Sunday, February 23, 2014

February 23


Dear Friends,
On Monday we took advantage of a Fee Free Day at the National Parks and visited the Petrified Forest, taking along a couple of the single gals that we lovingly call our daughters. Roger and I, being older  more mature, have “adopted” the twenties – thirties  crowd, so we have sons and daughters from WVA, NY, AZ, IA, IL, etc. We are enjoying this new role in our lives.

A couple of our other staff members also blog their thoughts and observations, so I have borrowed from Alice and Gail today. (Gail is also the one who provides us with many of our photos.) We are often surprised by the kids’ questions and the things they do not know--such as: no one in my class knew how to use a three-hole punch, but yet they know a lot about animals and restraining orders and drinking problems.

Alice wrote: "I should mention how this afternoon we went out and fed all the animals on campus... with the girls telling me all about each animal and what they like to eat and how they like to be touched/held. The horse loves carrots and to be brushed, but be careful in the sensitive spots. The horse also doesn't like loud screaming (as two of the girls had to leave the corral for screaming). The goat likes everything and can be pushy. The sheep like bread. The llama doesn't like girls and runs away (but will watch us from afar and won't eat the food we toss toward her before the goat and sheep get it). The chickens like to be held once you catch them (which I'm not totally sold on, but the girls are convinced) and like bread. It's a different kind of world these girls live in.

Gail wrote: This hogan has electricity.  Someone told me out here that sometimes people would put electricity in.  Some Natives live in their hogans with or without electricity.  I read an article today about Navajo getting some free housing.  Someone commented on the article saying, ‘make them get a job and pay for their own house.’ Well, wouldn’t that be awesome if they could!  How does one get a job when he is uneducated?  When the overall graduation rate is around 50%? 

        To get a job one requires a marketable skill.  She has to be able to function in the world.  He would need a car to get to work. There is a book entitled Bridges Out of Poverty that a social worker loaned me.  It was eye-opening because I’d never thought that much about the gaps in society.  One can’t take a third or fourth (or even second) generation welfare recipient, who knows no other way of life and who has no high school diploma, and expect him to function in a world that abides by a different set of rules.  Not only rules but nuances like speech, non-verbal communication, expectations, and priorities…  If I were to be dropped off in Beverly Hills and expected to know how to interact with people there, I could do it to some degree, but right away people would know by my speech, clothing, shoes, and mannerisms that I didn’t belong there.  A worker, even at McDs, has to be able to talk to people.  He has to be able to make eye contact, something I notice the Navajo don’t to a lot of.  It’s a different social expectation.  I hope I make sense to someone.  The old Proverbs says: Give a man a fish, and he eats for a day:  teach him to fish and he eats for a lifetime.


Well, friends, we are fishermen who are not only fishing for the Kingdom, but are attempting to teach life skills to our students and maybe do a little mentoring for the younger staff also. Thank you for your consistent prayers.





Sunday, February 16, 2014

February 14


Feb. 16, 2014
This week we had our annual staff retreat – the topics were the Gifts of the Spirit and Love Languages.

This was delightful because the entire staff was present for the meetings, not just the teachers, with whom we spend most of our time. After we took our Gifts Surveys, we shared by groups, describing the gift and giving some examples of how we’ve seen God use our gifts. Mine is mercy and R’s is administration. He’s a natural organizer, and I have a tender heart. The whole gamut of gifts was represented, and it seems to me that we are using our gifts for the Body here at SVIS – not just with the children, but also with the other staff members.

The second day we concentrated on the Five Love Languages as explained by Dr. Gary Chapman. Of course, we were familiar with this: touch, words of affirmation, quality time, gifts, and acts of service. We know what our Love Language is, and true to stereotype, ours are opposites, and we’ve been aware of that in our marriage and have tried to love each other in such a way that each perceives the love. We were familiar with that idea with our own children also. But it is a challenge to think of it in terms of our students.

Our students come to us with their love tanks virtually empty. In other Christian Schools where we have worked, this wasn’t necessarily so – as most of the students came from loving homes. We have the challenge of identifying our children’s Love Languages and then ministering to them in a way that is believable and not rejected.

