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.

Cards bring it home for the holidays

Posted on December 21, 2009 by Hand In Hand

As this Story of Faith in Action (SOFIA) illustrates, Operation Thanks-Giving blessed both giver and receiver.  Thanks to Marianne Griebler and Denise Brown for their work telling the story. Find this and other SOFIA stories under “Outreach” at www.elca.org/storiesFind all the “Hand in Hand” blog digest posts related to Operation Thanks-Giving at http://blogs.elca.org/handinhand. Read on and enjoy an extra helping of thankfulness this Christmas season. Sue Edison-Swift

Edwin Holmvig-Johnson’s first Thanksgiving as a missionary was also his first away from home.

Edwin is a Young Adult in Global Mission with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA). He teaches reading and writing to children in primary school in the U.K.

“My homesickness had been fairly stable up until that week,” he said. “The weather was gray and it starts to get dark here around 4:00 in the afternoon. It was a hard week.”

Then, a package from the ELCA churchwide organization in Chicago arrived.

Edwin opened it expecting to find official forms needing his John Hancock. Instead he found a package filled with handmade cards, compliments of the first annual Operation Thanks-giving, a new ELCA missionary support initiative.

“There were these fantastic cards and greetings from a congregation (Trinity Lutheran Church in Vale, N.C.) that I’d never met on the other side of ‘the Pond.’ It felt wonderful to know that I was being thought of and prayed for and made it easier to keep going,” Edwin said.

For her part, Ginger Crisman, evangelism committee chairperson at Trinity, was inspired by the idea of involving her congregation in Operation Thanks-giving. Early in November she supplied 150 worshipers with colored paper, crayons and pens prior to Sunday service. The Rev. John Locke encouraged each card-marker to say a prayer for the recipient of their creations.

Worshipers from age 3 to 83 put their artistic talent to use, creating about 93 cards for ELCA missionaries and 93 cards for military service personnel. “It was everything we hoped for,” Ginger said. “God works in big and little ways. This was a little way.”

“Show the Missionaries Some Love”

The Rev. Twila Schock, ELCA program director for Global Mission Support, knew this “little way” could have a big impact.

In 1994, Twila was a first-year missionary in Slovakia. The excitement of the assignment was wearing off by Thanksgiving, Twila recalled, when everything (language, shopping, daily routines) just seemed hard. But a Thanksgiving care package she received turned out to the best cure for homesickness.

Earlier this year, Twila shared her story with Sue Edison-Swift, associate director for Global Mission Support, and that was all Sue needed to hear. “We’ve got to show the missionaries some love,” she said, and the first annual Operation Thanks-giving was born.

Operation Thanks-giving took a page from Hand in Hand, the theme for the Global Mission Support newsletter. Card makers were asked to use their hands to draw and decorate turkeys on the cards.

This Thanksgiving, 258 ELA missionaries in five countries received a package of cards crafted by 15 congregations and two units at the churchwide organization. Some congregations choose to send cards directly to missionaries they support.

Having Faith in the Work that God Can Do

Those cards deeply touched Emily E. Ewing, a missionary in Rankovce, Slovakia, worlds away from her hometown of Vail, Colo.

“The fact that people I don’t know and who don’t know me sent me the cards was big for me,” she said. “It just shows so much faith in the work that God can do with each of us and faith in our church, as well, that they will send cards knowing that they’re going to someone who is far from home, following God’s call.

“It was really cool that so many people believe so strongly in the work God does with the church that they would send cards.”

On November 15 during Sunday school at St. John Lutheran Church of Farmersville in Easton, Pa., 22 people each made three cards for missionaries and military persons serving in Baghdad.

“We often hear about the needs of military units who are deployed over the holidays. I had never considered the same type of need for missionaries,” said the Rev. Roxi Kringle, pastor of St. John.

The excitement surrounding Operation Thanks-giving was contagious. “The (Sunday School) room was buzzing by the time I got down,” Pastor Kringle said. “A couple boys asked their recipients to write back. The thank you notes the church received from Iraq had the class beaming.”

A Wonderful Sense of Connection

Michael and Terri Church, a husband-and-wife pastor team serving as English-language mission developers in Cluj-Napoca, Romania, saw Thanksgiving arrive as they struggled to become acclimated with a new culture.

Hoping to downplay their loneliness by discounting the holiday, they decided to make Thanksgiving just another day. “Under my breath, I quoted a favorite line from (the movie) ‘Rocky’: ‘To you it’s Thanksgiving; to me it’s Thursday,’” Michael said.

What a difference a day can make.

“Friday’s mail brought our Operation Thanks-giving cards,” Michael said. “Completely unexpected, out of the blue, came these wonderful handmade cards from complete strangers, in Lutheran churches all over the country, reminding us that we weren’t alone, and that there were people at home giving thanks to God for all their blessings — and even that we ourselves, as missionaries, were one of those blessings. It gave us a wonderful sense of connection to our country and to our church.

“Thanks again to everybody who took part in it,” Michael added. “May God be with you all!”

thanks4thanks

Posted on December 3, 2009 by Hand In Hand

Operation Thanks-Giving cards are doing what we hoped they’d do: giving ELCA missionaries an affirming hug from home.  Here are two of the “thanks4thanks” notes that have reached my desk.  Thankful blessings, Sue Edison-Swift.  P.S.  I’m mailing the last of the first-round of cards tomorrow.  I’d be happy to mail another round (or more!) of cards, so send your Christmas and Valentine-themed greetings to Global Mission Support, 8765 W. Higgins Road, Chicago, IL 60631.

