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Posted in General Articles
by Heather Beard
on 5/13/2008
I just wanted to send a quick thank you for your prayers for the baby mentioned in one of my earlier blogs. Our students went back last week to check up on it and good news abound. They said that the mother was properly taking care of it and that it had even gained weight! We have contacted a lady friend of ours here who said that she would make frequent visits to the home to continue checking up on the baby, whose name is Angel.
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Posted in General Articles
by Heather Beard
on 5/13/2008
Before we left for Cape
Town our students put on a couple huge events for the
kids they work with. The Ithemba crew
put together a carnival, where over 90 kids attended! Check out these pictures below. It was a crazy and fun time, a time where
kids could be kids again!




The Joshua Project team put together a last supper, to say
the least with the kids they work with. It
was a fun filled day with laughter, dancing, egg races and food! Check out these pics from the day.
  
I am beyond proud of our students this year. They have truly made a difference in this community. They have forever left a footprint in the lives of many.
Thank you for helping make a difference! Blessings, Heather
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Posted in General Articles
by Heather Beard
on 5/13/2008
Well the end is close in sight. I still can't believe that
in two days I will no longer call Jeffreys
Bay my home. It's been a challenging experience, and there
is so much waiting for me at home, although it doesn't take away the sadness of
leaving a group of people who you've invested into for the last eight
months. It's been an incredible experience,
one to not be forgotten. God has
challenged me, stretched me and refined me once again.
Last night we returned home from Cape Town.
We spent four full days there, visiting and touring the sites. Although the weather was not pleasant, the
fog never lifting off of Table
Mountain, it still was a
beautiful time of rest, reflection and fun!
We hiked Table Mountain, we visited the penguins, we ate American
food, Cinnabun and Subway, we saw three movies, and we climbed Cape Point, the
most southern tip of Africa. It was a great way to spend some last moments
with our students.
 The View at the top of Table Mountain.  Christina and I at the top of Table Mountain.  Penguins!  The drive to Cape Point, including a rainbow!  Cape Point, where it is believed two oceans meet.  The Cape of Good Hope.
The next couple of days we will be packing up and saying
our goodbyes. Most of us leave on
Thursday to return home. I will be
meeting up with Chad at the Frankfurt Airport
on Friday morning and from there we will fly to Atlanta where we will spend two weeks
visiting our AIM family and doing some pre marriage counseling. From there we will head to New
York to visit with my mother, step dad and brother for five days
and then back to Colorado
on June 3rd.
I cannot thank you enough for all of your love, prayers,
financial support and encouragement as I have been here. I truly would not have been able to do it
without you. I have been meaning to post
an update on Chad's
and I's plans, but with the craziness of this past week, have not been able
to. Once I return home I will post an
update about our upcoming plans! I love you all
and hope to visit with you when I am home!!
Blessings,
Heather
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Posted in General Articles
by Heather Beard
on 5/4/2008
South
Africa is one of the most beautiful
countries in the world, I'm just sure of it.
I have felt so blessed this year to have been able to explore and see
another part of God's world, his handiwork and masterpiece. On Friday Katie, Melissa and I went to TsiTsikamma National Park and hiked Storms River
Mouth. It was such a peaceful day, as
God found me right where I was at. It was a perfect ending to a really hard
week. Here are some pictures. Thank you for making this possible for me to
experience. Love to you all,Heather





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Posted in General Articles
by Heather Beard
on 5/4/2008
I sit here trying to think of how to even begin explaining
the events of this last week. It was
beautiful, heart breaking and everything in between. Our time here is closing, this last week
being our last full week of ministry.
And of course it ended up being one of the hardest for both me and our
students. I cried, prayed, laughed and
struggled right alongside the girls I have been meeting with every week for the
last eight months.
Monday was probably the roughest day of the week. Holly and I were out trying to do the grocery
shopping, which on a public holiday is impossible, and ran into one of the
street kids here. His name is Dion. He is sixteen years old and he has AIDS. He weighs 95 pounds and refuses to take his
medicine. He literally is dying in front
of our eyes. He has resorted to drinking
and friendly smiles and exchanges are no longer had with him. He is utterly hopeless and is begging to
die.
From there we receive a call from some of our students who
do ministry at the health clinic in one of the townships, Pellsrus. They ran into a woman and her two month old
baby on the street. The woman is drunk
and holding her child like a sack of potatoes.
