Sunday, November 4, 2007

They've Left

Last Friday, Quami, Eddie and Massah returned to Sierra Leone. It was sad to see them go, but I know that it is best for them. They were actually ready to go. It's easy to think that they wouldn't want to go home, but home is still home and they were ready to get back to a familiar place and away from this cold.
On Thursday night we had a Farewell Party for them and they got up and shared a little about there experience in America. Eddie talked about the first time he used an automatic flush toilet, how he was looking, looking and then all of a sudden it just flushed! Then he went to wash his hands and he was looking for a way to open the tap, but he just put his hands under the faucet and it came on! It was much funnier hearing it from his perspective. And Massah shared about going to Disney World in her best Valley Girl attitude, which she picked up while she was here!
It was wonderful to have them here and seeing them go just made me want to go with them all the more. But I know God has called me to be here right now, so I will stay!

I'm Surrounded by Liars!

Everyone I know has proved themselves to be very good liars this past week! Let me explain...

Last weekend(10/27) we had our final COTN Benefit and it was here in Bremerton. It was quite an exciting event since my family was going to be there and also John's family, but no John. Yes, I was to handle the meeting of the families all by myself. However, surprise, surprise, John was there. He flew in the night before and showed up at the benefit! Apparently, everyone knew but me. I just didn't realize they were all such good liars, especially Kelsy, usually I can get anything out of her! Anyway, it was great fun and I'm glad that I was surprised!

Thursday, October 25, 2007

"I like reading your blog, but I have one request... You need to write in it more!" Sarah Saunier


Okay, okay I know I'm not very good at this!!! I've been told that I'm still in the 16th century when it comes to all the new technology stuff. I remember hearing something about our generation being remembered for the "you tube" revolution and I had just recently heard about it. Maybe it's true, I'm behind the times. But rightfully so, I was away from all this for a year!


This last weekend I had a reunion with my dear friend and partner in Sierra Leone. We finally got to re-attach the string we had between us for a whole year! Even if it was only just for the weekend. Sarah came up mainly to visit Quami, Massah and Eddie(it's okay, I know where I stand) but we also got to spend some good time together. It was weird to see her here because we've never really been together in the States at all. We were both so clean, and not sweaty, and we didn't have any children hanging off of us.



We met up with Sarah on Friday and took the kids to the Library in downtown Seattle(what a great library, I think I could spend hours there). It was a lot of fun and I think the first time the kids and Quami had ever been in a library. They had a great time reading all the books and trying to get us to read the books that were written in Japanese! Afterward, we went to lunch at Red Robin. Sometimes it is still strange to see these kids just walking down the street in downtown Seattle!



Saturday we went to the aquarium. When the Sierra Leoneans were in California for our benefit, they went to Sea World, so needless to say, the aquarium was not that exciting. But it's just great to spend time with them. They will be leaving soon, so I'll take all I can get!


It was great to catch up with Sarah and for all of us to be together. I must admit that all the Sierra Leone talk made me miss it a lot. Sarah is planning on leading a teacher team down in June and she's asked me if I would co-lead with her. I know this would be blast, but we'll see what happens.




This weekend we have our final benefit in Bremerton and then the benefit season is officially over! I'm excited for things to get back to normal, or maybe this is normal, I'm not really sure! My parents and Kelsy will be attending so I'm excited for them to see what I've been up to and to learn more about the other faucets of Children of the Nations.

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

I Did Mt. Townsend!



On Monday I got to celebrate Columbus Day(which I haven't done since third grade), with the day off! A lady I work with, Robbin, invited me to go hiking. So we hiked to top of Mt. Townsend, starting at 2,880 elevation and ending at 6,280! It was quite a hike, but the view was absolutely gorgeous and it was actually sunny! Once at the top we could see Mt. Rainer, Mt. Baker and Glacier Peak, incredible. Along the way we met up with the Retired Hikers Club, so when we were feeling a bit tired and wanted to rest, they pushed us on. Geez, I hope when I'm in my 60's and 70's I'll still be able to do things like this. It was just a beautiful day, enjoying God's creation and getting to know Robbin better.

Thought for the Day

Last night I was reading and this thought kind of "popped" in my head...
Because our God is a relational God and He desires to have relationship with us, do you think that maybe He is speaking to us all the time and we lack the wisdom or the ears to hear Him? If that is true, how much of His guidance and direction, we in our humanness must miss.

