Category Archives: Andy

Saint Paul Mission Trip – Day 1

Here are a few of the photos from Day 0 and Day 1 of the recent mission trip to Saint Paul (I didn’t take all these photos, even though I wish I could be at multiple places at the same time):


Mission Trip  - Day 0

Mission Trip  - Day 0

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

Saint Paul Mission Trip - Day 1

As usual, it was an incredible trip! If you have any questions, feel free to ask. I love talking about the mission trip, even though most people get sick of hearing about it.

He is Risen!

Easter was a big day (naturally) at our church for the Youth Group. They starred in the Sonrise Service. Served Egg Bake between the Tradition and Contemporary Worship Services. They ran an Easter Egg Hunt.

Here are a few pictures from that day. Easter Egg Hunt photo credit to Jaxon Schoff.


I hope your Easter was as wonderful as mine and these photos only cover about 4 hours of my wonderful Easter!

Old Salvation Army Building Wall Phase #2 Beta

Mediacom. That is all I’m going to say for now.

So these pictures actually started out with me just wanting to document a little bit of the Mural Project progress, but then a bunch of kids wanted to take pictures. Which made me nervous, but I let Jaxson, Wyatt, and Kyle take the majority of these picture while I stood as close to them as possible.

This week, I’m going to bring the camera that wasn’t a thousand dollars with the $700 dollar lens attached to it and let them go as wild as they want.


Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

Youth Group!

The first mural has been finished and will be going up this Wednesday. Hopefully. At least that is the plan, Stan.

Old Salvation Army Building Wall Phase #1

Last Wednesday before Youth Group, a hearty clan of painters painted the south wall of the old Salvation Army Building. This phase is just to make it less of an eyesore. Phase 2 will involve painting murals where the boarded up windows are. Well, it is one of the phases.

This group consisted of a lot of Sharps, Pastor Doug, Pete Nelson, and I helped do some of the finishing up work at the end. Here are a couple of photos:


The last 2 pictures are from setting up for the Youth Group. I wish I would’ve gotten some pictures of that, but I didn’t. I was in charge of the lesson for the Sr. High Students. The idea of the lesson was to talk about what they liked and didn’t like about previous Mission Trips. This was going to be bookended by the old preacher’s story “The Lonely Ember”. We got the first part of “The Lonely Ember” done and lots of Mission Trip talk done, but we never got quite to the closure part as we ran out of time.

Oh well. At least everybody got to eat s’mores!

I Stood in the Disenchanted Field

Last night was the annual Hayrack Ride for the Youth Group. Unfortunately, I brought the wrong lens and the wrong flash, but here are a few pictures from the evening.


Although, I probably wouldn’t have taken many pictures any way. A flash in the dark isn’t the most popular thing in the world.

But there was a good turn out. 30-35 kids. Most importantly, a good time was had by all AND there were no clown sightings!

Milwaukee Mission Trip Vol. 1

I thought I was going to write a really long breakdown of my trip to Milwaukee with my church’s youth group for Mission Work.

Instead, I think I’ll settle for a description with each photo. Maybe I’ll be more ambitious with Volume 2.



Halfway between Madison and Milwaukee, we found a Pizza Pit. Just like home.


Across the street from the Lutheran Church we were staying at was a Greek restaurant that sold frozen custard. Not fooling this cone cost me close to $5. They didn’t always give change either.


Found this sidewalk art at our first stop Monday morning at Adullam Outreach. This was an outreach program named after the cave where David spent his exile.


One of the good and bad things about Youth Works is that break your group up into groups with other churches. My group consisted of 3 kids from Boone and 1 adult and 2 kids from Louisville, Kentucky. Our group worked all 4 days at a low income nursing home. They owned property across the street from their main facility. They had us mow that property. Going by the height of the weeds and the amount of garbage, this seemed like the first time they had been mowed all year. Wyatt is pictured mowing.


More Wyatt mowing.


On Monday the low income nursing home (named The Family House) had a free food giveaway on their lawn. They have food donated to them by Aldi and Wal-Mart. Pictured is Cordelia Wallace, the founder of Family House. 80 years old and a house of fire. She is telling her story to Megan (who’s spirit animal is Shakira), Wyatt, and Elizabeth. Elizabeth is from Louisville. One of the things we did was go door to door in this neighborhood knocking on doors to tell people about the food giveaway. It might go without saying, this was not a nice neighborhood. Nobody answered their door. Although we did tell some random people on the street about it.


David organizing their pantry.


Our facilitators at The Family House were Cornelius and Latoya. Can you pick them out of the picture? Latoya showed no team loyalty by wearing just about a different team jersey every day. Cornelius is a bad Prom date. More on that later. The guy in blue is Scott. He was the other adult chaperone from Louisville. He was a good dude. A little daffy, but a good dude. He is also in the FBI. The male kid that isn’t Wyatt or David is Jay. Real name James. But he goes by Jay. In the unabridged version, I’d have a lot to say about the dynamics of this group. The important thing to know is that when I job needed done, they banded together and got stuff done.


