The Mission:

June 2014, the Carlsbad Fusion High School group traveled for 10 days to Soldotna and Anchorage Alaska. Soldotna is a town of 5000 on the Kenai Peninsula along the southern reach of Alaska. Working alongside the Alaskan Christian College, the students did a variety of labor-intensive work projects to improve both the college and local schools and non-profit agencies. The mission of the Alaska Christian College is to empower Alaska Natives through biblically-based education.

Completing the first leg of the trip, we then traveled to the 1st Covenant Church of Anchorage to put on Kids Camps over 4th of July weekend reaching out to local children in one of the older areas of the community. The statistics in Alaska are staggering - 75% of Alaskans experience domestic violence, with rape 2.5 times the national average. The violence towards children is also way above the average. The governor of Alaska says, "It really is the secret evil that is rotting us from the inside. It is something we don't talk about too much. It is done in the secrecy and privacy of homes." He said he's praying just for Alaska's rate of crimes like child sexual abuse -- which has been the highest in the nation -- to fall below the national average. He wants people to know that it's OK to talk about what's happened to them, wants them to have the courage to speak out.


Alaska 2014 Slideshow

Monday, June 30, 2014

Day 3 - Words are few

Today was full ... of work, of God.  Today was full. Trees were cut, wood was chopped, classrooms were cleaned, vehicles were washed, library was cleaned, gardens were weeded, buildings were painted, furniture was moved and God was in the details.  Everyone was safe, no one was hurt, all worked hard.  Muscles are sore, mosquito bites are huge and calluses are beginning. God is good! Night all!

Good Morning Alaska!

We arrived in Anchorage and drove by van to the First Covenant Church last night.  Arriving just after 1am Anchorage time (2am San Diego time), the students were wired for sound while the adult leaders were very happy to see a few couches to elevate us off the floors.  Gaining a few hours sleep, we awoke to a fresh Alaska morning, cereal and muffins, 30 minutes of personal bible time and then church with the Covenant Church.  Long white church, open beam ceilings, wood pews ....  100 in attendance today.  60 visiting.  28 (us) from San Diego and 30 from Minnesota completing their mission trip.

Live worship band (mellow and traditional)
Family prayer time ( different for our students)
Children's message (on Babylon)
The Pastors message on Babylon - Jeremiah 29: 4-14 (engage the City where you've been called / bloom where you are planted /good message)
Lots of stand up, sit down :-)

Spent some time just hanging out, killing time ... random lunch, and we are on our way to Soldotna.  We traveled along one of the world's great drives starting in Anchorage and leading south on the Seward Highway towards Portage Glacier. It's the trip, not the destination, that makes it worthwhile. The two-lane highway along Turnagain Arm, chipped from the foot of the rocky Chugach Mountains, provides a platform to see a magnificent, ever-changing, mostly untouched landscape full of wildlife.  Known as one of the most beautiful in all of America.  To the right large expanse of mud, much of it quicksand cover the surface until water is reached.  Tides comes in and go out every 6 hours and at times can reach  30 feet high! Winds can max out at 100 miles per hour making it a haven for wind surfers.  Across the water snow capped mountains rise up 4000-5000 feet in the air.  On the left of the road a few houses peek out, hiking trails go up and every once in awhile you see a pipe coming out spewing fresh water where people can literally fill up their jugs with fresh water.

We took a break from the drive and stopped at the Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center- a non-profit center gives homes to injured and orphaned deer, moose, owls, elk, bison, muskox, bear, fox, and caribous.  Although you can drive through this 200 acre preserve, we got to walk through it giving us unique opportunity too see the animals in their namtural habitat, even watching two bears wrestle.

As we drove for nearly 2 1/2 hours high energy chatter fell silent as one by one the student fell asleep - not even the beauty could keep them awake.   Off the side of the rose you could see the Kanai River now with fisher men in the wader standing hip deep waiting for their Salmon and Halibut .... 'this the Season.

