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Thursday, 13 June 2013

Spring 2013

SPRING 2013



Easter snow at Waterloo
 Spring was very slow coming this year with daffodils battling against the snow over Easter.  The farmers around here suffered many losses over the freezing lambing period, despite pulling out all the stops.  A farmer near us lost sixty lambs one night when the weather suddenly changed.   One farm lost forty sheep in a snow drift.  So sad.  A neighbour was bottle feeding nearly a hundred lambs, mostly because the mothers' milk dried up after the prolonged cold wet weather of most of last year.  She's never known anything like it before.  The ewes that did have milk often had sore chapped teats as a result of the biting wind blowing through the lambing sheds.  Because of congestion in the lambing sheds, many  farmers had to turn out the lambs into the snow as there was  nowhere else for them to go, adding to the huge loss of lambs this spring.

A positive side effect of all this trauma was that Ifor has been going out with a brand new Christian on the 'sheep run', collecting dead animals from all over the county from 6.30pm till often after midnight, meeting so many farmers every time.  Like a couple of other farmers in his neighbourhood, this man is regularly reading his Angus Buchan daily journal for farmer. He has been on a men's Alpha, has now started on  a second Alpha course and is steadily being transformed by God.

Enjoy the video!
One day Ifor came back with six orphan lambs from a farmer who was struggling to cope with the difficult lambing. Then two days later another six, then another two!  We started bottle feeding our little flock four times a day initially, reducing to twice a day as they approached weaning.  Nearly a fortnight ago we walked them over
like the pied piper, to their new home - a lovely woodland paddock carpeted with bluebells and loads of grass that our kind neighbour has let us use for free.  The farmer who gave us the lambs  is also reading the Angus Buchan journal daily and is noticing big changes in himself.   Like Mervyn in the video in an earlier blog, he is telling others how prayer really works and giving his own examples.  His mother has recently started going to chapel and people are remarking on the positive changes they are seeing in her.  Ifor has also been helping another branch of that family with issues they are going through.

It seems our little lambs have their own ministry: When the senior school bus drops children off by our house, the lambs run to greet them and some of them have been helping us bottle feed them. Through this, two of them have joined the monthly youth group I run.  The group have now finished the Journeys DVD testimony series and we have just started something called Think Tank.  This involves discussion around true but surprising stories, a parallel Bible story from the Street Bible and of course games and food.

 Still on the farming scene, Ifor is now relief milking three mornings a week, back home by 9am.  Because of this we have been able to reduce the stipend we are being paid by the Baptist Union.  Since the dairy herd has been increased to 450 cows, they need two people milking at a time. Seven different people milk on a rota, so Ifor is always milking with one or another of the team, and getting to know them better. To thank everyone after a successful concentrated time of calving, the farmer and his wife invited all the men and their wives/partners around for a meal, which was great for getting to know everyone better. Then a few weeks later we were invited to an evening at the pub with all the farm workers to say goodbye to the herdsman who was off to New Zealand, and to say hello to his replacement.

Ifor has been visiting more farmers through his role in Farm Crisis Network and helping them in various ways. One of these farms is all the way up near Welshpool, but thankfully most are in our area.  After the difficult lambing, which is the main "crop" for farms around here, Ifor held a "Spring Thanksgiving" service in a rural chapel in a part where he has been working, as opposed to a Harvest Thanksgiving.  It caught the imagination of a few others in the area who came along and appreciated it.


At the beginning of March we were able to go to the New Wine Leaders conference in Cheltenham where Robbie Dawkins and Guy Chevreau were  teaching on power evangelism.  These four days were an inspiring, empowering and equipping time for us.

The day after we arrived back we cooked breakfast at our home for the Holy Spirit Away Day  of the Alpha course we have been running in a cafe in Glasbury.  People experienced his presence strongly.  One woman was so affected that when she went home afterwards she just had to sit and take time to reflect on what she had experienced as it was far more than she had anticipated. God does like to surprise people!  Everyone was greatly blessed by Him.  The group did not want to stop meeting after the series finished, and they have been meeting up in the pub to look into difficult passages in the Bible and other questions they have.  They call these weekly pub nights "Pester the Pastor"!

