Hand in Hand Global Mission Support Blog Digest

This "blog digest" is brought to you by the ELCA Global Mission Support team. Here you will find posts and re-posts by ELCA missionaries, ELCA Global Mission churchwide staff, and other friends.

“You mean the world to me” gift donations

Posted on June 3, 2010 by Hand In Hand

A gift donation for ELCA Missionary Sponsorship is a meaningful way to say “you mean the world to me” to dads, grads, newlyweds and forever-weds.

There are four Global Mission Support gift cards available to help share the news of your thoughtfulness:
“Celebrating.” “Thanking.” “Honoring.” “Remembering.” We are happy to mail you a card to personalize or we can mail a card directly to your gift recipient.  One card for each $25 donation for ELCA Missionary Sponsorship, please.

  • Call 800-638-3522 and ask for an RIS staffperson to donate with a credit card and request a gift card.
  • To donate online visit www.elca.org/4missionaries, then call 800-638-3522, ext. 2969, to request a gift card.
  • To request gift cards after donating  by check, to request gift cards for congregational use, or to learn how you can sponsor a specific missionary, contact me at 800-638-3522, ext. 2969.

Graduation (“Celebrating” card):  What the world needs now is you!
Mentor appreciation (“Thanking” card):  You opened the world for me!
Memorial (“Remembering”):  [Name] meant the world to me.
Anniversary (Celebrating):  I love that you’ll love this gift.
Recognition (Honoring):  You make a world of difference!

 

 

Call 800-638-3522 to donate to ELCA Missionary Sponsorship and request one of four gift cards: celebrating, thanking, honoring and remembering. Donate online at www.elca.org/4missionaries and call 800-638-3522, ext. 2969, to request gift card(s).

God’s blessings!  Sue Edison-Swift, ELCA Missionary Sponsorship

Continued prayers sought for Thailand

Posted on June 1, 2010 by Franklin Ishida

[A letter received from ELCA companion Church of Christ in Thailand. This follows an earlier prayer request  from the CCT.]

Dear Friends,

Many of you have written with expressions of solidarity for us in the Thai church and with the Thai people over these last few days. We are thankful for your concern and prayers at this time when our nation is struggling through a seminally tumultuous time in its history. Many questions still remain unanswered about the events that shocked both Thailand and the world last week. Many of them will probably remain unsanwered. The one certainty we have is that all is not yet at “peace” in this country known as the “land of smiles.” There is a still a lot of hard work to bring about true peace and reconciliation.

In this nation today there are people who have lost loved ones, those who were physically and emotionally harmed in the violence. There are those whose businesses and homes have been burned, those who have lost their livelihoods because of the downturn in tourism or because the place in which they once worked is out of business. There are those facing criminal charges and those who desire justice. There are those whose hopes, whether well founded or not, of a better society have been crushed or still burn within them like insatiable hunger. And there are also those whose only care is to get back to making money, gernering influence and living “the good life.” What is to be done with all these desires and emotions? How could there ever be a “settlement” with such a national landscape? While it is true that this was the worst violence in terms of lives lost and people physically hurt that the nation has ever experienced, this is not the first time Thailand has faced a crisis. And we might take heart that in all the other times of crisis the Thai spirit has shown uncommon resilience and has ultimately survived.

But as Christian people it is not just “survival” that we hope for but the “Kingdom of God.” We don’t want our nation to just muddle through, or be “ok” in comparison to other nations. We want it to be the best it can be. We want it to reflect the character of a loving, compassionate and just God. We want children to not just be safe, but to flourish with good nutrition, education, healthcare and self-esteem. We want men and women to excel in loving one another, develop their God-given gifts to create order and livelihood from the good earth and to live in harmonious relationship in families and communities. We want public servants to be just that — “servants” of the public instead of their own self interests or those of the highest bidder. To this end we aks for your continued prayers for our church. May God help us to see and understand our responsilibity to our society — to be salt and light, to be prophets and healers — and be all of these things as a witness to our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.

Sincerely Yours,

The Rev. Sayam Muangsak
General Secretary
Church of Christ in Thailand