“Flight 024 bound for Seoul, South
Korea is now ready to board!”
Picking up our carry-ons, we joined the waiting line. Soon we found ourselves boarding the plane
for our first segment of the journey back to the Philippines.
After our first session of PAFCOE was finished in the middle of June, we
flew to the US for a few weeks. Since we are American citizens, it is always
wonderful to be back in our own country!
We enjoyed our time here and were privileged to share mission reports in
various places about what God has done and is doing for PAFCOE.
Now we are on our way back to the Philippines for the second session of
PAFCOE which will start on August 9. After living in the Philippines for 5
months, we have come to call Iloilo our home. And so though we are leaving our
home (in America), yet we are going home to our mission field in the
Philippines!
We are looking forward sharing with you more stories and experiences of
God’s working through PAFCOE!
Thank you for your prayers and support!
"Not more surely is the place prepared for us in the heavenly mansions than is the special place designated on earth where we are to work for God."
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
Monday, June 25, 2012
"OJT" - What's that?
Here's an update that Dad recently wrote:
OJT – What’s that? When I first heard the term “OJT,”
it took a moment for my western mind to translate its meaning.
“On-the-Job-Training” (OJT) is so common in South-east Asia, that virtually
everyone understands and uses the expression “OJT.” For PAFCOE students,
“OJT” means an evangelistic series that they are assigned to conduct on their
own, as part of their training experience. Some students opted to do an
evangelistic series for children; others put one on for adults.
When the PAFCOE students returned to our training center at
the Riverview Adventist church, after four weeks of evangelistic meetings, they
were all fired with evangelistic zeal because of what God had done through
their efforts. For all of them, this was the first time that they had
ever conducted a month-long evangelistic series. It turned out to be a
“life-changing” experience, not only for the coverts baptized, but for each of
the students conducting the meetings.
Our oldest student, Jovita, a 66-year-old church
member from Baracay Island, reported that many at her site doubted that she
could do the series. “This senior citizen will never make it through four
weeks of meetings,” they said to one other, as they listened to her wavering
voice. But amazingly her voice held out, and she reported that her voice
was stronger when she finished the series than when she began, and a dozen new
souls were added to the little church where her “OJT” took place!
Many miracles happened during the student’s OJT training.
Perhaps the most amazing was of the two projectors that stayed dry during a
flood! One of our student teams reported that while out visiting,
preparing people for baptism, there was heavy rain in their area. They
knew that whenever there was heavy rain, the house that they were staying in,
flooded. Then they remembered that the two borrowed projectors they were
using for the children’s and adult meetings were both sitting on the floor in
different parts of the house. Earnestly they prayed that God would work a
miracle, and save the projectors from getting wet. Upon returning to the
house after their visits, they found the water was ankle deep in some places,
but when they picked up the projectors, they found them completely dry, and the
flour under them also completely dry! After recovering the projectors,
they proceeded to mop up 50 buckets of water from the rest of the floor!
God still works miracles today.
At the end of PAFCOE “OJT,” two-hundred-and-sixty-three
people were baptized, with approximately another 100 preparing for baptism in
the future. At one of the OJT sites, the student evangelistic lectures
were broadcast on the local radio. Because of prejudice in that area
against the “Sabbatistas” (Seventh-day Adventists), many were too fearful to
attend the live event, but in the privacy of their home, they tuned into the
Prophecy Lectures on the radio to learn the truth. Now some of these are
calling the local church and requesting baptism! One of our PAFCOE
graduates has been assigned to follow up on the interests.
Here is a video that HCBN made up for the first batch of PAFCOE.
Perhaps the most “Amazing Fact” about the PAFCOE “OJT” was
the cost. Each of the PAFCOE student teams was given 25,000 Filipino
pesos (about $600) or less, for their one-month evangelistic meetings! Of
course, the local churches were responsible for covering the costs of food,
housing, and transportation for our PAFCOE evangelists. But imagine doing
a one-month evangelistic meeting for $600! And what is even more amazing
is that when we first started classes at PAFCOE, we had NO MONEY for OJT!
