Wednesday, February 28, 2018

In the News ... “Wayland Baptist University encourages students to focus on civility, respect, facts, faith"

WBU Photo
“We need solutions.”

Staff Report
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal

LUBBOCK, TEXAS - Wayland Baptist University President Bobby Hall is challenging students to find ways to #BeTheSolution in a divisive world.

Students were asked to write their concerns about challenges facing society on cards, and Hall encouraged them to focus on civility, respect, facts and faith when dealing with divisive issues ...

 • read the rest of this LAJ report

Invitation to Prayer from Faces of Children ... TODAY

Faces of Children is an ecumenical prayer ministry under the auspices of First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas. Their mission is to initiate ministries of prayer for children in churches, communities, and neighborhoods. In doing so, they seek to provide an opportunity for people of God to join together, learn about children and their needs throughout the world, and celebrate Christ's love (especially as it relates to children).

Invitation to Prayer ... TODAY

Hi Friends,

We will be meeting this Wednesday - TODAY - at 11:00 a.m., in the gym conference room at First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas. I hope you can join us!

Also, Faces of Children is now on Facebook! I invite you to like our page so that you can see regular stories, prayer needs, and updates from partner ministries.

Warmly,

Carrie




Dear Intercessors,

Children facing the death sentence of growing up in a war zone ...
Children being sacrificed because they are believed to be demons ...
Our state's dubious ranking: worst in the nation for deaths related to child abuse ...

Our hearts can be broken in so many ways. Please join me in praying this week for children whose very lives are something to be survived.

And also please join me in praying for the Alsup family. Mr. Jim Alsup has been an integral part of Faces of Children over the years, faithfully praying for children day-in and day-out. His wife Sandy died last week.

We trust God holds his brokenhearted children near, binding up their wounds and wiping away their tears. This week we pray the Alsup family and children all around this world feel the comfort of a loving Father who never, ever lets go of our hands.

Reuters Photo by Bassam Khabieh
SYRIA // Syria's Ghouta a 'death sentence' for children under siege

"Syria's Eastern Ghouta has become a "death sentence" for children as heavy bombing is killing scores of young people trapped in the besieged enclave, aid agencies said on Tuesday.

Sparking an international outcry, a surge in pro-government air strikes, rocket fire and shelling has killed more than 210 people - including 54 children in the rebel pocket near Damascus since Sunday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. "The longer the siege and bombing goes on, it is effectively a death sentence for many children," Alun McDonald, a spokesman for charity Save the Children, said by phone, "People are trapped and thousands of lives are at risk not being able to leave, without medical evacuations, and lack of food and medicine."

Forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad have been besieging almost 400,000 civilians - half of them children - trapped inside Eastern Ghouta for years, but the siege has tightened this year and attacks on the enclave have intensified. Siege tactics and indiscriminate attacks on civilian areas contravene the internationally-agreed "rules of war". Monday saw the heaviest one-day toll in three years, with 127 people killed, the British-based Observatory said. McDonald said more than 100 children in Eastern Ghouta need evacuation for life-saving medical treatment that is not available for conditions including cancer and kidney disease.

The United Nations children's agency (UNICEF) estimates that about 12 percent of children under the age of five in Eastern Ghouta are acutely malnourished, the highest rate anywhere in Syria since the seven-year war began." Read more here ...

There are no words to describe the situation the people of Ghouta are facing... and experts agree the toll is heaviest on children. Please pray for the children living in this war zone, and children in other war zones around the world. Surely their hearts and lives are shattered ... Come quickly, Lord Jesus.

Photo by Frans Lemmens/Alamy
NIGERIA // 'They ensure each twin baby dies': the secret killings in central Nigeria

In 1996 Chinwe Olusola heard that a child would be offered as a sacrifice to trigger good harvest in that planting season. "I pleaded with them not to kill her and they allowed me to take her," she says. "As more babies kept coming, it got to the point that my two-bedroom flat could not take us all. At that point we also had very limited support from individuals. The responsibility of caring for the babies became overwhelming and I resigned from my lecturing job at the University of Abuja."

The couple say that the killing of babies, usually twins, is still practised by a few groups within the Bassa Komo tribe. The tribespeople believe, according to Margret Ekesua, a missionary with Nigerian Pentecostal church Assemblies of God, that twins are "demons who suck their blood at night" and "predestined to kill either parent or both."

The foundation's efforts in persuading people to betray their communities and tip off missionaries when babies are at risk are the most difficult aspect of the rescue. "Through our locally trained informants and converts, we get information that a nursing mother has died or that a set of twins have been delivered. We trace the village and initiate negotiations with village leaders for the release of the child. We assure them that the children will return to them educated when the communities begin to accept them," says Olusola. Read more here ...

