Noticias

Living Water at Festival in Thailand

Living Water at Festival in Thailand
Of all the festivals celebrated in Thailand, Songkran is considered the most significant. It is a time to celebrate Thai New Year with family ceremonies and “blessing” one another with water. In Chiang Mai, this tradition has turned into the country's biggest city-wide water fight, attracting visitors from around the world. This super wet shindig takes place around the city's moat and lasts for 3 days! Create International, a ministry of Youth With A Mission, joined in the fun this year.

Solidaridad en nuestra ciudad

Solidaridad en nuestra ciudad
El pasado miércoles 4, cerca de las 20 horas, gran parte de la zona oeste del conurbano bonaerense y aún Capital Federal, se vieron afectados por el paso de una tormenta que dejó dañosconsiderables.

En Ituzaingó, en las cercanías de nuestra base de JUCUM, los daños ocasionados por las ráfagas de viento, la lluvia y el granizo, dejaron miles de árboles caídos (el 50 por ciento), el 95 por ciento de laciudad sin luz, el 70 por ciento sin telefonía fija, más de cinco mil luminarias dejaron de funcionar, unos 500 comercios se vieron afectados y algunas cinco mil viviendas damnificadas.

Inmediatamente, el Municipio y Defensa Civil de la provincia comenzaron a trabajar, pero se vieron colapsados a las pocas horas y solicitaron la ayuda de diversas organizaciones.

YWAM in Thailand takes DTS inside prison walls

YWAM in Thailand takes DTS inside prison walls
It’s been around seven years since Sophon was sent to the Ratchaburi prison in Central Thailand. He has almost completed the allotted punishment for the crime he committed so many years ago. His release is due at the end of this year. While he is excited, apprehension also clouds his outlook, as he is no longer certain what life looks like outside of his prison walls.

What Sophon does know, however, is that being in prison has truly changed him. For the better. A number of years ago, soon after he entered the prison, Sophon took a decision to follow the ways of Jesus. His journey of faith in Christ has brought him hope and a new understanding of what his life should be like. Sophon has been so swept away by the love of God that he has decided to serve God even after his upcoming release. “I want to serve God and have God help me in areas in my life that are not right yet,” Sophon says.

A story for St. Patrick's Day!

A story for St. Patrick's Day!
Maewyn Succat was born to a well-to-do British Roman family in roughly 400 AD in Kilpatrick, Scotland. He enjoyed the status of middle class wealth, and the prestige of having a preacher grandfather and a deacon father in the young Christian church. Maewyn, however, while reveling in the comfortable position of his family, rejected anything to do with their faith. However, everything changed for the young Briton when he was kidnapped by Irish pirates at the age of 16, and dragged to the neighbouring country where he was forced into slavery.

Pioneering YWAM work in the Democratic Republic of Congo

Pioneering YWAM work in the Democratic Republic of Congo
No country in Africa captures the extremes of the continent like the Democratic Republic of Congo. A massive nation with vast natural resources, it ought be one of the wealthiest countries on earth, and yet today, it is ranked as one of the poorest. Stunningly beautiful, it has been scarred by ugly deeds — 5 million people dead as a result of the years of simmering warfare over the last two decades.

The eastern Democratic Republic of Congo has been hit hard by the war. The region has thick, often impenetrable rainforest, with few tarred roads. Travel there is painfully slow. One Congolese family had a grueling struggle to attend a DTS at Arua in Uganda. Their 1000km journey from Isiro took an incredible 14 days. The couple travelled with their toddler by bicycle, motorbike, foot and car. On the way they got lost, were separated from each other for several days, were robbed, and suffered severe exhaustion. They survived on a meager diet of rice alone. They arrived in Arua not knowing the language, yet convinced that God wanted them there, and that they needed to do the DTS: perseverance, tenacity, and faith!

¡Crecen los Ministerios de Barcos Equipados de JUCUM!

¡Crecen los Ministerios de Barcos Equipados de JUCUM!
La visión de Juventud Con Una Misión de operar con barcos en el mar para propósitos ministeriales, vino a Loren Cunningham (Co-fundador de JUCUM) por allá en 1964 durante una cruzada en las Bahamas que habían sido devastadas por el huracán Cleo. El primer intento, lamentablemente suspendido, de comprar un barco fue en 1974 con el m/v Maori en Nueva Zelanda. Con la compra del crucero ex italiano de 11,750 toneladas llamado m/v Victoria, re nombrado luego como el m/v Anastasis en 1978 y su subsecuente transformación en un barco hospital, nacieron los Ministerios de Barcos Equipados de JUCUM.

Desde 1978, JUCUM siempre ha operado navíos de diversos tipos y tamaños, barcos viejos a punto de ser “retirados” y barcos nuevos tomando su lugar. Ahora la visión de operar navíos de diferentes diseños para fomentar la propagación del mensaje de Cristo a través de las tres actividades principales de JUCUM: Evangelismo, Entrenamiento y Ministerios de Misericordia, se está acelerando con el hermanamiento del campus de la Universidad de las Naciones (UofN por sus siglas en inglés) con los Ministerios de Barcos Equipados.

That's The Spirit!

Munich 1972
Lynn Green, previously International Chairman of YWAM and member of the global eldership, looks back 40 years to the first Olympic outreach, and wonders what God will do this time...

I have been in YWAM for over 40 years now. I have been involved with some remarkable projects, and have seen God do some amazing things in and through YWAM. The Olympic outreach in Munich in 1972 is one of those memorable events!

YWAM celebrates 20 years in Mongolia with a new Biblical Studies program

YWAM celebrates 20 years in Mongolia with a new Biblical Studies program
In early 1990, high inflation and food shortages racked what was known then as The People’s Republic of Mongolia. Despite the recent peaceful democratic revolution, little hope seemed present in the Asian country. Especially for the church. After 70 years of Communism, Mongolia was one of the few countries with no known churches or even native believers.

The first missionaries in over 60 years, a group of Native Americans, arrived in the country in 1990. And in 1991, the first YWAMers arrived. Beginning with only 14 Mongolian believers, all of them teenage girls, the YWAM team faced many hurdles in their attempts to plant an active, vibrant church in Erdenet, Mongolia. But without a doubt, God had His hands on the church of Mongolia. Today, the country not only celebrates 20 years of religious freedom, but also that Christians make up 1.7% of the population.

"I'm Glad I Was Born in a Slum...!"

"I'm Glad I Was Born in a Slum...!"
I am glad I was born in a slum.”

When Suchada Nantavong speaks the claim, her smile stretches from ear to ear — and those around her are shocked. She continues, “...and through that God has given me understanding to be able to work in the slums in Phnom Penh.”

Most people who are in slums are desperate get out, and Suchada was one who succeeded in doing just that. However, she chose to go back. This time with Jesus’s heart, hands, and love. She pours all these characteristics out in the biggest slum in Phnom Penh, the capital of Cambodia.

Amar a través de las culturas – una especialidad de JUCUM

Amar a través de las culturas – una especialidad de JUCUM
Toma un grupo numeroso de gente joven, aventurera y creativa de ambos sexos y varias nacionalidades, júntalos por un periodo largo de tiempo, añádele algunas experiencias memorables en algún lugar de la Tierra (preferiblemente en circunstancias difíciles de vida), condimenta la mezcla con un entusiasmo para cambiar el mundo y revuelve bien. Luego observa lo que sucede…

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