Tuesday, December 18, 2012

23 Graduates!!!

December 10, 2012 marked the end of the 4 month PAFCOE 2nd session with 23 students graduating. It was a special service and below are some pictures from it. This was the RiverView and Jaro choirs who sang for us under the direction of Ma'am Fuentes. (All the picture captions are above the pictures, not below them.)
Happy student marching in. (We didn't get too many pictures of the march in.)
Some of the guys waiting for the girls to come in.
Michael and I (part of the staff) marching in.
Reading Matthew 28:18-20 together.
Pastor Sualog (the district Pastor) giving welcome remarks with the choir in the background.
Graduates and staff singing "How Beauteous are the Feet."
Our registrar giving remarks.
The audience.
Matthew Reyes doing the offering appeal.
Dad doing the sermon.
Certificate time!
Happy graduate!
Renelyn was so happy to have her certificate, because her husband almost died near the end of the program and she had to go home and care for him, but still finished all her work! Praise God!
Watching the video Pastor Doug made for us.
 March out!
Very happy graduates!
 Group picture.
 
 
 Some of the first session graduates attended, too.
 These two young men were both Pastor's sons and had been friends for many years.
 Our family and registrar.

We praise God for what He's done through us and the students!

"To God be the glory, great things He has done!"

Monday, December 17, 2012

Meetings, baptisms, classes and fun in Iloilo!

After the seminar in Barrio Obrero ended, a lot went on graduation on December 10.  We had a special PAFCOE baptism where some of our students were baptized or rebaptized in.  The district Pastor was the one who officiated. Below are a couple of them.
 
 During this time we were preparing around 50,000 crafts for the students' OJT time. It was a huge project, but praise God, we got it all done (thanks to our hard-working students!).  Below are the students working hard on cutting and counting crafts.
But life at PAFCOE is not just all classes, homework, preparing crafts and helping out in evangelistic meetings. There is time for some fun - cooking at the Hargreaves' house! This was a favorite activity for the students where they came and cooked an American meal at our home and enjoyed eating it afterwards!

 
 

Randy and Richard Steffens and their family came to Iloilo for a few weeks and did 2 evangelistic meetings, which the students and us participated in.  Below are pictures from their seminars.

 
Of course, at the end of it, there was another baptism - this time at the Oton beach close to the city.

 

Soon after this baptism, the students received their money for their seminars and off they went for their own experiences of seeing how the Lord would work through them.



 Praise God for what He's doing there in the Philippines! Thank you for your prayers and support!
 

Pictures from Barrio Obrero and its baptism!

Here are a few pictures of our time in the Barrio Obrero from August 31 to October 6. To read more about this time, click here.
Registration for the health expo in Barrio Obrero on August 26.

NEWSTART panels and booths. It was very simple, but people still came.

Roberto lecturing on water.
Kevin lecturing on temperance. (He's a nurse by trade.)
Health lecture during the evening with the Doctor.
Doctor Wetz Dela Cruz did the health lecturing and did a great job!
The audience with HCBN doing the filming.
Below are pictures of the seminar.

Dad and his translator (Erme Jun). The people didn't  understand English too well.

Attendance in the covered gym.

Some of the baptismal candidates.
Baptism! It was done in a portable baptistry that we had built - the first one ever to be built in that area!
 

Our PAFCOE students and staff on the stage the last Sabbath.

Singing with the children up front.

We had to take the chairs and everything down every night.

Students helping every night (sharpening the pencils before the meeting).

Children's program.
 Those are just some of our many experiences there in that place! We praise God for what He did in that area of Iloilo City!

Thursday, December 13, 2012

Barrio Obrero...



Dear Family & friends:

Barrio Obrero.  We had never heard of the place till earlier this year when discussing where to conduct the evangelistic series for our fall session of PAFCOE.  The local brethren decided to do a church-plant there.  We later learned that the place is considered one of the roughest, low-class areas of Iloilo—known for drinking, gambling, and evil.

The barangay, or suburb as we would refer to it, has a massive Iglesia ni Christo church, whose towering spires can be seen from many parts of the suburb and beyond.  The Iglesia ni Christo (Christ of Christ in Tagalog, the local language here in the Philippines) church was started back in the early 1900s by a former Seventh-day Adventist who became embittered toward the church, and left to start his own.  Today it is one largest, most influential churches in the Philippines, next the Catholic Church.  When we started outreach in Barrio Obrero, we quickly learned that the vast majority of its inhabitants belonged to the big Iglesia ni Christo Church.