At one of the early meetings of our first small group where one member is Russian, someone commented that we might have a Russian group one day!  Well just recently she invited a Russian friend who had come to visit and also another Russian friend who lives nearby - so much of the conversation that evening was in Russian!  Her visitor experienced God's presence and His comforting of some of the hard times she had been through.  The other guest has been reading  a Russian translation of The Shack. To date she has not returned to the group but seemed to enjoy the experience.  All this original group have now read "Heaven is for Real" by Todd Burpo. Todd's three year old son Colton died briefly during an operation and over the following months mentioned some of the experiences he had in heaven and what it was like there, relating things he could not possibly have known otherwise. With this group we have now started a DVD series of interviews with Colton (now aged 12) and his family which stimulates group discussion.  Ifor referred to this book at a dedication service last spring, and since then we have lent out over a dozen copies to people eager to read it for themselves.  People who read a copy often lend it to their friends and family.  We are aiming to circulate several books in many areas and follow this with conversation groups in each area as it is proving to have quite an affect on the readers. Most people are curious to read such a book.  We are also finding it greatly helps those who have been bereaved  and those who have suffered a miscarriage.  People who ordered copies of this book following an anniversary service Ifor led last year have been lending the book out to other family members.  They are keen to meet in one of their homes later this year to discuss the book together.  At this year's anniversary service at the same chapel I read out the Father's Love Letter, and many people took copies of it in bookmark form. This service attracts a number who do not otherwise go to a chapel service.

I was invited to do slide shows on Uganda and sell necklaces at a Mothers Union and also at a W.I.  At the latter, after hearing about some of the healings we saw as we prayed for people in Uganda, one woman asked me "Where does that leave me as I don't believe?" As we talked it became obvious that she wanted to meet Jesus and was happy for me to pray with her.  Through this she experienced His peace and readily agreed to the challenge to ask Jesus to reveal Himself to her then to watch to see how He chose to do so.

A Christian friend joined me when selling the Ugandan jewellery at a craft fair in Crickhowell where we had some good talks with many of the customers. The Christian organiser of the fair has bought a quantity of various sizes of beads, made by the children of Moses's school in Kampala, to package and sell online to craft people and hopes this will be ongoing.  A few weeks ago I was asked to do a stall at a school when they hosted an eco/holistic Green Day.  All sorts of  things were on offer, so beforehand I asked God for words for any of the people there.  I recognized  the person I had "seen" and gave her the message I felt I'd been given from God for her.  She was very enthusiastic and asked me to write it down for her. She also took a card explaining the Essence series (see previous blog) and was keen to host a group of her friends to do this in her home.  She also asked for another card for a stall holder she was friends with.  I need to get back to her soon to see how she's getting on with gathering a group.

The hill prayer group met to pray over Rhayader on a very cold day which included a blizzard before we came  down! We were told that the cafe style church there had stopped meeting as it was only attracting other Christians.  However the vicar of Rhayader has started  Messy Church  which has taken off and is attracting 25 to 30 children, accompanied by their grandparents.  The town is built as a cross, following the four valleys out of the town.  It used to be the centre of pagan worship in Wales.  As we prayed I clearly "saw" big columns of fire scattered around the town, possibly coming from each clearly defined estate.  I also "saw" big sweeps of blue water pouring down over the surrounding hills and flooding the town. So lots of hope there.


We were not able to join the group praying over Crickhowell this time, but the following month we took communion together on a hill top, recently cleared of forestry, overlooking Abergavenny.  This venue was confirmed to a couple who regularly pray over the town by               the verse God gave them from Isaiah 13:2 NIV  :                              "Raise a banner on a bare hill top"

On the way back we called to make contact with a couple in Bwlch who have recently gathered together a group of seven Christians to meet monthly to pray for the village.  We came away most encouraged.

