Thursday 12 July 2012

Digging deeper and growing stronger in faith

The year has gone so quickly!

I started this year with a lot of hope. I had seen some people leave on gap years and come back different people, changed for the better, and I hoped something like that would happen to me, too. Back home, I had tried to live a good life, but some of those old habits seemed just too stubborn.

Being in London was very different from what I expected. I thought of it as a "sabbatical" i.e. a peaceful, restful year of course filled with service and teaching, but still peaceful and restful. It wasn’t.

In London this year we saw the start of something new for gappers – a “mission school.” It involved four mornings a week of training. In addition to that, we worked for Koinonia, the local outreach to university students, and we served the teenagers of our host community, Antioch, we lent a hand serving practically in different family homes, and we lived in household. Needless to say we did not get bored.

But in this midst of this seemingly crazy schedule, God was at work. And he worked hard. I have seen miracles happen this year. In Koinonia, in the people around me, and in myself. Looking back, I cannot but thank the Lord for this opportunity to dig deeper and build stronger foundations. 

Let me tell you a little more about those miracles. 

We started the year with fewer than 10 people in Koinonia. Fresher’s week, when new students get to meet representatives of the various student groups on campus, went very well for Koinonia. So by November there were 18 committed people in Koinonia, including 12 students. At the end of the academic year some of the events we hosted brought together more than 30 people at a time, and we were regularly following up with around 50 students. 

We knew it wasn’t because any of us were born sales people, nor because Koinonia was offering students so much fun. It was clearly God working, in adding to our numbers. We saw this as a sign of God’s word to Antioch to be prepared to collect a harvest of people hungry for God. Now we saw it happening in our midst.

I also witnessed miracles in people around me. I saw people’s attitudes change 180°, I saw people decide to choose for Christ and and I saw people being touched by the Holy Spirit. I saw people who had a problem with their hearing being prayed over and being able to hear clearly once again.

One of our students came to a morning meeting, not looking very happy. He said one of his teeth was causing him a lot of pain. So one of us asked if we could pray over him. The student, a very rational thinker, did not believe it would heal him, but said yes out of politeness (maybe a little bit of hope, too?). When the prayer was finished, the student looked very surprised. The pain had left completely. I can testify that he was glowing for the rest of the morning. 

And miracles in myself. 

After 5 years of studying medicine, my mind had been brainwashed. Everything that happens around me has to have a rational, logical, scientific reason. A couple of months after I started my time in London, Antioch Community organised a healing-service. About 400 people attended that evening. Many people asked prayers for healing, and people testified that they experienced God healing them. I asked some people to pray over me, but I didn’t experience any healing. The only thing I could think of was: I really hope those people who claim to be healed of cancer, of hearing loss, of blindness,… are going to check this with a real doctor. I had no faith this kind of things could happen and definitely not to me. 

A few weeks later, the community organised a ‘power-weekend’ for people in the community who wanted to experience more of the Holy Spirit and his gifts and fruits. I went and asked for more faith, a little crack in that wall of logical, down to earth rationality around me. The person who prayed over me started to pray for more freedom for my mind, which was an interesting, new thought for me. But, during that prayer I started to realise how amazingly great God is, how much more he has for us, how small this little worldview of mine was and how ‘logical’ it is for God to intervene in our world in such a transcendent way. 

It was a very freeing experience, and during the year I could see my faith grow more and more. I am very thankful for that grace and I find myself impatient to see what else it will lead to. This growth in faith had an impact on my prayer life, on my greater understanding of the importance of the charismatic gift of speaking in tongues and on trusting that God will provide and protect, and that he will do miracles. 

God really provided what I needed this year: being put in London, and in a strong community with excellent leaders and great fellow gappers, but also financially, emotionally and physically. 

This is just a fraction of what God has done with me this year, and I am certain He will continue showing me more and more things that have changed over these last months. This Kairos GAP year will be a strong foundation to build the rest of my life on. The motto “A year set apart for a life set apart” is very true. I am ready to go back now and use all these new experiences, examples, ideas and calls in order to see His kingdom grow. 

