OCI Reports

Harbert Hills Academy and Mukuyu Outreach

Three Angels Broadcasting Network

Program transcript

Participants: Steven Grabiner

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Series Code: OCIR

Program Code: OCIR000005


00:16 The world today is gripped
00:17 in a combat that encircles the globe.
00:20 It's not a war between nations
00:23 but it's a war over the destiny of humanity.
00:27 Often called the great controversy
00:30 this battle rages in every city, town and country.
00:34 Join us today, as we visit two OCI Ministries
00:39 that are engaged in frontline battles
00:42 in this great conflict.
00:59 It's hard to imagine in this peaceful country setting
01:03 in Southwestern Tennessee
01:05 that at one time a fierce battle raged.
01:09 The Battle of Shiloh which was,
01:11 up to that point in US history
01:13 the bloodiest battle that had ever been waged
01:16 on American soil.
01:19 The northern troops were taken by surprise
01:21 by Confederate soldiers.
01:23 The army was unprepared.
01:26 One of the officers in the northern army
01:28 was a man by the name of Lew Wallace.
01:32 Lew Wallace is not known for any great heroics
01:35 in the Battle of Shiloh.
01:37 What he is better remembered for is writing the book Ben-Hur.
01:42 The storyline and that novel is about a man consumed
01:46 with the desire to get revenge,
01:49 until he meets Jesus Christ and encountering Christ
01:53 he lays down his weapons of war.
01:57 Today in this setting, students are being introduced
02:01 to that same Jesus Christ through the ministry
02:04 on Harbert Hills Academy.
02:07 Harbert Hills Academy was originally established
02:10 on the basis of helping young people
02:13 and the concept was not just to help young people in general
02:16 but really to give an opportunity to young people
02:19 who might not otherwise have a chance
02:21 for Christian education.
02:23 The most rewarding part of working here
02:26 is getting to know the students as an individual
02:29 and watching them grow over the years that they're here
02:33 both spiritually and academically.
02:34 You know, I'm used to seeing academic growth
02:37 but working at a boarding academy
02:39 I get to see them grow spiritually.
02:42 First of all we're educational institution
02:46 and we are a Seventh-day Adventist Education Institution,
02:50 and our training program along with the academic
02:53 and the spiritual program
02:55 is to give students hands-on experience.
02:58 So our goal for each student that we receive
03:01 is to give them the basics and to have them baptized
03:06 or re-baptized in some cases before the leave.
03:09 Since I've been here I understand
03:12 how God has really worked in me,
03:14 how He has used me as a tool to reach out to others.
03:18 I really think I'm growing spiritually,
03:20 mentally and physically here.
03:22 Harbert Hills Academy is a diverse campus
03:25 with our staff as well as students.
03:27 The fact that we're able to issue I-20s means
03:31 that we have student's here from various cultures.
03:34 They have learned from each other,
03:35 they feed off of each other.
03:37 They grow, they learn about other cultures and get excited
03:40 about visiting other cultures as a result of that.
03:43 My favorite part for being here
03:45 is you get to have different friends from around the world.
03:50 It's really cool having people from other countries
03:52 'cause you get to learn a little bit about their culture
03:55 and you get to share a little bit of our culture.
03:58 We go- play basketball, play soccer,
04:01 and some other games called benteng,
04:03 it's more like a database but it's from Indonesia.
04:06 You know here in the US we're often centered on our own,
04:09 you know, little bubble that we have.
04:11 And so the students that come here will get a view
04:13 that they would not have gotten otherwise.
04:15 I wish that when I was in high school,
04:18 I was in a more multi-cultural environment than I was
04:22 because I see the benefits of it here.
04:24 But the school, you know, it's small
04:26 and for me I think it's a good thing
04:28 because if it's a big school
04:30 than there's a lot of distraction from everything.
04:33 We're sitting on 500 acres,
04:35 that we've got a good buffer zone around us
04:37 so that we don't have a lot of distractions here.
04:39 It's peaceful, it's quiet and so student can focus
04:43 little bit better way in harmony with the Lord.
04:45 Here nature is all around us.
04:48 For our Friday night Vespers
04:49 we have a number of programs
04:51 over the course of the school year
04:52 we have sacred concerts that we do,
04:54 guest speakers coming in,
04:56 the student led week a prayer.
04:58 We have a large choir and the small choir.
