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AN ISP Update from Cambodia

Chantha, now a 33-year-old teacher in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, trusted  Christ while working as a housekeeper for a pastor and his family in Malaysia. They treated her with love and respect, and taught her to speak English. When she attended church with them, she heard the gospel and trusted Christ to forgive her sins. Later, she returned to Cambodia and became a school teacher. 

Chantha explains her life map to delegates at a recent ISP teachers conference in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.

At a recent International School Project Dream Makers conference in Cambodia, she learned about life maps, a way for students and teachers to tell their life stories by drawing pictures of important events in their lives. It’s a powerful exercise that takes place at each conference. Teachers draw their life maps and share them with their small groups of teachers. 

Knowing most of her small group members were Buddhists, Chantha was concerned they might not understand her decision to follow Christ. She hesitatingly showed them her life map. The teachers in her group warmly embraced her and her story. 

On the last day of the conference, an official from the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports gave a speech and invited some of the teachers to share their life maps. In front of the entire group, Chantha explained her life map. The government official complimented her for including her faith journey in her story and referred back to her story three more times as he finished his talk. 

Teachers in 30 countries around the world attend conferences like this one. They learn exercises — like making life maps — so they can better understand their own stories and talk to their students about morals and values. 

As you think of us over the next few weeks, please pray for safe travel and good connections with people. We plan to be at our Cru staff conference in Colorado July 18-26. On the way there and back, we plan to visit family members, friends and churches in Nebraska and surrounding states. We’ll be on the road from July 11 to August 3. And please let us know how we can pray for you.

— Anne Marie, for the Winzes —

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Fast Updates During a Long Bike Ride

Last week, a man on a bicycle left Washington, D.C. He plans to arrive in Fort Collins, Colorado, by July 18. Our team is playing a small role in this journey.

He’s carrying all he thinks he’ll need, including camping gear and a bike repair kit. He plans to ride about 60 miles a day, day after day, for almost six weeks. (I’m impressed. I recently biked 60 miles in one day, and I had no interest in getting on my bike the next day.)

A couple weeks ago, I got an email asking if our team of writers and editors would help raise the profile of a little-known part of Cru. Dennis plans to bike almost 2,000 miles doing a kind of bike-a-thon to raise money. Along the way, he hopes to post online updates. But as he’d be on his own and not carrying a laptop, he would need help with those updates.

Unlike most Cru fundraising efforts, this one is asking Cru staff members to give. The part of Cru he’s already begun raising money for, the Ethnic Ministry Fund, provides matching funds to help those from different ethnicities reach their ministry locations. Staff members from minority cultures often find fundraising more challenging than those who are part of the majority.

Dennis, like many of us, sees this need as crucial to Cru’s long-term success. So, as he thought about riding a long distance, he decided he wanted to help meet this need.

For our team, this work will be a stretch. Typically, it takes a few months to prepare an issue of Cru Storylines, as it always did for the magazine. For this project, we need to work fast, doing several updates on a webpage for Cru staff members each week. We’re building a new set of skills that will help our future work.

That will be challenging, but that’s the easy part. Dennis is doing the hard part. If you’re somewhere between D.C. and Fort Collins over the next few weeks, keep an eye out for our Cru bike rider.

As you think of us, please pray for safety and health for Dennis as he travels and for the fund to benefit from his work. Pray for me and our team to effectively communicate the progress of Dennis’ ride. And pray for Anne Marie as she continues adjusting to her new role with the International School Project.

We’re grateful for your generosity, prayers and friendship.

— Mark, for the Winzes —

Good News from Around the World

KJ grew up following Islam in Gambia, a sliver of a country in West Africa. Eleven years ago, a missionary from Nigeria showed the JESUS film in KJ’s village.  He began following Christ. Facing persecution, he had to walk to the next village to shop as those in his village refused to do business with him. He now helps lead a church in his village, has planted churches in two others and is working to start a fourth.

This is one of three stories about people from Muslim cultures turning to Christ that we’re working on for Cru StorylinesTM. We rarely get to tell such stories as we need to protect these believers and ministries. Yet in some places, believers are bold enough to share their stories.

 In Great Britain, an immigrant from Iran who grew up Muslim helps lead a ministry. She and her husband, also a Christ-follower who grew up following Islam, take the gospel to other Muslim immigrant families through FamilyLife®, a Cru® outreach.

On campuses across North Africa and the Middle East, where virtually every student is Muslim, teams of Christians visit to tell about Christ. Because their time in these countries is short — up to a year, but sometimes shorter — they can take risks that long-term missionaries cannot. If they face trouble, they can leave earlier than planned with little damage to ongoing ministry.