Finally, 7:30pm we rolled into the Alaska Christian College.  Tomorrow begins our work schedule.  Please pray as we begin to define the difference between "camp" and "mission" .... "Work" and " fun".

Tonight we toasted marshmallow by bonfire in broad daylight at 10pm ... weird!


Sunday, June 29, 2014

Anticipation grows as you approach a mission trip. As we stood in front of the church ready to head to the airport, parents said their goodbys as students eagerly waiting to just get on the road. Bags were marked and counted, instructions were given and everyone was once again reminded that regardless of our expectations this was God's trip.  Only He knows the plans He has for us, the path He has laid out.  The vision was odd as the kids piled into three awaiting limos - yes long black stretch limos.  Hmmmm.... so random that this has become the least expensive way to the airport but it was ... so limos it was.  Rather a different looking mission trip I must say.  Leave it to Carlsbad campus to do it right!

We, being the Bostwicks were bringing up the rear in the chase SUV with the extra luggage.  We weren't 7 minutes down the road before the call came from JD Larson.  Suitcase and Backpack left inside the church!  Really?  Well we always say, no trip is complete without at least one U-Turn.  Quick U-Turn - meet up with truck chasing us and we're off again.  Oh which student forgot their luggage?   Well we hate to name names ....



Checkin, boarding, loading, etc - smooth, smooth, smooth.   Seems like a long flight - might be something to do with it all being in daylight, including even now as I write this and look out the window at 10:01pm and it's not yet sunset.  Guess we better get used to it.

So even in the initial hours as we travel to our destination the anticipation hangs in the air.  As everyone is catnapping on the plane, the excitement is still just under the surface and can still be heard in whispered conversations. And even now God's at work.




Monday, June 2, 2014

When a door opens..

Our team sat together in a tight circle around a fire pit talking about where God might lead us.  How do we open a door?   How do we make sure we are ready to take on Kingdom building?  Then again, what is Kingdom Building? Is Kingdom Building traveling to another place ... another state, another country and as quickly as we can converting as many people as we can?  Is it infiltrating another culture to impact them "for the Lord."  That doesn't seem right.

As a team, we make plans.  We plan Vacation Bible Study, we plan crafts, we create expectations in our minds.  We picture children enthralled that we have travelled 2500 miles to see them and tell them about Jesus.  We imagine serving food at a soup kitchen.  We've been told about clearing brush and wooded areas (Alaskan wooded areas, mind you!). We picture "service projects" whatever they might be and all the while sharing Jesus.  But what if ? What if ... what if God is sending us for reasons, or a reason, only He knows?  What if 28 of us are headed to Alaska for 11 days just so one of the 28 (only known by Him) is to have a "chance" meeting with one person in Soldotna?  Or, we get there and are rerouted to another area and end up working with elders instead of kids?  Uh?  What do we do with all these crayons?

The point being is, as with life, and even more so when we are headed out to do Gods work, we make plans, but we are at His whim. It's His work, not ours.  His call, not ours.  His plan, not ours.

Being the hands and feet of Jesus doesn't mean we make plans, expectations and blueprints to follow and then get frustrated when we go off track.  Being the hands and feet mens just that - we go where He sends us, we respond when He places it before us and we act when He says go!

Sitting around the dancing fire, we talked about the rope climbing term On Belay.  When you climb, you are tethered to a person below you - a groundsman, of sorts, a stabilizer.  The terms On Belay and Belay On are used between the climber and the one holding the ropes, as the climber moves on up the rock.  When the climber says Belay On and the stabilizer says On Belay, it mean go on, I have the rope, I have your back, you are secure, I have you covered.

As we move into this mission trip, as a team, we pray that we stay open to what He has planned for us and that we remain flexible and willing to be used for His will and His desires.  We pray Belay On - knowing that God replies On Belay.  He is sending us with His plan, His will and He has the ropes.