Myanmar Update 2: Orphanage on the Water
The home and children of Love Children’s Home Dear Friends, For the past few days we’ve been away from Myanmar’s primary city, Yangon, and in […]
Read MoreThe home and children of Love Children’s Home Dear Friends, For the past few days we’ve been away from Myanmar’s primary city, Yangon, and in […]
Read MoreOne of the beautiful beneficiaries of a Heaven’s Family village water project Dear Friends, We arrived in Myanmar on November 7—the day of the first […]
Read MoreDear Friends, Jeevan Lam is nine years old and lives in Nepal. In April, the director of Loving Children Orphanage sent a photo of him […]
Read MoreDear Friends, I wanted to share with you a recent monthly report from the life of Bienvenu Bizimana, our beloved missionary in Burundi, East Africa, […]
Read MoreThe director and the orphans of Beulah Orphanage Dear Friends, Every year around this time we ask sponsors to send an extra $5 for each child they sponsor […]
Read More8-year-old Nicolae Ilues lives at a Home of Hope in Moldova. He likes to take care of the animals at the home. Dear Friends, In […]
Read MoreAll five Kenyan women held three things in common: All were young believers in Jesus; all discovered that they were HIV-positive; all had been infected by their own husbands. Priscah, who operated a nursery school, became too weak physically to care for children, including her own. She had to close her nursery school. A friend, and then eventually her mother, took in her children...
Read More"Many will be dead the next time I visit," John Siam lamented. "My burden for them is so great, I pray for them with tears. Prisoners are open and hungry to hear Jesus' words of life, but if I cannot at least bring them a Bible, what good am I in this world?"
Read More"I was a slave!" he said, and everyone in our circle laughed. They had been taking turns sharing how their lives had been impacted by their recently received micro-loans. Kenyan pastor Elijah Muyekho continued to tell his story with vigor: "I worked for a man who owned a rock quarry. I used a hammer and chisel all day long. My job was to break huge rocks and chisel them into rectangular blocks that are used to construct walls and buildings. On an average day, I made about a dollar."
Read More"God, if you are there, can you end my suffering?" That was the anguished cry of 20-year-old Miriam Nduwimana of Burundi, East Africa. She had endured almost unimaginable suffering. It began two years earlier when Burundi was embroiled in bloody tribal warfare. Miriam and her two younger sisters witnessed the slaughter of their other family members. They survived their nation's holocaust by fleeing to neighboring DR Congo.
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