
The Boy Who Lost His Finger to a Bear
HF/Orphan's
Tear
Seven-year old Padam
Shah was born in the Himalayan Mountains of Nepal, close to the
Tibetan border. He lived in such a remote region that the closest village
market was a seven-day walk. Snow covers the ground six months of the year.
Padam's family was very
poor, making their living by keeping sheep. Tragically, Padam's parents
both died of tuberculosis, and so Padham lived in a tiny hut with his married
brother. They were barely surviving. Pradam spent all his time watching sheep
graze, all day, every day.
One day while Padam was
shepherding, a bear attacked him. He fought with all his might and escaped with
his life, but lost the index finger on his left hand. He also suffered leg
lacerations. His only coat---already ragged---was shredded even more. But it
was all he had to keep warm when he soon returned to his daily task of watching
sheep.
Thankfully, God had
better plans for Padam. A native Nepali evangelist named Henry was led to
preach the gospel in the remote region where Padam lived, and he learned of
Padam's plight. Moved with compassion, Henry was eventually able to bring Padam
to Kathmandu to live with his brother's family, as they were burdened to open
their home to orphans. That orphanage is now supported by Orphan's Tear. Just four weeks ago, a family in the United
Kingdom found Padam at OrphansTear.org and became his sponsors. (We currently
have ten other Nepali orphans waiting for sponsorship at OrphansTear.org.)
Padam had never eaten
with a spoon before coming to the orphanage. And when food was presented at any
meal, he ate voraciously, obviously uncertain of his next meal. Under the ample
love of his new parents, however, he has flourished. Most importantly, he has
come to know the Lord, and if you ask him what his aspiration is, he will say
that he one day wants to return to his people in the mountains to tell them
about Jesus.

Padam then and now: A bear got his index finger, but Jesus got his heart
These kinds of happy
endings are what the ministry of Heaven's
Family is all about. Included in
this update are four more from around the world that I hope will touch your
heart. Thanks for making them all possible. We're all looking forward to a very big happy ending, one that will be just the
beginning. --- David
A Widow's Might
HF/I
Was Hungry

Sunita
and Philemon Thapa of Kathmandu, Nepal
Three weeks before I
visited Nepal in May, Madan Thapa died of cancer, leaving behind his
26-year-old wife, Sunita, and their 7-year-old son, Philemon. Madan had made a
tolerable living, for a Nepali, driving a truck. Sunita supplemented their
income doing full-time domestic work that earns her about $19 per month. Still,
with their combined income, Madan and Sunita could only afford a one-room,
$15-per-month apartment in a crumbling brick building on the outskirts of
Kathmandu. They were proud, however, that they could afford school, exam and
uniform fees for their son Philemon. He would have a better future.
When Madan passed
away, Sunita's grief was compounded knowing that she and Philemon were destined
for a life of destitution. Even if Sunita were to remarry, chances are good
that a new husband would not be willing to support Philemon---a stark reality
for poor Nepalis that is difficult for those of us who eat every day to
understand. Philemon would have to be given to willing relatives or put in an
orphanage.
Sunita's parents
couldn't help her, as they died years earlier, and Sunita's three siblings have
little means to help either, being equally poor. In fact, Sunita's sister,
brother-in-law, and their daughter live in a single room just across the hall
in the same apartment building. Having a limited education and no special job
skills, the future indeed looked bleak for Sunita and Philemon.
But there is a happy
ending: Sunita and Philemon were introduced to me by their pastor who spoke
highly of their strong faith in Jesus. Because of the generosity of Heaven's Family supporters, money was available in our Widows Fund to offer help. I was blessed to leave Sunita with a new treadle sewing
machine, along with funds that will allow her to quit her job and attend a
one-year tailoring school. Beyond that, I gave her enough money to pay for all
of Philemon's school expenses and take care of all their living expenses for
one year. The total was about $1,000. Needless to say, it was a happy visit I
had with a grieving widow and her little son. Thanks for saving the day.
"The Lord supports the fatherless and the widow" (Psalm 146:9).

