8.27.2011

Transition Underway

We have some important news.  Over the last month I learned about a new internship opportunity at Bethlehem's North Campus.  It is with the same pastor who oversees me now, but it involves the opportunity to shepherd adults in a way that lines up very closely with my call to pastoral ministry.  After much prayer and discussion, Julie and I felt confident that I should at least interview for the position.  I was chosen as one of the three finalists, and then offered the job after the second round of interviews.  This and what we have learned about the position and people during the interview process has confirmed for us that God has called me into a new season of ministry.   The new internship moves me into a leadership role among the career-age single adults at our North Campus and into counseling along-side our main counseling pastor.  Julie and I are excited to see God provide this opportunity.  We feel career-aged adults are a group Julie and I can connect with well with our vocational background and giftings.  We expect it to be a great help in preparing both of us for full-time pastoral ministry.

This will be a 20 hour per week position, so when Fall classes start (end of September at Bethel), I’ll be required to decrease my hours with Father’s Light Mentors.  As of October 1,  my status will change from urban missionary to volunteer director.  This is the painful part of the decision.  We have dreams for what God will do through Father's Light, but we are holding on to the promise of Romans 8:28.  We're trusting that God will work even greater good through the ministry as a result of this transition.  At this time we’re searching for someone who can step into my director role at a similar level of hours to what I have been doing. My hope is to train in a new director and then serve on our Father's Light leadership team until we depart from Bethlehem.  Please pray with us for God's hand and His timing in my transition and our search for a new director.

Because my new internship is paid by the church, we will no longer need to raise support as well.  It has been a gift to have such a generous team of prayer and financial contributors this past 18 months.  Like we’ve mentioned before, your role has been critical to the ministry expansion God has brought about.  And who knows what is to come as God continues to work through our mentoring and draw new mentors in.  We’ll continue to keep you updated through emails and the blog about Father's Light as well as the new internship. 

May the Advocate of the fatherless and widows bless you and keep you! 

Tony

7.27.2011

What Would You Do with 820 Hours?

How about catch up on all the to-do projects around the house?  Finish all the books you've only made it part way through?  Do an in-depth study on a favorite book of the Bible?  Tackle a new hobby? Or maybe just sleep?

How about investing every one of those 800+ hours into the life of children?  Well, I just compiled our numbers for the past 12 months and it turns out that's about how many hours our group put into the lives of kids.  820 hours of meeting, enjoying life, relating, leading, praying, and pointing kids all ages to Christ.  Praise God!

Since the inception of the ministry in 2006, our mentors have put in an extraordinary effort.  We've seen a total of 32.75 years of ministry dedicated to the lives of 20 different father-absent kids at Bethlehem Baptist, Hope Academy, and our community.  What an amazing work of God!  Here's a sampling of some of what the kids experienced over the past two months...

Last weekend we made a trip to Feed My Starving Children to spend 2 hours learning about global hunger and help pack around 100 boxes (containing 36 bags of food each) for kids in places like Haiti and Somalia.  For many kids this was the first time they ever served in this way. 

Sorry, forgot to take pictures, but this is a pretty good stock photo :)

In mid-June about 12 of us made it to an outing at Ham Lake Baptist Camp that included water fun (of course), a cook-out, and a Gospel-focused devotional.

Paddle boat mania.

Talking about the nearness of God, purchased for us by Christ.

And just two weeks earlier we participated in the Young Eagles program which gives kids the opportunity to fly with pilots who donate their time.  High winds forced us to reschedule, but 8 of us still made it and had a blast.  The three older kids were surprised when the pilots turned over the controls to them soon as they were up in the air.  Talk about a fun time for a teen-age boy!

Pre-flight briefing.
Helping out with the pre-flight check.
Andre, Jeremiah & I, ready to go.
Our lively backseat.  They were a brave pair.
We saw a lot of post-flight smiles!