Our only option for a place to conduct the meetings, turned out to be a large covered gym near the center of the barangay.  This was where the street kids hung out, to play basketball or other games, or worse to smoke and socialize.  Teenage mothers are quite common, and we met many children 10 years old or less, who were already smoking.  Safety was a prime concern of the local brethren, since stealing and other crimes are part of the sub-culture of the suburb. 

Barrio Obrero lies along the sea, and is bordered on one side by swampland.  Many squatters live in the area, their bamboo shacks clinging to the banks, or built over the swamp edge. Poverty is the picture in these areas, and the only escape from the misery is alcohol, gambling, or sinful pleasure—or so it seems to the locals.  Our “Revelations of Prophecy” seminar offered something better!

We began the meetings with a Health Expo which attracted only a small group, since the word had spread around the suburb that “the Adventists have come to our barangay, and if you join them, you’ll have to give up your gambling, drinking, and your pork!”  The group who did come were those who needed help—stroke victims, and those unsatisfied with the low-life of the street.

On the night that we began the Prophecy Seminar, there was a brown-out (black-out as we call it) in the area, so with nothing else to do for entertainment, curious residents wandered into the gym to see what “Revelations of Prophecy” was all about, in spite of the rumors.  Since we had a generator, the lights and sound blazed out the open sides of the covered-gym until there were over a hundred-and-fifty sitting inside listening, with many more outside.

The next night, Saturday night, things did not go as well.  A tropical storm blew in that evening, and the driving rain watered our attendance down to around fifty.  Since the sides of the gym are open, even those inside struggled to stay dry.  Many put up their umbrellas and the site from the stage was unforgettable!  The was camera crew huddled under umbrellas, trying to keep themselves and their equipment dry; the sheets of rain blowing in on one side of the open gym, illuminated by the stage lights; the water spreading out over the concrete floor, unable to drain away fast enough in the downpour; the electrical and microphone cables suspended on plastic chairs above the circulating water; and the audience, seated under their umbrellas in the driest side of the gym—how could we ever forget that night!

Just as memorable was the noise!  Since the covered gym has a tin roof, the tropical downpour sounded like a million tiny jackhammers above our heads.  Even with our speakers at max volume, it was difficult to be heard.  The noise grew so loud at one point, we simply had to suspend the meeting and wait.  In the din, we prayed with the mist blowing in our faces, that God would still the storm.  As we prayed, and watched, and waited, gradually the noise decreased as the rain started to let up, until we were able to begin preaching again (I say “we” because I had a translator).  The rain continued throughout most of the meeting, but with less intensity so that we could be distinctly heard.  We had a “captive” audience since no one wanted to leave the gym during the storm!

Later in the series, we had a rainstorm during a Sabbath morning meeting that was even worse.  It rained so hard that we actually had water flowing across the floor of the gym like a river, and the water was nearly six inches deep beneath the stage that we were preaching from.  Again we prayed and waited for the noise to lessen, and although we had to wait longer this time, God did answer our prayers and still another storm.

The meetings in Barrio Obrero were unique in other ways as well.  It was the first time in all our years of evangelism, that we parked our car inside the meeting hall!  Since it was considered unsafe to park outside on the street, we parked inside the gym along one wall. 

The gym has walls that are about eight feet high, with another fifteen to twenty feet of open space between that and the tin roof.  We would drive in from the street through the same entrance that our audience would later walk in.  On weekends when more church members from the city would attend, we had a parking lot along one wall of the meeting hall!

One night while I was preaching I saw a transformer across the street latterly explode in a fireball of electricity, and then the arch danced back along the wires till a main breaker somewhere tripped and ended the fireworks.  Instantly, one section of the suburb was in complete darkness.  For several moments, I lost everyone’s attention, and part of the audience rushed outside to see what had happened.  Thankfully, the lights stayed on in our hall.

There were other unforgettable events during the evangelistic meetings in Barrio Obrero, but most memorable were the lives transformed by the power of the gospel.  We’ll share some of their testimonies in our next report.  One lady, a stroke victim said to me, “Pastor, God sent you here.  Of all the places in the Philippines that you could have gone, and of all the barangays in Iloilo that you could have held meetings, God directed you to Barrio Obrero so that we could learn the truth!”

Yes, God sent us to Barrio Obrero, but He used people like you to support the work of evangelism with your prayers and funds.  We, together with the little church that has been “planted” in the rough suburb of Barrio Obrero, say “Thank you so much!”