Our students pray with her, take the child and walk her home. Upon arriving at the woman's house, they see
a man rolling joints and at least 6 cats roaming the home. The house is an absolute disaster, and
talking to the neighbors we find out they are all alcoholics and the neighbor
tells us, "They need a lot of help." Our
minds and hearts go back to that child finding out it has not eaten more than
flour and water for the last four days.
It weighs only 2.5 Kilos, making it about 6 pounds. It has a rash over its entire body. The mother is too drunk to have patience to
feed and hold it properly. We sat there
wondering what is going to happen to this child. We buy some formula for the baby and try to
teach the mother how to do simple things like feed it, burp it and hold
it. And then we leave, praying and
hoping that God brings restoration and life to that family.
From there we come home.
I meet with one of my students and we start talking about the street
kids and the most recent situation that has developed over the weekend. There are a couple men here who have started
abusing the children and telling them that they are going to hell. They are referred to as the Rastas, so their
religion plays a part in both their abusive behavior and condemnation of those
kids. The kids go there because the men
give them marijuana, yet the men are beating them for sniffing glue and petrol.
Either way those kids are in danger.
And that's a wrap.
The day is over. My heart still
hasn't been able to process all these things, I still feel overwhelmed and
heart broken. Today at church, I wept for
Dion, for that baby, and for those kids.
I don't understand these things.
I don't understand why there has to be so much pain in the world. And I guess that's where I'm at. I heard God tell me this morning to
surrender. And I guess that's what we
have to do as our time in Jeffreys comes to an end. The Lord has really been speaking to me
through His word. I'm searching for
strength and peace to finish these last weeks strong.
He says…
"You keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on you, because he
trusts in you. Trust in the Lord
forever, for the LORD GOD is an everlasting rock." Isaiah 26:3-4
"a bruised reed he will not break, and a faintly burning wick he will
not quench; he will faithfully bring forth justice. He will not grow faint or be discouraged."
Isaiah 42:3-4
I guess all that to say, please be praying for us here. Today at church the pastor said something
that struck my mind and heart, he said through out life we may lose some
battles, but we will win the war. So we
continue on to fight for the things the Lord cares about.
We leave on Wednesday to go to Cape Town for four full days. It is our last debrief time with our
students. We will start to process the
events of the year and how to begin to reintegrate back to life in the
States. I'm not sure I have any of those
answers. Pray that our time will be full
of peace, rest, and laughter. Pray for
safe travels as it is a 8 hour drive from Jeffreys.
Blessings,
Heather
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Posted in General Articles
by Heather Beard
on 4/13/2008
This week has been a bit different than most weeks here in
Jeffreys. Because our ministry sites are
still closed for Easter Holiday, we had a bit more room in our schedule to
really try and challenge the students this week. So we took advantage of the extra time and
decided to structure our days around a couple spiritual disciplines that
Richard Foster discusses in his book Celebration of Discipline. We focused on solitude, fasting, prayer and
celebration. Each day has many
testimonies of the things God did within our students and within me, but for
this blog I wanted to share what God did on our solitude day. On Tuesday we took the students hiking up a
mountain and gave them the day to reflect and mediate on the semester and allowed room for God to speak into their lives.
Before we were allowed to hike we were to pick an object that
represented something we needed to surrender to God. Once we had that object we were released to
start the climb. My attitude this day
was not poor, but trudging through the bushes in Africa
and rock climbing isn't necessarily the way that I prefer to find God. But I don't think God really cared about how
I preferred to find him, because He's found in everything! Tiredly I started trudging through the thorny
bushes and stumbled upon a bush with flowers that were perfectly intact, but
had obviously been through a fire. They
were completely scorched, but somehow they were still beautiful. I picked one and used it as my object, and
began asking God to reveal himself through this scorched flower. 
A few minutes later
one of our students approached us and asked if we wouldn't mind her tagging
along with us, of course we said we didn't.
She was really scared about trudging through the bushes alone and I was
reminded that sometimes on our journey through life we need the help of others
to get us to where we need to be.
Because of her vulnerability with us, God allowed that truth to
penetrate my heart. So we prayed and
continued on our upward climb. After a
while we stopped on some rocks and took some time to start journaling about the
truths God was bringing to our hearts.
As I began journaling I was reminded of my attitude in starting this
hike, so I confessed that and asked God to speak. We moved forward and the higher we climbed
the more of God's beauty we were able to see.
When we were a bit higher we took another break and soaked in the beauty
of God's creation around us and I started reflecting on my little scorched
flower. I realized why I picked it; it
was because this was and is how my heart feels. My heart still intact, but so
scorched, I felt almost dead inside. The
flower was obviously dead, but somehow it was beautiful. And I realized that even though my heart may
feel dead and that there may be nothing to give, God is still beautiful and that beauty radiates any scorched
heart. 
