Sunday, December 18, 2016

Christmas 2016

December 2016

Dear Friends and Family,                                                                                                             
                Greetings from the mildly temperate climate of Summerville South Carolina.  As the final signs of autumn color drift down from the sweet gum trees, and the remaining blossoms fade from the confederate rose, we welcome the seasonably mild chill that accompanies December in the south.  We miss the silence of fresh falling snow as it drifts down under the street lights, but not the aftershock that comes after its arrival.

And so we settle in for a mild winter season and appreciate an occasional cold snap that forces us into our winter jackets and listen to the latest winter storm watch and thank the Lord he directed us to a warmer climate for this season of our lives.

2016 has been a full year and we have enjoyed the Lord’s favor.  He blessed us with two darling grandchildren this year bringing our covey of grands to nine.  Victoria Jane Humphries was born to Rebecca and Corey on my mother’s birthday, January 12th.  Actually, Corey was blessed with the privilege of delivering her since her arrival preceded the arrival of the mid-wife!  Victoria is a precious child with the mild manor of her Grandfather.  

Victoria Jane
Jasper Lee Scott was born on August 16th to Maribeth and Ben.  He checks in at number nine and the third grandson on the team.  He had the looks of his big sister Olivia at first but has begun to take on his own identity over the last couple of months.


Rebecca and family still are serving at Shorter University in Rome GA.  They have three girls, Ella Mae at 5 is our oldest grandchild, and then Isabel, who turned 3 in August, and Victoria.  Julie and Eli are at Southeastern Baptist Seminary in Wake Forest NC.  Julie is expecting her third child in February, an arrival eagerly anticipated by Micah (3) and Veda who turned one this year. Maribeth and Ben finished their first year in their new mountain home in Asheville NC with Olivia (4) and Wren (2) along with new brother Jasper.  


Rachel and Mark are still in Bonita Springs FL and, along with Bowen (2), are anticipating the birth of a brother in mid-January.  That will make eleven grandchildren under five.  What a quiver we have!  Jason is still holding down the fort here in Summerville growing his Snap-On Tool business.


We were able to gather to enjoy a July 4th celebration at the Center for Intercultural Training CIT in Union Mills NC, which is just east of Asheville.  We have been blessed to serve with Sowers at CIT for a number of projects.  Since the holiday fell between training sessions they graciously rented us accommodations that enabled each family to have their own apartment, while giving us a great place to be together for fellowship around the table and the swimming pool.  















These guys were all 2 at the time






























Victoria, Wren, Veda
Ella Mae, Olivia
Bowen, Isabel, Micah




















We hope to make that an annual tradition since it is harder for us to accommodate the whole clan at our house at the same time.

                 
Jane’s dad passed in mid-August.  This image of Pop was done by Rebecca for the memorial service.  The verse that is written on his coat is “whoever restraining his words has knowledge and he who has a cool spirit is a man of understanding”.  The face is created with words that highlight various character qualities that she saw exemplified by her Grandfather. 


We were privileged to be able to minister to him for the last month of his life and we miss his presence in our family.  He turned 93 in April and soon after Father’s Day it became apparent that the natural process of passing from this life was settling in.  He lived a full life and has left a legacy of family that is quite a tribute to his love and care for each of us.  We gathered at his house for Thanksgiving for one last time at the home place.  The baton has been passed to the next generation to carry on by extending his wisdom and kindness to the succeeding generations.


Thanksgiving Blessings


















Jasper Lee and Giga














Jane and I have been privileged to serve with Sowers again this year and will be setting out to Florida in January for the farm at Sherry White Ministries in central Florida.  We will be about two hours away from Rachel and look forward to the arrival of our tenth grandchild while we are there.  One of the blessings of serving with Sowers is that our weekends are free which allows us to spend time with loved ones living near the projects.

