Saturday, February 27, 2010

Oh Beautiful Nigeria !



Hi Nigeria friends from Timonium, MD. We have had two back to back blizzards this February. Here is a photo of my children playing during the second blizzard. We are all dug out now and the snow is melting. Has it been a year? It is hard to believe. A year ago, I started to post stories of my 2008 visit to Jos, Nigeria. I have had the privilege to serve at Faith Alive for the past two summers and then in the ministry at home for the Advent Project. It is time to say goodbye on this journey. A new team will be chosen soon to go this summer. I know they will have a very special experience too.

The Nigerian people and images are always in my mind. I miss you my friends! I went hoping to give to you but you gave me so much more. Faith Alive is a family - a community of faith. Our church is creating a community of faith. We now are opening ourselves up to more people at Crowne Plaza, our small groups and even just stopping in the cafe after worship. I love knowing that this is not for just now, but that this is for our families' future. I have a picture of Nigeria that will not go away. But what I am thinking now is that the picture is going to be my model for being a better person in my community as a disciple of Jesus Christ.

Oh Beautiful Nigeria !

You are our brothers and sisters.
Your children are our children - only wanting a chance -
a chance to live a safe healthy life - to know You, Lord God and know they are loved by You -to have a relationship with You.
I see your beautiful smiles, but I feel your pain and have heard your cries.
I see your hands raised in the air to God, your children wanting hugs.
I smell the diesel fuel burning in the air for cooking yellow corn bricks,
I see the dirt streets winding around,
I hear the unrelenting rain and the beating sound it made on the tin roofs,
I see the blue skies after clearing and the low hanging white clouds.
I feel the fierce humid heat,
I remember the markets streaming with vendors trying to sell their wares,
the beautiful hand-made cloth and wooden objects
A woman begging for money with her child at the foot of one of the doorways.
I see the hope in the faces of the multitudes of people when they would see the Faith Alive van.
When we would get out, how you run up to touch us.
We prayed for you.
We played with your children, running and running around in a circle.
We sang with you and heard your beautiful voices.
We heard your beautiful music.
We praised God with you.
You fed us - we ate with you.
You gave us shelter - we stayed with you.
We grew to love you.
We will never forget you.
We have been changed forever.

Oh beautiful Nigeria, our heart beats for you!


Teresa Pompa

Monday, February 15, 2010

2010 Application




Above you will find the information and the 2010 application for our NATIVITY:NIGERIA mission this upcoming summer.

Please note that the application is due by March 21, 2010. After that time, individual interviews will be conducted with applicants.

Please submit all completed applications to the Information Desk at Church of the Nativity or nigeria@churchnativity.org

There will be an information session at Church of the Nativity on March 3rd at 7PM for all those interested in learning more about this ministry.

Please direct all questions to nigeria@chuchnativity.org

Lillies


A refection on our current blizzard by Dr. Gin Gin Diokno:

Sore doesn’t even begin to describe it!
After shoveling 2 plus feet of snow last weekend, I had to dig out another foot today. Good thing that I have very nice neighbors who helped me with the hardest part which was the heavy wet slush. Whew! This storm has kept us indoors but I find myself with so many things to do. I haven’t gotten the cabin fever bug yet. Here are some things I did: I cooked better-than-diner made-from-scratch blueberry pancakes; the secret is to separate the eggs, beat the whites then incorporate into the batter. They’re crispy on the outside and fluffy on the inside. Last Saturday, I had chili on the stove top and since it was simmering untouched while I was busy digging out, it was one of the best batches I’ve made. I had enough for my superbowl dinner. Taking pictures of the white stuff and sending them to my Jersey Family who usually gets more than we do. They were quite impressed. I also sent them to my godson in North Carolina who was wondering why they don’t get any. Getting some more reading done. But the one thing I really want to share is this movie I caught “On Demand” for free. While I’m doing my hand quilting, I chose this 1963 Sidney Poiter film for which he won an Oscar, becoming the first black man to receive the best actor nod. It’s about an itinerant handyman in the Southwest who gets a new outlook on life when he helps a group of German nuns build a chapel. It’s a very simple low-budget movie but has a lot of heart. It was touching how the whole community chipped in. It reminds me of what our church is doing at the Crowne Plaza. Knowing what the Nativity community can accomplish, I have no doubt that the endeavor will get a lot of support from our parishoners. If you have time, try to see this old movie with a message that resonates to this day. It’s called Lilies of the Field. Tomorrow, I might have to start on my taxes...