Saturday, September 22, 2012

Good Shepherd Church Seminary; Practical guidance for the new priest


Jesus Christ - Son of God
Dear Reverend/ Minister/ Pastor,

It is natural to feel 'lost' at the beginning of a new ministry - you have received the call, answered it, and then there may be a feeling of panic and 'what now?'

There are certain possibilities which may be of assistance to you in your new ministry
1) When starting a new ministry, it is helpful to sit down with pen and paper and make a concrete plan

2) Break down the plan to a time frame and the finances needed

3) Pray and discern the following; what type of ministry do you feel called to?
    There are different possibilities, such as;
      - A church in your neighbourhood
      - Prison ministry
      - Hospital ministry/ chaplaincy
      - Community ministry
      - Online Internet ministry

4) Once you have decided after guidance from the Holy Spirit of God what type of ministry you wish to prepare yourself for, you need to register your church with your local Revenue and enquire about tax free status for your church

5) Research and learn all the rules surrounding the governance of a church in your area, e.g. if you buy or build a small church, what rules do you need to abide by with regards to e.g. health and safety issues.
If you wish to conduct marriages, do you need a local marriage officer qualification in order to do so?

6) Gain accreditation by doing a training course in a seminary as a pastor/ priest/ minister. Gain community accreditation by qualifying as e.g. a local marriage counsellor or chaplain if this qualification is needed for practice in your community

7) Start saving up for, or fundraising for, e.g. a graduation robe as a vestment, a stole, a chalice, paten so you may be appropriately attired for your ministry. Make a list of what you will need for your particular ministry and then build the needs up over time

8) Explore the option of renting an area for church use if you judge this best for your ministry need

9) Work out what work you will continue to do in the meantime to provide your daily financial needs as you slowly build up your ministry.
I call this the 'Paul model of ministry' - Paul of Tarsus earned his daily living as a tentmaker, and ministered after his work hours. He was thus financially independent and able to fund his ministry needs from his earnings*

10) Plan out how much time you will allot weekly to your church ministry. Do you plan to minister full time? Part time? How will you ensure a healthy work/ life balance to spend sufficient time with your family/ loved ones to maintain happy and strong relationships?

Good Shepherd Church Seminary offers practical training for Christian pastors called to spread the Good News of Jesus Christ.
Feel free to make use of our modules as part of your training at http://lumierecharity.tripod.com/gsc-training-modules.html.
Full training is offered through the Universal Life Church; contact can be made with Rev. Amy Long at http://www.ulcseminary.org/

Blessings
Rev. Catherine

*St Paul of Tarsus - with thanks to About.com. See the following link;
http://ancienthistory.about.com/od/christians/p/PaulTarsus.htm
*Photograph of beautiful sculpture of Jesus Christ taken by Rev. Catherine.
With thanks to the talented sculptor

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

The smile says it all - a little boy is given a new life



Lumiere Charity rejoices with Mark van der Walt and all at Marike de Klerk Children Fund, as they celebrate the successful operation to the legs and feet of this little angel in South Africa. 
Mark has been dedicatedly transporting and assisting the family and this little boy for a long time, as he needed urgent medical and surgical care. 
His future would have been limited ability to walk, and compromised legs. 
Now through the miracle of dedicated selfless care from Marike de Klerk Children Fund Organisation, and the intervention of tireless and talented Doctors and Health Personnel, this little one looks forward to a future where he will be able to walk normally.

This story of success and happiness has great personal meaning for me. As a small child, I had malformed feet which pointed inwards and would have meant a compromised future. 
My mother took me to an Orthopoedic surgeon, who prescribed special boots for me to wear for years as my young feet grew, to train them to grow straight. I do remember it was a painful and long process. 
My Dutch grandmother would take over when Mom was out of the house. 
I remember her walking me up and down the old South African wooden block floors. 
I had to try to point my feet straight; with malformed feet, it was an almost impossible task, but Ouma and Mom persevered. 
Dad laboured away at work to pay for all the costly fees, and all at the hospital did what they could to help.

