Hi friends! After much thought, I've decided to make a change in how I share with you my newsletters. To protect the privacy of those included in stories in my newsletters, I will no longer be publishing them on my blog. However, each time I put out a newsletter I'll put up a post like this announcing I've completed a newsletter and inviting you to email me to receive a copy and/or be added to my newsletter email list!
I would love to continue posting my newsletters, but since I work with youth and online security is at a premium these days, I want to be sure I am being both respectful and safe in what I share over the Internet. If you would like to have a copy of my latest newsletter, please email me at ali.c.campbell@gmail.com and I'd be happy to send one your way! This newsletter includes updates on my fundraising goals, stories from my recent trip to Costa Rica to help lead the annual high school service trip and much more!
This is the greatest journey that the human heart will ever see, the love of God will take us far beyond our wildest dreams! -Stephen Curtis Chapman
Sunday, April 25, 2010
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Pictures from the YL Costa Rica Service Project!
On the bus on the way to Isla Cocal!
One of my groups with the family who will live in the house we just built--before it was just scrap metal and black plastic. Now they have actual walls--pink walls!--and later in the week we were able to give them a roof, as well. In all, the kids and leaders built several houses, put walls in some already constructed houses, painted houses and a local elementary school, cleaned up trash and painted trees to protect them from bugs/rotting and held a carnival for all the local kids on the island! 5 days of hard work...and 29 kids and leaders who got the chance to see Jesus in the families/kids we served and hear about His life every night in Club.
Club in a tent! Each night we had club in a tent with light bulbs strung across the ceiling. We played games, sang songs and heard from Tank, our speaker for the week from Colorado, about Life. God. and Life with God. Kids also got a chance to debrief what they were seeing and experiencing at the start of club and in cabin times after club.
One of the coolest parts of the week was playing with the kids on the island. And watching our students, who often have to grow up way too fast because of the lives they lead and their family circumstances, be kids. "And whoever welcomes a little child like this in my name welcomes me." -Matthew 18:5
Our whole crew! It was a great week. We were able to serve nearly 20 families...a bunch of international school kids from wealthy families got a chance to see real poverty and Jesus in it...and we heard about the amazing adventure God is inviting us to walk with Him. Life. God. and Life with God.
I'm so excited to get back this summer...start langauge school (desperately needed!)...and next school year to continue the relationships with students started on this trip. These kids blew me away--their stories, what they've seen and experienced in their short lives, and the amazing things God is doing in their lives!
Won't you join me in praying for these kids and the families we served? And I invite you to partner with me in bringing the hope of God and His invitation to join Him in the GREAT ADVENTURE to kids from all over the world who will one day be leaders all over the world. Want to know more about how you can partner with me? See the sidebar to the right and email me at ali.c.campbell@gmail.com! I look forward to hearing from you!!
Monday, April 5, 2010
29 kids and leaders, one island, and lots of memories!
Friends, I write this from my friend (and future supervisor's) living room with a gentle breeze blowing through the trees outside the window and bright sunshine streaming in. It's an almost perfect morning following an awesome week doing service work with kids. All 29 of us leaders and kids boarded a bus last Saturday and headed off to a small beach town called Quepos where we stayed for 8 days working every day on a small island called Isla Cocal. We worked every day for 6-7 hours building homes, constructing walls in existing homes, painting houses and a school and playing with the kids on the island. The last day we spent at the beach, relaxing and soaking up the sun and reflecting on the week. (And maybe getting a little sunburnt :)
It was a very long, but very rewarding week! The families on the island had next to nothing...some with only black plastic for a roof and walls, others with scraps of tin. They ate a diet consisting mostly of fruits grown in their yard (coconuts, mangos, water apples, etc.) and rice, beans, and fish caught in the ocean. And the stories, oh the stories, of struggle, hardship, lack of housing and food, and pain/heartache. But they were so thankful, and they thanked God for sending us! It was so awesome to watch a kid listen to these stories and their gratitude and watch it pierce their heart.
Each night we had Club after dinner--playing games, singing songs, and listening to Tank (our speaker from the US) share about us, God and life with God. It was for sure different than camp in the US. We had no sophisticated sound and light system, not a beautiful room to host us, but rather a tent with mosquitos. We didn't have a professional musician, but two kids who played guitar unplugged. It wasn't dramatic, but God was there. He filled Tank's talks with truth and beauty and wonder, and the kids responded with questions and thoughts and amazing insights from their lives.
As I sit here reflecting on this past week, I'm amazed at how God provided and showed up in really different ways than I've experienced before. I'm amazed at these kids who both at once are just like any other kid in the US (struggling with friendships, family issues, and school) and yet are also dealing with these things in a completely different social and cultural context that seems so foreign to me. And I'm more certain than ever that Young Life's vision of reaching every kid, everywhere for eternity is being realized here in Costa Rica among international school kids in both big and small ways.
