mandag 9. februar 2015

An even busier day!

We  started the day at 7am when we headed to do the Agenda 1 taster. There were about 15 churches interested in knowing more about how it works and what Agenda 1 is, altogether there were about 80 people in the church, mostly pastors and leaders from other churches in the province. Some had travelled as far as 60km to be there today. As well as lunch we shared a traditional snack of rice starch steamed in a banana leaf.

Some of  the pastors.



We presented the Agenda 1 concept in as manageable language as possible so people would be able to understand. We also gave then a taste of the Method and Tools Agenda 1 uses. The people were from lots of different denominations and did not know each other from before. The atmosphere was one of expectation and interest and they remained interested throughout the next 6 hours. It would seem there are lots of churches wanting to be part of this process.

We then set out on a 6 hour Journey to the guest house in Chhuk which is the province we will be holding a taster day tomorrow (Tuesday). It is very comfortable and clean with a big double bed and en-suite bathroom (to say bathroom is a bit of a stretch).

The journey down to here meant we drove, or should I say bounced as the road is so bad, past an enormous lake. The sun was a ball of deep red fire as it set over the water. There were small fishing boats and individuals hoping to catch their evening meal. The reason for the bumping was the standard of the road. It was a main trunk road to and from the capital but it was so bumpy that I was regularly leaving my seat behind as I bounced along! Even the heavy suitcases were bouncing. We had a couple of toilet stops on the journey and for those of you who have been to Cambodia, you will know what I mean when I say the toilets had to be seen to be believed. I was very glad of the anti-bac!


We skirted round the outskirts of east of Phnom Penh at 6pm as the factory workers were finishing for the day. Workers in factories here have an eleven hour day, 7am-6pm which means they are never home in daylight. They are transported to work standing on the back of an open-topped truck. Some trucks were so over-loaded that the tail-gate was left open for people to stand on. There were hundreds of people loaded like animals onto these trucks. On the one hand we might with our western view think it is terrible but at leats these people have jobs and an Income.

We ate our evening meal in a street cafe, marinated beef which we barbequed outselves on a small barbeque which was brought to the table as well as noodles and vegetables. It was very tasty and I would happily have that meal another time too.




A busy day


The day started with a lovely breakfast of bacon, scrambled eggs, fresh french bread and butter, freshly squeezed orange juice and darjeeling tea. We then left for church in a tuctuc, 3 suitcases, 3 backpacks and 3 adults made for a bit of a squash but we made it safely.

Steve preached at the service and I shared a bible text. Rom 5:1 and my point was that when we are God’s children we are adopted into his family. When things are going well we feel secure as His child however when something doesn’t go well or we do something daft, we do not cease to be His child. In the same way that we would not cease to be the child of our earthly father just because we misbehaved. We have the same right as any child to come their father, say sorry, receive forgiveness and start again.

After church we set off across the city to an island in the middle of the Mekong river and a lovely restaurant. We ate a tasty lunch with a fantastic view of the river and another island on one side and the city of Phnom Penh on the skyline opposite. We then drover a further 2 hours north east and are now in province north east of Phnom Penh not far from the Vietnamese border. 

The Capital from the roof-top restrauant.
 

We are staying at a guest house near where we will be doing the Agenda 1 taster days. Before heading to the restaurant I watched the blood-red sun slip down behind miles of rice paddies. We had another great meal in a street café, I really do love Khmer food, it seems to have the right balance of spice and mild flavours. Now to sleep in the guest house, I have a clean room with a fan above the 2 double beds to keep me cool. I can hear grasshoppers and other insects outside my window and I am watching a lizard of some sort eating flies and mosquitoes off the bedroom wall.

lørdag 7. februar 2015

Good stuff in Cambodia which is run by christian organizations or organizations based of Christian values.

Being back in PhnomPenh has meant I was able to meet up with Ådne Berge who is a member of my congregation in Norkirken Sandnes. He is down here with two others for a week with Viator Microcredit of which he is the manager. Viator does some fantastic stuff at grass root level in countries such as Azerbaijan. See their film clip here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nliEvsVdhQA  Here is a link to Erik's blog which talks about him, Dag og Ådne's trip here this week. To my English speaking friends, sorry, you will have to use google translate. http://investeringsnettverket.tumblr.com/ 

We talked until almost midnight about the exciting things he is involved with, both here in Cambodia and in other developing countries and about the past week and what I have been doing. We arranged to have breakfast together with the rest of his team and Steve in a french restraunt the following morning. After breakfast, which lasted a couple of hours because we were talking so much, we headed to Three Corner Coffee Company's office accross town. This is a fantastic project employing and bettering the life of girls and women previously involved in the sex industry here in Cambodia. Have a look at their website, there is pleanty of interesting information there: http://threecornercoffee.com/  I bought some coffee for Tim.

