Volume 11 Number 2 - Adventist Volunteer Service
Transcription
Volume 11 Number 2 - Adventist Volunteer Service
Fr o m E ve r y w h e r e t o E ve r y w h e r e A New Focus volume 11 • number 2 departments 4 Postcard 5 Reflections 6 Editorial 30 New Volunteers 32 Volunteer Opportunities features 8 God’s Strength in My Weakness God was teaching me much more through my students than I could ever teach them. 12 Hard on His Heels contents My experience has taught me that a Christian’s journey begins and ends with following hard on His heels, just as I am now following hard on the heels of my guide. 17 Don’t Give Up! When I went to the embassy to apply for a visa, they denied my application—just like that! 20 A Surprise Delivery Liz and I occasionally glanced at each other, shaking our heads in disbelief at what we had just encountered. 23 The Beggar All of his fingers were a third of their original length or less. 26 The Best Salary The satisfaction of knowing that you are in the place where God wants you to be is the best salary, and one that only God can give. 28 A Volunteer Interview God has a great plan for all of our lives, so don’t get discouraged by any setbacks. Submit your life into His hands; He will lift you up at the right time. Cover: Matheus da Silva plays in the snow at Norwegian Junior College in Norway. Story on page 17. Ooops! We realize that there were several errors in the last issue of Mission Post (Volume 11, Number 1). On page 19, a picture is repeated (pictures 3 and 4 are the same photo). On page 26, the location of Majuro on the globe in the top left corner of the page is incorrect. Finally, on the back cover of the magazine, we’ve misspelled the word “Brazil” and all of our arrows on the world map are pointing to the wrong locations. We apologize for these errors and we thank those of you who took the time to point them out to us! m i s s i o n p o s t | c o n t e n t s 2 adventist volunteer service missionpost GENERAL CONFERENCE VOLUNTEER STAFF Homer Trecartin | DIRECTOR/EDITOR Donna Rodill | SR EDITORIAL ASSISTANT/LAYOUT & DESIGN Candace Renk | AVS VOLUNTEER APPOINTEES COORDINATOR Joanne Stango | AVS ASSOCIATE COORDINATOR Jill Walker Gonzalez | AVS ASSOCIATE COORDINATOR/ EDITORIAL ASSISTANT Ana Faigao | AVS ASSISTANT COORDINATOR Page 23 DIVISION VOLUNTEER COORDINATORS Hudson E Kibuuka | EAST-CENTRAL AFRICA DIVISION Gabriel E Maurer | EURO-AFRICA DIVISION Michael Kaminsky | EURO-ASIA DIVISION Faye Reid | INTER-AMERICAN DIVISION Jose Rojas | NORTH AMERICAN DIVISION Akeri Suzuki | NORTHERN ASIA-PACIFIC DIVISION Marly Timm | SOUTH AMERICAN DIVISION Robert Bolst | SOUTH PACIFIC DIVISION Page 12 Julian Hibbert | SOUTHERN AFRICA-INDIAN OCEAN DIVISION Rose Christo | SOUTHERN ASIA DIVISION Gary Rustad | SOUTHERN ASIA-PACIFIC DIVISION Paul Tompkins | TRANS-EUROPEAN DIVISION John Enang | WEST-CENTRAL AFRICA DIVISION Pag e 28 We welcome unsolicited manuscripts, letters to the editor, volunteer tips, postcards and stories. Send all editorial correspondence to: Adventist Volunteer Service Publications 12501 Old Columbia Pike Silver Spring, MD 20904-6600 USA E-mail: AVSpublications@gc.adventist.org Fax: 301-680-6635 Website: www.adventistvolunteers.org Pag e 8 Mission Post (ISSN 1528-235X) is published four times a year by the Adventist Volunteer Service of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. Printed by the Review and Herald Publishing Association, 55 West Oak Ridge Drive, Hagerstown, MD 21741-1119. Copyright © 2001, General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. For a free subscription, send your name and address to Adventist Volunteer Service Publications, 12501 Old Columbia Pike, Silver Spring, MD 20904-6600 or send an email to: AVSpublications@gc.adventist.org m i s s i o n p o s t | c o n t e n t s 3 adventist volunteer service P o s t c a r d Dear Volunteers, I t is momentous! That’s how I can best describe my stay in Japan so far! It has been two months now since I first set foot on Japanese soil, and with each passing day comes a special blessing. I am currently serving in Okinawa, a beautiful island south of Japan with sparkling white sand beaches. I am enjoying my experience here as an assistant language teacher in both a junior academy and an elementary school. One noteworthy blessing I have received is that my duties here are very reasonable. I have not been overloaded, so, even with my work, I still have time for personal devotions. My fellow teachers and my students are very warm and friendly. They have made my stay wonderful. I find it thrilling to learn about the Japanese culture and language. I even enjoy using chopsticks now! Due to the language barrier, I am learning to put more trust in prayer and simple gestures—like smiles—as ways to reveal Christ to others. Some of my students are willing to decide for Jesus through baptism, but what keeps them from acting on their belief is the lack of parental approval and support. Nevertheless, two of my students have decided to get baptized!* It is alarming to me that in a country that enjoys freedom of worship, only 1% of the m i s s i o n p o s t | p o s t c a r d population is Christian— and the majority of that 1% are elderly! There is still a great work to be done here—especially for the young people! As you think of world missions, think of and pray for Japan. In His Service, Obed Soire Top and Bottom: Obed Soire Middle: Obed with two of his students. From Kenya – To Japan *The two students mentioned were baptized on October 25, 2008. 4 adventist volunteer service “God, who prepares His work through ages, accomplishes it by the weakest instruments when His time is come.” Photo courtesy of Russell Gibbs R e f l e c t i o n s By D’Aubigne, Signs of the Times, November 5, 1885. m i s s i o n p o s t | r e f l e c t i o n s 5 adventist volunteer service editorial Homer Trecartin | Editor, Mission Post | Associate Secretary, General Conference of Seventhday Adventists | Director, Adventist Volunteer Service A New Focus By Mark Pierson (With Introduction by Homer Trecartin) Tragedy! The unexpected. The unthinkable. As I read the story that follows, it was like a knife of memory cutting into my own heart and soul. Someday maybe I will tell you about my own experience with tragedy. How do we relate and react when all our dreams and plans come screeching to an end? Can God really bring something good out of the ashes or mangled wrecks of our lives? With his story, Mark Pierson has given us just a glimpse into a personal tragedy that changed his life – forever. But now, three years after the accident, life has a new purpose and drive. People are being changed – people in his own family and people halfway around the world. I Another semi went slowly by us in the left lane. As that truck was slowing down, two other vehicles spun out of control through the highway median. I told Luke to call Cathy and tell her to pull onto the shoulder, because it wasn’t safe where they were. Luke picked up the phone while looking in the mirror. “Dad,” he said, “we’re going to get hit.” In his mirror, he had seen a truck coming up behind us way too fast. Within seconds, our fully loaded U-haul, which was the biggest one available, was moving forward even though my foot was still on the brake, and we hit the semi in front of us. “This is going to be bad,” I thought. I opened my driver’s side door, not wanting to look back at Luke’s car; I was afraid of what I would see. n March of 2006, my wife, Cathy, and I decided to help my son Luke and his wife Kandice move from Bakersfield, California, to Marysville, Michigan. At the time, Kandice was seven months’ pregnant with the family’s first grandchild. We started the long drive on a Sunday with one U-haul truck and one car. By Tuesday night we were in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Then on Wednesday, it happened. Luke was in the U-haul with me. Kandice and Cathy, who was driving, followed us in Luke’s car. We were on Interstate Highway 40 heading east. Soon after we began, it started snowing lightly. The semi-truck that I was following slowed down, so we slowed down too. After a couple of minutes, the semi stopped in the right lane. We stopped behind it, and Luke’s car stopped behind us. m i s s i o n p o s t | e d i t o r i a l 6 adventist volunteer service But I forced myself to look. It was bad. The car was now in the