A big THANK YOU to everyone who made this happen!

some last highlights - I will let the pictures do the talking

I have a feeling this post will not work very well for everyone who gets this as an email. Go to http://msgoeslondon.blogspot.be/ for a better view.


Oxford
Christchurch. Alice in wonderland and Harry Potter.
http://www.chch.ox.ac.uk/
Mercy took us, Gappers, to Oxford for a day.
In The Eagle and Child.
The pub where Tolkien and C.S. Lewis
loved to exchange ideas.
Beautiful city with a hint of Tolkien, C.S. Lewis and Harry Potter.



























Koinonia weekend away
making movies... Guess which one it is based on. tip: Disney

After they said goodbye to us and prayed for everyone who was leaving.


A weekend to say goodbye,
a weekend to thank God for the year,
a weekend to relax after exams and a busy term.




Celebration in Richmond!

 Celebrating the year with the Koinonia team.
A picnic, a nice town and a boat ride.
And then back home an amazing dinner.
We got spoiled in London!







Camden

 
I only found out about this place 1 week before I left. If you like markets, I strongly recommend this one. It was my favorite in London!
Take the tube to Camden town and you'll see the first shops on your right hand side.

Gapper Farewell
I do not have any pictures of these.
Saying goodbye was a long and painful process. Our first official goodbye party was the 10th of June, where the community said farewell during the meeting with a 'gapper farewell open house' at the Brothers afterwards. This was so early, because Camille left earlier than everyone else.
Lucy, one of the koinonia girls, prepared us a thank you/goodbye dinner.
I was invited to a very nice gourmet dinner at my host family (The Potters) to celebrate our year together.
It was also a last chance for a lot of people in community to invite us before we left :)
Joe gave us the last 2 weeks off to see things in London that we wanted to see and had not had the time to do so. So I went to see the musical of 'The Lion King' with Clara. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-pgZtzDj_7o
Some friends came to visit last minute.
We visited our new friends and some families for the last time...
And on Sunday morning, Mercy, Elyssa and Julia brought me to the train station.

Home 
I came home to a beautifully decorated house.
Did not expect that!


Sad to leave, happy to be back!



Sunday 24 June 2012

family visit

Mid May my parents and Michaël came to visit.
It was lovely having them over, catching up, showing them around in London, having them meet everyone here, ...

Next to the obvious, we went to a few more interesting places :)

pentecost 2012
Once a year 3 big London churches (Hillsong, HTB and Jesus House) organise a week long Pentecost festival that is opened by a huge prayerevent.
Tim Hughes, Nicky Gumbel and other great leaders included.
It is very encouraging to see so many young christians in such a secular city as London!
If you're ever in London around that time, it's worth keeping that evening free...



Virginia waters
Joe drove us up to Virginia water. A beautiful park and lake south-west of London.
If you are in London for a longer period of time, this is a must.
http://www.theroyallandscape.co.uk/landscape/valleygardens/














Antioch Lordsday
Lucky for us, there was an Antioch event that weekend, so they met a lot of people in the community here.
Thank you, Antioch-people for being so welcoming.
And a special thanks to the Stobarts for making this visit possible.

Thursday 21 June 2012

London and her quirks

a few funny things about London:

mass
I have to stifle a laugh every time at the end of the mass where they say:
Go forth, the mass is ended... THANKS BE TO GOD

am-pm
please explain to me the logic of:
1AM - 2AM - 3AM - 4AM - 5AM - 6AM - 7AM - 8AM - 9AM - 10AM - 11AM - 12PM - 1PM - 2PM - 3PM - 4PM - 5PM - 6PM - 7PM - 8PM - 9PM - 10PM - 11PM - 12AM
makes absolutely no sense to me...

ginger
there is ginger everywhere...
gingerbread
gingertea
gingershampoo
gingerbeer - which by the way is not even beer and does not contain any alcohol (or at least most of the time)
ginger roots in peoples kitchens
ginger lippgloss
dried ginger fruit
and there is much, much more...
I hardly knew what the flamish word for ginger was. First time I heard about it was maybe 4 years ago. Really weird to see it everywhere here.

