Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Open Doors = ...

Open doors = opportunity.  
Opportunity = a set of circumstances that make it possible to do something

Opportunity for us = the mission:
  • to serve the least among us.
  • to walk alongside those fathering the fatherless and share the widows' burdens. 
  • to treat others as Jesus' image bearer, and teach the supremacy of Christ in all things.  
  • to equip believers to care for orphans and widows in their country and help them prevent generational patterns of oppression, prostitution and slavery. 

 Opportunity for this little boy = to live:
  •  meet Jesus and learn about God's unconditional love.
  •  attend school. 
  •  regularly eat nutritious food. 
  •  daily drink clean water.
  •  avoid the orphanage and stay with his mom.

Yes, asante sana for your kindness.
It has opened many doors of opportunity!

hugs from the haugers Ooo0
Field Directors, Among the Least
PO Box 3543 Pagosa Springs, CO 81147

Sunday, January 12, 2014

Church Today

What to wear to church in Kenya 
when the property is flooded?

  Sunday best, of course.  
Just roll up the pants.


What to do as a pastor when hooligans and 
thugs show up at church with machetes and rip 
                     down fences, destroy buildings and threaten the people?
                                         Worship the Lord, of course.
                                     And know He who calls is faithful.


How was church today for you?

Friday, December 20, 2013

Eternal Gifts

Your gifts helped us bring the good news of Living Water and potable water to a village and widowed mamas.

Your gifts helped us teach healthy transition and attachment 
practices and to orphan caregivers, reminding them that 
Heavenly Father adopted them when they were abandoned in sin.

Your gifts helped us minister to single and widowed mamas who are neglected and victimized in this developing society.  These mamas learn who they are in Christ and who Christ is in them. 

Your gifts helped us feed and care for forgotten children, showing them God's love.

Your gifts help us carry the gospel of God's kingdom to the poor in Jesus name.

Remembering each prayer, encouragement and support that's helped us be God's messengers of grace here in Kenya... 

We offer our simple gift of thanks.

May the Lord bless you for your kindness.

hugs from the haugers Ooo0o


Thursday, December 12, 2013

Change



Change.

Everything that grows changes.

As the not-for-profit CARE grows, it experiences changes.

Let me tell you about a BIG change… but first, a little background  -

Mark and I have been a big part of CARE from its inception in 2000 (along with some AWESOME adoptive families). It started as a small adoption support/advocacy group and has grown to a remarkable organization that awards grants to adoptive families, participates in an annual River Run for Orphans, facilitates adoption trainings and acts as a clearinghouse for adoption resources and education.

The work CARE does in Kenya, as CARE4Nations, affects the core of orphan prevention by helping mamas raise their children instead of abandoning them to orphanages. The ministry assists widowed/single mamas with discipleship and biblical business practices - learning to serve Jesus and earn an honest wage. By God's grace we also started a school for neglected children, provide bio-sand filters through evangelistic outreach to places needing potable water, work at an orphanage and a boarding school for physically challenged kids.



You donations labor hard through volunteer efforts 
to bring vulnerable children the support they need to grow in families.
 
There’s that word again - grow. We’re happy to see CARE grow and experience change. Our new board members and their fresh creativity have introduced an innovative change... 

CARE has been re-branded as Among the Least.



This name change more accurately reveals the vision, work and growth of the ministry.  We are now Field Directors of Among the Least.

Finally, you might have noticed on your tax receipt that CARE’s exempt status was  re-evaluated by the IRS. We’re pleased to report (CARE) Among the Least has been reinstated retroactively.


Your donations can be sent to:
 Among the Least
 PO Box 3543, Pagosa Springs, CO 81147
or
 thru paypal at amongtheleast.org
or 
Restoration Fellowship
PO Box 2757
Pagosa Springs, CO 81147


A huge "asante sana" to all who partner with us 
through support, prayers and encouragement. 
Your giving make an eternal difference in the lives of widows and orphans.

Feel free to google tiltingbalance.blogspot.com to read amazing stories of God’s grace in Kenya and look for our new blog commonbecomesholy.com coming soon.

Find more information about the organization at amongtheleast.org.
 

Blessed to be a blessing,
mark and ~lisa hauger
Field Directors for Among the Least, Kenya
+254705707339


Monday, December 2, 2013

Strong Courage

As I post this, Taleah has finished school and is practicing the violin.  Mark just got in from taking Henry back to the orphanage and is helping get dinner on the table.  I spent my day with women - praying, planning, organizing the future.  Only a week ago we were laughing with friends in Pagosa... Now's the time we reflect and appreciate everyone who loved on us so well.  Thank you for your help, support, listening ears, wise advice and encouragement.  Below is my first journal entry this time around. God's calling us to be brave.  What about you?  What's God calling you to?

Here we are again, on the other side of the world, trading quiet, crisp Colorado daybreak with humid city sounds. 


Sunrise from Lisa's sister's home in Pagosa Springs, CO
The morning air drips wet and warm and I sip milky Kenyan brew from a tin cup, listening… birds’ song mixes with children’s laughter, traffic jostles with toots and rattles, women outside our bougainvillea fence chatter as they walk along, wood piled high on cloth-wrapped heads. 
  
But I hear more then this African life teaming around me.  I hear God.  He speaks to my heart in a familiar rhythm, with ancient words,  

“Be strong and courageous.” 