We celebrated our forty first wedding anniversary in March.  I have been richly blessed to have such a special partner in life who constantly reminds me of God’s grace and mercy.  The Bible reveals that the marriage covenant relationship mirrors the relationship that Christ has with his bride, the Church.  Jesus is the consummate grace giver and lover of my soul. 

He commands me to live with Jane in an understanding way which requires my constant attention as our lives and habits are continually evolving with age.  He gives her plenty of opportunity to develop patience.  What a great journey we are on!

As we see 2016 come to a close, we are grateful for family and friends who over the years have provided us with such fond memories.  Each of you holds a special place in our hearts as we think back across time, which seems to take on wings and fly with ever increasing speed.  So goes the cycle of life.

We are grateful as well to our Heavenly Father for his provision of life for us.  Not only in this age but, more importantly, in the age to come.  We eagerly anticipate his second coming.  We eagerly appreciate the celebration of his first coming, two thousand years ago.  Born of a virgin according to the prophetic scriptures, he lived a sinless life, then died a horrific death in place of sin cursed folks like us, that he might reconcile us to a Holy God.  



And so I would encourage you to read the good news account of Jesus’ birth in the Gospel of Luke.  The heavenly host appeared to the shepherds who were in the fields tending their sheep and proclaimed “today in the city of David a baby has been born who is Christ the Lord”.  God made him who knew no sin to be sin for us.

Jesus death on the cross of Calvary is the complete payment for the sin debt that we owe God.  Paid in Full!  That is the message of Christmas.

Jesus is that perfect Christmas gift!  Won’t you receive him into your heart this Christmas?  He so desires your worship.  You will be so glad you did, and we will be ecstatic as well!

Remember – Wise Men still seek Him!

Merry Christmas,  Glenn and Jane

Monday, May 30, 2016

Spring Tour 2016


Our tour of “Spring” has come full circle once again.  We began here in Summerville in March with the blossoming of daffodils and azaleas and the South Carolina pines swollen with pollen.  On the first of April we arrived in Union Mills, NC, about an hour east of Asheville.  Our April Sower project was at the Center for Intercultural Training, CIT.

CIT is a ministry dedicated to equipping servants to live in another culture.  They do this by focusing on teaching living skills that enhance their biblical knowledge and language abilities.  Participants are given insights into their individual giftedness and how to best use those gifts in the context they will be ministering in. There are classes designed for children as well.  There are relationship activities to build team work.

The participants range from whole families to couples and singles.  We had the privilege of having a number of them join us for devotions each morning during our stay.  It is a great blessing to hear how God has called them to the field and the steps He has brought them through.















There was a couple who are going to western Canada to live among native Indians.  Another is off to South America to teach in a Seminary setting.  There was a single cattle rancher who is moving to an Asian country in order to learn the language and immerse himself in a culture that is quite different from his Midwest upbringing.  Each situation was unique and we were continually amazed at God’s provision for each one in a broad number of areas.
Art the Facilities Manager, John, and Me
Our Sower partner at CIT was John Stoner.  We had served with John before and really enjoyed being together again.  John’s wife Rosie spends every other month ministering to her ailing Mother in Columbia SC.  CIT’s proximity to Columbia gives John the opportunity to serve the Lord and be with Rosie and her mom on the weekends.  This ability is what attracted us to Sowers.  We look for projects that are close to our children so we can spend the weekends with them.








Our main task at CIT this time was to paint walls and install vinyl tile flooring in one of the dormitory wings.  We put down about 3,000 square feet of flooring over the course of the project.  John celebrated his 70th birthday while we were together and as a cancer survivor is quite the role model for me.



















Jane worked her normal magic with Gloria in housekeeping and helped out with the preparation and serving of noon meals for the participants.


