(She is in the red-striped sweater on the left at the back.)
Monday, March 31, 2008
Pray for Natasha
(She is in the red-striped sweater on the left at the back.)
Sunday, March 30, 2008
Smelly Feet
Friday, March 28, 2008
It ain't Hollywood, but it's fun!
To help build a strong relationship between ROL and CID, we decided to start a movie night on Fridays for the older kids at CID, and last night was our first adventure. Anya Tall (my Christmas visitor) has the movie Alvin and the Chipmunks, so she brought it for us to see; Lena (our house mother here) bought popcorn (my favorite!); and I went to CID to get the kids. There were 6 of them who had a "clean" record without any discipline problems for the week and they, along with their counselor Maxim, came to spend the evening with us.
We began with the movie AND POPCORN, which was a great hit. Then we played a new game I had brought on this trip called "Stacker Uno" which is much like the card game Uno, but using plastic cubes that are stacked in a tall tower (something like Jinga or is it Ginga??). Boy, these kids are real strategists and really competitive, and we had a lot of fun with it. We finished with dinner and a name game to help us all remember each other better.
One of the girls, Aleona (bottom row with hood - she hates having her picture taken and this is the only one I have of her), came into the kitchen and sat down to talk. She was sent away by her mother because they could not get along, and because she has a lot of health problems that cause her to be in and out of the hospital frequently. She told us that she had never seen an apartment like ours, and she had forgotten what a "home" looked and felt like. I don't know why this caught me at a weak moment, but I had to leave the room and let her finish her conversation with Lucya, because I didn't want her to see me cry. The loss of a mother, the loss of a home, and traveling from hospital to shelters for the past few years, with no place to call her own! It just became too much for me. Just imagine how unbearable it must be for her!
Please pray for Aleona and the other children and staff at CID. Also pray for us as we continue this new contact with the kids and that perhaps through the church families of our ROL family we can help find foster homes for some of these kids who do not quite "fit" into the orphanage profile here.
From Russia with LOVE!
Nancy
Pray for Valya
I have truly enjoyed getting to know these two young women over the last two weeks, and spent the night with them at their TH last night. After we had enjoyed some “girl” time together, Valya asked if she could practice the mime routine that she is to do while on her upcoming mission trip, since she had not done it in front of an audience in several months. Of course, I was thrilled – always up for a little entertainment!!! When she began to play the song and translate the words in Russian to Natasha so that she would understand the meaning of the gestures, I was excited to hear that it was Ray Boltz’s “Watch the Lamb.” I love this song, and if you have never heard it, stop now, go to any tunes website and listen to it – it truly depicts the story of Easter and reminds us that we should stop to watch the One who died for us.
This was also a special evening because Valya, who attends Bible college here in StP, leaves Saturday morning for a three week mission trip to the Congo in West Africa. It will take her three days travel to get to the village where their mission team will be trying to help a local pastor stop the influence of witchcraft over the people there. It will be hard work, but I know that Valya is up for the challenge, and we had a chance to have a special prayer for her this morning before I left their home.
Please pray for Valya as she serves God on this mission trip; pray for Natasha as she serves alone in the Reflections TH; and pray for all of us as we reach out to the orphans of StP to hopefully lead them to love us and want to come and join our families!
From Russia with Love!
Nancy
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
“Don't forget about us, Nancy”
I met Tanya a week ago. She came into the meeting to see “the American who is visiting.” She didn’t stay but a few minutes, asking a couple of questions, before she and two of the other girls left to go to dance class. She looks like a dancer – tall, beautiful, graceful. She also looks like a model – thin and elegant in her carriage.
Well, this past Monday night we talked a little about occasions when you might want to give a card – sharing what events are important in their lives and whether or not we celebrate these in America. Afterward, I gave them card with a piece of craft foil on which they could draw and color their own designs. Some of them struggled with how to begin, but Tanya grabbed her paper, came and sat by me on the bed, and immediately began to draw. It was a funny little cartoon character that she surrounded with hearts. After she had finished, she went over to Valya (counselor for Reflections of Hope Transitional Home and a former orphan herself) and asked Valya to help her write in the card.
