Tag Archive for 'missions'

Another way to map our Mission Trips

June 26th, 2008 by mickey

With the Kenya mission team leaving today, we thought it would be a fun time to show you another way to see all of the places that Mt. Bethel is going this year.

You can already view all of our off-campus events in a Google Map, and you can even download a file to view them in Google Earth.  Now you can view them using the brand-new Google Earth plugin.

This plugin allows you to view Google Earth content right in your browser, including 3D terrain, buildings, and fun stuff like that.  We’ve added the rest of our 2008 mission trips into a collection, which you can browse below.

You’ll need to install the plugin before they will show up, and the plugin currently only runs in Windows (sorry about that — Mac/Linux support is due in August).  Check it out!


Powered by EarthSwoop | More info about this collection

A Week in the Life of a Missions Pastor

June 24th, 2008 by carey

I have one of the greatest jobs in the world!  Every week I get to see God transforming lives and making a difference for His kingdom.  Don’t get me wrong, there are lots of challenges, and I mean lots, but the blessings and the stories of what God is doing through missions make all the challenges fade out of sight.

I started out my week with hearing good news about the wonderful work our mission team did in Pass Christian, Mississippi, as they continued the effort to rebuild homes on the Gulf Coast.  Long after Katrina, many people have moved on to other concerns, but a number of our Mt. Bethel members are revitalizing the commitment to help those who are still in need.

Two Sundays ago, we commissioned a mission team to Costa Rica and Romania (Deborah House), which will be doing work projects to help these ministries as well as Vacation Bible School for the children. I will have the joy of sending off both teams with communion and prayer on Friday and Saturday.

A few nights ago, we had the mission committee meeting where we heard about the ongoing work of Breakthrough House, which we support with help from our members both physically and financial.  Breakthrough House is helping women who have had a life of substance, physical, or emotional abuse put there lives back together and have a new life in Christ.

At Infusion (a summer youth retreat) that took place last week, our middle high school students did craft projects to give to children of the community we sponsor in Kenya.  The crafts tell of how God loves them and protects them.

This past Sunday, we commissioned the Austria mission team, which will work at a Christian sports camp, and the Kenya Mission Team, which will work on the medical center in Kwambekenya.

And if all the praying over and sending out and sharing with others isn’t enough for the week, a group of our women made 1200 sandwiches to send to MUST ministries, a ministry that helps the needy and homeless.   Wow!

That is just a taste of the missions ministries I saw going on this week at Mt. Bethel.  In just this one week, I have been blessed to see so many mission ministries that are making a difference at Mt. Bethel, and the best part is yet to come - all those teams that are going out, will come back with testimonies of what God has done through them and in them!

Can you see why I say I have one of the greatest jobs world!

I can’t wait for next week!!!

In August I have an opportunity to spend the night at MUST ministries and feed the homeless and help out around the facility.  We are in need of some other folks to come along side me and others and give a night to help the least of these.

If you are interested in helping with MUST or hearing of other mission opportunities, give me a call.

Be Blessed,
Carey Akin

“Trippin” with Mt. Bethel Missions

June 5th, 2008 by carey

We have a great group of Short Term Mission Trips going in 2008!

