All posts tagged compassion international

Compassion Question #1

What is the criteria (denominational, doctrinal, etc). Compassion uses for selecting which local churches they will work with?

That’s an important question, and here’s the answer.

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If you make a purchase after you click on some of the product links in a post or after you use an on-line shopping link in the sidebar, I receive a small commission, which costs you nothing extra. I recommend only items that I think will be of interest to my readers and that I probably have used personally or wish I had.
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I hope you’ll also visit my other blog–NoelPiper.com

Ask your questions about Compassion

You can tell by its name, Tell Me When to Pack, that this is my travel blog. I’ve been writing here about the Compassion Sponsor Tour Talitha and I took to Guatemala, because that was definitely a trip.

But we’re home now and as I’ve said before here and here, the ministry of Compassion International is intertwined with other special interests of mine. Adoption, disabilities, and poverty are not limited to places one must travel to, so I’m shifting to NoelPiper.com to write my remaining thoughts and observations from Compassion and Guatemala.

Today, I’m thinking about Compassion’s Child Development Centers. Before we traveled, I was fuzzy about how Compassion relates to an individual child. One of the days of our tour was spent at a Center. Here’s some of what I learned . . .

Please read the rest and comment to ask any questions you have about Compassion. You’ll also find the link to photos from the Compassion Center we visited.

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My travel photos may be viewed at my Shutterfly Share Site.
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Subscribe to Tell Me When To Pack. Use the links to the right or click here.
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If you make a purchase after you click on some of the product links in a post or after you use an on-line shopping link in the sidebar, I receive a small commission, which costs you nothing extra. I recommend only items that I think will be of interest to my readers and that I probably have used personally or wish I had.
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I hope you’ll also visit my other blog–NoelPiper.com

Photo story: Visiting the home of a Compassion child

 

 

 

As part of our Compassion International Sponsor Tour in Guatemala, one morning we made a visit to the home of a child who is part of the Compassion Child Development Program (CDP). In another post, I plan to write more about the CDP projects.

Our large group of sponsors was divided into smaller groups so we could go to different homes and not completely overwhelm a household. Each family had already given permission for a visit. These were not the homes of any of the children sponsored by any in our tour. But our visits would give us a better idea of how our sponsored children live, and of the effect of the CDP in a family.

The neighborhood we were in was at the top of a large hill (small mountain?). If you’ve ever seen–in person or in a photo–a hillside totally covered with tin-roofed small houses, that’s where we were–at the top of one of those hills, like this:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

From the street, we walked down crumbly steps to the family’s house.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The house is one room wide, with each room on a different level, reaching further down the hill.  and opening onto the tiny hardpacked dirt yard.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Angel is almost 5 and has been part of the Compassion Child Development Program just a few months.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We hear that Angel is lively and happy at the Compassion Center. But when we were there, he was tight-lipped and unmoving, even when his grandma and sister tried to persuade him to interact with us.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Do You Want a Friend?I’ve raised 4 sons. I know that look. It says, “Nope. Nobody’s going to tell me what to say or how to act.” Even a story didn’t move him, when Loida read from Do You Want a Friend? , into which my Dominican friend Raquel had written the Spanish translation of each page.

The rest of the family was more welcoming: Grandpa, who earns by wood- and metal-working; Angel’s mother, whom we didn’t meet because she was at work an hour away; his aunt, who earns as a seamstress; the aunt’s small daughter; Angel’s 3 sisters; and Grandma, whose cooking and housekeeping makes a home for them all.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

All of these live in 3 rooms. The aunt has one room for herself and her seamstress work.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In another room 3 people sleep in each bed.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We prayed with the family in the kitchen, which is a separate room across the yard.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

By the end, a lollipop and bandanna had done their work to loosen Angel up a bit.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Later in the afternoon, one of our group talked with Angel at the Compassion Center: “Why didn’t you talk with us. Were you mad?” He smiled and said, “Yes, I was mad.”