Please pray for missionaries working to save these babies. Pray for the indigenous cultures to change and grow in understanding that these innocent babies hold no threat.

Dallas Morning News Photo
TEXAS // More children die from abuse in Texas than in any other state

In 2016, 4-year-old Leiliana Wright was brutally beaten to death while in her mother's care even after social workers had been warned the Grand Prairie girl was in danger. Her story led to outrage and scrutiny of the state's child welfare system, but she was far from the only child to die in such a way. A report released this month by the Department of Health and Human Services shows that Leiliana was just one of 217 Texas children killed by child abuse that year - a 34 percent increase from 2015. Texas reported more child fatalities than any other state in 2016, a sobering distinction it is has held since 2012, according to the report. Read more here ...

As our state grapples with fixing its broken foster care system, please pray for children who are caught in the middle... whose entire childhoods are spent shuffled from one painful situation to another. Pray for the children who are removed from dangerous situations only to be placed in another dangerous situation, and for the children who fall through the cracks and aren't removed. Being the worst state for fatal child abuse is a sobering statistic. Father, help us find our way.

Photo by AFP/Getty Images
GLOBAL // Marriott Hotels Fighting Human Trafficking

"In January, we [Marriott Hotels] made human trafficking training mandatory for all associates, and developed training tailored to the specific roles on our properties. Over 225,000 of our associates completed the training this past year, and we're on our way to our goal of 100%. The objective of the program is simple. We want the associates in our hotels to be aware of the scale of human trafficking, our commitment to stopping it, to learn the many indicators or unusual behaviors of traffickers, and to report suspicions to management, who in turn, alert local authorities. To make the training program more readily available, we teamed up with the American Hotel & Lodging Association to make it accessible to all of its members. The training was translated into 15 languages, so it can be used more effectively worldwide." Read more here ...

Praise God for the commitment this hotel chain has made to fighting trafficking. Praise God for the children and victims already discovered and rescued due to their efforts, and pray for more to be found as a direct result of this program.

Praying with you,

Carrie

Carrie J. McKean
Faces of Children Director
First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas
(432) 684-7821 x153



If you have prayer requests about children, those who care for them, those who have authority over them, or those who harm them (the really hard prayers to say sometimes), please send them to info@facesofchildren.net

Today in the PC-USA Mission Yearbook


The Mission Yearbook for Prayer and Study is a daily devotional with 365 inspiring mission stories that come from next door and all across the globe. It inspires thousands of Presbyterians daily as they uphold the mission of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) in intercessory prayer.


Today in the Mission Yearbook: February 28, 2018

1001 NEW WORSHIPING COMMUNITIES - Five years ago, many Egyptians came to the U.S. during the time of the Arab Spring and Muslim Brotherhood rule. They harbored a desire to worship in the language of their heart, Arabic, which they describe as “the language of heaven.”

Hearing this, the Rev. Adel Malek, who is from Egypt but has lived in the U.S. for more than 30 years, helped begin the Arabic Presbyterian Fellowship near Los Angeles ...

CLICK HERE to read more.

Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Partners Blog: "Improving village health"

Steve and Oddny Gumaer started Partners Relief and Development in response to the needs of refugees and displaced people from Burma, and now in the Middle East, as well. Their mission is to demonstrate, through holistic action, God’s love to children and communities made vulnerable by war in Southeast Asia, the Middle East and other conflict zones.

Partners Photo
Improving village health

We heart these health care workers who have improved the health of kids in their villages in Karen State, Myanmar ...

read the rest of this post ...




Partners Relief and Development is a registered charity in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Norway, the United Kingdom and the United States. "We’re a small, grassroots nonprofit passionate about making a big impact in communities affected by conflict and oppression, demonstrating God’s love to children and giving them the opportunity to live free, full lives." For more information aboput Partners, visit their website at partners.ngo/

In the News ... "OMA 'Lenten Luncheon' series set to begin"


• Wednesdays, through March 28

Staff Report
Odessa American


ODESSA, TEXAS - The Odessa Ministerial Alliance has scheduled lunch from 11:30 a.m. to noon, and worship from 12:05 p.m. to 12:45 p.m. on the following days as part of the 2018 Lenten Luncheon Series ...

read the rest of this OA report ...

Invitation to Prayer from Faces of Children ... Tomorrow

Faces of Children is an ecumenical prayer ministry under the auspices of First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas. Their mission is to initiate ministries of prayer for children in churches, communities, and neighborhoods. In doing so, they seek to provide an opportunity for people of God to join together, learn about children and their needs throughout the world, and celebrate Christ's love (especially as it relates to children).