When we reached the highest place, I was blessed enough to
experience three of our students explain their objects and what it represented
to them, and then see them yell "I surrender!" and throw it off the
mountain. Again I was reminded that God
uses the weak to lead the strong. The
whole day I felt so weak in every area of my life, but God used me and others
to forge the way up and down that mountain, and to help students experience
freedom from things that were hindering their journey with God. That is a true blessing of doing what I do
and I am so grateful to have experienced that. 
That is just one of the many things God spoke to me this
week. It truly was a great week, tiring in some ways, but renewing in
others.
"And the LORD will guide you continually and satisfy your
desire in scorched places and make your bones strong; and you shall be like a
watered garden, like a spring of water, whose waters do not fail." Isaiah 58:11
Thank you all for your steadfast and faithful prayers. We are approaching the end of the trip with
just 4 weeks left! Please continue to
pray for strength for me and that I would be able to just pour out everything I
have. I look forward to seeing most of
you if not all of you this summer.
All my love,
Heather
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Posted in General Articles
by Heather Beard
on 4/6/2008
Ok...so one of the quickest lessons you learn as a missionary is the importance of Plan B, because as always plans change. We are no longer headed to Lesotho. The day before we left we encountered more obstacles to our departure, we had a couple girls really sick, a spare tire on our van and another tire with a gash in it just to name the top two. So yet again we called another leader meeting. We talked about our options and decided that we would spend the afternoon praying. We gathered the team and told them to pray for us as we make the decision. We had a lot of confused students, which is no fault of their own, but their bipolar leaders. So we approached the throne and all of us were in agreement that we needed to stay here in Jeffreys. So needless to say we obeyed the Lord and find ourselves here. We're believing that the Lord has big things in store for us here and are expecting him to act mightily this week. As a leadership team we have some great things planned throughout this week. We are hiking a mountain tomorrow, the goal is to allow the students some time and space for reflection and strength, we are going to conduct the 30 hour famine on Tuesday and spend 24 hours in prayer on Wednesday. During the afternoons the students will have time to do intentional ministry with their internships and the people here that they've grown to love. We have some other activities planned this weekend, of course unconfirmed, but include some team builders and South African braaing (grilling). So...there you have it Plan B. I think Jesus loves Plan B's just as much as Plan A's!
Blessings, Heather
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Posted in General Articles
by Heather Beard
on 4/4/2008
Well the time has finally come, tomorrow we are headed to Lesotho
for our two week outreach. God granted
us favor with the visa office in Port
Elizabeth and our visa extension request was
permitted. We will be working with a pastor called James in the mountainous
region of Butha Buthe. I have heard that
Lesotho is an absolutely
breath taking country, so I am excited to experience another part of Africa. Please be
in prayer for our team over the next couple of weeks, as we will be out of our
comforts and facing a reality that most Africans face each day. Pastor James and his family have started an
orphanage and a care point center for children in their area. While we are there our main hope is just to
be helping hands for Pastor James and his staff and to bless them in anyway we
can. Not only will we be out of our
comfort zone physically, but spiritually as well. Because we will be in the bush, we are going
to be encountering traditional African spirituality, which can be very dark and
oppressive at times. Because of Jesus'
perfect love, we will walk without fear, but I would like to extend that you
cover us in prayer in this way as well.
We are excited for this experience and are looking forward and expecting
God to do big things.
A quick update on me personally:
This week was our team's spring break and therefore a break
for us as well! Most of our team packed
up and went to Cape Town
for the week, leaving the house almost quiet.
Christina, Holly and I took up an offer from a lady named Joy in a nearby
town called St Francis Bay and invaded her place. St Francis Bay is located right on the Krom's
River which empties into the Indian Ocean. Joy's house was right on the river and we
found it so peaceful. We really were
blessed by her hospitality and found ourselves for the first time in months
being taken care of. She cooked us all
our meals and we even had tea and snacks all day long. She let us watch T.V. and we sat on real
couches! It truly was a treat. Her son even came over and gave us a boat
ride through the canals of St Francis it was so beautiful. It was a fun filled weekend, but also a
relaxing one where I was able to process and pray through a lot of things in my
life. I'm grateful that God gave us the
blessing of staying with Joy and I'm grateful for the time that God has given
me this week to catch up on some matters in my life. Please continue to pray for me as I am
working and processing through a lot of the upcoming changes!
