The SAMS and Love for Life team returns

The SAMS and Love for Life team have returned safely from Argentina. They delivered the ‘Amor para toda la vida’ (Loving for Life) programme in schools and the programmes were very favourably received by young people, teachers, parents and church leaders alike. There was also the opportunity to network within the local diocese of Northern Argentina which Down and Dromore is linked with.

News from Pablo Ochoa

Hello everyone!

Just to let you know some news from Chile ! Here it is a wee wee wee 
summary about life here…

I’m doing well here, life is good.. God more than… and I think its 
time to visit the lovely NI pretty soon. I wish! I’ve been working in our mission called MOU (the yellow hoddie) and during last week we had more than 900 people on the streets sharing the gospel and learning lots of biblical things during 6 days.

Things at church are well, After MOU, so now…  I’m starting to work with the University group, not sure what we’ll do but praying for that, more ideas, knowledge and passion!

Family as always doing well, mom doing bible courses and coming to our family retreat in October… sister and brother in law taking exams because they want a baby but cant at the moment.. pray for them if you can.

If you didn’t know.. I resigned to my old job and now I started to work in a girls clothes company, called limonada (lemonade) as a operations manager, check it out ! www.limonada.cl, very girly stuff but my job is in logistic and  coordination so good enough.

During the mission, we had a group from London, 7 guys with us…  and one of them told me when we were talking…..  “you Pablo have a bit of Irish accent” !!! Ha ha ha is that good!

All my love for you all…  still remember all the good times with you and I really hope to visit you as soon as possible…

Let me know what about ya!!!

Hugs, blessings and love.

In Jesus

Naomi Francey reflects on her time in Argentina

Naomi Francey
Gilford Parish (Down & Dromore)

My Gap Year……..

Where to start? It is difficult to sum up nine months in Argentina through SAMS into 200 words, but I’ll try my best. My work involved working with kids clubs, soup kitchens, children’s hospital visitation, being a teacher assistant in a primary and secondary school and basically showing people the love of God in all that I did. Would I do it all again? YES!

I think that the highlight of my trip would have been working in a soup kitchen just outside the city of Salta where we fed the kids, helped them with their homework and played with them in the park. These kids were cheeky, funny and energetic. They also had patience with my lack of Spanish and were just great to be with. They came from the surrounding shanty town area and the love I had for them was so special. Their lives seemed so carefree, even though I’m sure some of them had many struggles hidden behind their smiles.

Argentina itself is a tremendous country; I loved it whenever I got the opportunity to travel. The Iguazu Falls bordering Argentina and Brazil were amazing, the geysers of Chile were breathtaking and the Bolivian countryside was so peaceful. Salta is a great city, surrounded by beautiful mountains and filled with people who have beautiful hearts. I know I have left many friends and a new family there and I will return when God wants me to go again, I hope it’s sooner rather than later!

Please continue to pray for the work of the church in Argentina and many thanks to the SAMS network.

Megan Johnston reflects upon her gap year in Argentina

Megan Johnston from Lisburn Cathedral reflects upon her gap year with SAMS in Argentina.

I spent nine months of my gap year in Salta, Northern Argentina as a volunteer with SAMS. I was based in a local Church called “El Redentor” where I was a leader of the children’s Bible study club. I participated in the weekly youth group and worked as the Pastor’s secretary. I taught in private and public schools helping as a language assistant, which you can imagine really opened up my eyes to the extremes in society. I had my own English classes, which were a real blessing during my time in Salta as I have no teaching qualifications, although it was encouraging to experience God’s hand at work. Please pray for my students as they still continue with my on-line English classes, that they would have an open mind to learn.

My time in Salta was significant as I learnt many things such as relying wholeheartedly on God. It was also character building and an opportunity to learn things about myself. Having made life-long friends and extended family in Argentina, I know that if God calls, one day I will return to Salta, it would also be exciting to see how much the people have developed and strengthened not only in their faith but also as a Church body. This is my prayer.

Red Box Project

CORE AIMS

• Support children’s and youth work

• Resource leadership training

• Develop language skills

• Facilitate the soup kitchen

• Enable educational sponsorship

God calls and sends us into our communities to participate in His mission. It demands identification without loss of identity: it means going beyond our comfort zones and entering other people’s stories, as Christ entered ours.

Reflections From Helen King

Reflections from Helen King (Shankill Parish, Lurgan) who has recently returned home from a gap year placement with SAMS in Argentina.