We enjoyed the arrival of spring in the western mountains of North Carolina.  We were able to be at Maribeth’s for the celebration of our Granddaughter Olivia’s 4th Birthday.
Olivia and Wren


















Wren, Olivia, and cousin Ella


















Picnic in the creek


We moved north to Pennsylvania for our May project at Summit Grove Camp.  We were able to be with Jane’s Dad to celebrate his 93rd birthday.  Jane was able to give her sister a break from caring for her dad for a few weeks.  Summit Grove is about an hour from Annapolis so I worked Monday through Thursday and spent the weekends at Pop’s.


We were excited to learn that we would be serving with Doris and Frank Hutchison.  They were the first couple that we had the privilege to work with in Sowers three years ago.


They say April showers bring May flowers but the showers seemed to arrive a month late.  We had some inside tasks to do as we helped by putting the finishing touches on a new meeting room, painting and laying bamboo laminate flooring.


It seems that bath houses are our main focus at Summit Grove.  The second campground bathhouse was in need of a facelift and the rain held off for a couple of days allowing us to tackle it.


A tree had fallen on the roof so we were able to install a metal roof and a fresh coat of paint, and a gravel walkway that will help keep the floor clean.




















Doris helped with getting rooms cleaned and made curtains for the upcoming season.  With Jane serving her dad for the first two weeks, Doris was able to establish a special relationship with a member of the staff and that led to an opportunity to model Christ to her and, ultimately, lead her to salvation.  We were excited to see God use this special circumstance to build a friendship that he used in a magnificent way.


Jane was able to join us for the final week of the project.  She manned her paint brush and helped finish painting the trim and was able to work alongside of Doris once again spring cleaning.


We are back in South Carolina for the summer.  We have all of our children and grandchildren coming into town the first week of June.  Two are coming for a wedding and the others don’t want to pass up an opportunity to get together.  Julie's youngest, Veda, is on the move in her walker so it should be a busy time with seven grands on the move.  Victoria will be six months old on the 12th so she will not be as mobile.

Victoria Jane
Our ninth grandchild will be arriving in August.  Maribeth and Ben have decided to await the arrival to find out if it is our third grandson or seventh granddaughter.  We are excited!  Ella, the oldest, will be 5 in June.

Our spring tour proved to be a successful one serving with Sowers, first at CIT and then at Summit Grove. We saw our Lord paint a magnificent landscape of fauna, sprouting newness of life for our enjoyment across the southeastern states.  The new birth in Christ of the young lady at Summit Grove topped off the spring tour.

Spring is our favorite season, as God again reveals His creative abilities. God’s voice is heard around the earth as He reveals himself to mankind through creation.  The budding of the trees, the blooming of flowers, the melody of the song birds calling to a potential mate, all cry out "God is!" and serve to bring our thoughts to the source of it all.

How about you?  Does the onslaught of spring beckon you to muse on the giver of life?

He desires your worship.  Jesus paved the way for us to enter into a personal relationship with the creator God.  You see, the sin nature that separated us from that relationship was fully secured on Calvary’s cross. Jesus paid a debt he did not owe and credits his righteousness to anyone who will put their faith in His shed blood.

Simply ask Jesus to come into your life and be your Savior.  He promises to give you a new life that will surpass any spring you have experienced before.

Until next time,
Godspeed,  Glenn and Jane

Friday, April 29, 2016

The New Drug


With the Sexual Revolution that started in the 1960’s came a tidal wave of relaxed views on God’s gift of sexuality within the protective walls of the marriage covenant.  One of the downsides of setting aside this protective barrier has been the current proliferation of Pornography use in our culture.

“Teens & young adults rank not recycling as more immoral than watching porn.” 
-The Porn Phenomenon

“The Porn Phenomenon is a wakeup call. When 54 percent of Christian young adults ages 18-24 seek out porn at least occasionally, & when two out of the three youth pastors & more than half of senior pastors say porn is a current or past struggle, we have a genuine crisis on our hands. Porn is undermining God’s truth in the lives of young people & eroding the credibility of the Church.” 
-Josh McDowell

“…pornography is the greatest cancer in the Church today.” 
-Chuck Swindoll

For the last few years I have been working with men who are addicted to Porn.  My journey began when I started mentoring some college students and they indicated that they struggled with issues of purity.  My immediate assumption (not a good idea) was that they were speaking of improper relationships with their girlfriends.  I was asked to give a talk on pornography at a student men’s retreat.  Preparation for that talk opened my eyes to a world that I had no idea existed.

