… And my TODO list is depressingly long. I'm tackling my list, like a good girl.
You are welcome to watch me wrestle with questions, participate in a discussion, or smile since you've already figured it out.
Monday, October 13, 2014
I don't want to write a blog post today
It is rainy outside, perfect for snuggling under a blanket eating chocolate. Old movies are playing on TCM.
… And my TODO list is depressingly long. I'm tackling my list, like a good girl.
… And my TODO list is depressingly long. I'm tackling my list, like a good girl.
Tuesday, October 7, 2014
September Newsletter from Leif & Zhanya Camp
Several people have mentioned that
they did not receive my August prayer letter—I did feel a little bit encouraged
that my letter was missed, but also a little guilty, because I didn’t write
one. I had intended to, but things
piled up at the end of August and beginning of September—kids starting school,
moving English Worship, meetings etc. —so I ask for your understanding as I let
the prayer letter slip. Also, I have
been having trouble sending them out—they are getting blocked as spam, so
first, if you do not want to receive these, let me know. Second, if you know someone who wanted to
receive them but isn’t, pass them along as their server is probably blocking
mine. Anyway, below is my prayer letter
for September with a printable version attached. I must confess, the way I remember what I
have done each month is by the pictures I have taken—and this month I seemed to
forget my camera every where I went—so there are things that I have not written
about. To be honest, it is also not
always so convenient to photograph meetings and other things (and I’m not so
good at selfies when I am teaching or whatever). This month just flew by.
One other thing I wanted to say—this is off
the prayer letter topic, but something that has been on my mind—sort of a
meditation. I was thinking the other day
on Luke 15:4-7—the parable of the one lost sheep and rejoicing when it is
found. In my life I run across many lost
sheep—some even in my own family. And, yes, as a missionary and as a pastor, it
is my job to try to bring them into the fold.
But I don’t think this wonderful task is reserved only for pastors or
missionaries. As God has first loved
each of us, and as out of that great love He came to seek and save us, each of
us are called to be imitators of Christ. Now what if we each picked one lost
sheep we know in our lives and made bringing them into the fold a priority in
our prayers and our actions? I am not
saying we go looking for 10, or 100, or so many million Gospel touches, just
finding that one lost sheep and leading them into the fold. The idea that with God’s help we can do this
and cause the angels to rejoice seems marvelous. And there are so many lost sheep….
Blessings,
Leif
ЯБЛОКО YA-blah-kah—Apple
Psalm 17:8 Keep me as the apple of Your eye; Hide
me under the shadow of Your wings,
OK, so why apple? Well, it is the Trinity season, and one
symbol for the Trinity is an apple; also, three times maybe four (I always
liked those verses in Proverbs and Amos for the three/four construction!) the
phrase is used, three times to refer to God’s chosen people (which in New
Testament parlance means the Church), or it could just be that the apples have
started to fall off the tree on our dacha so I have to pick them and sort them
and dry them and wonder why would anyone want to be the apple of any one’s eye
since apples are causing me so much extra work, and so apples are just on my
mind at the moment—but you can decide the reason! Still, an apple is an interesting
fruit—especially the red, shiny ones—and to be the apple of God’s eye, to be
His beloved, to know that when He sees you He smiles just because you exist and
are His beloved child, that is something else entirely. This is something good to know when we become
overburdened by the cares of this world and feel as if we might be alone.
September
is always a big month here for the Ingrian Lutherans—summer is full of
different mission trips or groups and camps, and that is time consuming in its
own way, and people, including many of the pastors I work with take their
vacations. But September means back to the regular schedule—confirmation
classes begin, Bible studies that were interrupted by Summer vacation, Sunday
school, and also the first session of our Bible school without walls. This month English worship also has moved to
St. Anne’s—even though the building still is not heated, for now we are holding
services there every Sunday (and hope to have heat by winter), Russian services
are also being held the 2nd and 4th Sundaysl (and I am
helping with those). The big news this
month is the long awaited reprinting of Lutheran Heritage Foundation’s
translation of the Book of Concord.
Bible School WithOut Walls—WOW!
2 Timothy 2:2 And the things that you have heard from me among many witnesses, commit
these to faithful men who will be able to teach others also.
If
you recall, last December the St. Petersburg District decided to organize a
Bible school without walls, and was quickly joined by two neighboring
districts—Karelia and the Western Ingermanland (which is to say the Suburban
and village Churches surrounding St. Petersburg—keep in mind that an Ingrian
District might span a large territory, but consists of between 10 and 20
congregations). The Bible school
consists of 8 intensive weekends spread over 2 years (with readings and
homework between sessions) and is designed to give laity a chance for deeper
study of the Biblical and Confessional understandings of the Church and help
the church identify potential leaders (Sunday school teachers, deacons,
pastors, etc.). Teachers are volunteer
and each session is hosted by a different parish.
Last year we managed to fit in the first
two sessions—Christian Spiritual life and Overview of the Old Testament. Pastor Ivan Laptev, who is the chair of the
Ingrian Mission board returned from his vacation the first week of September,
but we were not able to meet until the 9th—at which time he told me
the first session for this year on the New Testament was already scheduled for
the 12-14th. As I was in the
process of moving English Worship to St. Anne’s, I had hoped all my duties for
this session would be simply logistic, delivering and distributing the Lutheran
Heritage books and Good News Journals that we were using as textbooks. On the morning of the 10th,
however, Ivan came to the office and told me that the pastor/professor who had
been invited and was expected to teach on the Epistles and Revelation had just
canceled. Well, I had just gone over Revelation
with my kids for summer devotions (so my Seminary notes from Dr. Brighton’s
class were still fresh in my mind), so I was volunteered to teach that, and was
also roped into teaching on the Catholic Epistles (that is to say all the ones
not attributed to the Apostle Paul).
