« February 2009 | Main | April 2009 »

March 31, 2009

Pong's Baptism

Saturday was a very joyful day for our team as we were able to participate in the baptism of our friend Pong. Pong is a friend of our teammate Eder. He has been attending a Thai church in Bangkok as well as having Bible studies with Eder and meeting with our Tuesday night Thippawan group. He recently expressed a wish to be baptized and we joined him in celebrating his new life on Saturday night.....

group in room.JPG
Meeting together to sing and hear about the meaning of baptism before our walk to the canal.

Bhudda.JPG
We walked through a Buddhist wat to the canal behind it.

bridge.JPG

DSC_0173.JPG

baptism.JPG
Pong was baptized in the klong (canal) by his friends Eder and Pon (who was baptized last summer).

group at baptism.JPG
We also blessed Pon by prayer and string tying. It was a very joyful moment for everyone who witnessed it and we praise God for the work he is doing in Pong's life!

-C

March 28, 2009

New Life

DSC_0029.JPG

We continue to be blessed and encouraged by our weekly meetings with our home church here in Thippawan. We are excited by all the new life we see. Over the past few weeks, several new people have come, one of whom has asked to be baptized (Pong, a friend of Eder will be baptized tonight). It's interesting to study the Bible with a mixture of seekers and new believers and to see how God is working in them and bringing about changes in their lives. We are amazed when we think about how God brought about this group and we give him all the glory because he is the one who made it all happen. It's exciting to work in partnership with our believer friend, Yupim and to see her taking leadership of the group. Please continue to pray for us on Tuesday nights (that's your Tuesday mornings if you live in the States). Pray for the Holy Spirit's power in our meetings. Pray that as the interns leave (who are friends with some of the people who have begun coming)...that we will be able to follow up and stay connected with those friends. Pray that God's glory will be revealed and that they will experience him as a friend and as a living Father. Pray for the power of forgiveness. In our last meeting we had a very meaningful talk about the need for forgiveness and it deeply affected some who are considering what it means to follow Jesus.
Thank you for remembering our Tuesday nights.

-T & C

March 23, 2009

Tawai Baan

On Sunday we celebrated a Tawai Baan at our new team-member, Colleen's house. Colleen has been here for around a month now. After an initial few weeks of living with a host family, she is now busy studying Thai in Bangkok and recently moved into a new home. An intern on our team, Anita, will also be moving in with her. A Tawai Baan is a common Thai tradition of blessing a house- usually performed by monks. We have adapted this practice and the practice of string tying as a way to give a Christian blessing to a new home.

DSC_0012.JPG
There was good food as always! One unique one we tried was a drink of some sort of black gelatin cubes in a very sweet brown sugar ice liquid. It was described as being a drink that is very good for you to drink when it's hot. Well, it's hot!

DSC_0009.JPG
One of the friends who came is Wanna- she's a sushi vendor so we got so sample her delicious product!

DSC_0017.JPG
Eder, Pong, and Wanna sing Thai worship songs. It's always such a blessing to worship with Thai friends, in Thai ways.

group.JPG
Blessing Colleen's home with scriptures.

Seri and Colleen.JPG
Our friend and landlord Seri who has been attending our Tuesday night home church, came along with us. Here he is performing the string tying ceremony with Colleen.

DSC_0041.JPG
Meanwhile, the girls had fun outside playing with their bubble guns, a gift from Colleen.

Silas sits.JPG
And Silas enjoyed lots of attention, dancing with the ladies and sitting up looking like a big boy in a chair. He is getting better and better at sitting up, but can still plop over to one side or the other pretty frequently. At home we practice by putting him in a pen of cushions so he doesn't fall over on our very hard tile floor!


We are so happy to have Colleen here as a long term member of our team! Excited to see what God will be doing through her friendships!

-Candice

March 18, 2009

A Pleased Pet Owner

DSC_0049.JPG
Meet Lenny Mast.

DSC_0033.JPG
After Eliza's trip to Mae Sot and her newfound discovery of a love of animals, she began insisting that it was time to own her Very Own Pet. Daddy was not very hard to convince so yesterday afternoon, off they went to the pet shop.

DSC_0045.JPG
Silas is quite (over)excited over the baby bunny as well. He grins every time his little hands touch that soft fur. But we have to let him have a quick touch and then snatch poor Lenny away before he gets mauled by grabby little hands.
So far, Lewis is adapting to his new friend fairly well- seems more scared than aggressive around the new guy.

