Thursday, January 31, 2013

My. Thoughts. Exactly.

Thought i would share this. This is how I have been feeling lately!


This is from a blog
http://www.kouya.net/?p=5108

In the last couple of days I’ve seen a number of tweets and articles from churches and mission agencies claiming that the people involved in them are changing the world. I’m not convinced.

Don’t get me wrong, I don’t believe that these people are not wonderful, hard-working, dedicated and well-intentioned. I just don’t believe that they are changing the world. Oh, and I don’t believe that the world isn’t being changed. I just don’t believe that they are the ones changing it.

Let me explain. When Christian ministry (be it through a church or mission agency) is successful it is God who achieves that success; not the church or agency. Paul planted, Apollos watered, but God caused the seed to grow. God calls us to work alongside him. He uses our efforts – the slick and professional as well as the gauche and embarrassed - to bring glory to himself. We serve God and God changes the world.

This might sound picky, but I think it is really important for at least two reasons.

Firstly, when we claim that we change the world, we are claiming credit for something that God has achieved. That really isn’t a good idea.

Secondly, when we think of ourselves as world-changers, we can easily slip into prioritising our techniques and methodologies over a prayerful dependence on God. This, too, is not a good idea.

The ultimate aim of Christian work is to bring glory and honour to God and this needs to start with the way in which we talk about the work we do.

As they say on Twitter: just sayin’.

By Eddie Arthur



So many days it feels like we just exist! So thankful for His grace that carries us through it all! It's not about just doing. But also being! When the day ends I want to say that I choose Jesus today and whether I did something or not- I lived through Christ!
Seeking him daily and many times failing! But living in His grace-
Amy louise



Wednesday, January 23, 2013

keeping a bigger perspective


keeping a bigger perspective...

last night i told bob- i need to get out and get perspective. So we went for a night walk... amazing what a little exercise does for the soul!  It changes my outlook and encourages me to keep pressing on... Here is the update that I sent out- sorry if it is a repeat for some...


Hello sweet friends and family!  
It has been an intense month here in Malawi.  We would so love your prayers as we keep on serving the King!  It has been one thing after another.  It has been really hard to see the bigger perspective when all we can see is what is in front of us.  The bigger perspective is that God is sovereign.  He has us in the grip of His hands and we need to trust that.  We are so thankful that these circumstances are continually pushing us to our knees and seeking the face of the one which we have the hope of eternity.  

How you can be praying...
  • This last month we have had 2 major break -in and many minor ones here on campus.  As Bob is in charge of security - he has created a team of campus men to increase security.  With all that is being done we still live in an extreme poverty 3rd world country and even a bucket that is stolen is valued.  Please pray as Bob has to deal with lots of security issues and calm the nerves of  75+ Americans - plus 250 + students that live on this 50 acre campus. 
  • Bob threw out his back last week and was flat for about a week.  Gosh - so it begins - we are getting old.  Please pray as he has so many things to be doing- laying flat is only meant for sleeping!
  • Also Bob is preparing for this semester coming classes and his computer decided to die.  As for now it seems that it is working - but we need to get it repaired and we live very far away from an Apple Store.  It seems silly to pray for a computer but He needs it to prep and teach.  So please pray that it sustains this semester until we can get it repaired.  
  • Please pray for us as we serve here and as living in a different culture can be exhausting and emotionally draining.   
  • Please be praying for the staff here at ABC.  We have lots of people and people drama has drained all of us.  We live on planet full of people!  SO there will be people drama until God comes back!  Please pray as we are in relationships with others - we would shine the light of Christ.
  • Please pray that we keep our eyes focused on what we have been blessed with - Family, health, amazing friends and supporters, a home and 10 puppies!  We have hope!  We choose it!
  • We recognize that Satan is very busy at bringing discouragement and fear! We are thankful to know that we are covered by the King of the universe.  We must be doing something right if he wants to bother us.  Please pray that we would continue to seek the kingdom of God First!
Thank you our amazing prayer warriors.  We could not do what we do without you!  We will keep you updated!
Love- the stauffy family


