
Christina
Tipa, happy with her new prosthetic arm
The Cornesti Orphanage
in Moldova---eastern Europe's poorest nation---is a heart-rending place. It is
state-run, underfunded and understaffed. Over a hundred children are
crowded inside an old building that still bears the communist hammer and
sickle on its exterior wall.
|
|
 |
Because of an inadequate sewer system,
a foul
smell
permeates the entire building. The food is poor and mostly starch. Many
of the children are dirty. The female staff who serve them are overwhelmed. No
child should live in such a place.
Thankfully, two people
who are full of Christ have felt His heart for the orphans at Cornesti.
Romanian missionaries Ghiorghi and Christina Cazacu have been doing everything
they can to make life better for the children there. They've repeatedly brought
shoes, clothing, nourishing food, and the gospel. Our team of ten who visited
Cornesti in July added to some of that blessing with suitcases full of clothing
and stuffed animals.
But there is even better
news. Ghiorghi and Christina have personally adopted five Romanian orphans, and
their example is motivating other believers in Romania and Moldova to do the
same, a novel concept in their part of the world. They have a dream to empty
Cornesti Orphanage by the power of God. More details of our time in Romania and
Moldova follow in this update, along with other encouraging reports from around
the world. God's grace in you helped make them possible. Thanks so much. ---
David
Abducted, Exploited, Redeemed: Christina's Story
HF/I
Was Hungry

Christina
Tipa, age 12, with her new prosthetic arm, between Ghiorghi and Christina
Cazacu
On a cold evening in
Romania, a little baby named Christina Tipa was placed by her grandmother on a
bed that sat beside a wood-burning stove. She wanted Christina, who was not yet
one year old, to stay warm while she slept. Tragically, however, Christina
rolled off the bed during the night, landing directly on the stove top. By the
time her grandmother pulled her screaming granddaughter from the stove, one
side of Christina's body was severely burned.
Doctors did not expect
Christina to live, but they did what they could. When gangrene was discovered
in her left arm, they amputated it right below her elbow. The infection was not
contained, however, and so they had no choice but to amputate the remainder of
her arm.
Amazingly, baby
Christina lived.
Months later,
Christina's young father died of tuberculosis, leaving her and her mother in
desperate poverty. In their vulnerability, they became prey to criminals
who, seeing an opportunity to profit from Christina's
handicap, abducted them both. Each day their captors would place little
Christina on public sidewalks to beg---with her shoulder exposed---and a
sign was hung around her neck that read, "Please help me buy a prosthetic
arm." They would watch from a distance and empty her cup when it was full
of money. Moving from city to city in eastern Europe to avoid arousing
suspicion, Christina's captors enjoyed their profits while keeping her and her
mother terrorized.
Years went by. Both
mother and daughter once succeeded in escaping, but their captors found them
again, and before Christina's eyes they brutally murdered the person who had
helped them escape---a legless man whom they were exploiting in the same way as
Christina. Then, as Christina watched in horror, they severely beat her mother
and later dumped her body, believing she was dead. She survived, however, and
lived long enough to tell authorities and her sister---Christina's aunt---of
their ordeal. Unfortunately, Christina's captors
escaped apprehension and continued moving her from city to city,
living off the money that compassionate pedestrians dropped into her cup.
When Christina was
seven, her aunt was shopping in the city of Odessa, Ukraine. She noticed a
young girl without a left arm begging on the street and began questioning her,
certain she was her niece. She called the police and ultimately was able to
take Christina home with her to Moldova. How I wish that were the happy
ending to this tragic story. Christina's aunt, however, placed her in the
Cornesti Orphanage.
It was at that
orphanage that Christina was noticed by Ghiorghi and Christina Cazacu, who were
moved with compassion to help her, especially after they heard her story. They
led her to Jesus and became her advocates. Just two months ago, Christina
received her new prosthetic arm. And she has since moved in with her aunt, whom
Ghiorghi and Christina are evangelizing.

Our team of ten got to
know Christina at a Christian summer camp for poor children, which is largely
funded by the Cazacu's ministry. Christina has a very precious spirit, and she
is a follower of Jesus. We all fell in love with her.
Still, one problem
remains for Christina. Because of scar tissue from her burn, her left leg is
not developing properly and is almost half the diameter of her right leg. When
she bends her knee, her knee cap moves far to one side because of pressure from
the inflexible scar. She needs skin grafts on her leg and left torso that will
enable her to develop normally.
I promised Christina
that I would tell my friends about her, and that we would help her with the
money she needs for surgery. For that, I received a very long hug. A happier
ending is in sight!
Three Homes of Hope...So Far
HF/Orphan's
Tear