In thinking through my class list, some of them are easy to figure out – M who asks daily how her grades are (and they are very good), needs words of affirmation. L, who wants to link arms as we walk, needs physical touch. In fact, the other day when I called her “Sweetie,” she exploded at me. A often shows others that she cares about them by serving them, so I suspect that this is the language she understands. I still have to think about the others.

R knows he has two who need physical touch desperately. They are all over him, touching him when they come to class. Another boy, who is always in trouble for messing with other children, probably is showing that he needs positive touch also. You can understand how some of this gets “tricky.”

We are concerned about others who are not in our classes also –there have been incidents of gang involvement and bullying. The administration and teachers desperately want to discern their Love Language too, so we can fill their tanks with our love, and through that, they will receive Jesus’ love. They are living hopeless lives without Jesus.


We hope your days are filled with love,
Happy Valentine’s Day.

Sunday, February 2, 2014

February 2, 2014


Dear Friends,
            One of our young dorm moms had kidney stones and surgery this week; and in November, a different dorm mom suffered terribly with kidney stones too. I am not saying, “Why us, Lord?” We believe that God is in control and has purposes way beyond our understanding. But I wanted to share that we on the SVIS staff are just like you – some have wayward siblings, homosexual family members, abusive situations in the past, jailed family members, children not living for the Lord, failed relationships, personal and family illnesses, family suicides and unemployment. The enemy does everything he can to distract us and diminish our testimony here. 


 
Making Navajo Tacos
This week I would like to borrow some things from a list by Paul Zimmerman entitled: What do missionaries really need? Our prayers! Please remember our staff in prayer this week with these requests:


1. Love for God. Sometimes we are overworked and have many responsibilities. Our supreme motivation for obedience to the call of Christ is love for him.

2. Genuine love for others. The second great commandment is “Love your neighbor as yourself.” Pray that we will get along well with each other and have a Christ-like love for our Navajo students.

3. A deeper relationship with God. Since our schedules are so tight, we might be tempted to skimp on our time with God. This would result in failure. Moses instructed Joshua to meditate on God’s law day and night and be careful to obey his commandments. Only then would his way be made prosperous and successful.

4. Spirit-controlled lives. We don’t want to be doing the Lord’s work in our own energy and wisdom.

5. Fruit of the Spirit. (This year we are studying one fruit of the Spirit each month in our classrooms. This month, the Fruit is Love.) Christ perfectly manifested all of the Fruits of the Spirit – love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. Pray, therefore, that the Fruit of the Spirit, the very beauty of Jesus, will be evident in our lives.

Here are some names of people serving on our campus. If you feel led, choose a couple each day to bring before our powerful Savior. Mardell, Kris, Erica, Michael, Sharon, Randy, Fred, Shelle, Ron, Seth, Linda, Rod, Kara, Suzie, Kathy, Rajeen, Daryl, August, Helen, Kristi, Ray, Roger, Bryce, Vera, Ben, Frances, Alan, Rosie, Caitlyn, Alice, Aaron, Natalie, Nathan, Tommie, Autumn, Donna, Sara, Andres, Gail, Jeannette, Sadie, and Liz.













,
From Waldorf to the World,


February 2, 2014




Dear Friends,
            One of our young dorm moms had kidney stones and surgery this week; and in November, a different dorm mom suffered terribly with kidney stones too. I am not saying, “Why us, Lord?” We believe that God is in control and has purposes way beyond our understanding. But I wanted to share that we on the SVIS staff are just like you – some have wayward siblings, homosexual family members, abusive situations in the past, jailed family members, children not living for the Lord, failed relationships, personal and family illnesses, family suicides and unemployment. The enemy does everything he can to distract us and diminish our testimony here. 