left lane, facing the wrong direction. The roof, having been torn off from the driver’s side, was sticking straight up in the air. The car’s rear bumper was in front of the rear tires. I ran up to the car and tried to open Cathy’s door, but it would not budge. I saw my wife, motionless, in the driver’s seat. The trunk lid was touching the headrests of the two front seats. Kandice had been lying down in the backseat asleep. The only part of her I could see was the top of her head. I called Cathy’s and Kandice’s names several times, but they gave no response. I had been a volunteer firefighter in the past and the ABCs of resuscitation came back to my mind. I thought to myself, “How can I remember this at such a horrible time? Why am I not freaking out?” I lifted Cathy’s head from her shoulder so I could check to see if her airway was clear. Her head had been resting completely over on her shoulder, where it normally couldn’t. “She must have broken her neck,” I thought. So I laid her head back down. “She is dead,” I thought. When I first looked at her, her eyes were already dilated, an indicator of death. I now know her death occurred within seconds of the blunt force trauma. Soon Luke and I went to a waiting ambulance and sat in shock. No one spoke. An autopsy was performed on Kandice; her baby was a girl. Luke and Kandice had discussed what to name their child, but had not known its gender; they’d wanted to be surprised at birth. Luke named his first daughter Katrina, as he and his wife had previously discussed. m i s s i o n p o s t | e d i t o r i a l That day our family lost three of its firstborn girls. After losing three very loved family members, you start to think about life differently. You start asking yourself, “Am I really following God? Do I really love others? Do I live only for myself?” I thought about these things for a long time, and by August of that year, I had a desire to do volunteer service in another country. After talking with Cathy’s sister, Monica Barlow, her husband and, later, with my two sons, I was surprised to realize that we all had the same desire to do volunteer service! We felt it was a sign that the Holy Spirit was calling us to serve overseas. Because we were still grieving, we wanted to wait about two years before starting an adventure like this. We knew we wanted to do construction and maintenance work but weren’t sure where to go. One day we happened to get in touch with someone who worked for Adventist Health International (AHI) at Loma Linda University. We were surprised to find that AHI had some construction projects—one in Ethiopia—that would start in about two years. The plans of AHI and our desires had the same time frame and purpose! It was plain to me that God was guiding us. It was late 2008 when our group of fourteen flew from California to Ethiopia to volunteer at Gimbie Adventist Hospital. We are here as a result of the accident. Our loss has changed our lives for the better. It has changed our focus. I pray we keep this change of focus. To read more about Mark Pierson’s volunteer service at Gimbie Adventist Hospital, see his article on page 23. 7 adventist volunteer service Kazakhstan God’s Strength in My Weakness By Carly Fletcher everywhere, and there are many beautiful parks to visit. I found the people to be very friendly and excited to share their culture with me, as well as to learn about my culture. Who could ask for more? Along with three other volunteers— Mirian from Brazil, Randy from America and Malcolm, a fellow Australian—I spent my days teaching English during the week, running vespers programs on Friday nights and helping out in the English church on Sabbaths. Overall, it was a wonderful opportunity to meet people of all ages and to share Jesus with them through friendship and through invitations to attend religious programs. English has become such a world-wide language that there is a great demand for English language schools like the one I served in. Teaching English is also a great way to share Jesus with people who have never heard about Him before. It is certainly a great way to share the Gospel in Kazakhstan where there is a mixture of two main cultures and two main faiths: the Kazakhs, who are primarily Muslim by religion; and the Russians, who are Russian Orthodox by religion. Why Did God Send Me? “God, why have you sent me here to Kazakhstan? What am I doing here?” It was 2006, I was teaching English in a small classroom in the English Language Center in Almaty, Kazakhstan, and I found myself asking God those hard questions. I felt inexperienced and out of my comfort zone; the students seemed to know more about English grammar than I did! Moreover, I was a long way from my home in Sydney, Australia. I had decided to take one year off and dedicate it to serving God as a volunteer. However, when I arrived in Kazakhstan, things were a bit different than I expected. At first, everything was new and exciting! I was young (21 years old) immature and wanted to experience new things and new places. I thought that I could change the world, but God had some plans to change me instead! An Almaty Overview My Kazakh volunteer experience was full of many good things. Kazakhstan is a beautiful country, and the city of Almaty is no exception. It is overlooked by snow-capped mountains, there are trees m i s s i o n p o s t | k a z a k h s t a n 8 adventist volunteer service understand more of what the other was going through. After our discussion this student and some of the other students in my class invited me to spend the day with them at Medeo, a huge ice-skating rink in the mountains. We had a wonderful day ice-skating (or trying to), climbing up hundreds of steps to an overlook to see the city below, eating ice cream, getting to know each other and learning about one another’s cultures. As we became better and better acquainted, I found that the class was easier to teach; my students and I had a lot more fun together. Later on in the year, it was that particular student who comforted me when I found out that my grandmother had passed away back in Australia. Because of this experience, I gradually began to see that God was teaching me A Challenge in the Classroom Often it is the most challenging experiences that bring you the most joy in the end. During my very first term teaching, I had one particular student who challenged me greatly. She was difficult to work with and liked to cause disruptions in class, as well as challenge my authority as a teacher. After class, I often ended up going home and crying, feeling that I was a useless teacher. I prayed about this and asked God to give me strength and love for this student. One day there was a particular disruption in class, and this student, along with some others, vented her frustrations about the class and made some suggestions. Although this was a painful experience for me, it was also quite constructive, as we were able to work through certain issues together and Carly (far right) ice skating with students. m i s s i o n p o s t | k a z a k h s t a n 9 adventist volunteer service Kazakhstan time talking with her, learning about her and about her family. I found out that she was an accountant and that she lived with her brother and mother in Almaty. After we became friends, she invited Mirian and me to spend the day with her and a group of others in the mountains. We had a lovely time out in nature, eating wild strawberries and sitting around a campfire. We became good friends, and this student often came to visit me at the English Language Center. In turn, I invited her to the Friday night and Sabbath programs. Sometimes she came. One day I asked her if she believed in God. She told me she was an atheist. She did not show a lot of interest in religious things and sometimes even laughed at the things I said. However, I kept praying that God’s love would shine into her life and that she would find the truth. I still pray for her today and keep in contact with her on a regular basis via email. Please pray that she and the other students at the English Language Center in Almaty much more through my students than I could ever teach them. However, teaching was still very challenging for me, and the more I taught, the more I understood that it is in my weakness that God is strong. I could hear God saying to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness” (2 