6.28.2011

Sleepless in a Good Way

My wife was recently helping out as a translator for the introduction meeting of our newest mentor, Ross.  She met with Ross and Elizabeth, the mother of the boy with whom we intended to match Ross.  During the get-to-know-you session, Elizabeth shared a touching story with Julie and Ross about her son Asahel and the "little old man" who lives in their neighborhood.

Not too long ago, the older man invited Asahel to come fishing with him.  Elizabeth said her son was so eager to have a man in his life that he literally couldn't sleep the entire night before the fishing trip.  This was extra special for Asahel, because his mother works 2-3 jobs to pay the bills and rarely has time for special activities.  The next day when he came back from the fishing trip however, Asahel seemed frustrated.  His mother asked him what was wrong, and he said, "I was so tired I ended up sleeping almost the whole time." 

You can imagine Asahel is pretty thrilled about having a mentor who won't just take him fishing once, but intends to do something meaningful with him every week!  Ross is now one month into things and reports God has blessed them with a good start.  Asahel loves to talk, so there hasn't been much ice to break!  And so far it sounds like no one has nodded off...  

Ross, Asahel, and Elizabeth.

6.20.2011

Five Years Ago on Father's Day Weekend

I wanted to share with you the sermon that launched our church on the Life Coaches (now Father's Light Mentors) ministry path five years ago.  It ranks as one of the top 10 sermons I've ever heard.  I was a kindergarten Sunday School teacher and small group leader at the time.  Sitting in the pews, I knew I had no time to get involved, but I could barely keep myself from bee-lining it to the ministry table after David Michael's rousing call to serve.

Some 15 months later, God made a way for me to join Mike (the Life Coaches leader at that time) and two other faithful men in the church to relaunch the ministry.  Almost four years later, we've seen God raise up over 20 men and women to dedicate one year of their life (and beyond) to mentoring father-absent children.  And by God's grace 16 are actively mentoring in our church's ministry today!

The sermon is about 50 minutes long and worth hearing in entirety.  The call to serve as a Life Coach/Father's Light mentor comes just before the 41:00 mark if you like to cut to the chase :)

http://www.hopeingod.org/sermon/more-abundantly-all-we-ask-or-think

Hoping with you that we can "blow the dust off this sermon" in 16 years and "marvel,"

Tony

6.02.2011

From Life Coaches to Father's Light

We just finished the process of choosing a new ministry name!  It was a little bit bigger of an undertaking than expected.  A name communicates a lot of information... some good, some not so helpful.  It takes a while to sift through a variety of good options.  After quite a bit of discussion we chose the name Father's Light Mentors for a variety of reasons.  

 
 1.  Our ministry addresses father absence head-on, and our ultimate desire is that God would use each mentor to lead children to Himself as their true Heavenly Father.  


2.  If you do a concordance search on "light," you'll see it is a familiar image associated with God's presence, favor, protection, revelation of truth, wisdom, goodness, life and His glory.  And it's not only God who gets associated with these things, but we become His "children of the light" and "light of the world" in Christ. It's hard to find a better constellation of traits that we want to embody as mentors to the kids we serve!



3.  Our name upholds the fact that it is the Father who is the source of anything good in our lives and our mentoring.  The light doesn't come from us. 


4.  Last, we wanted to be sure people knew we're a mentoring ministry.  So what better way to do that than put Mentors in the name :)  And of course, we liked the way Father's Light Mentors sounds -- even if it's a bit of a tongue-twister!

In some ways it feels like starting a new chapter as we announce the new name, and move on to work on a new logo and hopefully our own web page.  But, of course, these are just the window dressings of the ministry.  The flesh and blood, real life-changing work of mentoring the father-absent goes on just the same as it has for almost five years now.  We'd love to have you pray for the small changes we're working on, but we especially would love prayer for the 16 of us who are mentoring and our kids.  Also, please remember the 40+ kids we are hoping to serve at Bethlehem and Hope Academy.  God bless!

