All the Right Ingredients

clock May 21, 2010 17:51 by author bryonmondok

The Garcia’s consistently send out a great newsletter. It’s timely. It’s informative. It has a great balance of all the right ingredients. They post it to their blog and it also arrives electronically in my email inbox.

Here is a list of the ingredients that make their newsletter a great communication tool.

  1. News about their ministry.
  2. Family news.
  3. Prayer needs.
  4. Financial needs including budget status.
  5. Praise reports.

These five ingredients are a great template for any newsletter. Sometimes when you sit down to write, your mind goes blank. Every missionary experiences this. In fact, anyone that must use communication as part of the ministry goes through this. There are two things you can do to overcome this.

First, make the time. That’s the biggest part of the battle. Actually sitting down to write you supporters is the lowest priority in our busy ministry lives. This must change in order to keep your pool of supporters from shrinking.

Second, make notes. On a piece of paper that you keep in a journal or somewhere on your desk, create headings from the above list and jot down ideas and events that take place day-to-day under the appropriate heading. Believe it or not, this is over 75% of the task. All you have to do now is string your notes together in a way that will make sense to your readers.

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21st-Century Slavery

clock March 11, 2010 13:20 by author bryonmondok

Allen Allnoch is a Shepherd’s Staff missionary and a fantastic writer. Allen’s home is in Bluffton, SC, and his mission field is in South Africa. Check out his blog.

In preparing lessons for our after-school children’s programs this week, I’ve had to grapple with an extremely troubling issue: human trafficking. As the soccer World Cup approaches in June, we’re trying to make children and teenagers aware that traffickers are expected to descend on Cape Town in large numbers.

The depth of evil associated with this issue is astonishing. I was shocked to read that today, despite more than a dozen international conventions banning slavery in the past century and a half, there are more slaves than at any point in human history. Children are lured away from their homes (or off the streets for those who have no homes), with the promise of a better life. People of all ages are bought and sold as if they are nothing more than cattle. Kids as young as 3 and 4 are exploited sexually , offered up for prostitution and for pornographic purposes. The list of atrocities is long and painful to confront.

The problem is especially acute in South Africa, where there are an estimated 38,000 children trapped in the sex trade. According to a January 18 article in Time magazine, “More than 500 mostly small-scale trafficking syndicates … collude with South African partners, including recruiters and corrupt police officials, to enslave local victims.”  For the four-week period of the World Cup, Cape Town public schools will be closed, meaning more children will be on the streets and vulnerable to those who would seek to take advantage of them.

I can’t comprehend the hardness of heart that would compel a person to treat a child, or person of any age, in this way. If you don’t believe Satan is real, then just google human trafficking and read some of the horror stories. Only a supernatural force of evil could influence people to sink to such depths.

But there is hope in the One who has already overcome the devil and all the havoc he has wreaked on the world. God is a God of justice and He “works righteousness and justice for all the oppressed” (Psalm 103:6). He has made it clear in Scripture that He loves children and all who are oppressed, and that there is misery in store for those who mistreat children:

Jesus “called a little child and had him stand among them. And He said … if anyone causes one of these little ones who believe in me to sin, it would be better for him to have a large millstone hung around his neck and to be drowned in the depths of the sea” (Matthew 18: 2-3, 6).

“If God is for us, who can be against us?” Paul rhetorically asked in Romans 8:31. Still, these little ones need your prayers, as do teenagers and others who are vulnerable to those who would exploit them. For more insight into South Africa’s human trafficking crisis, see http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1952335,00.html. For more information on the issue in general, see http://www.justiceacts.org.

Allen’s Blog

Allen’s Missionary Page

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Calvary International Fellowship: Some Communication Issues..

clock February 27, 2009 23:11 by author bryonmondok

Believe it or not, in the early days of the  web I did some web design and was was very familiar with all things webby. Those were definitely web 1.0 days. Going to the mission field and dealing with 9.6kps (on a good day) slowed everything down. We have done our best to not allow technology to pass us by, but besides Kelli and the kids venturing into Facebook, we can just barely make out the taillights of web 2.0 far ahead on our horizon.

Uttermost Feb 09 2 All of that to say a dear friend is currently reworking the CIF Website and I am slowly catching up. As I'm learning I figured out how to post our personal missionary newsletters. So below are some links to our three most recent missionary newsletters. Sorry, you'll need to print and fold them yourself.

While I'm on this issue I would like to instigate a dialogue regarding snail mail versus hardcopy missionary newsletters. Back in the day, when we first went to the mission field, and even as I taught missionary communication at FIT with Shepherd's Staff, we all held to the idea that email and Internet newsletters for missionaries were not a good idea. It was believed that very few people would read something online and even fewer would translate the computer screen to actual prayer. That was then, this is now. It is a whole new world out there now and it is certainly a whole new world wide web --thus I need someone to build a site for us...

Okay, I'm definitely going on too long, but I'm wondering if the days of the snail mail hardcopy missionary newsletter is passé. Please give me some feedback on this. We are not making any decisions in the immediate future, but with our furlough coming up in couple months it may be time to transition into more blogging, Facebooking and Youtubing to keep in touch rather than pay for printing and postage. It is my feeling that there is still a generation of people that would rather have something in hand every two months, but I want to hear.

By the way, cool missionary refrigerator magnets will ALWAYS be in style. Thank you for the feedback...

Here are some back issue of the oldschool old missionary newsletters --Just click and download...

October 08

December 08

February 09

Calvary International Fellowship: Some Communication Issues...

Compean Missionary Page

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New Blogs

clock December 28, 2007 21:13 by author bryonmondok

I've created blogs for Jeff Jackson and Trip Kimball. They are not set up yet. Jeff, your blog is here: Link; Trip, your blog is here: Link. There are some things you guys can do to them, and some things I have to do to them to continue to customize them up. One thing I'll need from each of you is a mug shot for your blog. I'll have to upload that. Right now, the blogs are ready for yopu guys to set up. I can give you any help you need so let me know what I can do to help. If you think this is not user friendly enough, I can walk you through.

By the way, skip down to the username and password paragraph info.

 

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Blogging Ideas

clock December 7, 2007 02:04 by author bryonmondok

I read this useful post today:

Where do you find your ideas? I take inspiration from everywhere! Sometimes an idea pops in my head while I’m driving, or reading or watching television, other times I visit another blog or website and think, “hmmm….I’d like to expand on that.” There’s nothing wrong with taking your inspiration from other sources, as long as you remember to provide attribution.

All writers and bloggers borrow ideas. The good writers and bloggers know enough to thank and credit the person with the original idea. Some unethical writers borrow words and topics while misleading their readers into thinking their ideas are original.

If you come across an article or blog post and feel this is a subject you would like to discuss with your readers, by all means do so. But please do the right thing and give a nod to the person who wrote the original piece. Here’s the problem with constantly taking other writers’ ideas: 

Read the rest of the post here.

HT: Freelance Writing Jobs 

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