God sent the money at “just the right time” so that our students could conduct
their “on-the-job-training” (OJT). Praise God!
Your friends,
Pastor Lowell, family, and team,
PAFCOE (Philippine Amazing Facts Center of Evangelism)
PS. For approximately $1,500, you can sponsor a
student AND an evangelistic series (their OJT), at PAFCOE. If you would like to help out, email my Dad at: lowell@amazingfacts.org.
Monday, June 18, 2012
Come to PAFCOE!
The first session (batch) of PAFCOE ended on June 5 with 23 graduates who were sent out into the Lord's vineyard!
Our family flew back to the US for a few weeks before returning to the Philippines next month.
Now we are taking applicants for the second session starting August 9, 2012 - it will go until December 11, 2012.
God is calling you to be a witness for Him wherever you go! A great way to be trained to be an effective witness is to come to PAFCOE and learn for yourself!
Our course is not limited to students just from the Philippines; it is open to anyone from around the world, from Africa to Nepal from Thailand to Indonesia or South Korea or anywhere else! As long as you can speak English!
Below is what the President of the Southern-Asia Pacific Division said regarding the second session of PAFCOE.
We welcome you to come and participate in learning how to be a worker for the Lord wherever you go!
For more information, go to http://www.pafcoe.org/wp/ There you can find all the details for how to enroll and other things.
God bless! Keep working for the Lord! :-)
Our family flew back to the US for a few weeks before returning to the Philippines next month.
Now we are taking applicants for the second session starting August 9, 2012 - it will go until December 11, 2012.
God is calling you to be a witness for Him wherever you go! A great way to be trained to be an effective witness is to come to PAFCOE and learn for yourself!
Our course is not limited to students just from the Philippines; it is open to anyone from around the world, from Africa to Nepal from Thailand to Indonesia or South Korea or anywhere else! As long as you can speak English!
Below is what the President of the Southern-Asia Pacific Division said regarding the second session of PAFCOE.
We welcome you to come and participate in learning how to be a worker for the Lord wherever you go!
For more information, go to http://www.pafcoe.org/wp/ There you can find all the details for how to enroll and other things.
God bless! Keep working for the Lord! :-)
Monday, June 11, 2012
PAFCOE Graduation!
June 5, 2012 was a day, long to be remembered in the history of PAFCOE and its students and staff.
The day when our students received their hard-earned diplomas and were dedicated to God’s service.
The day when first session (batch) of PAFCOE ended. It was such a special service!
Michael and the men who graduated |
The ladies who graduated and I. |
And yet above all the
problems and trials that took places in the various places, the students persevered
and came back rejoicing that God had used them in winning souls for Him! Galatians 6:9 says, “And let us not be weary
in well-doing, but in due season, we shall reap if we faint not.” And this is what they did! God did so many
miracles for all of them – so many that it would probably take a book to
recount them all!
Since their seminars
were during the rainy season, pouring rain throughout the day was a common
occurrence. In one place, the student and his wife were out of the house at the
church, helping to prepare people for the baptism that Sabbath. While they were
there, the rain started. Sometimes when it rained, the house they were staying
in got flooded. Suddenly they remembered that their 2 borrowed projectors were
sitting on the floor in their house. The student’s wife was worried that they
would be ruined if the house had water in it. So she started home right away
and prayed all the way there, “Lord, please save the projectors and help them
not be ruined. Do a miracle for us!”
When she arrived at the
house, sure enough, it was flooded with water up to a person’s ankles.
Everywhere it was wet. But when she came to the places where the 2 projectors
were, she saw that the areas around the projectors were totally dry and when
she picked up the projector bag, it was not even damp! God had done a miracle
and kept the projectors dry in answer to their earnest prayers!