The
Cazacus along with six adopted orphans and their new parents at one of three
"Homes of Hope" (under construction, but occupied)
Eight years ago,
Ghiorghi and Christina Cazacu adopted a little Romanian orphan girl named
Nicoletta who, like Christina mentioned in the previous article, had been severely
burned as a baby. The left side of her face was very disfigured and some of her
fingers were fused together. To date, Nicoletta has endured surgery and
skin grafts twenty-four times. She is now 14 and very happy to have a mother
and father.
It was always Ghiorghi
and Christina's dream to adopt Nicoletta's three younger siblings as well, and
last year, after lengthly legal proceedings, their dreams came true. Their
family of three grew to six with the adoption of Hadasah, Leah, and David (new
names that they each chose for themselves). Finally, the Cazacus adopted a
beautiful baby boy named Daniel. Their family of five adopted orphans has
become the first of three existing "Homes of Hope" in Eastern Europe.
While traveling across
Moldova, our American team was blessed to visit one of the other two
"Homes of Hope." There we met ten-year-old Boris, who previously
lived at the Cornesti Orphanage. Boris' mother had abandoned him, and his
drunken father chained him every day to a dog house while he was getting drunk
elsewhere. At the Cornesti Orphanage, Boris had cried in Ghiorghi's arms,
saying that he had no mother or father to love him. Ghiorghi vowed that he
would try to do something for Boris.

Five of the
adopted orphans at the Home of Hope in Meleseni (Boris is second from the
left)
As a result, Boris is
now being adopted along with five other children by a Moldovan pastor and his
wife. Ghiorghi and Christina's ministry is funding the building of their new
house in the Romanian village of Meleseni (see photo above), where there is no
existing church. That new house is thus not only a home for a pastor, his wife,
and their six newly-adopted children, but is also a meeting place for a house
church in a village where there was no gospel witness. And the very same thing
is being done by a pastor and his wife and their three adopted orphans in a
third "Home of Hope" in Transnistria, a little-known nation that lies
between Moldova and Ukraine. All of this is because of Ghiorghi and Christina's
example, influence and support.
The greatest hindrance
to orphan adoption by Christians in Eastern Europe is their poverty. Believers
who are willing to adopt orphans can't afford the simple day-to-day
expenses. Through our Orphan's Tear division, however, we're partnering with Ghiorghi and Christina to
help connect monthly sponsors to the children living at their Homes of Hope. If
you would like to "adopt" one of the Home of Hope children with a $20
per month sponsorship, that will go a long way to supplement the costs of
raising a former orphan in Eastern Europe's poorest nation. If you are already
sponsoring a child elsewhere through Orphan's Tear, perhaps you will want to add a Moldovan child
to your "portfolio." Just click here, and then select "Moldova", to learn more about the children's stories. Thanks so much.
Dinner with the Dead
HF/Shepherd
Serve

A
common sight in Romania and Moldova: Permanent picnic tables in a graveyard,
used to eat meals with departed loved ones on certain days prescribed by the
Orthodox Church.
As I met with pastors
during our time in Romania and Moldova, I repeatedly heard stories of the
persecution that they face, and the source was always the same: Romanian
Orthodox priests. Romanian Orthodoxy is deeply ingrained in the culture, and
evangelical Christians are considered to be a sect.
The derogatory term for them in Romania is "the repenters,"
a slur that is actually quite complimentary.
One pastor
named Viorel Calancea told us a wonderful story of the first time he
proclaimed the gospel in the square of the village where he now pastors. A
contingency of Orthodox priests arrived while he was preaching, and one of them
read Galatians 1:9 before the gathered crowd: "If any man is
preaching to you a gospel contrary to what you received, he is to be
accursed!"
Quickly looking to the
Lord for wisdom, Viorel asked the priest to also read Matthew 23 from
the same Bible for everyone's benefit. The priest turned to that chapter, read
it silently, and then said, "I am not your personal secretary to read at
your bidding!" So Viorel asked if he could borrow the priest's
Bible to read Matthew 23 to the crowd, to which the priest, feeling the public
pressure, acquiesced.
When Viorel finished
reading Jesus' denunciation of the scribes and Pharisees, the crowd ordered the
contingency of priests to leave, threatening that they'd stone them if they
didn't! After that, Viorel said that he preached to the crowd until
midnight! A church was birthed in the village of Tatarasti!

Three
pastors with Romanian copies of TDMM. The one on the left is soon going to
Turkmenistan as a missionary.
I was blessed to share
the Word at two pastors' gatherings and hand out copies of the Romanian
translation of The Disciple-Making Minister, which is now in its second printing. I was also
blessed to listen to a number of testimonies from pastors and others of how
they have been helped from reading its thirty-three chapters. Doors continue to
open for its distribution across Romania, Moldova and Transnistria. One
Romanian pastor even told me how he's taken scores of copies with him to Italy
to give to Romanian-speaking Christian leaders there. Thanks so much for
helping us equip pastors around the world.
The Orphan's Tear Construction Company
HF/Orphan's
Tear

