Tuesday, November 6, 2007

“The national priority”… drifting


Six weeks after the start of this school year, pupils of the elementary school (from the first to the fourth grade) seem to have officially entered a short vacation. I say “seem” because the concrete reality of each locality is not known precisely. And it is not known exactly at a Ministerial level either, for the “simple” fact that the current school year has a very contradictory configuration, which simply disfigures it. Many buildings which were useful to the process of studying were given back as private goods and therefore turned into pubs or night bars. But, even in some buildings that still serve the studying, the buildings’ rehabilitation and hygienic works continue at the time being, as well. This is why some of the classes are improvised somewhere, or they are not taking place at all.But, even in those schools where classes are taking place according to a rigorous timetable, several of them are undermined by an environment that is against study. There are no labs with modern equipment, libraries or consulting rooms. The heat stations of several schools, even in the great cities of the country, are on the edge of bankruptcy. During cold days, children are staying in classrooms wearing the clothes they wear outdoors as well, for fear they might catch a cold. In every quarter of an hour, teachers demand them to do some physical exercising, in order to get warmer. Afterwards, the lesson thus disturbed continues with questionable results. The pupils from elementary classes, who are, by definition, the “disobedient” ones, are frequently catching cold and, therefore, parents will not let them come to school. Therefore, entire classes of pupils enter a fortuitous vacation.This vacation often lengthens endlessly for the tens of thousands of children who have nobody to take care of them, due to the emigration of their parents, to work abroad. Abandoning school, which is constantly increasing in Romania, feeds its percentage especially from this category, named “the home alone” category. Which is the most mysterious, the most unpredictable and the most threatening Romanian reality of today. A possible succession of generations which are thus confused by the separation from their parents and, subsequently, by dumping school, which would bring much more damage to the country than a negative demographic index. Because, in case of the second version, the remedy would still be possible, it disappears in case of the generations struck by the feeling of alienation from the beloved ones, and from themselves as well.Schools from the countryside are confronted with even harsher conditions. Half of them do not have, for years, any health approval which would be necessary for their functioning. Because they lack a sewerage system, water supplying and, sometimes, electric power as well. How could the computers, which are indispensable to modern education, function? Due to these causes, but also to the lack of the official number of students which is necessary for the existence of every class, some countryside schools were closed and the few pupils of those rural localities are forced to cover a distance of 7 to 10 kilometers daily, by foot, to get to a school from a locality nearby, where they were distributed to study. The autumn and winter days, with storms, with rains followed by floods or impenetrable snowfalls turn into unexpected days of vacation.As a result, the Government has adopted an initiative which is correct, in its essence, the initiative that all these rural localities receive microbuses for the pupils’ transport to the schools from the villages nearby. But these initiatives, just like several others, are often embezzled by the local authorities, which are inflexible to school necessities. A research performed by the Institute of Educational Sciences shows that the majority of the school board members have a huge distrust to Local Councils and Mayoralties. Why? Precisely due to the fact that these are not representing public interests when distributing and administrating resources, but subordinate everything to electoral propaganda. Performing an analysis of the manner of preparing the current school year leads to frequent cases of Mayors who have accessed important financial sums for modernizing schools, but those financial sums were embezzled one way or another.But not those Mayors are the ones to blame, as they are quite illiterate themselves, but the Romanian Government that has turned the principle of administrative decentralization into a chaotic reality. Nowhere can the principle of administrative decentralization be turned into a slavish imitation, as “universally good” formula. It requires an organic adoption, perfect adequacy to the field it is applied to. Unlike other domains, the education, health and the army require, each of them, a unitary structure at a national level, that would not create any artificial differences from one region to another, from one locality to another. This is due to the simple but essential reason that the education, the health and the defence are strictly indispensable values that must be equally accessible to the entire nation.For the year 2008, it is stipulated that the education receive 6 per cent of the GDP, the highest budgetary percentage of the latest 18 years. But would the actual chaotic decentralization of the education allow this budgetary surplus to be dedicated to educational projects of an ample perspective, and not to the “traditional” interests of any political group? Whenever they are confronted with this depressing alternative, the members of the Government evade into stereotype declarations, just like: “the education is a national priority”. Indeed, the Romanian education, its recovery constitutes a priority. Unfortunately, it is a drifting priority. The actual priority is the emergency of proclaiming the solidarity of values including the elimination of all centrifugal forces. Of all those forces that are alienating the concept of education itself by a damaging politicizing.This is why the first step for the acknowledgement of the education as a national priority is the institution of an apolitical school system.
by Mihai Iordanescu
(C) 2000-2007 Nine o'Clock,The Web Edition - Your English Language Daily [e]Newspaper

2007-11-07

“Quo vadis, Domine?”