Next stop was lunch at Daughters of Cambodia, who are also helping women previously involved in the sex industry. Take a look at their website here: http://daughtersofcambodia.org/  I had a chicken caesar wrap which was very tasty! The sex industry is a sad side effect of the tourist industry, tourism is important for the economy but sadly not all tourists behave appropriately. I will be back there again before I leave Cambodia.







fredag 6. februar 2015

The prayer and more.

Today has been an exciting one, It is today that we get the best idea as to whether the people have understood the teaching and caught the vision for what it can mean for their church and local community.

We began every session (3 per day) with outstanding worship led by the students from the Normisjon dormitory pluss others. Something I don't often see in my church are elderly people bopping and dancing to the latest Christian song, as worship is loudly led by a very good and enthusiastic drummer, bass guitarist, accoustic guitar, keyboard and african drums. There were also up to 12 teenagers leading the worship. It was alive, vibrant and moving. Some of the songs we knew from English but by no means all of them, it didn't matter.



There was a lot of time allocated to group work today. When everyone had made plans for their church for the next six months it was time to present their ideas and vision to the other churches. This always takes some time so we divided into two groups in two seperate rooms. There will be another Agenda1 for these same leaders in six months time. The first session will then be self-assessment of what they planned and how it went. What are the successes and what are/were the challenges?

I have had to wear a "tag" so that people knew I was a member of the conference, this was especially important at meal times otherwise I risked not getting anything to eat! Those of you who have ever been with me to an event where we wear name labels will know that I HATE them. I was however happy to wear this one because I thought it was rather fun, my name was written in Khmer - how cool is that!



Talking of food, I generally like Khmer food but there was a couple of dishes which I passed over. One of them, chicken with ginger and noodles sounded very nice, I am fond of both chicken and ginger. It wasn't until it was passed to me that I realized that the chicken was chicken feet. So there I was with a problem, having been passed the plate to help myself I thought it would be too rude to say I had changed my mind but could not imagine eating the scaly toes of a chicken, whatever the sauce tasted like! My solution? I just took noodles and hoped nobody noticed.

Mealtime



During the worship both yesterday and today the sense of the presence of God was really powerful. I do not have prophet as my main area of gifting but sometimes, especially when singing and worshipping I feel Him telling me stuff. There was no exception yesterday when He showed me His plan for Agenda 1 and today he reminded me of His promises for the persecuted and the poor (Rev 7:9-end).

At the end of the conference each group is prayed for with the laying on of hands. In the west we pray for one another in turn and quietly. Not so in Cambodia! Here there is a huge enthusiasm to pray and to be prayed for. Everyone prays loudly and at once and these are by no means short prayers! As each group is prayed for, if anyone has as prophecy or word of knowledge they can write it down for the group to take home with them. There were lots and lots! Prayer like worship in Cambodia is authentic, active and loud. This picture does not do it justice but might give you an idea. I would love Norkirken's prayer ministry team to have been here today. Another time maybe?


Now I am back at the Goldiana Hotel in the centre of the city. There is internet and a swimming pool! Although I will be out and about doing stuff over the next couple of days, I will be staying here until Monday morning.

Helping to develop direction and a missional mindset


The conference is being held in a church. All the meals and the accommodation are in the church. I have a very comfortable room and all the rooms we are using, including the bedrooms have air conditioning, a pleasant surprise.

The Church is not built on a hill, I am holding my camera wonky and have no idea how to correct the problem digitally!
 
 
 
 
 
 
There was no internet at the Church but there was electricity, something which I learned on my last trip, not to take for granted! I have teken a picture of the powerlines to give you an idea of the standard.
 
 
There are 2 of us here from Norway for the Agenda 1 Conference as well as the Cambodian team. Steve Bruns and I. Here's a picture of Steve thinking during one of the breaks.









He has done an excellent job of making the Agenda 1 concept accessible to the Cambodian people who have varying levels of education. We have both been bending our minds about how to convey a thaught or concept pictorally. Between us we have come up with some very good and easy to understand ideas. At least, easy to understand if you are following the teaching. Here is an example:





Can you guess what it is illustrating?








