Thursday, September 30, 2010

Prayer Request

1. Our partnership with the Presbyterian Church and the Police is taking us to new territories and the exhibition will become nation-wide next year. We are working on a follow-up plan with the churches and need to develop more capable speakers.

2. BHHP - October 2-10 - 20 Americans are coming to help us to reach students in campuses and high schools and utilize the many opportunities we have. Pray for great success during that week.

3. Traveling – I will go to make an audit to Poland from November 29 to December 4. Please pray for wisdom and the audit will be a help for Polish Campus Crusade ministry.

4. Church – In my church the year started. I got a new responsibility. I mentor three home group leaders. Please pray for wisdom to able to help them. I also lead an evangelization small group in Alpha course like in last some years. The participants are around forty-fifty years old. It will be a new experience because I usually lead 30s group.

Student Survival Kits

Campus team was working hard in Budapest. We've already got permissions in every major university to be a part of their freshmen orientation and give out the Evangelistic Student Survival kits (SSK). Thousands of students filled out the survey attached to it and now we are processing to see how many would like to hear personally about God, so than we could call them.

The growing student leadership volunteer team is greatly helping this work, and by now they do most of these evangelistic appointments. Students are leading other students to Christ and disciple them!

Contrast Exhibition

The program YTL, the Policy and the Presbyterian Church started, called "Contrast exhibition" had a big start in two major cities. In each city we held a press-conference and basically all the important media were present. Important government, political and religious leaders were speaking. It even made it to the evening news in the national television (for those of you who speak Hungarian - here you can watch it: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SF9xRtgZICE ) and there were many other reports showed in TVs and radios. In many of these interviews it is openly mentioned that the gospel is a part of this exhibition.

Students between ages of 14-18 in these cities are required to come to this exhibition as part of their classroom activities. But before that each school organizes a special seminar for them and we travel down to speak to these students on Why wait? Also we train the educators - and give them reason why they should allow Christianity to be promoted and a Christian-based program, like YTL to be used in their classrooms. We had incredible discussions and saw great openness - they are so hopeless, they don't know what to do and how to deal with youth problems.

In a short two weeks we've already gave talks and opportunity to hear the gospel to 4,000 students and 300 educators. These events are organized by the schools and we just have to go there and speak.

Opportunities generate more opportunities:

1. Two universities offered us to teach courses in their universities and train campus students on YTL for credit!!! This means that they allow campus students to get credit to come to a class where they will hear the gospel!!! WOW! 1Cor 1:26-29 is truly become reality - God is using the fools, us...

2. Next year the government wants to take this exhibition nation-wide and bring it to Budapest. They'll provide the resources for the exhibition and we need to provide the speakers for the student's and educator's seminars!

3. Also, we had been asked by the government to help develop a curriculum for schools to prepare kids for family life. We've developed a possible strategy of such program and that had been published and distributed by the government to every school already - in 5000 copies. On November 5th, we'll introduce this in a conference for professionals!

Annual Staff Conference


Each year we spend a week together with our 37 full time staff and 4 short-term missionaries a week for fellowship, teaching and planning for the up-coming ministry year. We had a fabulous time together between August 16-22. We’ve studied Haggai together as well have heard great lectures on leadership development. It was a very beneficial time as we are facing with a very busy semester.

Speak Out English Camp

69 Hungarian Student Staff + 30 American Volunteers + 22 Hungarian missionaries were hosting over 330 non-Christian students and sharing Christ with them as well doing evangelism on the beach, and in many other cities. We've trained a team from Slovakia - they've came to observe how they could start this camp in their country. Also, we've sent a team to Albania and Romania to reach students there.

I would like to transmit to you a letter, Eszter, who participated in Speak Out English camp as a staff. Eszter is a leader in our campus ministry. I thought you would better see the camp through the eyes of a student.

Dear Ibi!

It is just one week ago that I arrived back from Speak Out. I would like to say thank you for your support and to share with you some wonderful things that happened to us in this month.