Invitation to Prayer ... Tomorrow

Hi Friends,

We will be meeting this Wednesday at 11:00 a.m., in the gym conference room at First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas. I hope you can join us!

Also, Faces of Children is now on Facebook! I invite you to like our page so that you can see regular stories, prayer needs, and updates from partner ministries.

Warmly,

Carrie




Dear Intercessors,

Children facing the death sentence of growing up in a war zone ...
Children being sacrificed because they are believed to be demons ...
Our state's dubious ranking: worst in the nation for deaths related to child abuse ...

Our hearts can be broken in so many ways. Please join me in praying this week for children whose very lives are something to be survived.

And also please join me in praying for the Alsup family. Mr. Jim Alsup has been an integral part of Faces of Children over the years, faithfully praying for children day-in and day-out. His wife Sandy died last week.

We trust God holds his brokenhearted children near, binding up their wounds and wiping away their tears. This week we pray the Alsup family and children all around this world feel the comfort of a loving Father who never, ever lets go of our hands.

Reuters Photo by Bassam Khabieh
SYRIA // Syria's Ghouta a 'death sentence' for children under siege

"Syria's Eastern Ghouta has become a "death sentence" for children as heavy bombing is killing scores of young people trapped in the besieged enclave, aid agencies said on Tuesday.

Sparking an international outcry, a surge in pro-government air strikes, rocket fire and shelling has killed more than 210 people - including 54 children in the rebel pocket near Damascus since Sunday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. "The longer the siege and bombing goes on, it is effectively a death sentence for many children," Alun McDonald, a spokesman for charity Save the Children, said by phone, "People are trapped and thousands of lives are at risk not being able to leave, without medical evacuations, and lack of food and medicine."

Forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad have been besieging almost 400,000 civilians - half of them children - trapped inside Eastern Ghouta for years, but the siege has tightened this year and attacks on the enclave have intensified. Siege tactics and indiscriminate attacks on civilian areas contravene the internationally-agreed "rules of war". Monday saw the heaviest one-day toll in three years, with 127 people killed, the British-based Observatory said. McDonald said more than 100 children in Eastern Ghouta need evacuation for life-saving medical treatment that is not available for conditions including cancer and kidney disease.

The United Nations children's agency (UNICEF) estimates that about 12 percent of children under the age of five in Eastern Ghouta are acutely malnourished, the highest rate anywhere in Syria since the seven-year war began." Read more here ...

There are no words to describe the situation the people of Ghouta are facing... and experts agree the toll is heaviest on children. Please pray for the children living in this war zone, and children in other war zones around the world. Surely their hearts and lives are shattered ... Come quickly, Lord Jesus.

Photo by Frans Lemmens/Alamy
NIGERIA // 'They ensure each twin baby dies': the secret killings in central Nigeria

In 1996 Chinwe Olusola heard that a child would be offered as a sacrifice to trigger good harvest in that planting season. "I pleaded with them not to kill her and they allowed me to take her," she says. "As more babies kept coming, it got to the point that my two-bedroom flat could not take us all. At that point we also had very limited support from individuals. The responsibility of caring for the babies became overwhelming and I resigned from my lecturing job at the University of Abuja."

The couple say that the killing of babies, usually twins, is still practised by a few groups within the Bassa Komo tribe. The tribespeople believe, according to Margret Ekesua, a missionary with Nigerian Pentecostal church Assemblies of God, that twins are "demons who suck their blood at night" and "predestined to kill either parent or both."

The foundation's efforts in persuading people to betray their communities and tip off missionaries when babies are at risk are the most difficult aspect of the rescue. "Through our locally trained informants and converts, we get information that a nursing mother has died or that a set of twins have been delivered. We trace the village and initiate negotiations with village leaders for the release of the child. We assure them that the children will return to them educated when the communities begin to accept them," says Olusola. Read more here ...

Please pray for missionaries working to save these babies. Pray for the indigenous cultures to change and grow in understanding that these innocent babies hold no threat.

Dallas Morning News Photo
TEXAS // More children die from abuse in Texas than in any other state

In 2016, 4-year-old Leiliana Wright was brutally beaten to death while in her mother's care even after social workers had been warned the Grand Prairie girl was in danger. Her story led to outrage and scrutiny of the state's child welfare system, but she was far from the only child to die in such a way. A report released this month by the Department of Health and Human Services shows that Leiliana was just one of 217 Texas children killed by child abuse that year - a 34 percent increase from 2015. Texas reported more child fatalities than any other state in 2016, a sobering distinction it is has held since 2012, according to the report. Read more here ...