hamster snacks
During christmas we babysat Humphrey, the hamster of one of the community families.
When I looked in the box where they kept all the food, I saw this:
choc drops - yummy treats for all small animals.
CHOCOLATE DROPS as a treat for your hamster??? Humphrey is one hell of a lucky hamster. I hope he knows...
interested? --> http://www.pegasuspets.co.uk/rotastak-small-animal-treat-chocolate-drops-50g.ir?cName=furries-small-animal-treats

light switches
At the start of the year we had a search expedition for all the light switches in our house. Most of them are outside of the actual room, so have fun reading a book at night. Yep, you have to get all the way out of your bed, open that door, get out of your room, turn off the light, close the door and good luck finding your bed again ... 
But then some other switches are very strategically placed somewhere behind the door. My lightswitch is outside of the room next to all the ones for the hallway. Guess how many times I've been woken up in the middle of the night with my light turned on and a silent 'oh, sorry' whispered in the hallway.

plugs in bathroom
You can search your whole life for a plug in a bathroom here in England. 
Security reasons they say. 
I'm sure those millions of electrocuted people in Belgium and everywhere else in the world are very jealous of this rule here... 

red lights
The traffic lights here make absolutely no sense. If you are waiting for the light to turn green, it takes ages (!), really it feels a lot longer than at home. So no one waits and people are crossing everywhere, with or without a red light. Very efficient!
One of the first nights in London, we decided to go to the pub in Acton. When we came back, we had to cross a rather large and somewhat complicated crossing. Of course the light was red. At the other side a group of 6 or 7 policemen were waiting for the light to turn green. (I guess they had more police around because of the riots at the start of the year.)
Anyway, our hosts just start crossing without even looking at the light. You can't believe my amazement when we crossed those policemen at the other side, who did not say a word about it. 
Weird!

Porridge
Since early winter we have a mouse in our house. We tried everything and it never got caught. 
I called him Porridge. 
Every now and again we spot him wandering around, but with the winter gone, we don't see him that often anymore...









Tuesday 19 June 2012

Camille left...

Two days ago the first of the 3 musketeers left... the end is getting closer.



Camille, it was an honour fighting alongside you!
Keep up the good work,
We miss you here. 

Monday 11 June 2012

face2Faith

Over the last ten years a number of Catholic, Protestant and Orthodox movements, groups and communities have begun to cooperate in Europe in order to build deeper friendships and to present a more unified witness. Under the name of "Together for Europe" (http://www.together4europe.org/en/ ) these movements have organised local and international events, amongst them two conferences in Stuttgart in 2004 and 2007.

This year "Together for Europe" made a political statement by meeting in Brussels together with politicians from the EU. On 12th of May we gathered in the heart of Brussels for that purpose. In parallel there were hundreds of similar gatherings around Europe, all aimed at engaging local and national politicians and expressing to them the desire of Christians to be active in shaping the future of our continent. All these sites were linked by internet and video, and part of the Brussels event was televised to all those locations.

or you can watch the televised part here.



The face2Faith project was to bring together the next generation of Together for Europe. 30 young people from Germany, England, Ireland, Hungary, Italy and Belgium gathered in Leuven on a Wednesday night: movements as varied as YMCA, Focolare, Charismatic Renewal, Offensive Junger Christen and Christus Bruderschaft were represented. During the next 4 days we spent time getting to know each other, praying together, but also exploring questions like "Wat is friendship on Facebook and in the Bible?", "How can we as young Christians impact society through our professional lives?" and "What is the cultural context we find ourselves in?". Ice-breakers, team building games in the forest an football matches alternated with ecumenical prayer services and intense theological discussions over strong Belgian beer :)
And we worked on a stage presentation for the big Brussels event on Saturday.

I really enjoyed being there and I would love to continue being part of this.
Europe needs people to stand up for certain values like family, solidarity, just economy, unity and others.

