and Samy hope to do this same ministry for the other two as funds become available.
 
‘I was in prison and you visited Me.’
‘Lord, w
hen did we ever see you sick or in prison and visit you?’ 
And the King will say, ‘I tell you the truth, when you did it to one of the least of these My brothers and sisters, you were doing it to Me!’
  
Matthew 25


Read Samy and Ruth's latest newsletter here

Samy and Ruth Newsletter SeptOct 2012

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

A Chance to Learn


In 2009 in the village of Gutumuma, Ethiopia (which lies about 122 miles south of Addis Ababa), a revival began.  Since then, hundreds of families have come to Christ.  Twenty children from several of these extremely poor families have been identified for sponsorship and receive education, school supplies and two meals a day. 

1

Our sponsors are extremely selfless in their giving because, unlike many sponsorship programs with large organizations, we aren’t able to facilitate individual communication with these children and updates are somewhat infrequent.  Instead, the families who sponsor a child can know that 100% of their monthly donation goes to directly support the children’s education. 

DSC_1274
Kids lining up to receive their lunches
DSC_1284
Walking back to the classroom to eat

YWAM, in partnership with Watch and Pray Ministries, has established a kindergarten and employs a teacher and a cook.  (Children in Ethiopia begin school at their ability level, not the grade they are ‘supposed’ to be in.)  The children in our sponsorship program attend this school and if we can garner the necessary funding, we would like to double the size of the school by the fall of 2013 – from 20 to 40 children.

2

With skyrocketing inflation in Ethiopia right now, food prices have become so high that the very poor simply cannot afford food.  Through the faithful donations of their sponsors, twenty children have enough to eat.

beforeafter

From the time the sponsorships began, we’ve noticed a marked difference in the physical appearance of the children – they have filled out, their eyes are brighter and there are many more smiles when our staff is able to visit them.  It is truly amazing to see what a difference better nutrition actually makes!

Two of the children in our program need new sponsors… 

Husen5
Husen is 6 years old.  His father was killed and he is one of four children being raised by his very poor mother.  Husen would like to be a teacher when he grows up!
*SPONSORED!  Just one boy left!

Teshita4
Teshita is 8 years old and one of nine children.  His family is one of the poorest in this village.  His father relies on farming to provide for his family.  Until this year Teshita was unable to attend school because his family could not afford the uniform and cost of books to attend the local school.

For a commitment of $30 per month, you will help provide food and education for one of these boys.  Please contact us if you’d like to sponsor one of these two boys and we’ll send you a prayer card, information about how to set up a monthly sponsorship and updates from Gutumuma when our staff visits.  You can reach us at:

Thank you so much!

.

Saturday, December 1, 2012

An upside down Christmas?



How will you celebrate Christmas this year?

What will the month of December look like for your family?

We love what the folks at The Advent Conspiracy have suggested:

We all want our Christmas to be a lot of things. Full of joy. Memories. Happiness. Above all, we want it to be about Jesus. What we don't want is stress. Or debt. Or feeling like we "missed the moment"... But doing this means doing things a little differently. A little creatively.

WORSHIP FULLY

Christmas marks the moment where God's promise was fulfilled and love took form, tiny fingers and all. It is a moment that deserves our full attention and praise. We put Worship Fully as AC's first tenet because we believe the level of our involvement at Christmas is based entirely on how much we are celebrating Christ's birth. He deserves celebration; one that is creative, loud and directs every heart His way.

SPEND LESS

Quick question for you: What was the one gift you remember getting for Christmas last year? Next question: What about the fourth gift? Do you remember that one? Truth is many of us don't because it wasn't something we necessarily wanted or needed. Spending Less isn't a call to stop giving gifts; it's a call to stop spending money on gifts we won't remember in less than a year. America spends around $450 billion dollars during the Christmas season, and much of that goes right onto a credit card. By spending wisely on gifts we free ourselves from the anxiety associated with debt so we can take in the season with a full heart.

GIVE MORE

We know what you're thinking. "Wait, didn't they just say I should spend less, and yet here they are telling me to give more? What gives?" The most powerful, memorable gift you can give to someone else is yourself. And nobody modeled this more than Jesus. So what does this look like for you? Tickets to a ball game or the theater? A movie night? The main point is simple: When it comes to spending time with those you love, it's all about quality, not quantity.

