Missionary Shary Frahm – Serving in Cambodia

By

At the Altar

‘Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid or discouraged for the Lord your God is with you wherever you go.’ Joshua 1:9

Our grateful hearts are overwhelmed by the offering of this cross on Sunday by the congregation of Immanuel Lutheran Church of Crystal Lake, IL as they gathered around us to pray for our departure back to Cambodia.

Thank you so very much!

PS The Kids of the Kingdom shared two dozen of gorgeous red roses that were the altar flowers for the morning. Wow!

 

IMG_8999 IMG_9001

Follow
X

Follow

E-mail : *

By

How a Community Group Can Bless a Missionary couple

A few days ago I posted a pic of a huge poster carefully created and signed by the Kids of the Kingdom at Immanuel Lutheran School in Crystal Lake, IL. Along with these great kids, our /an Immanuel community group showered us with their special talents as well. I am sure we did not see all of these great loving acts of kindness showered on us throughout the morning, but they provided a warm environment from which God’s ministry in Cambodia could be presented. Handling not only the weekly coffee and light brunch table, they also posed for and were active in capturing so many moments throughout that morning and then allowing us to recognize them for their partnership to the congregation.
In the middle of the table just below the poster I put out here a few days ago was this gorgeous cake. I’m told it had a match to it that appeared upon the scene at just the right moment. Perfect!
Thank you to you, our community group, who has loved us, prayed for us, and welcomed us into their group, and are now sending us forward in love.

IMG_8983

 

Follow
X

Follow

E-mail : *

By

The Power of a Cross

Last Sunday the youth of Immanuel Lutheran Church of Palatine under the loving encouragement of the Roe and Lazarri parents and Pastor Donald, held a fundraiser for God’s work in Cambodia. Thru the talented planning of the two families listed here, the youth offered homemade pocket crosses, cross necklaces, and prayer packs during their services to raise funds for Cambodia. Our grateful hearts are overjoyed with their partnership to share forward the gospel message and to pray for us. Thank you so very much for such a wonderful project. The crosses were perfectly made. Well done faithful servants!!

imagejpeg_0-1

Follow
X

Follow

E-mail : *

By

Heading Out the Door !

IMG_8980The 22nd was our last Sunday in the area for a while. Immanuel Lutheran Church of Crystal Lake, the Kids of the Kingdom, our community group, and the church at large scooped us up for the whole morning and showered us with tons of love and prayers to send us out. While it may take me a bit to sort it all out at this end, we wanted to start out with this amazing sign that greeted us that morning. The Kids of the Kingdom is a group of young people who meet after school to share Jesus. Way back in 2014 they surprised us with a treasure chest of coins and from that moment forward, they have loved us along this journey and prayed and continued to encourage us. Here is their poster. Way to go y’all. Thank you so very much for your love.

Follow
X

Follow

E-mail : *

By

Khmer Khronicle January 2017

KK January 2017

Follow
X

Follow

E-mail : *

By

Immanuel Departure

A heartfelt thank you to the Immanuel Lutheran Church of Palatine IL community and the short term team coming to Cambodia for praying for us upon our soon departure and return to Pastor Chut Samuel in Siem Reap, Cambodia.

Immanuel Palatine January 15, 2017

Follow
X

Follow

E-mail : *

By

Christmas in Siem Reap with a joyous heart

operation-christmas-child-box-with-jessica

 

From Half way around the world in Cambodia in a community we know and a gorgeous lady whose family we lived with (and dearly love) comes this precious photo with an Operation Christmas Child box in her hands. It warms my heart beyond words I can express here how God has used us in some very wonderful ways on both sides of the pond. Misty eyes of tears!

Merry Christmas to you! 

 

Follow
X

Follow

E-mail : *

By

December 2016 Khmer Khronicle

KK December 2016

Follow
X

Follow

E-mail : *

By

A Simple Box and A Year Later

Being a part of a group so close to home in Operation Christmas Child came around this year in a different light for me, a more personal one that, as I look at the photo here, realize had been tucked away in my ‘file’ from the last year until now.

