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A Tale of Three Churches

There once were three churches. These churches were established some time ago, most long before you and I were born. Someone had a vision, and planted them. They’ve each grown, thrived, waned and grown again….some over a 100 year history.
While each church has similarities, each is unique…like each of us. One church, Central Presbyterian, became a second home for a small, petite girl with a big name…Anne Barajikian. This church taught her in Sunday School, provided VBS each summer, gave her lots of opportunities to serve in music, allowed her to meet her heroes, missionaries from around the world, and most of all, stood up for the principles of God’s Word in the midst of a prominent town.

The second church, Dix Hills Evangelical Free Church, was home for this girl’s grandparents. While newer than the other two, it has made its place in Dix Hills and the surrounding area, growing in leaps and bounds. This church allowed this girl, now a teenager, to sing with her school and start ministering at a young age.

Church number three, First Baptist Church of Brewster, allowed this teenager, now grown up with children of her own, to minister in music as well as the children’s ministry. It nurtured her young family as they made their first steps toward joining a mission that would take them far away from their home country.

Central has used it’s “central” location and opened its doors to the arts. Many Sunday afternoons, beautiful opera music sounds out in their vast sanctuary. Many people who would not normally pass through a church door, now come to hear the music that they love in a new place. Thursday afternoons, Central hosts a children’s club which ministers to the neighborhood. While these may not be traditional events for a church, they are ministering to the people around them in a most perfect way.

Dix Hills, who allowed a young teenager sing on its stage, has continued the tradition of nurturing the youth to take leadership positions. The youth group runs VBS entirely on its own for a local church closer to the city. The next generation is being prepared to serve their God in a unique way.

Brewster, is trying something new….VBS on Sunday! Who doesn’t like VBS? Encouraging local children and their families to come to VBS on the most traditional day of the week to worship will show them that Brewster Baptist is a great place to be every Sunday of the year.

And so, each church takes its place in New York. Similar, yet unique. And each one is our partner…they come alongside us as we minister with Wycliffe with both prayer and finances. And they get to rejoice when God’s Word becomes available in the heart language of another people group.

But we are their partners too! So I get to rejoice after each concert, on Thursday afternoons, and at the close of another VBS. Because I’ve partnered with them as they have served. And we all lived happily ever after!

(Thanks for allowing us to come and share with you this month! We love you all!)

Mom, sister Lois and Barbara Walling (Central), Walther and Shirley Reeves (Central), Mr. and Mrs. Tobiason (Central), Sam and Ashley Sutter – great hosts and servants at Dix Hills.Susan Tobiasin and Faye Maynard (Central), Pastor Rick Julian and McKelvie Wilder (Brewster), Central’s Praise Group, Central’s Pastor Aldridge, Paige, from Central.

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Posted by on July 29, 2011 in Anne, Family, Ken, Wycliffe

 

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To my “home town”!

Anne acting silly on a Smart Car in Frankfurt, Germany.

I, Anne, have returned from my latest trip to Germany. I had the opportunity to work in the office, planning some meetings for the Fall, as well as participate in our twice yearly staff meetings. Like me, half of our staff work remotely from our office which is in Germany. A few staff came as far as South Africa! So it is always nice to connect with our group, pray for each other and make sure our strategies are aligned as we served our partners in Europe.

Tomorrow, we take off for New York! We’re both excited to get back to Long Island where I grew up. I have such good memories of my childhood. I had a great family, good neighbors and my family and I attended a wonderful church called Central Presbyterian Church. As the saying goes, “If the doors were open, we were there.” We had lots of opportunities to serve at Central and most of the time it was in the music ministry with my dad greatly involved in missions. Two of my loves!

So this Sunday, July 17th,  we’ll be speaking at Central in the morning. Friday, July 22nd, we will be visiting the First Baptist Church of Brewster, a fantastic church we attended for five years. The next Sunday, July 24th, we’ll be speaking at another wonderful church, Dix Hills Evangelical Free Church. This is the church where my grandparents, Norman and Martha Clayton, worshiped when in New York. They, too, have stood by us for many years as we’ve served either with Children’s Bible Fellowship or Wycliffe Bible Translators. We’ll be doing a presentation we’ve entitled, “Looking Back, Charging Forward” to highlight our last 20 years with Wycliffe and the people who have made it possible.

Hope we can see some of you there! Please pray for us that our message will go forth in a clear way. Our job is not done!

 
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Posted by on July 14, 2011 in Anne, Europe, Ken, Prayer, Wycliffe, Wycliffe Europe

 

Nigeria Trip Pics

Here is just a sampling of the pictures taken on my most recent trip to Nigeria. Additional photos have been uploaded to Google’s Picasa photo viewer (here) and even more photos from other team members will forthcoming in the future.