Corinthians 12:9, NIV). Prayers for Another Student I met another student in one of our video classes. She was very quiet and reserved. I felt that God was leading me to befriend her in some way, so I spent some Above: Carly (in white sweater) pictured with one of her classes. Right: The four volunteers. m i s s i o n p o s t | k a z a k h s t a n 10 adventist volunteer service will come to know Jesus as their Savior. Though this student was not baptized, we teachers did have the privilege of seeing one of our students get baptized. I pray that there will be many more baptisms in the future. Why God Sent Me Although my experience was sometimes hard and challenging, I have no regrets about volunteering in Almaty for a year. It taught me that it is only through God’s strength that we can do anything. Besides that, I met so many beautiful people and experienced so many wonderful things. For me, volunteer service was a time of challenges, fun, laughter, sharing, tears, snow fights, making new friends and, most importantly, growing spiritually. I learned so much about God and about myself that I wouldn’t trade my volunteer experience for anything. I guess that is God’s answer to the question of why He sent me to Kazakhstan! Below: Student playing the dumbra. Bottom: Some the church members. Carly Fletcher, originally from Australia, is currently working as an ADRA intern in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, where she will live for two years. She offers the following advice to those thinking about volunteer service: “Dedicating a year of your life to serving God is an adventure! I really encourage anyone who is thinking of volunteering to give it a go. God is calling people who have willing hearts and are ready to serve Him and spread the Gospel of Jesus Christ and His soon return. If you feel that God is calling you to volunteer, take that step of faith now!! And always remember that God has promised to be with you wherever you go. m i s s i o n p o s t | k a z a k h s t a n 11 adventist volunteer service Hard on His Heels By Marsha Trampe Tanzania Darkness surrounds us as our small group is hiking up the stony slopes of the mountain. The cold envelops me; my breath is hanging in the air like a veil. I can only see as far as the little headlight on my helmet shines. The world around us rests in still obscurity, except for our steady breathing. M truthfully and trust his advice every step of the way. He is the expert, for he hikes this mountain twice a week. He probably knows every single stone on our path. And he knows this terrain by heart. He has been here on days of all sorts of weather: fair, rainy, stormy and even snowy. Therefore, the final decision of whether ascent is possible for a group rests with this man. He is responsible for the lives of his clients, and his word needs to be obeyed at all times. Like many holiday hikers before us, we needed to learn a vital lesson on the very first day of the hike. On the first day, our guide advised us to go polepole which, in Swahili, means to go slowly. But our excitement got the better of us. After having followed the slow but steady pace of our guide for an hour, my friend said, “I cannot possibly walk this slowly! I need to take bigger strides. This slow pace tires me out!” So, we passed the guide and hurried up the slightly ascending way. As the hours wore on, our initial energy began to drain. We reached the first hut, exhausted and weary, but the guide had no mercy on y two friends and I have a common goal: at sunrise we want to reach the summit of Mount Meru in northern Tanzania. I’m new to this mountain climbing business, but very determined. No matter what, I want to make it. And there is only one way for a newbie like me to get there. Since my friends are experienced mountaineers, they let me walk right behind our guide so I can fix my eyes on his heels, match my steps to his pace and put my feet on the very spots his feet have just left. All my sleepiness wears off as I concentrate so as not to miss a step that the guide takes. Although we cannot see what lies in the darkness ahead, I feel safe and secure. Since we began our tour two days ago, our guide has proven himself to be kind and trustworthy. He knows our strengths and weaknesses. He keeps checking on our condition. “How do you feel?” he asks. “Do you need a break to drink water? Can we go on?” These questions are important because he wants us to succeed. So I answer him m i s s i o n p o s t | t a n z a n i a 14 adventist volunteer service of trust is called faith. And it only works one step at a time. My experience as a volunteer here in Tanzania has taught me that a Christian’s journey begins and ends following hard on His heels, just as I am now following hard on the heels of my guide. My Jesus, “who has gone through the heavens,” has also been in dark hours of loneliness, doubt, depression, exhaustion and temptation (Hebrews 4:14, NIV). The Bible continues, “For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but we have one who has been tempted in every way, just as we are—yet was without sin” (Hebrews 4:15, NIV). Just as I can count on the leading of my mountain guide and just as he sympathizes with and cares about my less than perfect condition as a hiker, so I can count on Jesus’ leading, for He sympathizes with my weaknesses. This is good news for me, because I am very often impatient with myself. Although I have patience and love for others, my own his foolish clients. He poked fun at us for having wasted our strength on our very first day on the mountain. “And we are not even close to the hardest part of the trip!” he said, shaking his head at our thoughtless behavior. Now at the last and hardest bit of our hike, his words have taken root in my heart. I try not to miss a single step and I am alert to what the guide says. “Be careful, this is a slippery wall. Use your hands to support you as you balance to the other side.” Or, “Follow the green marks and stay close behind me.” As I follow his advice, I wonder about how dangerous this part of our hike is, but I cannot see anything beyond the scope of my headlight. I listen for the guide’s words and follow his steps. That is all I can do right now to keep safe in the middle of the unknown terrain that surrounds me. This blind acceptance of someone guiding us, someone who knows the path because he has already been there, is very familiar to me as a Christian. This kind m i s s i o n p o s t | t a n z a n i a 15 adventist volunteer service Tanzania faults and failures bother me a lot. Often, I get angry at my own weaknesses. On the mountain, we are finally getting to the last and steepest part of our hike. We continue through gravel fields and deep volcanic ash. But my exhaustion grows and the loose ground we are treading makes matters worse. I simply cannot find a foothold and it is getting harder to keep our steady pace. Instead of ascending, every step seems to take me downhill a little more. At one point, anger rushes through me and I try to go faster, but instead of going up, I go down, back over ground I’ve already covered. I end up sitting on my backside, gasping and red faced. My friends pick me up and calm me down. They remind me to just follow the guide. Fatigued, but not willing to surrender, I get back into the routine of walking behind the guide. Slowly, but surely, even I, who has never climbed a mountain before, manage to reach the summit of Mount Meru at 14,978 feet (4562.13 meters) above sea level. As I marvel at the beautiful sunrise from the summit, I thank Jesus for giving me strength and for teaching me an important life lesson on this mountain: “Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith” (Hebrews 12:2, NIV). Let us follow hard on His heels, trusting that He will lead us safely and faithfully to the summit. Marsha Trampe, originally from Germany, writes from Tanzania, where she volunteers as a Grant Proposal Writer for ADRA Tanzania. She has been serving in Tanzania since November 29, 2008, and intends to stay for at least a year. The Mount Meru hike took place on February 13-15, 2009, with guide Sabbath Mutoba. Marsha was accompanied on the hike by her friends, Evelyn and Thomas Simader, a German couple who are currently volunteers serving as the directors of the Havilah Village Orphanage which is located on the