Saturday, December 28, 2013

At the end of Christmas

A lesson about Christmas:
This was a special time for my family, not only because my parents from Oregon visited, but also because it was the first Christmas for our daughter Ruthann. We shared many meals, games, carols, stories and many many sweets.  We laughed a lot and oogled over Ruthann as more of her personality shows.  She loves to put everything in her mouth, she loves to sing and to say Ooohhhh.  She also loves to stare for hours at the lights on the Christmas tree and she also calms down from any fussing just as soon she gets outside.  She is hilarious.  This Christmas it was a gift to be able to spend time together. Aside from all the time with family, I saw something especially meaningful about the Christmas story- I saw the story from a parent's perspective.

After much anticipation Ruthann was born right on time.  She was a beautiful girl from day one and everyone was smitten with her.  I love to hold her and to look at her.  I love to comfort her and to carry her around.  I love to show her new things and I love to show her off.  She is so sweet and my heart now melts as she is now smiling at me when I come into the room.  I didn't know it was possible to love a little person so much. As I think about her future, I want only the best for her and I want her to be safe and I want her to be protected.

The birth of Christ contrasts with my daughters birth.  Mary's pregnancy was scandalous, the journey to where Jesus was to be born was long and hard, and he was born in the crudest of facilities. There were no celebrating friends, no clean sheets, and no comfortable accommodations.

The king of kings enters the world as the lowliest of peasants.  I am sure the birth is not what Mary or Joseph imagined when they heard that the baby born would be the messiah. (the shepherds and wise men must have been a great encouragement.)  I'm sure Mary and Joseph imagined something different for Jesus's life other than controversy.  I am sure they didn't think that their son would be condemned to death as a criminal. Christ's journey was very difficult one (an understatement), but also- it must have been extremely hard on his parents.  Mary and Joseph heard others say that he was the messiah, others said he was a prophet, others said he was a blasphemer, and the rulers said he was a criminal. Jesus's life was marked by suffering and those around him also suffered.

Christmas is a great time of year, but it also reminds us how Christ suffered.  This year I look at the story through a parent's perspective and ask, "Why would God let his own son suffer so much?"  "Why would a loving father allow such horrible things to happen to his own son?"  It doesn't make since unless we consider his motivation and it is found in the most familiar verse in the whole Bible:

 "For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten son, that who so ever believes in him shall not perish but have ever lasting life." - John 3:16

He allowed his son to suffer because he so loved the world.  It is God's love that allows him to use suffering to reach the world.  It is hard to imagine a love so deep as to allow such suffering.  The truth of the matter is that God's love is deeper than I can imagine and he does not avoid temporary discomfort to demonstrate his love.  This year I have caught a little better glimpse of how much the father really does love us.  (For more reading of difficult times in store for believers- read Hebrews 12:1-13)

Financial need:
This time of year I hear at least four advertisements a day asking for donations. Like the so many others, Young Life is able to operate because people give.  My funding goal is to raise $3,000 monthly.  If  30 people donate $100 per month, the goal would be met. I would like to ask you to pray about being a financial donor and consider giving $100, $50, or $25 per month. We also welcome one-time gifts as well. Please pray for one week about being a donor.  If you feel led to be a financial partner you can make donations by opening the "partnering" tab at the top of this page.

Prayer need:


  1. Please pray for safety for our students as they are back home now during Christmas break.  Many are going to places that are not safe, where many hardships are brought on by drug and alcohol abuse.  Pray that the kids would be safe and that they would continue to seek God on their own.
  2. Chevak is a village on the western coast of Alaska and a group of adults would like to start Young Life.  Pray for volunteer leaders and for a clear direction for the ministry as this would be our first fully native led group in the state.


It has been a great privilege to be able to be involved in the ministry and I can't thank you enough for taking part in it too.  Blessings to you and your families during this holiday season.

Aaron Routon
My parents (Gary and Debbie) and Puffin and Ruthann



Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Gabe's Story

             This season I am thankful for all of you.  I am thankful for my family and my daughter and I am thankful for the opportunity to work with people from rural Alaska.  The following is the story of a friend of mine who attended Mt. Edgecumbe High School from 2004-2009.  This past year he has been in Sitka for work and I was able to meet with him a couple times.  Gabe has a huge heart for his people and wants to be a tool for God to use to bring hope to people in rural Alaska.  His testimony reveals the hope he has and it also gives us a chance to look into the Gabe's World.  I would like to ask that when you are finished reading Gabe's story, that you would pray for Gabe and pray for Pitka's Point.
Blessings to you all,
Aaron
Pitka's Point