-Candice

March 17, 2009

"My Nabr Hid" by Claire

Claire drew a map of our neighborhood today and we thought it would be fun to share it with you....

map.JPG
And here's a little map key for you:

At the top, in pink is "my has" (my house).
Coming down from that is a street and a soi dog (street dog).
Below that, designated with an "N" is the Noodle shop where we often eat.
In purple at the bottom is "has con calis" (Ulai's house)
At the top is our street sign (it says 10/2 or sip song (the Thai number is actually 10-2 meaning 12.)
Below the sign are three taxis.
To the right is the map title "My Nabr Hid" (My Neighborhood).

Claire is really taking off reading lately and loves to guess how to spell and write in her journal and notes to us. She wrote a note to Silas the other day inviting him to a tea party. It said "Cim to my te pre Silas!" So much fun to see her enjoying reading and writing.
DSC_0072.JPG
She is enjoying her school break right now. She and Eliza will both start summer school in April.

-Candice

March 14, 2009

Traveling with Eliza

Last week Eliza and I accompanied the REACH team on a trip to northwestern Thailand. We taught at an English camp and visited several villages in an area along the Myanmar border that is home to the Karen tribal group. It was a good trip - the camp was a success and I think that all of us learned more about Thailand. Unfortunately, I took along a camera that didn't work so I came home with only a few pictures that the REACHers kindly let me take with their cameras.

maesot09_camp.JPG
The camp was held at a church in the town of Mae Ramaat. Fifty some kids attended and the REACH team did a great job of organizing a fun combination of teaching, crafts, games, and songs. I did some translation, ran errands, and helped with just a little bit of teaching.

maesot09_eliza.JPG
After the camp we spent several days in some more remote villages. In this picture Eliza is posing with a Karen woman in a very remote village where we attended a wedding ceremony. The ceremony itself was disappointingly Westernized - complete with a ring bearer and bride in a white veil. Odd features included a maid of honor dressed exactly like the bride (including the white veil) and at least two guests crashing to the floor after unsuccessfully trying to sit on plastic chairs that were missing one leg. We only arrived at the village after a nerve-wracking trip over an incredibly steep and rutted mountain road that was made even worse by a rickety truck and a driver who failed to inspire confidence.

We also got to experience at least a little bit of the more mundane life in the villages as well. We slept under mosquito nets in houses on stilts and I even got to try the traditional way of bathing - outdoors on the porch while wrapped in a sarong. It's always good for me to be reminded that Thailand consists of so much more than Bangkok. Village life has formed the basis of Thai culture. The developed, frenetically paced Bangkok is a much more recent addition.

maesot09_villagers.JPG
Another village we visited was right on the river that separates Thailand and Myanmar. We spent some time with some Karen Christians and also visited a settlement of Karen people who have moved in from Myanmar in search of work. This area is close to a large camp that was recently visited by Angelina Jolie. While she was there she made some comments that were not well received by the authorities. When we stopped by that camp we were told we couldn't enter or even take pictures because of the minor uproar she had caused.

maesot09_pig.JPG
Eliza did a great job on the trip. She had to put up with a lot of attention from strangers, strange food, and long, hot truck rides. She also developed a new appreciation for animals - discovering that she's not afraid of cats and that she really likes to feed pigs.

We got back home very early on Friday morning and have enjoyed a couple of relaxing family days since then. The REACH team, meanwhile, is continuing their tour of the country. They'll spend the next week in Chiang Mai and then head to northeastern Thailand for another 10 days or so.

-Tom

March 11, 2009

More Travels

Tom and Eliza.JPG
I'm very late in doing this blog! Tom and Eliza are actually returning in just a few days from their trip to Mae Sot near the Burma/Myanmar border. Here they are getting ready to take off on the overnight bus last Wednesday night. Eliza was quite excited to pop out of bed and hit the road!

I've been in touch with Tom off and on over the past week. The first three days, he and the Reach team were doing an English camp for about 60 kids. They seemed to all really enjoy it and Tom said the Reachers did a great job teaching, doing crafts and games, doing Bible skits, etc. It really helped that they have had so much teaching experience already in a Thai school. After the three days of camp, the team and Tom and a Thai friend, Manat headed out to experience some villages of mostly Burmese/Karen people. They were able to stay with hosts in a village one night and even got to attend a wedding!

In the meantime, Silas, Claire and I have been holding down the fort here in Thiappwan. We've had some meetings at home, gone out a few times to the library, doctors appointment, and shopping, but mainly we've been here at home. It's been nice to have a quiet week and lots of time to hang out with Claire. We do miss Tom and Eliza and are very excited for their return on Friday!! Please pray for safe travels home for them! After my retreat and then this trip just a few days later, we are very eager to spend time together as a family again.

-Candice