After we were done with work for the day and had showered, we went to the overpriced frozen custard place. Anna is the youth that hasn’t been identified up until this point.


Monday night was a free night. We started our free night at the park across the street from our home for the week.


Alex, Anna, MacKenzie, and Megan


Andy spinning Summer


Alex


After the park we went to Dairy Queen. Alex showing off his ice cream eating form.


After Dairy Queen, we went to a park on Lake Michigan and watched the sun set on the Milwaukee skyline.


Posing with Alex


Attempt at a guy photo.


Wyatt with Summer


Wyatt with Alex


David with Alex


Alex and Summer


Posing with Youth Pastor Alisa


Tuesday. Back to work. David. Mowing property #2.


The Family House. The Family House was actually a nursing home that Cordelia Wallace started out of her own house where she raised 8 children. Most of the other houses in the neighborhood were drug houses. So she slowly acquired them and added them to her facility.


Street view. Cordelia worked at a nursing home. She had “ideas” on how to improve the life of the residents and took her suggestions to her bosses. They smiled politely (maybe) and then told her that they get paid to do the thinking. She gets paid to do what they tell her to do. She cried all of the way home. Then complained to her husband. After listening to her, he stopped her and said, “Listen, you can complain about it or you can do something about it. But if you don’t do anything about it, I’m done listening to you complain about it.” She did something about it.


I often find that areas our Youth Group go to do mission work aren’t ready for Iowans. Iowans work. On the start of Monday they took us up to a room and told us to organize it. They were planning on turning it into a kids center. We organized it in 45 minutes. Their jaws dropped open. They told us that they were expecting that to take us all day. The previous week they had had 2 youth groups there working. We had accomplished more in 45 minutes than those 2 youth groups did in a week. So they had us start painting the floor. Pictured is Elizabeth and Megan putting a second coat on the floor.

More on this trip soon. Even though I can never tire of talking about it. Mission Trips are hard to talk about to people back home because there is no way to put into words to describe the transformation that happens.

They mostly look at you and say, “Oh. You painted some stuff and served food at a soup kitchen. That is nice.” It is so much more. That is why I would argue that anybody that is a believer should commit themselves to at least one act of service a year. Whatever, that might be. Putting up drywall for Habitat for Humanity. Serving dinner at the local homeless shelter. Anything you can do to help somebody else. I’m telling you, do it!

I should stop rambling, because there are quite a few blog subscriber birthdays today. I’ll go youngest to oldest:



Happy birthday Logan!

Photo of the Day 0063 - July 4, 2014
Happy birthday Derrick!


Happy birthday Jill!

I hope all of you have amazing birthdays!

You Can Sit With Us

WHAT FOLLOWS IS A MESSAGE FROM THE PHOTOGRAPHY 139 SHAMELESS MISSIONARY DIVISION…

As many of you may or not know, for the last several years I have helped chaperon my church’s Youth Group’s Mission Trip. We have went to Kansas City, Minneapolis, Kansas City, and Martin, South Dakota.

Next June, the Youth Group will be going to Milwaukee and I will be going with them again.

It is one of my favorite weeks of the year because there is no other week of the year where I grow more as a person and as a christian. I often describe it as the best free vacation a person can go on.

The truth is while it is debatable whether or not it is a vacation (depends on what you enjoy… I enjoy hard work, Bible study, and working with kids… sleeping on the floor… maybe not so much) but it isn’t free.

It costs in excess of $500 per child to send these kids out into the world to do God’s work.

Therefore, the Boone First United Methodist Church Youth Group has began the earnest work of raising funds to cover the costs of their trip. Last Sunday they cooked and sold chili. Their next project is to sell shirts with a message of hope and acceptance.

I could describe the message of the shirt, but why come up with my own words when Pastor Sarah has already explained is so well:

It all started in High School Sunday School at Boone First United Methodist Church with a discussion about the need for kindness in this world. Even small acts of kindness can have large effects on the people they touch. So the youth started to brainstorm ideas of how to make a difference around them. Part of the solution: a simple t-shirt that could invite people to know they are friendly, welcoming and inclusive. Help us make a bold statement with this Tshirt that bullying is “out” and kindness is “in.” Although the funds support the youth mission trip, we found this message to be important beyond age and church walls. Join us in creating a movement to show ways we can be nice to others in every aspect of our lives, including the clothes we choose.

Here is a look at the shirt.



FRONT


BACK

You are probably thinking, “Wow! What an amazing shirt! How much does one cost!”

A Unisex shirt is $19.99
A Ladies shirt is $21.99
A Long Sleeve shirt is $24.99
A Hooded Sweatshirt is $39.99

There are two ways to order. The easiest is just to follow the link below and order the shirt yourself:

WEAR YOUR WELCOME

Another way would be to give me your order and I’ll get it placed. The advantage to that is that it will save you $5 shipping. The deadline to order is December 20th.

Thanks for your consideration!

Might as well share a few of my favorite mission trip photos from over the years:


That should just about cover it.