A few months ago, I read again a favorite book of mine, “Quo Vadis” by the Polish writer Henryk Sienkiewicz. The author writes about a time when Nero was the emperor in Rome and the Christians were persecuted and even killed. At one point as the story goes, the apostle Peter was encouraged by the Christians in Rome to leave the city, seek safety and save his life. Peter left Rome a few days latter while his fellow Christians were killed and burned alive by Nero. As Peter was departing the Lord, appear to him along the Appian Way. The Apostle bowed down, kissed his feet and asked “Quo vadis, Domine?” translated “Where are you going Lord?” Jesus told Peter, “If thou desert my people, I am going to Rome to be crucified a second time.” Peter was ashamed and returned to the city to be with those that needed him most.
We do not know if the legend is true but there is a great lesson to learn from it. We need to always ask the Lord about his priorities in the world and be part of them; we at times are too much preoccupied with ours.

As some of you might remember when we decide to go back to Romania in 2003, our goal was to work with students and well educated young Romanians. Our desire was to train a young generation of leaders. We still dream on doing that but we needed to reevaluate our plans. Shortly after our arrival, we sensed that God had slightly different plans from ours. For a few months, we struggled with His plans and the open doors God placed before us. We had right in our face, a large population of orphans and the greatly impoverished and uneducated Gypsies. We came to a cross road and we had to choose between our plans and God’s. Looking back, I think we had great ideas but they were not His, at least not for that moment.

Today, every time we finish a church service in the Gypsy villages of Tinca or Sabolciu, I know God is pleased and I drive home knowing that I am where God wants me to be. Every time I return from ministering to the teenage orphans at CP2 (Placement Center 2) I feel the same.

A few weeks ago, I asked my self this question, “Where would Jesus go to church on Sunday? Would He go to a traditional Romanian church or in the poorest Gypsy village to bring the Word of God to people unable to read the Scripture and without access to medication or a doctor? I had no trouble finding the answer.

When we struggle with our place of ministry, we should ask the Lord like Peter did “Quo vadis Domine?” I believe the Lord would meet us on our Appian Way, point to our lack of love for the people that need us and encourage us to turn back and go His way. We need to be willing to alter the course of our lives and align our compasses to His. While His road it is not always an easy road to travel, we discover God’s love, peace, and joy. The real Pathway to Joy is doing His will.

We at PTJM are determined to continue our journey with Him, “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he hath anointed me to preach the gospel to the poor; he hath sent me to heal the brokenhearted, to preach deliverance to the captives, and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty them that are bruised, (Luke 4:18)

Thank you for being our partners on this journey and making it possible through your prayer and support.

Serving Him together,

Cornel & Karen Bucur


PTJM Prayer Requests
Please pray for:
† Orphan Mentoring Program: our staff, patience and love for the 115 teenage orphans
† Foster Care Ministry: the foster families that care for the 33 children
† Oradea Children’s Hospital Ministry: the abandoned orphans and our staff working there
† Church Planting Ministry: to finish the church building in Sabolciu as soon as possible
† The Bucurs: protection and strength to oversee all the ministries
† More partners to join our prayer and support teams



Quote of the Month:
“I grew up in Romania in an orphanage for 18 years... I don't even want to remember the times we went to bed hungry and punished.” (Georgeta Swartz, California)

Saturday, September 15, 2007

In God we trust


In God we trust

When we say, “I reached the bottom”, we expresses the end of human ability, capability or power. We at PTJM Romania experienced another level of this expression last week when “the bottom dropped out”. I will give you a few examples:
- Our PTJM Romania office was robbed last week.
- Two of our vehicles were damaged while parked.
- Ben (7) was hit in the head by a heavy piece of metal
- Alex (3) swallowed a large coin. Two days later, she developed high fever, was dehydrated and admitted as a patient in the same hospital we care for the orphan children.