A
few of our orphanages under construction in Tanzania, Myanmar and Pakistan
When we started
the Orphan's Tear division
of Heaven's Family three-and-a-half
years ago, our intention was very simple. We wanted to find monthly sponsors
for children in impoverished Christian orphanages in Myanmar so that we could
help them have adequate food and clothing, along with Christian nurture and an
education. We never dreamed of building orphanage dorms, although the
orphanages that our children were living in were very inadequate, mostly built
of bamboo.
God has proven
Himself, however, to be the "Father of the fatherless" (Ps. 68:5) So
far, we've built solid brick dorms for thirteen of our orphanages, and we've
purchased houses that serve as dorms for five others. Beyond that, we currently
have buildings under construction (or about to start construction) for nine
more orphanages, and we've purchased land for four others with the intention of
building new dorms for them. We've also provided bathrooms, wells and
kitchens/dining halls for many. Through hundreds of people, the Lord has
provided hundreds of thousands of dollars for all of these projects. We are
amazed and thankful.
Due to the summer
slowdown, some of our orphanage construction projects have been halted, and
we'd like to get them started up again. These projects that provide adequate
and safe shelter for little followers of Christ all fall under the category of
"I was a stranger, and you invited Me in" (Matt. 25:35). Thanks to
all who have shown their love for Jesus in this way.
Kyrgyz Bread...of Life
HF/I
Was Hungry

Glad
to be in our family: Saltinat Chongmaroonova, reborn one month ago, with
two of her grandchildren.
There are no other
people on the face of the earth whom I admire more than missionaries who have
left friends, family and comforts to serve Jesus in a foreign land. Too often,
however, missionaries are not esteemed by the church as they should be, as
modern-day apostles. Rather, they feel like Paul, who described himself and
other apostles as "the scum of
the world, the dregs of all things" (1 Cor. 4:13). I recently heard a
story of some people who sent not only their worn-out clothing to some
missionaries ("good enough for them"), but also included their used
tea bags.
I wish every reader
could spend a week with missionaries John and Beth Carey who serve in the
central Asian nation of Kyrgyzstan. Among many other projects, they've been
reaching out to the poorest of the poor with food, medicine and the good news
of Jesus. Heaven's Family has
been assisting them through our Food Fund. John recently wrote,
Every
time I go to visit a family that is in need of support I am amazed at the
conditions that they live in. I often try to imagine my wife and children
living in those conditions with no hope of getting out of it. Single mothers,
the elderly, and invalids are usually the poorest of all. The weekly products
and medical assistance we provide helps to meet their daily needs, but
humanitarian aid alone will never lift them out of poverty and give them hope.
Their only true hope is in Jesus! And He is what we are bringing to them as
well...Two women have come to Christ through this outreach already and everyone
receiving aid has heard the gospel and is prayed for regularly...
One of those whom the
Careys have won to the Lord is Saltinat Chongmaroonova, pictured in the
photo above. She was abandoned by her husband many years ago and lives with her
daughter, also abandoned by her husband, and her two grandchildren. Living in
material as well as spiritual poverty, her heart was melted by the love of
Christ as she received much-needed practical help from the
Careys. She now regularly attends their house church and was publicly
baptized just a few weeks ago. Thanks for being part of her
transformation.
An International Blessed-Seller
The Disciple-Making
Minister recently reached a
publication milestone with 100,000 copies now in print in twenty languages.
Most have been given to pastors in poor nations, but TDMM is also finding a
readership among Christians and Christian leaders in wealthier nations. You can
order your own copy by clicking here.

Human Resources Needed
The small staff of Heaven's
Family is busier than ever as we
do our best to keep up with growth that has averaged seventy percent each year
over the past five years. We are in need of additional team members who not
only have a heart after God and a love for the "least of these" among
Jesus' family, but who also possess administrative or communication skills,
such as writing, editing, graphic/web design, photography and videography. We also
need a grant-writer/director of development as well as associate ministers.
Positions are open only to those who can be self-supported, but we can help
with that process. If you are interested, please send your resume' to HR@HeavensFamily.org.
Parting Shot
A
Portrait of Unrequited Love

Two
Christian campers in Moldova practice loving their neighbor, even though their
neighbor prefers less love!
All contributions to Heaven's Family or any of its three divisions are fully tax-deductible within the United States. Heaven's Family is also a registered charity in the U.K. and most gifts qualify for Gift Aid, significantly increasing the amount of your contribution. All three divisions of Heaven's Family share the same mailing address. Please send all gifts to either Heaven's Family, Shepherd Serve, Orphan's Tear or I Was Hungry at:
P.O. Box 12854
Pittsburgh, PA 15241
If your gift is for a specific project, please indicate which project on the memo line of your check. Most of our current projects are described at IWasHungry.org.
To donate securely by credit card to the Heaven's Family general fund though PayPal click here. You can donate securely by credit to any specific project by visiting IWasHungry.org. Thank you!
This Ministry Update is a communication of Heaven's Family, and it is our primary means of keeping our partners informed of their fruit. We are striving to serve Jesus by loving "the least of" His brethren”poor believers who live in less developed nations and who often suffer persecution for their faith. We are focusing on equipping Christian leaders with essential biblical truth, supporting Christian orphanages, and meeting very pressing material needs. We'd love to have you join our growing family. Please visit the websites of our three divisions: ShepherdServe.org, OrphansTear.org and IWasHungry.org.
|