05:00 And the small choir is like the group that
05:03 just to go to different churches and minister,
05:05 do singing, the ensemble to,
05:08 it's really neat having other people that
05:10 play the same instrument and just uplifting each other.
05:13 The young people are here to serve.
05:16 If someone in our community has a need
05:18 and we get a phone call we go to serve.
05:21 Last year we went down and helped
05:22 when the tornadoes hit Alabama.
05:24 It was devastating over there.
05:25 We saw people crying and their house is gone and,
05:29 and then you have the other people that
05:30 saying this is a test from God we can-
05:33 we'll be stronger by that.
05:35 We do mission trips giving young people an opportunity
05:39 to serve in other countries.
05:41 We've done evangelism with the young people,
05:43 traveled and let them be a part
05:45 of presenting a series of meetings
05:48 and presenting the health parks
05:49 and seeing people come to Christ through their efforts.
05:52 You know, we have the academic,
05:54 social, spiritual and we have the work program.
05:57 The council that we have talks about a work education program
06:00 that involves spending about half the day in the classroom
06:03 and about half a day
06:04 in a vocational practical work setting.
06:07 We just take the message from Spirit of Prophecy that
06:11 we should all learn hands-on and have hands-on experience.
06:14 We have a 49 bed intermediate care nursing home facility.
06:18 We have a farm, a bakery and those are the things
06:21 that really give the young people an opportunity
06:23 to earn part of their tuition.
06:26 With the vocation classes their hands are moving
06:29 they are involved in things and woodworking class,
06:32 they are sanding, they are cutting,
06:34 they are sawing.
06:35 This past year we added a brand new vocation class,
06:38 which was the digital photography class
06:40 and it's been of tremendous boast to the students moral.
06:43 We do macro shooting and portrait shooting
06:46 and our students learn to how to work with lighting
06:49 and auto mechanics.
06:50 They're working on cars, they are underneath the car,
06:53 they are under the hood and radio broadcasting class,
06:56 they are on the air, they're working with mikes.
06:58 We have a 50,000 watt FM radio station,
07:02 that's one of the ways that we connect with our community.
07:06 Harbert Hills Academy is in a process
07:08 of development right now.
07:11 There's a project ongoing for upgrading our boy's dorm.
07:14 We're also in the process of building a new girls dormitory.
07:17 It's about $1.2 million project.
07:20 We have a tornado shelter that we're building
07:22 into the building in the basement.
07:24 It will be a safe home away from home environment.
07:27 We're actually working right now on a project
07:29 to build an addition to our bakery
07:32 were we can process the food that we grow
07:35 over the course of the year.
07:37 And we're on a mission to do it one step at a time
07:39 and allow the Lord to lead us and guide us along the way.
07:43 One of the things that I would challenge
07:46 is to consider becoming involved in this kind of ministry.
07:50 We are in need of teachers, instructors,
07:53 who understand God's council
07:55 and who are willing to put their life in God's hands.
08:00 One of the methods that Harbert Hills Academy uses
08:03 to engage their students in the battle of life
08:07 is to teach them the principal of service.
08:11 There are 49 bed nursing home facility
08:15 located on the campus provides an excellent opportunity
08:19 for the young students to minister
08:21 to those that are older and are in need.
08:24 This helps teach them
08:26 what should be their true priority in life.
08:31 My brother Randall Dickman is our current administrator
08:34 for the Harbert Hills Academy Nursing Home.
08:37 I've been working here as administrator since 1992,
08:40 and I went to school here when I was a young person.
08:42 I probably didn't notice as much of the privilege of working here
08:45 back then as I do now,
08:47 but through the years I've really seen that
08:49 it's a privilege to work for God
08:51 and not only work here at the nursing home,
08:54 I teach at Harbert Hills Academy.
08:56 We have our own CNA training program here
08:59 so most of our graduates when they leave
09:01 in addition to having their diploma,
09:03 they are also certified CNA's.
09:06 When I first came
09:08 I worked in the general departments like housekeeping
09:11 and I found that working with the residents
09:12 was an opportunity I can take
09:14 because I love interacting with people,
09:16 so I found that that would be a good way to give back
09:18 to this community and also give back to God
09:20 what He has offered me.
09:21 It makes me feel good to help others.
09:24 I sometimes sing to them,
09:26 I tell them some jokes and then I hear them laughing
09:28 and I just love seeing a smile on their faces.
