Tuesday, January 25, 2011 | By: John

The Wedding Feast

Jenny, Lena and Vitalik


Weddings often bring tears of joy, but sometimes there is much more than usual behind those tears. Jenny (O'Leary) Kelly started Safe Haven International after she came to Ukraine to help at a summer camp for orphans, fell in love with the kids, and saw how many of them just fall away once they leave the orphanages. Her idea was to have a home or homes where kids could come and live, learn of Christ's love and know what it means to be a part of a real family. That idea started to become a reality 9 or 10 years ago, when Safe Haven purchased a home outside of Kiev.

Anya, Lena, Bogdan and Vitalik
About 6 years ago, Bogdan and Anya became the houseparents here, along with Jenny. When Jenny met Andrew and they started their life together, Bogdan and Anya continued on here. This past weekend, Vitalik and Lena, who lived here at the Safe Haven house got married at the camp Andrew and Jenny started to give orphans and other hurt kids a place to go for healing.

Most of the people at the wedding were "kids' who either live or lived at the Safe Haven house and other kids who grew up in orphanage in Kaniv. At one point, I looked around and thought how awesome it is for so many of those kids to have a chance at a normal life-to know what a family is, to have a wedding, to have a relationship with Christ and just to belong.

For Jenny, it was a dream come true and the tears she had were ones that come from a heart that saw a need and didn't run from it.
Monday, January 17, 2011 | By: John

A Long Journey to Contentment

Pasha outside his childhood home
Sergei, Pasha and I went for a little adventure last week that took about 16 hours and covered over 250 miles. And it was one of the best days I've had here. We started by taking Pasha to get some documents in the village he grew up in. At the town hall they told use we had to go to another city for other documents. When we got there, they called the regional headquarters and they told us that since Pasha is living in Zolotonosha, where we started, he needs to go there for his documents...

Sergei and me in front of Czar Dub-King Oak.
When we were going back to the village for a second time, Pasha asked if we could go to see a "big tree." OK, I really like trees, but this one was quite a ways into the woods. Off we went and it was really cool. It was a 400 year old oak tree that the Nazis had tried to kill by machine gunning it. There is a ring where they had done that. As we were looking at it, I thought of all the history this tree has lived through and I thought of Pasha's childlike desire to visit the tree. I'm glad that my adultlike skepticism didn't stop us.

Pasha, me and Lydia at her bome.
During the drive we also visited Pasha's childhood home,  Pasha's mother in a sanatorium, and we visited with Lydia Petrovna. And I realized how blessed I am to be able to enter into Pasha, Sergei and Lydia's lives and how the Lord had somehow put us all together. A feeling of contentment and "rightness" came over me and I was blessed to see it. Sometimes I get into a mode where I want to be here when I'm home and home when I'm here, and wonder why the Lord gave me two such distant places for ministry work. Having two places like this has been difficult, but now I'm seeing what a gift it truly is and how it doesn't have to be "one or the other." Sorry it took so long Lord.

That feeling was reinforced last week as I received a letter from Dana who was a regular at the Bible study in Butler for two years. Dana is at another facility and he wrote, "I was reading in Philippians and came up to Paul's thanksgiving and prayer. Then I realized [what he wrote] is what I have been wanting to tell you. Philippians 1:3-11."  That one got my eyes coated with some tears.

So I'm working on the contentment thing and it's a process. But with days like the one with Pasha and letters like the one from Dana, God has been giving me a lot of help.
Monday, January 10, 2011 | By: John

Where God Was Homeless-Ravi Zacharias

This was written by Ravi Zacharias:


Kamarivka Internat-New gloves
Some years ago, we were spending Christmas in the home of my wife's parents.  It was not a happy day in the household.  Much had gone wrong during the preceding weeks, and a weight of sadness hung over the home.  Yet, in the midst of all that, my mother-in-law kept her routine habit of asking people who would likely have no place to go at Christmas to share Christmas dinner with us. 

That year she invited a man who was, by everyone's estimate, somewhat of an odd person, quite eccentric in his demeanor.  Not much was known about him at the church except that he came regularly, sat alone, and left without much conversation.  He obviously lived alone and was quite a sorry-looking, solitary figure.  He was our Christmas guest. 