See, I told you I knew little-boy attitudes. They’re pretty much the same in Spanish as in English.

You can see the rest of my photos from the home visit too.

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My travel photos may be viewed at my Shutterfly Share Site.
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Subscribe to Tell Me When To Pack. Use the links to the right or click here.
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If you make a purchase after you click on some of the product links in a post or after you use an on-line shopping link in the sidebar, I receive a small commission, which costs you nothing extra. I recommend only items that I think will be of interest to my readers and that I probably have used personally or wish I had.
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I hope you’ll also visit my other blog–NoelPiper.com

Yes, I was there too

 

 

 

 

Earlier I posted  links to my photos and a video from Talitha’s amazing day with Juan, the child she sponsors through Compassion International.

There was also a Compassion photographer snapping throughout the day. So here are a few more photos, and since some else was shooting, I’m actually in several of them.

 

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My travel photos may be viewed at my Shutterfly Share Site.
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Subscribe to Tell Me When To Pack. Use the links to the right or click here.
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If you make a purchase after you click on some of the product links in a post or after you use an on-line shopping link in the sidebar, I receive a small commission, which costs you nothing extra. I recommend only items that I think will be of interest to my readers and that I probably have used personally or wish I had.
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I hope you’ll also visit my other blog–NoelPiper.com

Faces

 

 

 

 

My last post included photos that tell Talitha and Juan’s story. Here are a few more of faces (and clothes) that caught my eye.

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My travel photos may be viewed at my Shutterfly Share Site.
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Subscribe to Tell Me When To Pack. Use the links to the right or click here.
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If you make a purchase after you click on some of the product links in a post or after you use an on-line shopping link in the sidebar, I receive a small commission, which costs you nothing extra. I recommend only items that I think will be of interest to my readers and that I probably have used personally or wish I had.
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I hope you’ll also visit my other blog–NoelPiper.com

Talitha meets Juan

 

 

 

 

Here in Guatemala, this was the day Talitha has been waiting for–the day for meeting Juan, the 5-year-old she sponsors through Compassion International.

I was blessed to be an observer while Juan’s hugs sucked a willing Talitha into a whirl of words, love, tears, prayers, games, laughs, songs, and precious gifts.

It’s a day that falls most easily into the category of a picture is worth a thousand words. So these photos should substitute well for several tens of thousands of words.

I’m not sure how many words a video is worth. See what you think. Listen for my favorite comment from Juan. Yes, I’m sure you’ll recognize it when you hear it.


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My travel photos may be viewed at my Shutterfly Share Site.
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Subscribe to Tell Me When To Pack. Use the links to the right or click here.
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If you make a purchase after you click on some of the product links in a post or after you use an on-line shopping link in the sidebar, I receive a small commission, which costs you nothing extra. I recommend only items that I think will be of interest to my readers and that I probably have used personally or wish I had.
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I hope you’ll also visit my other blog–NoelPiper.com

“I’m crying, just talking about it”

 

 

 

At lunch today I visited with Pedro. He’s a full-time university student, studying marketing and business, pressing ahead with a heavy class load to be finished as soon as he can. Still he makes time to work as a translator for Compassion whenever he can.

There will be lots of translators with our group on Saturday when we sponsors meet “our” children, so there are enough to go around for all the meeting and getting acquainted that will be going on.

I asked Pedro if Compassion pays the translators. “Yes, we get paid. But all of us would do it for free. We love doing what we do.”

Pedro has been involved in this way with Compassion for about 2 years and has been present for approximately 30 sponsor-child meetings. He had lots to say about those special days. (This isn’t a totally direct quote, but close).

I always cry when the children and sponsors meet for the first time. It’s such an emotional moment. It never gets old.  It makes such a difference for the child and for the sponsor. Afterward, the sponsors pray for the children in a new way.

There is always a time for sponsors and their child and his or her family to exchange prayer requests. I’d say that 70% of the children and families don’t ask for anything. They just express great thanks and say a general sort of “pray for us.”