As our state grapples with fixing its broken foster care system, please pray for children who are caught in the middle... whose entire childhoods are spent shuffled from one painful situation to another. Pray for the children who are removed from dangerous situations only to be placed in another dangerous situation, and for the children who fall through the cracks and aren't removed. Being the worst state for fatal child abuse is a sobering statistic. Father, help us find our way.

Photo by AFP/Getty Images
GLOBAL // Marriott Hotels Fighting Human Trafficking

"In January, we [Marriott Hotels] made human trafficking training mandatory for all associates, and developed training tailored to the specific roles on our properties. Over 225,000 of our associates completed the training this past year, and we're on our way to our goal of 100%. The objective of the program is simple. We want the associates in our hotels to be aware of the scale of human trafficking, our commitment to stopping it, to learn the many indicators or unusual behaviors of traffickers, and to report suspicions to management, who in turn, alert local authorities. To make the training program more readily available, we teamed up with the American Hotel & Lodging Association to make it accessible to all of its members. The training was translated into 15 languages, so it can be used more effectively worldwide." Read more here ...

Praise God for the commitment this hotel chain has made to fighting trafficking. Praise God for the children and victims already discovered and rescued due to their efforts, and pray for more to be found as a direct result of this program.

Praying with you,

Carrie

Carrie J. McKean
Faces of Children Director
First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas
(432) 684-7821 x153



If you have prayer requests about children, those who care for them, those who have authority over them, or those who harm them (the really hard prayers to say sometimes), please send them to info@facesofchildren.net

In the News ... "'Christian Ethics' lecture events coming next week to Hardin-Simmons"

• Interests in prophetic literature, Old Testament social ethics

By Loretta Fulton, Reporter
Abilene Reporter-News

ABILENE, TEXAS - M. Daniel Carroll on March 5 will present the first of two talks for the T.B. Maston Lectures in Christian Ethics at Hardin-Simmons University. The presentation will begin at 7 p.m. in Logsdon Chapel on the HSU campus. A reception will follow.

The second talk will be at 9:30 a.m. March 6 at Behrens Auditorium. The public is invited to the lectures, which are free ...

read the rest of this ARN report ...

Today in the PC-USA Mission Yearbook


The Mission Yearbook for Prayer and Study is a daily devotional with 365 inspiring mission stories that come from next door and all across the globe. It inspires thousands of Presbyterians daily as they uphold the mission of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) in intercessory prayer.

Photo credit: Rosaline Maria
Today in the Mission Yearbook: February 27, 2018

MISSION CO-WORKERS IN THE PHILIPPINES - “I am a Korean-American Presbyterian, but that does not define all I am.” Those were the opening lines of my seminary application essays, ordination process paperwork and grant applications. The lines came at a turning point after serving as a Young Adult Volunteer (YAV) in Egypt in 2003. Those applications helped me re-evaluate my 20-something years of life, and I sensed the stirrings of ministry that might look more multicultural than the boundaries of my familiar upbringing ...

CLICK HERE to read more.

Monday, February 26, 2018

From @chinaaid : "Authorities ban church, forcing Christians to meet privately"

The China Aid Association is a non-profit Christian organization - based in Midland, Texas - with a mission to uncover and reveal the truth about religious persecution in China, focusing especially on the unofficial church. They do this, they explain in their website, by exposing the abuses, encouraging the abused and equipping the saints to advance the kingdom of God throughout China.

ChinaAid Photo
Authorities ban church, forcing Christians to meet privately
Distributed by ChinaAid, January, 2018 ...

YINING, XINJIANG, CHINA – Authorities in China’s northwestern Xinjiang banned and sealed a church on Dec. 31, leaving more than 100 Christians without a gathering place less than a week after their pastor had been questioned for 10 hours ...

more on this story from China Aid


In the News ... "San Angelo residents furious about these vandalized religious murals"

SAST Photo by John Tufts
• Not the first time "Paintbrush Alley" has been target of vandalism

John Tufts, Reporter
San Angelo Standard Times


SAN ANGELO, TEXAS - Residents expressed outrage on social media after someone defaced religious iconography and other murals in San Angelo's Paintbrush Alley, an area in the 100 block between Concho and Twohig avenues ...

read the rest of this SAST report

In the News ... LAST CALL - LA Chargers coach Anthony Lynn headlines Lubbock FCA event - TONIGHT"

Courtesy Photo
• Tickets still available at the door

Staff Report
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal

LUBBOCK, TEXAS - TLos Angeles Chargers coach Anthony Lynn, the former Spike Dykes-era Texas Tech running back, returns to Lubbock on Monday to be the featured speaker at the Greater South Plains Fellowship of Christian Athletes eighth annual victory celebration.

The event is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. at the Memorial Civic Center banquet hall. A limited number of tickets priced at $150 are available at the door.

