Mon 23 Jun 2008
Joey Ann Payne, Operations Manager at Global Aid Network’s warehouse/distribution center near Lancaster, Pennsylvania shares a brief update below about the Mission Packing Project that is taking place there, “It is going very well,” said Payne. “We needed to pack 5,000 CarePacks for Myanmar in just two days to meet the deadline of the trucks arrival. The volunteers really dug in and finished it. Now we have a close deadline on [packing] seeds for El Salvador and Gambia. We are pushing hard but need more volunteers.”
This youth group, shown in this photo, came from Christ Church of Roaring Spring, PA.
“We were looking for a mission trip that was economical,” Nancy Kletzing said. “This was close and the kids got really excited about it.”
Two boys and one girl worked with their pastor packing CarePacks for Myanmar. They had so much fun that they returned that evening to work more even though they had planned to stay at their host home and rest.
Their pastor, Joel Kletzing, was so proud of how his youth worked. “I had no idea they would work so hard here. They really enjoyed it. They are already talking about coming back next time.”
When they get back to their church, the kids want to present a DVD of the Mission Packing Project and their own stories to their church. Their group may be much bigger next Mission Packing Project!
Today a team of staff and volunteers loaded 202 wheelchairs into a container bound for Ukraine. This was a partnership with Wheels for the World.
These three couples work at the GAiN Warehouse year-around as coaches for the local school students here on job training assignments. They also turned out to help during the June Mission Packing Project. They are packing seeds for El Salvador.
Check back for more updates and information about what is happening at Global Aid Network’s Mission Packing Project.
DAY ONE:
DAY TWO:
April 28, 2008 – from Paul & Winona H.
Site #2 was on the 5th floor was just a mother and 19 year old son at home who needed a wheel chair desperately. The young man was very excited to have visitors. He wanted to talk about American Indians as he has great interest in them. His mother told us that he prayed for 2 months for someone to visit that knew American Indians or knew something about them. The young lad was over the top to know my name was American Indian and that I had family members that are 50% Indian heritage. He gave me a gift of a white eagle feather to remember him by. I told him we would never forget him and that God had planned before the foundations of the world that we would meet. To know this shows us how important it is to listen to God as He speaks to our hearts. We told the story of the bracelet and the mother and the boy were focused on the story. They understood the importance of what we said. They asked if we could leave a bracelet for the sister and for the grandmother that they wanted to tell her the story too!
April 28, 2008 – from Dave K.
In a little group that gathered around me, the ages ranged from 14 to 28 years old. We had a delightful exchange, as some wanted to discuss the Easter issues, while other talked about themselves and why we had come. Several students were clearly seeking. It was a mixture of faiths, but they were truth seekers just the same. We gave them the truth—the Gospel of Jesus Christ. We were glad that the Bible mission group is there to work with them because there are so few churches that preach the gospel in Almaty.
April 24, 2008 – from Dave K:
At the end of our stay, I asked if I could pray to ask God’s blessing for her facility and she agreed to let me do it. We also gave her several children’s Bibles and some More Than a Carpenter and the Gospel of John books. She said that she did not promise to read them, but took them anyway. Please pray that she will be very curious about what is in these books. The picture here shows the director in the white with her bracelet on and Lydia, one of our interpreters putting a bracelet on one of the precious children.
From Dave K.:
Scotty Z. (Junior at MCA): I really enjoyed serving God with my friends and two of the staff at my school. One of the unique opportunities that we had was to put on a basketball clinic at a school for middle school aged kids. This worked out really well because one of my basketball coaches came along on the trip. We also had about eight students who played on our varsity school team to assist in the clinic. This gave us a special opportunity to tell them of Christ’s love for them. Please pray for the students who heard the gospel that day as well as the coach who has heard the Gospel but has not accepted Christ as his personal Savior.