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The normal return…

Posted on 1, Jul

After traveling the world more than once or twice, you would think that goodbyes would get easier…but they just don’t. The taste of the meal I had with my family before leaving for The World Race in January 2008 is still lingering on my tongue. The other day I read some messages I got right before leaving some people I met in Ireland in 2009. I can still remember the laughs I had in Romania later in 2009 with friends. Leaving for Thailand last November was harder, I remember the feeling of having my parents make the drive to see me off and come to my going away party. I can still taste the baked goods from that party (yeah, I like food!). Once again, in 2 days I am faced with goodbyes as I come back to America.

I had lunch today with a good friend of mine here in Thailand. Somewhere in the conversation I realized that this very event wouldn’t be able to take place in 3 days, and it once again made me sad. For 8 months, Thailand has been the closest thing to home that I’ve felt in years. The last time I spent 8 months in one place was in 2007. On Monday when I step off the plane onto American soil once again, I fear the moment that I open my mouth and accidentally (or intentionally) say “Sawatdii Khrap” instead of “Hello”…or when I want to eat at my friend Phon’s restaurant because he knows exactly how many chilies to put in my dish (and even more the look on his face when he proudly announces that he tricked me and put an extra one in to make me more Thai!). I won’t have the donut lady that laughs when she sees me and slips an extra donut to me for free…I won’t know what to do when eating at a roadside stand is not the normal thing to do.

Please don’t get me wrong…I am extremely excited to see my friends when I step off that plane, to see my family again, and to go to the lake and celebrate my parent’s anniversary. I’m excited to drive on the right side of the road, I’m excited for American food. I’m looking forward to so many things being back in America, but a part of me is stuck here in Thailand.

I’ll miss my church…and the great people that greet me as I walk up…and the patience they show me when I struggle to talk to them in Thai. I’ll miss my Thai classes as my Thai teacher has become a great friend, and consistently reminds me that I can speak Thai much better than I could French when I took French classes in high school (many people will remember that disaster!). I’ll miss walking to the 7-11 and greeting all my normal smiling faces along the way.

It all seems surreal…even if I know I’ll see them again, it just feels strange. All that to say that on Monday, July the 4th I’ll be back in America. I’m sure one of the first text messages from my sister will be a warm insult to welcome me back (once I get a phone number there anyway!)…and strangely I would feel out of place if that was not the case. I’m sure the familiar voice of my parents will sooth portions of the drive from Atlanta to their home in Ohio. I can almost feel the cool Michigan breeze that I will feel once I get to Higgins lake later next week. It will all be a great warm feeling in my heart, even if I am missing Thailand at the same time…

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I Could Have Been … More?

Posted on 6, Jan

A night out with new revelations through new eyes.

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A New Start in Thailand

Posted on 10, Dec

It’s been a long but great couple weeks since I’ve last updated anyone on anything, so for my dedicated blog followers, supporters, friends, family, and whoever else comes across my blog, here is what I’ve been up to!

I moved into a house, which will be a community house for the other people coming to serve the Wards and the ministry they have going on, as well as a place for teams to stay when they first arrive. I’m excited to be in living very close to the heart of Chiang Mai, and for the first time in months it felt good to put what little I brought with me into furniture! After living out of suit cases for far too long, I welcome this bit of stability in life!

A short 2 days after “settling in” we left again. I left with Ray and his friend Trent to start a 2+ week outreach into some remote villages in Northern Thailand, places I fell in love with when I was here 2 years ago. We first found ourselves on a boat along the Thailand border to a village only accessible by boat 10 months out of the year, VILLAGE NAME. It’s not a real touristy village, in fact, you kind of have to know what to ask for to get there. We got there got our tents setup, and got started with building some new relationships, some with the kids of the village, some with teachers at the school. The next morning we were given complete freedom to do a Christmas outreach at the school for around 70 kids, here’s a few pictures from our time there!

After a full morning there, we ventured back up river and received a team of college students from Bangkok that will travel with us for much of the rest of our outreach time, it is awesome working alongside some Thai students that are wanting to serve their own country! We started our time off with a little bit of fun going on a cave hike…

Soon thereafter we found ourselves on one of the most insane drives up a mountain to likely the most remote village on top of a mountain I’ve ever been to. We were warmly greeted by the village pastor of this village of around 15. I’d be lying if I said I didn’t feel like I was in heaven, it s some of the most incredible views I’ve seen anywhere in the world. It was simply amazing sharing some time worshiping God, singing Christmas carols, and standing in awe of the amazing stars that you can only experience on the top of a remote mountain hours from any major city.