Today’s pornography is not the Playboy Bunny centerfold of the 1960’s.  With the advent of high speed internet came an onslaught of creative ways to lure men and women, boys and girls, into fantasy relationships that quickly hijack God’s design for experiencing pleasure, and the issue moves from a moral one to include a bio-mechanical one.

The entrepreneurs of Pornography have found ways to capitalize on our need for intimacy.  The human body is uniquely designed for a relationship with our Creator God and our fellow man, the deepest to be experienced within a covenant relationship with our spouse.

In his article “Sex and the search for Intimacy”, author Dick Purnell writes:

“Each of us has five significant parts in our lives. We have the physical, the emotional, the mental, the social, and the spiritual. All five of these parts are designed to work together in harmony. In our search for intimacy we want the solution today, or yesterday. One of our problems is that we want "instant" gratification. When the need for intimacy in a relationship is not met, we look for an "instant" solution. Where do we look? Physical, mental, social, emotional, or spiritual?     It's the physical.”

It is in this physical dimension that porn creeps in and takes thoughts captive.  All of the men that I am working with began their journey with porn at a young age, 10 to 12.

The first experience of seeing porn induces a feeling that draws you back for more.  As the frequency increases, the euphoric rush comes, then the shame increases, and the cycle moves into a new phase.  Visual stimulation leads to self-gratification which leads to shame.  The process quickly takes root and the unique design for sustained action leading to Godly pleasure becomes hijacked.

New discoveries in Brain Science have uncovered the way our pleasure center works.  The body releases Dopamine, a neurotransmitter, in varying quantities when we are engaged in activity that we enjoy.  The moral assessments of these activities are governed by two things: first, our cognitive belief of what is right and wrong, and secondly our sin nature, what we will do based on those beliefs.

The same dopamine hit that comes from an act of kindness and love also comes in varying intensities from other activities such as eating and drinking.  Food addiction has the same captive qualities as porn addiction. Indulging in these activities generates a dopamine rush which encourages us to repeat the action.

One difference between substance abuse and porn abuse is that substances like alcohol, drugs, and food dissipate with time but the visual images of porn are stored in our amazing memory banks and are not easily erased. Yes, the memory of the high of marijuana and cocaine will be there, but its reminders will not be seen on every billboard you pass or television program you turn to or magazine you look through.  There is no such thing as “dabbling” in porn.  Even if one makes efforts to step away from it, one carries the residual memories of what has already been seen and done.

I use the term addiction reservedly because “addiction” in our culture has become a medical term that indicates disease and an “it’s not my fault” mentality, something that I had no choice in having happen to me, like Cancer or Lou Gehrig’s disease.  I prefer the Biblical term bondage, but addiction is a more startling, in your face kind of language, that invokes the deep urgent need to do something about it. Addiction then is not an excuse but a term that encompasses an understanding of the issue.

Another major difference between substance addiction and sexual addiction is that substance addiction is much more acceptable as a topic of discussion in the church and as well as the greater culture.  As a consequence, sexual addiction/bondage is an unspoken issue.  It is the shameful thing that good moral families just don’t talk about.

Unfortunately our culture is inundated with high speed internet pornography.  Experts use the term Pornified to describe its prolific use in our society.  The hard porn of the 1960’s is now the soft porn advertising choice of marketing.  The Barna Group recently did a study of hard porn use and the results are staggering. A majority of men between 18 and 30 are regular porn users.  The majority of them have been regular users since childhood.  Consequently, Dopamine hits from porn watching have become the “New Drug”.