Blessings,
Heather
Here are a few photos:  The sunset over the Krom's River.  Christina on our canal ride.  One of the beautiful holiday homes on the canal.  Enjoying a breath taking view.  Me.  St Francis Lighthouse.
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Posted in General Articles
by Heather Beard
on 4/1/2008
This week AIM launched a new program. Please pass on to people who you think could be interested. Thank you!
Blessings,
Heather
Community Life: training & apprenticeship for
Christ-followers
One year of growth, community, and
ministry.
We're excited to introduce a
new opportunity that many of you will love. We're taking our best coaches
and disciplers and matching them up for a year with our most passionate young
people (up to age 31). At Adventures In Missions (AIM), we love the next
generation. We want to see people launched into a whole new way of doing life.
In a culture that esteems independence, we want to restore the value of
interdependence that was so prevalent in the Early Church.
By living in authentic community, disciples of Jesus learn how to be "salt" and
"light" in a way that transforms the world around them. It's a year of training
and apprenticeship in community.
Community Life is a place where you can continue to grow in your
identity and role in the kingdom
of God. The people of AIM
will pour into you during this year in a number of ways. Our leaders will train
you and hang out with you. We'll help you sharpen your life focus and call to ministry
and even help you develop your skill sets. We provide housing in Gainesville, GA,
where a select group of 30 young people will live together in several houses in
a neighborhood with easy access to the surrounding community.There are
five major aspects involved in Community Life:
· Mentoring:
As part of creating a personal development plan, you will be paired up with a
leader at AIM that will regularly meet one-on-one with you and provide
coaching, encouragement, and discipleship.Seth Barnes and Scott Borg will
guide a team of top leaders as we return to discipleship as Jesus practiced
it. This includes intensive teaching to help you understand your past,
who you are in Christ, and how to move forward in the plan God has for your life
and ministry.You will work on your own, in small group settings, and with
some of the most experienced and inspirational mentors AIM has to offer.
· Skill
development:You will expand your life skills.Many of you will
have an internship in the office in an area such as recruiting, marketing,
creative writing/editing, media, missions mobilization, web design, or program
development.Your internship will be tailored to develop your
passion. It's an opportunity to develop valuable work skills through hands-on
training.
· Ministry:In
order to stay connected with ministry, we've partnered with a local outreach to
the 60,000 marginalized Hispanics in and around Gainesville.It is important to us that
you continue to be exposed to the poor and have the opportunity to engage in
hands-on ministry. We'll also partner with a camping and sports ministry.
· Travel:To
continue engaging in different cultures and learning about God's heart for the
nations, we'll provide you with opportunities for travel to put into practice
what you have learned. In addition there may be a summer opportunity to
lead various discipleship programs for high school and college students around
the world. You will be able to call others to a life of sacrifice and to fulfilling
the Great Commission. In the future, we'll plant new leadership training
bases in places like Spain
and Africa with our colleagues Andrew Shearman
and Gary Black and partner with them in developing those training centers.
· Sample
apprenticeships:Recruiting Team, Marketing Team, Multimedia ministry,
discipleship ministry coordination, short-term mission project coordination,
and many others.You will have the opportunity to use your gifts in
mobilizing people for God's kingdom.
For more information: click here
To apply, click here to fill out a Quick App.
If you are an AIM alumni,
please call 1-800-881-2461 ext. 270 or email SerenaLivingston@adventures.org
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Posted in General Articles
by Heather Beard
on 3/22/2008
So today we were suppossed to be on our way to Lesotho, but the events that have unfolded this week prevented us from making our trip. This week we were informed that our visa extension request had been denied. It threw our leadership team into a crazy time of brainstorming ideas of how we can get that request granted so that our team would not have to go home a month early. The Vias went down to the Home Affairs office to try and get our money back and by the end of their time there they came out with our visa extenstions. We are not quite sure how it all worked out, but know that our God hears our prayers and loves to answer them. So with that craziness, we postponed our trip to Lesotho. We will still be going, but instead of leaving this weekend we will leave on April 5th. This weekend we are still heading out of town with our team. We are taking them to Alice, a town 3 hours East of Jeffrey's. We promised a former pastor of a church here in Jeffrey's that we would come for Easter Sunday and did not want to go against our word. So this morning we are headed to Alice to join Pastor Gundu and his church for ministry and for Easter. Please just keep our team in your prayers, for health, safety and traveling mercies. We plan to be back on Monday afternoon to continue on with ministry here in Jeffrey's. Thank you all so much for your love. Blessings Heather
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