This is from the daily devotional – My Upmost for His Highest by Oswald Chambers.
Am I Looking To God?
0Look to Me, and be saved . . . —Isaiah 45:22
Do we expect God to come to us with His blessings and save us? He says, “Look to Me, and be saved . . . .” The greatest difficulty spiritually is to concentrate on God, and His blessings are what make it so difficult. Troubles almost always make us look to God, but His blessings tend to divert our attention elsewhere. The basic lesson of the Sermon on the Mount is to narrow all your interests until your mind, heart, and body are focused on Jesus Christ. “Look to Me . . . .”
Many of us have a mental picture of what a Christian should be, and looking at this image in other Christians’ lives becomes a hindrance to our focusing on God. This is not salvation— it is not simple enough. He says, in effect, “Look to Me and you are saved,” not “You will be saved someday.” We will find what we are looking for if we will concentrate on Him. We get distracted from God and irritable with Him while He continues to say to us, “Look to Me, and be saved . . . .” Our difficulties, our trials, and our worries about tomorrow all vanish when we look to God.
Wake yourself up and look to God. Build your hope on Him. No matter how many things seem to be pressing in on you, be determined to push them aside and look to Him. “Look to Me . . . .” Salvation is yours the moment you look.

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

keeping a bigger perspective...

last night i told bob- i need to get out and get perspective. So we went for a night walk... amazing what a little exercise does for the soul!  It changes my outlook and encourages me to keep pressing on... Here is the update that I sent out- sorry if it is a repeat for some...


Hello sweet friends and family!  
It has been an intense month here in Malawi.  We would so love your prayers as we keep on serving the King!  It has been one thing after another.  It has been really hard to see the bigger perspective when all we can see is what is in front of us.  The bigger perspective is that God is sovereign.  He has us in the grip of His hands and we need to trust that.  We are so thankful that these circumstances are continually pushing us to our knees and seeking the face of the one which we have the hope of eternity.  

How you can be praying...
  • This last month we have had 2 major break -in and many minor ones here on campus.  As Bob is in charge of security - he has created a team of campus men to increase security.  With all that is being done we still live in an extreme poverty 3rd world country and even a bucket that is stolen is valued.  Please pray as Bob has to deal with lots of security issues and calm the nerves of  75+ Americans - plus 250 + students that live on this 50 acre campus. 
  • Bob threw out his back last week and was flat for about a week.  Gosh - so it begins - we are getting old.  Please pray as he has so many things to be doing- laying flat is only meant for sleeping!
  • Also Bob is preparing for this semester coming classes and his computer decided to die.  As for now it seems that it is working - but we need to get it repaired and we live very far away from an Apple Store.  It seems silly to pray for a computer but He needs it to prep and teach.  So please pray that it sustains this semester until we can get it repaired.  
  • Please pray for us as we serve here and as living in a different culture can be exhausting and emotionally draining.   
  • Please be praying for the staff here at ABC.  We have lots of people and people drama has drained all of us.  We live on planet full of people!  SO there will be people drama until God comes back!  Please pray as we are in relationships with others - we would shine the light of Christ.
  • Please pray that we keep our eyes focused on what we have been blessed with - Family, health, amazing friends and supporters, a home and 10 puppies!  We have hope!  We choose it!
  • We recognize that Satan is very busy at bringing discouragement and fear! We are thankful to know that we are covered by the King of the universe.  We must be doing something right if he wants to bother us.  Please pray that we would continue to seek the kingdom of God First!
Thank you our amazing prayer warriors.  We could not do what we do without you!  We will keep you updated!
Love- the stauffy family