The teaching is not all about sitting on chairs listening. We have many different churches from different places and different denominations represented here. That is the genius of the Agenda concept! It is equally relevant to all, it is cross-denominational and cross-cultural. It was also really great to see the unity of the churches as they worked, worshipped and lived together for three days.

Although there are lots of people, the leaders from each church work together in their group looking how their plans made last time have gone, applying the teaching, dreaming big dreams and then coming back to reality and making concrete plans as to what they want to implement in their church, how they are going to go about it and who will be responsible. Here is a picture of the groups at work:

Notice how young the leaders are!

The conference begins


After a very nice breakfast of freshly made omelett and toast with tea to drink we left the hotel by tuctuc. Travelling on the roads in the city always feels chaotic and uncontrolled and today was no exception. There were people, bikes, mopeds, tuctucs cars and lorries, all going in different directions - usually at the same time. The ride took about 30 minutes and took us to a part of town I have not been to before. There is also here the usual mix of affluence and abject poverty co-existing and clear for all to see. There is so much poverty here that it is not possible to hide it away or legislate against it was we do in the west.
 
 

 

There are over a hundred church leaders gathered for three days of teaching, discussion and planning. As with all gatherings of Christians, the day began with some excellent worship led by students from the dormitory which Normisjon runs here in the capital.
 
 

The church leaders who are gathered reflect the society in general here with the majority being young. The country still struggles With the after-effects of the Khmer Rouge genocide. T he four years they were in power during the 1970’s saw almost a whole generation wiped in those few years.

 
 





The lunch was very tasty, traditional Khmer cuisine eaten outside in the shade. In conversation with one of the pastors he shared with me that one of the problems he faces in his area is the ever present threat of starvation. This is not a real problem for most of us church leaders in the west. The church in the west is in danger of over-eating both spiritually and literally while the churches in countries like Cambodia is hunger both spiritually and literally.

 

The theme of these next three days is discipleship. What was a disciple in Jesus’ day and what does it mean to be a disciple of Jesus today? I shared with the conference that a disciple is not what you do but who you are. Whether we are aware of it or not we are all followers of something or someone. Being a Christian is about who you choose to follow. You can’t follow someone unless you are going the same way as them. It is easy to see that we cannot follow Jesus and at the same time go our own way. I touched on the truth that following Jesus is a way of being, it’s who we are. I will be going deeper into it in a teaching session this evening (using Matt 4. 18-22). We are both disciples and leaders at the same time. Jesus sent us into the world as his disciples but with a mandate to amongst other things, make disciples (see Matt 28. 16-20). Who are you following and who’s following you?

tirsdag 3. februar 2015

Sights and smells

I have arrived safely in Cambodia, just waiting for the other person I am working with, Steve, to arrive on a flight later today, The journey was a little long but went very well. I left a cold Sola airport in Stavanger at 7am headed for Frankfurt. After that was a lunch time flight from Frankfurt to Singapore. It was a 12 hour flight which made my arrival time midnight European time but 6am here. Lost a night somewhere on the journey!







Landed safely in Singapore, found my way to a different terminal by sky train and onto the flight in time.






 


 


It was so nice to be met at the airport and to see old friends again. I have spent some time by the pool, then into the nearby shops to locate factor 50 suncream. Not so necessary in the city but this evening we, the leaders are sharing a meal and having a planning/strategy meeting. After that I have no idea when I might get time for shopping before the last day! I will definitely need the suncream.



 
Travel in the city is either by private car, Bicycle, moped or tuctuc. Tuctucs are everywhere and the drivers are all willing to take you anywhere you want to og.

These are an inexpensive and reasonably safe way of getting around the city. It is helpful if your tuctuc driver speaks a bit of English, mine didn't! No problem though, he got out his map of the city so I could point to where I wanted to og to, but the map was written in Khmer! Still no problem, we just stopped a passing padestrian who happily translated for us.

It is almost three years since I was here last but I still remember the sights, whole families and shopping crammed onto a moped. Nor are the smells forgotten, the smell of oyster sauce, quite pleasant in small quantities is really overpowering when the streets are full of street vendors selling take-away food. The combination of that and the usual city pollution and grime means that Phnom Penh is not easily forgotten.

Tomorrow we head into the suburbs for the start of the conference I will be helping to lead. There will be lots of Church leaders from all over the country and various denominations gathered for a week of inspiration and teaching. Very exciting!