Monday, November 4, 2013

My most recent ministry letter:



September 25, 2013
Dear Friends & Family:
Thank you for your faithful support, both financially and in prayer.  Because of the intensity of the spiritual battle I was involved in, I haven’t written a letter for a while.  However, I do write about ministry related events and issues at dottiedch.blogspot.com  if you would like to keep in touch there.

The Update


I have been helping on- campus Christian Clubs (since 2007), Baccalaureate (since 1999) and the Pearland Youth Ministry Alliance (since 1991) – just as a reminder of what I have been doing in Pearland.

 

2009 was a year where everything was looking up.  Club ministry was really coming together.  People were coming to help.  Pearland was becoming a team. The vision (and the task) was becoming clearer.
2010 was the pivotal year.  At the very end of the year, the on- campus Christian club support team was destroyed by a divisive partner.  A youth pastor put himself in charge of Baccalaureate and the Pearland Youth Ministry Alliance.  He also attempted to take control of all on-campus Christian Clubs as well.
2011 was the healing and affirming year.  After the move  to put me out of everything I had been doing, I had two simple goals:  1) Finish well: finish the 2010-2011 school year with one club. 2) Move on: move  out of Pearland to another community.  By April 2011, I realized I was doing more clubs and working with more students than I had been, before the clubs were taken away.  Graciously, someone pointed out that God will prosper you in what He has called you to do – I couldn’t have figured this out at that time: I was too wounded.  My calling was affirmed.
By November 2011, something was taking place in me.  I realized that I was the point person for unity and working together in my community; it was unity and working together that was Satan’s target, not me.  I realized that the number one group hurt when we don’t work together is our children, our schools and the poor and weak among us.  I moved from licking my own wounds to a new healing and trying to rebuild, trying to help my community regain the ground that had been lost.
During this time, I started to view what I was doing differently.  Rather than just someone doing what she could, I saw myself as uniquely called, uniquely trained, uniquely designed by my Creator for my community, for clubs, for students, for such a time as this.  Rather than just doing a good thing, I started to see myself as engaged in strategic warfare for a generation.  My perception-shift  was critical:
   A unique  person, in a critical position, who is called by God to bring people and churches together, to reach students for Christ. 
I did not attend Baccalaureate 2011 – the first Baccalaureate I’ve missed since 1994.   The attendance was about 35 graduates per high school..  The low attendance was a balm to my ego, but also an assault to my community spirit – how could they ruin such a wonderful opportunity to influence students to godliness, and enable churches to work together?  I attended Baccalaureate 2012.  Attendance was even lower – about 24 graduates total.  I helped with Baccalaureate 2013 (because my daughter, Allie was a graduate), the attendance of the graduates from both HS schools was down to 12 graduates.
   The 1999 through 2010 Baccalaureate programs had been attended by about 100 graduates per year.

During July 2013, the ministry I was working with, Cross in the City, closed down very quickly:  I had less than a week’s notice.  This left me without an income and without a way to raise any support.  With only my husband’s income, our income is at poverty level;  it is a critical situation for our family.  Frankly, without God’s intervention, I don’t see how we are going to get through this one.  It is difficult enough to go without a paycheck, let alone without 6 months of paychecks.
In spite of our situation, I knew I needed to be sure of what God wanted me to do, not just continue to persevere because He was prospering my work, or run out and take the first job I was offered because our family was so desperate for the income.  It was definitely a challenge to wait on God at this point.
I also had real questions about whether I wanted to continue in Pearland.  I had two contrasting realities:.  God was clearly prospering what I was doing with on- campus Christian clubs:  6 clubs were receiving support at various levels, totaling about 600 students a week.  I was interested in supporting any type of on-campus Christian Club.  But, the local youth pastors decided that they would push a certain model of club with their youth groups.  So, if I supported a sponsor or student in their desire to do a different type of club, sometimes sponsors received critical emails.  It was an odd position to be in:  I want to support Christian Clubs.  I want to encourage students to attend church.  I want students to live out their faith on their campuses.  However, doing this caused me to be to be at odds with the youth pastor community. 
I prayed.  I looked for jobs.  I evaluated my strengths.  I considered my family and their needs.  I really thought I was going to give up on ministry and find a “real” job.

The Future 

And then, I got this exciting invitation:  to work with Youthworkers Support Network (“The Net”).  I have the opportunity to be part of a team and create community.  I will have the opportunity to encourage clubs all over the Greater Houston Area.  I will have the opportunity to help develop youth ministry networks all over!  This is the biggest thing I have ever done and I am excited about the possible impact. 
Some of the best news is that it will be part-time (20 hours per week), which will allow me to juggle my family issues, and will also allow me to continue encouraging the Pearland club leaders.  It will also give me time to evaluate whether I should develop a 501(c)(3) organization to provide this support for Pearland.  (YSN will avoid developing or supervising direct-ministry programs, so it can focus on networking and leadership development.)  In the process, I will get to serve at a level that will be both challenging and fulfilling to me.  I will get to help sponsors and students from all over our metroplex, start and improve their on -campus clubs.  I will get to help youth workers, who have just realized their community could be better if they worked together, start networks.  I will get to connect people. .    
I am:
A unique person, in a critical position, who is called by God to bring people and churches together to reach students for Christ.
Since joining YSN’s staff on September 1, I have two immediate  projects: 
#1  Rebuilding my support base:  I’ve never had time to focus on fundraising – I’ve always jumped into doing ministry, and fundraising was put aside.  Now I will have a season to do this.  My prayer is, that by January, 2014, I will be fully funded!  Please pray for my family’s needs during this time.
#2  Researching area See You at the Pole efforts:  “Where is SYATP going on?”, “Who is promoting it?”, “How can we help them next year?”



Will you consider joining me?  My initial goal is $30,000 per year.  This will cover my part-time salary of less than half that of a starting school teacher (which I’ve never received before), plus my taxes and basic program expenses  This will take as a little as 100 people giving $25/month, or $300/year – to keep me in this critical position.  Will you be one of my 100?  Will you be two?
                                                                                                            Please pray for me.
                                                                                                Serving Him,,
                                                                                                Dottie Hinesley
                                                                                                Schools-Network Coordinator

 




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