Gabe's Testimony 

Everyone goes through doubts: about others, about themselves, and about God.  We feel doubt when our trust for others is broken or ignored.  We doubt ourselves when our guilt, shame, and fear of failures lays heavy on our minds.  These doubts can take away all the good in us, sometimes even to the point of madness.  When we are at the stage of madness we doubt God- thinking that he has left us alone and abandoned.  Sometimes we expect him to take away all our burdens and to comfort us fully, we expect him to always show us he is there.  In times when we feel pain and burdens and in times when we don't see God- it is easy for us to lose faith in people, lose faith in ourselves, and lose faith in God.  Losing faith only leads us to deeper into darkness and until we are gone from this world or saved from the clutches of evil. 
I grew up in a big religious family.  I went to church regularly and did my best to stay out of trouble.  Although I went to church, I did not know very much about God and had very little understanding of him. I went to the Russian Orthodox  church and the priests didn't read much from the Bible. and other people there didn’t teach me the whole story of him.  I didn't know much about God until I went to Sitka for high school at Mt. Edgecumbe high School.  I was introduced to Young Life and the amazing people there taught me a lot about Jesus.  I loved the environment and continued to learn more and more.  I went home with this knowledge and did my best to really  keep the faith, even though I fell off the wagon a lot.  I eventually started losing interest in being involved with God and became more interested in other distractions.  This led me to my next stage of life what shattered me. 
It was January 16,2009 when I got news from home that I lost my sister Matalena and friend Ronald.  State troopers concluded that they drove their snowmobile straight for open water while they were intoxicated.  Matalena was only 14 and Ronald was 17- just a few months younger than me. They both slipped under the ice and drowned  at the same time 
I was devastated and very heart broken, losing a big piece of my life.  My sister and I were very close, our bond was unbreakable.  Her death left me with only memories and I missed her presence.  Ronald was one of my closest friends and I'll keep him in my heart as my best friend, and my brother.  His unique personality was impressive and he was always a gentleman. 
I left Mt. Edgecumbe in the middle of my senior year to fly home to the tragedy. I didn't know  to be calm about the bad news and decided to stay home and finish school so I could be close to my family during our grief.  My families grief only grew worse when  my grandfather passed only two months later.  He was very close to me, and he taught me everything and every value of being a man.  His departure took another big chunk of my  life.  The loss in our family was felt by every close relative.  There was a lot of drinking: sadness turned into madness and, and there were more and more problems.  Differences colliding and bursting into arguments and fights snuffed the light of life.   Overwhelmed by loss and grief, I too sunk into alcoholism and smoking marijuana because I thought it would ease the pain. But instead of easing my hurt, the alcohol and pot only made my attitude worse- and so my consumption also grew worse too.  Anger built inside of me as I continued to spiral down and I felt helpless to stop. I doubted that anyone, including God, could help.  Then the calamity and darkness escalated. 
My anger grew so big that I shut out the world and anyone who thought they could help.  I  thought that God had hurt me so bad that I lost faith in him: angered from disappointments and accusing him for my losses. I started doing a lot  of bad things.  I started getting into fights by provoking others into violence toward me.  People started telling me that I had changed so much and they lost interest in me.  Out of selfishness and ignorance I rejected them, not acknowledging the wrong I was doing to others or to myself.  I ignored all their words and continued my streak of pain, anger, and vengeance.  I was in pain from the loss.  I was angry because of the burden I had and because of the doubts others had of me.  I was vengeful for the pain inflicted on me my whole life. 
The first year of my grief was bad, but the second year was even worse.  My wrong doings caused my world to be turned upside down.  The people I loved were consumed by sorrow and my nightmares grew constantly,, and unimaginable events became reality. 
My family grew more distant from each other.  My parent's pain spread to my younger siblings, to our close relatives, and to our friends.  Things went from bad to worse.  I started having nightmares about losing other loved ones.  My loved ones were being replaced by darkness and death.  These bad dreams added to my list of sorrows and my attitude and depression only worsened.   
In my first dream about the supernatural, I remember a I went home to find a worm-like creature sitting in the living room on a dark night in the dark house.  I ran out of the house only to see that the land and all its life was burnt to ashes and suit. I saw a perfectly clean house by the dried out river with two children playing outside.  I was worried for them and ran to them.  I was curious why the land didn't bother them.  As I came near, the young boy turned to look at me and his face was frightening and angry.  I was afraid and stepped away.  Demons covered the area swarming me in numbers uncountable.  I awoke drenched in sweat and scared of what I saw.  I cried wile I sat in bed for a few minutes thinking about what happened.   