One day my little growing feet in the strapped boots hurt so very, very much. I was near to tears, and I whispered to Ouma as I stopped at the old black oven range just how much it hurt.
'I can't', I said to her, the tears dropping on my lashes. 
Ouma knelt down to me, put her arms around me and her face close to me, and in her Dutch and broken English said to me, 'Tinks, listen to me. You must. It is for your future. 
For some pain now, you will have a long future ahead of you where you will walk and be healthy. 
You must be brave. Trust me. Do your practice now, and one day you will be healthy and strong.' 
I listened to Ouma, my heroine, and started struggling along the wooden paving blocks again, pushing my feet in the direction they had to be trained in.

Today I have perfectly straight feet. I have worked twelve to fifteen hours straight with no problem or pain in my feet or legs. 
If it had not been for my family and the dedicated Hospital staff, I would have been a cripple today. 
And so the smile of the little boy in his boots after his successful operation has made my heart fill with joy at his blessings, and the remembered blessings in my life. 
God sets angels along our way - and Mark and his team have been family to this little boy.

At present Mark and the Marike de Klerk Children Fund team are desperately in need of funds. 
Severe weather conditions at Coronation Park have people living amongst slush and mud. 
People are hungry, and the children are in need. 
Is there anything you can do to help Mark with his dedicated work?
Please contact Mark at markvanderwalt@telkomsa.net
or contact lumierecharity@yahoo.co.uk

*Previous blog post about Mark and the work of Marike de Klerk Children Fund at
http://lumierecharity.blogspot.ie/2012/09/heartrending-poverty-at-coronation-park.html
*Photograph from Mark used with permission

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Charity Work; What to do where there is no Doctor; Good Health Lesson 6


My beloved and well used book


I worked in outlying areas as a volunteer teenager. The ambulances were varied; a wheelbarrow for an elderly person, a donkey cart for a woman in childbirth. In one area, there was no hospital.

At the time, blessed as I had been to grow up in an area where there were a number of hospitals and clinics, it was a bit scary to realise that when someone could die, there was simply no hospital to turn to. 

In another outlying area, there was a hospital a few hours travel away.
Sometimes we would load an extremely ill person in the back of a family van, and bump over the potholed dirt roads - where there was a road in the midst of thorn trees and thick vegetation - hours and hours to get to a hospital.
On the journey we were stopped by a swollen stream; water roaring by, with no bridge. 
We eventually got over that, terrified the car would flood, only for the car to become stuck in deep sand, wheels spinning around and around. 
We pushed at the car with straining shoulders, while cries of agony and fear from the endangered sufferer came the back. 

And oh, the blessed relief to bring the sufferer into the warm welcoming light of the Hospital Casualty Department; welcomed by capable people with kindly and calm faces, white coats and quick action to save not one but two lives; the little one coming into the world saved by a miracle of dedication, knowledge and hard work. That is still a wonderful memory.

There are other memories over many years, though, not as happy. 
I have tramped through outlying areas and  been asked into in a hut or plastic liner home to find someone needing immediate attention; and there was no hospital in the area. 
There are times when the Charity worker is presented during the course of his or her voluntary work by this situation. 
The answer is to be prepared for it.

Tips to be prepared for health emergency;
1. As Charity worker, get a recognised qualification in health care prior to beginning your work. This will enable you to be properly equipped to give good care of a reputable standard
2. Update your qualification regularly, keeping up to date with all new developments 
3. Ensure that your qualification is recognised in the area in which you minister, and register your particulars and qualification with an appropriate group in the area
4. Ensure you have good resource books on field trip with you - often you will be out of range for mobile phones, there will be no telephones or telephone lines.
Sometimes there is flood, or drought, or conflict in the area. 
Electricity is not always available, and a computer is not usually available.
A good resource book or books can be most helpful in these situations

A great book which I have carried around with me for many years is
'Where There Is No Doctor
A Village Health Care Handbook for Africa'
by David Werner, with Carol Thuman, Jane Maxwell and Andrew Pearson
I purchased my book many years ago, and it has been a book I have carried everywhere with me, together with a few other treasured health resource books. 

