Monday, October 1, 2007
PACKAGE!!!
I thought I'd share with y'all the joy I had last week from TWO PACKAGES that my mom and brother sent me! They sent some of the American things I was missing the most, like Sour Patch Kids candy and bags of brownie mix and chocolate chips. For a country that has such a love affair with chocolate the way the Netherlands does, you'd think you'd be able to find chocolate chips, but noooo! That would be too much to ask. They also sent a DVD and some CD's. Now, if only they could figure out a way to send me a chocolate malt and a vanilla/cherry Dr. Pepper from Sonic... It's nice to be loved!
Girls' Night
I though I'd introduce y'all to some of my good friends here. On the left is Tracy; she and her husband are both from Little Rock (small world!), and she used to model. She's beautiful inside and out! Next to her is Becca, who has become my closest friend here, but will sadly be moving to London at the end of October. She's from South Africa/Mauritius/Belgium; I'm still confused on that! On my right is Rebeca Balderas, the lady who I first heard speak about her ministry in the Red Light District. We were out at the Hard Rock Cafe having an "American Moment" and celebrating Becca's recent graduation from YWAM's University of the Nations with a BA. Fun girls' night!
Monday, September 3, 2007
Link to pics of Austria
http://www1.snapfish.com/share/p=90031188854464431/l=302130511/g=35904766/otsc=SYE/otsi=SALB
Here's a link to view the photos of the holiday I took in Hinterglimm, Austria; just copy and paste the address into your browser's navigation bar. It was a gorgeous place with hills full of edel weiss and music!
Here's a link to view the photos of the holiday I took in Hinterglimm, Austria; just copy and paste the address into your browser's navigation bar. It was a gorgeous place with hills full of edel weiss and music!
The Face of Love
I was listening to Sanctus Real's song The Face of Love tonight while e-mailing, and the words struck me again with their power and truth. It's a song that spoke volumes to me as I was preparing to move to Amsterdam, and listening to it again tonight I was reminded of their importance. Music has a way of speaking to me like nothing else can; I hope these lyrics speak to you, too!
I’ve seen your face on stained glass, in colored lightsThis is my prayer--that I will indeed be His face in the District. And especially that it's not my incomplete, imperfect love that's seen, but Christ's complete, perfect love.
In pictures of you looking to the sky
You've been portrayed a thousand different ways
But my heart can see you better than my eyes
‘Cause it’s love that paints the portrait of your life
The face of love
The face of love
You look more like love everyday
I’ve read your words in the pages of your life
And I’ve imagined what you were like
I may not know the shape of your face
But I can feel your heart changing mine
And your love still proves that you’re alive
You are the face that changed the whole world
No one too lost for you to love
No one too low for you to serve
So give us the grace to change the world
No one too lost for me to love
No one too low for me to serve
Let us see…
Let us be your face
Amsterdam at Night
I took these photos one night when some friends and I went on a boat ride through the canals. The city's beautiful when seen from the water, too!
Saturday, August 4, 2007
Weather update
Just thought you might want to know that the impossible happened today . . . IT REACHED 80 DEGREES!!! And it didn't rain! And it's supposed to be 77 tomorrow! I never thought I'd see the day when I was excited for moderately-hot weather!
Monday, July 23, 2007
Finding Life . . .
Weather
I don't think it's stopped raining since I arrived in May! My friend Rebecca and I stood and watched this storm roll in over the city, then got drenched in it on our walk back...
Most days it's in the 60's, maybe the 70's, and rainy. I've only been able to go to the beach once since that time when I first got here! I know God promised with the rainbow never to flood the earth again, but sometimes I wonder . . . Just kidding!
Monday, July 2, 2007
Windows closing...?
Praise the Lord!!! This article was in the news last week. If it goes through, this could be an answer to decades of prayers by the saints for this neighborhood in Amsterdam!
Sex Boss in Talks to Sell Red Light Property
Tuesday 26 June 2007
One of the biggest sex industry bosses in Amsterdam is in talks with housing corporation Het Oosten about selling his 20 properties in the city's red light district.
Charles Geert has been refused a licence to operate brothels because the city council says he has criminal connections. Geert controls some 53 windows in the area, around 30% of the total.
Sex Boss in Talks to Sell Red Light Property
Tuesday 26 June 2007
One of the biggest sex industry bosses in Amsterdam is in talks with housing corporation Het Oosten about selling his 20 properties in the city's red light district.