Three
other very poor Christian widows, in Sri Lanka, Nepal and Pakistan, who were
recently assisted through the Widows Fund
The Price of Rice
HF/I
Was Hungry

A harvester in one of the nine rice fields that we've been able to purchase for our orphanages in Myanmar
Due to the rising
price of oil, it is not only costing all of us more to drive to our local
grocery stores, but the food we buy there is also more expensive. That is due,
not only to the rising price of gasoline, but also to other forces of supply
and demand. With more crops being grown for biofuels, increased demand for meat
and dairy foods from China and India's burgeoning middle classes, and adverse
weather patterns, basic food commodity prices are rising all over the globe.
What has, however,
become an inconvenience to the world's economic elite (that's all of
us), is life-threatening to the world's very poor. The average American
spends about 12.5 % of his income on food. The average person in many developing
nations spend 60 to 80% of his significantly smaller income on food.
In Myanmar, the price
of rice has more than doubled in some areas over the past two years. In
Pakistan, the government is now rationing wheat, the price of which has
increased 150% over the past year. The World Bank has estimated that,
overall, food prices have risen by 83% since 2005.
When food doubles in
price for those who spend 60% of their income on food, those people go hungry.
Even before the current world food crises, about 800 million people went to bed
each night hungry and malnourished. You may not have heard about it, but there
have been recent food riots in Haiti, Indonesia, Afghanistan, India, Egypt,
Somalia, Bangladesh and Cameroon. In
Haiti, some of the poorest are actually eating soil mixed with salt, sun-baked
into cookie-sized wafers. (See http://abcnews.go.com/Health/WireStory?id=4212012.)
Recently, the regular
flow of emails from our thirty-one orphanage directors in Myanmar, like the one
below, has been increasing:
As
always shown and demonstrated in our monthly financial report to you,
the greatest burden and big problem we have for the children now is
about for their meals (foods). More than a half from your support is used
or spent for the rice. So, the result is lack for the other
materials which are really necessary for the children. Shalom Children Home is praying for the rice's
field.
The good news is that,
because of gifts to the Rice Fields for
Orphanages Fund, we've been able to purchase, so far, rice paddy acreage
for nine of our orphanages. This has been a tremendous help to them. We'd like
to do the same for all forty-one of our orphanages in eight nations. Gifts
to the Food Fund have also
recently made it possible for us to help hungry members of our spiritual family
in Pakistan. Thanks so much. To watch a new video about the children of
one orphanage in Myanmar who have benefitted from the gift of a rice field,
click here.
"I Was a Stranger"... from Eritrea
HF/I
Was Hungry

An entrance to Shimelba Refugee Camp in Ethiopia, where 15,000 refugees reside, and a few of the children who live there
You may never have
heard of the nation of Eritrea, which borders Sudan and Ethiopia in northeast
Africa. Over the past few years, however, its already-repressive government has
been gaining a reputation for severely persecuting Christians, especially those
who are aligned with independent churches. An estimated 2,000 believers are
currently imprisoned without charge or trial, languishing in prison camps.
Torture is routine, as authorities attempt to force believers to renounce their
faith. Some have died for refusing.
As recently as May
28th, Eritrean authorities jailed thirty-four more Christians in a house
church raid. All men and women present were taken to prison. Their
children were left behind.
Because of all this,
tens of thousands of Eritrean Christians have fled their homeland, trekking
across dangerous deserts, with the hope of finding safety in primitive refugee
camps in Ethiopia, Sudan, Libya and Kenya. Believers who remain in
Eritrea meet together very secretly. Heaven's Family has
been serving the underground church in Eritrea by carefully supplying copies
of The
Disciple-Making Minister to
English-reading pastors.
Last month, Canadian
friends Paul and Anne Brandner traveled to Ethiopia to serve Christian Eritrean
refugees, taking with them copies of The
Disciple-Making Minister and
$3,000 from our Christian Refugees Fund. With
some of those funds, they were able to provide much-needed necessities, such as
oil, wheat, soap, anti-malarial medication, razors and tooth brushes for
members of our family who live among the 15,000 refugees at Shimelba Refugee
Camp. With the remaining funds, they intend to provide two wheat grinders for
the churches at Shimelba. The wheat provided by the United Nations is not
ground, and refugees must give one-third of their wheat ration as payment to
have it ground.
Each of the pastors of
the three churches at Shimelba Refugee Camp joyfully received a copy of The Disciple-Making Minister. More copies will soon be shipped. Anne reported
that when she gave her final copy to an Eritrean pastor named Ammanuel--- a
refugee who had been tortured in prison for his faith---he looked at the cover and
exclaimed, "I know of this author!" He proceeded to tell Anne about a
pastor from South America who had visited him recently and recommended our
teaching. Ever since, Ammanuel had been praying for a book by David Servant.
God answered his prayer!
A Cuban Angel
HF/Shepherd
Serve