At present there is a free book download of this wonderful book;  please find the link;
http://www.nicagazette.com/2011/07/free-ebook-download-doctor/
A donation can be made through a link on the above page to the publisher, Hesperian Foundation. 

According to the Editor of Health on the above webpage, this book is the most widely used health education book in tropical developing countries. The book is based on David Werner's experiences at his Project Piaxtla in western Mexico. It has sold over 1 million copies, and been translated into over 100 languages. 

The book covers all aspects of people's health ranging from diarrhoea to malaria and bone fractures and ringworm. 
The book explains to you what you can do yourself, and how to prevent, recognise and treat many common sicknesses. 
There is also a large section on giving first aid. It also shows you how to recognise problems you might be unable to cope with and need to refer to a health worker.

Watch the blog for further great health tips and books I have used as resource for years on my field trips - in later blog posts!

Good luck with your good work helping those most in need. May blessings be with you and yours.

*With grateful thanks to David Werner, Carol Thuman, Jane Maxwell, Andrew Pearson. Your book has helped save many lives

Cleanliness in the Home - preventing Disease and promoting Comfort; Good Health Lesson 5



Wherever we eat, cook, live and sleep - it is home. Keeping our home clean, tidy and insect free is good sense - a clean home prevents disease and promotes family comfort. I have lived in beautiful houses with bath, shower and indoor plumbing - I have slept on concrete floors on my overcoat and with my bag as a pillow on Charity field trips - I have experienced water flooding in my bedroom during an Indian monsoon rain, my overcoat having to be thrown because it grew a beard of grey mildew. I have slept in tiny rooms in squatter camps, with a bucket to wash from, and a communal outhouse. Wherever I have lived during my journeys has been my centre of happiness - my home. There is only one thing I ask - that it be clean.

It is a challenge to keep clean when the funds are tight, we are living in a camp or as a refugee. However it makes good sense; if we don't keep our home clean, we can contract disease, which can cause us illness, discomfort, pain, sometimes disability and sometimes death. So tips to prevent disease and keep cleanliness in the Home are invaluable.

Some basic Tips;
1. Do not let pigs or chickens come into the house or places where the children usually play
2. Do not let dogs lick children or climb up on their beds. Disease can be spread by dogs through fleas and ticks on them as well as by licking. Keep your dog clean by ensuring their fur is washed, and that they are properly dried after a bath. Leaving a dog undried after a bath - especially in a cold climate - can cause illness to the beloved pet. Be careful to use the correct product to wash your dog
3. Examine your family regularly for lice, whether head lice or body lice. Also, check that your children have not contracted worms which can show up in their bowel movements. It is best not to let your children use sand pits or outside areas as a toilet. Train them to use an outhouse or indoor toilet, and to wash their hands both before and after using the toilet
4. Do not spit on the floor or streets, as spit can spread disease. When you cough or sneeze, cover your mouth with your hand or a soft piece of paper. Throw away the tissue into a waste bin/ refuse bin. 
Wash your hands with soap and water, and dry them well after sneezing in them
5. If children or animals have a bowel movement near the house or in the house, clean it up at once with water and soap or a disinfectant
6. Examine the beds for bed bugs. If the mattresses have bed bugs, they will need to be cleaned and treated
7. Hang or spread blankets and sheets often in the sun. If you have bedbugs, wash the sheets and blankets, hang in the sun and iron well on the same day you clean and treat your mattresses
8. Examine your family for any sign of skin disease such as scabies and send them for treatment if any signs are present
9. Clean your house often. Sweep and wash the floors, walls and beneath the furniture. Fill in any cracks and holes in the floor or walls where scorpions, bedbugs, cockroaches or lice can hide
10. Don't let flies into the house or in the kitchen. They spread disease. Do not let them settle on food. Keep food covered and, if you are blessed to have a refrigerator or cold closet pantry, keep food well sealed there
11. Don't allow mosquitoes in the home. They spread malaria. Use mosquito nets at night if you are in a high mosquito area. Use insect repellant. Don't leave standing pools of water near your home - mosquitoes can breed there
12. If you have a flea infestation in the house, disinfect the house
13. If you have a termite problem in the foundations of your home, treat your home to rid yourself of the pest

Keep your home clean, and your home will be your refuge and protect the good health of both you and your family.