Charles Geert has been refused a licence to operate brothels because the city council says he has criminal connections. Geert controls some 53 windows in the area, around 30% of the total.
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Spiritual growth
First, a quick update--one of the girls behind the windows became a Christian a couple of weeks ago! One of the other teams was sharing with her and asked if she wanted to pray to ask Jesus into her life, and she said yes! Now comes the hard part of discipleship and a desire on her part to leave the windows. There's also a girl new to the windows (I think from Romania) whom two different teams remember seeing. They both said she looks timid and scared to death; we're afraid that she's either abused or a victim of trafficking. Although I don't have her name, please keep her in your prayers.
I feel like I'm learning all over again how to make my faith my own. It's a lesson I learned after being out of college and living on my own, and am re-learning now in another country. I'm learning to incorporate as many different aspects of worship as I need to to be fed spiritually. I had a really hard time at first, because YWAM is a very charismatic group, which I didn't grow up with, and then I was also going to a charismatic church with some friends on Sundays. I felt like I was constantly on edge since the atmosphere was so different from what I'm used to. Not only at church on Sunday, but also at YWAM staff meetings and worship time.
In order to mix it up a little, I went for the second time this past Sunday to Christ Church, an Anglican church near here. I loved it! It was so nice to be in a service that was calm, reverent, and orderly. Afterward, there was a time for coffee and tea and I was able to meet some neat people from the city. I really liked this church a lot and left feeling refreshed and fed. In my previous blog, I included the lyrics of a hymn we sang that have really been a challenge to me. I've discovered that I really like a liturgical service. As a student of history, there's something in me that really responds to reciting the Apostles' Creed every Sunday, knowing that millions of my Christian forefathers have repeated the same words for centuries. It sums up the whole purpose of the gospel so succinctly. They also had a Scripture memory verse that we all worked on together as a congregation. That was really special. This church really reaches out to international students in Amsterdam, so for that reason they have more modern elements in their service, such as praise choruses.
Also, I realized that Mike Lumpkin, my pastor from UBC in Fayetteville, has his sermons on a podcast that I can download every Sunday. That has been great! He's been going through the book of John, and will be for the next year or two, and I've hated missing that. I love the in-depth study of Scripture like that. So I've also been able to keep up with that in addition to my own personal quiet time. His message this past Sunday was extremely convicting to me as he preached on being wholly satisfied with Jesus as the living water.
I didn't realize before I left how difficult it would be to integrate all of these aspects of my spiritual walk here in another country. But I've been so encouraged this week by the way God's meeting all of my spiritual needs here--exciting, vibrant worship here on the base; reverent worship in an open, friendly congregation; and solid, convicting study of God's Word. Thank you to those of you who have prayed that I would find a home church and somewhere to be spiritually fed; it's made all the difference in the world!
I feel like I'm learning all over again how to make my faith my own. It's a lesson I learned after being out of college and living on my own, and am re-learning now in another country. I'm learning to incorporate as many different aspects of worship as I need to to be fed spiritually. I had a really hard time at first, because YWAM is a very charismatic group, which I didn't grow up with, and then I was also going to a charismatic church with some friends on Sundays. I felt like I was constantly on edge since the atmosphere was so different from what I'm used to. Not only at church on Sunday, but also at YWAM staff meetings and worship time.
In order to mix it up a little, I went for the second time this past Sunday to Christ Church, an Anglican church near here. I loved it! It was so nice to be in a service that was calm, reverent, and orderly. Afterward, there was a time for coffee and tea and I was able to meet some neat people from the city. I really liked this church a lot and left feeling refreshed and fed. In my previous blog, I included the lyrics of a hymn we sang that have really been a challenge to me. I've discovered that I really like a liturgical service. As a student of history, there's something in me that really responds to reciting the Apostles' Creed every Sunday, knowing that millions of my Christian forefathers have repeated the same words for centuries. It sums up the whole purpose of the gospel so succinctly. They also had a Scripture memory verse that we all worked on together as a congregation. That was really special. This church really reaches out to international students in Amsterdam, so for that reason they have more modern elements in their service, such as praise choruses.
Also, I realized that Mike Lumpkin, my pastor from UBC in Fayetteville, has his sermons on a podcast that I can download every Sunday. That has been great! He's been going through the book of John, and will be for the next year or two, and I've hated missing that. I love the in-depth study of Scripture like that. So I've also been able to keep up with that in addition to my own personal quiet time. His message this past Sunday was extremely convicting to me as he preached on being wholly satisfied with Jesus as the living water.