Porn watchers have become intimately, emotionally bonded to a two dimensional image on a computer flat screen.  The successor to the computer screen is their smart phone, where pornographic videos are available 24/7, virtually anywhere.  The advent of WiFi enables them to access it at Starbucks, McDonalds, on a flight to San Diego, or in their parent’s living room.  One unintended result is erectile dysfunction in 20-something males.  The problem is not in their plumbing but between their ears.  Their brain has become re-wired for a computer screen and a real person just doesn’t excite anymore.

The user sees Porn as a “faithful friend” that relieves the stressors of life every time.  There is no possibility of rejection or scorn from the images presented.  It is not just still pictures but the person enters an on-screen video production and becomes vicariously the hero in the scene.  He or she is the one who is the object of the actor’s desire.  You see, porn addiction is an intimacy disorder.  I cannot overemphasize this.  I believe it plays an important part in the decision whether or not to seek help.  “If I get rid of the addiction where will I get relief for my need for intimacy and unbridled acceptance?”

It is my experience, however limited in scope, that a majority of people are using porn to medicate a deeper “wound”.  These wounds come from a wide variety of sources, from past and current relationships as well as various life stressors, and ultimately from not knowing and embracing the depth of love and acceptance available to them from our Father Creator.

All of my guys were drawn into the false intimacy of porn while enduring the trauma of normal adolescent relationships. We are constantly encouraged to measure our self-worth according to the dictates of the culture around us.  Life on the school yard is hard and the absence of a vibrant parental support structure opens an opportunity for the evil one to offer something synthetic to boost your self-worth.  That is where the snare of porn entraps the mind and they are caught in a web of lies that takes on a life of its own.

My interaction with students opened to me a world where porn and video games occupy a significant number of hours of their day, engulfed in “fake love and fake war”.  The guilt factor doesn’t exist in the “no absolutes” generation.  The problem for them is that there is an inherent shame that persists from our being created in the image of God.  They may not have guilt, but the shame “blind sides” them.  “If this is not wrong based on my understanding of my “if it feels good do it mentality”, then why do I feel this dreaded shame?” This issue of woundedness does not just affect adolescents but can be a catalyst for anyone of any age, male or female.

It turns out that porn is not the main issue but is merely the method of medicating the pain of life.  Take away the porn by moral obedience to the law and the addict will just find another way of medicating the pain. Even to the point of doing acts of righteousness.  We find that idols of the heart come in a wide variety.  The only path to freedom is to understand our unique relationship with our heavenly Father and his unwavering love for us.  Establishing a love relationship with him becomes the path for overcoming the wounds that take us to other idols.  Only love can break the bondage.  Law can never do it.

The millennials and Gen X ers are not the only ones who are addicted to porn, it is multigenerational, and although the statistics are staggering for the general population, the most alarming thing to me is that the statistics within the Church, the body of Christ, are not a whole lot different.

I have a young 20-something homeschooled friend, who comes from a wonderful Godly family.  He recently revealed publically that he had been addicted to internet porn since he was 12.  It began innocently enough with a visit to a trusted friend’s home and grew to a bondage that governed his life.  His parents were unaware of his addiction.  It is a secret bondage for most.

That bondage extends to men and women of all ages and it is a hidden plague that is affecting the church. The Barna study showed that only 7 percent of churches have any program to address the phenomena, and it is a tsunami that will engulf the church and render it ineffective.  Many in my generation just don’t know that the problem exists.  Yet it captivates pastors, elders, deacons, and its dominance is found across the spectrum of the church body.  I can’t stress enough that it affects both men and women.

Unfortunately because of its shame factor, we are not able to establish a “sexual addiction” group with a signup sheet in the narthex.  Unless it is affecting our immediate family we just don’t know the depth of the problem nor what we can do to help those in our midst that are struggling with its grasp.  When it is prolific in our immediate family, the shame of it keeps us in silence.

There is Hope!  