Some pictures:








Wednesday 6 June 2012

April - home and SWOT


So in April I had the chance to go home for a few days.
We had a SWOT weekend in Belgium (Similar to the weekend we had in Glasgow in september) and some time off, so my fantastic boss suggested I go a little earlier and spend some time with my family.
And in my great obedience, I did :)

Remember how in November I wrote this:
'I got the chance to see my parents and siblings for some time. So good to be able to come home for a weekend, having a nice time, going out for dinner, update each other about little things in life that have or haven't changed,...
It quickly felt as if I had never been gone.
Even though I really enjoyed being home, I am glad the GAP-year is not over yet. Being home, showed me that I still have a lot of things that I want to learn and master before going back for good.'

Well, after leaving home in April, I did feel things had changed. For the good. I think.
Anyway...it is going to be interesting going back to Belgium in a month with people expecting me to be the same, act the same and think the same as a year ago. Because I won't...
And I am curious to see how you all have changed too :)

Monday 4 June 2012

April - Easter

Easter was crazy... good crazy...

Noémie Tilmanne (some of you might know her) was here during eastertime. Noémie is studying in England and heard about me living in London, so she came down to visit.
It was great to see her again after so many years and to chat about when we were younger.

So back to Easter.
The day before Easter, some Christians celebrate a Seder meal.
It goes back to the Jewish passover meal, with her traditions.
Wikipedia says:
The main Christian view is that the Passover, as observed by ancient Israel as well as Jews today, was a type of the true Passover Sacrifice of God that was to be made by Jesus. The Israelites' Passover observance was the commemoration of their physical deliverance from bondage in Egypt, whereas Passover represents for most Christians a spiritual deliverance from the slavery of sin (John 8:34) and, since Jesus' death, a memorial of the sacrifice that Jesus has made for mankind.
So we went to one of the young families here and had a great time. It was nice to prepare Easter in this way.

After the meal we left for the Easter vigil that would last all night. 
It was done in the neocatechumenal tradition. 
A very deep and beautiful service with 7 baptisms in a pool built in the church. 
see the cross-shaped blue thing? That's the pool.
It's amazing how quickly time passed, because before we realised it, it was 6AM.

Back in Acton we had breakfast at Bob Bell's. Went home to get some sleep (which was very much needed!) And came back to Bob's where an amazing dinner was waiting for us.
24 crazy but beautiful hours. It was a great opportunity to live Easter in different traditions.
I am very grateful for this time.

Tuesday 17 April 2012

March

This month's update will be short since I told you most of what happened.
March was pretty much devided into 3 important weeks.
8-13: Mission trip to Poland
14-21: catching up with work and meeting Camille's parents and sister (and getting a new haircut :) )
22-30: D7
D7 is a seven day meditation based retreat offered by Kairos. Every day you follow guided meditations designed to help you better understand what it means to be a follower of Christ.From that place, D7 can often be instrumental, within the context of a wider discernment process, in helping people hear God speak into key directional life decisions. For example, career choices or whether to get married or explore some kind of single for the Lord vocation.D7 was designed with university-aged people in mind and seeks to challenge them to let the Lord reveal something more of his plan for their lives.  
http://www.kairos-eme.org/Training/D7 
This D7-week was a good time with the Lord. It started with questions about next year. And I found a lot of peace in that area. One of the first meditations is: 'And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.' (Rom 8:28)
What a great truth to ponder on.

Thursday 12 April 2012

Claire

End of march, Claire came to London.
How great is it to have some quality time with the sister you haven't seen in months?!
It was an honour, Claire, thanks!

The weather was beautiful, so we trotted through London for a few days.
It's in moments like this that I feel I get to know London. Shaftesbury Avenue, Sharing Cross road, Victoria station, national gallery on your right, st. Martin in the field behind you, Big Ben somewhere on your left, and here you see the countdown for the Olympics, careful cars come from this side here, it's a red light, but we don't care...
I love it! Hopefully, now the weather is getting better, we [read: us gappers] will get to know our city even better :)


PS1: Claire, I love you :)
PS2. I'm starting to realise how I have no clue when I'm speaking/writing American english and when Brittish english... I guess honour is British? 

