• Blog
  • About
  • Ministry
  • Pictures
  • Contact
  • Proverbs 365
x x x
  • Home
  • Contact
  • Log in

July 2009

July 3rd, 2009

“And if you give even a cup of cold water to one

of the least of my followers, you will surely be rewarded.”

(Matthew 10:42)

Greetings from Amsterdam!  Summer has finally arrived here in the city, and like everyone else here in the city, we’re trying to spend as much time outside as possible.  This is true on the ministry level just as much as it is on the personal level.  This past weekend, our family joined a dozen other people from our church community—on a muggy Amsterdam summer day—to walk 2.5 kilometers (1.55 miles) from our ministry center on the Herengracht to the main park in the city’s Old South, and back… carrying buckets of water on our heads.

Water Walk - Posed Group

We were doing it to raise awareness for issues of water and sanitation in the developing world.  Ever since the establishment of our ministry in Amsterdam, we’ve made “social justice” an important part of our work in the city.  But especially in the last few months, we’ve been making more of an effort to focus our attention in this area.  Three young women from our church (one of whom holds a masters degree in international development) have spear-headed a recent campaign to coordinate and crystallize our goals for the church’s social justice ministry according to the following mission statement:

“As a Christian community, our aim is to increase awareness and action on behalf of the poor and disadvantaged, in order that we may be a bright light, radiating God’s love to our ‘neighbors’ through involvement in the fight against social injustice, both locally and globally.”  

And one of the first issues that we’ve now chosen to tackle is world-wide water and sanitation.  It may not seem like a very spiritual issue.  But the fact of the matter is that water is one of the most basic needs in the world—and yet it’s one of the most unequally distributed resources in the world, as well.  As we’ve been studying this issue further, we’ve learned that the average person in the Netherlands uses 127.5 liters (33.7 gallons) of water per day (and in case you’re curious, it’s even more in the USA—about three times as much, in fact!).  But in contrast, the average person in developing countries uses just 10 liters of water per day.  Women and children have to collect all the water by hand, and the average distance a woman walks to collect water is 6 kilometers (3.72 miles)—sometimes doing this three times a day!  The average distance a woman walks to collect water is 6 kilometers (3.72 miles).   And the weight of water that the average woman has to carry on her head is 20 kilograms (44 pounds).  To look at the same situation from the global level, 1.1 billion people don’t have access to clean, safe drinking water.  2.6 billion people lack adequate sanitation (places to properly wash hands or go to the toilet).  Unsafe water and sanitation causes 80% of all sickness and disease—causing 6000 people to die every day (90% are children under the age of 5.)   This means that unsafe water and sanitation kill more people than all other forms of violence, including war.  It’s crazy to write it out like that—but it’s true.  These statistics can be overwhelming…

Suffice to say:  water and sanitation are very significant issues in the world today!

Water Walk - Into the Vondelpark

So the idea with our past weekend’s “Water Walk” was to organize some of the women and children of Zolder50 to help identify with the women and children in the developing world, to raise the general level of awareness among Amsterdammers for these issues, and to "advertise" for a fund-raising event later that evening.  Our family had the privilege of joining in.  Marci walked the whole way.  Elliot and Olivia walked for parts of the way.  And Cor and I offered logistical support (a luxury, of course, that most African families don't have), riding alongside in the bakfiets:  offering a place for the older kids to sit when they got tired, displaying a couple of posters that explained more about what we were doing, passing out flyers, taking pictures, and that sort of thing.

It seemed like it was an exhausting experience for those who participated... but also an enriching one.  Our hearts are growing, our views are expanding for how we can love our “neighbors,” and we also managed to raise over €500 for a Dutch organization called the Healthy Vine (www.healthy-vine.org)!  It’s hard to say exactly how God will use our efforts, but we continue to walk (at times literally, and yes—sometimes even with buckets on our heads!) by faith.  Please pray with us for this developing social justice ministry…

Eric

P.S. - In case you might like to see some more pictures from the Water Walk, you can visit http://www.ericasp.com/pictures.php/c70/

This entry is filed under Prayer Letters, 2009, 3rd Quarter 2009.

  • February 2012
    Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
     << <   > >>
          1 2 3 4
    5 6 7 8 9 10 11
    12 13 14 15 16 17 18
    19 20 21 22 23 24 25
    26 27 28 29      
  • Ministry

    • Recently
    • Archives
    • Categories
    • Latest comments
  • Search

  • Categories

    • All
    • Get Involved
    • Ministry in Amsterdam
    • Ministry Links
    • Our Story
    • Prayer Letters
      • 2006
        • 1st Quarter 2006
        • 2nd Quarter 2006
        • 3rd Quarter 2006
        • 4th Quarter 2006
      • 2007
        • 1st Quarter 2007
        • 2nd Quarter 2007
        • 3rd Quarter 2007
        • 4th Quarter 2007
      • 2008
        • 1st Quarter 2008
        • 2nd Quarter 2008
        • 3rd Quarter 2008
        • 4th Quarter 2008
      • 2009
        • 1st Quarter 2009
        • 2nd Quarter 2009
        • 3rd Quarter 2009
        • 4th Quarter 2009
      • 2010
        • 1st Quarter 2010
        • 2nd Quarter 2010
        • 3rd Quarter 2010
        • 4th Quarter 2010
      • 2011
        • 1st Quarter 2011
        • 2nd Quarter 2011
        • 3rd Quarter 2011
        • 4th Quarter 2011
      • 2012
        • 1st Quarter 2012
    • Prayer Points
    • Why Amsterdam
  • XML Feeds

    • RSS 2.0: Posts
    • Atom: Posts
    What is RSS?
  • StatCounter