I recently attended the Set Free Global Summit championed by Josh McDowell.  The summit was the first major gathering of the body of Christ dedicated to the issue of Pornography addiction in the church.

We heard from the latest Brain Science researchers as well as leaders in the Church who are focusing their efforts at offering a Biblical approach to bringing the issue into the open and, more importantly, offering a scriptural process to overcoming the bondage.

The Apostle Paul in his letter to the Roman church in chapter 12 exhorts us, in view of God’s mercies, to present our bodies as a living sacrifice Holy and acceptable unto God which is our reasonable act of worship.  He further asks that we not conform ourselves to the pattern of this world but be transformed by the renewing of our minds.

I used to think that the “renewing” was merely a cognitive, biblical knowledge acquisition process.  But with the advent of new discoveries in how our brain works, I have come to realize that there is a physical phenomenon that is at work as well.  You see our brain has neural pathways that take on a “grooving” as we develop repetitive responses to life issues.  As we develop habits our brain moves those responses from a prefrontal cortex “reasoning” section to the Limbic or “automatic” response section.

For example, we get into our car, reach for the door handle and shut it, put our key in the exact slot in the steering column, start the car, grab the seat belt and buckle it, reach down and put the car in gear, and we do it all without taking a second to think about what we are doing.  But if we get a new car, we find ourselves searching for the key slot and looking at the gear shift to see what we need to do.  Very quickly we will make the new neural pathways that will again let us get into the new car and get underway as a limbic response.

This is the process of renewing our minds.  It is the same with our knowledge of God.  We read and study the Bible to understand what it is that our Father desires of us and then we think about this revelation in light of our current way of action.  We cognitively choose to do it God’s way and the process of moving from forced response in situations to a more automatic response takes hold.

Neuroplasticity is the name given to this ability for our brains to change.  We were designed to be able to respond to various stimuli encountered in life and re-groove our brains to respond differently.  Isn’t our God amazing!

So the hope we have is that sexual addiction can be overcome by the power of God working in conjunction with his Word and the teaching of the Holy Spirit, enabling us to put off the old manner of life and put on a new way, essentially renewing our minds.

Thankfully we have men and women who are devoting their efforts to developing processes to accomplish the great goal of becoming Holy as He is Holy relative to porn use.  What began as a moral issue, and quickly became a brain issue as well, can be transformed by the renewing of our minds.

This hope can become reality when we create a culture of openness in the church. One roadblock to that is the fact that sexual addiction carries a stigma.  Confess that you have an addiction to food, alcohol, or pain pills and you will get a loving, concerned, empathetic response.  Confess an addiction to porn and everyone will move away from you.  The focus of the substance user is the substance itself, but people assume that the focus of a porn addict is them, or their loved ones.  The continual draw of Pornography is much deeper than simply a lust for sex.

We find that one of the biggest hindrances to restoration is the cloak of denial.  Addicts in bondage to shame are accustomed to avoiding bringing the issue to light at any cost.  Denying that they have a problem is the only way to keep the secret.

Consequently, they find themselves holding on to a friend they desperately want to be rid of, and so the battle continues.

I am confidently looking forward to a near future time when the church is open to understanding the deep soul wrenching shame of sexual addiction and embraces the paths to restoration for those caught in its grasp, a time when Pastors and congregations are free from the stigma so that those in bondage can get the help offered in community with their church families.

This help will still need to be offered in a safe confidential manner.  But a culture of understanding and compassion can be established that will be lovingly attractive to those hiding in darkness.  Jesus gave many examples of this kind of warm understanding for us to embrace.  “Let him who has no sin cast the first stone” comes to mind.

This culture of understanding will extend to leaders as well who find themselves in bondage to porn. Christian leadership at all levels are beginning to recognize the depth of this issue and moving from a punitive approach to a restorative approach.  As one of my favorite philosophers says, “everyone is addicted to something”. My addiction is just more palatable than the sex addict.