When preaching on the Kingdom of God in a chapel in Crai, some visitors of ours came along and one of them prophesied to the whole church about them being His treasure in jars of clay and that God is going to use them to bless the area around them and He'll show them how.
Ifor spoke at a Christian gathering in nearby Bronydd Mawr on receiving the Holy Spirit and everyone there received individual prayer and prophecy afterwards.

Together with our friend Canon Janet Russell, the new Director of Mission in the diocese, we organised Brecon and Radnor's first New Wine Cymru event to encourage, empower and equip His people.  Being the first, we focused on encouragement so after an inspiring time of worship led by local people we heard over a dozen short updates and testimonies of what God is doing across the two counties.  Most people had no idea that so much is happening, nor did they know many others who came along. Ifor preached a very encouraging sermon. The large number of people left no longer feeling disillusioned and isolated but greatly encouraged, taking with them a free gift and buzzing about the event over the next few weeks.  The next one will be 13th July when hopefully even more will come along.

It was good to see Cath Woolridge and her team in New Life Church, Llandrindod Wells, at the opening of their new excellent and central premises. They performed a drama which revealed different characters in a cafe. One of our small Glasbury group came and brought his sister too. Next time Cath comes to the county will be to take part in Brecon Jazz Festival by invitation of the Dean.

When my friend Trish Rogers in Pembrokeshire came in as the new president of the Baptist Missionary Society in Wales, she invited me to say a bit about what God is doing in Breconshire and then in the evening to preach.  I tried to show the congregation ways in which each of them, scattered deliberately across Wales, can be missionaries and spread the effects of the Kingdom of God in their own areas.  It was good to catch up with friends in Pembrokeshire and also to meet new people.


As I suspect many of you are, we are greatly encouraged by what God is doing in Cwmbran through Victory Outreach Church and their leader, Pastor Richard Taylor, an ex prisoner. When we went to the warehouse building behind Sainsburys to see for ourselves in April, a dozen people received Jesus for the first time, many of them addicts, ex prisoners and people from difficult backgrounds. Both of us received a powerful touch from the Holy Spirit when we went forward for prayer. Now, as the outpouring continues, there are people becoming new Christians every night and the many healings are continuing. We watched online their first baptism service since the outpouring began when over fifty people were baptised.  You may like to look at this link:  http://daibach-welldigger.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/cwmbran-overview.html#!/
 

A similar move of God is happening in Calcutta in India through Benjamin and Gillian Francis and their
daughter Abigail.  We met them in Cardiff Baptist College when Benjamin shared how God has used them to plant 10,500 house churches in the last ten years.  They came to spend the following day with us, helping feed our lambs, enjoy our ducks, pray for us and bless the work God has called us to here.  They are keen to keep in touch with us through Skype, which is wonderful.
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This year is the 200th anniversary of when John Wesley was saved.  To celebrate, the little isolated church of Llanlleonfel near Garth had a special weekend of events, including a re-enactment by the local primary school of the wedding led by John Wesley of his brother Charles to Sarah Gwynne of Garth House.  I walked across the field and climbed over the style to the little church hidden in the trees to join the congregation of "guests" at the wedding. It was a great occasion and wonderful to see how the children had researched the lives of the Wesleys.



On the family front, it was great to meet Lucy's boyfriend Timo from Estonia who joined us over Easter.  He did the DTS with Lucy in her first year with YWAM in Norway and this year has been on her staff helping lead the School of Evangelism. He happily joined some of the family in a sketch we did in a chapel on Easter Sunday. Lovely too to have all the family over the Easter period.
More great excitement followed as Katie and Sam announced their blessing of a new baby, due mid October.  So we will be grandparents!  Katie works in an old fashioned sweet shop in Chester and Sam is the manager of a new outdoor pursuits centre in New Brighton, just over half an hour beyond Chester. 
    
Kevin has been looking for a change of career after instructing in outdoor pursuits for a decade.  He now lives with us and has been successful in getting work with Welsh Water as an Assistant Ranger, helping to look after all the reservoirs in the Brecon Beacons but based at Llwyn Onn.  He is applying for a graduate training scheme with Welsh Water which if successful would start in the autumn.