Tuesday 10 April 2012

Happy Easter!


A meditation on easter from another perspective... 
Written by Eroni. 

   “The women went to the tomb in the very early morning of the first day of the week, carrying the spices they had prepared. They found the stone rolled away from the tomb, and when they went in they didn't find the body of the Lord Jesus.
As they were at a loss what to make of it all, suddenly two men in shining clothes stood beside them. The women were terrified, and bowed their faces towards the ground. But the men said to them, 'Why look for the living with the dead? He isn't here - he's been raised! Don't you remember? While you were still in Galilee he told you that the son of man must be handed over into the hands of sinners, and be crucified, and rise again on the third day.' And they remembered his words. They went back, away from the tomb, and told all this to the eleven and all the others. It was Mary Magdalene, Joanna, and Mary the wife of James, and the others with them. They said this to the apostles; and this message seemed to them just stupid, useless talk, and they didn't believe them. Peter, though, got up and ran to the tomb. He stooped down and saw only the grave-clothes. He went back home, perplexed at what had happened.”    Lk 24: 1-12 

  How does the word 'Easter' make you feel? Excited? Glad? Joyful? Relieved? According to this story, the first answer was in fact: puzzled, terrified, unbelieving and perplexed.

I think that's good news, actually. So many people in and around church life know that they're supposed to feel happy and joyful at Eastertide but and in their hearts a little niggle - or perhaps more than a little niggle - saying, 'Are you really sure? Isn't that all very odd? And how on earth will that help pay the mortgage, save the marriage, feed the hungry, save the whales, or even make you a better Christian?' Well, if you've got one of those little niggles today, you're in good company. Three terrified women, a bunch of frightened and grumpy disciples, and a perplexed Peter. It all makes the point: what happened on the first Easter was something nobody expected.
The challenge to pray through the Easter story is the challenge of holding your mind, and your whole life, open to the God who does unexpected things. Life-transforming things, things you'd never have imagined in your wildest dreams. Paul talks of God being able to do 'exceedingly abundantly above all that we can ask or think' (Ephesians 3.20). The power by which God can do that is precisely the power that raised Jesus from the dead (Ephesians 1.19-20).

Tuesday 20 March 2012

Kairos Week of Prayer and Fasting

Kairos Week of Prayer and Fasting
This week is a special one for us.
It's set apart to pray and fast for Kairos and Koinonia.
Please join in!

'Fasting can be a window of God's grace. It can be a powerful way to draw near to God. It can be a way of seeking him to know his will and as a response to sin. It can be an expression of love for God and as a way to commission new mission.

It's assumed in the Scripture that you will fast.
Matthew 6:16 "and when you fast...."

Use this week to join with brothers and sisters from all around the world to fast and pray for God to work in and through us.

Pray and fast for yourselves
Pray and fast for greater holiness
Pray and fast for that you can know God more
Pray and fast for freedom from sin
Pray and fast for your outreaches
Pray and fast for labourers in the harvest
Pray and fast for resources
Pray and fast for people to work for outreaches as staff
Pray and fast for money to pay staff
Pray and fast for households
Pray and fast for men and women to say 'yes' to God
Pray and fast for more volunteers - for GAP years, for student missionaries, for people who just want to serve God

Pray and fast for more saints, missionaries and martyrs in our midst.

Spread the word, invite others'

Sunday 18 March 2012

Intercession

Good clip!


"And I sought for a man among them who should build up the wall and stand in the GAP before me for the land, that I should not destroy it; but I found none." (Ezekiel 22:30)


Friday 16 March 2012

Poland!

Hi there!
Poland was class.
Great people, good schedule, beautiful nature, powerful retreat, amazing team and loads of fun!
I was struck by the generosity and hospitality of the people we met. It challenged me to take a second look at the way we receive guests...