University of Arusha campus. Previous Page: Three friends over the clouds (left to right: Marsha Trampe, Thomas Simader and Evelyn Simader) Left: Marsha (right) with hiking buddy Evelyn Simader and their guide, Sabbath Mutoba, at Rhino Point. m i s s i o n p o s t | t a n z a n i a 16 adventist volunteer service Norway Don’t Give Up! By Matheus da Silva W This time, yes, this time everything will be fine, I thought. Guess what! My visa was denied for the second time. I didn’t know what to do. After that, I didn’t want to go anywhere. I was 21 years old at that time, and I thought I’d rather stay in Brazil and finish my degree at Sao Paulo Adventist University (UNASP) than try to go anywhere else. I thought perhaps God had never wanted me to be a volunteer. Maybe I had just misunderstood Him. I was so excited about the thought of volunteering that maybe I had listened to my own will and mistaken it for God’s. But a single idea kept burning in my heart, even in the midst of these doubts. I still heard a voice whispering, “No matter how hard it seems, never give up. Always believe. Hold on.” From that moment on, I put my will in God’s hands. A few weeks later, I sent my application to another place, and, again, I was accepted, but this time I was scared. “Okay,” I prayed, “it is starting again; the process is 50% accomplished, but now I have to face a new embassy. God, you are the Captain.” This time it was the Norwegian Embassy that I visited, and, when I left, I was praising hat a wonderful day the 25th of August 2008 was for me when finally one of my dreams came true—the dream to be an Adventist volunteer overseas. I was 100% sure that it was God’s will for me to be a volunteer not just in my neighborhood, but beyond as well! I first filled out my application to be a volunteer in November 2006. A few months later, in January 2007, I received an email saying that I had been accepted for a volunteer position. When my application was accepted, I thought, “Now I can serve God to the ends of the earth!” However, as you know, God likes to surprise us. When I went to the embassy to apply for a visa, they denied my application—just like that! At that moment my world collapsed. I did not understand, so I started discussing it with God. “Why? Why? Don’t you want this for me?” I asked. A divine silence was what I got for an answer. I was discouraged. However, one single thought came to my mind: “Don’t give up!” So, I didn’t. I tried again. After a couple of days, I asked my volunteer coordinator to send my application to another place. Again, I was called. m i s s i o n p o s t | n o r w a y Inset: Matheus and fellow volunteer, Marsha. 17 adventist volunteer service Norway says, “Our confession of His faithfulness is Heaven’s chosen agency for revealing Christ to the world. We are to acknowledge His grace as made known through the holy men of old; but that which will be most effectual is the testimony of our own experience. We are witnesses for God as we reveal in ourselves the working of a power that is divine. Every individual has a life distinct from all others, an experience differing essentially from theirs. God desires that our praise shall ascend to Him, marked with our own individuality” (page 100). Through prayers and through my testimony, I can help young Adventists and non-Adventists to know a little more about God’s will for their lives. I have tried my hardest to help them, and I have been very blessed because I feel the hand of God leading me closer to Him who is the source of all wisdom. I thank Jesus every day for having given me this wonderful opportunity to share the Gospel overseas as an Adventist volunteer! the Lord because everything had worked out so easily. My visa application was accepted! Now, I am doing my volunteer service as a dean in the boys’ dorm in Royse, Norway, at Tyrifjord Videregaende Skole (Norwegian Junior College). I have been here for three months now—long enough to realize the great things that God has done in my life. Things here are really different from Sao Paulo, Brazil, where I’m from. The food, the clothing, the culture, and, of course, the language. My first challenge here was to get to know more about the wonderful Norwegian culture. The only thing I knew about Norway before I came here was that it is the land of the Vikings. Before leaving Brazil, I was happy because I knew that God had a purpose for me in this place. When I arrived, though, I was unsure as to how to be a faithful witness to the young people. I prayed to God so that He would show me what I could do, how I could help. I found an answer in The Ministry of Healing by Ellen G. White. She Norwegian Junior College m i s s i o n p o s t | n o r w a y 18 adventist volunteer service Matheus writes from Royse, Norway, where he was recently asked to spend another year volunteering. He plans to stay for the second year. “What a great surprise it was for me!” Matheus says. “Once more, God has shown me that He loves to surprise His children!” To everyone who has ever thought of becoming a volunteer, Matheus says, “If you are thinking about volunteering to shine for Christ in this dark world, I have one piece of advice for you: GO FORWARD, and prepare yourself because He will surprise you with a mountain of blessings!” Playing in the snow m i s s i o n p o s t | n o r w a y 19 adventist volunteer service Guyana A Surprise By Melissa Sissons Delivery A t 5:00 a.m. a phone call awoke me from my early morning slumber. Cell reception in Guyana’s jungle can be tricky; we have to hang our phone in one precise spot on our kitchen window to get any signal at all. Praise God the signal was working this morning! When I answered, I heard the anxious voice of the village health worker on the other end of the line. Her concerned words pierced through into my sleepy brain. “Come! Patsy* is in labor!” I ran to my front porch and called for Liz, using the characteristic intonation that carries sound nicely across our jungle campus. “Leeizzz!” I called. She answered with a simple, “Wooo,” a high pitched call that means, “What’s up?” or “Yes?” Liz Shires is a nurse who has joined our Bethany Medical Missionary College team for a year as a teacher. I told her to put on her scrubs, that we were headed to deliver a baby. She was thrilled. Both of us have worked as Emergency Room nurses in the past and we have not forgotten the excitement of a good medical drama. Little did we know what was awaiting us! m i s s i o n p o s t | g u y a n a We jumped into our Mule, a 4x4 vehicle, and sped down the sandy, treelined trail. As the thick forest whizzed by, I tried to fill Liz in on the details of Patsy’s complicated situation. Patsy is a teenage mother. Her first child was born when she was 15½ years old. Now, at 17 years old, she found herself pregnant again, but this time she did not mention it to her family or friends. In fact, she even denied it to most who questioned her. Therefore, her family attributed her growing figure to Pasty eating well and to genes inherited from her overweight grandmother. We were told later that it was only upon the morning of her delivery, the pains first being blamed on Naro (wind or gas), that Patsy’s parents realized the truth about the situation. When Patsy became doubled over in labor and unable to walk or move, her mother ran to the clinic to call the health worker who called me. In the meantime, as she lay on the hard floor of her home, her father asked her, “Are you getting baby?” When Patsy nodded yes in response, her father simply picked up her other child and walked out the front door to pace in the yard. Patsy then had to 20 adventist volunteer service crawl into the bedroom and prepare to deliver her own child. Unaware of the stage of her labor, we arrived at a very quiet home. It was about 5:30 a.m. We went up the steps, removed our shoes and announced our arrival with a call of “Inside,” which means, “Can I come in?” We heard a quiet answer, so we entered the quaint home. The threeroom house seemed very empty, and I called again to Patsy through a crack in the bedroom door. A village lady now answered me and told us simply, “Come.” Upon opening the door, all I could say was, “Shucks**, Patsy!!” Patsy lay on the bare, wooden floor with her skirt up to her waist. A half delivered placenta lay between her legs and a bloody infant close beside her feet. The still