Giving Him Wings

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My oldest child is graduating and leaving home in four weeks (sniff, sniff). Would you indulge me as I share a reflection of God’s work in Him and through him?

After getting through customs in a small dirty room in the Ndola Airport, I exited the back of the airport to see a man with skin as dark as cocoa beans and a big smile that showed off his bright ivory teeth. He welcomed me to his country of Zambia and introduced himself as David Mulonga, the pastor of a local church.

I learned that a few days earlier Mr. Mulonga had been attending a pastor’s conference in South Africa and noticed Chris’ nametag. “Chris Stull…are you by any chance related to Dillon Stull?” They visited about our son and Chris told him I would be coming into Zambia a few days later, so he came to the airport to greet us.

As he shook my hand, he told me my son had ministered in his church two years ago and made a great impact on his community. He shared how one young man had grown in his faith, treasuring the Bible Dillon had given him. “Dillon may have been a boy on the outside, but he was a man on the inside,” he said.

Mr. Mulonga was referring to a trip Dillon had made with a small team from our church when he was fifteen years old. The eye doctor, who at the last minute could not make the trip because of kidney stones, asked Dillon to take his place and trained him in some basic eye tests. Little did the team know how much that opportunity meant to Dillon, as he had felt a call in the fourth grade to serve others through medicine.

Dillon stepped up and, with a registered nurse who was more than twice his age as his assistant, fitted hundreds of Zambians with eyeglasses. The highlight of the trip for Dillon was having the opportunity to fit the Chief of the Copperbelt Region, who presided over more than a million people, in glasses.

Since that time I have seen his heart turn more and more toward that land. His room is decorated in an African theme, we often find him poring over books teaching Zulu and Swahili, and friends on trips to Africa with him have told me he threatens to “lose” his passport multiple times. I’ve known since his first trip to a remote village in South Africa that part of his heart stayed in Africa.

So now it’s time to share a little more of him. In four weeks, just after high school graduation, he plans to depart by himself on a 37-hour trip to a training  school in Mozambique, Africa, where he will be until mid-August, just a couple of days before he starts his college education at Baylor University. Though it will be painful for us to let him go, I thank God for answering a prayer I have prayed since before he was born – that God would use him to impact the world for the Kingdom of God.

I envision traveling with my husband to Africa when we are old and gray and someone coming up to us and saying, “Mr. and Mrs. Stull? Are you related to Dr. Stull? He came to our village and God used him in powerful ways to help us.”

“I have no greater joy than to hear my children are walking in the truth.” 3 John 1:4

 Dear Father, I want to lift up all the graduates this year, graduating from kindergarten to first grade, middle school to high school, or high school to college. We thank you for their growth and the learning opportunities you have blessed them with and the opportunities they will have as they look ahead. Help each of them to understand your deep love for them, and give them a vision for what you have planned uniquely for them to do. May they walk in your Truth, living this next season for your honor and glory. Amen.

 

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Companion Planting

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Complementary vegetable plants benefit those they are planted next to. Companion planting can control pests, enhance flavor, shade and produce a higher yield.

Tomatoes: Plant near pepper, onion, asparagus, cucumber, carrot, celery, and parsley plants.

Peas: Plant near bean, corn, carrot, cucumber, turnip and radish. Tuck in some chives near the peas to reduce aphids. (Keep garlic and onion plants at a distance, as both will stunt the growth of pea plants.)

Lettuce: Plant near cabbage varieties, beets, carrots, onions, radishes or strawberry plants. Reduce the chance of aphids feasting on lettuce plants by planting chives or garlic nearby.

Peppers: Plant near onion, tomato, carrot and eggplant to boost pepper plant growth.

*Corn: Plant corn alongside of beans, parsley, peas and potatoes—with a benefit to all. Squash, cucumber, melon and pumpkin plants are also complementary vegetable companions for corn. Tomatoes and corn are both attacked by the same worm, so avoid planting them too close together.

Radish: Plant alongside lettuce, peas, beans, carrots and cucumber.

Carrots: Chives will improve the flavor and growth of carrots. Also plant near lettuce, bean, pepper, radish, tomato and peas. Rosemary and sage will reduce the chance of carrot fly infestation. (Keep dill away from the carrot plants as it will retard growth.)

Cucumber: Bean, corn, cabbage varieties, radishes and tomato plants are all good neighbors for the cucumber. Oregano will keep insects away. If the cucumber plants attract beetles, aphids or other bugs, plant marigold or nasturtium nearby. (Cucumber plants don’t do well if planted near sage.)

*From what I have read, gardeners did not get as good of a return on investment by planting corn. People say they take too much time, money, and trouble. The number one return on investment seems to be berries, from the testimonies I have read online on various sites. According to strawberryplants.org, ten to twenty-five strawberry plants can often be purchased for less than $20.00 and can sometimes be found for closer to $10.00.  Usually, 25 strawberry plants will adequately supply a family of four with strawberries.  Just a few strawberry purchases in the grocery store will likely cost more.

Source: Complementary Vegetable Garden Plants | Garden Guides http://www.gardenguides.com/93382-complementary-vegetable-garden-plants.html#ixzz1qHoQEegL

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Video Reflections on March 2012 Africa Trip

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Thank you so much for your prayers for our recent trip to Africa. I felt God’s Presence and saw His hand at work every step along the way.