Thank you all for your prayers, support and interest in Breconshire as we try to advance His kingdom here.  I'm sorry there has been such a long wait for this update.  I really do want to try and post new blogs each month!  Please pray that will happen!  May God bless you all.


Monday, 4 March 2013

February 2013

Narnia was trapped in winter for over a hundred years, then bit by bit it yielded to the spring.  Here, with the odd warm spells, spring started early with catkins opening but then with a series of  very cold and snowy spells it has been a stop/start progression.  Revival IS coming to Breconshire, but the initial breaking out of such a long 'winter' is met by a similar stop/start progression.  Prayer is making a slow but steady difference in warming the hardened ground.  We are encouraged by the fact that once Spring gets going, the progression is relentlessly forward, whatever the weather that follows.

This month Anne led a service in one of the tiny chapels in the middle of nowhere ("Central" the secretary called it!). Soon after starting the sermon she asked a question which had an immediate response from a new widow who lost her husband in tragic circumstances. She opened up in raw honesty about her bereavement and some of the questions she was having. There followed much support and discussion instead of the sermon and one of the members encouraged her to lean on Jesus.- surely how a Sunday gathering should be!  Ifor led the service there the next time, and God gave me three pictures for the chapel that morning. The first was of a blue river flowing with colourful sparkles like jewels. I took this to be the River of Life.  The second was of golden rain and the third a clump of snowdrops. I sensed God saying that He would be bringing the chapel into a time of new life.

At the end of January we were asked to speak at a day led by Nick Bradshaw called Simply Church at Cardiff Baptist College.  Here we talked about when God builds His church, its all about what His body is doing during the week rather than just what happens on a Sunday morning. We gave examples of some of these happenings and what we are trying to do with Him to further His Kingdom in Breconshire.
     A few days later we were asked to speak at a day on Rural Mission hosted by BUGB South Wales, along with Barry Osborne.  Being a different theme, we spoke about some of the things God is doing in the county and different ways of raising the Spiritual climate and introducing Jesus to the people who live here as relevant and interested in themselves and their daily lives.  Then taking people further in their journeys of discovery to levels where they naturally start telling their friends and huge extended families about their new experiences.  Both these days had the side effect of encouraging us in what God is already doing in the county and seeing more clearly different ways forward.

Opportunities to share pictures and stories, including God stories, of Uganda and Kenya continue to come in, especially through W.I.'s.  Radnorshire (where we technically live, being just over the river border) celebrates 90 years of W.I. this year and it was encouraging that they opted for a big church service to mark the occasion, complete with wearing hats or fascinators!! I am in the back row of the photo with some members of Aberedw W.I.  I will be speaking at this club tonight. Earlier this month  I was asked to share at a church prayer meeting in Leominster.

After hosting Cath Woolridge in a concert in Brecon two years ago, this time we handed over the organising to the Anglicans who arranged for her and her team "Sound of Wales" to come to Brecon Cathedral.  We took two of our first small group along which they enjoyed.  Cath shared some powerful and moving testimonies.  As a result of this concert she was asked back to the Cathedral during the busy Brecon Jazz Festival this coming August.

When we prayed above Sennybridge earlier this month, it was very encouraging to learn how there are Christians living in ones and twos on the hills surrounding the village like a polo as someone remarked!  The men's Alpha in Crai is going well, with many of the men attending having influential positions.  Also the work at Bronydd Mawr is continuing to go well. God seems to have plans in that area.
The Alpha we are leading at a cafe in Glasbury is also going well with yet another new person joining us last night.  We have encouraged someone else to lead it next week and do the talk as we will be away doing a funeral. Hopefully he will be able to help in the future when we hope to run a number of Alphas at the same time.  The new rector in Builth Wells has recently started a Youth Alpha, and another Alpha is starting soon in Garth, run by a small house church.  Anne Roberts is also looking to start one or something similar in a village near Glasbury through a tiny church over which she has pastoral oversight. Alpha is catching on in Breconshire! Please pray for the Alpha Holy Spirit away day we will be running on Sat. 9th March at our house starting with breakfast!