infant was half wrapped in an old towel, still attached to the umbilical cord. Both Patsy and the woman seemed oblivious to the potential life-threatening nature of the situation. All I remember is the woman pointing to the baby and saying, “So, that is it then.” Liz and I sprang into action, fumbling with our gloves, looking for our bulb syringe to suction the baby, all the while dodging the growing pools of blood that seeped across the floor and dripped through the wide cracks to the sandy ground below. I wished I had not obeyed the local custom this time by removing my shoes before entering the house. But this was no moment to think about shoes! Liz assessed the little baby girl while I gently pulled on the placenta to m i s s i o n p o s t | g u y a n a encourage its final delivery. The health worker arrived by the time we were cutting the cord, and all of our eyes lit up with relief as the baby began to cry and fuss. After making sure Patsy was not hemorrhaging, I scooped the placenta into a bowl and carried it outside. I found a flat board in the yard, chased away a ravenous dog and laid out the placenta for inspection. I did not want any parts of it to be left inside Patsy due to the chance of infection or severe bleeding. When I was satisfied that it was whole, Patsy’s father got a shovel and buried the placenta in the bushes. By the time I returned inside, the baby was being bathed. I cleaned up the mother and mopped away the blood with some old clothes. We assisted the new pair into the family hammock and put the baby to her mother’s breast. The 21 adventist volunteer service Guyana baby’s eyes opened and she latched on immediately, nursing perfectly for over thirty minutes. Before leaving, we all joined hands and gave a prayer of thanksgiving to God for His protection. Then, we bid the family farewell. The Mule ride home was quiet, Liz and I occasionally glancing at each other, shaking our heads in disbelief at what we had just encountered. We both knew how differently it all could have ended, and we were thankful that God had allowed us to play a small part as mission nurses in His work. m i s s i o n p o s t | g u y a n a Melissa Sissons writes from Guyana in South America, where she and her husband are the directors of Bethany Medical Missionary College. The Sissons have two children and have lived in Guyana for eight years now. *Name of patient has been changed for the purpose of privacy. ** A local term of disbelief. Page 20: Melissa Sissons with Patsy’s baby. Page 21: Liz (left) with her sister Alexis who is also a volunteer at Bethany Medical Missionary Collage. Below: Melissa with her husband and children. 22 adventist volunteer service Ethiopia The Beggar By Mark Pierson I to Customs at the airport to retrieve the camera. A man named Girma drove me where I needed to go. With Girma’s help, I had my camera by 3:30 on Thursday afternoon. I was now done with what I needed to do here in Addis Ababa, but I would not be leaving for six more days. There was a lot of time left to fill. I had brought the book Redeeming Love* by Francine Rivers with me to Ethiopia, and had been reading it in the evenings at Gimbie. I brought the book along with me to Addis as well; I felt that God wanted to spend some quiet time with me here. Thus, I spent much of the next six days reading. About 3½ years ago my wife, Cathy, had read Redeeming Love to me. When we finished the book, I remember thinking, “I’m most like the character Michael Hosea, the good guy in the story.” At that time, I really thought I had placed the desires and needs of others above my own. But as I read the book again, I see that I am actually Angel, the prostitute in the story. I’ve been very good at deceiving myself about myself. Jesus has been my beloved for most of my life, but at times I t’s Sabbath afternoon, October 4, 2008. I’m in Addis Ababa, staying in one of the guest rooms at the office building for the Ethiopian Union of Seventh-day Adventists. I came here from Gimbie Adventist Hospital (where I am volunteering as a construction worker) last Wednesday so I could retrieve my video camera, which was confiscated by the Customs office when I entered the country. The hospital vehicle was going to Addis and if I wanted to get my camera, this was my chance. The guest room I’m staying in for 5 nights costs 120 birr per night for a total of 600 birr, or $60. It was very hard for me to pay 600 birr for my room, because I know that the unskilled employees at Gimbie Adventist Hospital earn only 270 to 320 birr per month. You should see the simple, poor conditions those employees live in. I felt my stomach turn when I paid that money for my room, when there are so many here that don’t have basic needs, such as food or shelter. The day after I got here, I went to the Ministry of Information offices in downtown Addis Ababa. There, I had to get a letter giving me permission to bring the camera into the country and, when I received the letter, I had to take it m i s s i o n p o s t | e t h i o p i a * Redeeming Love is a story based on the book of Hosea. 23 adventist volunteer service Ethiopia barefoot. All but 2 or 3 of his toes were totally gone. He was holding out one hand for money. All of his fingers were a third of their original length or less. The lower half of his face had thick white scales flaking from it. I turned my head away and rushed by him, repulsed just from looking at him. I remember actually feeling a little nauseated. When I had walked a few steps past him, though, my heart thought of Jesus touching and healing the lepers. “This must be leprosy,” I thought. I stopped, turned around and started walking back towards him. As I walked, I took 10 birr out of my pocket, the equivalent of $1 USD. I rolled it up to give to him. Then, on second thought, I unrolled it to make it longer so that when I gave it to him there would be less chance that I would touch him. Guiltily, I thought, “Jesus touched the lepers.” But I couldn’t touch this person. He reached up with both hands to take the money because his fingers were too short to grasp it with one hand. My hand touched his and I pulled away quickly. The expression he gave me was one of appreciation. I turned away and walked the couple of blocks back to my room. The first thing I did when I got back was wash my hands thoroughly with soap. I know I am not perfect, but I also know Jesus is working in me and drawing me to be like Him, because my heart ached with pain and sorrow at seeing a human being that looked SO unlovable. However, my reading of Redeeming Love, along with my experiences here, have reminded me that I am just like the man I saw on the street today. I’m a repulsive, nauseating beggar who is loved by a passionate, forgiving, unchanging, everlasting and self-sacrificing bridegroom whose name is Jesus. How have sold my heart to the enemy. I claim to care about needy people. I don’t. I claim to love the people Jesus loves. I don’t. I claim to be generous. I’m not. I claim to love others. I don’t. Not really. I can see that now. But this book has changed me in the last few days. I am beginning to see how it is possible to love without desiring anything as a reward. My room here is in the middle of the downtown part of a city of four million people. Not a nice city. I have been taking a walk here each day. The sidewalks are full of children begging, people who limp or who can’t walk at all. Many have no function in their legs, so they literally drag themselves along the sidewalk as they beg. On the few blocks I walk I usually see two or three people dragging themselves along with their legs out behind them. I’ve seen several with elephantitis, a disease in which the lymph nodes in a person’s legs and feet swell. These people drag themselves along the ground as well. I see many, many young women on my walks, most of them with at least one child. They are dressed like they come from the northern part of the country, from a rural tribe. Many of them are beggars. I see these things every day on my walks here in Addis Ababa. This afternoon, however, my walk was especially difficult. I came across someone literally sitting in the gutter. The person was about 20 feet ahead of me. I could not tell if it was a man or a woman. I will say it was a man. The man was trying to cover his face with his hand and a filthy rag. His teeth were sticking out at weird angles. The skin hung away from below his eyes. The clothes he had on were little more than filthy rags, just like our righteousness. He was m i s s i o n p o s t | e t h i o p i a 24 adventist volunteer service did Jesus feel when He walked the streets full of beggars, cripples, prostitutes and pharisees? I’m beginning to see a little what He felt like, so very little, because He is God and I am the beggar, with the leprosy of sin. I cannot find any words that begin to express the love I feel towards my Jesus, and the love that I now experience from Him. Indeed, as I have been alone with Jesus in this city of four million, I have been changed. 