This is only a quick overview of what I’ve been up to, including some pctures, along with some of the great happenings, I admit that there have been some hard things to deal with, some far more serious happenings of which I’ll go into detail more as I have some time to write, look for more blogs coming very soon with more detailed stories of Godly encounters we’ve had along the way…some amazing stories of God showing up in very unexpected ways…

It’s the holidays, please consider giving to my support account to help further the Kingdom! support.markstratmann.com

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A video of The Wards in Thailand and their ministry, I’ll be joining them for long term ministry in Thailand!

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Seasons Change, We Grow…

Posted on 7, Sep

You’d think I was used to change now…but the truth is, I’m not. The changes of seasons in life has slowly drifted from dreading it to accepting it…someday I hope to embrace it!

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You Can’t.

Posted on 15, Feb

Before leaving on the World Race over a year ago, my sister questioned my desire to go in many ways.  The biggest question I remember hearing over and over again was, “how can you go, help these starving people, help the homeless, be with orphaned children for a few weeks and then leave them?”  It was a valid question, and most of the time I had no good answer…in fact, I don’t think I ever had an answer.

Today, I will answer it…You Can’t.

In reverse order, I will answer why that is…

Thailand – Walking down the streets of the Nana Entertainment District (overshadowed by the Marriott Hotel) I had no clue how real the sex-tourism was.  From the broken lives of the girls being treated as nobodies in this world to the hurting, lost men lurking the streets, there is not a day that I can walk and not think about the far reaching effects of Human Trafficking, and the need for people…US…to walk into horrible situations and bring Hope into them…Bringing Jesus and God’s Kingdom to them…everyday I think of them…everyday.

Cambodia – My stay was short in Cambodia, but in the few weeks there, I spent some time at the “Happy Tree Orphanage” where many kids diagnosed with HIV or AIDS were living.  I remember two of the girls, who decided that they needed to have me do a photo shoot of them, and in turn gave me a tour of the AIDS hospital.  As I walked through the halls and around the playground, it hit hard that these kids all have a very short life expectancy.  I wonder today how many are still alive, how many are sick, how many of them know what they are up against in life.  Also in Cambodia I can’t get out of my mind the faces of many victims of land mines, still active in the countryside.  Or the stories of survivors of the mass genocide that took place in the killing fields.  I saw the need for God’s healings, the need for Jesus to come into these places and truly turn around the future of the country.  I still see the need for all of US.