Note:  If you're wondering why we had to find a new ministry name, check out the post below.  

4.12.2011

Life Coaches for Kids®: Major Expansion

These are exciting days for the national Life Coaches for Kids® ministry, which has served as an umbrella and resource to us at Bethlehem for years. 

Over the last year, Life Coaches began a partnership with Young Life, the world’s largest youth ministry (reaching approximately 2 million kids in about 70 countries).  The goal of Life Coaches has always been to reach the millions of father-absent kids throughout the world.  Until the Young Life partnership, however, Life Coaches ministries had only been started in a handful of states and in India on a small scale.  At this time Young Life has already started training hundreds of mentors in 15 major cities in the U.S.  This kind of expansion has been the hope of Life Coaches all along.

The next step of this partnership was just announced. As of May 1, Young Life will be taking over ownership of the Life Coaches ministry.  Practically, this means the ministry has the chance to grow 30-fold (by conservative estimates) over the coming years, without having to build a national-sized ministry from scratch -- Young Life already has the scale necessary to expand Life Coaches immediately!

Please join us in praying for this amazing opportunity.  At Bethlehem, we will keep doing what we've been doing with just a few small adjustments, like finding a new name for our ministry.  Our hope is that thousands more kids in Young Life programming will get to experience what 15 kids are currently experiencing in ours.

Life Coaches has put together a good-bye page on their website.  It has a moving photo tribute to their last 12 years of church-based ministry.  I encourage you to check it out.  You'll see a number of pics of the mentors in our program and they sneak me in there too.  Enjoy!  

Link to Slideshow







3.28.2011

New Opportunity to Provide Life Coaches for Children of Prisoners

We're excited to announce the start of a new partnering effort that gives us the opportunity to provide coaches for another important teaching and mentoring ministry here at Bethlehem, Fathers for Christ.  

Fathers for Christ was founded by former inmate and Bethlehem member Dustin Shipley. Dustin equips male prisoners at the Lino Lakes Correctional Facility and Hennepin County Jail to reconnect with their children as godly leaders for Christ.  He leads men through a 12 week class, connects them with one-on-one mentors from our church, and helps provide them transitional housing and support/accountability once they leave prison.  Having life coaches from our ministry in the lives of these fathers' kids is one more important piece for God to use to establish these families in Christ. 

Dustin leads seven fathers through his 12 week class at a time.

2.20.2011

Rare Event: 2 in 1

We’re celebrating a rare event in our ministry:  just a few weeks ago we had two mentors start within one week of each other!  You might recognize one of them in the picture below!


It’s been a long time coming.  I was thrilled to become an urban missionary last year since this let me increase my ministry hours and opened up time in my schedule so I could become a life coach, myself.  Now, the demands of support-raising (we've nearly reached our goal!) have slowed down enough to get started.  Praise God!

I’m matched up with a wonderful boy named Andre. He’s a smart and outgoing kindergartner at Hope Academy who loves basketball, sledding, and just spending time together. He’s gotten to know Jeremiah, Levi, and Hannah, and they've hit it off well. When I started mentoring I knew it would be fun, but I'm surprised to find I enjoy it even more than I expected! God is good!

Ben and his wife, Bethany.
Our other new mentor is Ben.  In the end of December, he contacted me to let me know that both he and his own mentor (a pastor at Bethlehem) felt like God wanted him to start working with a young man. He let me know that he was hoping to mentor someone near his home in the West Metro.  We found a 14 year-old youth who lived near Ben and appeared to have a lot in common.  He was part of the national ministry’s waiting list, so I called up his mother to see if I could drop by to get to know them better and get him registered with Bethlehem.  It turned out I called exactly one year from the day she first signed her son Bobby up for a life coach. 

Two weeks later Bobby’s mom told Ben and me through tears how happy she was to have the opportunity for a godly man to get involved in her son’s life.  So far things are off to a good start.  Last week Ben was taking Bobby out to the racquetball court to teach him the game Ben shared with an important mentor from his own college days. 

