Grace Notes

June 29, 2011

Grace Youth Serve

Filed under: GYM — graceadmin @ 3:00 pm

Seven youth and three chaperones depart Friday on a ten day service trip to the Idaho panhandle where they will join about eighty other youth to worship, fellowship and serve the communities in and around Shoshone Base Camp near Wallace, Idaho.

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Updates will be published here as time and Internet availability allow.
This is a long and demanding trip. Please keep our youth and their leaders in your prayers that they might have a safe and fruitful journey.

June 17, 2011

A Good Word from Camp, May 2011

Filed under: General,Missions — arleyp @ 8:26 pm
OK, May has come to a close and I worked all day to get this done on time–before the last Sunday of the month.  Funny how I put this deadline on myself–no one is hanging over me.  First, I do covet your prayers–read the commandment, coveting prayers is not on the sin list!  Second, this is my way of keeping in touch and sort of holding myself accountable.  Third, this is also my record of what I have been up to so I can review it occasionally.

Church of Ingria 400 years

Busy as usual, and my big concern this month is my car-it broke down a couple times, nothing with God’s help I could not handle, but as I do need it this next month for a lot of trips to the villages, I am facing another test of faith… So, attached are the usual–the prayer letter and some photos.  There were  a lot of meetings this month, several I did not photograph, but several I  did. This is to keep you all posted and also reminds me what to pray for.  We have several events coming up–if I remember my camera, I will pass on photos of those things   attend or be part of.
Birthday–the banner simply says Church of Ingria 400 years.  I thought I was through with such stuff, but they needed someone to run sound at the International Christian Academy’s graduation.

Leif the soundman at International Christian Academy's graduation

Leif and Andrei Savilainen, the Ingrian pastor

Andrei-Again, Andrei Savilainen, the Ingrian pastor heading up the Ingrian Lutheran Chaplaincy initiative came for a pep-talk and some help.  He has invited me up to Karelia to lead some seminars at the three congregations he serves, and he requested that I might try to invite some Lutheran American police officers to come visit him and some of the police he is trying to serve–in sort of a cross cultural info and experience swap
Pastor Bill Moberly of the AALC, head of the Eastern European Mission Network, has partnered up with Ingria to organize 3 English language evangelism camps this year.  One in Petrozavodsk, one in Koltushe, and one in Gubanitza (Zhanya) 0r helps organize transportation, busses and so forth,  at one of the camps, Karl and Nastya will help translate–as I am responsible for coordinating the camp in Gubanitza).

Leif with Pekka

Leif with Pekka–the good news is that in the Finnish parliamentary elections, enough conservatives were voted in to stop a move to change the Finnish constitution’s definition of marriage.  It will remain the union of a man and a woman (rather than the proposed “two individuals”).  Pekka is  working with conservatives as this all plays itself out.  I will not be able to visit Finland for the next 6 months while I await receiving Russian citizenship.

Lyle Thomas teaching seminary students

Lyle Thomas teaching seminary students an overview of healing prayer in counseling.

The Bishop gave a pointed sermon.

The Bishop gave a pointed sermon on Ingria’s up to date confessional theology in the face of modern day liberalism.
NO, we are not forming our own praise band, but possibly some evangelistic concerts…  Here we are playing “Go down Moses” which  is continually played on Russian radio in English.  We have, of course, translated

Leif, Nastya, and Karl

into Russian, added some of the more Christian verses, and it always goes over well (since this is often the first time people hear the song in a form they can understand the words).
Blessings,
Leif

Prayer Requests

Pray for upcoming English language evangelism camps in June—being held in Petrozavodsk, Koltushe, and Gubanitza, pray also for the scout camp that I will be attending with Karl and Nastya, that God open some doors for the Gospel there.  Pray for our car/transportation situation—I will need our car a lot next month running between camps, Church, St. Petersburg and the villages, and it has been breaking down a lot (it does have a holy radiator!—OK holey is more grammatically correct).  Pray that I do find some rest and renewal this summer.  Pray for English language worship services, and for Kostya Subotin who may be sent as a field worker to help out.   Pray for the upcoming seminar in Yoshcar-ola—I leave shortly for a four day trip.  Also pray for a seminar that will be held at our dacha (someone has asked to use it—this is the first time).  Pray for the Chaplancy program—doors are opening in Karelia, pray also that God help me to be more faithful and more energetic in pursuing the opportunities He opens up for me.

Another Call for Volunteers

The Chaplansy initiative is looking for a couple or more Lutheran police officers who would like to come visit Karelia and meet with local police in sort of a cross cultural exchange.  We are also open to short term groups working directly with Ingrian parishes, camps, repair, good-will.  Also, if any one is interested in short-term English evangelism, next year I want to plan some in coordination with English services so we can more effectively reach out to students.
Draw us to Thee, for then shall we
Walk in Thy steps forever
And hasten on where Thou art gone
To be with Thee forever
TLH #215 verse 1
CONTACT ADDRESSES Feedback, questions, whatever are most welcome.
Our Russian home address:

Leif and Zhanya Camp
18 line V. O. dom 43 Kv. 7
St. Petersburg, Russia, 199178
Stateside contact address:

Leif and Zhanya Camp,
C/O Marli Camp
902 N. 12th
Melrose Park, IL, 60160
Russian Lutheran Church Address:

Ev. Lutheran Church of Ingria in Russia
Bolshaya Konyushennaya dom 8a
St. Peterburg, Russia, 191186
Telephone: after getting an international line by dialing 011, dial 7- 812 (our area code) 321-1508(our phone number)
Note—Between St. Petersburg and central US time, the difference is 9 hours.  Stateside contact telephone: 708-344-4472
E-MAIL:  lzkcamp@mail.ru & leif.camp@elci.ru. Please feel free to share this prayerletter with your Church, friends, or enemies if it might help (just please do not quote things out of context or edit my words in such a way as to change their intent).  If you would like to receive a copy via e-mail, simply email me directly and ask!

