Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Difference Between Provigil Adderrall

Outreach 6,7 and 8 weeks

When I write this now I'm sitting in the middle between the cases and ask me how I ours, Glump 'get in there.

The highlights of the last few weeks have been the Christmas event for the kids after-school clubs and the church. The event was completely designed by us as a YWAM team and should be for the children a testimony of the true reason of Christmas. There were testimonies, dances and games from our Kids.

the end of the 7th Week there were debriefing, we exchanged our experiences and prayed for each other. A Norwegian family drove back that is a little earlier, because the children wanted to be home for Christmas.

Last Sunday (17.12.) I was privileged to preach in the church came from the reactions in some it is probably quite good (my first sermon in English!) To.

On our free day we took a trip to the Banks Peninsula near Christchurch, Akaroa back to where I and the men at the beginning had our outreaches the Men's-Camp. Akaroa is a charming village on a beautiful bay. You can still feel the French flair, because there landed the first French settlers, realizing that the British were faster, and the island was already in British hands.

Now we're on the go to Te Anau, but we will stay one night in Dunedin.

The weather is still too cold for the season, but this morning it rained in buckets and had 8 degrees! The children are excited and looking forward to Christmas, well, maybe we have still snow - at the temperatures (Te Anau is even closer to the South Pole and will be even colder than Christchurch). At New Year we are in Cromwell (near Wanaka) and then you go on 8 January in the north to Motueka (near Nelson) to the Abel Tasman National Park and then a few days after Takaka in Golden Bay. Am 18.1. it works then again towards Matamata, where we at 22.1. the next school visit.

We wish all our relatives, friends, colleagues and other visitors of this blog a merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!

your Nilzis!


The Christmas event



Wolfi in preaching

Pastor Chris

Best regards from the Nilzis!

Sunday, December 10, 2006

I Want To Know About 3d Dvds

familie_nilz @ 2006-12-10T22: 43:00

Outreach Week 5

highlight this week was the Christmas event in Aranui, the poorer part of town. It was not as bad as we feared, were probably the really bad guys' still in bed only just crawling out of their caves at night and make the area unsafe.

There was a band, a bouncy castle, a clown, face-painting and a Hangi, a traditional Maori dinner (of which I was able to push me but when I handed out food). The children made their moves to the two rehearsed songs: "I want to thank you" - a modern song of thanks to God and "Theres somebody out there" - a kind of short dramas that people on the margins of our (?) society is and that there is hope in Jesus for them;

Claudia from the team still had a hip-hop dance with a couple of adolescents from the Baptist church and with our kids studied, the course was particularly well received.

The children had their joy at the bouncy castle and were really not so undisciplined, maybe I'm also a bit too dangerous dreing'schaut ;-)

On Wednesday were a few men of us still at the youth night, which takes place is actually very unconventional: At 18:30 we set off the room. It consists of a bed-sitting room, table football, snooker tables and a Playstation with a large TV. The walls are painted with pretty good and creative images. Most Maori are skilled artists and also very musical. So sang equally well with a few, when one of the leaders grabbed a guitar and we sang a few praise songs. There

program is none, it will just play and you have community. The only highlight is a witness, or a short contemplative theme, but does not take more than 10 minutes. Longer is not enough attention phase. This time I had the honor - I summarized briefly. At 20:30 was the fifth one.

The special that night is simply that we have community and talk to team members with the people and form relationships, so no instant solution, but genuine and sincere devotion. The only way you can reach the people who really clear when you're not real.

Speaking of real: a real old town has not even Christ Church, as you see in the pictures. This is only really old here the Cathedral (built 1864), but sprout around the skyscrapers, at least in the center. The city has a diameter of about 20 km and consists of single-family homes and about 20 hautpsächlich quite separate districts. The Scottish Influence can be seen the same, here the kilt is still (or again) fashion, but only for women. Frightening is that a resident said: Rather, she does in the Middle East in the night on the road than in Christchurch. The crime here has increased dramatically.

The door knocking was more comfortable than last time, this time Sabine and I went together. Most were not interested, but friendly. But a woman asked us into her house and told us their suffering. People are sometimes very lonely, surprisingly, almost no one knows its neighbors. And I always thought that the Kiwis are such an open-minded and sociable. It's not too often that people disappointed by the church, even hurt, and want nothing to do with it any more. It is so not the island of the blessed - who believes dreams.