Twelve Modern Disciples Go Overseas
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| The team in Armenia with Mt. Ararat in the distance. |
By Owen Wilkie
The
Assemblies of God World Missions works with its own ministries and
other organizations to send teams on missions trips to various
countries of the world on a variety of assignments.
One team
that went to three of the former Soviet Union countries on a 14-week
compassion and ministry missions trip last October through December
went as a part of the Convoy of Hope (COH). This is their story:
GETTING THE TEAM TOGETHER
The
team of six men and six women gathered at the Convoy of Hope
headquarters in Springfield, Missouri, coming from Arizona, Washington
State, Illinois, Michigan, Indiana, Missouri and several other states.
Kisha
Johnson joined the group because she was seeking God’s direction in
missions and her pastor directed her to the Convoy of Hope. Noah
Hensley said he wanted to live out Isaiah chapters 58 and 61 and preach
to the poor, bind up the broken-hearted, feed the hungry and provide
shelter for the homeless. Gabrielle Lutz had felt called to missions
since she was 13 and wanted to serve God with her whole heart.
They
put off jobs or education for a time to leave the comforts of home in
answer to God’s call on their lives. Chris McCullough wrote on his
blog: “Financially there is no way I could have gone on this trip if I
had tried to do it myself. It’s a miracle that I’m able to go on this
journey. What’s even crazier is that when it got down to a week left
before I was to leave I still had a decent amount of money left to be
raised. Then Sunday came and the church prayed for me … and all the
money came in at the last minute. Now if that’s not God testing and
stretching my faith I don’t know what is.”
The other 11 in the group had similar stories of how God had called them and enabled them to go on this trip.
After
training for 19 days in Springfield under the direction of COH
Internship Director Matt Wilkie, (with an additional unexpected
five-day trip to help the Hurricane Ike victims) the team boarded a
plane and were on their way.
MOLDOVA
Their first
stop was in Moldova where they worked with AGWM missionaries Andy and
Nancy Raatz, Troy and Heidi Darrin and missionary associate Sara Tady.
Straseni, Chisinau, Mihaileni and Sarata-Galbena are names of towns
where the team worked that will forever be etched in their hearts with
memories of events and people to whom they were able to minister.
In
Straseni the men helped put up the wall for a new church building. The
team gave food and ministered to a vision impaired group, and worked in
an orphanage of about 100 kids playing tag with the kids and making
balloon animals. They played soccer and volleyball with the youth from
the community but were no match for the Moldovans.
One of their
major projects in Chisinau was helping put the finishing touches on the
Home of Hope, a residence directed by Andy Raatz that helps women who
have been trafficked and their children.
In Northern Moldova
they passed out bags of food in a town that had been completely
flooded. Kisha Johnson, one of the team who helped pass out bags of
food to the flood victims, remembers, “I’ve never received so many hugs
and ‘thank you’s’ in my entire life.”
In Mihaileni they did painting and construction on an AG church.
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| M.A. Sara Tady playing with Danny |
In the same
town Mikellah Kimbrough, Zach Forner and Karen Carr took groceries to
some homes of needy people. In one visit they found seven-year-old Lina
and three-year-old Danny living alone. Their parents had left them home
alone to fend for themselves while they worked out of the country. An
older brother was away at school. They fed the children, loved them and
cared for them the best they could. They returned with Igor and Lilly,
from the local church, who said they would help care for the children.
Igor said, “I didn’t know poverty like this existed in my village.”
In Sarata-Galbena the team did an outreach in the community distributing food to the needy and witnessing to them about Christ.
ARMENIA
In
Vanadzor, Armenia, they worked with AGWM missionaries Nick and Olivia
Pucinni. One of the projects they did was to set up seven water filters
among the Yezide Kurdish people. The villagers were grateful for the
clean water since they and the livestock shared the same source of
water. Even the local hospital used an unsafe source of water. Each
water filter can provide water for up to 80 people, pumping up to 120
gallons a day, and requires little maintenance. After setting up the
filters they taught the local people how to install more filters and
maintain them.
They also helped build homes for people who had been living in trailers since a devastating earthquake in 1988.
While in Armenia they took pictures of Mt. Ararat off in a distance that many claim still holds the remains of Noah’s ark.
REPUBLIC OF GEORGIA
While
in Tbilisi, Georgia, they worked with AGWM missionaries Diane Dorlon,
and missionary associates Juan and Shirley Ocasio and Amanda Tyler. One
of their projects was to give food and other supplies to some of the
estimated 140,000 internally displaced people from the recent conflict
with Russia. They handed out pots, pans, food and other household items
to people who had recently lost everything when they had to flee their
homes.
Chris wrote on his blog during this time: “I walked
into a room of refugees today who have literally lost everything they
own. I am sure all of them had lost one or more loved ones. It is tough
to find the silver lining in their situation.”
Gloria Ann Ried
remembers how she and other team members and missionaries went to
purchase food each day for the refugees. When the merchants realized
the food was for the refugees they often gave them the groceries for a
huge discount. Gloria Ann said one day they carefully packed up and
counted out 50 sacks of groceries. When they arrived at the camp they
distributed 55 sacks, just what was needed. “It was amazing how God
multiplied the food and money over and over again,” she said.
Another part of the group worked with a construction crew on a building in Rustavi.
BACK HOME
Finally,
after 14 weeks of working on a myriad of projects, staying in various
types of accommodations, experiencing several different foods and
cultures, having enough adventures for a great number of blogs and many
conversations with friends and relatives over coffee, and ministering
in Jesus’ name to hundreds of people, they returned home to family and
friends and their own comfortable beds.
Nathan Hammerberg
commented after he got back: “Knowing I did what I was called to do is
the greatest feeling I have ever experienced. It got me outside of
American Christianity and refined my character quite a bit.”
Noah
Hensley summed it up for the whole team when he said: “This trip has
given me many experiences I can share with other people. It changed how
I view things. I know that I’m a missionary wherever I am.”
Owen Wilkie is the Web editor in U.S. Relations for the Assemblies of God World Missions.
Click on www.goag.org for information on taking a missions trip, or go to “Going” on this Web site’s home page.