After a few minutes of whispering back and forth, and several corrections, Tanya walked over, sat down beside me, and presented me with the card. I was so shocked – I guess I thought they would want to give the card to someone here in Russia who was special to them. Here is what I found inside the card:
“Nancy! Don’t forget about us Nancy and I wish to you all best!!! From Tanya”
I hugged her, thanked her, and assured her that I will never forget her; and I told her how special she had made the evening by presenting the card to me. I will cherish it always! These are the nights when I return home and cry myself to sleep!
Pray for Tanya and the other young adults at Dormitory #35, because these are the ones who have been classified as handicapped, whether physical (many are crippled, deaf, etc.) or mental (many are labeled as educationally handicapped). But despite all the labels that are placed on them, they are just kids yearning for someone to remember them, and I will do that for sure!
Nancy
Monday, March 24, 2008
Love at First Sight
Christ is Risen! (but not in Russia)
Yesterday, when I arrived at All Nations Christian Center (ANCC) for church, I greeted Lucya with the traditional Russian Easter saying "Christ is risen!" and she immediately replied "He is risen indeed!" Then she gave me a bewildered look and said, "But He didn't rise today." And I told her, "Oh, yes He did. He arose in America!" We both got a good laugh out of that, because of course, He didn't/doesn't arise in either.
ANCC is a wonderful congregation made up of mostly university students from all over the world. During the service, which was done in English and translated into Russian, I could hear translators around the room translating in Italian and other languages that I could not recognize. What a wonderful way to worship - all people, all languages - coming together for one purpose - to worship God.
The guest speaker at ANCC was an Englishman who currently resides in Scotland who was simply called Mr. Brian. He spoke on the peace and rest we find only when we come into the presence of God. He also reminded us that all too often we like to say, "I can do it!" And the devil loves that saying. What the devil doesn't want is for us to say "I can do it with God!" We must always remember the source of our strength, the source of our peace, the source of our rest - it can only be found in God.
We left church and went to lunch at Natasha and Valia's apartment on Nevskey Prospekt. They had hosted a number of children from Orphanage #51 over the weekend for visits and three of those children had gone to church with us. On the metro, in route to their apartment, one of the children, Laila, run to sit in an empty seat across from me and Lucya. She then saw an elderly "grandmother" (babushka) standing beside her seat; so she jumped up and offered the woman the seat. The woman motioned for Laila to sit back down and told her that God had blessed her with good, strong legs, and she preferred to stand on them as long as she could to honor Him. We all laughed and suddenly she turned to me, pointed her finger, and said "Who are you?" Lucya told her I was American/Engliski and the woman broke out into a big, toothless grin, and began to shout at me - "God has blessed you. I see God in your face. You are a blessing to these children. You are a blessing to me. God will use you." And on and on - and with each statement she was pointing her finger at me and getting closer and closer, and louder and louder. I just kept nodding and say, "Thank you. God bless you."
When we got off at the next stop, Valia came running over to me to ask if I was okay. I told her, of course, I was just receiving my second blessing of this wonderful Sabbath day - the first from the worship service, and the second from this unknown babushka. At first the experience was a little frightening, but then, as she shouted at me, and Lucya translated each phrase, I began to feel a sense of peace - she was truly offering me a blessing, and I certainly appreciate it.
I hope you received a blessing on Easter morning - and the rest of the day for that matter! I was thinking of you and your services, as you sang about our Risen Savior. Continue to remember us in your prayers.
We will minister to the young people at Dormitory #35 tonight, and will again be at Dormitory #70 on Thursday.
From Russia with love,
Nancy
It's more than just bowling!
ROL does this all the time. The homes are constantly inviting orphans from wherever they can find them to come and visit, come and play, come and let us love you. It all starts with building those relationships, and then when you've got them hooked - got them loving and trusting you - then you share Jesus with them. Trust is a big thing anywhere, but it's really the foundation of relationships in Russia. These kids don't trust just anybody, and you really have to work at it.