09:31 We're going to see Lord come one of these days
09:34 and what a special thing to see a baptism in a nursing home.
09:37 That's something you probably will not see very often.
09:40 Well, on opinion we were in debate re-baptized
09:43 for several years but I just decided right now to do it.
09:48 You know there's not a lot of facilities who would
09:50 make it available for residents to be baptize if they wanted.
09:53 Time and time again I've seen them go out of their way
09:56 and do extra things to make our residents feel at home.
10:02 People know that when they come
10:03 to Harbert Hills Academy Nursing Home
10:05 the care they will receive is top notch
10:08 and it's not just a technical care it's a loving care.
10:12 It's really one of the challenges in today's world
10:15 for young people to take up the vision
10:17 of what it means to really serve,
10:20 setting yourself aside and saying okay Lord,
10:22 You just do whatever you want to do.
10:24 The staff at Harbert Hills Academy is dedicated
10:28 to equipping the students become victors
10:31 in the battle of life.
10:34 Their aim is to exceed the expectations
10:37 of both parents and students,
10:39 by not only providing a well-rounded education
10:44 but more importantly introducing the students to Jesus Christ.
10:49 In a moment we'll visit another OCI ministry
10:53 located in a different part of the world yet engaged
10:57 in the same great controversy.
11:02 Pain, suffering and hopelessness are everywhere we look.
11:06 As Christians we know that the ultimate answer is Jesus.
11:09 We're called to bring people to Him
11:12 as well as to share His love in practical ways.
11:15 Can you imagine the difference it would make
11:18 if every church member did all that we can to share our hope.
11:22 That's what OCI is all about,
11:24 laypeople using their skills to reach their communities
11:29 and bring change,
11:30 weather through lifestyle centers or schools,
11:33 restaurants or clinics the methods are diverse
11:36 but the goal is the same,
11:38 to bring hope and healing to our dying world.
11:41 In order for this work to continue prayer,
11:45 workers, and funding are all necessary.
11:47 When you support OCI,
11:49 you support the work of more than 80 ministries
11:53 around the world.
11:54 For more information about how you can be become involved
11:57 please contact us anytime.
12:03 A small but dynamic OCI Ministry
12:05 that is having a large impact is Mukuyu Outreach
12:10 located in the country of Zambia,
12:13 situated on the banks of the Zambezi River
12:16 this ministry was born out of sorrow and tragedy.
12:19 Yet under God's blessing,
12:21 is having a far-reaching effect into the communities
12:24 in this remote region.
12:26 Mukuyu is the Tonga word for fig tree.
12:31 This large fig tree attract the attention of Johann Myburg
12:35 as he was coming down the Zambezi River.
12:39 Johan had a vision of making a difference
12:42 in the lives of the people in this remote community.
12:45 Unfortunately Johann was tragically killed
12:49 by an elephant on this property.
12:51 However his brother Hein picked up the torch
12:55 that Johann has laid down.
12:57 Hain and his wife Melissa have extended Johan's original vision
13:02 and are making a huge impact in this world region.
13:08 Well, in 2002 my older brother moved to this spot.
13:13 He was doing work with Riverside Farm Institute
13:16 doing food distribution and while in the area
13:20 he saw the need of the people who live around here.
13:22 So we settled here and he started with basically nothing.
13:26 He got people from overseas to help do evangelistic series
13:30 with the help of OCI here.
13:32 He managed to put up two churches in the area
13:34 and eventually a third one and so he was only here
13:37 for three years before he passed away
13:39 in a very tragic accident
13:41 when he was attacked by an elephant bull.
13:45 That was in August of 2005
13:47 and at the time that happened I was living in the UK.
13:51 Unfortunately while I was living there
13:53 my spiritual life was in decline.
13:55 I had a very comfortable life
13:58 and I talked with the Lord often and I asked Him to help me
14:02 'cause I knew I didn't want to go anywhere else,
14:04 I didn't want to change
14:05 but I knew I was heading for trouble
14:07 and I asked Him to put change in my heart.
14:09 Soon after that, that's when the accident happened.
14:14 And coming here for the funeral
14:16 and seeing the reaction of the people at the funeral,
14:19 the love they had for Johann and seeing first hand
14:23 what he kept busy with made me understand
14:25 or realize that I was living a life,
14:28 it was just selfish
14:30 and when the idea came in my mind of moving here
14:33 at first I didn't want to know anything about it
14:36 but like I said the Holy Spirit spoke with me constantly
14:39 for a couple weeks and eventually
14:41 when I made the decision to come out here to Mukuyu,
14:45 honestly that's the time in my life
14:47 when I had the most awesome peace
14:49 and conforming to the will of the Lord that's,
14:52 that's the most awesome thing that I could have done.