Dear SAMS Supporters
So, after 239 days and 6519 miles away from my house, family and friends I am finally home! After a lot of travelling and prayer I arrived in Salta, Argentina and the scary thought of spending almost 9 months away from home was soon replaced by my crazy schedule. In an average week I could be doing anything from working in the pastor’s office to helping at a Comedor (where children from a shanty town were fed by a local church) to leading Bible studies in Spanish or teaching English in a private school. Even though there were difficult times and plenty of tears, I wouldn’t have changed this year for anything!

A HUGE IMPACT
I would like to tell you about one woman I met who had a huge impact on my life. Her name is Daniela and she worked (unpaid) as a cook for around 30 children so that her own 5 children (all under the age of 9) would have food to eat. Apart from her children and her faith in God, Daniela has absolutely nothing. Her house is about the size of an average living room here, has a tin roof and has windows but no glass. She has no income and is on her own because her husband, who beat her so badly that she lost most of her teeth, left her when she was pregnant with the youngest child. I grew very close to Daniela and her children while I was working in the Comedor. Daniela’s faith in the amazing God we serve was such a witness for me. She was told by doctors that her two year old daughter Paula would never walk because she had been so badly malnourished as a baby, but Daniela and her church refused to give up on Paula and God answered their prayers. Little Paula started to walk about four months ago. However, several weeks before I came home, Daniela told me some heartbreaking news- Paula had just been diagnosed with a brain tumor and Daniela was in floods of tears because she did not have the money (the equivalent of £40) to pay for the first necessary treatment. She even considered selling her house as a way to get the money. Daniela told me that her previous few days had involved crying herself to sleep every night, being angry with God and then trying her best to be strong during the day for her children. She also told me that she didn’t understand why God would let this happen to her but she knew that he would get her through it and that He was with her. I cried in the bus on my way home that day. This story may make some of us uncomfortable but perhaps sometimes God allows us to see things that challenge us so we can do something to change them.

EYES OPENED
While I was away, a friend sent me a card that said “No man comes back from a journey the same person he went out” and I’m pretty sure that’s true of me! OK I’m still just under 5’2, I still love pink. I still love my food. I still love chatting to people. I’m still totally disorganized! However I’ve seen and learnt so many things this year that mean I can’t possibly be the same! God really opened my eyes this year and taught me a lot about myself, my relationship with Him and how I see other people.

A CHALLENGING BLESSING
I want to thank all of you who supported me in prayer during my time away. There were numerous times that I thanked God for his protection and for his answers to prayer. It was so nice to know that people were thinking of me and I really appreciated all the encouragement through letters, texts, parcels or emails while I was away. May I leave you all with this prayer given to me by Titch Hamilton (SAMS) before I left for Argentina.

MAY GOD BLESS YOU

May God bless you with discomfort
at easy answers, half-truths, and superficial relationships.
So that you may live deep within your heart.

May God bless you with anger
at injustice, oppression, and exploitation of people.
So that you may work for justice, freedom and peace.

May God bless you with tears
to shed for those who suffer pain, rejection, hunger or war.
So that you may reach out your hand to comfort them.

May God bless you with enough foolishness
to believe that you can make a difference in this world.
So that you can do what others claim cannot be done.

Helen King

Death of CMS Ireland Director Ian Smith

It is with deep regret that all of us in SAMS Ireland learned of the death of CMS Ireland Director Ian Smith. Ian worked closely with SAMS Ireland General Secretary Denis Johnston and was also a member of the Association of Mission Societies. Ian had been ill for some time and he will be greatly missed by us all. Our thoughts and prayers are with his wife Carol and the family.

Latest prayer letters and news

Some prayer letters and news recently received into the SAMS office:

SAMS Prayer Line for the week commencing Tuesday 21 July

Following their wedding on Friday and several months in this country, new mission partners Andy & Rose Roberts fly back to Brazil tomorrow to resume their work at My Father’s (safe) House for vulnerable boys in Olinda.  Pray for their journey, the work they will be taking up and their new married life together.

 

On Friday Paul & Sarah Tester, together with SAMS volunteer Rachel Hovenden, are members of a group from the Diocese of Peru’s Youth Ministry taking part in a mission trip to the southern city of Juliaca in the Andes, in support of the new church plant there.  They will be leading a children’s holiday club, running youth activities and helping to evangelise the local area.  Please pray for the health and wellbeing of all involved (especially bearing in mind the spread of swine flu in Peru), for God to use those involved to share his gospel, and for many to respond and choose to follow Christ. 