The student retreat was located somewhere in the mountains with a beautiful sight. On saturday morning I woke up and the view from our window showed a beautiful blue sky over a frozen lake with some misty mountains in the background. STUNNING!! Best start of the day ever :)

The retreat itself went very well. Combine over 50 students from all over the place (Bielsko, Krakow, Sosnowiec, ... ) with some good teachings, prayer and fun and I guarantee a good experience.

Next to that we had a tour around Bielsko by Ania and Maciek.

Market square Bielsko-Biala
On monday we visited Szczyrk. For those who remember the kairos weekend in Poland 2008. That was in Szczyrk. So many nice memories came back :)
Here is a picture we took 4 years ago.

The only difference was the weather. This time it was cold and snowy...
And the last day we visited Krakow, where some of the students showed us around. It was good to see where they pray and meet as a group at the Dominicans (Beczka). A very beautiful city.

Also... I found my camera -thanks for your prayers :) - but only after I came back from Poland. So the only picture I have that we actually took ourselves is this one: 

our team: Maarten (Leuven) - Sam (Leuven) - Leah (Dublin) - Me (London) - Eoin (Dublin)
Dziękuję!

Thursday 8 March 2012

Next week

I'm leaving for Poland tomorrow.
The plan is to help out with the first Coffee stall in Bielsko, participate and support in their student-weekend away and get to know the Polish kairos-students a bit better.
Please pray for
- Gods presence,
- the participants
- protection
- all practicals
(and now that you're at it, pray that I might find my camera)

Tuesday 6 March 2012

Half Birthday

Happy ... to ... Happy ... to ... Happy ... to... Sophie, 
Birthday ... you!
28th of February, I was quietly sitting in the front room at the Brothers house reading a book. When all of a sudden 6 people started marching in, singing the song written out above.

Apparently it was my Half Birthday.

they even used half a candle :)
Because my real birthday is in August, and because most of us will be back home in August, they surprised me exactly 6 months earlier. Very thoughtful and I felt very loved.

Thanks guys!

Also, the rice pudding they made me, reminded me of those lovely mornings at my grandma's house in de Sophoraslaan. Great memories :)
(Al miste ik wel de gouden lepels)                                    

Sunday 4 March 2012

February

February... getting closer to today!

Mid February we all went up to Dublin for the Kairos weekend. Theme: Power -from within, from on high, in common and power to proclaim -
Great opportunity to serve. Some opportunity to catch up with people. And I have to admit that in the middle of all the craziness, God found a way to have a chat with me too.
Monday I got a chance to meet up with my Godmother, who lives in Dublin. It was lovely to catch up and to see her new apartment!

After the Kairosweekend we got a few days off. This year I realised that one of the things that make me relax most are some good walks in nature. A nice park or forest is my favourite, but even a walk around Acton can do the job.
What is it that makes you regain your energy? Think about it, it's a lot more effective than to just sit around and do nothing.

I forgot to say in the January update that our schedules changed. We have a normal amount of time for sleeping now and more time for morning prayer. A very welcome change. Next to that we still have our 4 training sessions a week, time to do different jobs and more study time. (With study time I mean time to prepare some of the talks we give each other. Mostly about a book we were reading. Or time to study for the psalmscourse. )

Koinonia has gotten into second gear. Great things are happening and the students are starting to ask for deeper stuff. Time for us to start thinking about that. What a good challenge to have! ptl!

Alright, this was February.
Coming up: some short stories from the past weeks or general observations :)

Saturday 3 March 2012

January part II

I'm so far behind! It's already march and I'm still writing about january...
Do you mind if I just give you some headlines about what happened next, so that I can continue writing about everyday things again?

Mid January we had our Koinonia weekend away in Buckden Towers. The theme was 'JOY'. Joy being more than a feeling. Joy coming from ONE source. Joy being something you will not find if that is the only thing you're looking for. Joy relating to Hope.
We were around 40 people, koinonia students, foreign gappers and staff included.