In conclusion, pornography purports to offer a cool, refreshing drink that will satisfy the longing of the soul, but as Jeremiah 2;13 says “My people have committed two sins: They have forsaken me, the spring of living water, and have dug their own cisterns, broken cisterns that cannot hold water”.  Jesus offers living water and he who drinks that water will never thirst.

Restoration is the process of repairing the broken cisterns and filling them with the water of life that Jesus stands ready to abundantly provide.  Come then, all ye who are heavy laden and He will give rest to your souls.  Jesus feels your pain!

If you want more information on how to come along side of someone who is struggling with the bondage of sexual addiction feel free to contact me at kellenbenz@juno.com.  I have been blessed to come across some great resources that are proving effective for the guys I meet with.  One of those is the Conquer Series available at conquerseries.com

Until next time,  

Godspeed,
Glenn

Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Pioneer Village at Sherry White Ministries

February found us in central Florida serving at Pioneer Village, a part of the Sherry White Ministries family.  Pioneer Village is a twenty five acre farm that provides therapy for ladies that are enrolled in a one year addiction program.


There are typical farm chores that need to be tended to at Pioneer Village and the ladies in the program spend every afternoon here.  There are horses, sheep, goats, pigs, chickens, ducks, rabbits, a lama and a peacock.
  

The care of these animals is a task that many of the program participants have never had the experience of doing.  The interaction provides an emotional connection as well as a responsibility component, being care givers to animals that need human attention for their existence.
















There are gardens to cultivate, weeds to pull, pens to clean, and stalls to muck.  The labors provide a distraction from the draw of a destructive lifestyle along with a connection to God’s creation, resulting in a days end weariness that is soothing to the soul.

The farm serves another purpose integral to the recovery program that is aimed at creating an environment for the program participants to engage with their families.  One weekend each month Pioneer Village is the gathering place for the ladies and their estranged families.  The animals and farm activity provide a conversation breaker for moms who need a diversion for their loved ones from the “elephant in the room”, addiction.


There are two rustic cabins that have been built and provide an opportunity for a mom to spend a night with her children.  The setting of the village is designed to duplicate an early 19th century town that will include a future prarie chapel to accent the existing general store.


The ladies in the program live in town at Lydia’s House, an early 1900’s home that has been beautifully restored and fitted to serve up to twelve ladies.  The participants are responsible for keeping the house cleaned, the yard tidy, and meal preparation.  There are classes that they attend there, aimed at building Biblical character as well as equipping the ladies with long term tools for overcoming addiction.
































This is the second time we have had the privilege of serving here.  The ministry has a far reaching impact on the families and friends of the ladies in the program.  Addiction impacts in various ways and we have had the privilege of meeting a number of graduates of the program.  


Their testimony of how they came to a personal relationship with Jesus and how he has transformed their lives through the program and their new life as productive members of their communities is a sincere tribute to the efforts of everyone who contribute their gifts and talents to this ministry.


We do serve a patient God!


A real highlight of our stay here at the farm was attending the wedding of two of the past graduates of the program.  Terry and Amber were united in a beautiful ceremony in front of one of the cabins that was named in honor of Amber's two children.  They both have a tremendous testimony of how God rescued them from a life of addictions.  Terry went through the men's program which has been temporarily suspended.  We met him when we served here in January of 2014.  We were honored to be in attendance.


It's harvest time for Velencia Oranges in the groves surrounding the farm


The sites here are magnificent!  Perfectly level concrete parking pads



Our Sower partners on this project were Art and Donna McElheny from near Buffalo New York.  They began serving with Sowers about the same time as we did. They are full time RV’ers, spending the winter in the south and the summer months at a Bible Camp near their home town. We enjoyed working with them.

The men’s duties at the farm are coordinated by Bud Bowling who has volunteered at the ministry for ten years.  Bud and his wife GariAnn are full time RV’ers too, and live in Medford Oregon in the summer and winter here at the farm.  Bud is a master carpenter and has built many of the structures here and was the major re-builder of Lydia's House.  GariAnn works in the ministry office.