Keeping water supplies clean - Build an outhouse; Good Health Lesson 4




There are areas where no plumbing, sanitation or toilets are available such as in some rural areas, refugee camps or squatter camps. If human waste is not properly disposed of, unpleasant disease can result. If you are in one of these areas, why not do as community members of an outlying district where I did volunteer work did - build outhouses. 

Wooden houses (the old fashioned pit latrines) were built in the countryside, with buckets underneath the wooden seat which could be easily removed regularly, cleaned and disinfected. Remember not to built your outhouse near a river, well or water supply. 

Also be careful - if you built an outhouse higher than a water supply and very near to it, any human waste not disposed of carefully can seep into the ground and filter through rainwater down the embankment into the drinking water supply. So build at least 50 feet away from a water supply, and not on a higher level than the water supply.

Stuart Michael M gives excellent advice on how to build an outhouse. Please find the link;
http://ezinearticles.com/?How-to-Build-an-Outhouse-Yourself&id=4280816

Becky Lower gives directions on building the box structure, cutting sheets of plywood and the measurements needed, building a seat box, screens, ventilation and vent pipe. Please find the link;
http://www.ehow.com/how_6917762_construct-outhouse.html

Please remember that any time you use equipment such as a saw, hammer, nails or other equipment, there is a great risk of hurting yourself or others. Ask around and either get an expert to make the outhouse for you, or supervise your making of the facility. Your personal health and safety is always a priority.

If you wish to use concrete, we have made concrete many times in many outlying areas. The same principle applies; ask someone who is an expert in making concrete to help you. There is a definite knack. And be careful to keep little children and pets away from the drying concrete. 

I used to sit with a book and read next to my drying concrete until it had safely hardened with no possibility of being written in or hurting anyone while hardening. Good luck with your outhouse!

*With thanks to Stuart Michael M and Becky Lower for their invaluable information

Sunday, September 2, 2012

Good Shepherd Church Seminary; The Early Christians



For those studying for the priesthood, please find the link to 
Eberhard Arnold's e-book, 
The Early Christians in Their Own Words*
for resource reading and study.

Arnold's book is a source book of original writings, including texts by 
Tertullian, Hermas, Ignatius, Justin, Polycarp, Irenaeus, Origen and Clement of Alexandria.
Our grateful thanks to Eberhard Arnold for his gracious permission to share a link to this e-book as in the Preface and conditions for use of the e-book. 

data.plough.com/ebooks/EarlyChristians.pdf

*Copyright 2011 by The Plough Publishing House. Used with permission
*Photograph taken by Catherine Nicolette. With thanks to the artist for this wonderful representation

Heartrending poverty at Coronation Park Camp





It was a winter's day in South Africa recently, and I was visiting a camp at Coronation Park. Kindly faces welcomed me to their makeshift homes. Currently two hundred and sixty people are living in this camp. In one area, a plastic home which collapsed on the homeowners in a storm, was still lying forlornly on the ground. Luckily the family were not severely injured, and other members of the camp hastened to bring them in, wet and shivering, into their homes to assist them. The mark of hospitality and kindness of those living in poverty towards each other in the camp is inspiring.

DEDICATED VOLUNTEERS
Mark van der Walt from the Marike de Klerk Children Fund works in the camp. I was privileged to visit the camp recently and witnessed the dedicated work Mark does there. Mr and Mrs Nielsen facilitate the camp, and assist many people from all walks of life who have fallen on hard times. Mrs. Nielsen was welcoming, and it was wonderful to see her caring attitude towards all the camp members. Children were well supervised and delighted to see me, and their smiles lit the day.

POVERTY EVERYWHERE
There is much poverty in the camp. Plastic liners form tents. There are some small makeshift houses or caravans, windows taped together with brown tape to attempt to keep out the rain and cold. Residents continue the struggle to stay clean by washing clothing as often as possible. One shack had a fire burning outside to try to warm water for a wash, in the bitterly cold winter weather.