Vietnam – A country that I love so dearly, faces that I think about every day.  From the multitudes of orphans that have birth defects resulting from chemicals spread during the Vietnam-American War to the college students who are some of the most incredibly friendly people in the world, I can’t go a day without thinking of them all.  I remember many of the people who I encountered in Vietnam, and see how God is moving in that country…a country where the government would rather not have anything to do with Christianity, to which laws forbid much of the freedom that we have in America.  It’s a country that has prostitution and human trafficking that is growing quickly, they are in need of Jesus to use US to help direct the future of Vietnam as well as Christianity in the nation.  I remember them daily…and don’t forget any of it…ever.
Thailand (Northern) – The villages in northern Thailand captured a special part of me.  Maybe it was the growth of the church, the drug addicted villages transforming ever so quickly, the welcoming people, the smiles on everyone’s faces…there are thousands of reasons that I could speak of on why I loved northern Thailand.  There is a huge and intense need for Jesus to use US in northern Thailand as there are people in great danger and living in fear of the Burmese Army.  There are hundreds of thousands of people…humans…fleeing from Burma in fear of their lives.  It is a really catastrophic situation which needs Heaven to be lived out on Earth…through US…not a day goes by that I don’t think of them…not a day.
India – A country that was a struggle for me…in many ways…is in great need for Jesus to create a movement quickly.  A place where the government shuts down many Christian run organizations.  It is a country where overcrowded streets create for dangerous (and rather humorous and exciting) travel situations.  Many people in India come across as rather difficult and aggressive at times.  It was a difficult place for many reasons, but I know that Jesus is moving there.  The needs in India range from God breathed healings and miracules are needed for the orphaned children, the trafficked children, the lepers living in colonies, the hungry, the hurting, the lonely people living each day asking for distress…they need US…and I haven’t forgotten it one day.
South Africa – The orphaned children, the HIV & AIDS victims, the graphic living situations, the danger, the lack of value on human existence.  There’s no way that I can forget many situations I found myself in in Africa…held up at gunpoint, sitting in the dirt with orphans, seeing the white vs black struggle, the physical/emotional/spiritual hunger that rages through many in S. Africa…not a day goes by that I’m not reminded of the needs for Jesus in Africa…not a day goes by.
Swaziland – What more needs to be said about a country so engulfed in the AIDS / HIV epidemic that the average life expectancy is near or less than 30 years old.  The need for healing, food for the hungry, and education are in huge demand for this small country.  The ways that God used US in Swaziland will continue forever.  Not a day goes by that I don’t somehow think of the kids walking miles after miles for the one meal they will get in any given day.  Not a day.
Mozambique – What a time it was for US in this beautiful country.  The incredible healings that take place in Mozambique, the hunger for significance, the thousands of orphans, the grateful and welcoming people in Mozambique, the horrible roads…it’s all part of why I loved my time in Mozambique.  Again, not a day goes by that I don’t think of the people WE prayed for, the lives that were transformed and changed in this country of hurt and poverty.  Miss it daily…and never a day that I don’t think of it…
Bolivia – There’s no way I can forget this beautiful…beautiful…beautiful country.  From the incredible mountains to the lush green of the rainforest, it is gorgeous.  The landscape can’t fool you though, this is one of the poorest countries of South America, being landlocked severely limits it’s export capabilities, causing industry to overlook the country.  The constant turnover in their Government causes turmoil daily in much of the country…yet Jesus is lived out in this country.  I miss the time in the rainforest working on the orphanage…while I may not have met any of the children that are now living in the orphanage that we helped to complete, they are constantly on my mind.  Never a day goes by that I don’t think of the nights I spent with Rusty and some of the girls of our squad talking (attempting to talk) to Remberto, an amazing missionary to his country, who left everything behind to build orphanages around Bolivia with his family.  He is an amazing man…I miss him daily.
Peru – From the vast desert-like area of Chincha to the lush Amazon Jungle, I miss it all daily.  I miss so many of the people at the Iglesia Berrea in Iquitos, or Templo La Mies in Nauta…I can’t get the images and lives they are living out of my mind.  I can’t forget that Pastor Nester is living in Los Jardines, Chincha…and the earthquake torn area surrounding him.  Not a day goes by that I don’t think of those days…not one day.

Through all of this, I come back to my sister’s question…”how can you go, stay there for a little while and leave?” and my answer is … you can’t.

Not a day goes by that I don’t wake up wondering what I’m doing of significance.  Not a day goes by that I don’t think of these countries and the multitude of things that I could be doing to help any one of them.  Not a day goes by that I don’t wonder how many people I encountered are still among us.  Not a day goes by that I don’t think of the lives that could be turned to God…through you or me.

Yet things hold us back….that’s for another blog though…for now, oh sister of mine…my answer still remains empty…while I did see so many people, and sit in awe of so many things across the world, I still must say, I don’t know how…other than it changes your life in more ways than I can count…and (not to brag, but…) I can count pretty high.
“You Can” … the more up-beat blog coming soon!!!
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The Escalator Only Goes Up