This is not all, but enough to make a point; we are under spiritual attack and need your prayers. More than ever under these circumstances, I realized that God is there even when the bottom falls out; His grace is sufficient and enables us to move forward. It is in these kinds of situations that the believer experiences God’s presence and provisions. When He is the only one we have, we realize that He is the only one we need. His grace is sufficient, and we need to learn to let go and learn how to lean on Jesus. When the bottom drops out, when there are no crutches, no resources, no one to turn to; Jesus is sufficient and He is always there.
While going through this valley of tribulations I asked myself, “Am I really trusting God? Is God real even in these circumstances? Am I experiencing a religion or a relationship?” Only when the bottom drops out we discover who we really are and who He truly is. As I searched my soul, I was not certain what the answers would be but in the end, I discovered that love and faith are His gifts and we need to practice and cultivate them in order to stand firm in difficult times. “He only is my rock and my salvation: he is my defence; I shall not be moved.” (Ps 62:6)
PTJM and the Bucurs lost much during the last few days but gain even more, more faith and love for God, more friends and prayer partners. While we are under attack by the enemy, we are more than conquers because we are His and that settles it. Thank you so very much for partnering with us financially and in prayer for the work we do in Romania.

Cornel & Karen Bucur

Friday, September 14, 2007

Blessed to be a Blessing




Blessed to be a Blessing

Apostle Paul says: “be able to comfort them which are in any trouble, by the comfort wherewith we ourselves are comforted of God.” (2 Cor. 1:4) According to Paul, we are comforted by God so that when we see others going through hardship we begin to imitate God and offer comfort. In a very short verse, God communicates his desire for all Christians; each of us need to experience the grace of God and become a blessing to others, so that, “when one member suffer, all the members suffer with it...” (1Cor 12:26) It is in this text that God shows us the key to human happiness so many seeks; in helping others we find our own happiness.

We live in a selfish world and it is difficult even for Christians to understand that our own happiness and fulfillment is tied up with the fate of others. We are not called to be the hermits of God but the people of God. The togetherness of the saints of God.

When in trouble many of us pray for deliverance from our afflictions. God answers our prayer, but goes beyond that, He also wants to bless the people around us through the comfort He extends to us. Through our own pain, He wants us to grow into God’s Grace Dispensing Agents (GDA). We are special people called to give out the same grace we ourselves so much enjoy when received.
“Remember them that are in bonds, as bound with them; [and] them which suffer adversity, as being yourselves also in the body.” (Heb 13:3)

Last Sunday together with my wife, we visited a very poor Romanian family with three children. The mother abandoned the family three years ago, the father is raising alone two girls and one boy. Martha (14) is one of the girls she is paralyzed since birth. She could move around on her own but she is lacking a wheel chair. Thus, she lives indoor most of her time. This family have no indoor plumbing; the father washes Martha’s body in a bucket. There is no heat in the whole house except a little cooking stove in the kitchen where the whole family is forced to live. As I was sitting there, listening to their story God was growing in my heart the desire to be His GDA for this family.

I asked myself what Jesus would do in this situation. I would not know I am so limited He is so limitless. Nevertheless, I know two things for sure. First, through Him and in partnership with you we are called “to comfort them which are in any trouble, by the comfort wherewith we ourselves are comforted of God.”
Second, that together we are called to extend God’s grace to people like Martha and her family. Thanks so much for your faithfulness in support and prayer.

In His service,

Cornel & Karen Bucur



Prayer Requests
Please pray for:
† Construction Project in Tinca: For funds to finish the church building that will be used for the Youth Ministry and for the Gypsy School of Ministry.
† Construction Project in Sabolciu: for funds to finish the new church building, build a water well for the Gypsy community in addition, a playground for the children.
† The children (33) in our Foster Care ministry.
† Orphans (22) abandoned at the Oradea Children’s Hospital.
† Orphan youth (120) at CP2.
† More partners to join our prayer and support team to be able to help Martha and families in need.

“Remember them that are in bonds, as bound with them” (Heb 13:3, KJV)
“When one member suffer, all the members suffer with it...” (1Cor 12:26, KJV)

The Person God Uses


The Person God Uses

“For you see your calling, brothers” (1Cor 1:26, WEB)

Each year we have mission groups from different churches come and serve with us here in Romania. Every time they leave, our hearts ache. The friendships developed during this time, the experiences we shared, the mighty presence of God seen at work in our lives and in the lives of those we minister to brings us close to each other and closer to God. In time, many of these people had become my heroes. They left western comfort, vacation time, families, and other pleasant situations and came across the world to work with a missionary family they only heard about and with people of a different race, language and culture. Many come motivated by one thing, to share the love of Christ with people in need.