  • The Romania/Deborah/House team is completed, ticketed and ready to roll. They leave June 21, the same day as our Costa Rica team who are also ticketed and heading for VBS and construction in the Barrio Mexico region of San Jose.
  • Carey Akin is helping to lead another group to Kwambekenya, Kenya, our partner village where Randy worked in April. We hope they can be working on the Medical Center sponsored by MBUMC. He can add someone to the team if you are ready to go!
  • You will have to wait until next year if you wanted to go to the camp in Austria; that team filled very quickly and they leave July 2.
  • Contact Becca Hood if you would like to go to Ecuador on July 26 to Aug.3. There are some spots open for adults of all ages! Ask anyone who has been there with SIFAT-it is a wonderful trip-not too far away or too long away!
  • Two trips coming up in September have a few spaces. Men only are invited to go on a rugged treck to the Bolivian Andes on September 4, also a SIFAT trip. The Boyces are leading a team to Macedonia September 19 to work with the Methodist Church there.
  • One brand new trip is planned; Gaylyn Kelly is leading a trip to Kenya for college students only on December 26-January 4, 2009!
  • In November, we are going to India for the first time to work with widows and children with the Hope For Today ministry, spawned by ILI.
  • One of our most popular trips is to work with the Life Academy kids in Timisoara, Romania and we go again on July 12.
  • Our Costa Rica Women’s trip is so popular that it is filled up and we are not going until September!
  • We are sorry to say, we had to postpone our Estonia trip until next year as we did not have enough people going at this time.
  • Looking ahead: the Honduras trip will be in July in 2009 instead of in the spring!

Sherry Reed

Compassion Into Action

June 4th, 2008 by randy

There is no “season” of Compassion Into Action! It doesn’t begin and end with certain dates. Sometimes I think people honestly believe that their Christian responsibilities and duties follow the school’s calendar. When summer rolls around, it’s quitting time!!

Last week, one of the first weeks of summer, we had to close three children’s Sunday School classes. The reason was not because of a lack of students, material, or space . . . it’s because of a lack of volunteer teachers. One mother was most upset when she was told that she could not drop her child off for Sunday School, unless she volunteered to help teach the class. She stomped and she fussed, “You can’t do this! Someone should have announced this policy from the pulpit” We did. “Someone should have publicized this in the bulletin!” We did. “Someone should have mailed postcards to communicate this need!” We did. “How can we rectify this situation?” Well, you can volunteer to teach your child! Why is it that some parents want, expect, even demand that someone else teach their child the Christian Faith? Every Baptized child’s parents have vowed before God to do what the church is begging them to do. Amazing. “Compassion Into Action” is the motto regarding our discipleship and missions ministries. It never rests and it begins with our own.

Consider what some are doing with “Compassion Into Action” this summer. Just last week, our Girl Scout Troop 2033 made 2,400 lunches for MUST Ministries. Soon, the Abundant Life Circle will be packing 1,200 more lunches. For 30 years, Mt. Bethel has provided volunteers for the MUST overnight shelter. (We need volunteers immediately for this ministry to continue).

Other “Compassion Into Action” ministries include the Hope Center Baby Thrift Store, the USO, youth mentoring projects, Foster Care support, knitting and quilting for those most in need, Any Soldier packing, Katrina rebuilding and St. Philip missions. In addition, mission trips are heading for Kenya, Romania, Costa Rica, Austria and Ecuador. Amazing!

I invite you to consider the place God has in your life. Many of us are living as if the Heavenly Father has died! Oh, we may believe with our hearts and minds that He is alive and well, but our actions and behavior say that, as far as we are concerned, He is dead. Look at your calendar, look at your checkbook. How much time and money do you spend on yourself? How much time and money do you spend on God? There’s your answer.

Perhaps you do not believe in the Devil? Jesus did. He said, “Get behind me Satan.” He wasn’t speaking to an imaginary friend. He was speaking directly to the temptation to put self before God. The tactics of the “Evil One” are very simple. In order to convert us away from Christ, all he has to do is keep us out of church, keep us out of the Bible, and keep us off of our knees. If he can accomplish two out of those three, he’s got us.
The Church is dependent upon two things if it is to survive and thrive, the Holy Spirit and willing hearts. How willing is your heart? Your involvement is putting “Compassion Into Action” is your answer.

That’s how I see it. What do you think?

Randy

Volunteering to serve at the MUST shelter

June 3rd, 2008 by mickey

Many of you may not know that Mt. Bethel is among the many groups committed to providing volunteers to stay overnight at the MUST shelter, The Elizabeth Inn. This can be one of our most personally rewarding volunteer tasks as we interact with and learn about people who are temporarily homeless. Unfortunately, it is often difficult to find members who will spend the night. Because or our large membership, MBUMC is committed to the 5th, 12th, and 20th of every month. We need to provide at least two people each night. It works great to have a man and a woman or a family unit.

