Rainwater Project

Here’s the deal:

SAMSUNG CSC

A 10,000 liter tank similar to these costs about $2000 to purchase and install. We’re looking for 15 people or churches to step up and provide enough for one tank.

That will allow us to install a “starter kit” of 100,000 liters of water storage, as well as a solar or wind-powered pumping system at Tanzania Christian Clinic and Tanzania Christian Academy for Science. The system will collect rainwater in the rainy season, and in the dry season will provide clean water for their students and patients.

It’s an expandable system. If we can raise more money, we can buy more tanks, or we can build a huge concrete cistern. We hope to travel to Tanzania late in February, and spend the next 90 days building this system.

Building a rainwater capture system isn’t our long-term dream for our mission work. We’re committed to evangelism. But doing this will give us an opportunity to work with the entire Monduli mission team, all of us together in Tanzania for the first time. And we can meet one of the needs of the clinic and school.

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Mission Survey Trip

We are now looking for a sponsoring congregation to oversee our ongoing work in Tanzania. Please let us know if you hear of any churches who are interested in Tanzania, or generally in Sub-Saharan Africa.

We are currently planning another mission trip to Tanzania in February, 2015. We hope to spend about 3 months there, working to build a rainwater collection system for Tanzania Christian Clinic, and learning more about the community and the culture.

Ralph & Twyla Williams, Lewis & Tammy Short

Ralph & Twyla Williams, Lewis & Tammy Short

Last weekend, we traveled to Nashville to help our teammates Lewis and Tammy Short, as they were making final preparations to leave for Tanzania on Sept. 10. We hope to spend some quality time with them in February/March, making plans for our work together.

We traveled to the Monduli Region in Tanzania during May 2014, on an exploratory mission. We were conducting a needs assessment to see whether local needs might lend themselves as evangelistic tools. We kept a daily journal at Williams Tanzania Mission on facebook.

Early in our visit, the District Commissioner listed what he considered the two largest needs of the community. There is a great need for rainwater retention and water purification. And there is a very high ratio of illiterate adults, which has multi-generational social and moral consequences.

We began asking whether anyone had attempted adult literacy programs, and whether there was any demand for such. We found two programs, which had failed because they required payment and/or because they required people to travel to a fixed location in the evening. The people who operated those programs spoke frankly about the demand, and about the causes of their failures.

As a result, we began asking about volunteer programs, and whether people would volunteer to teach others in their home or in a convenient local setting. We found that there is a Swahili term for volunteering, and we found a similar program, which trains local volunteers to teach others.

We believe we could build an adult literacy program, training local volunteers, and using the Bible and other available materials in Swahili. We would then have two immediate audiences to teach: our volunteers, and those whom they are teaching. We would use this as an evangelistic outreach, to contact and teach people who otherwise would never encounter Bible teaching.

In addition, we arranged to partner with a local church to outfit their building with rainwater collection barrels. We told them that if they raised money for one system, we would raise money for another system. A similar building nearby has six to ten 10,000-liter barrels for rainwater collection, and we believe they could do the same, in time. This church has a new building with a baptistery, but has no way to fill the baptistery, so the water collection system would fill that need, and allow them to serve the community with water as well.

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Tanzania Mission Survey Trip

Dear Family and Friends: 
Twyla and I are preparing for a mission survey trip to Arusha, Tanzania, where we are looking for ways we can help bring Jesus to the Maasai. We need to raise about $5000 to cover the round-trip airfare and incidental costs for our trip. We would like to invite our family and friends to be involved in this work. 
First–and most important–we need your prayers. We need wisdom as we prepare for this.
Second, we need money. 
Our church will provide oversight of incoming funds for our mission survey trip. If you would like to give, please message me and I will provide you with the details for contributing to our trip.

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Check out this nifty helmet!

Skully

Skully helmets (@SkullyHelmets #iwantskully) have Bluetooth and 180-degree rear view, as well as GPS, on a head-up display.

 

Key Features:

  • Lightweight, Aerodynamic Shell
  • 3D laser-cut foam for a perfect fit
  • Fully adjustable flow-through ventilation
  • Anti-fog, anti-scratch, anti-glare face shield
  • Quick release chin strap and visor
  • SKULLY SYNAPSE (TM) Heads Up Display system with voice control
  • Visual GPS navigation
  • 180 degree wide angle rearview camera
  • Bluetooth connectivity to smartphone
  • Internet connectivity via smartphone

Check it out:

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Good Info on Distracted Driving from NEJM

CaptureThis link takes you to a study about Distracted Driving, and includes a good video explaining the study in layman’s terms:
http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMsa1204142?query=TOC#t=articleTop

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Threat & Risk Management for Commuters

I’ve just been reading the final report on Air France flight 447. That’s the Rio de Janeiro – Paris flight that went down in the ocean on June 1, 2009. There’s a lot to be learned.

 

With regard to threat analysis, one of the most chilling comments in the report was directed toward pilots in general, rather than the crew of AF 447.