The 49-year-old Lynn rallied the Chargers to a 9-7 finish last season after the team started 0-4. Lynn has coached in the NFL for 18 years, serving as an assistant with six teams from 2000 through 2016. He was the Buffalo Bills’ interim head coach for one game in 2016 before the Chargers hired him as head coach on Jan. 12, 2017.

He played for the Red Raiders from 1987 through 1991.


Invitation to Prayer from Faces of Children ... Wednesday

Faces of Children is an ecumenical prayer ministry under the auspices of First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas. Their mission is to initiate ministries of prayer for children in churches, communities, and neighborhoods. In doing so, they seek to provide an opportunity for people of God to join together, learn about children and their needs throughout the world, and celebrate Christ's love (especially as it relates to children).

Invitation to Prayer ... Wednesday

Hi Friends,

We will be meeting this Wednesday at 11:00 a.m., in the gym conference room at First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas. I hope you can join us!

Also, Faces of Children is now on Facebook! I invite you to like our page so that you can see regular stories, prayer needs, and updates from partner ministries.

Warmly,

Carrie




Dear Intercessors,

Children facing the death sentence of growing up in a war zone ...
Children being sacrificed because they are believed to be demons ...
Our state's dubious ranking: worst in the nation for deaths related to child abuse ...

Our hearts can be broken in so many ways. Please join me in praying this week for children whose very lives are something to be survived.

And also please join me in praying for the Alsup family. Mr. Jim Alsup has been an integral part of Faces of Children over the years, faithfully praying for children day-in and day-out. His wife Sandy died last week.

We trust God holds his brokenhearted children near, binding up their wounds and wiping away their tears. This week we pray the Alsup family and children all around this world feel the comfort of a loving Father who never, ever lets go of our hands.

Reuters Photo by Bassam Khabieh
SYRIA // Syria's Ghouta a 'death sentence' for children under siege

"Syria's Eastern Ghouta has become a "death sentence" for children as heavy bombing is killing scores of young people trapped in the besieged enclave, aid agencies said on Tuesday.

Sparking an international outcry, a surge in pro-government air strikes, rocket fire and shelling has killed more than 210 people - including 54 children in the rebel pocket near Damascus since Sunday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. "The longer the siege and bombing goes on, it is effectively a death sentence for many children," Alun McDonald, a spokesman for charity Save the Children, said by phone, "People are trapped and thousands of lives are at risk not being able to leave, without medical evacuations, and lack of food and medicine."

Forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad have been besieging almost 400,000 civilians - half of them children - trapped inside Eastern Ghouta for years, but the siege has tightened this year and attacks on the enclave have intensified. Siege tactics and indiscriminate attacks on civilian areas contravene the internationally-agreed "rules of war". Monday saw the heaviest one-day toll in three years, with 127 people killed, the British-based Observatory said. McDonald said more than 100 children in Eastern Ghouta need evacuation for life-saving medical treatment that is not available for conditions including cancer and kidney disease.

The United Nations children's agency (UNICEF) estimates that about 12 percent of children under the age of five in Eastern Ghouta are acutely malnourished, the highest rate anywhere in Syria since the seven-year war began." Read more here ...

There are no words to describe the situation the people of Ghouta are facing... and experts agree the toll is heaviest on children. Please pray for the children living in this war zone, and children in other war zones around the world. Surely their hearts and lives are shattered ... Come quickly, Lord Jesus.

Photo by Frans Lemmens/Alamy
NIGERIA // 'They ensure each twin baby dies': the secret killings in central Nigeria

In 1996 Chinwe Olusola heard that a child would be offered as a sacrifice to trigger good harvest in that planting season. "I pleaded with them not to kill her and they allowed me to take her," she says. "As more babies kept coming, it got to the point that my two-bedroom flat could not take us all. At that point we also had very limited support from individuals. The responsibility of caring for the babies became overwhelming and I resigned from my lecturing job at the University of Abuja."

The couple say that the killing of babies, usually twins, is still practised by a few groups within the Bassa Komo tribe. The tribespeople believe, according to Margret Ekesua, a missionary with Nigerian Pentecostal church Assemblies of God, that twins are "demons who suck their blood at night" and "predestined to kill either parent or both."

The foundation's efforts in persuading people to betray their communities and tip off missionaries when babies are at risk are the most difficult aspect of the rescue. "Through our locally trained informants and converts, we get information that a nursing mother has died or that a set of twins have been delivered. We trace the village and initiate negotiations with village leaders for the release of the child. We assure them that the children will return to them educated when the communities begin to accept them," says Olusola. Read more here ...

Please pray for missionaries working to save these babies. Pray for the indigenous cultures to change and grow in understanding that these innocent babies hold no threat.