You would think by now I’d be used to moving into the unknown…
As a wild teen living on my own, to a wife with little strength, with children adopted from difficult places, to living among the least in a culture far from my own, to adopting another…

“Be strong and courageous.”

I have no grid for the next move… the one where we leave behind a son to gain another.  It’s not like we ignore the tall 16 year old, grown from a forgotten seed into a stout sapling whose roots need water – lots of water to continue flourishing.  Yet, we also can’t overlook the small one waiting for something he needs that he never knew existed – a family.


“Be strong and courageous.”

If that’s not enough… ministry surrounds us on every side. 
  • We want to send a shipping container full of useful donated items to empower the local church to minister to the poor.  The container would then serve as a resource building on the church property.
  • We desire to help develop a curriculum that trains both orphan caregivers and short-term missions teams to understand healthy attachment practices.
  • We need to advance the already existing programs - pure water evangelism and micro-finance discipleship - to become completely sustainable. 
  • We long to love the Lord and others and share joy unspeakable and full of His glory.
“Be strong and courageous.”

So amidst the noisy busyness enveloping me, vying for attention, constantly knocking for more, I listen for His voice. I hear His Word guiding us through the unknown, providing wisdom, nurturing encouragement. In the shadow of giants, He teaches us... 
“Be strong and courageous." 
Joshua 1:9

Looming storm in Summitville, CO.
Taleah being brave floating into Niagara Falls (free day ride).
Tavin being strong and courageous in CO (Notice Africa...)

 

Watch for our new blog coming soon...  


 
Kumshukuru Mungu kwa ajili yenu!
(Thanking God for you!)

the haugers Ooo0o

Saturday, September 28, 2013

Being REAL

   Ever try to take a family photo and it seems like nobody will cooperate?

  And when they FINALLY decide to gather together, silliness happens?

The photo may never be "perfect." but then, 
what is "perfect" but just pretending?
Thanks for letting us be REAL...
for helping us share our hearts, 
caring for our vision and being kind to our dreams.  
We're grateful for your prayers, encouragement and support. 

Our plans to travel back to minister in Kenya - November 13th. 
First, we visit family in Ohio and New York, 
participate in a short term mission conference and 
continue the conversation of serving the fatherless.
Psalm 82:3-4, James 1:27
  

Donations can be made to: Restoration Fellowship 
and attach a sticky note: "for haugers."
Mail to PO Box 3543
Pagosa Springs, CO 81147
 

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Beautiful Scratching


We’ve been back in Pagosa for 3 weeks now. The early mornings find me on my sister’s patio watching the sun peak over the San Juan Mountains.

Quiet time.
Seriously quiet compared to noises clamoring for attention outside our compound in Kisumu, Kenya - a city of almost 2 million. “Tuk, tuk, tuk” rattles, beeping horns, buzzing motor bikes, and voices exchanging business in Luo and Swahili while children's sing-song repetition of numbers carries from the small tent school across the road.
Now, enjoying the slightly crisp air of Colorado, I feel more than I hear. A soft breeze stirs. Sun streaks across pages of my bible and hits my face with warmth. Aspens’ slight tinge of fall dance on slender boughs.




 

Yes, it’s quiet. 
I’ve been quiet. Not writing, not “unloading” the thoughts that churn my mind in the slums of Kisumu among the broken. For a few weeks I silently watch graceful trees stretch strong into the end of summer. The mountain peaks, a skyline scratching across enormous blue.

I realize I know that strong stretching, a beautiful scratching.

Weathered-white bark enduring seasons of change. Rocky peaks rising from the ground and scratch their rough edges against the heavenly expanse without leaving scars.

I know that beautiful scratching.

For me, it’s about a love that outlasts pain…



His course little black head sweating against my chest, and I cuddle his small body. Praying. He wiggles down, scraping my arms with rough hair - unkept, unwashed, ringworm patches hidden under moist tight curls. That evening the scratches on my arm’s tender part raise angry red.

Painful.
Loving sometimes does that.



Remembering, experiences flood me and thoughts of charcoal-black mamas embracing hungry babies, wide-eyed and unresponsive with suffering that bites their hearts yet carries hope that keeps looking. Crippled children ignore their oozing sores, crawling along chipped cement because they see us coming and their longing for a touch, a smile will come true that day, even if it’s just for a day.

The lavish cost of loving includes the scratching, the scraping, the grating, the aching wounds.





Why?

Because it’s worth it.

It’s worth taking a risk, to be hurt, to live hard so others might live free. I don’t think people were made to stay comfortable, and I wonder if we resist suffering at the expense of loosing our ability to truly care.

Love in it’s purest form is raw, and real and firm, not wavering because He, LOVE made flesh, might take my hand and move me to search in the ugliness of life to find beauty.

Jesus loved.

Without reserve.

He, who could have walked in the cushioned kingdoms of men, chose to live within empty painful places, filled with lost, lonely people. His love stretched strong across the expanse of humanity. He accepted the sore scratching, knowing in the end His wounds would let us love without enduring eternal scars.

That’s how we share a horrible crisis like death, enter unimaginable struggles with children, travel into darkness to bring light. We do it with grace and pervading peace because it’s not the throbbing sting that lasts, it’s His LOVE.

In my quiet, I’ve see this, in the mountain crests surrounding me, like carving a message in a tree that grows high with boughs that can carry the weight.

A beautiful scratching.