We’re preparing a story about a young man who came to Christ thanks to such an outreach. Because we cannot show his photo, we’ll show the story in a series of illustrations — almost like a true-life comic book. This is a new process for our team.

While my team works on such stories, Anne Marie continues writing about the work of the International School Project. Their work, likewise, often takes place in countries where we must report only carefully. Read more about ISP at http://www.isponline.org/.

Thanks for praying for Anne Marie as she works on her article from Cambodia. She’s made great progress, with some work still to go. As you think of us over the next few weeks, would you pray for wisdom as we make our summer travel plans? We’ll be in Colorado for our bi-annual Cru staff conference, and will be visiting friends and churches on the way.

Thank you so much for praying for us, and for your generosity.

Since we can’t show you photos from these stories, above is a photo of us at the Myriad Botanical Gardens in Oklahoma City. We visited there during the Evangelical Press Association convention last month.

An Award for Cru Storylines

Anne Marie and I rushed down an airport hallway in Dallas. An early morning thunderstorm in Orlando delayed our departure, leaving us only 15 minutes between flights. If we missed this one, we’d have to go through Phoenix or Chicago to get from Dallas to Oklahoma City.

We made it, and got to Oklahoma City, site of the Evangelical Press Association convention, as planned. It was only April 5, and this was already our second trip of the month.

April 1, we woke up in Jacksonville Beach, Fla., to teach Writing for Life to communicators—both professionals and volunteers—working for a denomination. Their director took our class at last year’s EPA convention and invited us to train his team.

We enjoyed meeting them, and spending eight hours in training (top photo). Several team members expressed gratitude for the structures and processes we explained.

In Oklahoma, we enjoyed taking part in the EPA convention without any formal role.

For the last nine years, one or both of us had had a teaching or leading role at the annual  event, We enjoyed interacting with other  professionals and taking several classes. We did accept awards forCru StorylinesTM, along with two coworkers. (In the second photo, we hold the award with Rachel Ferchak, editor in chief, second from right, and Rachel Streich, a writer.)

We did have an informal role, helping host two publishers from overseas who joined the convention. Anne Marie helped Mary, from Mexico, find her way around, and Mark did the same for Benjamin, from India. And while we were in Oklahoma City, we took a short side trip to visit my brother, Rex, and his wife, Val.

As you think of us over the next few weeks, please pray for Anne Marie to complete her writing from Cambodia, and for us to connect with current and potential new ministry partners.

Thank you so much for your interest in our work, and your prayers and generosity.

Anne Marie’s back from Camboida

 

After an exhausting week in the classroom, Somaly rode her motorbike across town through a driving rainstorm and arrived late to a meeting for Cambodian teachers sponsored by the International School Project in April 2017.

When she discovered ISP was connected to Cru, she remembered her college years where she had grown in her faith because of the Campus Crusade staff members at the University of Phnom Penh.

I enjoyed meeting Somaly (center in this photo), Chandra (right) and other teachers at the ISP training in Cambodia.

After graduating from college, she married, had children and began her teaching career. She wanted to become a teacher of influence, helping other teachers discover faith in God and also grow professionally, but she didn’t know how.

Somaly learned about teacher movement communities at the ISP training conference. ISP equips teachers to form communities and make disciples of other teachers. We also help them plan professional development events for their peers.

She quickly agreed to help lead a teacher community, knowing how much she and the other teachers needed the encouragement a group like this could provide. Now, about 70 teachers belong to the Phnom Penh community.

Earlier this month, I traveled 26 hours across 12 time zones to Cambodia where I met Somaly and attended a leadership conference. Teachers from six cities across Cambodia received training. Now, they are now trusting God to create teacher communities for discipleship and professional development.

Would you pray for these things?

  • That Somaly and other teacher will see God work in their schools.
  • That I can write an article showing Somaly’s story to encourage others.  
  • That Mark and I can effectively train a group of writers in Jacksonville, Fla., the first few days of April.
  • That Mark’s father and my mother and father will continue in good health.

Thank you for your generosity and for prayers for us.

— Anne Marie, for the Winz family

 

 

From Anne Marie: On to Cambodia

Can you name a teacher who inspired you? Teachers around the world influence an average of 30 students every year. They care about students, but who cares for the teachers?

This month, I joined the International School Project, a branch of Cru® that cares for teachers. In 30 countries around the world, we’ve helped educators establish teacher communities so they can help their peers grow professionally and spiritually.

Somaly, a teacher in Cambodia, has prayed for years that God would use her in the lives of her students. Six months ago, Kevin, a staff member with the International School Project, asked God to lead him to teachers in Cambodia who wanted to help other teachers and students grow in their faith.