14:55 I think the Lord has especially prepared me for this
14:58 because when I came here I was very wary of everything
15:01 and but as I started living here
15:04 the Lord just helped me
15:06 to accept everything that's around here
15:08 and to learn that these things
15:09 that had happened is not of His doing,
15:12 but it's of the devils doing
15:13 because he doesn't wants' us to be here.
15:14 And we need to move forward
15:16 and we cannot look back on the past.
15:20 The people that live in this area,
15:22 the biggest problem for them is they have a lack of Christ.
15:25 They don't know Christ.
15:26 They don't know how to reach Christ.
15:28 They don't know that He's there for them.
15:31 I've seen specific examples of the people around us here,
15:34 when they meet Christ
15:35 and they let Jesus into their lives
15:37 they soften up from the hard people
15:39 that used be to people who actually start cleaning up
15:42 and looking of their children
15:44 and making their homes look nicer
15:46 and just improving their lives just through knowing Christ.
15:49 I was lucky enough to be
15:50 in an Adventist primary school as a kid.
15:53 And I look back now and I know that,
15:55 that had a huge impact on my life.
15:58 It helped to, together with the Christian upbringing
16:00 we had in our home,
16:02 it formed a solid base and we really want to give
16:05 that to the small kids in this area as well.
16:08 We're trying to reach out to the people here,
16:10 bring the Gospel to them,
16:12 bringing the truth and reaching out in education
16:15 and any other way we can help them to be there for them.
16:20 The further one goes from the tarmac
16:22 and the centers of population the greater the decrease
16:26 in the level of education.
16:29 Out here in rural Zambia,
16:30 the children face a daunting task to get a good education.
16:34 Some of them have to walk four to six miles
16:37 to get to the nearest school.
16:39 In the book Education, Ellen White tells us
16:43 that the work of redemption and education are one
16:47 and that the foundation for both is Jesus Christ.
16:52 Hein and Melissa are endeavoring to lay in this community
16:55 a foundation that these young children
16:58 could get an education that will lead them
17:02 to their Savior Jesus Christ.
17:05 At the moment they have just one school in the whole area
17:08 that we are in and in winter time
17:10 the kids can't go to the school
17:11 because the elephants come.
17:13 During the dry season there's elephants everyway,
17:15 so the kids can't go to school,
17:17 the older ones managed to make the way out there,
17:19 although its dangers but the younger kids
17:20 they just don't go to school.
17:22 And because of our personal experience with elephants
17:24 in our family the death that we had in our family
17:26 we have a burden for that and it's sad for us to see
17:29 that kids will have a lack of education
17:31 because of elephants.
17:33 And so we've put up one roof
17:35 that's the first structure that will form
17:37 the lower basic school which is the first four grades,
17:39 which is in the village,
17:40 what we still need for that school is three more classrooms
17:44 plus an office building and then four houses for teachers.
17:52 Well, the orphanage we started in 2007,
17:55 it was idea that me and Hein got together,
17:59 so we raised some money and we build the orphanage.
18:01 We can take in 12 children
18:03 but for now we've got eight orphans.
18:05 Boys and girls will get a mother that will be living in the house
18:07 and she'll be the one to look after them to raise them
18:12 and we also want to start the orphanage
18:14 to bring some education that will be close to the school
18:16 that we will be building.
18:19 The orphans outside that they are staying
18:20 with the relatives or friends
18:22 they don't get the chance to be going to school
18:25 or learn to be self-supporting
18:26 because usually when they stay with the relatives
18:28 or friends they just use them as workers.
18:30 So if we can start the orphanage
18:32 they can grow up in the right way
18:33 by learning things about the Lord
18:35 and get proper education and learn to be self-supportive.
18:41 Obviously there are many well-educated women
18:44 in the country of Zambia.
18:45 However in the rural areas women face tremendous challenges
18:50 in getting the education necessary.
18:52 In June of 2010 Melissa started the Nanyanga women's Club.
18:58 The purpose of this club was to give some of the women
19:00 in this local region some skills
19:03 that would improve their standard of living.