This is from the daily devotional – My Upmost for His Highest by Oswald Chambers.
Am I Looking To God?
0Look to Me, and be saved . . . —Isaiah 45:22
Do we expect God to come to us with His blessings and save us? He says, “Look to Me, and be saved . . . .” The greatest difficulty spiritually is to concentrate on God, and His blessings are what make it so difficult. Troubles almost always make us look to God, but His blessings tend to divert our attention elsewhere. The basic lesson of the Sermon on the Mount is to narrow all your interests until your mind, heart, and body are focused on Jesus Christ. “Look to Me . . . .”
Many of us have a mental picture of what a Christian should be, and looking at this image in other Christians’ lives becomes a hindrance to our focusing on God. This is not salvation— it is not simple enough. He says, in effect, “Look to Me and you are saved,” not “You will be saved someday.” We will find what we are looking for if we will concentrate on Him. We get distracted from God and irritable with Him while He continues to say to us, “Look to Me, and be saved . . . .” Our difficulties, our trials, and our worries about tomorrow all vanish when we look to God.
Wake yourself up and look to God. Build your hope on Him. No matter how many things seem to be pressing in on you, be determined to push them aside and look to Him. “Look to Me . . . .” Salvation is yours the moment you look.

Saturday, January 12, 2013

An update on Tina....


Below is a story on Tina and what is God is doing in her life.  This is the college's newspaper story!  Enjoy...





International student finds similarities
As Tina Kamkosi, an international student at Whitworth University, has traveled her life’s journey in Malawi and for two years in Spokane, she sees that “God is faithful and God provides.”
Life’s adventures now open her to be a life-long learner. 
Tina Kamosi
Tina Kamkosi, Whitworth graduate student from Malawi
She hopes the master’s in business administration (MBA) degree in international management she earns this year will help her be a change agent when she returns to Africa some day.
She would like to do humanitarian aid and human rights work with the United Nations and other non-governmental organizations that make life better for people in Malawi and other parts of Africa.
 Her hope and vision now is quite a contrast to how she felt when her mother died while she was in high school.  She thought then that God must not love her or God would not have taken away someone she loved and needed.
After her father died while she was studying at the African Bible College in Lilongwe, Malawi, she became part of a missionary family, Bob and Amy Stauffacher.  Now they have raised support from their pockets and other donations to cover her tuition.  Amy’s parents, the Warricks, house Tina in their home near Whitworth.
“Anyone can be anyone’s family,” she has concluded.  “We are human beings, and all have needs.  God places us where we are to support each other and to pour love on each other’s lives.
“Every perspective helps me look at life in a different way, not just focusing on myself but giving back to God’s world,” she said.
One way she has done that is through Whitworth’s International Club.  As president last year, she developed a team of leaders, promoting “being stewards of what God has given us,” Tina said.
“International students are people with much in common.  Too often, we focus only on differences,” she said.  “We need to look at our similarities, too.  We all need relationships.  We all come here to learn in a different culture and from these relationships we learn about ourselves and others.”
Tina finds in relating with U.S. and international students that they develop openness as they become aware that they previously did not see beyond themselves or their cultures.
Realizing she was “close-minded” before she came, she relishes opportunities to learn about herself and others.  Whitworth helps her as it engages and involves students to know others, to listen to each other’s stories as a way to add value to their own stories.
Wanting to serve, Tina finds stories about the lives of different people opens her eyes to options.
She participates in Whitworth’s annual International Festival to share the campus’ cultural diversity not only with other students but also with the community.
“It’s a way that people who do not travel can see and learn about other cultures along with being host families,” she said.
Tina believes God has provided a support system through friendships she has made here.
Her late parents were teachers, who were transferred to teach in different communities in Malawi every two years.  So she attended a girl’s boarding school in Lilongwe.  When she was not admitted to a university, a friend suggested the African Bible College.
“I prayed that if God wanted me there, I would do what God wanted me to do,” Tina said.
With the influence of her mother’s strong faith, Tina said she had “received Jesus Christ as her Lord and Savior” several times before it stuck.  Then she began to lead Bible studies, live her faith and serve the community.
“In Malawi, people receive the Good News, but fall back if no one follows up, so we start by building a relationship with someone, talking about other things.  When we have a relationship, we tell about our faith.”
In Malawi, 60 percent are Protestant, 15 percent are Catholic and about 20 percent are Muslim.  Tina grew up Presbyterian, attended an Assemblies of God church two years and went back to being Presbyterian.
Having many questions after her mother died, she didn’t want to hear or talk about God’s love in the high school Bible study group.
A missionary took an interest and prayed for her, letting her know God loves her and wanted her “to come back to party.”
 “I began to understand that faith is about a journey of trusting God,” she said.  “We will have pain.  There is no promise of a smooth life, but whatever happens, God has promised never to leave or forsake us.  I realized God had carried me through.”
At the African Bible College she majored in biblical studies and communication/journalism.  Her mother’s death fund from teaching covered her first year’s tuition.  It ran out in her second year.
She prayed for a miracle.
She also asked Cheryln, a Hawaiian woman on a missions trip, to pray for her when she returned.  Cheryln not only prayed but also collected funds from friends to cover her next semester.
Tina worked at the college’s community clinic.  An Irish woman she met in a Navigators Bible study promised to send her 20 British pounds a month for living expenses.  Her aunt, with whom she lived, provided pocket money. 
In 2007 at the college, she met Bob, Amy and their young children.  Bob and Amy grew up in Spokane.  Bob had taught high school in San Diego, where a missionary from African Bible College inspired them to go and serve as missionaries in Malawi.
They went to Malawi in 2007 for a three-year term, supported by family, friends, their San Diego church and Life Center in Spokane.
She took classes Bob taught, visited their home and played with their children, becoming part of their family.  After her father died, Amy offered to be there for her as her parents and family.
“God is calling us to be part of your journey, Tina,” they said.
Their term ended in March 2010.  She was graduating that June, open to go to graduate school anywhere in the world.
She considered options and applied to Whitworth.  The Stauffachers returned to San Diego in early June.  She joined them there  on June 30.  In July, they drove to Amy’s parents in Spokane.
In August, she went with them to Life Center, where Bob and Amy told of their ministry in Malawi and introduced Tina as a member of their family. 
In September, she started pre-requisite courses for a master’s degree in business administration.
In 2011, she switched to a master’s in international management, which required another language.  With her desire to work in Africa some day, she chose Swahili, which Whitworth just began teaching, because every other year students go to Tanzania.
Visiting Bob and Amy in San Diego for Christmas 2011, they urged her to complete the MBA, too.
Tina has worked on campus not only with the international student affairs office and in the sociology and history department, but also summers doing custodial work.
“It was humbling, helping me realize how important it is to have someone to clean up after us,” Tina said.  “We need to respect people who serve us in janitorial work.”
 She appreciates that beyond business theory, professors challenge students to relate business to life, ethics and faith, understanding that “God puts us in places to help others move closer to God by the way we live,” Tina said.
“Our lives need to be living testimonies that open ground for relationships, not just telling someone our beliefs,” she said.