Your friends,

Pastor Lowell & family & the PAFCOE staff

Monday, November 19, 2012

What's happening at PAFCOE?



Here's an update Dad wrote:

Greetings from the Philippines!  What is happening at PAFCOE?  You’ve probably wondered on several occasions, and the silence from here may have heightened the mystery.  Yes we have been busy, but in a busy world, that seems like a poor excuse.  So we’ll just have to say politely, like they do so well here in South-east Asia, “We’re sorry, we’re late!”  Being late is much more easily forgiven here, than in the West.  Filipinos smile shyly and say, “We’re on Filipino time.”  That is considered an acceptable excuse for tardiness, but at PAFCOE, our students are required to be on time...  Looks like my PAFCOE journalism is hopelessly late!  Permit me to borrow another Asian expression – “Kindly forgive me!”

Our twenty-three students are on OJT.  That is short for “On-the-Job-Training” – which at our school of evangelism means a one-month evangelistic series in a local church somewhere in the Philippines.  Our students and staff are in 19 different sites scattered throughout the Islands of this tropical paradise, with a combined total attendance of over one-thousand adults in the adult evangelistic meetings, and even more than that in the many children’s meetings. 

Some students are thrilled with the numbers attending, some discouraged with smaller meetings, but all are facing the usual challenges of doing evangelism in enemy territory.  Last night one site sent us a message to pray that the pouring rain would stop so that people could come to the evening program.  About an hour later they sent another text, “Thank you for the prayers.  The rain has stopped, but now there is a brown-out (black-out).  Please pray that the power will come back on.”  We learned later that they had to conduct the meeting in the dark since the power remained off, but even that difficulty turned into a blessing, since the people were very quiet and attentive. 

This is the first week of meetings for our students in their sites throughout the Philippines.  For us, classes ended Oct. 31, and most of our students departed the next day on busses, boats, or planes, for their OJT sites.  For all of them, it is their first 4-week evangelistic series.  They had worked with us in our “training series,” and taken classes on public evangelism, but “on-the-job,” doing it “yourself,” is still the best training!

We conducted the “training meeting” from August 31 – Oct. 6 in an area of Iloilo where there is no Adventist church.  This was a 5-week evangelistic series, with our students as helpers, learning the art of public evangelism.  The meetings were in a covered gym with open sides, in what is considered one of the “roughest” and “poorest” neighborhoods of the city.  Now, praise-the-Lord, there is a new group of Adventists meeting in that district of Iloilo, and the little group of new believers is praying for God’s direction in building a church in their area.

The weekend that we finished that series of meetings, an American friend of ours started a four-week evangelistic series in another district of the city, and before he finished, his brother and family came to conduct a two-week series in yet another area.  When those two young men finished, a beautiful beach baptism brought more souls into the family of God!  Planning, preparing, and coordinating those meetings in addition to teaching classes at PAFCOE during the day, kept us “running” up until the time our students left for OJT.  When Jesus said, “Go,” I think He meant “run,” to save souls! 

Now we are on break—sort of.  We are back to “walking” and our students are “on the run” for soul-winning!  During this month, we will be traveling to Manila to lay plans for moving the PAFCOE school to that metropolis next year.  One of the central churches in Manila has invited us to come hold PAFCOE at their church, and conduct evangelism in metro-Manila.  We have seen God’s leading in that move, and are stepping forward with plans.  We believe that this will broaden the influence and opportunities of the PAFCOE training considerably.  When we initially started PAFCOE here in the Philippines, it was our vision to make the school “mobile” so that different areas of this country could take advantage of the evangelistic training being offered.  Now we are seeing how God is fulfilling that vision.

That is a “little update” from a “little country” in South-east Asia, but we extend a BIG “THANK YOU” to all those of you who have supported the evangelism work of PAFCOE!  “Thank you” to those of you who have sponsored worthy-students.  “Thank you” to those of you who have sponsored this school.  The average cost for all 22 of the evangelistic meetings this session (including our main meeting) was just over $1000 per meeting.  We’ll update you when our students finish their meetings, what the final outcome of souls is.  At any rate, even one soul is an investment that heaven paid the “highest price” for.  “Thank you, and thank the Lord!”

We’ll share some stories about our training meeting in that “rough” district of Iloilo, in our next report.  It won’t be next year either—I promise!

Best wishes for now!

Your friends,

Pastor Lowell & family & PAFCOE staff