Saturday, October 6, 2007

The Loss of a Dear Friend

This past Wednesday night, my dear friend and pastor, died, due to complications with a post-op hernia. Last week, Pastor went in for surgery on a strangulated hernia, a few days later he went in again because he was having internal bleeding and infection, he never recovered. Pastor Sorie Morrah, 31, is survived by both his parents and siblings.

Sorie grew up in a Muslim home, but as a youth, started attending a Good News club, which is a outreach program. It was there that he made a decision to surrender his life to Jesus. After this he started recieving severe persecution from his family--he would be the last to eat(if he got to eat at all), while his brothers and sisters would get new clothes, he would get none, his parents even stopped paying his school fews, but thank God for a local pastor who took Sorie under his wing and paid his fees and was a life-long mentor for Sorie.


As Sorie graduated high school, he wasn't sure what he wanted to be doing, but he knew he didn't want to be a pastor, because the life of a pastor is very difficult financially, especially in a third world country. But again his mentor encouraged him and helped him get some training. In 2005, Pastor Sorie was hired by Children of the Nations to be a pastor at our Church of the Nations in Marjay Town, Freetown. Within six months, he was sent up to Banta Mokelleh to start a church in an area that is 95% Muslim, to a village setting where life is vastly different from the Freetown life he grew up in, to a people who speak the native language, Mende, and very few speak Krio, Sorie's language. As the COTN vehicle drove off and left him there, he went into his room and started crying. He prayed, "Lord, if this is your will, just give me peace, that's all I'm asking." Moments later he fell into a deep sleep, but when he woke up there was a knock on the door, and a man outside. He said, "Let me take you to where you can get water, I'm going to be your friend," and at that moment Pastor Sorie knew, "this is going to be alright."


The next two years, Pastor Sorie devoted his life to those people, bringing the light of Christ into a dark, dark place where spiritual strongholds like witchcraft and voodoo have reigned. However, when light is brought to a dark world, there will be opposition, the last six months of Pastor Sorie's life, he has been battling one spiritual attack after another. Lies had been spread around the village destroying his honor and credibility and created division amoung the COTN staff members and the people of Banta Mokelleh. But never once did Pastor Sorie fight back, he continued to greet and be friendly to the very people who started these lies, praying for them unseizingly.


He will never know the difference he made in the lives of the people of Banta Mokelleh or the lives that he has touched with all the people he has come in contact with. Pastor Sorie was the most honorable man I met in my entire year in Sierra Leone. To me, he is such an example of Christ, not once did he retaliate when he received opposition, not once did he ever question his faith; throughout his whole life he stood firm for the Lord and what he believed. This is the kind of faith we are all called to. I thank God for the amazing gift of having been able to meet such a man as Pastor Sorie Morrah.


Since Pastor's Sorie's convertion as a youth, one by one, each of his family members have surrendered their lives to Christ. Please pray for his mother, as she is still a practicing Muslim.


"Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! In His great mercy he has given us new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, and into an inheritance that can never perish, spoil, or fade--kept in heaven for you, who through faith are shielded by God's power until the coming of the salvation that is ready to be revealed in the last time. In this you greatly rejoice, though now for a little while you may have had to suffer grief in all kinds of trials. These have come so that your faith--of greater worth than gold, which perishes even though refined by fire--may be proved genuine and may result in praise, glory and honor when Jesus Christ is revealed. Though you have not seen him, you love him; and even though you do not see him now, you believe in him and are filled with an inexpressable and glorious joy."

1 Peter 1:3-8

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

A Trip to Banta

This weekend we made the big trek to Spokane and even up to Chewelah! It felt so far that we were joking that we were going to Banta, minus the bumpy roads and breakdowns on the way!

We had a great time. Quami and kids rode horse for the first time.


Saturday we visited Tejan and the family he is staying with. It was a long awaited reunion for Tejan, he had been anxious to see them for weeks.

Sunday they had an exhausting day of speaking at three church services, but they did a great job. They will also be speaking at our benefit dinners coming up next month, so this was great practice for them.
It was so nice to be in Spokane and see friends and family, but I realized how much I miss Spokane. There is something so comforting about familiar. Don't get me wrong, Silverdale is great, but I'm kind of tired of getting lost or not see a familiar face. Well, what can I say, I'm just a Spokane girl!

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Visit to Spokane

This weekend I will be traveling with Quami, Eddie and Massah to my home! I'm really excited for them to see where I come from. Saturday we will be in Chewelah and hopefully they will get a chance to ride horses and see another part of our country. They will be speaking at all the services at New Community on Sunday(9am, 11am, 5:30pm). This will be an amazing service. Please pray for them, as they are still adjusting to being here and that they are able to communicate their stories even though there is a language barrier.