Our youth group had a good session this month when seven of them looked at the Columbine High School shooting and Ground Zero which brought up questions about Jesus's death and suffering for us.  Next month (17th March) will be the last of the Journeys DVD series of testimonies we have been following.  This final one will be focussing on the decision to follow Jesus. Prayers appreciated.

We have just come back from an inspiring and challenging four day intensive School of Healing and Impartation run by New Wine Cymru and Global Awakening with speakers Bill Johnson, Randy Clark and Tom Jones from America.  800 delegates packed into All Nations Centre in Cardiff where  we saw many, many healings.  The first morning I noticed gold dust on my hands and they tingled for many days and nights after that. The second day I felt as though God was clothing me in a cloak of His Presence to carry everywhere.  We were all very much aware of the Presence of God many times during those four days.  Both of us were greatly encouraged and came away with an urge to pursue more intentionally the work He has called us to do here as we co partner with him.

Thank you for your continued prayers for Breconshire.  God is certainly "on the case".

Below is an amazing bit of research into what God has been doing in Llanigon, near Glasbury, in the past.  I thought you might also like to have a look at it.


  http://daibach-welldigger.blogspot.co.uk/2013/02/the-first-nonconformist-revival.html



Friday, 25 January 2013

Dec and Jan 2013

A carpet of snow covers over the drab and makes everything look new and fresh and exciting.  Yet even before that, new bulbs have been pushing through, full of promise.  The birds have been pairing up and singing, even in December.  The new year brings a time of fresh starts and new beginnings.  Ifor started off by rearranging our study which enables us to work more efficiently. A number of people have been saying in recent weeks how they have noticed changes in the spiritual climate and things taking place that never would have happened before:  carols in a pub, small prayer groups springing up around the county, Christian events and courses, etc.  Ifor and I have started praying more systematically together every day, as well as forming two parts of a weekly prayer triplet
   
Daphne Godwin came to speak in Tretower, telling of some of the wonderful miracles that have been happening recently at Ffald y Brenin, Pembrokeshire.  A couple of Ffald y Brenin style Houses of Prayer have started near there in the Crickhowell/Abergavenny region, praying missionally over the area.  Brenda and Dollie also pray from hilltops over those two towns each month as well as continuing to pray most months with our hilltop group that Ruth organises.  Following a 'hilltop prayer' in the Sennybridge/Crai area,  a couple of years ago, a group now meet monthly to pray for their own area. A couple in Crai have organised the Journeys course, village meals with a speaker, Christianity Explored, Alpha, a monthly meeting at Bronydd Mawr, and are now leading a men's Alpha. Our friend Mervyn spoke at the first Alpha, and took a neighbouring farmer who has continued attending each week.  He has also gone a few times to the Elim church in Brecon and he is recognising that Jesus is the only way forward with his problems.  Barbara and Christine continue to meet regularly to pray over the county and particularly the Lower Chapel valley,where Ifor is making a lot of good contacts.  One of these is regularly praying and reading Angus Buchan's daily journal, and telling others about what he is reading and the differences he is noticing in himself as he tries to put into practice what he reads.


Praying over Llyswen and area
The small prayer group that started  just a few months ago in the Erwood/Llaneglwys area continue to meet. Two other small missional prayer groups started up this month - one in Boughrood and another in Glasbury, using a sheet I prepared based mostly on Peter Farmer's teaching involving hearing God about the area, recognising possible spiritual issues behind problems, praying blessing, proclaiming and noticing the changes that occur.  Another of these missional prayer pockets is looking to start soon in the Llanwrtyd/Llangammarch/Garth area.  Another group is also running in Garth, partly as a result of Peter Farmer's input.  We learnt recently that some of the Anglican church in Glasbury meet fortnightly for prayer, as do a home prayer group from Wesley Church in Builth.

Just before Christmas the hill prayer group met to pray over Llyswen and the whole farming area around Brechfa Pool, before heading back into Ruth's warm home where she had prepared a wonderful meal for us all.  Since then we have prayed above Llanwrtyd Wells and afterwards had a chat about the town with one of the local prayer-s, giving us helpful insight as we look to further God's Kingdom there.  Ruth and I were asked to pray in the grounds of Bronllys Psychiatric Hospital which we felt was effective.  We particularly prayed for one patient, and his parents noticed a big improvement  when they visited him two days later.