There are several kids at CID that I really feel God is leading us to - kids who would perhaps have a better chance at a better future through ROL and the family environment here. Please pray that God will give us not only the desire to win the trust of these kids, but the courage to step up and really get to know them, and bring them into His family.
From Russia with love,
Nancy
Sunday, March 16, 2008
We Have Arrived!
We were greeted at the airport by Vica, SAC's administrative assistant for this trip (and a friend of mine for 4 years!), Marina Topol (director of Road of Life), and some of our ROL family - Meisha, Anya (Little, not the Anya that was with me over Christmas), Natasha, Nelly, Sasha, and Oksana. Delivery of all materials went well, and we were home by 8pm. I was in bed by 10:30!! Had a great night's sleep.
Church service today was wonderful at New Generation Church. Pastor Demetri preached on the Holy Spirit, the authority of Jesus, and Jesus' command to us to be a witness. What did God touch my heart with today? Just that I have a witness that only I can give - my experience with accepting Jesus, what God has done in my life, how Jesus is MY savior. You cannot give my witness and I cannot give yours. So, bottom line, if YOU do not give YOUR witness, it WILL NOT be given. It's up to you - will you share your witness, your story, or will you be silent? How sad to think that after all God has done for us, we might not be willing to witness to others about those blessings.
He also reminded the people of what their forefathers had done for them - how many had died because they said, "Yes!" when asked by the communist government if they were Christians. They were willing to witness, even in the face of death. What a mighty heritage the Christian church in this country has for speaking God's name. I have never had to face death for Him, nor my forefathers in America; because America was established to prevent that from happening. How unfortunate that America is now moving more and more toward silencing God's word.
Pray for us as we begin our ministry. Monday through Wednesday we will be at Orphan Hospital #15 and Child in Danger Shelter for Orphans during the day, and will also be doing ministry in the evenings at several different sights. So when I leave home in the morning at 8:30 am, I will not see the front door of this home until 10:30 pm! It's a long, hard day, so keep us in your prayers. Also, pray that when the opportunities arrise, we will speak out with boldness to proclaim that Jesus is Lord! Praise Jesus (Slava Jesus - pronounced hey-soos, like in Spanish)!
I love you all and you too are in my prayers!
From Russia with Love! Nancy
Friday, March 14, 2008
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Jump Start
Oh, did you hear about the snow we got here in the Deep South!? It was wonderful - it didn't mess up the roads, but was just beautiful - even if only for 24 hours. I know the kids in St. Petersburg will get a hoot out of our "snow storm" - especially since they live in 3-foot-deep snow and ice throughout the winter season, with temps hovering around -10 to -30 degrees F. Like everything else, snow is relative to your environment.
Okay, enough about the weather (and my hair). My first team will be made up of myself and Dustin Clark from Huntsville, Alabama. Dustin will be familiar to you since he was also a part of my fall team last November. As soon as he got home, Dustin contacted me and said, "Ms. Nancy, will you take me back to Russia during spring break?" Of course, I said "YES!" And the rest, as they say, is history. So Dustin and I will have a busy week. Below is our schedule for the week:
Mon., Mar. 17 - Wed., Mar. 18:
morning at Hospital #15; afternoon at Child in Danger Shelter
We will be working each evening with young adults from both Dormitory #70 and #35. These dormitories are for kids ages 17-23 and are multi-story buildings that hold between 300-500 kids. We will be doing a large group activity on Tuesday night with about 135 kids at Dormitory #70, so keep us in your prayers. We, as Americans, are not allowed to share Christ with these kids while in the state-run facilities, but once we make friends with them, we invite them to small group fellowships at the Road of Life Family Homes where we can do Bible study and invite them to attend church with us.
Lots of opportunities for fun, fellowship, and making new frends, especially since I will be there for six weeks.