I didn't realize before I left how difficult it would be to integrate all of these aspects of my spiritual walk here in another country. But I've been so encouraged this week by the way God's meeting all of my spiritual needs here--exciting, vibrant worship here on the base; reverent worship in an open, friendly congregation; and solid, convicting study of God's Word. Thank you to those of you who have prayed that I would find a home church and somewhere to be spiritually fed; it's made all the difference in the world!
Monday, June 11, 2007
"Make Me a Channel of Your Peace"
These are the lyrics to a hymn we sang in church this past Sunday; it's a prayer commonly attributed to St. Francis of Assisi. The words perfectly sum up a lot of things I've been thinking and praying about regarding ministry in the Red Light District and life at de Poort:
1. Make me a channel of your peace:
Where there is hatred, let me bring you love;
Where there is injury, your healing pow'r,
And where there's doubt, true faith in you.
2. Make me a channel of your peace:
Where there's despair in life let me bring hope;
Where there is darkness, - only light,
And where there's sadness, ever joy.
3. O Spirit, grant that I may never seek
So much to be consolded as to console,
To be understood as to understand,
To be loved as to love with all my soul.
4. Make me a channel of your peace.
It is in pardoning that we are pardoned,
In giving to all that we receive,
And in dying that we're born to eternal life.
1. Make me a channel of your peace:
Where there is hatred, let me bring you love;
Where there is injury, your healing pow'r,
And where there's doubt, true faith in you.
2. Make me a channel of your peace:
Where there's despair in life let me bring hope;
Where there is darkness, - only light,
And where there's sadness, ever joy.
3. O Spirit, grant that I may never seek
So much to be consolded as to console,
To be understood as to understand,
To be loved as to love with all my soul.
4. Make me a channel of your peace.
It is in pardoning that we are pardoned,
In giving to all that we receive,
And in dying that we're born to eternal life.
Last weekend, I went to the beach with Jolanda, Rebeca, and another lady named Lianne. I didn't realize that the beach was only about a 25-minute train ride from here, so that was a nice surprise! Here was a shocker: you're allowed to go topless on the beaches--there's not even a separate beach for that! This is one crazy place. A lot of the Dutchies thought it was weird that I thought it was weird! We spent about six hours on the beach, then came back and went to a sidewalk cafe for apple pie and coffee. I really needed a nice weekend like that! 

Monday, May 28, 2007
More pictures...
I had such a great weekend! I made friends with a couple of people who had been away on outreach for the DTS (Discipleship Training School) that they were leading. One is Jolanada, a Dutch girl, and the other is Emas, a Lithuanian guy. They are both so much fun and were great to hang out with me this weekend! We went trash picking a couple nights (it's amazing what people throw away here!), went out for Dutch fries, watched movies, biked, and went to a cool little village where they have traditional windmills and cheese-making demonstrations.
After the village, we all went to have Dutch pancakes and then stopped by an exhibit of World Press Photos. Emas, needless to say, has a good time wherever he goes! He left this morning to go back to Lithuania, but he might be returning to this base later in the year. Jolanda, thank goodness, will be here for another year or two. They've been great for helping me get over home-sickness!
Ministry at the Cleft
What an eventful week! I had my interview on Monday afternoon for working in the Cleft. Edna and Kim, the leaders, told me after the interview to go home and pray about whether or not I'd be working with the ladies behind the windows or with the street ladies (ladies who sell themselves to get money for drugs), and that they would do the same. Of course, all along my heart has been with the ladies behind the windows, so I was hoping they would come to the same conclusion. On Tuesday Edna called me and asked if I'd been praying and how I was feeling led. I told her about my desire to work with the window ladies, and she said that she and Kim had come to the same conclusion without a doubt! So I was finally able to start ministry on Wednesday afternoon.
That first time, Edna took me on a prayer walk around the Red Light District to explain the different sections and to pray over it. That was a nice, slow way to get into it, because I was pretty nervous about starting! There are about six of us involved in the ministry, and each ministry time starts with Bible reading and prayer. Then we divide up into pairs, prepare baskets of hot drinks and cookies, and go out into the neighborhood. On Thursday night I was actually able to go and visit with the ladies, and it was amazing! I went with Rebeca Balderas, and at first most of the ladies whom we offered refreshments to just waved us off, saying they didn't want any. But then we met with some ladies who welcomed us, and in I went to one of the windows. It was really surreal standing there, seeing things from their perspective, watching the way people would walk by and stare--some curious, most lustful. Since I'm new to the ministry, the leader that I'm with takes the lead in conversation while I sit and pray. Rebeca was able to have some really good conversations at one window. Three ladies from the Dominican Republic all share the same window, so we were able to cover more ground there! Rebeca shared with them that satan loves to prey on women, but that God wants to restore their worth and dignity. They really seemed to be listening intently.
