A Blog About Life and Ministry in the "Pearl of the Antilles"

Zachary and Sharon Segaar-King, along with their children, Hannah, Vivian, Isaiah, and Esther, who are serving with Resonate Global Mission







Saturday, November 30, 2013

Segaar-King November Ministry Update

Dear Friends and Family:
“He threw himself at his feet and thanked him—and he was a Samaritan.”  Thus Luke pointed out that only one of the ten lepers came back to give thanks after Jesus healed him of leprosy (Luke 17:11-19).  The one who returned was a Samaritan, a race hated and excluded by Jesus’ Jewish peers, and yet he found the will and words to give thanks for God’s grace.  If the leper was so thankful for physical healing, how much more do we, who have been healed body and soul, have to give thanks?  This Thanksgiving let us return to the feet of Jesus to give thanks like  the Samaritan.
Please join us in giving thanks for:
-Our lively and growing family that brings us so much joy so far from our original home.
-A daily opportunity to give our full-time efforts to ministry because of your generous support.  So many foreigners with the desire to serve can only stay in Haiti a few weeks a year because of their vocations!  We stay all year round!
-Love.  This simple, yet profound word was what our four-year-old daughter carefully spelled out first on her list of what she was thankful for this year.  We are thankful for God’s love, love from others and love that we get the opportunity to express toward others.
-A successful five-day evaluation of the last three years of work done by the Christian Reformed Church of Haiti.  There is much for which to give thanks!
Please join us in praying for:
-God to raise up visiting teams from our supporting churches that would like to come to Haiti and help us to complete the Ministry for Christian Development Conference Center this spring, 2014.  If you are interested, contact us as soon as possible.
-A good start to the Savannette church construction project.  By the end of first week of December, the construction team will break ground.
-Generous support during this Christmas season for the upcoming seminar, “Obstacles to Ministry and Biblical Solutions,” which we are holding in March, 2014, to assist pastors with the challenges facing them in ministry. 
 

 
PLEASE SEE OUR ATTACHED DECEMEBER NEWSLETTER!

FOR MORE PICTURES, STORIES, AND INFORMATION ABOUT OUR MINISTRY AND FAMILY, PLEASE SEE OUR BLOG AT segaarking.blogspot.com

Thanks for your prayers and support,
Zachary, Sharon, Hannah, Isaiah, Vivian and Esther Segaar-King
Missionaries to Haiti
Christian Reformed World Missions

 

A Christmas Gift for a Pastor


Pastor Jean-Baptist, has a difficult life.  He rises at 4:30 a.m. for devotions, to prepare his children for school, and to catch the overcrowded bus.  Much of the day is dedicated to his paying-profession of construction because, like most Haitian pastors, his congregation does not compensate him.  By 3:00 p.m. he is exhausted but heading to the hospital to visit a parishioner who nearly died of pneumonia.  After a quick stop at home to put on his tie and jacket, he is off to the evening prayer meeting at church where he will be asked by several parishioners for loans to pay school fees.  Pastor Jean-Baptist finishes the day hungry, exhausted and with empty pockets despite a full day of work.  Pastoral ministry in Haiti (and throughout the world) is fraught with dangers of burn-out, sexual and financial temptation, and even the loss of faith.  On March 26-28, Perspectives Réformées of Haiti (PRIHA) will be holding a conference entitled, “Obstacles to Ministry and Biblical Solutions,” to help pastors navigate these challenges.  Pastors Paul Mpindi, Zach King and Jacky Chery (PRIHA’s coordinator) will be presenting.  It is critical that we raise  $5K for the conference by January 15, 2014.  If you would like to support the project, please send checks to CRWM (at the address below with “PRIHA PROJ 805904” in the check’s memo line).  This is a great gift to give a pastor this Christmas!

 
Haitian pastors, like the ones pictured above, need all the help they can get to face the challenges of ministry.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Haiti and Typhoon Haiyan

In Haiti, located in the Caribbean's "hurricane alley," we are used to receiving devastating tropical cyclones.  Our last hurricane, Sandy, came at the end of the hurricane season last year.  Perhaps you will remember Sandy from the destruction it wrought upon New Jersey and New York.  When it hit Haiti, Sandy was had winds of 70 mph.  Typhoon Haiyan, which made landfall last week in the Philippines, had winds of 200 mph.  For us, there was a connection between Haiti and Haiyan.  Jeff Cosico, our colleague who has been working for the World Renew Disaster Response program in Leogane for the last several years, is a native of the Philippines.  In fact, he was in Haiti when the Typhoon hit his hometown on the other side of the world.  Jeff had a very difficult time getting into contact with his family in the Philippines for several days due the destruction of the communications infrastructure in his area.  However, he finally received a message that his family was not physically harmed.  His house, however, was another story.  Although his contractual employment with World Renew in Haiti was to end at the end of this month, Jeff felt compelled to return to the Philippines as soon as possible.  Please pray for Jeff and his family as they rebuild.  As we so well know, going through a natural disaster can be traumatic and discouraging.  Pray also for the relief operation that is underway in the affected areas of the Philippines.  Also, please give thanks that Haiti was spared a disastrous hurricane this season.
Jeff sent us a picture of his house in the Philippines.

Thursday, November 14, 2013

The Land of Tri-Level Bicycle Parking

Three level bicycle storage at Amsterdam Central Station

Bert Jan Peerbolte, Zach's Ph.D. supervisor, who is Professor of New Testament at the Free University

The one of the main academic buildings at the Free University where the Theology Faculty is housed
Last week Zach took his annual trip to Amsterdam for consultation with his Ph.D. supervisor, Bert Jan Peerbolte, from the Free University of Amsterdam.  The trip was the capstone of an unbelievably busy October in which we received a number of visiting delegations, wrote a new strategic plan for 2014-2017, and did ministry training.  Thankfully, this time Zach had something to present--the first two chapters (about 97 pages) of his dissertation on eschatology and missiology in the parables of Matthew, Mark and Luke (which he wrote last summer in Grand Rapids).  Zach was pretty nervous about how they would be received since he has been out of academics for nearly a decade.  However, Bert Jan was happy with the chapters and only suggested some minor changes.  While at the Free University, Zach wrote 27 pages of the third chapter as well.  Zach's objective is to graduate in 2016 and do most of the writing in 2014 and 15 (during four months of study leave).  While in Amsterdam, Zach stayed with Brenda Heyink and Matthijs Kronemeijer at the Gemeenschap Oudezijds 100 Christian Community.  Brenda is a former colleague from CRWM and friend from Calvin Seminary.  Her husband, Matthijs, works for the Chaplain Service of the Dutch military.  The community is located in the heart of the "Red-Light District" in old Amsterdam, where tourists come from all over the world for legalized pot, prostitution, and a lot of drinking/partying.  Oudezijds 100 Community is a light for Christ in a place where the churches are museums and spiritual darkness is palpable.  Please pray for Zach as he tries to be faithful to God's calling for him to deepen his knowledge of Scripture so that he can better teach those God has entrusted to him.  It is very, very, very hard trying to find time to work on this project in Haiti!