For us, staff, the camp started on 27th June when the group of 41 enthusiastic Americans arrived to Keszthely. Our orientation week consisted of talks, trainings and games that prepared us to the challenges and difficulties of the next few weeks and they also helped us to become a team that is ready to serve together – not just towards the campers but also towards the people at Keszthely and each other. The deep spiritual teachings of this week meant a source for all us in the following 3 weeks, and so did the prayer chain that deepened the unity even more. The prayer chain started on the last night of the orientation week at 11 and we all took part in it, even the staff families. We were praying by rooms for the campers coming in the following weeks: each room prayed for 6 campers by name. The chain was symbolized by a candle that was received by each room and passed on to the next one after 15 minutes of praying. So the way of the candle started at 11 and ended at 7. Our room was to pray from 2:45 to 3:00. It was simply wonderful to see how this team could faithfully pray through all night and how God strengthened us to be able to wake up and pray for unknown students after that tiring week.

That is how we finally started the first camper week on 4th July: full of enthusiasm and ready to challenges. It was an awesome experience how we could see God working daily at the camp: on Sunday we started by chatting with the campers, but by Tuesday these conversations turned to serious and were able to build a relationship on them. Through them the campers finally understood why we, staff are so different from them, why we are so ‘normal’ (as one of the camper girls said). And even though the love they could experience among us and towards them was already a testimony, we also had the chance to share the gospel with all of them during the 3 weeks. Related to this I would like to share with you one of my deepest experiences that happened on the first week. I got the chance to see how the image of God changed in a camper’s mind. His name is Mike. At the first tutor time he declared himself as an atheist, but in spite of that he was thirsty to hear about spiritual issues. Other campers spent the nights having fun but this guy I always saw sitting in the hall, talking to his tutor about spiritual issues. And even though he did not get to point where he gives his life to God, but the way how he thinks of God and Jesus changed radically by the end of the camp. This is just one of the miracles we experienced – there were hundreds. They way how God was holding us through this month was also a miracle. We didn’t have strength by ourselves for all these overnight conversations, for evangelism four times a week, for the cheerful presence at the programs of every night, for the tasks we had to keep in mind and to organize: we got our strength from God who is source of everything. If we had wanted to do this by our own, we would have failed on the first week for sure. But as we fully relied on God, we were strong enough to do that. Personally, I lived through the strength of the Holy Spirit and of the prayer like never before. These experiences seriously transformed my relationship with God.

One thing I also learnt is that we always need to be ready to share our faith. There were days when I felt like I was useless for God’s purpose because I was so tired or busy with my own problems. But I realized that these were the times when God was using me the most in conversations with the campers or during evangelism. Maybe because my strength was not enough any more so I just let God talking through me. Everything, including the trainings, the fellowship, the Bible study, the ministry was teaching me how incapable I was to live the Christian life by my own. We shared the gospel with 1599 people (including the 336 campers), 94 of them decided to give the control of their life to God and we made the follow-up with 55 people so that they could experience the wonderful life God wants to give them. It would have been literally impossible by our own.

And let me tell you finally what was the most astonishing for me – and I think for the campers too – during Speak Out. The whole staff was made up of 99 people. 30 of us were Americans and 69 of us were Hungarians. Each one of us came from a unique background, situation of life, family, some of us had problems or difficult situations left behind. But in spite of all that these 99 people could serve together with such a godly love and unity that this could be a testimony towards the world. We prayed a lot for this unity before the camp and even throughout the camp. And one thing that everybody experienced this summer is what it means to form one body in Christ and what Paul writes about in 2. Corinthians 3:18: “And we, who with unveiled faces all reflect the Lord’s glory, are being transformed into his likeness with ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit.” That is why it was really hard to say goodbye to this team, but one thing comforts me and it was actually said by an American guy: “The good thing is that when we, Christians say goodbye, we never say it forever, because we know for sure that we will see each other again.”

I just want to say thank you because you supported me and helped me to experience all this. I am very thankful for the financial and prayer support. I am thankful because I could be the part of such a blessed ministry and a wonderful team. I am sending you some pictures with my e-mail that was taken at the camp and also a list about the students that I personally talked to during the 3 weeks and who got closer to God. I will keep praying for them namely and I ask you to pray for them too if you can. Thank you once more!

God bless,

Eszter