I leave Wednesday to return to Indiana where I continue the marathon of fundraising reaching the last leg where I'm both tired, weary and yet hopeful as I catch a glimpse of the finish line. I've been accepted to langauage school here in Costa Rica that begins the first week in May and I'd love to be here to start then! But it will take an additional $1,200 in monthly commitments to get me here. I'm trusting God to provide, trusting His timing and His plan. Thanks for walking this long road with me...thanks for your prayers and encouragement...I wouldn't have made it this far without you!
It was a very long, but very rewarding week! The families on the island had next to nothing...some with only black plastic for a roof and walls, others with scraps of tin. They ate a diet consisting mostly of fruits grown in their yard (coconuts, mangos, water apples, etc.) and rice, beans, and fish caught in the ocean. And the stories, oh the stories, of struggle, hardship, lack of housing and food, and pain/heartache. But they were so thankful, and they thanked God for sending us! It was so awesome to watch a kid listen to these stories and their gratitude and watch it pierce their heart.
Each night we had Club after dinner--playing games, singing songs, and listening to Tank (our speaker from the US) share about us, God and life with God. It was for sure different than camp in the US. We had no sophisticated sound and light system, not a beautiful room to host us, but rather a tent with mosquitos. We didn't have a professional musician, but two kids who played guitar unplugged. It wasn't dramatic, but God was there. He filled Tank's talks with truth and beauty and wonder, and the kids responded with questions and thoughts and amazing insights from their lives.
As I sit here reflecting on this past week, I'm amazed at how God provided and showed up in really different ways than I've experienced before. I'm amazed at these kids who both at once are just like any other kid in the US (struggling with friendships, family issues, and school) and yet are also dealing with these things in a completely different social and cultural context that seems so foreign to me. And I'm more certain than ever that Young Life's vision of reaching every kid, everywhere for eternity is being realized here in Costa Rica among international school kids in both big and small ways.
I leave Wednesday to return to Indiana where I continue the marathon of fundraising reaching the last leg where I'm both tired, weary and yet hopeful as I catch a glimpse of the finish line. I've been accepted to langauage school here in Costa Rica that begins the first week in May and I'd love to be here to start then! But it will take an additional $1,200 in monthly commitments to get me here. I'm trusting God to provide, trusting His timing and His plan. Thanks for walking this long road with me...thanks for your prayers and encouragement...I wouldn't have made it this far without you!
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
It's Camp Time...er, Service Project Time
As we in Westfield are gearing up for the busy season leading up to Young Life camp in June, the Costa Rica staff is preparing to take high school kids on the equivalent of camp there--the Service Project. Here in Westfield we are promoting camp as "the best week of your life" (which it is!), signing kids up, getting them started on fundraising and hoping to pack out TWO buses this year. In Costa Rica, the scene isn't that different, but there the team is asking kids to forfeit Semana Santa at the beach (equivalent of Spring Break) to travel to a remote island in Costa Rica to serve getting their hands dirty doing the work of Christ who calls us to serve the least of these.
And why would kids in Costa Rica pass up a holiday with friends and family to volunteer you might ask? Well, because they get to do it with all their friends from school and Young Life, with the leaders who have poured countless hours into their lives this school year, and because they're promised a life changing experience--and that's certainly what it is.
Will you read the following email from one of my soon-to-be teammates in Costa Rica? I would love you to partner with me and them in prayer this month!
And why would kids in Costa Rica pass up a holiday with friends and family to volunteer you might ask? Well, because they get to do it with all their friends from school and Young Life, with the leaders who have poured countless hours into their lives this school year, and because they're promised a life changing experience--and that's certainly what it is.
Will you read the following email from one of my soon-to-be teammates in Costa Rica? I would love you to partner with me and them in prayer this month!
"This is the first day of the rest of my life and I'll never be the same." That is what we are longing to hear from high school students' lips after they have experienced the love of Christ during the Service Project (March 27 - April 3). Would you join me this month, in praying each day for God to strengthen me and the rest of the Young Life team? If we are filled with God's love, aware of who we are in Him, and confident in His love - we will watch kids respond to God's love. Thanks for being our prayer warriors!
"We pray that out of Jesus' glorious riches He may strengthen you with power through His Spirit in your inner being, so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith. And I pray that you, being rooted and established in love, may have power, together with all the saints [all Jesus followers], to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, and to know this love that surpasses knowledge—that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God. Now to Him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to his power that is at work within us, to Him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations [in my neighborhood, in my city, and everywhere in the world], for ever and ever! Amen."
- Ephesians 3:16-21
Jessie and the Young Life team in Costa Rica
Saturday, February 27, 2010
70% and counting!
Hi friends! Just wanted to share with you that I am at 70% and counting! The goal is Costa Rica by May and I need to be at 100%. Praise God for helping me get to 70%!!!
Wanna help me reach 100% by May?
(1) PRAY!
