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Outreach

For This Cause

At Shoreline we believe that once you discover how much God loves you, you will want to give back to those who are less fortunate in your community and the world. Wherever there is an injustice, you may very well see the fingerprint of Jesus through Shoreline. Any season, any time, our challenge to you is to share God's love.  The outreach into our community, missions and through the Love Foundation are based on personal relationships that have been formed through Pastors Rob & Laura or Shoreline staff members. Come join us as we Unveil God's Love!

As we roll into the second half of 2009 there is always a place to make a wrong right, go to the Love Foundation page to find out how. 

 



Everything listed under: Outreach

  • Message from Haiti, Day of the Quake

    Letter from Jamalyn, a missionary to Haiti who was in Fondwa, at the orphanage where our kids came from. It's quite beautiful to read about relationships being all that matter in life because in a minute, all things temporary can be lost: 

    Dear Friends and Prayer Warriors!

    I am so thankful for your prayers and words of concern. It has been a long two weeks since the ground first shook. Many of you have asked what I saw, what I thought and so on. It is not real easy for me to put all these thoughts into words just yet, but I will share with you what is on my mind at the moment. 

    The destruction was unbelievable. At first when the quake hit I was with the children at the orphanage and couldn't figure out if what had happened was something others felt around Fondwa or if it was just in that one spot. My mind just couldn't wrap itself around what was happening. All the older children thought it was the second coming. All I knew was they had to get away from the building (that somehow miraculously did not fall) and up to the main road. So I told them that I wasn't sure if it was Jesus coming back or an earthquake but if it was Jesus he would find us on the main road. Up on the main road, I was shocked to see that the shaking of the ground was indeed an earthquake and the further I walked down the road the further I keep seeing destruction. The protestant church where we worshiped. Our friend Dia's house where everyone hung out on her porch. My dear friend Jesula where I would sit and talk about life and drink coffee. All gone. Then, there was the guesthouse. All the memories Dave and I made there our first two years of marriage--gone. The work the peasants did to put that structure up and to create infrastructure--a radio station, a clinic, a business office--gone. The Sisters quarters--gone. It was just unbelievable to me. Then there was the news about Sister Oudel and Baby Jude--gone. All in a matter of 35 seconds. I was scared to ask about the school. I didn't have to - as people saw me they began to tell me. The school is gone. Lekol la te tonbe. I felt my stomach turn. The blessing was it was after school was done for the day so none of our students were hurt. However, two Masons working at the school lost their lives. My office at St. Luke's has concrete walls. It is an odd reminder of what is here and what can be gone in seconds. I figured it is too much to ask the trustees to put dry wall over it so I will just cope (or have my therapist write a letter for me). After the first night of sleeping on the road with all our neighbors and listening to their prayers that they would randomly cry out in the middle of the night I realized all this "stuff" is gone but my relationships within the community were still strong. Madame Chery gave us a mat and sheet to keep he team warm in the middle of the night. We all had shorts and t-shirts on and the temp dropped to about 50 degrees. In the morning, Jesula whose husband suffered a broken arm, leg and clavicle (he was working at the school too) boiled us water so we would have clean water to drink. She had lost her house, her husband was suffering with broken bones that were not yet set and she took time to care for us. Later the Sisters made sure we had some food to eat. These relationships are all I have now and they are really all I needed in the end. I am thankful for my relationships with all of you too. You all were the force behind the peace I felt when I should have felt panic. I knew that I had a community praying for me at home and I was so thankful for your love. 

    As for Fondwa, Dave is going in two weeks to begin to assess the needsand then we will be able to decide what is next. If you are interested in donating to Fondwa go to www.familyhm.org <http://www.familyhm.org/> and click on Fondwa. If you are interested in going on a team with us in the future make sure to let us know. 


    Much love,
    Jamalyn

  • Battle 4 A Cure

    In May of 2008 my sister ran across a craigslist post by a mother of a 4 year old child who had lost all of his hair. He attended school a few hours a day and the children made fun of him. The post was asking people to donate money so she could by him a wig. The wig was going to cost $800. My sister told her husband about it because she wanted to help the mother raise the money. My sisters husband told a guy at work and he actually wrote him an $800 check. My sister delivered the check to the mother. This is when my life changed.

    My sister came home and told me all about this gorgeous little boy that she met. I decided that I just HAD to meet him. I called up his mother, Michelle and asked her how I could help. I coordinated a fundraiser with 5 live bands, door prizes, a live silent auction and local TV stations in less than a month. All I did was ask for help from the community, we didn't pay for one thing. The fundraiser was a huge success, we raised thousands of dollars for the Edmondson family; and Michelle's son, Joshua, became a very good friend of mine.

    It turned out that he has an autoimmune disease and an extremely rare tumor disease. Tumors infect his entire little body and he ends up getting a lot of them biopsied. He recently started chemotherapy with hopes of controlling the tumor disease. He has had numerous surgeries, lost all of the hair on his entire body and has spent entirely too much time in Dell Children's Hospital. Every time he was in the hospital I would take him toys, blankets and pajamas. After a while every time he had to stay he would tell his mom "Call Miss Amanda. I need to see her." I would always drop what I was doing and head straight to the hospital with gifts. I would stay and play with him in the play room on most days. He was on the special floor...the oncology floor, because he couldn't be around too many germs.

    By having such a small friend that frequented the special floor in the hospital so much, I got to know a lot of children there with cancer. I decided that I wanted to start something where we would deliver toys to these kids. It meant so much to Joshua that he could call someone and they would drop everything to bring him Batman pajama pants. So, that's what I did. I came up with Battle4aCure and Hope Baskets because these kids are in the battle of a lifetime and they just need someone who cares. I started researching childhood cancer and I didn't like what I found. 11 Children die from cancer every single day. I started following a blog of a little girl named Samantha Hughes. She was the same age as my niece. She passed away shortly after her 5th birthday. I will never forget how I felt the day I read that post, I just sat and cried. Since I started, our group lost a little boy named William who was 2; a little girl named Katie that was 4; a little girl named Reagan that was 5 and many others that we weren't extremely close to but it was still heartbreaking. We are usually introduced to the kids when they have first been diagnosed. We see them go from good to bad to worse to unresponsive in some cases. It is the most heartbreaking thing I have ever witnessed in my entire life.

    We have also seen a lot of children beat cancer, which is like winning the lotto. The excitement we share with those families is unmatchable! It has been a roller coaster of fun and sorrow and everything in between.

    As for my friend Joshua, he is still undergoing chemo treatments. His doctors are hoping for a miracle and so am I. Joshua and I have spent A LOT of time together over the past 3 years. I've had him on his birthdays, during Christmas and Summer vacations and I've taken him just about anywhere he asked to go, whether it was the ice cream place or Sea World. He has been the most amazing little blessing and I love him like he was my own.

    Battle4aCure started as a dream to make a difference and touch a life, and I truly believe it has done just what God intended it to. :)

  • How may we help YOU?!

    Met with Mayor Lee Leffingwell and he asked, “How may I help you?” - we replied , “No, how may we help you better serve the people in our community?” Not sure he quite knew what to do with that offer, but we believe it is the beginning of an awesome opportunity to say “Austin, God loves you!”

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