19:06 Its part of the vision that
19:08 Hein and Melissa have of permeating this region
19:12 with a higher educational standard
19:14 than it's currently here.
19:17 Some of them came to me and they said
19:18 if I could do something for them in the village,
19:20 so I decided I will start by teaching them
19:23 how to do tailoring.
19:24 So we started off by just knitting
19:26 and doing some needle work
19:29 and eventually we got donated two sewing machines.
19:33 And now I'm starting to teach them
19:36 how to make clothes
19:37 and then I've started with Bible classes with them
19:39 I'm telling them Bible stories and Bible lessons
19:42 and I just recently started teaching them English.
19:54 In the beginning they came-
19:55 they couldn't speak English,
19:56 but some of them can pick up English words now.
19:59 They've learned a lot of things.
20:00 They were lot of women that came
20:01 they couldn't even work on the sewing machine,
20:03 they couldn't even do any knitting.
20:05 And we've showed them and within a few months
20:07 they've learned something new which they never could have done
20:09 and every day they are learning something new.
20:12 In our group we've got 19 people.
20:15 Before we started our program we pray
20:18 and we also have a Bible reading.
20:22 People they gave us
20:24 two sewing machines from America.
20:26 So these days we're knitting by hand,
20:29 we're doing by the machine.
20:32 Well, the products that they make
20:34 we try to sell some in village
20:36 and half of the money goes to the ladies
20:38 and the other bit goes to wards, our groups,
20:41 so we can buy more things and if there's a little bit left
20:44 we put side by side for the orphanage.
20:46 We raise money for the orphanage.
20:48 We also do the tithing of the Lord first of all.
20:52 At the moment close to be- we brought the orphan home.
20:55 We've got one roof setup.
20:59 This building once finished,
21:01 we intend to use as an older age feeding center.
21:03 There's quite a few old people in the village
21:05 and unfortunately in this specific culture
21:09 the old people aren't always looked after
21:11 as well as they could be and we've seen many old ladies
21:15 still having to farm their own corn
21:17 while they can barely walk.
21:19 Old ladies having to cut their own firewood
21:21 while they hardly able to carry it
21:23 and so we were really touched with that need
21:26 and we intend to have that community center
21:29 not only as a training center
21:30 for the ladies with the sewing classes
21:32 but to have warm cooked meal
21:34 ready for the old people once a day,
21:36 just to help with their basic nutrition
21:38 and at the same time we intend to bring
21:41 one of our Bible workers in the area
21:44 while they're eating he can reach out to them.
21:47 In remote areas of the country like this
21:49 good medical treatment is a very hard to come by.
21:52 Along the river there's a variety of threats.
21:55 There's the danger of crocodile and hippo attacks,
21:58 malaria and bilharzia are prevalent.
22:01 Even this simplest medical situation
22:04 can develop into emergency without good medical treatment.
22:08 The local people find it difficult
22:10 to get this good treatment.
22:12 But Hein and Melissa have developed a way
22:14 to bring in the treatment to the individuals,
22:17 the families, the communities
22:18 living along the Zambezi River.
22:22 Because of a lack of education this area for so long,
22:26 it's sometimes very difficult to reach out to people
22:28 on an intellectual level.
22:30 What really works well and the spirit of prophecy
22:33 is very clear on that as well is that,
22:35 to use the example that Jesus did
22:37 and He met the physical needs of the people
22:40 that listened to Him.
22:44 We had lot of ladies that has been going into labor
22:48 which we took to the hospital.
22:49 We actually had one baby that was born on our vehicle.
22:52 And the most exciting thing
22:55 that we are having for future is the medical boat,
22:58 the closest hospital is Chirundu
23:00 which is about two hours drive from here.
23:03 It was a dream of my brother to have a medical boat
23:07 and recently we managed to get the funding for this boat.
23:10 We're just now waiting for the official approval
23:14 from the government
23:15 so we can run the boat as a medical service provider.
23:17 And the function of that boat will be
23:19 to run up and down this Zambezi.
23:21 We've got a stretch of about 25 miles.
23:24 Things that we will be able to help the people
23:26 with are things like bilharzia and intestinal parasites.
23:30 Then malaria is a very big problem here,
23:33 especially in the kids.
23:34 AIDS is also a big problem.
23:36 And then there's things like
23:38 skin infections and chest infections.
23:41 We've come across quite a few people with TB in the area
23:44 and they just do not get to the hospital,
23:46 so those are things that we need to tackle with the medical boat.