Every dream got worse like mead decaying in heat until one day I drempt of Satan himself, which is no lie.  Every story you've heard of him is true.  I was in a place, a dark place, and I was guided by two catholic priests.  Then they stopped and groaned like they were in pain at their their stomachs'.  The priest started to tear and scratch their faces, peeling skin off of them.  Demons appeared and crawled out of their flesh and came after me.  I ran and ended up in a room with the thought that I lost them.  I turned to see a door with a window unable to see through but visible enough to see a silhouette.  A figure walked in front of a light shadowing the window.  When that someone turned I saw the upper torso of a muscular man and horns the shape of a ram- big horns.  I froze and heard a rattle to my left. I could not move a muscle, but my eyes looked down to see a pale dark green tail moving.  Then someone grabbed me from behind creaming in my left ear.  I woke up that instant grasping for air, with my heart pounding. 
Nightmares grew more frequent along with the troubles that were tearing my family apart.  I was so angry at the world and at the one who created it.  I was getting out of control.  My anger planted a seed of hate, and feeding it with anger, it grew rapidly.  To the point where I hated God and everything about him.  But, deep inside, a small voice would tell me that I am wrong and that I needed help.  Being blinded and mislead I ignored that voice, making the distance between lost and found more distant.  From here things got even worse.   
  A crucifix I had always worn, all of a sudden became heavy and irritated my skin.  I took it off and didn't put it back for a long time.  Once I did, I became very vulnerable without knowing it.  My hat grew worse as if all the good I have ever known or shown people never existed.  Until one day I had an epiphany, it struck so hard I felt sick to my stomach.  I was sitting and thinking long and hard about the hurt and my hate and thinking about the bad things I had done, when I saw it.  I looked up towards where we keep our icons of saints and crucifixes.  I saw the biggest crucifix and all of a sudden I felt a very strong hateful urge to flip it up-side-down and to toss all the icons.  I instantly got scared as my life flashed before my eyes.  All the beautiful things I was told, all the things of a good life, and the importance of Jesus Christ.  I then realized what was really wrong and I took the initiative to fix everything, to better myself again.  But that is when things in my life got even worse.  
I was not the only one who was very angry with God.  Some of the strongest members in my family, including me, were consumed by darkness. Violence and ignorance had grown between my dad and his closest brother.  Their anger escalated and they hated each other.  My dad talked daily about killing his brother and also my brother became suicidal and needed to be watched.  My nightmares became more vivid and realistic and I became an insomniac.  I couldn't sleet without having dreams of demons and harm coming to my family.  These images became worse to the point that I could see these images during my conscious state.  I started to see unusual dark things that bothered me a lot.  I began hearing voices people who weren't there.  I prayed to God more often and when I did I would get confused - like my mind was a brick wall.  But I didn't stop praying and  the problems I was facing didn't stop.  With all the bad things happening and my attempts to fix them I felt a strong feeling of hopelessness , but still I didn't give up.  My life slowly made progress even thought I felt evil tormenting me until one night it all stopped. 
I had a dream of Satan for the second time but it was very different, I was stronger and not so vulnerable.  I was waling down the hallway of my grandpa's house during the night.  The, I heard the same rattle sound as my first dream of Satan.  Before I could freeze I turned around as fast as I could.  When I turned, I saw his whole figure and he grabbed me by the neck and lifted me off the ground as if I was as light as a feather.  He screamed in my face and his breath felt like a hot furnace. and it was louder than a lion's roar.  Pale green skin covered his man-like body.  He had very big ram-like horns and he had long bat-like wings stretched out.  His eyes and mouth were like fire with flames flickering and his teeth were as sharp as a great white shark.  I felt no fear knowing that God protected me from his evil.  The only thing that I could do was pray and so I recited the "Our Father" prayer that Jesus prayed.  When I finished a flash of darkness fell and I was let go.  The light came back but dimly at first.  When I looked down at my hand I saw a bottle of holy water.  right then I knew what I had to do- I had to bless the house.  I looked down the hallway where I needed to start and I saw flashes of dark shadows zipping back and forth from room to room and I heard something laughing, as if it was a joke.  I had no fear, feeling only faith leading me, as I walked through the darkness and I praying and blessing every inch of the house with Holy Water.  When I got close to finishing what I needed to do, the laughter became louder, screams started and the whole house began to shake.  I continued without stalling and I raised my voice louder than the screams.  When I blessed every corner of the house the shaking and screams stopped instantly.  All of a sudden the house grew quiet and bright: as if the sun was shining through the windows.  I was surprised.  The door opened bringing in a priest who was dressed in beautiful church clothes and who carried a candle in one hand and smoking incense in the other.  He walked through the house spreading the beautiful scent.  I woke up feeling that a heavy burden had been taken away.  A smile spread across my tear streaked face.  That night, when I thought my life was going to end, I know that I overpowered evil with the help of God.  I had faced all my fears and now I have no fears of anything in this world because it is all under God's power.  He is the one who gives and takes away in everyone's life, regardless of how they were raised.  Sometimes faithlessness can lead you to become stronger, But, above all else, never give up life and all the good things, even when you get blinded from bad situations and evil. 

Gabe R Tinker