1 Mark Pierson has recently returned to his home in Coulterville, California, USA. He plans to go back to Ethiopia again next year to continue his service at Gimbie Adventist Hospital. 2 3 4 m i s s i o n p o s t | e t h i o p i a 25 1 This woman has epilepsy and while she was having a seizure she rolled into her cooking fire. She had no money for medical care so she got none. Her wounds got infected, so she finally came to Gimbie and received care of antibiotics by IV. This photo was taken two weeks after the accident happened. 2 A man waiting at Gimbie Adventist Hospital for a spear to be removed from his arm. The spear, which was in his arm for 14 hours, missed the bone and arteries. The man had been in a fight. 3 A man with elephantitis begging on the streets of Addis Ababa. 4 The group of 14 that went to serve at Gimbie Adventist Hospital as a result of the deaths of Mark Pierson’s wife, daughter-in-law and unborn granddaughter. (Mark Pierson is in the center in the white, button-up shirt). adventist volunteer service Austria The Best Salary By Sonja Zwahlen I to discuss problems. Very often they just come to chat or spend time with each other. I have my phone with me all day, so the girls can call me at any time. Often I have to coordinate things. With sixty girls that all have different needs and desires, this is not always so easy. For example, one girl may need a key for the kitchen, while another one may have a broken light in her room. Or, there may be a girl who is sick, while another one needs comfort. I never know what the day will bring! All Bogenhofen students have to work five hours a week in the garden or cleaning the buildings. The coordination and supervision of this work is also a task of the deans. It is the same with the daily dish-washing. Young people do not like to do the physical work very much, but still it has to be done properly. With everything that is going on, days go by very fast. In the evening, when every girl is in her room and hopefully also in her bed, I feel very tired, but very satisfied. I am thankful to be serving at Bogenhofen. I know that this is the place where I am supposed to be right now, and I feel God’s help and power every day. I am very happy when I can discuss important subject with the girls or when I have the opportunity to encourage them have always had the desire to discover and experience all the wonders of God’s creation. Thus, I have participated as a volunteer in different short term projects in Bangladesh, Zimbabwe, Senegal, Canada and other places. While I was involved in these projects I learned more and more about Jesus and it became my great desire not only to work short term for God but to give Him all my time. So, when I finished my education in Occupational Therapy this summer, I asked the Lord to help me know His way for me. I am very happy that He guided me to Bogenhofen Seminary in Austria. When I found that they were looking for a dean in the girls’ dorm, I agreed to volunteer there for one year. Bogenhofen is an Adventist high school, a theological seminary and also a German language school. There are about 150 students, most of them in high school. Bogenhofen itself is like a little paradise. The scenery is beautiful, there is a nice castle, a river, and the surroundings are very peaceful. My office is right at the entrance of the girls’ dorm. It is there that I try to be ready to meet the girls’ needs. Most of time, my door is open and the girls come in to ask for things, to find out information or m i s s i o n p o s t | a u s t r i a 26 adventist volunteer service to go their way with and for God. There are also difficult situations, though, for which I need God’s assurance about what is right or wrong and with which I need courage to deal. Still, when I am dealing with the girls, I never want to forget to be as gracious and loving with them as God is to us when we make mistakes. In my free time I have the opportunity to practice music and to spend time with friends. Altogether, there are about ten volunteers on the campus. We laugh, pray and encourage each other. Even though we work in different jobs, we are connected in friendship and in our desire to serve the Lord. Every day here at Bogenhofen is a great challenge in many ways. There is sickness, too much work and too little sleep. Despite all this, I want to praise the Lord. m i s s i o n p o s t | a u s t r i a Often we only realize His helping hand when we are in difficulty. This is the best way to grow personally and to keep close to God. I want to encourage you to ask the Lord what you can do for Him. Don’t think about salary or any other needs. The satisfaction of knowing that you are in the place where God wants you to be is the best salary, and one that only God can give. Sonja Zwahlen, originally from Switzerland, writes from Bogenhofen Adventist Seminary in Austria, where she will be serving until the end of July 2009. She is an intradivision volunteer. 27 adventist volunteer service Chuuk A Volunteer Interview Stanly John, a 26-year old pastor from Kerala, India, believes whole-heartedly that it was God who made his dream of being an Adventist volunteer come true. It was God who called him and God who enabled him to do what he has been doing since August of 2008: serving as a volunteer Bible teacher and school chaplain at Chuuk Seventh-day Adventist School. While serving, Stanly was interviewed about his experience on Chuuk. serve on Chuuk, I started to do research on the location. I found that Chuuk is an island in the Pacific Ocean, very far from my home country. I also found that the cost of airfare was very high and that I had to get a US transit visa to travel to Chuuk. My travel agent informed me that I had only a 1% chance of getting that visa. But God made everything possible for me to serve on Chuuk. I got the US transit visa and various people helped me by giving me sufficient funds for my travels. I praise God for Mr. T. V. Varghese, Mr. Matthew Daniel and Pr. Jose Prakesh, who encouraged and supported me! One day before I departed to Chuuk, my mother asked me what I was going to do, as I was going to a place where I would know no one and have no support and help. I reminded her that God says in Isaiah, “I will lead them in paths that they have not known: I will make darkness light before them, and crooked things straight. Jill Walker Gonzalez (JWG): Why did you decide to volunteer? Why on Chuuk? Stanly John (SJ): When I was studying at Spicer Memorial College, I came across a copy of Mission Post magazine. After reading the experiences of different volunteers whose stories were featured in the magazine, I decided that one day I would be a volunteer too. After my studies, I applied for volunteer service. It took me three years to find an assignment. However, I thank God for this because, for those three years, I was able to work as a pastor in my home country of India, and that experience prepared me for volunteer service. My division volunteer coordinator suggested Chuuk to me as a possible location for an assignment, along with two other places. Without even knowing where Chuuk was, I told her that I was willing to serve there, if accepted. When I found out that I had been accepted to m i s s i o n p o s t | c h u u k 28 adventist volunteer service JWG: How has this experience changed your life? SJ: Being a volunteer is a totally new experience for me! I believe that God sent me here. Unlike my pastoral experience in India, volunteer service on Chuuk has helped me be more patient with people and has given me a new outlook on the world that is outside of my home country. These things will I do unto them, and not forsake them” (Isaiah 42:16, KJV). I told her that God would be with me ‘in ways that I knew not.’ Thus, I could travel with confidence to Chuuk. JWG: What kind of volunteer work do you do? Describe your typical day. SJ: Here on Chuuk, I teach Bible, history and computer classes. I am also the Chaplain of the school. I enjoy my duties. My day begins with a prayer for the students I am going to teach. JWG: What would you say to encourage other volunteers? SJ: I know there are many people who want to become volunteers, but for some reason their applications are rejected. As I mentioned before, I waited three years to become a volunteer. My application was rejected for many positions, but God finally gave me a place to serve. God has a great plan for all of our lives, so don’t get discouraged by any setbacks. Submit your life into His hands; He will lift you up at the right time. JWG: How do you feel God has blessed your service? SJ: I am blessed in God’s ministry because He has given me the privilege to work in a foreign land which I knew nothing about before I came. JWG: What do you love most about what you are doing as a volunteer on Chuuk? SJ: I love the people of Chuuk. I love teaching and correcting my students. I make sure that all of them know the love of Christ. My ultimate goal is to educate them for eternity. One thing that has impressed me is the unity among the teachers and administration here. We are a family. The spiritual life on our campus is great and we are experiencing many of God’s miracles in our daily lives. JWG: Anything else you’d like to share? SJ: “For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, saith the Lord. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways, and my thoughts than your thoughts” (Isaiah 55:8, 9, KJV). As humans, we may have only short term goals and aims, but God has a greater plan for each of our lives. He will do great things for you! JWG: What is the biggest challenge you have faced while volunteering? SJ: In order to teach my students effectively, I have to find new methods to get and keep their attention. I must patiently win their attention to direct them in God’s path. m i s s i o n p o s t | c h u u k Stanley John 29 adventist volunteer service Espinoza, Aldo Jhonathan—6th Grade Teacher, from USA to Palau Estil, Eugene Gonzales—Asst for CLAP Program, from Philippines to South Korea Etter, Danielle Marie—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Fernandez, Mercedes de la Calle—Librarian, from Spain to UK Franklin, Tomiko M—Academic Tutor/Student Activities Coord, from USA to Kenya Freeman, Kayla Janae—Admin Asst, from USA to ADRA/Tanzania Gallewski, Melanie—Public Health/Nursing, from Germany to Peru Garapasi, Tinoda—Support Analyst, from Zimbabwe to UK Gatti, Giannina Priscila—Dtrs with Miss Med Intern, from Argentina to Botswana Georges, Jennifer—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Giaccarini, Elian Roberto Sr—Asst Boys’ Dean, from Argentina to UK Gil, Samira Angelica—Pre-Kindergarten Teacher, from Mexico to Delap Gladden, Whitaker T—English/Math/Science Teacher, from USA to Cambodia Guthrie, Stephania Lakita—Reassign as Human Resources, from USA to Korea Guzman, Paul Alonso—Computer Teacher, from Mexico to Egypt Hahn, Amy Michelle—English-Math-Science Teacher, from USA to Cambodia Hamer, Rory Patrick—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Hamer, Sonnett Ree—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Harms, Matthew Steven—Maintenance Asst, from USA to AWR-Guam Harper, Jeffrey Alan—School Chaplain, from USA to Australia Hartman, Matthew Lee—Community Ambassador-Travel Team, from USA to Peru Haughton, Jillian Denine—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Hawkins, Christopher Neil—ESL Teacher, from USA to Taiwan Hawkins, Eric Jon—ESL Teacher, from USA to Taiwan Henry, Hyacinth Lorraine—Reassign as Language Inst Asst, from USA to Brazil Heuberger, Neven—English Teacher, from Germany to Mexico Holder, Lynn Nicole—Reassign as English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea House, Kevin Andrew—Ecological Worker, from USA to Peru Hunt, Kirk E—Dentist, from USA to Rwanda Hunt, Krista Kay—Math Teacher, from USA to Egypt Hylton, Matthew Ronald Steven—English Teacher, from Jamaica to Chile Infante, Henry—Asst Boys’ Dean, from USA to Norway Jackson, Alec Kenneth—Science Teacher, from USA to Egypt Johnson, Alise Raeanne—4th Grade Teacher, from USA to Delap Johnson, Cedric Norio—4th Grade Teacher, from USA to Palau Jun, Kyungsoo—Evangelist, from USA to Kenya Kalousek, Wesley Brandon—Maintenance Asst, from USA to Pohnpei Kandoll, KaraLeigh Elizabeth—Secondary Teacher, from USA to Honduras Kennedy, Harvey Andrew—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Kim, Henry Kiyoung—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Kim, Soon—Nurse Asst, from USA to Kenya King, Carson—Emergency Med Tech/Registered Nurse, from USA to Chad Kiragu, Eunice Wanjiru—Bible Worker, from Kenya to Australia Knauss, Karen Sue Quackenbush—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Knauss, Kerry Alan—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Kornienko, Victor—Kitchen Asst, from Ukraine to Norway Labuguen, Maybel Jacinto—Bible Instr/Tchr’s Aide, from Philippines to Macao Latour, Donn Alan—Dermatologist, from USA to Guam Lee, Hee Ok—ADRA Asst, from South Korea to ADRA/Bangladesh Lee, John Minwoo—Bicycle Miss to the World Asst, from USA to Kenya Logan, William Alexander Tramblie—Teacher, from USA to India Lucas, Patricia Marlene—Asst Dean of Women, from USA to Denmark Luce, Holly Elizabeth—Preschool Teacher, from USA to Saipan Kurlinski, Emily Suzanne—ESL Teacher-Youth Ministries, from USA to Ukraine Labris, Frelyn Joy—Nursing Educ & Leadership, from Philippines to Afghanistan Lyew, Sylvia Celina—English Teacher, from USA to Chile Mann, Corbin Jeffrey—Elementary & HS Computer Teacher, from USA to Pohnpei New Volunteers Ethiopia Africa, Chivonne Lorraine—Missionary-Bible Tchr, from So Africa to So Korea Alcaide, Charity Grace—3rd Grade Teacher, from Canada to Delap Allen, Randy Roy—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Apollon, Ingrid—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Arnold, Damien Joel—Maintenance Asst for K-12 School, from Australia to Delap Arrieta, Eliacim Thomas—History Teacher, from Mexico to Egypt Baatjes, Patricia—English-Religion Teacher, from South Africa to Korea Barbosa, Mateus Ruela—High School Science Teacher, from Australia to Pohnpei Behrens, Liesl Jan—Camp Instructor-Lifeguard, from Australia to USA Block, Christopher Mark—Asst Boys’ Dean, from USA to Kenya Boucaud, Genevieve—Reassign as Eng Instr, from Trinidad and Tobago to Japan Brannaka, Michael Kevin—High School Science Teacher, from USA to Delap Beenken, Brenda Elaine—Elementary Physical Education Tchr, from USA to Palau Brito, Sarai—Asst Home Dean, from Venezuela to Malaysia Brooks, Lindsay Emiko—Asst Dean of Women, from USA to Denmark Bulich, Sebastian Andres—Carpenter, from Argentina to Kyrgyzstan Burzo, Jamie Heather—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Cabuena, April Lou Jaranilla—English Language Tchr, from Philippines to Ukraine Cardoso, Gisllene Rodrigues—General Duties, from Brazil to Italy Chan, Esther Ivette—High School History Teacher, from Mexico to Palau Christensen, Robert Erlin—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Chung, Kwang Soon—Relief Dentist, from USA to Trinidad and Tobago Chytil, Ana—Physical Education-Health Teacher, from Croatia to Delap Claney, Ona Marie—ESL Teacher, from USA to Palau Clarke, Kellyann A—English Language Teacher, from UK to Japan Collie, Alareece Marie—ESL Teacher, from Bahamas to Costa Rica Connell, Dana Lynn—Personal Ministries Asst, from USA to UK Craig, Bryan Kingsley—Lecturer and Seminar Presenter, from Australia to Norway Craig, Bryan Kingsley—Health Ministries Lecturer, from Australia to Switzerland Cremades, Rebeca Maria—Medical Intern, from Spain to Kenya D’Agostino, Boris Adriel—Accountant, from Argentina to Russia da Silva, Matheus Elias—Reassign as Pastor’s Asst, from Brazil to Norway Dahlberg, Lauren Elizabeth—Reassign as Kindergarten Tchr, from USA to Delap Dantzie, Abigail—English-Religion Teacher, from UK to Korea Davis, Jacob Nathanael—High School Science Teacher, from USA to Palau de Souza, Renan Daniel—Asst Boys’ Dean, from Brazil to Spain