A
Cuban pastor with one of the first copies of TDDM to be distributed in
Cuba, along with Maria Rialto
Earlier this year,
pastor Carlos Rialto (not his real name) helped us print the first edition of
the Spanish translation of The
Disciple-Making Minister for
distribution in his native country of the Dominican Republic. But Carlos has
set his sights on other Spanish-speaking nations in Latin America, and so he
smuggled a few copies into communist Cuba in late May. He successfully made it
through Cuban customs with his contraband, a small miracle in itself.
Carlos gave one copy
to the pastor in the above photo (who is a friend of mine), and then stepped
back to take a "tourist photo" of his wife, the pastor, and the book.
However, a hotel security officer stopped them, examined the book, confiscated
it, and then showed it to an undercover security agent standing nearby. (This
is how things are in Cuba.) Carlos quietly prayed that they would not search
the bag he was carrying, as it contained the remaining copies.
As the security agent
examined the book, he began questioning the Cuban pastor, who nervously answered
all his questions. After a few minutes, the security agent leaned closer to the
pastor and said in a low voice in Spanish, "Relax, we are all covered by
His blood! Praise God! Can I get a book like this to buy?" A second small
miracle.
None of those who were
present for that incident knew that a bigger miracle would be occurring in a
few weeks. I wish I could tell you the details of that miracle, but I can't. It resulted in 1,000 pastors being equipped!
Incidentally, when
Carlos returned to the Dominican Republic, he wasn't permitted to enter the
country due to a technical error by immigration authorities, and so rather than
flying back to Cuba, he flew to Orlando. There he was arrested by U.S.
immigration authorities for a 15-year-old probation violation from his
money-laundering days before Christ. He consequently spent forty days in the
Orange County Jail waiting for his plea date. During that time he led
twenty-seven other prisoners to the Lord, holding two-hour Bible studies with
them twice a day! Carlos is now a free man. And we've just shipped twenty
copies of The Disciple-Making
Minister to the chaplain of
the Orange County Jail!
Join Us in Myanmar this Fall!
A
Trip of a Lifetime

2007 team member Tim Burgan among some of his orphan fan club
This Fall we're taking
two teams to Myanmar. The first team will be going November 8-21 and the second
team will be going November 28 - December 12. Although the second trip has
reached its limit for team members, there are still some slots open for the
first team. For more information, please email us.
Almost Heaven
West Virginia
I'll be speaking at
Calvary Full Gospel Church, south of Pittsburgh, on
Sunday, July 6. And I'll be speaking in Berkley Springs, West
Virginia, the weekend of July 12-13. For more information about either of these
meetings, please email us.
Building Orphanages is as Easy as Eating Pie!
H/F Orphan's Tear

This November, just a few weeks before Thanksgiving, some wonderful churches will be hosting Orphan's Tear Great Pie Auctions, proceeds of which will help build dormitories for some of our neediest orphanages. Not only do folks have a great time bidding against their friends for homemade pies, but they also help provide better places to live for little followers of Christ who don't have parents. If your church would like to be involved, please contact us soon. We can provide everything you need to know and full-color bulletin inserts. To view a special Pie Auction video, click here.
Don't Stop Your Love!
Historically, July and
August are when contributions slow down for most ministries. However, Heaven's Family never stops loving. Thanks for remembering your
family over the next few months. And thanks for the privilege of serving you as
you serve "the least of" Jesus' family around the world.
David

Parting Shot(s)
A
Miniature Model

Every
time I clicked the shutter of my camera, this little Cuban girl changed her
pose, as if she were a professional model! She's the granddaughter of the
pastor who encountered the "Cuban angel" mentioned in an article
above.
All contributions to Heaven's Family or any of its three divisions are fully tax-deductible within the United States. Heaven's Family is also a registered charity in the U.K. and most gifts qualify for Gift Aid, significantly increasing the amount of your contribution. All three divisions of Heaven's Family share the same mailing address. Please send all gifts to either Heaven's Family, Shepherd Serve, Orphan's Tear or I Was Hungry at:
P.O. Box 12854
Pittsburgh, PA 15241
If your gift is for a specific project, please indicate which project on the memo line of your check. Most of our current projects are described at IWasHungry.org.
To donate securely by credit card to the Heaven's Family general fund though PayPal click here. You can donate securely by credit to any specific project by visiting IWasHungry.org. Thank you!
This Ministry Update is a communication of Heaven's Family, and it is our primary means of keeping our partners informed of their fruit. We are striving to serve Jesus by loving "the least of" His brethren”poor believers who live in less developed nations and who often suffer persecution for their faith. We are focusing on equipping Christian leaders with essential biblical truth, supporting Christian orphanages, and meeting very pressing material needs. We'd love to have you join our growing family. Please visit the websites of our three divisions: ShepherdServe.org, OrphansTear.org and IWasHungry.org
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