I've had cards made to advertise Essence, a series written by Rob Frost to help people on their spiritual journeying to engage with and experience God and become aware of how He relates to them.  I have taken these around many New Age/spiritual shops in Builth, Hay-on-Wye and a cafe in Talgarth.  Please pray that people who would like to pursue this and deepen their spiritual lives, would see these and get in touch.

I sold Ugandan necklaces at three Christmas fairs in December. I had some good conversations at the first Craft Fair in Crickhowell, which led to an invitation to sell at Crickhowell Primary School fair later in the month where I did some demonstrations with the children.  Please pray I'll be invited to do a morning presentation for the school there.  The Christian lady who organises the Crickhowell Craft Fairs asked if Moses would be prepared to send her quantities of beads for her to sell online for people to use to make up their own jewellery.  This will be a useful outlet for Moses. Her photographer took close-up photos of the necklaces to use on her new craft website.  If anyone else out there would be prepared to sell the Ugandan jewellery, both Moses and Pastor John could do with more outlets as all the money raised goes directly back to their two schools.  The third Christmas fair was outdoors in Builth.  Below freezing (Brrrrr!) but no snow this time so no brazier either.  Ifor went to the indoor Christmas fair in Erwood at the same time.

Erwood village Christmas  Dinner
I had two W.I. Christmas dinners this year, plus a village Christmas dinner in the pub in Erwood. All well attended. Then we were both invited to a Christmas dinner for all the farm staff at Maesllwch, where Ifor has been doing some relief milking. Great to get to know the other staff and their wives.  The whole herd is dried off over Dec/Jan, so no milking until they start calving in huge numbers at the end of this month.  Ifor's birthday was earlier this week so I made him a milking cluster out of cake!

Ifor led a Carol service in a chapel a few miles above Erwood, attended mostly by farming families.  Then on the Saturday before Christmas he led carols at a pub in Glasbury, arranged in the order of the story which he read from the Bible between each carol I played.  About fifty people came to join in and listen, far more than the landlord expected. One lady left her table and came and sat right next to me so she wouldn't miss anything!  It was very well received and many hoped we would do it again next year.


In December Ifor led a huge funeral service for a local farmer.  These always open up many doors for him, especially among farmers.  Just before Christmas he was involved in another large funeral of a popular man from Erwood.  About 500 people attended, many standing outside in sub freezing temperatures.

We showed The Nativity film to our first small group which especially helped our Russian friend understand the Christmas story better.  In the new year we started J.John's Ten course which has gone down very well and stimulated, lots of discussion.  At the first session, two of the group brought along a relation of theirs from Aberdare. She was happy to receive prayer to the first one, and Jesus met her at her point of need. She is keen to come to Brecon Cathedral on 2nd Feb to hear Cath and Dai Woolridge in concert - the next big event we are involved with.  Please pray for this event.


Boxing Day fun
All our family came up over the Christmas holiday which was lovely.  Ifor and I led the service in Erwood on Christmas day. Ruth and John had organised the service brilliantly, based on Room 101, but were laid up with flu.  Then on Boxing Day we had around my brother and family, my dad and auntie for the day to continue enjoying the celebrations.
Mary with Mrs Pugh in Erwood Chapel, a week before her 103rd birthday.

A huge crowd gathered to celebrate Mrs Ena Pugh's 103rd birthday in Erwood hall with her twin sister Lily Milward following yet another interview on the telly.  Both of them live independently and until last year when her sister broke her hip, they would walk and catch the bus and meet up to shop in Brecon every Friday.