We’re thrilled to have Ben come on board!  He’s part of the Air Force National Guard, and is set to deploy in late June for five months overseas.  He obviously has a lot of good reasons to wait a year to start mentoring, but it’s impressive that he didn’t want to push it off.  One of those reasons has to do with becoming a father.  He and his wife are expecting their first child to arrive in mid-July after he’s deployed.  Please pray for God to provide a way for him to be there for the birth!

1.31.2011

Seeing God's Goodness Through Mentoring

This is an inspiring story about one of our veteran life coaches/leaders, and what God has done in the midst of some significant challenges. It was just published this week in our church newsletter.  Enjoy!

“What do I do with a rebellious kid?”

“What if there’s no connection?”

“What if they think I’m lame?”

These are the normal questions that run through most of our minds when we first dive into children’s ministry. When the children we minister to come from broken homes, we can add to these:

“How do I break through their defenses?”

“How do I deal with so many troubling influences in this child’s life when I’m only seeing him once a week?”

For one of our most experienced Life Coach mentors at Bethlehem, Howard Engnell, there was one more question:

“How do I build a relationship with a young man I can barely hear?”

Three years ago when he started meeting with a second grader named Jude, this was Howard’s assessment: “I could see he was troubled. His parents had divorced, and his dad had moved on with a new family. It was just Jude and his mom. He was angry and struggled with authority figures.” Jude’s dad had left a hole in his life.

“I would spend time with him, but we struggled to communicate. He was quiet, and talked quiet, and with my hearing impairment it was hard to hear him.” It’s what many of us would consider a hopeless situation. But Howard realized, “I just had to be his friend.” And Howard has been quite the friend.
For three years Howard has been committed to Jude. He faithfully brought Jude to Cub Scouts during their first year. Jude often wouldn’t cooperate with the leaders, and he wasn’t willing to put on his uniform for meetings. Howard never received a “thank you” from Jude during that time.

Still, by God’s grace, Howard didn’t give up. He met Jude in his world just like Christ meets us. Like a father or grandfather, he helped him learn how to hit a baseball. He taught him to ice skate backward. He took him on the free outings to sports games and performing arts that our ministry provides. And he taught Jude to say thank you. At the same time, Howard’s wife, Grace, befriended Jude’s mother, and they stayed connected.

Looking back three years later, Howard and Grace remember what it felt like to see Jude smile for the first time. It took over a year of waiting but now smiles are a regular sight. Howard brags about how Jude, now in 5th grade, survived a 19-mile bike ride to Fort Snelling with him. Grace talks with mother-like pride of how Jude graciously served them drinks and snacks at a recent visit. Their biggest joys are over the small but noticeable changes in Jude’s heart.

Jude is learning to thank the adults that serve him, from his sports coaches to his mentor. And he shows a growing sensitivity to the Gospel. His mother reports that for the first time she has heard Jude pray for his dad to encounter the saving grace of Christ.

Howard and Jude are living proof that “love covers a multitude of sins,” (1 Peter 4:8). Even though communication has been challenging at times, providing a steady love in Jude’s unsteady world has been used by God just as much as words.

In our ministry, we see over and over how hurting kids like Jude need the persistent grace of Christ in human form more than anything else. They need a mentor who believes God is sovereign in their lives even when they try to shut everyone out. They need someone who is faithful.

Besides mentoring Jude, Howard has served on our Life Coaches for Kids® leadership team for three years. He was inspired to get involved when he heard the tragic statistics: 70 percent of incarcerated youth, 63 percent of youth suicides, and 71 percent of the high school drop-outs in our nation involve father-absent children and youth.  God moved him to carry out the call of James 1:27 to minister to the “fatherless and widows” as one of our first life coaches three years ago. God has led another 17 adults to join him since then. Their stories could easily fill a book.

