Yara*, a Syrian refugee, tells her story of her family’s escape from the civil war and how through the witness of the church, Yara came face to face with Jesus Christ.
- Read more about Yara's story
- Log in or register to post comments
Indianapolis District Nazarene Missions International
Yara*, a Syrian refugee, tells her story of her family’s escape from the civil war and how through the witness of the church, Yara came face to face with Jesus Christ.
Today, we sent home our second team of the year. The team was from Wichita First Church of the Nazarene. Wichita First has sent several teams to Honduras in the past. My first time working with them was back in 2008 when they brought a medical mission team to Tegucigalpa. Two of the team members from the 2008 team were on this construction team, Clay and Wayne. It was great to be able to serve with them again!
It’s that time of my two-year ministry cycle….to be on home assignment. I usually schedule these 3 months from January to March on even-numbered years. This allows me to be home for Christmas every other year and then I start the travels. This time around, I’m going to be in Arkansas, Alabama, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Missouri, California, Kansas, and Massachusetts. After my first weekend of services on the return to my parent’s home in Arkansas from Alabama, I and my mother drove through 4 states in the first 3 hours of the 8 hour trip: Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, and then Arkansas. (See below for the full schedule.)
Home assignment is….well, interesting, to say the least. I’ve now been in the States just over a month and I can just now go into Target and Wal-Mart without wanting to run like a scared rabbit (because I’m completely overwhelmed). I must admit that I love the 150 calorie birthday-cake pops at Starbucks (that the Starbucks in Bulgaria don’t carry). One of the first purchases that I made was at TJMax – my all-time favorite store – where I bought a suitcase and some running clothes (my pre-home assignment motivator to not put on 15 kilos while States-side). Some of my home assignment guilty pleasures are Sonic’s half-price strawberry limeades during their 2-4 pm happy hour and looking at the travel bottles, cases, and adapters in luggage sections of stores.
And so the traveling has begun…. January is a slower month (meaning that I only have services on the weekends) and that’s given me the opportunity to write the Sofia ministry center proposal with the vision, budgets, etc. In theory I’m also trying to do some content editing on the translation of Wesley’s Plain Account of Christian Perfection – maybe in February. Trying to keep up with all the correspondence for churches, traveling, and attempting to stay connected with what’s happening in Bulgaria is a balancing act.
It was a busy fall in Bulgaria. To get everything in order to come on home assignment, I worked hard to do the following:
So, the craziness just continues. 🙂
My goals for the year are: 1. to read the Bible through in Bulgarian, 2. to break ground on the Sofia Ministry Center, 3. to succeed at getting European Union grant money for some of our NCM projects, and 4. to publish fully all our 7 literature projects, and 5. to continue investing in ministry in the Lyulin quarter of Sofia where I live and where we’re going to build. 🙂
Blessings on you and may whatever craziness surrounds you never be able to overcome the peace that Christ offers,
Jess