But of course, the
highlight of the whole month of OJT was the last Sabbath when people gave their
lives to Jesus and were baptized. Over the whole country of the Philippines,
260 people were baptized on June 2 and joined God’s true church! Seeing people
that they worked and prayed for made everything they had experienced so
worthwhile!
We asked the students if
they would like to do another evangelistic meeting and each one of them said,
“Definitely, yes!” Many of them are going into full-time ministry work in some
area of the Philippines, praise God!
The first batch of
PAFCOE ended in the evening of June 5, with the students’ graduation.
Twenty-three students graduated and were sent forth into God’s vineyard to work
for Him! Numbers 23:23 sums it all up when it says, “What hath God wrought!”
If you’d like to see
more pictures of graduation, click here.
Praise God that every
student’s tuition is paid off and now we are looking forward to the next
session – starting August 9. Thank you for your prayers and support!
Thursday, May 31, 2012
A Caribou chariot, Camps, Adventures, and People
This exciting update was written by my brother, Michael. Sadly the camera was forgotten, so there are no pictures to add to the report.
05-23-12, Wednesday. Ring, ring, ring! Time to get
up. Yawning, I looked at my watch. How I
wished I could roll over, go back to sleep, and simply forget about the events
of the day. But I
needed the time to prepare for my talk at the Adventist Youth Survival Camp. With great effort, I forced myself out of my
cozy bed. Then I knelt down and spent
personal time with my heavenly Father pleading for strength and wisdom to make
this talk valuable and applicable to the youth.
Next, I set to work preparing my talk for the survival camp attempting
to survive myself. God gave me the essential wisdom to prepare the
talk and His Spirit taught me that morning.
I prepared a fascinating talk outlining the history of the great
controversy from the fall of Lucifer to the flood. About 7:30, the pastor came and brought me my
“sermon”—notes prepared by the church. It was very exciting to get the sermon notes just a little while before
I was supposed to preach! We were supposed to leave for the camp at 7:30
a.m. I gulped down a sandwich, swallowed
a mango (well, I actually cut it up first!), drank a carton of soy milk and
cleaned up in less than 15 minutes.
But why
the rush? Pastor Milore, who was supposed take me to the youth camp on his
motorcycle, had a flat tire on his motorcycle and was not ready at 7:30. At around 8:30, after a prayer for safety, we
mounted the motorcycle, fastened our helmets, and we were off!
At about 9:00, we arrived safely at the place
where we had to park. We parked the
motorcycle, and together with our tour guide, we followed
the riverbed for a couple of kilometers.
Finally, we ascended a steep hill right to the youth camp—it was already
9:30! About 60 youth greeted me with shy
stares. A couple of them were brave
enough to come shake my hand. Finally,
it was decided that I would speak at 1:00 because I had arrive too late for the
early meeting. But this, too, was good because it gave me time to prepare. At the appointed time, I preached for an
hour, did a review, and gave prizes to those who answered my questions. Afterward, we ate lunch. Lunch consisted of rice, cooked greens and
vegetables, and a few bananas. They invited me to try out a Filipino specialty—young bamboo shoots
preserved in a form of vinegar. It was interesting, indeed!
After lunch, we returned to San Jose. Thanks to God’s protection, we arrived home safely.
05-24-12, Thursday. 5:00 AM.
It was time to prepare to speak again at the survival camp. This time I would do part two of the great
controversy. Since I had the lecture
mostly prepared already, I did not have to get up so early. After studying, praying, and again grabbing a
quick bite to eat, we left about 8:00. Finally, we arrived at the place where we
parked. We wandered up the mountains trying to find
the camp by ourselves, this time without a guide. Finally, after prayer, the Lord helped us
find our way up to the youth camp (which is at a remote area in the
mountains). I spoke again for another
hour on the sanctuary and salvation and the final movements in the great
controversy showing the youth how they could have confidence that our church is
the true church, a movement raised up by God in response to prophecy. At the end, I did my quiz, gave prizes, and
finished. Then, we proceeded to lunch
where they wanted me to try their famous “bamboo soup”—a “soup” made from the
shoots of young bamboo plants with coconut milk. It was actually quite delicious!