Dallas Morning News Photo
TEXAS // More children die from abuse in Texas than in any other state

In 2016, 4-year-old Leiliana Wright was brutally beaten to death while in her mother's care even after social workers had been warned the Grand Prairie girl was in danger. Her story led to outrage and scrutiny of the state's child welfare system, but she was far from the only child to die in such a way. A report released this month by the Department of Health and Human Services shows that Leiliana was just one of 217 Texas children killed by child abuse that year - a 34 percent increase from 2015. Texas reported more child fatalities than any other state in 2016, a sobering distinction it is has held since 2012, according to the report. Read more here ...

As our state grapples with fixing its broken foster care system, please pray for children who are caught in the middle... whose entire childhoods are spent shuffled from one painful situation to another. Pray for the children who are removed from dangerous situations only to be placed in another dangerous situation, and for the children who fall through the cracks and aren't removed. Being the worst state for fatal child abuse is a sobering statistic. Father, help us find our way.

Photo by AFP/Getty Images
GLOBAL // Marriott Hotels Fighting Human Trafficking

"In January, we [Marriott Hotels] made human trafficking training mandatory for all associates, and developed training tailored to the specific roles on our properties. Over 225,000 of our associates completed the training this past year, and we're on our way to our goal of 100%. The objective of the program is simple. We want the associates in our hotels to be aware of the scale of human trafficking, our commitment to stopping it, to learn the many indicators or unusual behaviors of traffickers, and to report suspicions to management, who in turn, alert local authorities. To make the training program more readily available, we teamed up with the American Hotel & Lodging Association to make it accessible to all of its members. The training was translated into 15 languages, so it can be used more effectively worldwide." Read more here ...

Praise God for the commitment this hotel chain has made to fighting trafficking. Praise God for the children and victims already discovered and rescued due to their efforts, and pray for more to be found as a direct result of this program.

Praying with you,

Carrie

Carrie J. McKean
Faces of Children Director
First Presbyterian Church of Midland, Texas
(432) 684-7821 x153



If you have prayer requests about children, those who care for them, those who have authority over them, or those who harm them (the really hard prayers to say sometimes), please send them to info@facesofchildren.net

In the News ... “TONIGHT - Singer David Kauffman leads Lenten Mission Night"

Photo by Tony Gonzalez
• Audience encouraged to “just dive in and go with it”

Rich Lopez, Reporter
Midland Reporter-Telegram

MIDLAND, TEXAS - David Kauffman does concerts all the time, but for Lent, he felt he needed to go deeper. The 40-day religious observance felt like a journey for Kauffman. He thought it could feel like that for his audiences as well.

“During Lent we are so focused on specific personal things,” he said. “So instead of a concert, we can go on this journey together through song, story, Scripture and sharing.”

Kauffman will lead his Lenten Mission Night on Monday - TONIGHT - at St. Ann’s Catholic Church ...

 • read the rest of this MRT report

Today in the PC-USA Mission Yearbook


The Mission Yearbook for Prayer and Study is a daily devotional with 365 inspiring mission stories that come from next door and all across the globe. It inspires thousands of Presbyterians daily as they uphold the mission of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) in intercessory prayer.

Photo by Johanneke Kroesbergen
Today in the Mission Yearbook: February 26, 2018

MISSION CO-WORKERS IN ZAMBIA - One day, while taking a break from studying in the Duke Divinity School library, I got into a conversation that would change the course of my family’s life. As I talked with a stranger, I learned that he was the only person in the world with a PhD in New Testament (my field also) who could speak the language of the country where he was training Christians for ministry. This really struck me ...

CLICK HERE to read more.

Sunday, February 25, 2018

Equal Exchange Blog ... "A Generational Shift: A Conversation with the Next Generation of Coffee Farmers"

Equal Exchange's mission is to build long-term trade partnerships that are economically just and environmentally sound, to foster mutually beneficial relationships between farmers and consumers and to demonstrate, through our success, the contribution of worker co-operatives and Fair Trade to a more equitable, democratic and sustainable world.


A Generational Shift: A Conversation with the Next Generation of Coffee Farmers

I often tell people that the easiest part of being a green coffee buyer is actually buying the coffee. The much more complicated and interesting part of my job is collaborating with our producer partners to work on the issues and threats that coffee-growing communities face. One of the big contemporary threats to coffee production is the aging of coffee farmers ...