After that weekend we stayed for a couple of days for the GAP retreat. All the European gappers in one castle. Thinking and praying about the future, looking forward. A lot of good things came up for me. And some great star-thoughts stayed. A time I will not quickly forget. A question came up though: How is it possible to be an active member of a community, maybe have a career, have a family, have a good prayer life, keep your friends and still be a good person with enough energy to look out for the needs of the people around you? If you have a practical and concrete answer, please let me know! You'll be a lifesaver :)

Back in London I had a nice time with Clare D. One thing that will stay with me is when we were in Westfield, by far the biggest and poshest shopping centre I have every seen, sitting on one of those leather benches, praying and reading our bibles. How often do you meet a friend you get to do that with?

However nice all these things where, January was a difficult time for me. I guess after 5 months of running from one good thing to another, at some point the energy bar starts to look red. Luckily I have some very good leaders here who took care of it very well. February onwards things started to get better and I believe I learnt a lot about managing energy levels in a responsible way. One more thing to take back home in July!

Friday 3 February 2012

January update part I

January 2012... 2012, twelve years ago I started highschool. I was 12, 12 years ago :)

New years eve...
So as the sneek preview showed, This year started with a BANG.
We celebrated the new year with the mens household and a few other guests.
Great people, great time.


Aline goes London
Aline, thanks for coming! We had a great time rangeing from a scary and unexpectedly long nightwalk towards the Tower Bridge to a lovely boatride to Greenwich. 
By the way, that nightwalk was the best one I've had so far this year!
One day I'll find out what that weird tunnel was :)
( Zijn uw foto's gelukt? )


Gapper invasion
Two weeks ago we had some of the european Gappers join us for a week. (2 of them gapping in Dublin, 1 in Scotland and Clare D., who is not really a gapper, but who was more than welcome :) )
It was interesting to see how their Gap-schedule differs from ours. And I had not met most of them before, so it was a pleasure meeting those great ladies here!

Ok, I have to go get ready for an evening at the Potters. Looking forward to some time with my 'hostfamily' here! More january stories later... :)


Saturday 7 January 2012

December update




December was a weird month.
A lot of things happened.
Let's check the google calendar...

The month started with Kim and Elisabeth coming over, a thanksgiving meal and a 'power-weekend' (about the Holy Spirit, gifts and fruits)  - en goed begonnen is half gewonnen! -

The next week was the 'bless your uni' week, where some christian groups in UCL (university) worked together to be a loving witness to students. We handed out gloves and hot drinks and it was highly appreciated.
And we went to the 'fusion'-day. (more info in one of the previous posts)
+ The Kew garden trip.
A great week!

The following week was more festive with the Koinonia Christmas party -->
and The Muppet Christmas Carol
           |
          V



The 3th week: We moved in into the house of one of the families here. They were on holidays and let us use their place. It was such a grace to be able to live in such a beautiful house for a while. HOLIDAYS started on thursday. And we had a fantastic christmas dinner with the team. PM and Joe made us an impressive meal with brussels sprouts that I actually did not dislike. Good job!
On christmas day we were invited at the Potters. A great family who take very good care of us :)
I went to my first real midnight mass. (for as far as I can remember)
And christmas day was at Mimi and Tim Turners place. Very nice, english, relaxed and fun day!


The last week we visited Brighton for a day. And Pevensey castle. It was one of the best days soo far. The sea was beautiful, we had nice compagny and it was soo good to be out for some time!
The 31st we moved back to our own little household and we had a nice dinner at the mens household with a few other guests. Later on we walked to the london eye and waited...

Little sneek preview of January:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J--WBdwnyvI&feature=related
It was definitely worth the waiting!

Friday 6 January 2012

November update

Hi! 
Here is an update I made end of november. 



Beste,
London, november 2011
Hello,

As you know, I have been living in London for 3 months now. Time for an update!
It will be very similar to my previous letter, where I explained what I expected this year to look like. Let’s compare how close those predictions were to the real London GAP-life.

June 2011

The idea is to serve there as a full-time Kairos Gapper.
Here is a short explanation.

GAP? Never heard of it…
The practical and spiritual lessons of this past year will be of use for a lifetime.”