Posted on 5, Nov
Just as it seems like The World Race is coming to an end, my eyes are opened yet again…for quite possibly the hardest part of the trip so far.  I’ve been through a lot this year…being on a bus attacked by angry people in Peru, held up at gunpoint in South Africa, crossing the insane traffic in Vietnam…yet tonight was the hardest to swallow.
We went to Nana.
A place where prostitution is everywhere.
A place where Human Trafficking is at it’s worst.
A place where people’s hurt is everywhere.
A place that NEEDS JESUS NOW.
As men, Matt and I walked the streets, praying over everything we were seeing.  We went up an escalator in the worst place I have ever been…and I felt trapped…the escalator only went up…there was no way down in my sight.  The girls wore numbers, to make it easier to order.  I couldn’t take it.  It didn’t last long before we both needed to go a few blocks away to get away from it all.  We sat on the steps outside of some fancy hotel a few blocks away and tried to explain our emotions…truth is we didn’t say much at all.
The hurt that goes into this place is undescribable.  At one point I wrote off the night as useless…I said there was no use to us being there at all…but our God reconsiles us all the time.  A beggar came up to Matt and I at one point with one leg…we prayed over him and struck up a short conversation before realizing that the guy spoke extremely little english, and he went on his way.  His name is Wood.  He came back to us at the end of the night smiling.  He tried his best to describe how he lost his leg in 1996 to a land mine in Cambodia…describing it as the day it went boom.  The man was happy to see us, and stayed with us smiling.  It really did redeem the night for me.
We officially ended the night when Caroline, Gretchen, and I had a conversation with a man who described how most of the girls got into prostitution.  Most are either trafficked into it buy kidnapping, or by “choice” to go there to help support their family in the poorest of farming communities.  Imagine it…your 12-14 year old daughter leaving to support you by selling herself every night.  On average 450,000 guys in Thailand hire a prostitute.  Sickening, isn’t it?
It’s time to stop it.
Please join me in this.
As this week continues, I will be fighting the front lines of this in any way possible.
We need you to join us in prayer as to how we can make an eternal difference in these people’s lives.
Human Trafficking is evil.
I’m committed to doing something about it.
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Your Time is NOW

Posted on 11, Oct

The urgency is NOW.

I can’t express simply how important and urgent it is for the Kingdom of God to be delivered.  Stepping on the ground here in Southeast Asia does something to me.  I realize more than ever not only the need for vagabonds who are willing to go out, but the need for us to go NOW…and I’m glad I’m here to take part in it!

There have been a few places this year that really captivated me.  I’ve loved everywhere I’ve been for various reasons, but since we landed in the Bangkok airport I’ve absolutely loved this area.  But not because it’s an easy place to be…because it isn’t.  The spiritual realm here is far different than anywhere else we’ve been.  We’ve dealt with serious oppression everywhere in the world, we’ve dealt with difficulties everywhere we’ve been.  There’s still oppression and difficulties here, but for some reason I see an urgency here.  There are various factors pointing to great difficulties breaking through if we don’t keep people on the ground here in SE Asia.  The responsibility is all of ours.  I have a role just the same as you do…to support Kingdom Come here in Asia.
There is INTENSE prostitution and other forms of human trafficking going on in the region.  Our female teams last month spent times on the streets of red-light districts all across Thailand shining as lights in the darkness, trying to show the girls a different way…and offering some way of making it happen.  Several ministries are offering a way out of the generational oppression of human trafficking.  They are offering hope to any of the girls wanting to get out of the red-lights and fear that comes knocking at their door every day and night.  There are ministries of men going after the men that are involved as well…the region is plagued with hurting humans, crying out for help in any way they can get it.  Everyone involved in human trafficking comes from an intense background of hurt and fear.  And I can’t stand it.

We spent time in northern Thailand, working with some Ka-ren people who live their lives in fear of the B/urma army and government.  It’s an intense oppression that they live under, and it’s simply NOT RIGHT.  The Ka-ren people are some of the most genuine, sincere people I’ve worked with this year.  Crossing into B/urma and being escorted by some way-to-nice-to-be-normal guys (working for the army/government) to the one and only church, and then  watched by them as we walked out of their country tells me that the area is up to no good.  Daily Ka-ren people flee, headed for the “freedom” of Thailand…trying to find some form of safety in one of the refugee camps.  Though safety is only skin deep.  The army can still find them, and they are daily looking for them…and the B/urma government instills fear not only in the Ka-ren people but with the Thai people to the point where the Thai police don’t stop much of anything the B/urma army does.

Then we moved on to Vietnam.  A country where worshiping God is restricted.  A place where evangelizing must be done covertly.  Outside of Ho Chi Minh City, the enemy weighs in extremely heavy.  They can’t openly worship God.  They can’t openly share their faith and beliefs with others.  Everything done for the Kingdom must be done behind closed doors.  The government knows of the “underground” church, but God’s protection is keeping them from doing anything about it. There is story after story of people being followed by the police, or watched very closely…or jailed for their actions for the Kingdom.  I daily meet people who take that risk though…awesome Vietnamese who are dedicating their lives to spreading the Kingdom to dark places.