I hope you enjoy them as much as we enjoyed the trip.

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Something’s missing!

I noticed that Ken tried to post a blog while in Nigeria, but only half of it has shown up. Apparently something went wrong while it was uploading because I’m sure he finished his thoughts before he sent it. But this is a great illustration of some of the things other missionaries and nationals must deal with on a regular basis in Nigeria and many other parts of the world. Sketchy Internet access.

Well, Ken is now starting his long trek home. He is on the road from Jos to Abuja where he’ll sit in the airport for many hours until his flight out at 11pm Friday night (5pm EST). He flies from Abuja to Frankfurt, Germany, waits another three hours and then flies to Munich where he has just one hour to catch his flight to Charlotte.

If all goes well, he will land here at 3:30pm Saturday afternoon. I will be waiting for him.

Afterall, it will be our 28th anniversary that day so who better to pick him up from the airport?

Thanks again for you prayers. I’m sure he’ll be writing a great update very soon for all of us.

 

Dodging Potholes!

Nigerian Pothole (courtesy of “Travelblog.org”)

Here is the latest from Ken:

“It’s now 9:45 Wednesday evening and we just returned home from dinner. We drove 11 hours today from Jos to the south of the country in an area called Abapliki [Abakaliki]. The roads were quite interesting to say the least. Similar to what we’ve experienced in Mexico and Indonesia where people pass all the time, there is the added excitement of road potholes big enough to swallow an elephant. A little exaggeration, to be sure, but they make people go around them – at 30, 40, 50, 60 mph! So, when passing, one not only looks for oncoming traffic but for potholes as well. It was not uncommon to find us in the back flying from one side of the car to the other as the driver swerves from one side of the edge of the road to another. And I mean that in all sincerity. I never felt in total danger but there were times when my breath was taken away.

We were also stopped frequently along the way, either by the police or the military. It seems both were looking for money. At one stretch, we were stopped it seems every quarter of a mile. Each had the ability to question the driver, demanding paperwork, etc. We were told that they were primarily seeking additional food money, Indonesian style. Often times, they would ask who the white people in the back were and the response was, “missionaries.” That seemed to calm their spirits and each time we were told to drive on.

We arrived here and were met by Joseph, the pastor translator. He had arranged for us to spend the next three evenings in a guest house built by the Dutch. The area is very hot with high humidity so just placing my luggage in the room caused my shirt to be drenched. I took a quick shower and immediately began sweating as I came out of the shower!

The room is fairly nice though, has a fan, and even an air conditioner! I suspect they will turn it off though sometime during the evening. We’ve had to spray it for mosquitos and that smell is still hanging in the air.

We went to dinner with Pastor Joseph, the translator coordinator, John (who was with us in the car all the way here), and the driver. I had gari, their staple food. It’s a series of dough, half mooned shaped, that you pick up with your fingers, roll in a ball, and dip it in a bowl of what looks like spinach, other vegetables, with fish in it. I thought I had ordered fried rice and fish but got this  instead. Figure that one out! However, it wasn’t bad at all. I’m glad I tried it.

Tomorrow, I’ll train Joseph and another translator on the BGAN satellite Phil works on cleaning up his computer from the viruses, installs Thunderbird and sets up the email account, and installs Pidgin chat. Once that’s done, we’ll have Joseph try from scratch turning on the satellite and sending/receiving email.  We’ll eat at another guesthouse for lunch and dinner tomorrow and return to this guesthouse to sleep. Then’, Friday morn, we’ll travel /2 hr. to Niger and start training them. Saturday morning we’ll drive back.”

As I was writing this post I received a text message from him that said they had a long but good day setting up the BGAN for two translators that have been working 20-30 years. It was pouring rain but he was in his room. He asked that we pray for the sun to come out or else they would have to stay an extra day before driving to the next village. It is from 1/2-2 hours away (not sure, got two different memos about the driving time).

Tomorrow is a repeat of today, with training on the BGAN as well as cleaning up their computer. Then the next day, if all goes as planned, the long drive back to Jos.

Thanks for praying!

 
 

I missed a call!

Got home from shopping this morning and heard my answering machine beeping. When I listened to my message I was shocked to hear Ken’s voice! He was testing the satellite phone and used his one phone call to me! (I’m guessing he’d do that if thrown in jail too…but we’ve not had that problem yet!)

It was lovely to hear him from so far away. He followed up the phone call with a short email. He didn’t sleep that well because of the heat and humidity. I’m guessing a little jet lag might be mixed in there too.