We were also joined by Sam White, a friend of Bud's from Oregon.  He and his wife Marjoe are full time RV’ers and this is the third winter they have served here.  


Art and I had a great time working with these guys.

Jane’s work here has centered on the two thrift stores that are located in Wauchula. The Mustard Seed is a typical thrift store and the second, Heaven Scent, is a retail store that specializes in upscale items that have been donated.


Heaven Scent is a recent addition and opened at the beginning of our third week here. Jane and Donna spent their time sorting items and making displays on the shelves in preparation for the unveiling.  Their design touch added much to the ambiance of the store.




The guys spent most of our time on the farm doing the various tasks that crop up.  The thing I like about serving here are the diverse needs that seem to change priority from one day to another.  It feeds my Attention Diversion Design, formally known as ADD :)

We laid out the rough location of the Pioneer Chapel as well as four future volunteer RV parking spaces so that the county planning folks could give their blessing.  At the Mustard Seed we installed some new lighting fixtures and shelving units and hauled excess furniture and electronics to the landfill.   

Removing fencing from the old Wild Boar pen


Recycling a load of metal   















Our biggest task was to continue construction on a new wood shop at the farm.





























Closed in and ready for the next volunteers to finish the inside



Our second grandson, Bowen, celebrated his 2nd birthday the weekend we arrived. Rachel and Mark live about 2 hours from Wauchula.  



We spent two weekends at their house and they came to the farm for two weekends.




The second weekend they came up we attended the winter training center for the Lipizzan Stallions which is located not far from Pioneer Village.





What magnificent animals.  Rachel especially enjoyed them.


Homeward bound !    We leave here on March 2nd heading home to Summerville SC.  We will stop on our way near Jacksonville at Seamark Ranch.  

Seamark Ranch is home to an orphanage that we visited a number of years ago when our RV ministry was just a dream.  We had checked out a number of orphanages in greater Florida exploring ways we might serve children.  We found on our exploration that the children need a longer term direct interaction than we felt we would be able to provide.  

Seamark Ranch is located on four hundred acres with an equestrian center as well as typical farm opportunities.  The children live in houses with eight orphan siblings along with a host parent couple and their children. 



When we visited, way back then, we were welcomed by Fred Meiners, the executive director, and his wife Debbie. They graciously invited us to stay overnight in their home and the visit with them gave us a sense of the vision of Seamark.  

Since serving with Sowers we have learned that serving ministries doesn’t require direct involvement with the target audience to be effective.  We will spend a few days there exploring ways we can serve the Lord Jesus through their ministry. 



We will be home for March and, in April, will be in Union Mills NC at the Center for Intercultural Training.  Lord willing we will move on to Pennsylvania for the month of May.  Then back home for June and July.  

August will bring the birth of our ninth grandchild.  Maribeth and Ben will welcome their third child.  They have decided to wait till the arrival to determine if it is our third grandson or seventh granddaughter.


March brings the celebration of the death of the Lord Jesus Christ on the rugged cross of Calvary.  I use the term celebration because, although the painful process of His crushing death was beyond comprehension, His rising from the dead on Easter morning is the crushing blow to death for the believer.  

Eternal life with Jesus is the free gift that His death and resurrection affords everyone who would place their faith in Him.  Jesus died for Sin and rose from the dead.  That is the Gospel, the good news.

Romans chapter 5 says “You see, at just the right time, when we were still powerless, Christ died for the ungodly.  Very rarely will anyone die for a righteous person, though for a good person someone might possibly dare to die.  But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners Christ died for us.”

Won’t you place your trust in Jesus’ shed blood.  It will be the full payment required to reconcile you to the God of the universe.

This truth is what propels Jane and I on in this Journey.

Until next time,
Godspeed,  Glenn and Jane