I can’t stand it anymore.  We all have a responsibility in this matter.  The Kingdom has many roles, and we need to find out what ours are.  I need to find my role.  This year has opened my eyes to many needs in the world…and I can’t go back to living my life for myself anymore.  Staring into the faces of women who’s lives have been torn apart by prostitution, men who’s life is so full of shame and hurt, Ka-ren people who drift off to sleep at night fearing whether they will be killed in the night.  There isn’t time to waste people!  The time is NOW to take part in bringing God’s Kingdom to the hurt, the oppressed, the lost, the hungry, the desperate.  Please ask God to reveal to you your place…people TODAY are dying.  Find out your reason for being here, don’t waste another day in seeking your purpose!!!!!!

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A Village Transformed

Posted on 25, Sep

A village transformed…

Ray’s truck took a beating as we ventured up the mountainside to a small village tucked far off the beaten path in northern Thailand.  I actually that we had stepped back in time when we finally made it to this primitive village, seemingly untouched by time…but stories quickly told a different history.

Rapee and her husband’s involvement in this village started many years ago.  When they started coming to this village, they found a village consumed by the enemy.  The villagers weren’t raising food for crops, they were raising opium…and they were all addicts to this dangerous drug.  They were addicted to opium and morphine, the elders of the village had the kids raising it and administering it to them as they could no longer help themselves.  Witchcraft casted a dark shadow across the village as well…causing further darkness in this seemingly innocent village.  Story after story came from Rapee’s mouth as she unraveled the story of their involvement of transforming this village.  It sounded more like stories from a drug rehabilitation center than stories from a small village in Thailand…though as I hear more, it’s all too common of a story for this region that is plagued by oppression from the B/urma / M/ynamar army.  Rapee told stories of people coming off of addictions, and the wicked visions and physical effects of coming off of long term drug addictions.  She told stories of witchdoctors and their long term involvement in this “untouched by time” primitive village.  She refused to give up though.  She and her husband were convinced that they could help this village survive a transformation, and she continued to evangelize and spread the good news of Jesus to these people, as well as raising up a community that would sustain itself.  Many victories later, and the help of many missions teams, this village has been transformed.
This man is 110 years old….
Eight years ago Ray and Candice (our local contacts here) came to this village with their connections with YWAM with the mission to build a church for the village.  Ray told a story of his encounter with witchcraft in the village just 8 years ago.  He was sleeping in a back room of the “house” we stayed in.  The local witchdoctor was not happy with the new church being built…obviously.  Ray awoke in the middle of the night to a huge black spider above him, a spider larger than him…which obviously freaked him out…so he yelled for the spider to leave in Jesus’ name…and it disappeared.  He has several other stories of attacks from the enemy in these small villages.  As teams continued to come alongside Rapee and Pastor, the village continued to become transformed.  They taught the village to farm rice and vegetables rather than opium…they taught them about Jesus, they believed in the villagers.

Today the entire community claims to be Christian.  Had I not heard the stories of the past being plagued with drugs I would have never guessed it.  As I write this blog, I hear someone crushing rice (it’s a process that does something to the rice…but I don’t understand what they’re doing…sorry) with a wooden contraption that is made seemingly by hand.  I hear Thailand cowbells…carved out of wood.  I see huts with thatch roofs, dirt paths, people walking everywhere.  But I see more…I see people interacting with each other, which just a few years ago was unheard of as the villagers didn’t trust each other at all…but now they do.  I see happy people.  I see people wanting to tell you stories of the past.  I see a church, that was planted just 8 years ago, yet has transformed the entire community…even the witchdoctor has turned ways and told his story at church the other day.  I see kids laughing and playing in the dirt…like kids should do.  I saw many if not most of the community come together on the church work day to help maintain the church building and property.  I see a community that has come together to become better…I see God’s love and grace come alive.  I see Christ’s examples lived out.