Because of other happenings in the house, not the least of which was that one daughter was taken to the hospital for the birth of her first child, everything was in confusion.  All of our emotions were on edge.  It fell upon me, in turn, to entertain this gentleman.  I must confess that I did not appreciate it.  Owing to a heavy life of travel year-round, I have jealously guarded my Christmases as time to be with my family.  This was not going to be such a privilege, and I was not happy.  As I sat in the living room, entertaining him while others were busy, I thought to myself, "This is going to go down as one of the most miserable Christmases of my life."

But somehow we got through the evening.  He evidently loved the meal, the fire crackling in the background, the snow outside, the Christmas carols playing, and a rather weighty theological discussion in which he and I were engaged—at his instigation, I might add.  He was a very well-read man and, as I found out, loved to grapple with heavy theological themes.  I do too, but frankly, not during an evening that has been set aside to enjoy life's quiet moments.

At the end of the night when he bade us all good-bye, he reached out and took the hand of each of us, one by one, and said, "Thank you for the best Christmas of my life.  I will never forget it."  He walked out into the dark, snowy night, back into his solitary existence. 

My heart sank in self-indictment at those tender words of his.  I had to draw on every nerve in my being to keep from breaking down with tears.  Just a few short years later, relatively young, and therefore to our surprise, he passed away.  I have relived that Christmas many times in my memory. 

That year the Lord taught me a lesson.  The primary purpose of a home is to reflect and to distribute the love of Christ.  Anything that usurps that is idolatrous.  Having been lifted beyond the prejudice of culture, Jesus repositioned the place of wealth for his disciples.  So staggering was the impact that many of them in the years to come would leave their own homes to go to distant parts of the world in order to proclaim the heaven-sent message that redefined their earthly homes.  Eleven of them paid for that message with their lives.   
Tuesday, January 4, 2011 | By: John

Behold

One of the most powerful scenes in Scripture is when Jesus is on the cross and his mother comes to Him, along with his disciple John, who was a young man. They are both devastated at seeing their son and brother dying before them. When Jesus saw Mary, he said, "'Woman, behold your son!' Then He said to the disciple, 'Behold, your mother!'" Jesus was telling them to take care of each other, but he was also showing them a new way: He was making them into a new family.

Zheka, Pasha, Ira and Danya
On New Year's Eve, all of the young guys and girls at the house, Bogdan, Anya and their sons, Danya and Pasha, and I got dressed up to welcome in the night. There were games, lots of food and a lot of laughter. Bogdan and Anya had also invited Roma's brother Gena and Oxana's sister and brother to come for the week. All three of them still live at the orphanage. As the party was going on, I sat back and watched how Pasha right away loved Oxana's brother Andrei and how Danya was all over Gena. I saw Bogdan put his arm around Masha and then Andrei and how they drew ever so much closer to him. I saw how the girls watched Anya, followed her and helped however they could.

New Year's Eve

Yesterday, I had coffee with Zhenya, who works with Campus Crusade for Christ. Zhenya and I met many years ago at one of the concerts we did in Kremenchug, where he grew up. Zhenya got to know Lydia Petrovna and actually went into the prison with her for a year. As we were talking, Zhenya asked if I remembered Sasha--a young man who became a believer at one of our concerts in the prison and who lived with Lydia when he left the prison. He said that Sasha is now married, has a daughter, is working, is involved in his church and still sees Lydia as his grandmother.

When I returned here to the house, Anya and Pasha (who is almost 2) were in the house alone. As I walked in, Pasha took my hand and we played with some of his toys. Then Andrei, who is 22, came in and Pasha took him by the hand and took him to get a book for Andrei to read to him. Anya said that Pasha hates being alone and this is all he knows. He loves being with all of the guys and girls and sees them as his big brothers and sisters. This is his family. And it is mutual: when I saw Andrei's blog, I saw one post that said "I (heart) my family" and it had a series of photos of Anya, Bogdan, Danya, Pasha and all of the others here at the house. His family.

Anna Zhuk, Andrei, Pasha, Bogndan

Behold.