Kairos GAP is more than a year out. It is a year of your life invested in service, training and mentoring.





Service
The gappers typically spend around six hours a day in some kind of Christian volunteer service capacity. 

This could be serving the desperately poor living on the rubbish dumps of Manila or speaking to college students in Minnesota about Jesus Christ. 

It could be helping with a youth outreach in Latin America or running a street mission in inner city Dublin.




Training
Over the course of the year, the average gapper spends around 400 hours exploring training from life skill topics such as self-management and intercultural awareness to more discipleship topics such as service and scripture. 

Given that a normal college class can take around 40 hours of your time, the GAP year is a bit like 10 classes over a year. 

The high training input that goes on in the year is the reason why many gappers point to their GAP year as a foundational year of service and learning impacting the rest of their lives.

Indeed one of the most valued aspects of the year is the space to develop and think about longer term vision for life.












More specific GAP in Londen:

My service will mostly be in Koinonia. This is a mission which reaches university students in London. (Similar to Pharos here in Leuven.)

Less than 1% of London’s university students attend a Church once a month. London was identified in a recent study as being one of the loneliest places in the UK. There is a desperate need for Christian community to be built amongst students.  (According to the GAP-director in London)








Most of my work will be reaching out to students in London to tell them about Christ.
Alongside the evangelism I will be involved with some administrative tasks for Koinonia, helping out with some youth work in community (Antioch) and a few other service opportunities.



The training consists of
  1. Evangelisation
  2. Scripture study
  3. project management
  4. Local mission – improving as a mission worker

Contact

If you have any questions, please ask!



Sincerely,
Marie-Sophie Vanderstuyft

more info about Koinonia: http://site.koinonia.co.uk./
November 2011

Gapping is a full time job, I’m telling you…
Here is a long explanation.

Gap? Yes, I heard of it in june
I feel like I have been learning a lot in the last 3 months. And I know for fact that this will be of good use later on.

It is such a great experience to be able to serve, get some training, help to build God’s dream without having to worry about anything else like studies or other obligations.

Service
We typically spend 24 hours a day working for Koinonia (the local Pharos) and the Antioch community.

I really enjoy the work with students. Most of this time is meeting up with new people, doing coffee stalls, preparing our Thursday nights, having students over for housedinners, cooking meals for our social events, meeting up with the gap-ers, etc.

In Antioch I am helping out with the youthgirls from 11-13 year old. They are fantastic!

Training
This year London started a new project called Mission school. We are the guinea-pigs.
This means that we get a lot of training. Four mornings a week are spent in mission training.
We focus on general evangelism, Scripture, our local mission and project management skills.

General evangelism covers books like
‘Searching issues’- Nicky Gumbel

‘Questioning evangelism’ – Randy Newman

Scripture studies are mostly the Psalms course. Where we look at different characters of God through the psalms.

Our local mission handles questions like How and why do we do coffee stalls?, how do we work as a team? Etc.

Project management skills train us to lead a more effective life. I am now an expert in google calendars, google documents and making mindmaps. Well… I should be.

Next to that we’re involved in the ‘underway-group’ of the community which is called TPC.
So we are getting a lot of those teachings too J

Very intense, but very instructive.



à true


à It is incredible how open people here are to ‘start a friendship’. London really is a lonely city.

I feel like Koinonia has seen some very explicit things happen already. A few people clearly gave their lives to the Lord and a lot of people were open to meet up with us over coffees.
We started a new project where we asked the students if they wanted to commit for a year to Koinonia. Thinking that it would be nice to have a small core group of people where we can count on. God did the unexpected. Except for 2 people all the other students said they wanted to do the commitment. So for now we have at least 11 students committed to Koinonia and more are coming up. It really is an answered prayer!

à I’m not involved in the administration, more in pastoral care and leading a household




à yep!







Contact

Please stay in contact if you have any questions or if you want to give me an update on your lives. I would love to get these!
And you can always check my blog:
www.msgoeslondon.blogspot.com
Marie-Sophie