My husband, daughter and I have all stayed there and can say that it is safe and painless, and an eye opening experience when we realized that many of these homeless are families with children!  Some people have a difficult time making it to work the next day after doing laundry for the guests most of the night, but we have many times a year when one or two of the nights are on the weekend!

As of today, most of 2008 has no MBUMC members signed up after June 20th! If you volunteer for this 10 or 12 hour service to some of Cobb County’s poorest, it promises to be more of a blessing to you than to them! to volunteer please email sueleit@mindspring.com or sherry.reed@mtbethel.org.

The Heart of Missions

May 14th, 2008 by carey

About a year ago I took on the responsibility of missions at Mt. Bethel and what a year it has been.  So many mission trips, so many missions ministries transforming lives and making a difference around the world.  Many new mission opportunities have been added such as our missional outreach to St. Philip church and partnering with the community of Kwambekenya in Kenya.  Even in the last two days I have met with a couple of missions ministries that we are looking at partnering with in the future.  For me it has had its challenges, but mostly it has been a wonderful whirlwind!

As I reflect of the past year all the amazing things God has done and all the exciting things that lie ahead on the horizon it has caused me to take a moment to stop and ask one simple question.

What is the heart of missions?  Is it mission trips, is it outreach to the community, what about evangelism or the life of service God calls every Christian to live?

Well, after any intelligent thought that I may have had ran out, which doesn’t take long,  I went where we always find the real answers of life, God’s word.

In 2 Cor. 13:4 we are told:  “For to be sure, he was crucified in weakness, yet he lives by God’s power. Likewise, we are weak in him, yet by God’s power we will live with him to serve you.

The heart of missions always goes back to the place of Jesus.  It goes to the place of His greatest sacrifice and our only hope.  The place of crucifixion.

It was at the very moment that Christ gave everything that we see a picture of the heart of missions.  Jesus teaches us that real life comes when we sacrifice our life for another.  When we die to us and live in Him.  I doubt that you are shocked by these words.  Most of you have probably heard them many times before.

The catch is to live it!  For me to give away my life and for you to give away yours is at the heart of missions.

We can help other people.  We can even do it at great personal sacrifice, but unless we give it away to Christ it won’t amount to much.  When we give away our life to Christ, we discover that His Spirit begins to transforms us and make us into more than we could have ever imagined. …Christ in you the hope of glory. (Col. 1:27)

When we have the life of Christ in us, we do the same thing He did, we give it away.

The heart of missions isn’t going some where or doing something, it is giving your life away to someone, Christ himself.

And as you do that He will send you there and you will serve Him here in the power of His Spirit and it really will make an incredible difference in your life and the life of the one you serve.

We in the missions department are committed to providing you opportunities to give your life away.

Ask God if he might want to send you on a mission trip this summer or fall or serve in a missions ministry right here in our community or in the U.S.

If God is calling you I want to invite you to call me and see how God might like you to give your life away.

God promises that anyone who gives their life away will have real life.  That’s what I long for, that is what I long to see in the life of this church.  The heart of missions it the real life God has for everyone who gives their life away.

Carey

Get in the Boat

May 2nd, 2008 by mickey

I went to Kenya with great trepidation. I thought that we would all be better served if we simply sent money to the people of Kwambekenya. No personal involvement for this boy. HOW WRONG I WAS!

It didn’t take me long to realize that what we are trying to do in Kwambykenya is for the long term - partnering with them to help them improve their lives with better education and medical care. The people there are wonderful. They have the Holy Sprit the likes of which I have never seen. They have very, very few material positions, and that is being generous. Life is a battle everyday and nothing is taken for granted. What they have, money can’t buy.