23:51 The boat's name is Bakwesu.
23:53 The person that helped to fund the boat,
23:56 he's a gentleman that lost his own brother
23:59 maybe two years ago.
24:01 And after hearing our story he came to me and said
24:05 he'll give the funding
24:07 and he thinks it might be a good idea
24:08 if we run this boat as a working memorial
24:11 to both of our brothers.
24:12 And he said why don't we name it Brothers in the local language?
24:16 And so I found out what the Tonga word for brothers is
24:19 and it turned out to be Bakwesu.
24:22 But in the Tonga language the words aren't as absolute
24:25 as the English language,
24:27 it means brothers and sisters,
24:28 it means members of the same community
24:30 and it means good friends.
24:33 And so the name for Bakwesu, I think it's quite fitting
24:36 and we are praying that that will have the,
24:38 the same effect to be friends to the people around us.
24:45 When we first got here
24:46 it was difficult to find a way to support ourselves.
24:50 We came here with very little
24:51 and we were really trusting on the Lord to supply our needs.
24:55 We've got a beautiful piece of land
24:57 with beautiful soil that we can use for planting stuff
25:00 and we have unlimited water obviously
25:02 from Zambezi River but we do not have electricity.
25:05 What we do have even outside of our piece of property
25:08 is unlimited open grazing.
25:11 And so when we got here my brother had 20 sheep
25:14 that he used to keep around the house
25:15 and so we took these 20 sheep
25:17 and I put in all my effort to keep them healthy
25:20 and keep them producing.
25:22 Six years later we have more than 500 hundred sheep.
25:25 The Lord has blessed this little enterprise and eventually
25:29 when we reach higher numbers it'll be able to help supply
25:33 towards the needs of the orphans and the community center.
25:36 There're so many things that we want to do here
25:37 but we don't have the funding.
25:39 And in the last year things have been going better,
25:41 we've had people supporting us to help us to build the things
25:44 and to get things ready.
25:45 But like the orphanage we did in 2007
25:48 and we can't finish it because we don't have funding for that.
25:51 The school and the community center is the same thing,
25:54 we've had it there for one year now.
25:56 So I think that is the biggest challenge.
25:57 We want to finish the work for the Lord,
25:59 but we don't have enough funding to finish all the things
26:01 that needs to be done here.
26:04 As you can see where we live,
26:05 we're so isolated from not even
26:08 other OCI members in the states all around the world
26:11 but just from our neighbors.
26:13 So it's very easy to start feeling
26:15 that you're alone in the world,
26:17 especially with the work that we do,
26:19 it comes with a special set of challenges.
26:22 And I can say that since we've joined OCI the contact
26:25 that we've had with other ministries not only in Africa
26:27 but around the world removes that feeling of total isolation
26:32 because you now meet people
26:33 who have the same challenges as you.
26:35 You are able to talk with them,
26:37 there's experienced people that can give you advice on things
26:40 that they've already encountered many years before.
26:43 And so that's a massive native support
26:45 that that we feel we, we can't go without.
26:49 I don't think you have to be qualified
26:51 or cut out to be a missionary.
26:52 I think all of us can be missionaries.
26:54 Even in your local town, maybe if you're working,
26:58 everywhere, everybody needs to be a missionary.
27:01 Tell the Lord that you're willing
27:02 to do His work and He will lead you
27:04 and you will see how your life will change.
27:07 All over the world remote communities struggle
27:10 with basic survival needs.
27:13 Jesus said, "Whatsoever you have done
27:15 for the least of these my brethren,
27:17 you have done it unto me."
27:20 On the banks of the Zambezi River,
27:22 Mukuyu Outreach is endeavoring
27:24 to fulfill the command of Jesus Christ,
27:28 as they educate, heel, feed
27:32 and serve the people in this region,
27:35 they are winning souls to Jesus Christ.
27:39 Wherever you are in the world
27:41 you can have a part in this tremendous ministry.
27:44 Medical volunteers are needed on a short or long-term basis.
27:50 I solicit your prayers for Hein and Melissa
27:54 and your generous support for Mukuyu Outreach.
28:01 To learn more about the worldwide work of OCI
28:04 please visit us at outpostcenters.org.
28:08 To contact us email info@outpostcenters.org
28:14 or call us at 423-236-5600.
28:22 For OCI reports, this is Steven Grabiner.


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Revised 2014-12-17