The God surprises came from all sides — everything from helping a single mom with her colicky newborn on the long plane ride to marveling at God working through our friends Shane and Mitzie McBride in their ministry to 253 orphans, and encouraging a single woman in South Africa who is desperate for God’s will to watching God “bring out” the animals to greet us when we had a short time at a game reserve one afternoon (I feel like I should post “As in the days of Noah, the animals came out….! Saw 8 giraffes, 2 rhinos, 50 zebras, hippos peeking up from the lake, and more.) I stand amazed at His works.

I’m thankful to Kim Heaton for putting together this video sharing special moments of our trip:

Bless you!

 

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Mission Trip Prayer – Day 11-12

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March 11 the team will be attending church at Westville Baptist Church before departing that afternoon. We will fly back to Johannesburg and then will take the same route home—to D.C. via a stop in Dakar, Senegal and then on to DFW. We arrive around noon on March 12.

Please pray for safety and timeliness of the flights. Pray that the teams sleeps/rests on the long flights. Pray for the seeds of God’s love and grace that were planted in Africa will continue to grow and flourish.

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Mission Trip Prayer – Days 7-10

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March 7-9 Brenna will be leading different ages/life sections of women each day while the rest of the team are there to assist, plan other things, pray, or whatever is needed. The team has one event on the 7th, 2 on the 8th, 2 on the 9th plus an event with grade 6/7 girls on the 9th. On the 9th, they will have time to present a Bible lesson to the grade 6/7 girls and also hang out with them, doing nails, facials, etc. On March 10 Brenna will be speaking to all ages of women (from the previous 3 days) and there will also be a 3 hour children’s event held simultaneously that Karen and Kim (and possibly Terry depending on if she’s needed with Brenna) will be in charge of/helping with. The theme for the time in Durban is “The Great Adventure.” We will be staying with a host family in Durban and have had someone assigned to us to help show us around as well.

Please pray for Brenna as she leads the conference. Pray for the team as they help and minister to those attending the conference. Pray for those attending the conference, that they will know the immeasurable grace of God.

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Mission Trip Prayer – Day 6

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March 6 the team will leave Zambia, fly to Johannesburg and then fly to Durban, South Africa. They will arrive there around 9pm that evening and then will start a women’s conference at 7:30 the next morning. Again, pray that flights will arrive on time. Pray that the team will get rest as they prepare for the women’t conference.

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Mission Trip Prayer – Days 3-6

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March 3 the team heads to Zambia and will be there until March 6. During this time they will be with Shane and Mitzi McBride and their family. There will be 5 of team members staying in their house with them, making it 10 people in one house. Please pray that the team would be an encouragement to them and a blessing rather than a hindrance. They are joining a group from Lifesong, so the McBrides are busy planning for about 30 Americans right now. While they are there, they will be in a church on Sunday, will do the Bible lesson in the school on Monday and Tuesday, will tour the compound (the “town” the kids live in), the strawberry farm, and the area, and will learn about microloans. The team will also see the kids perform in a play and play in a soccer game. They hope to also help organize some things and be available to do whatever the McBride’s might have for us.

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Mission Trip Prayer – Day 2

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March 2 the team will have the great opportunity to have dinner with the Easleys and Evens after we arrive in Johannesburg (supposed to arrive at 5:40pm with Karen not arriving until 8pm). Pray for that time as they seek to encourage and enjoy each other in a short span of time. Pray for flights to arrive on time (or early!) so that they can have the maximum time with them, and pray that they would be alert and awake enough to really treasure the time together.

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Mission Trip Prayer – Day 1

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Suzanne here. Brenna, along with friends Karen, Terry and Kim, are on their way to Africa today for a mission trip. While there, they will work with the McBrides at Lifesong in Zambia and then, Brenna will lead a women’s conference in Durban, South Africa. Kim put together a prayer list for the trip, and I wanted to share it with you.

As they leave March 1 (flight is at 11:45—Brenna, Terry and Kim are on a flight to D.C. and then to Johannesburg with a stop in Dakar, Senegal; Karen is flying to Dubai and then to Johannesburg), I ask that you’d pray for them as they leave their families. I know that the hardest part is saying goodbye (on both ends of the trip usually).

Other prayer requests as they leave:
*Health for both their families here and them as they go
*Peace and comfort as they are away from loved ones
*Mercies as they try to fit everything into their 2 suitcases each, need to stay in the weight limit and hope to remember everything they need—and that all of their bags would arrive with them, too!

Thank you for praying!

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An Orphan Vision

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“Momma, I wish I could draw better!”  As I came into Karis’ room to say prayers for her and tell her goodnight a couple of months ago, she sat propped up in her bed with pink pillows all around her, sketching. She said she was trying to draw the face that kept popping into her head at different times. She described the face as an African American boy about her age or a little younger. The main thing she said is that he has really large eyes that are completely hopeless. She said that was what she felt she could not get right in her drawing.

Lord, is this our future child she’s seeing? Almost done with the preliminary adoption paperwork with the intent to adopt an orphan from Africa, and knowing we are going in a couple of months to work in an orphanage in Zambia, I am prayerful. As I go, I am watchful for those big eyes Karis has seen.

During the same weeks of the visions, Karis played an orphan role in the musical “Annie.” I never expected how those songs would pierce my heart as I heard her upstairs practicing songs like “Maybe.”I can almost hear someone in a land far away singing it now:

So maybe now it’s time,
And maybe when I wake
They’ll be there calling me “Baby”
Maybe.

Betcha he reads.
Betcha she sews.
Maybe she’s made me
A closet of clothes!
Maybe they’re strict.
As straight as a line…
Don’t really care
As long as they’re mine!

So maybe now this prayer’s
The last one of its kind…
Won’t you please come get your “Baby”?
Maybe.

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