Hello all!

We wanted to send out another update about support raising, particularly after Keane’s update a couple weeks ago in which we outlined a possible breakdown of how to raise our remaining support. This is just one small scenario and is meant to be more of a visual help to those who appreciate having that kind of thing.

To date, we have $1,760 in monthly pledges raised out of the total $4,700 we need to raise (37%!). Hooray!

If each month we can have…

…12 people support us at $25 (down from 15 people!)
…and 23 people support us at $50 (down from 25 people!)
…and 10 people support us at $100 (down from 11 people!)
…and 2 very generous people support us at $150
…and 1 ridiculously generous person to support us at $200

(or just 1 person to do the whole thing)

Here is a link for giving.

We also need about $8,000 in one-time start-up costs (maybe more, depending on plane tickets), and we have $3,600 toward that! This is wonderful progress and we are so grateful that God is in this.

Hey everybody! Sarah here. The last few weeks have been jam packed with work and weddings and paperwork and good-bye parties and appointments and to-do lists, and I just want to throw this question out into the huge void we call the internet: Does life ever slow down???

One of the things that has taken up most of my time and energy over the last month has been wrapping up my job at my school. Between the typical end-of-year paperwork and everything I tried to put together for the person taking over my position, I have been running on fumes for a while. Last Friday was my last day of work at the high school, and I am praising God that it was a beautiful filled with sweet memories of my students. Our therapeutic groups have what we call Termination Groups (I know-they sound scary) when someone leaves. It’s a time when students can reflect on the progress their departing peer has made and can give them advice for the future. I was able to share some parting words with each of my students, and then, to my utter surprise, they each wanted to share some thoughts with me. I will hold their words in my heart forever. It was a sweet time of tears and laughter and saying good-bye.

I am so glad to be able to have finished my work and to now be able to focus on raising support and packing for Germany. If I could ask you to pray for a few things this week, they would be:

  • -In light of all the busyness and good-byes of the last few weeks, I feel emotionally weary. Please pray that God would restore me.
  • -We are flying to Florida tonight to spend a few days with my grandma. Please pray that this would be a sweet time and that we would be a blessing to her. This will be a hard good-bye for me.
  • -Please pray that I would be diligent in contacting people about joining our support crew. Sometimes the prospect of it can be quite intimidating!
  • -Please pray for my students who are transitioning to having a new social worker. Today is their first day of summer school and some of these students really struggle with change.

Love you all!

-sarah

Thank you thank you thank you to those this week who have prayed with us or shared that you are praying for us. We have been encouraged this week by sweet times of prayer with Keane’s family and with our Bible study. We will be carrying these memories with us to Germany, for sure.

My anticipation and excitement to work with students at BFA was magnified today. I was able to Skype with the current female counselor whose position I will inherit next year. (Side note: Technology is awesome.) It was just SO GOOD to be able to hear more details about the functions of the counseling department and my future role as the female counselor, specifically. The position entails much more than individual counseling. I will also work with the male counselor to provide professional development trainings to the school and dorm staff in mental health issues, will assist in teaching the mental health units of the high school health classes, and will lead transition seminars for the graduation seniors, amongst other things. These are things that are so near and dear to my heart, and I feel a renewed sense of awe that God has called me and Keane to work with these students next year.

For the past few months, our small group has been studying the Psalms. Perhaps “studying” implies something too formal; at times we have consulted commentaries and such, while at other times we have simply gleaned from the collective musings, experiences, wonderings, and gut reactions of a wonderful, diverse group of people.

Last week, a dear sister in our group led us in reflecting on our own encounters with Psalms in the heartaches and joys of regular life. There were sweet stories of just the right verse being discovered at just the right time. There were moments of hallowed silence. There was laughter. There were tears. The richness of the Psalms was reflected in the myriad of life experiences shared in that group.

I have my own Psalm Story. When I’m scanning through the book of Psalms in my Bible, I’m often stopped by Psalm 46, under whose title is scribbled “June 8, 2003” in the very adolescent bubble handwriting I had in high school. June 8, 2003 was the Sunday after my high school graduation. I sat in church that morning, sleep-deprived, dehydrated from all the tears you cry when saying good-bye to all your best friends and dorm siblings. That morning, sitting in church, I stumbled across Psalm 46:

“God is our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear, though the earth give way and the mountains fall into the heart of the seathough its waters roar and foam and the mountains quake with their surging. There is a river whose streams make glad the city of God, the holy place where the Most High dwells. God is within her, she will not fall; God will help her at break of day…He says, ‘Be still, and know that I am God; I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth.’ The Lord Almighty is with us; the God of Jacob is our fortress.”

As inconsequential as a high school graduation may seem, my mountain had fallen into the heart of the sea, and I desperately needed to read the words “therefore, we will not fear.” Because God is our refuge and strength, we will not fear. Amen.

Little did I know how much that passage would mean to me in the coming months. I flew into Chicago on an August evening just in time for freshman orientation weekend. I had never been to Illinois before, and as my eyes beheld the expansive grid of streetlights and houselights below the plane, I frantically thought, “Where are the hills?!” My heart ached that year for the figurative and literal mountains I’d known, and tightly I clung to “therefore, we will not fear.”

Lord, you are our refuge when the earth gives way from under us, when life becomes a quaking, surging mess. Help us to trust in your strong fortress. Help us to be still. Help us to know that you are the I Am, that you are the exalted God.