This Family

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Rachel Remembers it's a New Day: Making Special

Rachel Remembers it's a New Day: Making Special: She spilled beans and orange soda down the front of her white flower girl dress. I took her into the kitchen and rinsed her down the best...

Saturday, July 13, 2013

Rosineide's Birthday Picnic

We are so grateful to the two short-term missions trip groups that left us with party supplies--and a whole bucket of double bubble gum!:)
And, of course, the winning bubble:


Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Alexandra

Here is the youtube video, if you prefer watching rather than reading:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z5YR2yvtk6s


Life piles on you like trucks that arrive with more trash. And sometimes, you forget to keep hoping that someday you will see a difference.

From 2007-2009 I had the opportunity to work with almost 150 children at Living Stones in Paudalho, combined with the local government program PETI (Program to Eradicate Working Children). But we didn’t just work with at-risk children and their families, we worked with whoever walked through the doors of the church.

One of those children, who wasn’t even registered with the government, was Alexandra. A bushy-haired fireball that I personally kicked out multiple times for violent behavior. Her mother was a prostitute in another town. Her father was a drunk in another. She and her brother lived on the street or in abandoned houses. She thinks she was born in 1996. She doesn’t know her birthday.

When I first met her, she was (around) 11, and I wrote this: “Alexandra always wear a dirty baseball cap. When we finally got it off her head one day, we realized why—she had the worst case of head lice I have ever seen, with open sores on her scalp. We find her decent clothes to wear, because she runs around in a miniskirt and tube top. But she doesn’t have any soap to wash them. She doesn’t know how to wash them even if she did. She does what she can to get food, and is known for trading sexual favors for bubble gum.”

As she grew up, she came to Living Stones less frequently, and in 2011 I heard she was pregnant. I went from house to house, asking where she was, wanting to offer help. Her friends came back with different stories: she tried to self-abort the baby. She was living with a woman who drank too much. She was living with the family of the father of the baby. Every time I went to the place they said she was, she had just left. And so I let it be.

But I continued praying for her. I ran into the father of her baby once, who said the baby was alive and healthy. I asked people to pray, I kept her picture on my wall. But I figured, as with many of the children, that they had made decisions, and I had to let that go.

Four years passed since I last saw Alexandra. So when I turned around in church, I was not looking for her face. But there she was, glowing, as she called out “Tia Rachel!” and bounced her daughter on her knees. I blinked first from surprise and then from tears as I ran to hug her, no knowing where to start.
 

She and her daughter are healthy. They have a more permanent home, and she is friends with a woman from church that brought her. Her smile was real and her hair was the silky black it should be. Her daughter’s name is Stephanie, and yes, she is happy and wants to keep learning more about Jesus. And I couldn’t ask for more.

The children I work with might not turn out like I think they should, but that doesn’t mean I failed, or God forgot. You never know what God has planned. And over and over He taps me on the shoulder and grins, saying, “See? I told you so. I told you I loved those children even more than you do. I got this.”

Friday, April 12, 2013

Josefa from Paudalho

While Living Stones in Paudalho had to close down in 2011, we still keep in contact with the children through Birthday parties and the $10 FOR THEM program--especially Josefa's family. Take some time to pray for them today:

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Building Living Stones: Josefa's Birthday

Building Living Stones: Josefa's Birthday: (Josefa and Rachel) They moved. Their old house was demolished. It wasn’t much of a house: made of taipa ( Clay, mud, and sticks), but ever...

Building Living Stones: Children's day Celebration: you are special!

Building Living Stones: Children's day Celebration: you are special!: A big thanks to all the volunteers! These seven students from the International school came to help, after the school had also donated some ...

Building Living Stones: Getting Ready for Big Things

Building Living Stones: Getting Ready for Big Things: ·          They camd ·          This week has been full with passing out invitations for the party (which is next Tuesday, October 25 th ) a...