Praise the Lord!

The final count is in, Sierra Leone has officially sworn in the new President. The opposing party, All Peoples Congress, has won the election. We praise God for the peaceful execution of this election. And we pray that this new leadership will be a time of change and development for the country.
"For if you are trying to make yourselves right with God by keeping the law, you have been cut off from Christ! You have fallen away from God's grace." Gal. 5:4
I read this verse yesterday and for me it served as a great reminder. I think a lot of times we can get caught up in "doing." We think we must do something in order for God to accept us. What a mistake that is. In our attempt to earn God's love, we are taking Christ from the cross and saying that that sacrifice didn't quite cut it. Instead we should live in the freedom that God's grace provides for us. The more grace we accept from God, the more grace we can extent to others.

Sunday, September 9, 2007

A Visit to the Big City


This weekend we had a family friend getting married in Tacoma, so my mom came over and stayed with me here in my new home. Our dear friends, the Asbjornsens, came also. On Saturday my mom, Sue and I took the ferry over to Seattle and spend the afternoon wandering around near Pike Street Market. Seattle was hosting two football games on Saturday, UW vs. Boise State and WSU vs. San Fran. It was fairly busy and we saw many fans. It was a beautiful day and we enjoyed our time, but when it came time to get back on the ferry, I was ready. I decided that I really like having the option of having Seattle close, but not actually living there!

Long Time

Yes, it's been a long time and I bet some of you were wondering if I was actually going to keep this up. But I am, I was just waiting until I got settled in in my new place and job.

So here I am! I moved to Silverdale last weekend and worked all last week. It's a bit scary moving to a new place that I've never been, having to get directions to everywhere I might want to go, learning where the grocery store is, etc. Anyway, I'm here and happy.


I'll give you a recap of the last few weeks. The third week in August I visited John in Oklahoma!! Wow, what a beautiful state, I think there is one mountian/hill and a few fields!! Actually, it isn't that bad, it is beautiful in it's own way. John's thoughts on the state are, "there really isn't anything wrong with OK, but there isn't anything good either!" But was great to spend some time with him and see his world. We ended up driving a lot, I think I saw all the highlights of the great state. We went to Vance AFB where he was for most of last year and then to Oklahoma City, okay I guess we missed Tulsa, but oh well!


As soon as I got back I was busy packing and getting ready to move. However, I did get to see Tejan, one of the kids from our home in Marjay Town. He is in the states for surgery that will take place this Wednesday, so please be praying for him. It was crazy to see him here. It was just like my two worlds were colliding, so it was a bit strange at first, but it was really great to see him and spend some time with him. He said his favorite part is having lights all the time!


Last Sunday I moved and it's been fun settling in to a job. I don't think I ever imagined that I would have an office job, but you know, God can call us into some pretty interesting places sometimes.

Next week we are expecting Quami Agbermodji, Eddie Kamara and Massah Kamara to join us for our benefit season, starting in October. I know Eddie and Massah have the same last name but they are not related by blood. I am really excited to have them here and I will actually get to help host them while they are here.

I also wanted to give you an update on the election status in Sierra Leone. They have had a run-off between the two top candidate, since no one met the 55% of votes the first time around. The country has been a bit tense through this time, but the majority of people want to keep it peaceful, so hopefully it will be. You can keep that in your prayers. If you are interested in hearing more, this is a link to some recent news. http://news.bbc.co.uk/player/nol/newsid_6980000/newsid_6984700/6984760.stm?bw=bb&mp=wm&asb=1&news=1&ms3=54

That's a lot of random tidbits from my life recently, but hopefully this will get more organized!

Saturday, August 11, 2007

My first post...
And I'm sorry it's not more uplifting.
Today is election day in Sierra Leone. Please pray for peace among the people. There are seven candidates running, none of whom would be good leaders, but the winner must win by 55%. If no one gets this precentage of votes, they just keep doing it over and over again. I am guessing that this will happen at least once, but my concern is if it keeps happening, what will this do to the people and when will it stop.
I think about how easy it is to vote in the states and just knowing that the election will be carried out fairly and we don't give peace a second thought. But for Sierra Leoneans, many did not even register to vote because they feel that the votes will not be counted correctly, or there is a good candidate to vote for so why vote, or living with the fear that this election could throw them into another civil war. Many times I hear people complaining about our government and I just wish that they knew how good they really have it.

Just a little background for you.
Please keep these people in your prayers today and these next few weeks.

If you would like more information please visit the below site...

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/6941558.stm