DIGNITY OF THE CAMP RESIDENTS
There are so many needs in the camp. Children are being schooled, and need uniforms, food and assistance with school fees. Needs include electricity, not available at present. Food, adequate shelter and assistance for plumbing for water are other needs. The camp members explained to me that a great need in the camp is  for electricity. The small generator is used only in extreme need because the camp residents often do not have the funds to run it. It was heartrending to see the dignity of the camp residents, and how hard they work to try to keep the camp clean and tidy with such little resources. A gentleman shuffled painfully to the door to courteously greet me, a stranger, to his shack. His mobility is severely compromised, and other members of the camp help him to get around on a wheelchair.

Mark does all he can to ease the lives of the desperately poor who struggle to live from day to day in the camp. At Easter he delivered Easter eggs to the children at the camp, who were thrilled to receive this treat. Mark also provides transport for the ill and children needing surgical and medical interventions to the doctors, hospitals and clinics. He has dedicatedly transported a family and infant back and forth to the hospital, enabling the little one to receive the care he so urgently needed.


STOLEN BAKKIE
The sad news is that one of the volunteer workers recently had his bakkie car stolen while fundraising for the worthy work at the camp. He was financially unable to replace it. Due to the theft he regretfully is no longer able to carry out his work of mercy, which was a tragic turn of events.


SUFFERING IN THE RECENT COLD
The residents have been suffering in the recent cold, and were affected by the snow which has uncharacteristically begun falling in parts of South Africa. Indeed, there was a snow blizzard on the roads as I was travelling after visiting the camp. This depth of winter has been very distressing to the camp residents and in particular to the small children.

NEEDS IN THE CAMP
The needs of those in the camp are for -
food; employment; soap; water; washing facilities and toiletries;
clothing; school clothing; sponsorship of school fees;
transport to hospitals, clinics, doctors.
Dental help, School books, Electricity, Petrol/diesel for the generator in the interim would be a marvellous donation. Window panes for broken panes are needed.

BEACON OF HOPE
The little church which stands as a beacon of hope where the residents gather to pray and ask God for assistance in their plight, has broken windows taped together. Plastic liner homes, makeshift tents and homes built of pieces of wood and rapidly deteriorating caravans do not hold out the bitter cold, especially for infants and children. Where does Lumiere start? The inspiration to me is, the same place as Mark and Mr and Mrs Nielsen do - by opening our hearts to the plight of these brothers and sisters of our global village.

HEARTRENDING REPORT
The last report I received from the camp is heartrending.
Severe weather conditions are being experienced. The lowest ever daytime temperatures have recently been recorded. Snow and heavy rainfalls, with night temperatures into minus 3 have made matters far worse regarding the plight of the camp and needy people. The Marike de Klerk Children Fund organisation have been placed in a crisis, and have had to scrape every penny together to provide relief. This has been the worst situation the organisation has faced since their foundation ten years back.
"Things are extremely tough at the moment. The pleas for help are flooding in and it has left us in a desperate situation," Mark writes.

A GLEAM OF LIGHT
One gleam of light has shone through all this suffering. A baby that Mark and his volunteers have been assisting over the last nine months has been operated on. Without the operation the little one would not have been able to walk properly; after medical and surgical care, he can look forward to a normal life - thanks to the dedication of Mark and his volunteers.

CAN YOU HELP?
Having seen at first hand what the needs are, my heart goes out to all suffering in Coronation Park in Krugersdorp. In the spirit of Lumiere, please could you help in any way possible?

CONTACT MARK VAN DER WALT
If Divine Providence has led you to read these words, and you feel it on your heart to help, please contact
Mr. Mark Van Der Walt at markvanderwalt@telkomsa.net
Donations can be made to the Marike de Klerk Children Fund. Mark can be contacted re the same. If you have donations of food, clothing, petrol or other assistance, please contact Mark or email lumierecharity@yahoo.co.uk

Home that collapsed during a storm
Camp place of worship