Today we have 30 father-absent kids waiting for faithful men and women from Bethlehem. Some of
these kids attend church here with us, and many are students at Hope Academy, where a number of Bethlehem members teach and volunteer. They have stories like Jude.

Many have never met their fathers, and some are close to having to leave a school like Hope Academy because of the anger and soul pain of their broken family lives. We know the need is huge, but would you consider joining us to represent God’s pursuing grace in one of these lives? Would you believe God for great things with us? Pray for us? All this ministry requires is faithfulness. Our God takes care of the rest.

May the “Father of the fatherless and Protector of widows” be with you!

In Christ,

Tony Beach,
Director of Bethlehem Life Coaches for Kids ®

Howard and Jude at our Fall Outing.

1.23.2011

The Children

An excellent poem for Sanctity of Life Sunday, read by our pastor John Piper.  It's message is close to the heart of our ministry to the fatherless. 

1.02.2011

Highlights of the Year!


We hope you had a blessed Christmas and New Year's!  We enjoyed having the chance to visit our families in Eastern Wisconsin this year to celebrate.  Last year we stayed at home trying to keep up with baby Hannah's arrival and several boxes still left to unpack from our Thanksgiving move.  Freedom to travel is very nice!

Here are some more reflections on what we are most thankful for over the past year of life and ministry:

*A healthy and strong family.  In spite of all the stressors of 2009 and maybe in part because of them, God has brought us closer to Him and each other than we ever have been.  Thanks for your faithful prayers for us!  Please keep them coming!

*Four new mentors in 2010.  We're thrilled with what this means!  Eight lives and families that God has brought together for a potential lifetime of ministry!
 
*14 life coaches going strong with their mentees.  God has given us amazing coaches!  I'm impressed with how they continue to persevere through the joys and trials of mentoring with an obvious love for their kids that flows both ways. 

*A summer job with UGMTC's Minneapolis Director.  What an opportunity to learn about what goes into reaching the inner-city poor from a wonderful leader and organization like UGMTC!

*A monthly financial support increase from 45% to about 90% of our goal.  Back in June our support level was only at 60% and it looked like I might need to leave the ministry to find other part-time work but God provided significantly in July and August through giving and contributions to our big yard sale!  Thanks to everyone who was and continues to be involved!

*Seminary life continues to be rewarding.  I'm being challenged and grown in a variety of ways, and it's great to see it overflow into our family.  Especially good, was the 36 hours of pastoral care I had the chance to be part of at Maranatha Home in Brooklyn Center this past year.  Please pray for wisdom and God's provision for internship opportunities for me in the coming year.

Now, this wouldn't be a blog without some pictures. So here's a quick photo journal of some of the year's family fun:

Newborn Hannah and her high energy siblings in January.
Hannah and Julie's Grandpa, during her first traveling experience in February.
This is how we do dishes in our house!
You can imagine what the floor looks like when we're done :)
Hannah-bear in one of our frequent trips to Como Zoo.
Gotta love the tranquility of video time.
With cousins Eva, Grace, and Stephen in Chicago in April. 
One of our trips to the airport.
Who knew this pic would turn to be out so handy for a blog?
One of the many play times with our Albanian neighbor Emi.
Hannah showing some enthusiasm.
Another Como trip.  This time with my parents.
Hannah in a cute moment.

A visit to Julie's mom in July with a tired little girl.
We stayed home this Thanksgiving and rode the Mayflower Hide-a-Bed to Plymouth Rock. 
12/14, first birthday and first cake.  She's a cleaner eater than her brothers at that age but shares their "frosting first" mentality :)

Snow fort fun with cousins.  And the boys say good-bye to their new cousin Aklilu -- who was just adopted from Ethiopia by my sister and brother-in-law.  Both he and Levi had their first experience riding bikes on Christmas week!
Hope you enjoyed this little taste of life and ministry from the past year.  
God is good!  Have a blessed New Year!