Thursday, January 03, 2013

Happy New Year! Can't believe it's 2013!



So crazy that another year is over and we are moving on to 2013!  Weren't we supposed to be living in space by now. :)   It really flies by as you look backwards.  Funny how Life is really simple and we make our lives crazy by doing too much.   We think that we have these future years to enjoy it but not right now - we have too much to do and we are running around crazy. In reality we don't know the day or time that He calls us home. (just heard about my friend's friend who died at 23) I am reminded again - Life is short.  We live so carelessly.  We don't take care of what we have been given.  Let's take the time to remember what He has blessed us with and not throw away the gift of time that we have. We need to stop the chaos and refocus and reprioritize.  It is all gone in flash and I don't want to be the one saying I missed out on His story for my life. 

Please continue to pray for us as we serve here at ABC...
-That we would be passionate about our walk with the King of the Universe
-We would be intentional as a family and not let busyness change into chaos.
-When you live in your work, it truly gets exhausting.  Please pray for strength for us as we love on students, missionaries and the continue flow that comes through our front door. Which I love and is very stretching at times.  Somedays it seems we can never give enough... 
-Both schools start up in 2 weeks.  Busyness can sneak up on us.  Pray that we enjoy the moments we have given- Right here, Right now!


 Thank you for being our friends and prayer warriors.  We could not do what we do without you!
Lots of love- the stauffy family
bob, amy, nya, analise and luke!