(2) Tell your friends who might be interested in joining my support team and being a partner in Young Life Costa Rica and put me in contact with them.
(3) Host an evening or weekend dessert meeting. You provide the place and invite your friends, I bring everything else!
(4) Ask your church, youth group, business or club if they would be interested in coming together to partner with me and Young Life Costa Rica.
How might God want to use YOU to impact kids in Costa Rica for eternity?
Wanna help me reach 100% by May?
(1) PRAY!
(2) Tell your friends who might be interested in joining my support team and being a partner in Young Life Costa Rica and put me in contact with them.
(3) Host an evening or weekend dessert meeting. You provide the place and invite your friends, I bring everything else!
(4) Ask your church, youth group, business or club if they would be interested in coming together to partner with me and Young Life Costa Rica.
How might God want to use YOU to impact kids in Costa Rica for eternity?
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Something borrowed
This blog may not always be on point. Like now. It occurs to me that I know some pretty amazing people and I'd like to borrow some amazing-ness from them now.
From Lisa, a YL intern in Costa Rica this year, I borrow her blog punctuation style. Today.was.HARD. Sometimes I think it will be easier in Costa Rica, that all the hard parts are coming before not after. And then I get really scared. What if it's harder?
From my beautiful, eccentric, eclectic, wise friend Eileen, her wisdom shared from South Korea and a character named the Dane.
"When all was manic mayhem and I wanted to give up and go home, I saw two fingers fly up. It was the Dane’s.
From Lisa, a YL intern in Costa Rica this year, I borrow her blog punctuation style. Today.was.HARD. Sometimes I think it will be easier in Costa Rica, that all the hard parts are coming before not after. And then I get really scared. What if it's harder?
From my beautiful, eccentric, eclectic, wise friend Eileen, her wisdom shared from South Korea and a character named the Dane.
"When all was manic mayhem and I wanted to give up and go home, I saw two fingers fly up. It was the Dane’s.
“You see these two fingers?”
“No,” I grumble. (Silence, while he waits patiently.) “YES, I see them.”
“They were soft once. Feel it.” It felt like rock sandpaper.
“Yech.”
“To play the bass, they need to be hard. For them to become hard, they need to be disciplined. To get them disciplined, they first need to bleed. It bleeds, because you’re playing on them over, and over, and over again. So it’s simple. You’re going through the bleeding process, in order to play your life well.”
“And those that forgo the bleeding process?”
“...will never know what it’s like to play life in beautiful harmony. They will always be the spectator of those that were willing to bleed.”
“That’s deep.”
“Yeah.”
When I think about it being harder than today because Today.was.HARD, I will remember this. If I want to play my life well, I'll have to bleed. And something else from her:
"I am not who I thought I was. Charisma, warmth, dressing up... meaningless, meaningless utterly meaningless. It seems that my eyes have been opened and I suddenly feel the urgency of eternity. I feel the brevity of our existence and I am humbled that I am now gravely aware of my narrow-mindedness and self-centeredness."
Gravely aware. Preach it sister!
And finally, I'll return, as I frequently do, to the wise words of Oswald Chambers. If you haven't read him, go out now and pick up My Utmost for His Highest. It will change your life.
"Sometimes God puts us through the experience and discipline of darkness to teach us to hear and obey Him. Song birds are taught to sing in the dark, and God puts us into "the shadow of His hand" until we learn to hear Him."
Teach me, God, to be thankful for the darkness, patient in its uncertainty until I hear You.
Today.was.HARD. I'm bleeding in the darkness. May I stay here until I hear Him because if I don't I might miss the beautiful symphony that waits ahead. (Hebrews 12:2-3)
Saturday, January 30, 2010
Pictures from CCO/NST (YL Training in Colorado)
The whole international Young Life crew at our commissioning service at the end of Cross-Cultural Orientation in Colorado Springs. We are heading to Africa, Asia, Europe, and Latin America--all over the world.
This is the main lodge at Crooked Creek Ranch in Fraser, Colorado where we were for the second 2 weeks of training--New Staff Training with a total of about 175 new staff from the U.S. and internationally.
The beautiful mountain view from Crooked Creek. I got to look at this during breaks--it kept me going with 10-12 hours of class and lectures every day!
And when I was feeling REALLY tired in the mornings--sunrises like this got me up and reminded me of the beauty of creation all around me!
It wasn't ALL work :) Here is a group of my new international friends (and Devin, who does YL in Florida)--from the left: Meagan (going to Germany), Bonnie (Belgium), Sarah (England), Emily (Dominican Republic), Sarah (Tanzania), me, Devin, Denae (Singapore), and Ariel (Portugal). At every Young Life camp they hold a carnival for this kids--this was my first time experiencing the carnival as a "camper." We had fair food (cotton candy, popcorn, corn dogs, funnel cakes!), games, and lots of laughter!
I just wanted you to get a quick snapshot of my few weeks in Colorado!
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