Through the years, Rebeca and Edna have been able to build a relationship with a man who owns Cassa Rosso (a live sex show) and most of the sex shops in the city. Most of the time he runs away from conversations with Rebeca (she's quite a powerhouse!), but she was able to share the gospel with him recently, and he ended up in tears. Anyway, I met him Thursday night, and he and Rebeca were talking about getting together for coffee sometime this week. Please pray that that will come to pass. In Perspectives, when we were talking about frontier missions, we learned about the importance of finding a gatekeeper, or person of importance, in the tribe you're going to minister to. Although this is by no means a tribe, I think that this man is definitely a gatekeeper, and it's such a blessing that Rebeca and Edna have a relationship with him. God could do amazing things through a man like that, living for Him!
One of the last windows we stopped at housed two beautiful ladies, one from Italy and one from Romania. The girl from Romania looked like she was about 18. They were both so sweet, friendly, and outgoing, and the one from Italy has really been on my mind a lot. Please pray that I'll be able to build a relationship with her; her name is Sonja. Thank you all for being such prayer warriors. I've really been able to sense your prayers, and I know I'll need them all the more as I become more involved in ministry in the District!
That first time, Edna took me on a prayer walk around the Red Light District to explain the different sections and to pray over it. That was a nice, slow way to get into it, because I was pretty nervous about starting! There are about six of us involved in the ministry, and each ministry time starts with Bible reading and prayer. Then we divide up into pairs, prepare baskets of hot drinks and cookies, and go out into the neighborhood. On Thursday night I was actually able to go and visit with the ladies, and it was amazing! I went with Rebeca Balderas, and at first most of the ladies whom we offered refreshments to just waved us off, saying they didn't want any. But then we met with some ladies who welcomed us, and in I went to one of the windows. It was really surreal standing there, seeing things from their perspective, watching the way people would walk by and stare--some curious, most lustful. Since I'm new to the ministry, the leader that I'm with takes the lead in conversation while I sit and pray. Rebeca was able to have some really good conversations at one window. Three ladies from the Dominican Republic all share the same window, so we were able to cover more ground there! Rebeca shared with them that satan loves to prey on women, but that God wants to restore their worth and dignity. They really seemed to be listening intently.
Through the years, Rebeca and Edna have been able to build a relationship with a man who owns Cassa Rosso (a live sex show) and most of the sex shops in the city. Most of the time he runs away from conversations with Rebeca (she's quite a powerhouse!), but she was able to share the gospel with him recently, and he ended up in tears. Anyway, I met him Thursday night, and he and Rebeca were talking about getting together for coffee sometime this week. Please pray that that will come to pass. In Perspectives, when we were talking about frontier missions, we learned about the importance of finding a gatekeeper, or person of importance, in the tribe you're going to minister to. Although this is by no means a tribe, I think that this man is definitely a gatekeeper, and it's such a blessing that Rebeca and Edna have a relationship with him. God could do amazing things through a man like that, living for Him!
One of the last windows we stopped at housed two beautiful ladies, one from Italy and one from Romania. The girl from Romania looked like she was about 18. They were both so sweet, friendly, and outgoing, and the one from Italy has really been on my mind a lot. Please pray that I'll be able to build a relationship with her; her name is Sonja. Thank you all for being such prayer warriors. I've really been able to sense your prayers, and I know I'll need them all the more as I become more involved in ministry in the District!
Thursday, May 17, 2007

This is the common room where we cook and hang out. There's 2 or 3 kitchens per floor, so there aren't too many people trying to use it at once. It's a nice place to socialize with the people who live near me.
And finally, I'm including a few photos of the neighborhood. I took these yesterday while walking to the nearest grocery store. It's beautiful!!! I really can't get over this city--I love it. These were taken later in the evening; since we're so far north, it stays light until about 10:00 p.m. in the summer! It's nice, but I find that I don't go to bed until 12 or 1, which isn't good the next day!
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