While there are still a lot of needs for this village, a village with nearly no economic outlook as of today, with little education, with no actual pastor for the church…there are still a lot of needs for this community, but God has finally got a strong foothold here…and the community has captured my heart.
More pics…
The Church…on work day…the whole community showed up!
Work day at the church
Girl at the church
Yeah, that’s ME playing the guitar!
The kids loved the new mud slide!
I love Thai cowbells…they’re made of wood!
We taught kids to make balloon animals
The kids LOVED making balloon animals!
The church after we finished painting and replacing some roof tiles
The village
Our awesome sweet servant translator super host Rapee…Oh, I’ll miss her.
Oh, and there are lots more pictures at http://www.markstratmann.com!!!!  I understand there was troubles with it the past week or so…I THINK it’s working again!  Tech glitches in no-man’s-land Thailand are sometimes hard to fix!  I’m still in need of some support as well, please pray about helping me finish this trip fully funded!  Click SUPPORT ME! on the upper left corner of this page!!!
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More on Thailand

Posted on 17, Sep

When we landed in Thailand, I knew something was different.  I knew that I was going to have a great month, and honestly I needed it.  I was absolutely drained in India, and it showed not only on the inside but that drowned feeling was evident on the outside as well.  I was completely done with it all.  There is a dark spirit in India I’m convinced, and I wasn’t ready for it.  I let it consume my mind, my body, and my spirit.  I wasn’t a fun person to be around, I wasn’t the best I could be (therefore I couldn’t be in the Army)…but when I landed in Thailand, I could feel it all go away and joy starting to be restored.

We stayed at Koh Samet island off the coast of Thailand in the Sea of Thailand for a couple days before headed off to Bangkok to catch busses to our ministry sites for the month.  In the 2 days we were in Bangkok we took a temple tour of 2 Buddhist temples in Bangkok…here’s pictures of both of those…

Our ministries for the squad this month splits our small teams up differently, we have the girls working with human trafficking in various cities in Thailand (I posted a video that some of them made the other day).  The guys split into two groups, I am currently with Matt Peters and Rusty Jackson about 220 kilometers outside of Chiang Mai, Thailand.

We got here Friday morning at around 6:00 after taking an overnight bus from Bangkok.  Our contact Ray met us at the bus station and took us to meet his wife, Candice, and daughter, Maile, as well as Joann (another American missionary here), and our amazing Thai hosts “Pastor” and his wonderful wife Rapee.  We stayed at an incredible house for one night to recover from the bus trip and so they could tell us some of what to expect culturally while we are here.

Then on Saturday we packed up and drove off into the rain and headed to the small village of Hui Ka Paa (side note: village name means “Crazy Chicken on the River…seriously!).  We arrived true World Race style, it was pouring rain and the electric was out…the only light was from candles burning in the house.  We’ve completely gotten used to that this year!  It was there we were introduced to Weelapong and his wife and children.  Weelapong is Rapee’s younger brother with an amazing testimony that I will go into on a different blog.

We joined Weelapong in his ministry during our first few days in Northern Thailand.  We started out Sunday morning going to church at a small village church way off the beaten path.  I have found this year that these are the churches that I like the most because the people that attend them have something different about them.  It could be the way they welcome you, it could be that they are usually closer relationally than large churches.  Either way, I liked the small wooden building on the hillside that hosted a cross on the roof.

Here are some pictures from that church….

After that we went to a Buddhist school in the afternoon to speak truth about Jesus, here are pictures of that….

The next day we went to an elementary school and a high school, both of which we spoke at and were truly welcomed with open arms…here are more pic’s…

I have completely fallen in love with the personalities of the Thailand people.  They are gentle at heart and have a sense of humor that surpasses the language barrier.  You are greeted with the traditional “Y” everywhere you go, and we have fun “Y”-ing people from the back of the truck to see how they will greet you back from a motorbike…it’s humorous!  It’s exciting to be ministering with a different group than I’m used to working with…Matt and Rusty are great guys to be serving with, and there’s always a laugh to be had!  I have found that spreading the love of Christ to Asian believers is rewarding and I’m loving every minute of it.  The land is beautiful, the people are beautiful, and the ministry is incredible!

Our next days will be spent headed into smaller mountain villages for a few days and then headed to B/urma (spelled that way for searching protection) for a short time.  Be praying for our time in those places as the spiritual atmosphere is much darker than here.  We’ve been warned about some of the things we’ll see / experience there.

Thank you for all of your prayer & support over the past 9 months, with 2 1/2 months left this year is quickly drawing to a close…I arrive back in the U.S.A. on November 21st, arriving back in Detroit at 1:30 in the morning on the 22nd…just in time to recover from jet-lag and eat a yummy thanksgiving meal!

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