LOVE ALL

It all boils down to love. Love from a savior. Love to a neighbor in need. By spending just a little less on gifts we free up our resources to love as Jesus loves by giving to those who really need help. 



________________________________________________


If you'd like to give gifts this Christmas that give life, please check out our YWAM Gift Catalog!

.

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

On Being Intentional About Christmas With Adopted Kids


1375017_89926289



Together on the Ledge
@Empowered to Connect
Christmas is one of my favorite holidays and has always been a treasured day for our family.  We love a Christmas tree with sparkling lights, stockings stuffed to their brims, meaningful gifts, and lots of special food. But with the addition of our children from “hard places” we have found it necessary to learn new strategies to successfully celebrate holidays together as a family.

Why Christmas Stinks Sometimes
@Empowered to Connect
It instantly occurred to me that somehow I managed to have the only elementary school-aged child in all of America who actually hates Christmas. But I quickly asked the obvious question, “Why?”

An Older Child's First Christmas Home
@Rainbow Kids
Often, having had to survive a number of holiday seasons wondering if they would ever have the experience of purchasing gifts for a son or daughter, many new adoptive parents are at risk of overwhelming and indulging the new child in the family.

Celebrating Christmas With Newly Adopted Children
@One Thankful Mom

I’ve been wondering just how to “do” Christmas this year with three newly adopted children from Ethiopia. I would really like to change our “normal” Christmas to focus more on Christ and less on presents.

Creating a Hopeful Christmas for Your Adopted Child
@Crosswalk.com

Adoptive families of older children, especially during the holidays, must be sensitive to their new child, while bringing him or her into the family and making him or her a part of traditions that have been in place for years. The following seven points can help us get through a holiday fraught with emotion, keep our important family traditions, blend in our new children, and head off most major blow-outs.

Adoption Gifts
@Adoption.com
Here are some adoption gift ideas … from adoptive parents and birth parents to adoptees.

Audiobook Ideas for Your Family
@Delighting in Dirty Carpet
A list of audio stories you can use at bedtime, in the car, during quiet play…




.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Real Heroes


Don’t you love a good hero story?  The folks in the stories below haven’t entered a burning building to save a life or used super-human strength to lift a beam off of someone who was pinned underneath – at least that we know of!  But their generosity and sacrifice has made a huge impact in the lives of the very poor in Ethiopia. 

Click on the titles below to read about some very creative giving via our YWAM Gift Catalog

IMG_1285

Kids Changing the Lives of Kids
Something as simple as selling cookies makes a huge difference



Talent Project-2

Bursting With Thankfulness
Houses and sheep given to many families in Gutumuma

 
Smith fam

They gave up their Christmas gifts last year so children in Ethiopia could have clean water, food and bibles!



IMG_7747

These kids bought a house!
An Awana group in Arizona worked hard to provide a big blessing in Ethiopia


MG6974-L
Kids Blow Me Away!
Water filters, formula and food – all from big-hearted kids


nate1

He was planning to get a parrot
A generous boy changes his mind about spending his savings

________________________

Check out our 2012-2013 YWAM Gift Catalog to see
many ways to become a hero to someone in Ethiopia.
.




Monday, November 19, 2012

Links You’ll Like


MG7189-Le
They’re Both Mine
@tapestryministry
I have two daughters, one by adoption and one by birth…
Two girls, two different stories. 
Both mine.

Have you ever watched a broken heart heal?
@filledwithpraise
Some days it is so easy to see the healing of his heart through the progress he is making.  Yet other days it feels as if we are back to day one. 

Keeping the Lid on Tight
@onethankfulmom
This is another step of letting go, of admitting that we are not who we used to be, and of being uncomfortably needy.

Finish Line
@Injera&chocolate gravy
Oh the things that come out at bedtime

I love the words to this song by Tim and Laurie Thornton of The Blackthorn Project because it describes our adoption in Christ.  It’s called The Mud Song…

isn't it just like you to invite me into a warm house
isn't it just like you to stroke my hair as I fall asleep
Father you made me yours
found my orphan heart and brought it home
and I'm safe here and I sing
isn't it just like you to make a slave into your daughter
isn't it just like you to make wine out of dirty water

I used to live in chains
my wounds bled to the ground
my bed was out in the rain
my hair in knots and soaked in mud

but you took my hand
and you led me in
and you combed my hair
you kissed my skin
and you gave me food
you made me yours
YOU MADE ME YOURS
.
.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Up Close and Personal


by Cindy Wallitner
One year ago my life was turned upside down, although a more accurate description would probably be, my life was put right side up.