It was about a year ago when we were in Cambodia and had started to plan our schedule to visit churches all over Cambodia to share a Christmas celebration with each of them. As it went, our travels were divided up into sections of the country so we could make better use of travel time. Roads are not very good in most of the country, and since this is the end of the rainy season as I write this, the roads are probably at their worst, full of huge holes and muddy, slippery and at times scary, slowing down and making travel at a snail’s pace at best. Some areas had no roads at all, and we had to make our own. No, George and I never drove during these months, and we will remain in that stand. So we rode along.

It was mid December up in Pailin, a small municipality in the western edge of Cambodia very close to Thailand and at the base of the Cardamon Mountains. It is also unfortunately famous for the Khmer Rouge leaders who came from and retreated to the area from that era. It was as far west as we could go and not leave the country.

We had traveled two very long days to get to the church we were destined for. I soon figured out no one in the area had ever seen foreigners either in their village, or so we were told later. The locals, as usual, took very good care of us, making sure we were well shaded from the sun, and had safe drinking water. We had arrived early for the church celebration so we waited with everyone else from the van for the locals to finish their preparations, which included a meal of curry and rice noodles over a wood fire vat before the service.

As is my custom though, I always do some walking after a long ride. I certainly can’t get lost since everyone is alerted when I’m on my feet. At some point one of the elderly women invited me to come sit with her under her home next to the kitchen. That was easy, and I enjoyed seeing the world from their viewpoint. She pointed and talked quietly as we shared time together. I followed her hand gestures and sorted out their language as she talked. All of a sudden, here on the kitchen stand, is the obvious ‘Christmas Child box.’ I spotted it. It was all by itself on a bare piece of wood. It had a place of honor so to speak.

She also realized what I was looking at, which erupted in a fast expose of words and hand gestures and such (hands together in gratitude). The box was newish. The ‘girl’ sticker was still on it. Gone were the girl items, but evidently it now was used in the kitchen as a closed bin for whatever was not meant for the general bug population. I went over and touched it and realized an emotional connection of how this simple box had been packed and brought to this family, half a world away.

This also occurred three weeks later deep in the jungle where the Jarai people group reside in Ratanakiri Province. Same story almost to the details above, one more time. I had the same emotional gulp.

unnamed-2

So as I helped at Immanuel Palatine as their American Heritage Gals and Trail Life Guys packed and I watched these boxes fill up on this side of the pond, I can easily say here and now that these simple boxes do make a huge difference half a world away. At least from where I stood last year in Pailin and Ratanakiri Province, they did. Humbled again ~ Thank you Father.

Follow
X

Follow

E-mail : *

By

Missions Beyond Our Walls

unnamed-1

 

By now most of us realize that missions beyond our walls come in different flavors and seasons. That is good because the variety tends to capture the hearts of those we may miss along the way.

What happens though when it is a friend, or you yourself, that need a ‘mission’ moment or two in the crazy world of serving, especially when it’s two women who have served together half a world away. By the way, it’s ok to get weary in service, but it’s when you reach that point and realize you need to ‘check’ out for a bit, it’s time to do so.

That’s where I was with a friend who had come to visit. We had dug deep into the Cambodian platform and were exhausted. She was to leave for home in a few days too. She needed to get out and walk, and maybe I did too. So we did something neither of us does much anymore here in the US. (Probably as a result of dealing with such on a local daily basis in the market overseas). The novelty of shopping just wasn’t there. But we still went.

Someone was looking for jars for a project with limited available time. We got it and went searching. Operation Christmas Child was out there as well. Our feet got in motion, and our minds and God sorted out the ruffles.

That basically is how the nativity scenes were found, 24 to a package, with crayons to add to them, 3 to a package. Just walking thru the store with nothing in mind and stumbling across each on its own. Easy peasy.

We just started to ribbon each set as she was about to leave. No problem. They traveled around for a while and many helping hands accomplished this end task in short form. How wonderful, in simple form, to share about the babe Jesus, to someone who perhaps doesn’t know Him yet.

It was indeed time to let a God be God and as usual He sorted it out while we moved around and closed up shop on conversations we had started. We were better.

Follow
X

Follow

E-mail : *
Translate »