The homegroup in Glasbury continues to meet fortnightly to pray (they are seeing answers to their prayers) and discuss a bible passage or have discussions initiated by Table Talk (by Paul Griffiths). Two new people have joined since the chapel closed. More exciting news is that we have been able to start Alpha in the cafe next to the old chapel, courtesy of the new owner of the chapel who runs it.  We had an encouraging start this week with nine coming, these from the Glasbury home group, Maesyronnen URC chapel near Glasbury and two others from Erwood. Two others intend to come but were laid up with flu and injury. Ifor effectively used ten reams of paper to help illustrate the weight of evidence for the validity of the New Testament and the resurrection.  Please pray the word gets out and numbers will increase further.

Ifor was asked to take the dedication service of Mervyn's grandson in Lower Chapel on Sunday. About 60 people came to this, many of them his daughter's friends in their twenties and thirties who travelled through the snow from the Sennybridge area.  The Lower Chapel valley seems to be opening up slowly but steadily, and Ifor is coming alongside a number of connected farming families and helping in whatever way is appropriate.  We have had some new calling cards printed which should be useful.

We greatly value your prayers, especially for the Alpha course which continues until Easer on Monday evenings at 7pm. You can follow Ifor on Twitter @Revifor.




Friday, 21 December 2012

Olympic Sprint Through 2012


OLYMPIC SPRINT THROUGH 2012
So much has been happening this year that we thought we might just give you a quick dash through our year, Olympic Sprint style!

In the winter evenings we started up the monthly cinema nights in our home where local friends and neighbours enjoy meeting together to watch films projected onto a big screen.

In the spring we enjoyed a wonderful fortnight in Cyprus, courtesy of Peter's parents, who have bought a holiday/retirement home in Kyrenia. We visited many of Penny's old haunts from the time when she lived there in the sixties, including both her old homes. Back in Breconshire we enjoyed the Queen's Diamond Jubilee celebrations locally, as probably most of you did too.

In the summer Ifor was involved in setting up the Mid Wales region of New Wine Cymru and also regional prayer days around Wales with Waleswide. Our own monthly hill top prayer gatherings have continued and seem to be proving effective in opening up areas below. We have seen a number of people experience healing as we've prayed. One person who came to us with cancer of the kidneys felt very different as he left, and his oncologist is no longer going to operate nor give treatment and doesn't want to see him again for six months. All good fun! We hosted a training weekend for people interested in Simple Church and starting small groups who multiply. Also we were asked to speak to a group at Bristol Baptist College about what we are doing and trying to do in Breconshire.

On the family front, Kevin is still working and living in Pembrokeshire. Katie and Sam have returned from nearly a year in Australia and have settled in Chester. Lucy is still working in Norway and has moved to a new house. Mary has just moved to a new house in St. Davids this week. Becky and Pete have moved to a new house in Cardiff. We haven't moved house but we do have a new puppy called Sandy who is now six months old and good company for Rosie and more fun for us! Penny's dad celebrated his 91st with a barbecue and a great excuse for a family get together. Ifor's auntie and uncle celebrated their Golden Wedding anniversary where we enjoyed another big family get-together. Our niece Emma married Richard which provided yet another opportunity for the family to get together. All wonderful!

Moving into Autumn, Penny has organised two successful counity events – a “Paralympic Party” in Llyswen and “A Day to Remember” in Erwood. The invitations continue to come in for talks and slideshows on Uganda and Kenya, progessing to include whole mornings in four schools. Ifor has become the minister of Glasbury Baptist Church. The chapel has been sold, but the people are meeting regularly in homes and quietly growing both spiritually and numerically. He has been invited to lead carols in one of the Glasbury pubs just before Christmas, as we did for many years in Broad Haven. Penny is busy making Nativity clothes for this and other Christmas events, while Ifor has started doing some relief milking on a local Glasbury farm.

If you prefer to take the alternative, picturesque route where you will see far more, simply Google “www.prayerforbreconshire.blogspot.co.uk ” where you will find lots of photos too!

Wishing you all a very happy Christmas, a wonderful 2013, and lots of love from Ifor and Penny.