I am a typical American woman (married, with three children, attending a good church, living an upper middle class lifestyle) who one day thought it would be great fun to go to Ethiopia. My church was organizing a group with YWAM and it sounded like quite the adventure.

I have not been the same since.
 
K-0078
It was my second day in Ethiopia and we were preparing food to be distributed to families with the then fledgling program called Adoption Ministry 1:27. A young Ethiopian girl hovered around the periphery of our group and caught my attention. Her too small clothes were filthy and she seemed very lonely and sad. My heart was drawn to her and as the day progressed I knew I needed to connect with her.

I found out her name was Kalkidan and she was 18-years-old. Her source of food was from the nearby garbage dump where she went daily to scavenge for anything edible as well as for plastic things that she could sell. As the realities of her existence were revealed, my life came into sharp focus. I have never been hungry. I have always had clean water to drink. I have a closet full of clothes. I have unlimited opportunities. I have a loving family who cares for me. Kalkidan had none of these things and my heart shattered.
 
IMG_8138
My two weeks in Ethiopia flew by and I met many memorable people and assimilated the sights and smells of a country that God used to draw me to Him, but Kalkidan’s face never left me. When I got back to Washington, I “adopted” Kalkidan through the Adoption Ministry 1:27 program, and the life and future of this young girl changed drastically.

A few months later the ministry Director was in Ethiopia and visited with Kalkidan who shyly admitted that she had always wanted to be a hairdresser. A donor had given Joy some discretionary funds and that money was used to arrange for Kalkidan to enroll in a cosmetology school.
 
Cindy & Kalkidan
In August 2012, I went back to Ethiopia and I saw a very different woman from the one I left a year ago. Kalkidan looked AMAZING! She was confident and happy and so proud of all she had accomplished. She showed me the small room where she lives with two other women and two children, very thankful for enough to eat and a safe place to sleep. I have such a close connection with Kalkidan and I am especially grateful that she is active in her church and her faith is growing. When she finishes school, she will be well on her way to becoming self-sustaining.

I am proud to be a part of Adoption Ministry 1:27 as a sponsor. I have seen first hand the dedication and attention that the case managers give to the families in this program, and I will always be involved in helping the poor this way. I am eternally grateful for the day-in and day-out care that is given to Kalkidan and to so many others through AM 1:27. $40 a month has changed not only the life of someone in a far-away land, but more than that, it has educated and changed me, my children and my family. Meeting and caring for Kalkidan has made poverty in this world up close and personal and I will never be the same.
 


For $40 per month, you can also transform the life of a single mother or struggling family in Ethiopia.  Please visit our Adoption Ministry 1:27 website, where you’ll see photos and short descriptions of the many families we hope to serve.
.

Monday, November 12, 2012

Ending a wrestling match with Christmas


1322621_99870648
by Maureen Durso
For years I wrestled with Christmas – a painful experience – not unlike Jacob’s wrestling match with God in the book of Genesis. Like Jacob, the experience left me crippled. No, my hip wasn’t injured, but I became spiritually and emotionally crippled as regards one of the most sacred holidays in the Christian calendar.
I could find little in the way we, both as a nation and as a family, had come to celebrate the birth of Jesus. I well remember my daughter’s father running out on Christmas Eve to buy more gifts for her saying, “She doesn’t have enough stuff.”

“Christmas” began appearing in some stores prior to Halloween. Friends would proudly remark: “I have almost all my Xmas shopping done!” “I can hardly wait to get my house decorated!” “We are having 23 for Christmas dinner!” “I have all my cards addressed and ready to go!” “It won’t be long until we can take advantage of the after-Christmas sales!” There’s nothing wrong with any of those things, but I wanted to scream, “BUT, WHAT ABOUT BABY JESUS?”
 
flickr-4161935408-original
I could see little in the way I was celebrating to remind me of the story of the birth of that holy Child as told in our Scripture – nor anything to remind me that He came as a servant to the needy. I even felt short-changed by my church which held Christmas Eve Service at 6:00 so people who planned to open gifts that evening could get home to tear into the piles under the trees. And then, no service on Christmas day.

