Monday, August 10, 2009





I apologize for the lapse in time since my last update, but life in Asia seems to become busier and busier with each passing day. I spent my last week in Thailand working with an NGO (Non-profit Organization) called The Tamar Center in Pattaya, which focuses on providing counseling, job skills training and discipleship to women working in the sex slave industry. I helped to teach English classes at the center as well as to do “bar outreach” (Building relationships with the prostitutes working in the bars and inviting them to visit the center). During one evening, as I was walking back to my guesthouse from having dinner, I walked by a “massage parlor” where numerous women were standing outside motioning for passing men to enter, and decided to stop and say hello. The girls were warm and receptive and closed the shop for the evening to invite me in to teach them English and share their stories with me. I was amazed by the opportunity that I had been given to speak truth into the lives of these women and their openness to receive it. I stayed until nearly 2am sharing my journey with them and in turn listening to each of theirs...often in times such as these, I walk away feeling as though I have gained far more than I have left behind. I returned to Bangkok to finish the remainder of my teaching at the University before embarking on my journey to Cambodia. I wish to express my sincere gratitude for your thoughts and prayers as I crossed the border and received my visa; it is because of your faithfulness and support that I was able to have such a smooth and thankfully, uneventful, trek from Thailand to Cambodia.
I have been in Cambodia for just a little over a week now and have already found myself diving head first into numerous opportunities...I’m teaching Freshman English and “A Closer Look at Injustice” at a Language Center here in Battambang 5 days per week...Continuing my Khmer Language Study 20 hours per week...Working on the Administration/Development team for the Battamabng YWAM base...and I try to spend the remaining hours of my day building relationships within the community. I must say that my readjustment to life back in Cambodia has been significantly harder than I ever could have imagined and to be entirely honest, I continue to find myself struggling to find true community and close relationships here, though I trust that such needs will be met in due time.
I attended the University of the Nations YWAM Cambodia Staff retreat in a nearby rural village this past weekend and was encouraged to witness the vast growth that has occurred throughout the past year...many new ministries that were once only visions have come to fruition and many more have been spoken and are being prayed into! The base that I am working at is currently in a season of transition as the Discipleship Training School, where 30 Khmer students learned how to be spiritual leaders in their communities and to pursue God on a deeper level, has just ended, many of the staff have returned home for breaks, and a new School of Biblical Studies will begin in late September, so amidst the many changes things have become rather quiet for the time being. I was eager to return to the orphanage that I had worked at during my previous trip, but was greatly burdened to hear that YWAM has since been banned from visiting the orphanage due to “an unwanted religious agenda,” as stated by the Orphanage Government leaders. Please keep this situation in your thoughts and prayers as we are trusting for Gods favor in order to return.
I am anxious to feel settled in here in Battambang, though my things have been unpacked my spirit is still finding its home here, but every time I look into the eyes of a child or see the smile on an elderly womans face at the market, I am reminded of why I am here and my heart continues to break daily for the oppressed people of Cambodia. I have been here just a brief time and have already learned so much. I’m excited for what has transpired and trusting for the things to come. May we remember to seek His will for each new day. Blessings to you and yours.

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