From Michael Church (Romania)
Thanks for the “Operation Thanksgiving Card” cards, which arrived today. Terri and I were surprised and touched. This was our first big holiday away from our families, so it was a little extra-tender.  Just so that you know, I have also sent thank-you letters by email to the pastors of Trinity, Vale NC, and Grace, Howell MI. I asked the pastors to print and post them, so that the people who wrote the cards would know that they arrived and that we on the other end were grateful.  There was a third card, with no signature, so here’s a “thank you” for that one!  [All of you who sent in "random acts of thanksgiving" cards without a signature, consider this thanks for you!--Sue]

From Emily Ewing (Slovakia)
hi! i received some operation thanksgiving cards, and i figured i’d pass along a note of thanks. my birthday was the saturday after thanksgiving and i was in budapest (i’m currently a young adult in global mission in slovakia) with other people from my program celebrating thanksgiving. when i got back on sunday night, i had mail waiting for me. when i opened it, it was a wonderful surprise to see the operation thanksgiving cards. i know they weren’t for my birthday, but it just brightened up my night as i read them and looked at them. i felt loved and i felt like maybe this whole big lutheran church really is smaller and more connected than i think. it was wonderful timing, so thank you more than you can imagine for the cards!!
in god’s peace, emily  www.emilyinslovakia.blogspot.com

Trinity members give thanks

Posted on November 18, 2009 by Hand In Hand

 TrinityHandcardMembers of Trinity Ev. Lutheran, Vale, NC, made “Operation Thanks-Giving” cards prior to worship. They mailed 90 cards to Global Mission Support to be distributed as a “random act of thankfulness” to ELCA missionaries. Pr. John Locke writes: “From the preschoolers to the senior seniors, everyone created and sent a greeting, expressing love and thanks to [missionaries]. …We have been blessed to part of this ministry, being able to convey our love, support and thanks to those who carry God’s message of love and redemption to all corners.”

Learn more about Operation Thanks-Giving at  www.elca.org/handinhand.  There’s still time to participate!  We’ll distribute cards for as long as we receive them. 
Hand in hand,  Sue Edison-Swift

Putting the “first” before “annual”

Posted on November 1, 2009 by Hand In Hand

November 1, 2009–All Saint’s Day–marks the official start of  the first annual Operation Thanks-Giving. 

The idea began as  Pr. Twila Schock, Global Mission Support director and my boss, told the story of her first Thanksgiving as a missionary. She told how November in general and Thanksgiving in particular can be downright difficult, especially for first-year missionaries.  One thing led to another and we decided to “seize the thanks-giving” and show missionaries a little love by sending them “I’m thankful for you” cards.  

The “first” of “first annual” is obvious.  Editor types will note that what began as “Operation Thanksgiving Card” became “Operation Thanksgiving” and now seems to have settling in as either “Operation Thanks-Giving” or “OPERATION THANKS-GIVING.”   We’re learning as we go.   The “Q & A” below resulted from great questions asked by Trinity Lutheran Church in Vale, N.C. 

The “annual” in “first annual” assumes “Operation Thanks-Giving” (or whatever name it ends up) will catch on.  It trusts that, if  invited to a thanks-giving party, the good people of the ELCA will come.  They will offer encouraging and sustaining gifts.  They will make Operation Thanks-Giving cards and give ELCA Missionary Sponsorship donations. 

I know we are a thankful people, both blessed and a blessing.  Still, I was nervous.  “Do you think people will send cards?” I asked Twila.  “It could take time to catch on, but we’ll get cards,” she reassured.  Two-hours later I received the e-mail from Trinity Lutheran.  They wondered how many cards the congregation should prepare in order to send one to every ELCA missionary.  Imagine!  We could have an abundance of thanks-giving to share!

Operation Thanks-Giving Q&A

thanksU1. How many cards would we need to prepare to be able to send one to each missionary or missionary family?

There are 258 missionaries, 88 of whom are in their first year.

2. Can we put our church name and individual names on the cards?

You bet! You might want to include one e-mail address, too. I can’t promise that you’ll hear back from the missionary who receives the card (we don’t want to tie an obligation-to-respond to these random acts of thankfulness), but I’m thinking you could receive return e-mails.

3. When must you receive them to have time to distribute them?

There’s no deadline for thankfulness, so we’ll distribute the cards as they come in. We’ll scan and e-mail the cards we receive by November 21, so as many reach the missionaries as possible before Thanksgiving. Then, beginning in December, we’ll begin mailing all the cards (even those we’ve e-mailed) once a month.

4. I assume that we will send them to you in a bulk package. Will we need to provide envelopes for each?

You won’t; envelopes are not needed.

5. Is there a fee for postage?

It would be greatly appreciated if you included a donation for ELCA Missionary Sponsorship along with the cards. Make out the check to ELCA Missionary Sponsorship and place “MSG0340″ or “where needed most” on the memo line of your check.

Find Twila’s “My first Thanksgiving as a missionary” story on the second side of the Fall 2009 Hand in Hand newsletter.  Find useful “Operation Thanks-Giving” links at www.elca.org/handinhand.  During the month of November watch the Hand in Hand Blog Digest for “Thanks-Giving” stories by missionaries and sponsors.  E-mail your “Operation Thanks-Giving” stories to globalmissionsupport@elca.org.

Thankful blessings, Sue Edison-Swift