For Jacob daybreak came, God blessed him, and a new day was set before him. I, too, have ended my wrestling match with Christmas. As a first step, I wrote letters to relatives and friends explaining that for Christmas I would be making a donation in their names to Adoption Ministry of YWAM - Ethiopia. I urged them, in turn, not to send me a gift, but rather make a contribution to Adoption Ministry or a charity of their choice.
 
Over the past two or three years, many in our family have begun a new tradition in celebration of Christmas -- ministering to the needy in Ethiopia via the YWAM Gift Catalog. God has blessed us and helped return to me the true Spirit of Christmas that feeds my soul while ministering to others who have genuine needs.



gift catalog button
The YWAM Gift Catalog is one way to give at Christmas and to love others as Jesus does by giving to those who really need help.  There are gifts for every budget and whatever you choose to give will be received with incredible joy! 
Your gift donation is income tax deductible and all donations will be used to provide assistance where it is needed most.  Let us know and we'll be happy to send a card to someone in whose name you want to give.


Wednesday, November 7, 2012

A Family Compelled by Grace

Every one of our YWAM families are really remarkable folks - we often brag about them!

Here is an opportunity to meet one of them - Glen and Kristen Halvorson.  Their story is told in this short video made by their own Scottsdale Bible Church and shown at their observance of Orphan Sunday.



Thank you Glen and Kristen for hearts sensitive to God's call!

.

Monday, November 5, 2012

So you want to go on a mission trip?


What have mission team members said about taking a mission trip with Adoption Ministry of YWAM?

5050f8ce
“I saw Jesus up close and personal in the many faces of the people of Ethiopia, and my life has been changed forever.”

 
MG9100-L
“At each place we served, we made relationships with people we will never forget… the faces of those precious people of God will forever be etched in our memories.”

 
MG6959-L
“The love and hospitality of Ethiopia's people was very humbling to me. I didn't expect the strong faith of so many of the people I met there. They are full of joy, trusting every day that God will provide for them and serving Him in some extremely difficult circumstances.”

 
dsc05977
“I am not an adventurous person so this was a big deal for me to travel to parts unknown with people I had never met, but God wove our team together and I still keep in touch with several team members.”

 
IMG_1314
“I want to encourage you not to wait as long as I did to say 'yes' to God… I can tell you that there is nothing in the world like cooperating with God and taking a step of faith.”
 


These trips can be life-changing, never-to-be-forgotten experiences that God can use to forever shape your world view.  Our teams serve widows, children and families in some of the poorest communities in Ethiopia, doing service projects, child evangelism, women-to-women ministry and delivering humanitarian aid.

The 2013 calendar for mission trips to Ethiopia with Adoption Ministry of YWAM Ethiopia is already filling up but there are still open spots to either join an existing team or to bring a team from your church or small group. Consider a trip in the spring or fall as the weather in Ethiopia is much better for traveling (our summer is the rainy season in Ethiopia).

In order to successfully plan a mission trip, you’ll need to begin preparing NOW! Nine months is a minimum prep time in order to raise funds and prepare a team to serve. If you start now, you can set monthly goals for fund-raising, which will alleviate a lot of stress closer to the dates your funds are due. Below is our mission team payment schedule to help as you plan.  Total cost varies depending on the trip but you can plan on about $3000.

Payment Schedule

Date Due

Amount Due

Non-refundable appl fee
 With application
$   100.00
First payment
 5 months prior to trip
$1,000.00
Second payment
 3 months prior to trip
$1,200.00*
Third payment
 2 months prior to trip
One-half remaining balance
Final payment
 1 month prior to trip
Remaining balance

*1st and 2nd payment is to purchase airline tickets and secure in-country services
 
Here are a few suggestions as you plan a mission trip:
  • begin now saving money monthly, setting up specific dollar amt goals
  • start a Facebook group for your team – that can be a place to post information, share prayer requests and stay in touch
  • read everything you can about Ethiopia - its people, history and current events

    Suggested reading:
    There Is No Me Without You by Melissa Faye Greene
    The Hospital By The River by Catherine Hamlin (book and dvd)
    Fields of the Fatherless by Tom Davis
    Spiritual Warfare by Dean Sherman (purchased through YWAM publishing)

*Be sure to go to the Missions page on our website and also read some of our most frequently asked questions.


.
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...