Repaired living areas
Highway Church was also able to finance urgent repairs to Ps. Jonathon and Mia’s house at Baracbac. Their house was damaged by earthquakes and was in an unacceptably dangerous condition.
Pastor Tony and Ian first visited Umingan, Pangasinan Province in the Philppines, in March 2017. Highway Church has developed an ongoing and fruitful relationship with the Full Gospel Worship Centre since that first visit. FGWC is lead by Ps. Welly Navalta who has been serving God for over 40 years as Pastor, Teacher, Mentor and Counsellor to hundreds of pastors throughout Pangasinan and neighbouring provinces. Pastor Welly is passionate about spreading the Gospel, discipleship and Christian education. He is the visionary and driving force behind The Full Gospel Worship Centre as well as The Christian Life Learning Centre, a government accredited school, and Kingsway Bible College which trains new pastors. Pastor Welly is faithfully supported by his family. His wife, Leonila is the School Principal. His daughter, Jubilee, is the school administrator. Johnathon, his son is the pastor of the church at Baracbac and his other son, Nehemiah, is pastor at Santa Maria church. The entire family, spouses and children included, is devoted to serving God under pastor Welly’s leadership.
One of the methods of outreach is “slipper distribution”. A team goes into a village or burungay and leads the children in songs and games followed by the preaching of a gospel message. Afterward, all the children are given a free pair of slippers (thongs). One such outreach, which Ps. Tony and Ian were blessed to participate in, resulted in the planting of a new church.
Highway Church was also able to finance urgent repairs to Ps. Jonathon and Mia’s house at Baracbac. Their house was damaged by earthquakes and was in an unacceptably dangerous condition.
Pastor Welly and Ps. Jonathon’s wife, Mia, have both had serious health issues with cancer and required ongoing medical treatment. Praise God, they are both recovering well and testify to God’s healing in their lives. Hospital and medical treatment in the Philippines is very expensive and beyond the means of the family. Highway Church was able to support them with financial assistance to meet the ongoing cost of treatment.
The school is Ps. Welly’s great passion. “Lead a man to the Lord and you save one person. Lead a child to the Lord and you save a generation.” This stage of the development of the school buildings has been constructed to allow for a future second story. It has been financed to a large degree by the financial support of Highway Church.
Every spare Peso goes to the school program and facilities to reach as many children as possible with a Christian education. Unfortunately, the selfless dedication of the family means that they are often the last in line to receive the benefit of any support.
Jubilee is the School administrator. She is the engine room of the school and works tirelessly for little or no pay. Jubilee’s husband, Abel, runs a small business to try to supplement their meagre income. Both are fully committed active servants in the church and a vital part of the ministry team. Without their dedication the church would suffer, and the school would not function. Abel, Jubilee and their three sons, Ephraim, Enoch and Elijah all share one 3x4 metre room. With a bed and a couple of cupboards there is barely room to stand.
Ps. Welly has estimated the cost of extensions to the family home at about $5k. This would provide a couple of rooms so that Abel and Jubilee and the boys could live a somewhat normal family life.
The Philippines has made strong progress in the past two decades and more Filipinos have climbed out of poverty. Yet, more than 22 million Filipinos—slightly more than one in five—still struggle to meet their basic daily needs. More than 30 per cent of children live in poverty.
For these children and their families, challenges abound—including meeting their most basic needs. Many children don’t get enough nutritious food, to the extent that one in three has experienced stunting because of malnutrition. Others lack a safe place to grow and develop. More than 80 per cent of children have experienced some sort of violence, including physical, psychological, sexual or online abuse.
The threat of online exploitation is growing, with cheap internet access making more children vulnerable to sexual and physical abuse that is livestreamed to an online audience. Some children are promised a respectable job but tricked into the cybersex business; others are threatened or coerced, often by neighbours, friends or even a family member. The Philippines has been identified as a global ‘hotspot’ for online exploitation due to poverty, cheap technology, high rates of English and established money-wiring services.
More than 2.8 million children of school age lack access to education, with indigenous children and children with a disability disproportionately affected. Only 78 per cent of children complete their basic education.
These challenges are made even more difficult by regular destruction caused by tropical storms and typhoons which have become more frequent and more destructive over the past two decades. Usually the poorest households are the most vulnerable and the least able to rebuild and recover from the devastation. In 2013, Typhoon Haiyan, one of the most powerful tropical cyclones ever recorded, smashed the Philippines and other parts of southeast Asia, affecting 11 million Filipinos and killing more than 6300.
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