Cautious Evangelism in North Korea
North Korean families stretch whatever food they have to make it last as long as they can (this photo is a dramatization) Dear Friends, […]
Read MoreNorth Korean families stretch whatever food they have to make it last as long as they can (this photo is a dramatization) Dear Friends, […]
Read MorePar Dim making a regular contribution to her investment. Par Dim and her husband Joseph take care of 16 children at Emmanuel Orphanage. She recently […]
Read MoreNgun Ngen Tial proudly standing with her new loom. In the February issue of Heaven’s Family’s magazine, you may remember reading about Ngun Ngen Tial […]
Read MoreOne of the lepers who is thankful for receiving treatment at our new medical clinic in India Dear Friends, This past year has been […]
Read MoreWe received the photo above from the director of Life Concern Orphanage in Myanmar. He labeled it with the bittersweet caption, “Final Greeting of Christmas […]
Read MoreVan Kung and Dawt Par, wearing traditional Chin tribe clothes, are now happily married. One of the questions most asked from sponsors is: What happens […]
Read MoreNeither of them can remember their parents. Bawi was just three months old, and Ngun only two when their mother was killed in an accident. Six months later, their father died of tuberculosis, a disease that still takes lives among Myanmar's rural poor.
Read MoreTo Burma's military leaders who have been trying to suppress Kachin State's independence movement for five decades, she is a woman who hardly exists, a mere speck of dust on their political chessboard. To soldiers in the Kachin Independence Army, she is just one of forty thousand frightened people who have recently fled from their villages to escape fresh fighting. To her husband, a pastor, she is the wife whom he has seen only twice in the past four months, as he, like most other Kachin men in the war zone, has remained behind to protect his crops. To the thirty women and children with whom she sleeps each night on the wooden floor of their common room at Jan Mai Refugee Camp, Htulum Sumlut is a godsend, a light in their darkness.
Read MoreDoes anyone care? ...Does God even care? I imagined those questions racing through the minds of the women whose stories I was hearing—women who lost their husbands and who then found themselves struggling to feed their children as they faced famine and Kenya's soaring food prices.
Read More"Who is Jesus?" "Is He greater than Buddha? "Why did He die?" Those questions were like music to the ears of the two young missionaries. They were so happy that they didn't give up. Plan B was working. Lydia and Nwe Hnin Mee are recent graduates of a missionary training center founded by one of Heaven's Family's national missionaries in Myanmar. Upon graduation, the two girls bravely relocated to a small village named Ho Khe, in the heart of a region that is caught in Shan State's long-standing rebel war. With typical new-graduate zeal, Lydia and Nwe Hnin were excited about sharing the gospel with the 40 families of Ho Khe.
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