Found this online this afternoon but couldnt load the original creator’s site. A useful page to give a quick comparison of Google Plus, Twitter and Facebook to someone.
Home of Hope – Dhaka
Home of Hope is a school and orphanage outside of Dhaka accommodating children from disadvantaged backgrounds. Many are orphans. Some have only one parent and some come from homes of great need where sickness or other misfortunes have left their families unable to care for them. It was started in 1991 with 7 boys in two rooms – now has grown to 240 girls and boys on a campus which includes a school, aquaculture, agriculture, poultry farm, play grounds, technology labs, accommodation and dining facilities.
Their shared goal is training children to be leaders in all aspects of life: business, religious, education, and family life. Building up the next generation of leaders, transformed in Christ’s name, with Biblical principles at the heart of what they do. Children attend and participate in their own church and are taught to tithe from their allowance (from which the Pastors salary is paid) and also as a dorm room they decide how much they will contribute to the building fund.
The school caters for students from preschool up to year 10, they can then attend a transition training before continuing onto possible university studies. Students attend the school from Sunday through Thursday, 8am – 4pm and are also in “work” teams led by coordinators to sustain the operating of the campus.
The school day includes times of lessons and work and weekends enable sustained work on some tasks. Students are paid an allowance up till age 14 but some tasks are considered chores that just need to be done for the “family” – much like any other household. From age 14 students need to be more independent and seek work for their own income. One 17 year old student recently opened a computer shop.
There are teams involved in work and maintenance tasks: agriculture and aquaculture, developing building components for kitset churches, operating a poultry farm preparing “fryers” and “layers”, doing garden maintenance, as well as all the chores that a typical family requires completing in order to function smoothly.
Biplob Bairagee, Co-ordinator for Food and Farm, leads teams of students in areas of gardening (from seed to harvest), poultry (1 day old chicks are bought and reared to fry or lay stages), aquaculture (two ponds grow fish up to 2lbs in size – choosing three different types of fish which live in varying depths of the pond). Teams also are involved in food preparation (harvest/kill, prepare, cook), serving meals and cleaning up.
I was really impressed by the way the leaders are equipping and teaching the children to contribute by doing their part to keep the family running. Changing attitudes of dependency and reluctancy to work hard, by instilling into these children the understanding that God wants us to work and apply ourselves and take dominion over the Earth as God intended.
In “Truth and Transformation“, author Vishal Mangalwadi writes, “The consequence of Adam’s sin was that man who was meant to be the ruler became a slave on earth, not only to Satan and sin, but to nature as well. The earth began to grow thorns and thistles, and man had to eat of the sweat of his brow. In his struggle with nature , man ultimately lost, died, and became dust. Physical creation won over its ruler – man. Death became the master. But by defeating death and giving eternal life to those who repent and believe, God is restoring to man his authority over the world”.
By working on practical tasks alongside learning, students are developing the understanding that they are contributors, creators and developers themselves, in God’s image. Recognising that they have authority and dominion over the earth with the responsibility to manage it and enjoy its fruits -
He causes grass to grow for the livestock
and [provides] crops for man to cultivate,
producing food from the earth,
wine that makes man’s heart glad—
making his face shine with oil—
and bread that sustains man’s heart.
Psalm 104. 14-15
At the Bible College students also work and develop understandings and practical experience which they can then replicate in the areas they live in as pastors – able to teach and equip their church agricultural skills, building skills, technical skills. 85% of the Bible College graduating students are in ministry.
By providing access to online tertiary education opportunities, these students can have an option of studying at university level in areas that they know well through their life experience and can use their learning to contribute to the transformation of their nation.
Students studying online degrees in aquaculture for example may have already been practically involved in rearing and harvesting fish under the leadership of older students when they were younger, and leading others when they were older. By increasing their knowledge through a university education with some of the best teachers available around the world the depth of their potential contribution to transforming Bangladesh becomes even greater.
Malaria kills
When I travel to Papua New Guinea areas where malaria is known to be present, I always take up a supply of the right pills so I dont fall victim to malaria. I just read this blog post from the guys flying around the world in an Australian GA8 Airvan, the same plane used in some of the MAF programs:
“One lady told how she had lost three boys and two daughters to malaria, another man spoke of the three children that he had lost to malaria . . . the stories went on and on. One chap said that until the missionaries came to Malamaunda, they had no access to any medicine due to their remote location, and the death toll each year was in the thousands. Even now, the villages “close” to Malamaunda are a number of days walk away, and Bob Kennel told how a man had tried to bring his child sick with malaria to the village where Bob was - a three day walk. After a day’s hike, the child died in the man’s arms and all he could do was return home to bury his little child. This is happening right now. As I write this, people here in PNG are dying from malaria . . . only a very short flight away from Australia. This should not be happening . . . this must not continue to happen.”