Building Living Stones: Easter at Living Stones Paudalho

Building Living Stones: Easter at Living Stones Paudalho: The Living Stones project in Paudalho has been on hold because of construction projects (four new classrooms and two bathrooms--this will tr...

Building Living Stones: Where Hope Grows on Trees

Building Living Stones: Where Hope Grows on Trees: Sometimes it feels like lying when I write different statistics about Brazil, or post pictures. Yes, they can be impressive and/or depressin...

Building Living Stones: Pictures from Carnival

Building Living Stones: Pictures from Carnival: We started off passing out cookies, hot dogs, and bottled water, and then walked to the entrance of the town. Patricia and Cacau worked for ...

Building Living Stones: Prayer Requests

Building Living Stones: Prayer Requests: The PETI children (those I got to know through the Paudalho Living Stones, who are continuing through the government program) are doing well...

Building Living Stones: Party for the Children

Building Living Stones: Party for the Children: Each year, many people in the United States work hard to fill red and green bags with Christmas presents for the Living Stones children in B...

Building Living Stones: Catching up from 2010

Building Living Stones: Catching up from 2010: Having been in the United States all of 2010 (This is Rachel speaking), I wanted to catch you up on what happened in Brazil Living Stones Pa...

Building Living Stones: The History of Living Stones

Building Living Stones: The History of Living Stones: In 1998, the Living Stones program began in northeast Brazil under the name of Growing Kids. The founding pastor of Paudalho, Asuério Naque ...

Building Living Stones: Introducing Living Stones


This blog is to keep you updated with what is going on with the Living Stones program located in Paudalho, Northeast Brazil.  If this is your first time hearing about Living Stones, or you would like a quick refresh, here is a quick look at the program:

Living Stones serves impoverished children.
We work with many street children (a term used for both market children--who work in the streets and live with their families--and homeless street children--who work, live and sleep in the streets, often lacking contact with their families: Casa Alianza, Worldwide Statistics, Sept. 2000) and at-risk children who apply for help and welfare assistance in the urban context, and generally impoverished children in rural context.
Each child is individual, as well as their story and needs, whether they are temporarily or permanently in need. For most of these children, the meal they receive at Living Stones is the only hot meal they will have all day. We help them scholastically and nutritionally, enabling them to go to school instead of spending that time begging/working for food.

Living Stones is located in Northeast Brazil with World Renewal Brazil.
Working under the ministry of World Renewal Brazil (http://www.wribrazil.com/), Living Stones is a program individually connected with and under its respective church to serve the children in their community.  

Living Stones is a community outreach and church planting ministry.
We work with churches who desire to either 1. Begin a new church plant, or 2. Expand their church ministry within their community. We come alongside our brothers and sisters in Brazil to help train them and give them the resources to make a lasting difference in their community.
Through the week = Living Stones
On Sundays = A new church plant, or community outreach

Living Stones LENDs: enabling churches to provide Love, Education, Nutrition, and Direction
Each Living Stone program is set up to help their community in the best way possible. Some are full-time programs, serving two groups per day, in conjunction with the school system. One group goes to school in the morning, 1:00-4:00pm Living Stones (lunch and classes), and the other group comes 8-11am Living Stones (classes and then lunch), and goes to school in the afternoon. Some Living Stones are half-day programs,  some are in conjunctions with Glory Sports ministries, and some are on the weekends.  

You can help Living Stones LEND by giving a HAND
Have a HEART for the ministry, investing a part of yourself. ASSISTANCE by coming to Brazil yourself is always welcome and needed (opportunities at http://www.wribrazil.com) . Please take the NEEDS of the ministry before the Lord (find out more at www.buildinglivingstones.blogspot.com) , who supplies abundantly, and lastly, DONATIONS are always a blessing (at www.wribrazil.com/livingstones.html).  
The cost of the Living Stones program is approximately $1 a day per child. Please pray about supporting a child with a monthly donation of $30 (www.wribrazil.com/foundationbuilder) Once 60 people are committed, we can begin to plant a new Living Stones program and church in a community.