“Crews generally just undertake confident monitoring of the flight path and the automated systems due to their level of performance and reliability.”

This is chilling, because that confidence can kill. The report suggests that the flight crew spent little time on a detailed, structured analysis of the potential threats. They were aware of the threat of turbulence and icing, and there was discussion around those topics in the cockpit, but they did not focus on the threat and make decisions.

That’s not much different from what many of us do on a regular basis. As I commute, I confidently set out toward work or home, knowing that I have successfully completed the same trip many times. I rarely think about the threats that I routinely encounter, although I occasionally become aware of new threats, or special circumstances.

If I had given thought to threats before riding home last week, I would have remembered the sign saying the road would be under construction in the evening. I probably would have taken a different route, rather than being stuck in wall-to-wall traffic (and the high risks for a motorcycle in that environment).

As a commuter, I face the risk of complacency and of inattention to my surroundings. How many of us have arrived at our destination without any awareness of how we got there? We drove our usual route, made the usual turns and adjustments for traffic, totally consumed with plans for the day or the problem we were trying to solve.

A safe rider will take steps to avoid that complacency. The first step is awareness of the risk. Find triggers to remind you of the all-important task at hand. Develop a standard start-up procedure that includes a Risk briefing and steps to mitigate the risk. Say to yourself: “I’m commuting. I run a risk of being complacent. Today I will pay particular attention to…(some element of my ride) in order to keep from being complacent.”

Pay special attention to unusual risks that you may encounter on your commute. Things that wouldn’t catch you by surprise anywhere else, might catch you by surprise on your commute, because you have successfully completed that route many times.

It may pay to alternate routes occasionally, just to increase your level of awareness.

Whatever it takes to arrive home safely

Complacency is a killer in many other ways too. If you are just “going through the motions” in your job or in your marriage, you need to stop and do a threat analysis, and figure out a way to mitigate the risk of complacency. It’s never fun to crash and burn, especially in things that really matter. Life and Love, for example.

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This Happens To Other Families, Not Ours

This is not quite the sort of thing I usually write about, but it is so close to my own experience and my own beliefs, that I couldn’t resist sharing it. Thank You, KenBurkey

This Happens To Other Families, Not Ours.

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One of the babes learning to cook

The subtitle of my blog is Bikes, Books, Babes

If you read the “about” page, you will know that the “Babes” part refers to my grandchildren. They do lots of fun stuff, but this video is particularly worth posting. Enjoy!

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Three Book Reviews

 

 

 

 

I recently reviewed three books for the Christian Chronicle.

The books are:

  • Kingdom Calling by Amy Sherman
  • Work Matters by Tom Nelson
  • Work, Love, Pray by Diane Paddison

Here’s a link to the reviews on the Christian Chronicle website: Book Reviews

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Book Review: No Matter the Cost

No Matter the Cost, by Vance Brown (with John Blase) is a book written for men—more specifically, for those in the “Men’s Movement.”

Vance Brown is Chairman and CEO of Band of Brothers ministry. The book is intended to be a rallying cry for men who are discouraged. He calls men to be one of those referred to in John’s Revelation who “defeated [the accuser] through the blood of the Lamb…. They were willing to die for Christ.”

Brown challenges men: “Will you be one of the saints used by God to finally defeat evil?”

The largest part of this book is a blow-by-blow, phrase-by-phrase discussion of the Lord’s Prayer, sometimes called the Model Prayer. It is illustrated throughout by “brother’s stories”. These are definitely war stories, stories of men on the front lines, dealing with evil in their own lives and with death and suffering.

Brown refers often to a poem by John Eldredge, “Wild at Heart.” In this poem, Eldredge pictures a broken man who “prayed for an army of angels to come and heal him…but God decided instead to send him friends, men who also know broke.” As he tells these stories of broken men, he also tells of “men who also know broke” who fight alongside of them. He quotes Eldredge, “Don’t even think of going into battle alone.”

Brown sees the Lord’s Prayer as a trail map—or even a manual of arms—for the battle ahead. He pictures the disciples asking Jesus, “Teach us to pray”, and “what if Jesus essentially said, All right, this is what following me looks like; this is what becoming a part of the Last Battle is all about.

The dominant metaphor of the book is warfare. Brown sees Christians as involved in a great and final battle. But this isn’t your standard “church militant” call to seek out evil and destroy it. In the end, Brown sees Man’s role as defensive: “Put on the whole armor of God… that you may be able to stand your groundStand Firm” (Ephesians 6:13).

Brown closes the book with another Bible story, the prodigal son. He tells us that at the end of the battle, we can come home; Home to a mansion with many rooms, where there is joy. This isn’t a battle without hope, but a battle made possible by our hope. We can rejoice, like Paul, knowing that what has happened will turn out for our deliverance (Philippians 4:19). We can rejoice, knowing that through God’s power, we are more than conquerors, and we will be welcomed home.

This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers

http://www.librarything.com/work/12340902/reviews/84259285

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