CLICK HERE to read the rest of this post

Equal Exchange Photo

I am PCUSA ... and PRO-Fossil Fuel: What ELSE we'd 'keep in the ground'


• Part 3 of my argument AGAINST blanket divestment

As the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church USA meets in St. Louis this year and considers demands for an immediate and total, blanket divestment of the denomination’s investment funds from “fossil fuel producers,” I have to ask ... is blanket divestment the answer? Shouldn’t we, instead, consider reinvestment of those funds into responsible – even moral – fossil fuel producers?

A phrase often used by fossil-fuel protesters - online and on the street - is Keep it in the ground! In response to their demand, I have to ask them ... have you considered what else we'd be keeping in the ground, along with the oil and natural gas? ...

While it's true that a large majority of oil and natural gas is devoted to fuel for transportation and energy. There are a LOT of what we call petroleum by-products out there ... materials derived from crude oil (petroleum) as it is processed in oil refineries. Here is a partial list (compiled by Edmond, Oklahoma-based Ranken Energy) of an estimated 6,000 products made, in one way or another, from petroleum by-products ...

Please take a moment, and look back over the last few days of your life, and ask yourself ... is there one day when you did not make at least some use of at least one of the items listed above?

In some way, everybody does, almost every day ... and I do mean EVERYBODY. Just last year, we had people set-up camp in western Texas to protest the Trans-Pecos Pipeline. One of the last things we heard from them was that they needed "gas money" so they could move to their next protest, in another state.

NOW ... this is NOT to say that we should continue to burn as much oil as we possibly can. In fact, I'm encouraging that we all find ways - as individuals and as communities - to burn LESS. Here is where a comprehensive energy package - one that includes oil and natural gas - comes into play. The power needed in factories to manufacture the products listed above could come from a wide variety of alternative energy sources whose availability has grown dramatically in recently years.

Another item I would like to submit for your consideration ... use of these petroleum by-products could actually help reduce your carbon footprint in some ways. Take local transportation for example ... think about getting around town with bicycles and bicycle helmets, backpacks and athletic shoes, instead of automobiles.

This is one more reason why I am asking Presbyterian Church USA to consider redirecting their investment into responsible fossil fuels producers ... they are producing things we need and use each-and-every day.

Thank you for your consideration.




DISCLAIMER ...

Let me give you some idea of my background - the context in which I am composing this post, and future posts on this topic. It’s important to the consideration – if any! – that you will give to what follows ...

For the past 34 years, I have lived and worked in and around the city of Midland, in the western region of Texas ... smack-dab in the middle of what they call ‘the oil patch.’ There is some cattle and some cotton in the foundation of this community, but most of Midland today is built upon the energy industry, and the production of oil and natural gas plays a major - even predominant - role in our local economy.

I do not work directly for the energy industry ... though I have been happily married those same 34 years to someone who is. As for me, I first worked in in this part of Texas as a contract archaeologist ... but my vocation has changed more than once with the ups and downs – especially the downs! – in the energy industry over the past three decades. So I have also worked as a television writer/producer, a newspaper reporter/editor, a website/social media manager, a freelance film/television prduction assistant, and for the past ten years as a website editor for a community college.

This has given me a tremendous opportunity to observe the industry ‘up-close and personal,’ as we used to say in the news business. I suggest that I might have more insight than some others into the industry, its people, its technology and practices, and the changes in said technology and practices. I have seen, reported-on and learned from – to borrow a phrase from a movie title – the good, the bad and the ugly of fossil fuel production ... and the beautiful, as well.

Let me qualify that last paragraph, though ... my experience observing fossil fuel producers has been exclusively with oil and natural gas. I have no such current experience with the coal industry, and I am not qualified to comment upon changes that may have taken place in their technology and practices. When it comes to coal, all I have to go on are the 55-year-old memories I have of that industry – actually, the remnants of that industry – in the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton area of northeastern Pennsylvania ... observations which helped to firmly set my course down the environmentalism path as a teenager way-back-when.

Anyway, that is where I come from. Where I am going, in the weeks ahead, is to develop my pro-fossil fuel thesis, and to suggest options for a position within the Presbyterian Church USA that still promotes protection and restoration of God’s creation, yet encourages responsible – even moral – energy production that includes fossil fuels. Thank you for your time in reading the above. I welcome any comments you wish to make in the space below ... regardless of your stance on fossil fuel production. It is my hope that this will be the start of a discussion among those who ultimately share a common goal, a common destination ... though for now, we may be reaching it by different paths.


Today in the PC-USA Mission Yearbook


The Mission Yearbook for Prayer and Study is a daily devotional with 365 inspiring mission stories that come from next door and all across the globe. It inspires thousands of Presbyterians daily as they uphold the mission of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) in intercessory prayer.


Today in the Mission Yearbook: February 25, 2018

DISCRIMINATION - New words are added to the dictionary on a regular basis. Oftentimes these are words we hear but are not quite sure of their meaning.