I saw sites in Nairobi and in the Kenyan countryside that one could only imagine: the slums, the trash, and the smell. All are seared in my memory. When I arrived, I kept asking myself, what in the world am I doing here? I am half way around the word and away from my family in a place that is totally unlike any I have ever been.

I met the people with the biggest smiles you could imagine. The children had runny noses, yellow eyes, and bare feet, but they had big, big smiles. Almost immediately, we formed a bond with these wonderful Christian people. We could not walk anywhere in the village without the children running up to us and grabbing both of our hands.

Steve Franks and I had the opportunity to worship at a very small church. Mary was our host. The service lasted for over two hours. The congregation sat on hard wooden benches; the floor was dirt. Steve and I sat in the chancel area with the minister. Needless to say the service was different than what Steve and I were accustomed to. During the service we were asked to speak. What an experience that was. Before I knew it, I was shouting Amen after every sentence! Their exuberance was catching.

We helped (and the optimum word here is help) lay a stone road to the site where the medical center will soon be built, thanks to the people here at Mt. Bethel. I have never had so much fun lifting heavy rocks! We worked side by side with the people from Kwambekenya. We formed what Randy called a watermelon line. We took our place in the long line and passed the rocks one to the other. The work went surprisingly fast. We laughed and groaned together. We all agreed that we would never move rocks like this at home, but we did it joyfully. By the time we left, the road work was complete and ready for the trucks that will come when construction starts on the one and only medical center for the village.

On Sunday after church, Mary, walked Steve and me back to the center of the village to hook up with rest of our group. When we got back on the main street, we stopped at a very small store. Mary insisted that she wanted to buy Steve and me a Coke. Knowing the circumstances of how very little they have, we told Mary that it was not necessary. She insisted. Mary told us that if she did not do this, she would have a hole in her heart for the rest of her life. We had the Coke and biscuits. Seems like a very small thing to us for her to do, but to Mary it was very necessary and also sacrificial. What a gift!

On our last day, we were again with my Mary. We went on a walking tour of the village. We visited a homeless shelter for the displaced persons that came to the village during the recent violence in Kenya. The villagers have very little, but they share out of Christian love with their neighbors.

We visited a home in which great grandparents were taking care of their great grandchildren. Seems the parents and the grandparents were dead. They were preparing a meal of maize and beans - the only one of the day! Their very small farms would only allow for one meal a day at this time of year. Out of love and gratitude, they shared that meal with Gaylyn Kelly, Annie Coppage and me. I Have Never Received SO MUCH FROM PEOPLE THAT HAD SO LITTLE. It left me wondering if I would do the same out of the plenty that I have.

One of our team members had a very costly pair of boots. We talked one day, and I asked him if he was taking them back home. His reply was,”Of course, they were very expensive.” We had met a man named Big John earlier in the week. As we prepared to leave Kwambekenya, my friend was standing outside the bus. In one hand, he was holding a bag full of clothes that he was leaving there and in the other hand he held his boots. He looked at the bag, and then he looked at the boots and said, “These are for Big John.” He placed the boots in the bag. Their sacrifice and loving nature was not lost on us. How could we do less?

I love the people of Kwambekenya. I was told before I left on the trip that I would receive far more than I gave. I thought that was a bunch of bunk. Wrong again! I received more than I could imagine. They shared with me, this boy of the south, this guy that has been very fortunate in life. This guy that that has been loved all his life. What did they give me? They gave everything. They showed me the face of Jesus!

I know mission trips are not for everyone. I know Kenya is not for everyone. But there are needs all over the planet. We send teams to Central and South America, to Eastern Europe, to the Gulf Coast and right here at home. There are needs right here within ear shot of Mt. Bethel. I have heard Randy say, “It is not either or;” we must do both. If you can’t go on a mission trip, send someone. The important thing is to get involved. GET IN THE BOAT! We can do no less!

Ben Hornsby