As I observe each group upon arrival I always wonder about each person; what made him come, what is she able to do, what each person have to share? At the end of each trip, we are always amazed how God used each individual. I want to share with you a few things I noticed about the person God uses.
· Doesn’t think much of himself
· Marvels at why God chose him
· Doesn’t talk much but listens intensively
· Has little natural ability or experience
· Knows his poverty and dependence on God
While the team blesses us in many ways, at the end of the stay, two things are visible; the powerful relationship they have with God and the flagrance they live behind. In the words of Oswald Chambers, “The main thing about Christianity is not the work we do, but the relationship we maintain and the atmosphere produced by that relationship.” In the Old Testament, the people that were at the Temple carried with them on their clothes the flagrance of incense. Everybody they met on their way home knew they spent time with God. When we maintain our relationship with God, something happens and those around us know it. His presence in our lives is powerful in their nostrils. “God chose the foolish things of the world...God chose the lowly things of the world, and the things that are despised...that no flesh should boast before God. (1Cor 1:29, WEB)

We praise God for the team that came from River Oaks Community Church in Goshen, IN to serve alongside us recently. We had a blast doing God’s work together and many lives were touched.

The babies we care for at the Oradea Children’s Hospital, the children in our foster families, the young men being discipled at Placement Center nr. 2, the new believers in the three Gypsy churches started in Lugas, Sabolciu and Tinca, all of them were able to observe true Christianity and are able to benefit and be changed by God because men and women that walk with Him visited them. In Romania and elsewhere God is doing His work through people that think a lot about Him and very little of themselves.

As we are busy more than ever during the summer months, please continue to help this ministry through your financial support and prayer.

In His Grace,

Cornel & Karen Bucur


Prayer Requests
Please pray for:
† Construction Project in Tinca: For funds to finish the church building that will be used for Youth Ministry and for Gypsy School of Ministry.
† Construction Project in Sabolciu: for a work team that will remodel the old building, build the new church, build water well for the Gypsy community and a playground for the children.
† The children (33) in our Foster Care ministry.
† Orphans (22) abandoned at the Oradea Children’s Hospital.
† Orphan youth (90) at CP2.
† More partners to join our prayer and support team.

Mentoring Orphans in Romania


Mentoring Orphans in Romania

Out of concern for orphaned children and youth who spend their developing years coping with the loss of family, security and opportunity, Pathway to Joy Ministries established the Orphan Mentoring Program in 2006 to promote healing and wellbeing among the orphan youth who currently reside at the local “orphanage” in Oradea, Romania. This summer, as an extension of this ministry, we organized a Christian Camp in partnership with Calvary Chapel Fort Lauderdale, our home church. What an amazing time of ministry, fellowship and fun we all had! We saw many lives changed, some accepted Christ for the first time and others rededicated their lives to Him.

Last year we had a similar camp where I met Rudy for the first time. He was 17 then, rude and rowdy. Rudy grew up in the local orphanage. From the time he was 3 years old, Rudy suffered within a system and environment that prevented the development of his talents and abilities. Many times, he felt alone and unloved. Rudy never knew his father and has had no contact with his mother for over 7 years.

After 12 months of investing in his life as part of the Orphan Mentoring Program, Rudy changed. This year at camp, he was intent on developing relationships and growing spiritually. I saw Rudy again after camp, and the change in his life was evident. Rudy says, “I’ve been challenged to accept God’s love last year at camp, and my mentor is teaching me how to love and to live differently.”

This year at camp we had 53 young people, aged 4-22, who face the daily challenge of growing up alone without a family. They lack hope and are searching for meaning and significance in all the wrong places. Loss in one area of a child’s life often leads to multiple losses in other areas. Most of these kids struggle with low self-esteem and lack of confidence, focus and motivation. Although loss is sometimes inevitable, many times with intervention further losses can be prevented.

Pathway to Joy’s Orphan Mentoring Program aims to help orphaned young people like Rudy to grow in confidence, esteem and their personal relationship with God. We hope to accomplish this aim by treating them with courtesy and respect, providing them with intentional discipleship and considering their personal life story and dreams for the future.

If you would like to partner with us to see people like Rudy changed forever, please consider supporting our ministry financially. It costs $30 a month to support one of these kids in our Mentoring Program. Your monthly sponsorship gift will provide the following opportunities: a personal mentor, spiritual discipleship and development, vocational counseling, educational activities and recreational events.

Thank you for your continued prayers and faithful support for all our projects.

Through His Grace,

Cornel & Karen Bucur


Prayer Requests

Please pray for:
† Orphan Mentoring Program: The 90 orphan youth and mentors.
† Foster Care Ministry: The 33 children.
† Oradea Children’s Hospital Ministry: The 22 abandoned orphans.
† Church Planting Ministry: Three churches and two building projects in Tinca and Sabolciu.
† The Bucur family.