            This week I would like to borrow some things from a list by Paul Zimmerman entitled: What do missionaries really need? Our prayers! Please remember our staff in prayer this week with these requests:

1. Love for God. Sometimes we are overworked and have many responsibilities. Our supreme motivation for obedience to the call of Christ is love for him.
2. Genuine love for others. The second great commandment is “Love your neighbor as yourself.” Pray that we will get along well with each other and have a Christ-like love for our Navajo students.
3. A deeper relationship with God. Since our schedules are so tight, we might be tempted to skimp on our time with God. This would result in failure. Moses instructed Joshua to meditate on God’s law day and night and be careful to obey his commandments. Only then would his way be made prosperous and successful.
4. Spirit-controlled lives. We don’t want to be doing the Lord’s work in our own energy and wisdom.
5. Fruit of the Spirit. (This year we are studying one fruit of the Spirit each month in our classrooms. This month, the Fruit is Love.) Christ perfectly manifested all of the Fruits of the Spirit – love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. Pray, therefore, that the Fruit of the Spirit, the very beauty of Jesus, will be evident in our lives.

Here are some names of people serving on our campus. If you feel led, choose a couple each day to bring before our powerful Savior. Mardell, Kris, Erica, Michael, Sharon, Randy, Fred, Shelle, Ron, Seth, Linda, Rod, Kara, Suzie, Kathy, Rajeen, Daryl, August, Helen, Kristi, Ray, Roger, Bryce, Vera, Ben, Frances, Alan, Rosie, Caitlyn, Alice, Aaron, Natalie, Nathan, Tommie, Autumn, Donna, Sara, Andres, Gail, Jeannette, Sadie, and Liz.


From Waldorf to the World,
Love,
The Everetts

Monday, January 27, 2014

January 27, 2014



  Dear Friends,
This week in chapel Mr. M. talked about covenants and commitments. He paired each student with an adult; then he asked them first to define and discuss covenant. Then he challenged each adult to ask his/her child about his relationship with Jesus and gave us time to pray with the child. Part of his goal was to help the children realize that following Christ takes a commitment.

            My little partner glowed as she reported she had accepted Jesus and had been baptized last spring. But, another told her adult that she has tried several times to ask Jesus into her life and nothing “happened,” and another point-blank told her mentor that she was not a Christian and did not intend to become one. Two of the older girls were reported as saying, no, they were not Christians.  AM (along with her sister in my class) is a seeker, and the other (AR) said no she was not a Christian with real animosity. Her family is steeped in the traditional ways.

Some of the younger children told their adult what they think we want them to say, but we are not witnessing the fruit of a transformed life at all. One of the teachers reported that though the results were not encouraging, it was enlightening to know where we stand. And we all agreed that the prayer time was especially beneficial because the children still knew that we loved them and asked Jesus to help them in their struggles.
The lines weren't too bad.              
            R presents different character traits in his class, but when the lessons get close to the heart, such as Lying lips are something God hates, then the anger rises and the behavior deteriorates. His students weren’t interested in being peacemakers the week he taught that lesson, and this week will be difficult because it is on forgiveness.  So, that is a very real prayer request – for them to understand the difference between a whole relationship (which many have not seen modeled) and a broken one, and how forgiveness puts the two parties together.  It would be wonderful if even one child in his class would know God’s forgiveness through 
 Jesus Christ and start walking in a new kingdom.

The quizzing team and sponsors.
            My 6th graders participated in Bible Quizzing Event this weekend. They did fairly well, and I know they had a great time at Castles N’ Coasters in Phoenix afterwards. I’m sure I’ll hear more about it on Monday.  (photos)

Shooting a free throw
         Warrior basketball season has begun. We have a talented coach, and he is interested in the players’ spiritual development and their teamwork as well as their skills. Unfortunately some of the players find it difficult to stay eligible due to grades or attitude. On Saturday the staff played against the teams (3rd – 5th) and (6th – 8th). Some of us aren’t as young as we used to be. 
That was fun!

            Pastor Dean talked about our testimony in his sermon. The power of a testimony is a changed life from a transformed heart and mind. When we tell our story, we can say to someone, “I was in a place where you are.” The issue is sin and it needs to be cleansed from our lives. We on the staff feel that God has us here to share our testimonies with these children. I can say, “God has changed my life and made me whole, and He wants to do the same thing for you. There is hope even though your family is messed up and your childhood has been corrupted.”

Thank you for your prayers for us and our children.
Jammies


P.S. I wrote most of this last night, and now it is Monday night. R and I both had a difficult Monday. We’re praying for peace in our classrooms on Tuesday.