When Somaly and Kevin met in Cambodia six months ago, they became answers to each other’s prayers. Somaly and three other teachers formed a nucleus of the teacher community, trusting God to use them to make disciples of other teachers.

Next month, I plan to travel to Cambodia along with Kevin and two other Americans to provide leadership training to approximately 20 Cambodian teachers from four cities. In June, others will return for a conference for more than 100 teachers who will learn how to use ISP’s DreamMakers curriculum to teach morals and values, including a gospel presentation, to students.

After the conference, teachers will be invited to join the teacher community where they can talk about their experiences in the classroom. Spiritual training will be available to those who are interested as well.

I will collect stories about teachers who have benefited professionally and spiritually from ISP’s work. I look forward to meeting Somaly and other teachers, and learning more about them.

While I’m gone, Mark will remain in Orlando and continue leading the writers team that creates our digital magazine, Cru Storylines.

Please pray for us this month:

  • Pray that nothing will keep the teachers who have registered for the leadership conference, from attending.
  • Pray for our team as we prepare to present content during the conference, and that the content will inspire teachers to lead their communities well.
  • Pray that some teachers will come to know Christ and will join the spiritual training part of ISP’s outreach.

Thank you so much for your prayers and generosity. We’re truly grateful.

Lives Changed in Eastern Europe

Gina (left), Zana (second) and Daniel (center) set up a film showing.

God is at work around the world, changing people’s lives. It’s our privilege to help disciple people by showing their stories. After all, discipleship means showing what it looks like to follow Christ, and we show that in every story.

Last fall, I went to Romania to gather one of these stories for the March issue of Cru Storylines. Along the way, I found a second story that I want to share with you.

Gina Teodorescu serves with Cru in Romania. Now a widow in her early 60s, Gina and her former husband Ionel, came to Christ during the Romanian Revolution that overturned Communism.

The two met as students at Romania’s top engineering school. After graduating, they worked at the largest state-run manufacturing plant in the country. Ionel became the plant manager. During times of crisis, his government expected him to organize factory workers into a battalion that would defend the country and its rulers.

In 1989, Romanians overthrew dictator Nicolae Ceausescu, who had ordered the army to shoot at innocent civilians. Ionel ignored the order to bring factory workers as a battalion to the capital.

During those tense days, Gina and Ionel, both atheists who had been reading the Bible, asked God to protect them and their children. The revolution ended 3 days later, and they remained safe. They surrendered their lives to Christ.

Soon after, a factory worker left for six months to show the JESUS film in across the country. When he returned, Gina and Ionel helped him show the film locally. Two years later, they left their jobs and joined the staff of Cru.

Over the years, Ionel and Gina helped many people in Romania meet Jesus. One day, they spoke to Gypsy Christians in Craiova. Ionel declined their offer to become their pastor, but promised to return. Two weeks later, he died of cancer.

After taking three months off, Gina traveled back to  Craiova and met with the Gypsies. This took courage. She’d grown up scared of Gypsies due to an event early in her life. Society’s prejudice against Gypsies only strengthened her fear. (You can read more about this in Storylines in March.)

Yet to honor Ionel’s promise and to serve God, she went. She began coaching Daniel and Zana, a married couple who have now planted 11 churches in 6 years.

I wrote about Daniel and Zana for Storylines, but Gina’s story was every bit as interesting as theirs. Her faith inspired me. By telling Daniel and Zana’s story, and showing how Gina mentored them, we can encourage others to trust God with their lives.

And while you wait for the rest of what I wrote from Romania, you can read the story Mark wrote about God changing lives through SpeakOut camps in Slovakia: https://www.cru.org/storylines/2019/january/slovak-students-speak-out.

Thank you for your generous gifts to Cru on our behalf. We’re so grateful for your friendship and your kindness.

Our year ended on a strong note. In November, 20 writers and editors gathered near Nashville as Anne Marie and I led a day-long training.

The training, sponsored by the Evangelical Press Association, brought members of five Christian organizations together for the event. This was our fifth major training event or class series this year — two for Cru writers and three for others. It’s a privilege to help our Cru coworkers and other Christians based on the 30-plus years we’ve spent writing, editing, teaching and doing a wide variety of publishing work.

Mark’s work, leading the team of nine writers and editors who produce Cru Storylines and who help several Cru ministries gather stories, is unchanged. He’s responsible for that team’s ongoing training and he assigns stories to the writers and tracks their progress.

Meanwhile, Anne Marie’s job is in transition. Starting in 2019, she’ll be part of the International School Project, a branch of Cru. They equip public school teachers around the world to teach ethics and morality based on lessons from the JESUS film, showing students how they can make better choices.

Some teachers then become leaders, helping other teachers, thus helping even more students and even their whole communities. So far, 3,000 volunteers have trained more than 100,000 teachers.