Lets not ask “What would I do?
Ask “What can I do, now?”
Imagining myself as that father carrying his sick child rammed home the impact that malaria has.
MAF Pilot Story: Cyclone Paul, North Australia
MAF Pilot Paul Woodington tells a story of a community dealing with Cyclone Paul in Arnhem Land, North Australia.
On Saturday, 27th Mar 2010, the weather forecast predicted Cyclone Paul would hit Elcho Island around 10pm. MAF pilots on Elcho evacuated and flew their aircraft 90 miles to the new MAF hanger at Gove. At 11pm Saturday night, Cyclone Paul hit Gove, not Elcho Island.
Two days ahead of forecast and missing Elcho completely, the category one Cyclone passed overhead sending debris everywhere. Windows rattled, trees came down, and anything loose became an airborne projectile, but no real damage thankfully. The next day, Sunday 28th Mar, Cyclone Paul continued to develop into a category 2, hugging the southerly coastline, and eventually settling for two days over Yilpara, a homeland of 150 Yolngu people, 80 miles south of Gove.
Mobile Ministry Opportunities
Campbell and others in the MAF Learning Technologies team (www.maflt.org) are exploring how to take advantage of mobile phones in ministry. In Papua New Guinea, Arnhem Land and Bangladesh mobile phones are very common with phone companies providing cheap, basic handsets in order to build their customer base. In Bangladesh it is very common for people to have more than one mobile phone!
We are researching the options for installing Bibles onto mobile phones and also ways in which learning opportunities for isolated Christian leaders can be facilitated.
In New Zealand, Australia and other developed countries life can be very convenient. From our smartphones we can access the internet, we have applications which connect and provide us with virtually whatever information we want to subscribe to. I subscribe to podcasted sermons – these sermons arrive on my phone without me doing a thing, so that all I need to do is listen.
They connect us in community also – communities like Facebook and Twitter send updates to our phones and connect us to our friends and family wherever we are. The world can certainly be small for us. My teaching pastor lives in California.
But in un-developed countries like Papua New Guinea there are Christian leaders isolated geographically, socially and economically. If we can help remove the barriers they have through the application of sustainable technology then we strive to.
Please pray that we will be discerning in assessing the needs of isolated Christian leaders and be wise in partnering with them and training organisations so that technology can enhance their opportunities for spiritual growth and the growth of the people they shepherd.
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OS X Lion wont play AVI WMV files
July 23, 2011
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New Aussie Aircraft for Papua New Guinea mission
May 11, 2010
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Installing OS X 10.4 Tiger without DVD
March 13, 2011
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Floating hangar – Kalimantan, Indonesia
June 24, 2009
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HCSB Online Study Bible
September 8, 2010
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MAF Dedicates its First KODIAK Missionary Plane
May 22, 2009
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MAF Learning Technologies – Papua New Guinea
June 22, 2010
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Shot Fired at MAF Twin Otter – Papua New Guinea
August 28, 2009
- Ongoing Prezi – tools for teaching and learning January 31, 2012
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Setup Telstra ZTE MF626 USB Modem on Macbook Pro OS X Lion
January 26, 2012
- eBook Gesture Developments January 25, 2012
- Coffee – all you need to know! January 23, 2012
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mLearning – it’s bigger than mobile…
January 18, 2012
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Creating an Android App – MAF Advocate
December 1, 2011
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Cant move IMAP email to Trash on iPad?
September 2, 2011
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What if….? Missional Church
August 27, 2011
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Campbell: Good tip Dan, thanks mate....
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Dan Lundmark: I recommend Perian ( http://www.perian.org/#detail...
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Rod: I tried the above suggestions and at first it didn...
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Abel Ramirez: Please read this article on the doctrine of electi...
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KH: I have done all this and still not working for me....
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cdsmythe: Nice to hear it helped, thanks for saying thanks!...
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David G: Thank you for posting this. For what it's worth, ...
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cdsmythe: Yeah that search usually comes up with the instruc...




