Here’s some of his email:

“Today, we will practice more and go over last-minute details. This afternoon, we work with the co-translator and share our satellite information with him. We were told he is traveling 11 to 12 hours to get here to meet us and spend a little time with us. That means that we will spending that much time traveling back with him to the area we’ll deploy the satellite. So, Phil [his volunteer partner] and I are anticipating a long drive Wednesday.

The Nigerians are very, very accommodating. Special people.”

One of the many various roads in Nigeria. (Flickr credit to The Vuvuzela Diaries)

Please pray for them tomorrow as they have a very long drive. This is not highway driving. I was told there used to be lots of paved roads but many of them need a lot of repair so driving requires lots of meandering around the potholes. Looking at photos I see quite a variety of roads, some paved and some not.

I’ll keep you update but it might be awhile until we hear from him. At least a day or so I would guess.

 
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Posted by on June 7, 2011 in Anne, Ken

 

Ken has arrived!

Just got a small note from Ken! He has arrived safely in Nigeria with his team. Thank you for praying! Here are some excerpts from his note to me:

“We arrived at the hotel yesterday, approximately 24 hours after I left our home. Everyone made their connections and no one was charged overweight. Russ and I had to run to our last connection [in Frankfurt] but, once there, we waited another 20 minutes or so.

We met the rest of the team. Great guys with a desire to serve the Lord.

We placed our suitcases in the room [in Abuja, Nigeria] and were then taken to the local Hilton for a buffet dinner. The food was excellent but the place was absolutely jammed because of national elections. This hotel, we’re told, will be book solid tonight with election officials.

The country in general is deep red clay everywhere. Short of that, it reminds me so very much of Indonesia in the driving, processes and procedures, etc. The street lights have been out so every intersection is a dodge cars. And, the electricity just went out in my room as I wrote that last sentence. Thank God it was on all last night. It allowed me to have an overhead fan. The people are very, very friendly.

I’m asking the Lord to give me the same perspective as the Apostle Paul – that I would suffer hardship with joy for the cause of Christ. Let that be the case.

We eat breakfast today and then drive to Jos, about four hours away.”

Thank you for your continued prayers. I’ll try to keep you updated as I hear from Ken.

 
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Posted by on June 6, 2011 in Ken

 

On the Road Again with B-TAKs

BTAK – Bible Translation Acceleration Kit.

I’m all packed up and have tested the BGAN satellite equipment. My backpack and computer bags are ready.

Testing BGAN satellite connection

Testing BGAN satellite connection the night before departure

Although I’ve traveled extensively, I feel a little nervous about this trip. Weight restrictions, travel connections,travel safety all come to the forefront. Last night though, as I lay in bed, I felt this overwhelming peace that people were praying.

I leave the house at 1:00, meeting a colleague to drive together to the airport for a 5:00 Charlotte airport departure.

So, I’m expecting good things. I’ll keep you informed but please keep praying.

 
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Posted by on June 4, 2011 in Ken, Satellite, Wycliffe Associates

 

Nigeria Trip Prep and Prayer Need

 

Ken tests out his mosquito net prior to leaving on his trip.

There have been times in our ministry history when we truly have felt carried along by the prayers of friends, family, and supporters. I am hoping that this will also be the case during this upcoming trip to Nigeria on June 4th through June 17th.

This is my first time to Africa and I would be less than honest if I didn’t communicate that I am somewhat nervous. I’m not quite sure why other than the realization that there are many connections to me made, a lot of technology that needs to be configured and operating properly, and a great deal of country to traverse.

But, through it all, I am truly expecting great things from God. Will you pray for me and help make that happen?

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Packing Lists

Mosquito nets, malaria medicine, head lamp…not the things that are normally on our packing lists. But this is no ordinary trip. Ken is preparing for his first trip to the continent of Africa as part of the B-TAK team. He’s leaving for Nigeria on June 4th, returning the the U.S. on June 18th. (Read more here about Bruce Smith, Wycliffe Associates’ CEO, experience deploying BTAKs in a previous trip to Nigeria).

Preparations started a few months ago as he had to get his Yellow Fever shot and make sure all of his other vaccinations were renewed. Nursing sore arms from the shots reminded us of years before preparing for our first trips overseas to Papua New Guinea and later on to West Papua, Indonesia. It’s been 10 years since Ken’s had to take a malaria prophylaxis.

But there is excitement in the air! Although this trip occurs during rainy season, has many unknowns, and Ken will be doing completely new work, he is so excited that God continues to use him in these ways. Please pray for him as he prepares while continuing his work each day. We have sent off his passport to get a visa and it needs to come in time. We’ll keep you updated on this trip.

 
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Posted by on May 25, 2011 in Ken, Satellite