We’ve trained several ISP writers, and Anne Marie has mentored two of their writers over that last few years. She even traveled to Taiwan with ISP a few years ago.

She plans to travel with ISP teams on their mission trips. She’ll help train teachers and also report about teacher movements in each country. She’s also been asked to travel apart from mission trips to gather reports.

Your gifts to us throughout the year help us continue to share stories of how God is at work around the world and to help others do the same. We’re grateful for your friendship and commitment.

– Mark, for the Winzes

P.S. In light of travel costs associated with Anne Marie’s new role, would you be willing to send an end-of-the-year gift? If so, you can give online at give.cru.org/0262910.

 

 

Report from Nashville Training

“What’s keeping you up at night?” I asked 20 writers in Nashville who had assembled to learn more about taking an idea for a written story from concept to complete article.

“If I could provide some relief, would you be interested?” More than one person looked at me with eyes that said, Yes, please!

“If you can provide that same kind of relief for your audience, do you think they would be interested?” I asked.

Then, together we looked at the story of Jesus healing the blind man in John chapter 9. “Who sinned?” the disciples asked. “This man or his parents?”

The blind beggar had a problem, he couldn’t see. But it was even worse (or amplified). He’d been blind since birth, and society wanted to blame him or his parents for doing something wrong. Someone had to be held responsible.

Jesus bypassed the question and took action. His solution? He spit in the dirt and smeared mud in the blind man’s eyes. When the blind man washed the mud out of his eyes, he could see for the very first time. Jesus had transformed his life.

Of course, the neighbors had questions. The now-seeing man gave his testimony multiple times as he answered them. The religious leaders tried to logically explain this unusual turn of events. When they failed, they excommunicated the seeing man for claiming Jesus was God.

Jesus found the seeing man and asked him if he believed in the Son of Man. An opportunity. “And who is he, sir,” the seeing man asked, “that I may believe in him?”

“You have seen him,” Jesus said, “and it is he who is speaking to you.” The seeing man responded by believing in Jesus.

The first letters of each of the words above in bold spell PASTOR. Together we talked about how writers could structure their content to pastor their readers. During the workshop, for writers from five Christian organizations that are part of the Evangelical Press Association, we discovered that the model works for stories with different purposes. When learning takes place, it’s a delight to everyone in the room, including me.

Thank you so much for praying for us and for your generous gifts that allow us to do the work we do. We’re so grateful. This month, please pray for wisdom for Mark as he temporarily assumes the duties of his coworker who is recovering from surgery.

Please let us know how we can pray for you, too.

— Anne Marie —

Report from Romania

Daniel and Zana Osu, church planters in Romania, head into a Gypsy village and show Magdalena, a film that tells the story of Jesus through the eyes of Mary Magdalene. Magdalena, a complementary version of the JESUS film, is a Cru ministry tool.

Some viewers place their faith in Christ at film showings. A week later, Daniel and Zana return and lead follow-up lessons. The training is oral because most Gypsies don’t read and write.

Daniel and Zana baptize believers and start a church with regular services. They train leaders in the church and appoint a pastor. Soon, church members travel with the couple to another village to start a new church.

I watched all of this happen for a week. What a pleasure to meet Daniel and Zana, and their friend Gina, a Cru staff member who invited me to Romania and who translated while I was there on assignment with Cru Storylines.  (In the top photo, Zana and I are in one of the 12 churches the couple has started. In the second photo, Daniel invites people to trust Christ to forgive their sins at a showing of the Magdalena film.)

For thousands of years, Gypsies have been enslaved and persecuted, mostly because of their dark skin. They responded by dropping out of society.

Parents don’t register their children and obtain birth certificates. Without that documentation, their children can’t go to school. They don’t learn to read and write, leaving them eligible only for menial labor jobs, that pay low wages. Children marry early. Daniel was 14 when he married 10-year-old Zana. A year later, Zana gave birth to their first baby.

It’s a culture of uneducated children raising children while trying to figure out how to break out of generations of poverty and persecution. They face overwhelming obstacles , and yet, God shows up. Daniel and Zena have planted 12 churches in 6 years.

Now, it’s time for me to write the story. I have a first draft done. I will also write captions for the pictures and two smaller stories that will run alongside the main story. Please pray that what I write will glorify God and encourage believers as they see God at work in a glorious way.

Thank you for praying for us, and for playing a role as we tell of God’s glorious works.

— Anne Marie —

Below, Gypsies, a people group often despised by those around them,  watch the life-changing message of the JESUS film as seen through the eyes of a woman who was despised in her culture. (All three photos are by Guy Gerrard, the photographer who joined me in roaming around Romania.)