Ivan took the Pauline Epistles, Pastor Fedor Tulinin taught on the New
Testament Canon and Pastor Mixail Ivanov taught on the Synoptics and the Gospel
of John.
The
next session is on Biblical Interpretation and Hermeneutics scheduled for
mid-November (then “the Lutheran Confessions” in February, “Church History” in April and “Theology in
Practice” and “Outreach and Mission” will finish the cycle by at the beginning
of the next academic year).
House of Prayer-another day another project
Isaiah 56:7 Even them I will bring to My holy mountain, And make them joyful in My
house of prayer. Their burnt offerings and their sacrifices Will be accepted on My altar; For My
house shall be called a house of prayer for all nations."
In the village of Kuzmolovo, which is now
more or less a suburb of St. Petersburg, there was a house—a house that had
been being used as a house of prayer for many years by a group of Christians
with no solid denominational affiliation (such were many protestant groups
during Soviet times). The house caught
fire, and the owner decided it was not worth keeping—so donated it to the
Church of Ingria. The catch is this—if
we can “repair” the house by March 1st, which is to say “rebuild”
the house by that time, we do not have to file a building plan and pay for all
the engineers’ reports (which in Russia cost almost as much as the actual
building)—as long as we build a house the existing foundation. Now the race has begun to dismantle the
building (carefully to save what building materials we can), so we can then rebuild—I have spent three or
four days there and have left a lot of my tools there for others to use.
Prayer
Requests (remember you may send me your prayer requests as well)
With
all that is happening to Christians in Syria, with unrest in other places,
there is plenty enough to pray about. To
all these and your other prayers I ask you pray with me about the following as
well: This month we have a special prayer request for a little girl named
Lydia. My wife has been working as a
nanny for this two and a half year old who is at this moment in Israel with her
family facing a heart operation to repair a defect (they left Sunday)—prayers
for Lydia, her parents and Zhanya as well.
Prayers of thanks for building of St. Anne’s and for the new house of
prayer in the village, as well as prayers for the necessary funds to repair and
build (and in this regard, continued prayers for funding the building project
in Nizhniy Novgorod), also prayers for the Bible school and the students that
have attended, that they might continue to grow in faith and leadership. A big prayer of thanks for the printing of
the Book of Concord. Pray for Karl as he
searches for scholarships and God’s will as far as college applications, choice
of major and so forth, and keep Nastya in prayer as well as she continues to
grow in faith. Keep me in prayer as I
take on more responsibility—not only is my work with the Ingrian Missionary
committee expanding, but I have added helping out at two Russian services each
month at St. Anne’s. At the beginning of
next month, I have been invited to speak at the joint district pastors’
conference to be held in Koltushe, and at the end of next month, God willing, I
will travel to Nizhniy Novgorod. Pray
also for the continued partnership with LHF as we are already working on
reprinting the Small Catechism, the Lutheran Prayer book, etc., all important
for the work here.
St. Anne’s and English Worship
Although
St. Anne’s is without its own electricity or heat (we are borrowing a little
electricity from the school next door via a long extension cord), English
language worship services have moved to the chapel we fixed up last year. In addition to English Worship at 9:30 am
each Sunday, I am assisting with Russian language services being held on the 2nd
and 4th Sundays of each month, led by different Russian pastors—the
idea is that I eventually take on the 1st and 3rd (and
occasional 5th) Sundays on my own.
I also want to begin a Russian language Bible study, but this is waiting
until we can prepare a smaller room that can be more easily heated in the
winter. So much needs to be done—and the
ultimate goal is to set up a Christian Youth center there, space for Prolife
ministry and other related ministries seems such a long way off.
Lord, Keep us
steadfast in Thy Word
Curb those
who fain by craft or sword
Would wrest
the Kingdom from Thy Son
And set at
naught all He hath done.
TLH #261 verse 1
In
Christ,
Leif & Zhanya Camp
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________________
CONTACT ADDRESSES Feedback, questions, whatever are most welcome.
Our
Russian home address:
Leif
and Zhanya Camp
18
line V. O. dom 43 Kv. 7
St.
Petersburg, Russia, 199178
|
Stateside
contact address:
Leif
and Zhanya Camp,
C/O
Marli Camp
902
N. 12th
Melrose
Park, IL, 60160
|
Russian
Lutheran Church Address:
Ev.
Lutheran Church of Ingria in Russia
Bolshaya
Konyushennaya dom 8a
St.
Peterburg, Russia, 191186
|
Telephone:
+7-911-294-8754 (my cell number). Home
7-812-356-8457 Russian Prolife Website lutheransforlife.ru
Note—Between
St. Petersburg and central US time, the difference is 9 hours. Stateside contact telephone: 708-344-4472
E-MAIL:
lzkcamp@mail.ru & leif.camp@elci.ru. Please
feel free to share this prayerletter with your Church, friends, or enemies if
it might help (just please do not quote things out of context or edit my words
in such a way as to change their intent).
If you would like to receive a copy via e-mail, simply email me directly
and ask!
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