SAMS will be represented at both New Wine events this year, starting on Saturday.  The one at Shepton Mallet lasts for two weeks, the Newark event for one week.  Pray for those staffing the displays, including Richard Crofts, Tim Greenhalgh, Bob & Elizabeth Lunt  and Brazilian volunteer Felipe Canuto.

 

Sons of mission partners are on the move this week: John Meldrum returns to Brazil today (his parents Ian & Siméa travel in a fortnight) and Tomás Leake, son of Andrew & María, arrives in the UK from Argentina on Saturday.  Tomás will fly on to Australia in early August for a gap (part)-year before university in Córdoba, Argentina.  Pray for these travellers and their families.

 

Finally, former SAMS missionary Peter Wood died last week.  Peter served in Viña del Mar, Chile, from 1963-1972; the funeral is on Friday in Norfolk, with Bishop Pat Harris giving the address.  Let’s give thanks for Peter’s life and ministry and pray for the family at this time.

Annaghmore Team Returns From Argentina

“The breeze of divine grace is blowing upon us all. But one needs to set the sail to feel the breeze of grace”.

The ‘Beyond the Norm’ programme aims to give participants the opportunity to encounter South America within a supportive environment. It creates new experiences, new opportunities and new challenges. It provides the setting in which volunteers experience mission and cultural diversity first hand. Within unfamiliar surroundings participants wrestle with numerous issues and gain a better understanding of their own cultural norms.

We are all prisoners, consciously or unconsciously, of our own culture. Travelling 6,000 miles to South America is never the most significant part of the journey. SAMS hopes and prays that every participant is challenged and from past experience we envisage that volunteer’s worldviews will be impacted. Our worldviews are shaped by numerous influences. These include a combination of factors such as the culture of which we are a part, our education, parenting, family, life experiences, and friendships. On arriving in South America a person’s ways of deciding, thinking and communicating will differ from that of the local people. Having limited knowledge of the language and being in a country for a short period of time doesn’t stop a person experiencing ‘a clash of worlds,’ when patterns of behaviour, social structures and cultural expressions differ. The fusion of experiences creates a unique opportunity to see and hear things differently as the baggage of western consumerism is lifted for a short period of time.  

Before the Annaghmore team travelled to South America I was quietly confident as I knew the skill base was extremely high. I wasn’t disappointed as the 12 lads definitely produced the goods on the two building sites and their work rate was exceptional. But projects are much more than laying blocks and sometimes on teams people can miss out on the relational side. Thankfully the Annaghmore team embraced the relational side of the project just as much as they grasped the practical side. It was an encouragement and privilege to share with them as they interacted with the local people. They worked in challenging situations, ate there fair share of dry bread, stood under numerous showers that didn’t work, kipped in some suspect beds, and never once did they complain.

The team worked within different building methods and even though they had more skill that many of the people they worked with from the host country, they never pointed the finger and told local people how to do things, they showed respect to the community and valued everyone who worked alongside them.

I probably don’t need to tell you that the lads didn’t let me down when it came to eating everything that was placed in front of them! I could say so much, but maybe the local pastor in the church summed up the imprint the team made as he shared with me that for generations the story of the Annaghmore team would be passed on as one of the best gifts that God had given them.

This team was worth its weight in gold and every team member was authentic in all they did, and excellent ambassadors for their local parish and community.

Geoff Hamilton
Team Leader

Claire’s News Summer 2009, from Paraguay

Dear Prayer Partner,

How are you? I hope you are well. Thank you for all your continued prayer and support. Alot has happened since my last letter. I should write more often! The first bit of news is that I have decided to leave Paraguay and return home at the end of the year. As a lot of you know, I have been thinking of this and praying about it for a long time but wasn’t sure. Thank you for your prayers concerning that. It took me a while to be sure but I believe now that it is the right decision and I have peace about it. I told the leaders first and yesterday Bishop Andres told the rest of the church so it is all official. There were lots of tears yesterday so that is the start of it. It won’t be easy leaving people after 9 years, but I am looking forward to coming home too – family, friends, oh and nice chocolate every day.

Click here to read Clare’s News Summer 2009 …

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