I remember one 80-something grandfather during a home visit. He remained in a hammock because he’d been injured in a fall. His wife couldn’t hear. You could look around at the house and see parts of it collapsing, because they couldn’t afford to repair it. But when we asked him how we could pray for the family, all he said was, “I am so thankful to be alive, to wake up every morning, to have a job.” (He’s 80 years old and he’s still working!).

Every time I finish one of these days, I go home and fall on my knees and thank God.

I’m already crying, just thinking about it. Just wait till you meet Juan.

As Pedro talked, a mental video was running in my head, thanks to our daughter-in-law Molly‘s visit a couple of years ago with “their” child in Salvador.


We are waiting. For Saturday when Talitha will meet Juan.

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My travel photos may be viewed at my Shutterfly Share Site.
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Subscribe to Tell Me When To Pack. Use the links to the right or click here.
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If you make a purchase after you click on some of the product links in a post or after you use an on-line shopping link in the sidebar, I receive a small commission, which costs you nothing extra. I recommend only items that I think will be of interest to my readers and that I probably have used personally or wish I had.
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I hope you’ll also visit my other blog–NoelPiper.com

Ripples of love


 

 

 

Talitha and I left Minneapolis this morning with 4 bags. Two held our personal belongings. The other 2 were packed to the 50-lb limit with items to minister and bless here in Guatemala. Here are a few photos from the day.

Talitha has often traveled with me when I’ve been going somewhere. This time it’s flip-flopped– it’s her trip and I’m getting to tag along. I’m having a good time watching her excitement, waiting for Saturday when she’ll meet Juan, who she’s been sponsoring for a little over a year.

In the meantime, tomorrow we and the other sponsors who are here will meet the Guatemala Compassion national staff and tomorrow evening we’ll visit with some university students who are former Compassion children. I expect to hear stories that will emphasize the long-term effects of the faithful ministry of Compassion sponsors.

For example, here’s a story that one of you told when you commented at an earlier post about Talitha and Compassion.

Sponsoring a child is very near and dear to my heart because my mother was sponsored as a child by a Christian couple (they even visited her in Taiwan)! Because she was sponsored, she received a primary school education and went on to receive scholarships to continue her education. She eventually became a nurse. When she married my father and came to the US, she didn’t speak a word of English. She took me and my twin sister to church because she knew she would be able to find good people there who would help her in a new foriegn land. Because she took us to church, we heard the gospel and eventually became believers as adults.

The ripples of your love and support as a sponsor has depths beyond your comprehension. God is truly amazing.

 

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My travel photos may be viewed at my Shutterfly Share Site.
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Subscribe to Tell Me When To Pack. Use the links to the right or click here.
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If you make a purchase after you click on some of the product links in a post or after you use an on-line shopping link in the sidebar, I receive a small commission, which costs you nothing extra. I recommend only items that I think will be of interest to my readers and that I probably have used personally or wish I had.
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I hope you’ll also visit my other blog–NoelPiper.com

Off to Guatemala

Talitha and I leave in a few minutes for Guatemala with a Compassion International sponsor tour. Talitha will be meeting Juan, the little boy she’s been sponsoring for more than a year.

Talitha wrote about our trip and Juan and Compassion a couple of months ago.

I hope to have time and connection along the way to let you in on what’s happening.

If you’re not subscribed to this blog yet, this would be a good time, so you don’t miss anything.

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My travel photos may be viewed at my Shutterfly Share Site.
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Subscribe to Tell Me When To Pack. Use the links to the right or click here.
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If you make a purchase after you click on some of the product links in a post or after you use an on-line shopping link in the sidebar, I receive a small commission, which costs you nothing extra. I recommend only items that I think will be of interest to my readers and that I probably have used personally or wish I had.
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I hope you’ll also visit my other blog–NoelPiper.com

Have a heart!

Our 16-year-old Talitha has a heart for children. This has led her in ever-widening circles of connection, even beyond America.

There’s a way you can bless her this week. Please check it out.