Notes from the Edge of the World, June 2011

Filed under: Missions — arleyp @ 8:25 pm
The Replacement Apostle

Reputed burial site of the “13th apostle”, my namesake of sorts, St. Matthias- Gonio, Georgia.)

Acts 1:26- And they cast lots for them, and the lot fell on Matthias, and he was numbered with the eleven apostles.
The storied land of Sakhartvelo, known to most of us as Georgia, has legendary connections to some of Jesus’ original disciples. (Note: Our word “Georgia” comes not from St. George but rather from the Persian or Arabic word for the people of this area- “gurg”). According to tradition, the apostles Andrew, Simon the Zealot and Matthias came to this land on one of their mission trips after the Day of Pentecost. Simon the Zealot moved on to the disputed territory of Abkhazia, where his gravesite is located at the site of an ancient monastery. Supposedly Andrew journeyed further to Scythia (located in modern day Russia) while the so-called 13th apostle, St. Matthias, remained in Georgia. There he is said to have died and been buried on the site of a Roman fortress in the town of Gonio, just a few kilometers north of Turkey. The Western Latin Church has always claimed that his remains are in Trier, Germany, moved there after his death in Jerusalem. But the tradition of the Eastern Orthodox Church holds to the Georgian site, and there seems to be good reason to believe that Georgia’s proximity to the Holy Land made it a fit place for mission work in the days of the Early Church. All of Georgia was finally converted to the Christian faith by 337 A.D. through the witness of St. Nino to the king of Georgia.
The Witness Continues in the 21st Century

Deacon Zviadi Charkviani communes a member of a house church in the village of Tsvermagala

If you fast forward, oh, I don’t know, perhaps a few millennia to the 21st century, it is a blessing to know that Matthias’ witness to the resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ continues in this land. We read earlier in Acts 1 that Matthias was divinely chosen as Judas’ replacement, being one of the men who had followed Jesus from the time of His Baptism to the Ascension. I was reflecting upon this text in Gonio a few weeks ago, having accompanied our LCMS World Mission trained evangelists on their weekly excursion to the Black Sea coast. On Sunday we had worshiped in the mission center in Kutaisi, with me preaching at the service of this growing congregation. The following day found us driving from Kutaisi to Tsvermagala, a village just a short ten-minute walk from the Black Sea. There we gathered the faithful of a house church, afterwards traveling south toward the Turkish border in order to do a Bible study for a family in an apartment in Batumi. When our work was finished, Gonio was just a mere fifteen kilometers away from Batumi and a fitting end to a wonderfully busy day. So despite a spiritual detour during the years of communism, St. Matthias’ witness continues through our Lutheran evangelists. Once again the Holy Spirit is empowering believers in modern day Georgia through the Word of God.

Deacons Zviadi Charkviani (in black clerical garb) and Zaza Kiknavelidze (kneeling behind him) along with many from their congregation in Kutaisi)

Where am I now?
I am officially on vacation in Michigan at the moment, but have scheduled visits to St. Paul’s in Niles, MI (June 19) and Immanuel Lutheran in Leland, MI (June 26). I will also make a quick trip to Austin, TX to speak at the annual meeting of the Jesus is Lord Mission Society on June 23.
Prayer Requests:
Please continue to pray for our Eurasian mission accountant, Karen Roemer, recovering from cancer surgery.
Please pray also for my cousin Shawn Nunnink, undergoing chemotherapy. Another cousin has informed me that although medically Shawn’s chances are poor, doctors are amazed at how she is responding to chemo. Her prognosis is looking better and better. Shawn does not fear death, but this mother of four (her youngest is 15 months old) is asking that God will say “yes” to our prayers for her. She is praying that five acquaintances will come to the Lord through her witness. Please continue to pray for God’s mercy and healing upon her.
Thank the Lord with me for safe, uneventful travel home.
Rev. Matthew Heise
E-mail: matveih@yahoo.com—mailing address- 26650 Woodshire, Dearborn Hgts., MI., 48127.
To support my work financially, you can send a tax-deductible gift to:
LCMS World Mission; Missionary Support; PO Box 790089; St. Louis, MO 63179-0089 —–Make checks payable to LCMS World Mission. Mark checks “Support of Matthew Heise.”
If you would like to partner with me in my ministry with ongoing support as an individual or congregation, please contact Debra Feenstra for information on Together in Mission or Mission Senders at 1-800-248-1930 Ext. 1651 or Debra.Feenstra@lcms.org Thank you, and may God’s grace be with you as we celebrate the coming of the Holy Spirit on Pentecost!

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