“Intersectionality” is one of those words ...

CLICK HERE to read more.

Saturday, February 24, 2018

In the News ... "Lubbock Faith Briefs"

Courtesy Photo
• What’s going on in the South Plains faith community

By Erica Pauda, Reporter
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal

LUBBOCK, TEXAS - From the Avalanche-Journal, news of special events and programs from Lubbock-area houses of faith ... ...

 • read the rest of this LAJ report ...

 • more from the LAJ's "South Plains Faith Calendar" ...

In the News ... "Abilene Church News"


• Special events and programs this week

Staff Report
Abilene Reporter-News

ABILENE, TEXAS - From the Reporter-News, news of services, special events and programs from Abilene-area houses of faith ...

read the rest of this ARN report ...

In the News ... “Monday - Singer David Kauffman leads Lenten Mission Night"

Photo by Tony Gonzalez
• Audience encouraged to “just dive in and go with it”

Rich Lopez, Reporter
Midland Reporter-Telegram

MIDLAND, TEXAS - David Kauffman does concerts all the time, but for Lent, he felt he needed to go deeper. The 40-day religious observance felt like a journey for Kauffman. He thought it could feel like that for his audiences as well.

“During Lent we are so focused on specific personal things,” he said. “So instead of a concert, we can go on this journey together through song, story, Scripture and sharing.”

Kauffman will lead his Lenten Mission Night on Monday at St. Ann’s Catholic Church ...

 • read the rest of this MRT report

In the News ... "San Angelo Faith Briefs"


• Today, and in the days ahead

Matthew McDaniel,, Reporter
San Angelo Standard Times


SAN ANGELO, TEXAS - From the Standard-Times, news of special events and programs from Concho Valley houses of faith ...

read the rest of this SAST report

Today in the PC-USA Mission Yearbook


The Mission Yearbook for Prayer and Study is a daily devotional with 365 inspiring mission stories that come from next door and all across the globe. It inspires thousands of Presbyterians daily as they uphold the mission of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) in intercessory prayer.

Today in the Mission Yearbook: February 24, 2018

FINANCIAL AID FOR SERVICE AWARD RECIPIENTS - As coordinator of the office of Financial Aid for Service at the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), which awards more than $1 million annually to students pursuing degrees, Laura Bryan takes joy in what she does.

“It would be hard not to fall in love with this ministry,” Bryan said. “Our mission is simple — reduce financial barriers to service for Presbyterian Church members. It becomes extraordinary when you get to know the students seeking resources to honor their God-given gifts. We work with college students, seminarians, candidates seeking calls and pastors with educational debt.”

Captivated by applicants’ stories, Bryan and and debt assistance mission specialist Melonee Tubb decided to launch a new quarterly video series to inspire other students to apply for financial aid, just like the Rev. Sabrina Slater did ...

CLICK HERE to read more.

Friday, February 23, 2018

From ServLife International ... "Empowering Women"

ServLife International is a movement defined by values of God’s kingdom, not programs built around human efforts and activities. The reign and rule of God should be made apparent to every person on the planet, despite their religion, race or socioeconomic status. We believe that issues of justice are inseparable from the good news that Jesus Christ came to proclaim. ServLife exists to take the gospel of Christ and the hope of a better, more just, world to the lives of people we touch. This happens through individual contributions of time, creativity, resources and dreams.



ServLife Photo
Empowering Women

In a continuing effort to cultivate self-sufficient churches and combat extreme poverty, ServLife’s Nepal partners are conducting a sewing training. This program provides women with specific sewing skills that open doors for them in the tailoring industry. According to Nepal Director Bekharaj, “This training is to strengthen the church planters’ wives by developing skills and sustaining themselves economically.”

Pastors’ wives are not the only ones taking advantage of this program ...

CLICK HERE to read the rest of this post from ServLife ...



Adam Nevins 
From Adam Nevins
Executive Director
ServLife International Inc.


Join Our Mission

ServLife International propels reconciliation and justice by building global community to plant churches, care for children and fight poverty. Compelled by the message, life and love of Jesus Christ, we seek to care for the spiritual, physical, social, and economic areas of life in northern India and Nepal.  Learn more about our latest news, featured stories, and how to get involved at servlife.org

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Our church planters spread
the love of Christ in some of the most difficult
environments in the world.
Support Them ... 

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For only $30 per month you can help give a child food, education, care and, most importantly, hope.
Sponsor Now ... 

Fight Poverty

The HOPE Fund, our micro-finance program, provides start-up funds for a small business, paving a way out of poverty for families in need.
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ServLife International, Inc.
P.O. Box 20596
Indianapolis, IN 46220
USA