family

The Vanuatu Project

In May, one of our Elders - Craig Lambert - responded to a call for help from a missionary family our church supports in Vanuatu. Their house was breaking down, becoming unsafe for the family; and there were problems with the local water supply; so the village needed a more secure and reliable way to receive the water from the only source, the local springs.

Craig wrote about his experience going over as part of a team, and the opportunities they had to bless the Pike family and the villagers, in more ways than they expected; his experiences really highlight many of the reasons missions are so important. Read more below.


A Short Report on the Vanuatu Project

by Craig Lambert

I am just writing a few words to report back and thank our church for their assistance and prayers during my recent trip to Vanuatu. The trip was to assist The Pike family and the local village in which they are living so as to translate the bible into the local native language.

Tanks for the village church's water supply have finally been installed! Praise God!

Tanks for the village church's water supply have finally been installed! Praise God!

The Project involved the replacement of the whole floor of the Pike’s house; the installation of a solar panel, battery and lights in the Community Church and upgrading the water supply from a spring to the Pike’s house and to two new water points within the village. The local village is very remote, so a significant amount of work was undertaken. Where possible, the team worked alongside young men from the village who were always very keen to help and learn new skills.

Apart from myself, the team of nine were from Victoria Point Baptist Church. Each one covered their own costs and the money required to complete the project, I believe well in excess of $15,000, was otherwise raised from a number of churches, including Cornerstone.  

The team worked together very well and achieved all that it set out to do, apart from a few minor matters that were completed by Adam and the villagers very soon after we returned home.

I first visited Vanuatu 8 years ago with my wife Alison, so for me personally, it was a joy to meet up again with Norman, the local Pastor; Chief Paul, and some of the locals who I'd met in the first visit. It was also great to hear Adam preach at church, without any need of a translator, and later to experience the warmth and generosity of the village at a feast that they prepared for us.

We also shared a time of devotion and prayer each morning and had many wonderful spiritual conversations during our days. I am also sure many of us had the chance to refocus or recalibrate our lives and were challenged to deepen our relationship with Our Lord.

I personally believe, that whilst a project like this may assist a local village and allow their local church to sense the love and support of their brothers and sisters in faraway churches, one cannot go home without being truly blessed and spiritually encouraged through the experience.

Thank you again for all those who assisted, and we should continue to uphold Adam and Hester in the translation work, that ultimately is most likely to yield the treasure in heaven that endures:

“Do not lay up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy and where thieves break in and steal; but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroys and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also."

(Matthew 6:19-21)

MAKE GOD LOOK GREAT. CREATE.

Article by Stephen Altrogge, Desiring God

Creativity.

You’ve either got it, or you don’t, right? You’re right-brained or left-brained, into art or into computer science, a painter or a mathematician. Creative folks do creative things, like paint, write, and walk barefoot through the woods. Non-creative folks do non-creative things, like make spreadsheets and money.

Wrong.

Everyone is creative. Creativity is hardwired into our DNA by God himself. All of us were made to be creative people. Creative juices run hot through our veins. All of have an irresistible, divinely-inspired impulse to create, organize, and fashion.

We see this clearly in Genesis 1:27, which says:

So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them.

God, the greatest of all creators, the One who fashioned the Sun, and the humpback whale, and the Great Dane, made us in his image. The Divine image has been stamped upon us. We alone are made in the image of God. God has given us the glorious task of representing him on the earth. Of showing the world what our God is really like. Of showing the watching world that our God is a creative master who loves to bring beauty out of chaos.

When an accountant takes piles of raw data and fashions the data into a meaningful sales report, he is reflecting the image of God. When a woman works the raw soil and causes it to bring forth flowers and vegetables and herbs, she is reflecting the image of God. When an electrician corrals the wild, dangerous electrical currents into light bulbs, he is reflecting the image of God. When a writer assembles letters into sentences, and sentences into paragraphs, and paragraphs into books, she is reflecting the image of God.

Every man, woman, and child is creative. When we create, it pleases God, because He sees us reflecting his image. He sees us “imaging” him to the rest of the world. God loves to see his image shine throughout the world.

But creativity is hard work. It takes work to create a poem or garden or car engine or piece of furniture. It requires killing our laziness and working faithfully over extended periods of time. It requires a willingness to receive criticism with humility. It requires sweat and elbow grease. It requires diligence and faithfulness. It’s easier to not make anything at all. To be a consumer. To suffocate the creative gifts that God has given us.

John Piper writes,

If you are God, your work is to create out of nothing. If you are not God, but like God — that is, if you are human — your work is to take what God has made and shape it and use it to make him look great. (Don't Waste Your Life, 139)

That’s why I wrote the ebook Create: Stop Making Excuses and Start Making Stuff. It’s meant to be a divine kick in the pants, of sorts. It’s meant to inspire you and motivate you to use your creative gifts for the glory of God. To help you stop making excuses and start using your gifts.

You have creative gifts. You are a gifted musician or mechanic or teacher or dancer or woodworker or organizer or landscaper or quilter or preacher, and God wants you to use your gifts for his glory. He doesn’t want you to waste them or hoard them. He wants you to use them to benefit those around you and to bring him honor. He wants you to steward your gifts, not waste them.

Your church needs your creative gifts. Your family needs your creative gifts. Your friends need your creative gifts. You have gifts that no one else has. We need your gifts.

So stop making excuses and start making stuff for the glory of God!

Original article posted at Desiring God website - click here