The trip
home was the most adventurous trip I had ever experienced. Rather than walk
back to where the motorcycle was parked, we decided to ride a caribou (native term for water
buffalo). The native assured me that I
would not ride on the actual caribou but rather on a chariot. “A chariot?” I remarked, “How can you get a
chariot up here? Surely it would get
stuck.” “No,” the native replied, “this
chariot is wheel-less.” Still puzzled, I
waited with Pastor Milore for the “chariot” to arrive. Soon along came a huge caribou pulling a
hand-made contraption which was termed “chariot” by the natives (a caribou is
another name for a water buffalo). It was really just a seat set up on poles. Well, we jumped on the wheel-less cart, the
driver alerted the animal that it was time to move, and we lurched
forward. The caribou was certainly in no
hurry and walked very slowly. Up and
down back and forth the pastor and I were jostled roughly, almost sliding off
at times. We rode up over large rocks,
down into the water, and sideways on hills, somehow managing to stay
aboard. Finally, the pastor and I
arrived back at the motorcycle.
We
mounted the motorcycle, put our helmets on, and prayed for safety. We had not gone too far before the rear tire
suddenly blew out. Fortunately, we had not been driving very fast. I praised
the Lord that we were not injured by the blowout. We hopped off the motorcycle and pushed it
down the highway for a few hundred meters until we found a house by the side of
the road where we could temporarily park.
Angry black storm clouds were also gathering in the sky at this time,
and I knew it would likely soon rain. But
we knew that “all things work together for good to those who love the Lord”
(Rom. 8:28). We believed and claimed
this promise.
While the pastor rode away
with a tricycle driver to buy a new tire (a tricycle is the public means of
transportation in the smaller cities of the Philippines), I sat down on a chair
outside the house under the eaves of the roof hoping it would not start
pouring. I waited around some time trying to read a book
I had brought with me. Not too much
later Pastor Milore came back on a tricycle, we put the tire back on, and were
ready to go again. But before we left,
we gave two Great Controversy books
away, one to the tricycle driver who helped the pastor get the tire and put it
on, and the other to the family who let us stay on their property. We know those books are silent messengers of
truth. Truly, all thing work together
for good. After doing some errands, we arrived home at the San Jose Church safely, thanks to God.
05-25-12, Friday. This was a memorable day for me. That night I
was to preach the seal of God and the mark of the beast. Then we decided we would try something new—we
would preach the meeting together. It went over quite well, and we may do it
again before the end of the seminar. It
seemed to keep people’s attention better.
05-26-12,
Sabbath. The electricity was off for the
entire morning—maybe they were trying to fix something in the power company. We couldn’t just let the devil win, so what
did we do? My father preached the
morning meeting without PA. What an
experience! At least, the people were able to hear the message. Fortunately, the power came
back on before the evening meeting, but then it poured right before the nightly meeting
which was on the true church. Before the
meeting, the rain quit, but as expected, our attendance was way down. It then picked back up last night when we
talked about Babylon.
05-27-12, Sunday. Today I went with a church elder on
visitation. I was a little bit unsure of
what to say, but God blessed and helped me remember what to say. I encouraged the people and prayed for them
and they were glad. Most of my
visits took only a few minutes but one of them took more than half an
hour. I always try to encourage everyone to a
closer walk with God. We finished our
visitation about 10:30 that same morning.
Keep the
PAFCOE students in prayer as we wind down to the close of some 20+ seminars. Pray
that Jesus Christ would defeat the devil in this great controversy and many
miracles and changed lives can be witnessed. We are looking forward to hearing
the testimonies from the various student seminar sites and sharing them with
you. Stay tuned to the blog for future
updates!
So long
for now,
Your penman
in Christ,
Michael L. Hargreaves
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