Denis, Diana—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Díaz, Alexis Emilio—Doctors with Miss Med Intern, from Argentina to Botswana Dos Santos Rossi, Fernando—Dtrs with Miss Med Intern, from Brazil to Malawi Dull, Tanner Alan—General Floater, from USA to Palau Dungan, Charles Anthony—7th & 8th Grades Teacher, from USA to Woja Edgerton, Eric Brent—6th Grade Teacher, from USA to Pohnpei Ellis, Timothy James—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Erich, Robert—High School Social Studies Teacher, from USA to Delap Erich, Stephen Richard—ESL Teacher, from USA to Thailand missionpost | new volunteers 30 adventist volunteer service Japan missionpost | new volunteers Seltmann, Larry Max—Building Project Supervisor, from USA to Pohnpei Seltmann, Sara Cherie—Kindergarten Teacher, from USA to Pohnpei Shafer, Jolene Renee LaVon—4th Grade Teacher, from USA to Palau Shaw, Deirdre Elaine—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Shin, Kimberly Ann—Bible Worker, from USA to Australia Sianturi, Fabiola—Family Nurse Practitioner, from USA to Guam Sisodia, Misha Gaban—English-Music Teacher, from from USA to Malaysia Sokawukile, Bonga—English-Religion Teacher, from South Africa to Korea Solis, Adrian—English Language School Teacher, from USA to Japan Spencer, Bennett Elwood—Pilot, Adv Aviation Services, from USA to PNG Stengile, Luyolo—English-Religion Teacher, from South Africa to Korea Sunio, Joseph John—English Language School Teacher, from Canada to Japan Swope, Timothy Alan—High School Math Teacher, from USA to Pohnpei Tait, Courtney Michelle—2nd Grade Teacher, from USA to Palau Timothy, Jordan Alexandra—7th Grade Teacher, from USA to Palau Tito Mamani, Susana Judith—Dentist, from Bolivia to Kenya Tokle, Charlotte Daisy Rae—2nd Grade Teacher, from USA to Pohnpei Torres, Xochitl Alicia—Asst Home Dean, from Mexico to Malaysia Yoo, Jaihoo—Financial Secy for Bicycle Miss to the World, from USA to Kenya Valenzuela, Shiela Oligario—English Instructor, from Philippines to Japan Venter, Nicolaas David—Bible Worker, from South Africa to Australia Walter, Jonathan—1st-3rd Grades Teacher, from Austria to Majuro Waul, Latasha Shanita—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Weaver, Jessica Jean—ESL Teacher, from USA to Egypt Webb, Christopher Martin—English Teacher, from USA to Taiwan Webb, Lisa Marie Sannes—Guidance Counselor-Rel Tchr, from USA to Taiwan Webster, Donna Maureen—English-Religion Teacher, from Canada to Korea White, Anthony Joel—English Teacher, from USA to Ecuador Whitley, Diane Bernice—ESL Teacher, from USA to Czech Republic Wilkens, Lisa Marie—3rd & 4th Grades Teacher, from USA to Saipan Will, Nicholas Daniel—Hosp Worker, from USA to Ethiopia Witzel, Jodi Candace—1st-2nd Grades Teacher, from USA to Kosrae Zama, Robert—English Teacher, from Canada to Spain Zima, Alyssa Kiera—ESL Teacher, from USA to Thailand Zywietz, Valentin—Teacher, from Germany to India Norway Margart, Kendel Mills—HS PE Teacher, from USA to Palau Marinos, Jeremy Benjamin—Hosp Worker, from USA to Ethiopia Mark, Donovan Paul—English-Religion Teacher, from South Africa to Korea Marquina, Carlos Francesco—General Duties, from Peru to Italy Martin, Edward Hylton II—Reassign as Hosp Admin Support, from USA to Zambia Mathews, Kaitlynn Anne—1st Grade Teacher, from USA to Palau McClendon, Shari Denise—2nd Grade Teacher, from USA to Delap Meulemans, Paul Robert—7th-8th Grades Teacher, from USA to Majuro Michel, Casey Anne—Admin Asst, from USA to ADRA/Tanzania Michel, Robert Louis Gerard—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Mihara, Meiko—Asst Girls’ Dean, from Brazil to Spain Miller, Katherine Justean—High School Science Teacher, from USA to Yap Moonsamy, Colette—English-Religion Teacher, from South Africa to Korea Moore, Ryan Matthew—Youth Coord, from USA to Australia Morales, Amber Yvette—Asst Girls’ Dean, from USA to Spain Müller, Marlene—English Teacher, from Argentina to Kyrgyzstan Munsey, Michael Frank—3rd Grade Teacher, from USA to Taiwan Musante, Daniela—General Duties, from Argentina to Italy Myaing, Robert—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Neep, Alfred D—Director of Campus Security, from USA to Thailand Neep, Tonya Lee—Director of ESL Ministry Development, from USA to Thailand Nicholson, Melissa Abigail—Preschool English Teacher, from UK to Honduras Nikolaus, Fabian Ivan—General Duties, from Spain to Italy Olakowski, Sara R—ESL Teacher, from USA to Egypt Omonte Mamani, Valentin—Dentist, from Bolivia to Kenya Owens, Stacy—ESL Teacher-Youth Ministries, from USA to Ukraine Page, Alvin John—3rd-5th Grades Teacher, from South Africa to Laura Page, Marrelie Estelle—K-2nd Grades Teacher, from South Africa to Laura Paulsen, Alexandra Kim—1st & 2nd Grades Teacher, from USA to Saipan Park, Insang—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Patchin, James—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Pedrosa Armenteros, Sonia—Asst Girls’ Dean, from Spain to USA Pflugrad, Mitchell LeRoy—Maintenance Asst for K-12 School, from USA to Delap Phillips, Lisa Marie—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Ploompuu, Andres—English Language School Teacher, from Estonia to Japan Prindle, Casey Lee—5th & 6th Grades Teacher, from USA to Guam Pyle, Naomi Louise Ruth—Bible Worker, from UK to Australia Reichard, Aiko Mae—Asst Girls’ Dean, from USA to Japan Reimer, Robert—4th-6th Grades Teacher, from Austria Majuro Reitsma, Audrey Christine—Youth Asst, from USA to UK Reynolds, Vanessa—Asst Girls’ Dean, from Australia to Kenya Rich, Jeremiah Isaiah—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Richards, Nathalia Lucia—1st Grade Teacher, from USA to Pohnpei Riesenberger, Diana Sue—Translation Ctr Development Dir, from USA to Thailand Rodrigues Viana, Marcelo—Chaplain, from Brazil to Lebanon Rojas, Eli—ESL Teacher-Youth Ministries, from USA to Ukraine Rooplal, Chandanee Devi—English-Religion Teacher, from South Africa to Korea Rudder, Shevon—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Ruiz, Ivan Alfredo—High School Bible Teacher, from USA to Palau Rusiani, Giorgi—Reassign as General Duties, from Georgia to Italy Ruthven, Annie May—Teacher, from Australia to Thailand Ryabchun, Anna—Kitchen Asst, from Ukraine to Norway Saguan, Dannette Aguirre—Family Medicine Physician, from USA to Guam Salagubang, Jammie—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Salcedo, Rebeca Doris—Reassign as English Teacher, from USA to Argentina Sanchez, Josue Ismael—Comp Support/Website Developer, from Mexico to Italy Sands, Lindsey Kathleen—Teen-Youth Pastor, from USA to Australia Saw, Dora—Registered Nurse, from USA to Guam Saw, Eng Chuan—General Surgeon, from USA to Guam Schmidt, Vanessa Sonia—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Schroeder, Sharla Richelle—7th and 8th Grades Teacher, from USA to Saipan Scott, Marci Kay—English-Religion Teacher, from USA to Korea Sedgman, John—Xray Technician Specialist, from Australia to Tanzania 31 adventist volunteer service volunteer opportunities Australia Kazakhstan Cameroon Nepal Chuuk Peru Guyana South Korea India Tanzania Italy Thailand Japan United States Pastor/YouthMin/Evan Gateway Adventist.Centre Maintenance Koza Adventist Hospital Kindergarten Teacher Chuuk Seventh-day Adventist School Health Instructor Bethany Medical Missionary College Music Teacher Haryana Region General Duties Italian Adventist College Pastor Okinawa International Church English Language Teacher Almaty English Language Center Construction, Maintenance Scheer Memorial Hospital Global Mission Program Coordinator North Peru Union Mission English-Religion Teacher Korea SDA Language School ADRA Story Teller ADRA/Tanzania ESL Teacher Thailand SDA Language School Teacher Assistant/Bible Worker Orcas Christian School Listed are samples of volunteer opportunities available at the time this issue went to press. There are currently hundreds of volunteer opportunities available throughout the world, and more become available each day! For the most current information on these and other volunteer positions, visit us online at: www.adventistvolunteers.org. If you are interested in becoming a volunteer, contact your division volunteer coordinator for more information. Your home division will process your application. To find your Division Contact from the website, click on “divisions.”
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