Easy Rider
Cleophas and Beatrice Makona, with Cleophas’ new motorcycle Dear Friends, When you give to the Heaven’s Family Mutual Fund, a percentage of your gift […]
Read MoreCleophas and Beatrice Makona, with Cleophas’ new motorcycle Dear Friends, When you give to the Heaven’s Family Mutual Fund, a percentage of your gift […]
Read MoreA new Kenyan flag at Heaven’s Family Christian Academy, in Saboti, Kenya Dear Friends, If they knew about it, children in the U.S. and Canada […]
Read MoreTluang Za Men of Living Hope Orphanage earned a third place prize in her class at school The sweltering heat of summer has already begun […]
Read MoreVan recovering in her hospital room with an ice pack on her incision and a big smile on her face Dear Praying Friends, I […]
Read MoreA lesson of faith: a new kitchen comes to Living Hope Orphanage! Living Hope Orphanage has prayed a long time for a new kitchen. Their […]
Read MoreDear Friends, I wish I could share only happy news from the orphanages you help us support, but this month I have sad news. This […]
Read MoreWaiting for wife and mom to return home well again A heart-to-heart message to my friends, To all of you who contributed to the […]
Read MoreAnna rejoiced when she heard the decision: Yes, you can come. That was the open door she had prayed for, and she began making plans to visit a place that had broken her heart—a prison for boys.
Read MoreI sat talking with pastor Preval Meritil, longtime friend of Heaven's Family and my host once again for this, my fourth visit to Haiti. Together, we had done a lot of work since the earthquake one year earlier, and this time I was leading another work team, checking on projects that we'd started at our adopted Resettlement Camp, and visiting the orphanages Heaven's Family had been supporting even before the earthquake. Preval told me about another needy orphanage named El Bethel, meaning "House of God." Since El Bethel was on our way to the Resettlement Camp, we decided to visit.
Read MoreDuncan Owino had a new wife and no job—hardly a good way to begin a marriage. In Nakuru, Kenya, however, where Duncan lives, such a plight is not uncommon. Poverty and unemployment are endemic there, but neither prevent young men and women from marrying.
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