Tuesday, 20 November 2012

Autumn 2012

Much has been happening since the summer, starting off on 1st Sept with the encouraging induction of Rev. Andrew Stammers whom we sent from Broad Haven to train for the ministry at Bristol Baptist College.  After much sacrifice, college work, training on the job at Radstock and fighting a brain tumour with surgery and chemo at the same time, it was a great joy to see him being ordained and inducted to Radstock Baptist Church.


This was followed six weeks later by Ifor being inducted by Rev. Peter Thomas as Pioneer Minister to Glasbury Baptist Church (see previous blog) at the Breconshire Baptist Association half yearly gathering in Maesyberllan, another huge almost empty chapel in the county. Absurdly the first role of the new pioneer minister was to organise the closing service and continue the selling of the chapel building!  Jaxne, who runs the cafe next door and has a canoeing business, is buying it. 
The closing service was held at the beginning of November with two dozen people (considerably more than expected) packed into the vestry at the back where the few members had been meeting for many years.  One member was the daughter of a former minister of the chapel, another the great granddaughter of the builder of the chapel. So this was a moving service, but the church itself continues as a small homegroup which is already increasing in numbers and they are seeing answers to their prayers.  Ifor preached on Joseph who must have felt abandoned several times but God turned the tables right around for him.  At the end of the service one person had a vision of a heart beating.  She did not know what it meant, but Ifor knew instantly when she told him.  He remembered the video at the BUGB Assembly a few years ago when Jesus' heartbeat sounded over the events of the crucifixion, slowed and was silent when He was dead, then stirringly started to beat again as the sun dawned on Easter Sunday.  It seemed God was saying the chapel is closed, but now comes the resurrection! - just as Ifor had mentioned in the last blog. Such reassurance!

Llanwrtyd Wells, renowned for its Bog Snorkelling Championships and Man v. Horse Race, held the World  Alternative Games which included a Biblathon - reading the Bible from cover to cover over four days and nights.  I joined in a three hour stint with two women from our next village and so ended up receiving a medal!  The organisers have no idea of the powerful effect of the Word of God being declared over the town, let alone the impact on the readers!
The Paralympic Party in Llyswen went well and was greatly appreciated by those who came which was  less than I'd hoped.  However this was a first so hopefully those who came will spread positive news.  The children participated in enforced-handicap games and all ages watched the short DVD's of Christian Paralympians and their stories.  My new friend Mary, one of the mums, took the younger half of the children.  They all enjoyed making Olympic wristbands with the Olympic colour beads used to tell the gospel (yellow or gold, black, red, green, blue - work it out!!) Mary also made lots of bronze, silver and gold medals which were presented by a local man who had his legs amputated after a road accident.  He himself has been competing in sport since the accident and showed his medals to much applause.

My Ugandan slideshows have progressed to taking whole mornings in four primary schools, with the children participating in balancing cups on their heads and attempting African dancing - even trying to do the two together as they watched the Ugandan pot dance! Afterwards the children have taken responsibility for selling the paper bead jewellery made by the children in Pastor John Okello's school to help pay for their schooling. I was also invited to sell the jewellery at two well attended coffee mornings as well as a couple of evening meetings.  These invitations are continuing, providing further opportunities to meet people, raise awareness, share exciting stories and of course sell the jewellery for the children from both Pastor John's and Moses' schools in Uganda.

Ifor has taken six harvest festivals this autumn.  These generally attract many people from the surrounding communities who swell the normally tiny congregations.  This year Erwood held a harvest supper in the Market Hall and invited a speaker from Sporting Marvels who do effective mission work in the Rhondda. It was well attended and enjoyed and a few people took magazines to learn more about how hopeless young lives are being given meaning, value and purpose.  We are both out most Sundays taking services in different towns, villages and isolated chapels in fields. Lights seem to be quietly coming on in some lives as they begin to recognise that a living, two-way relationship with their Heavenly Father is within their reach.  Other times we sometimes wonder why we are bothering!

The monthly hill prayer walks continue.  Last week we prayed over Brecon from the Crug - an ancient hill fort. The previous month we prayed from another hill fort, Castell Dinas, over Talgarth and the pass down to Crickhowell.  King Brychan reigned over the whole of Brycheiniog (Breconshire) from there.  He had 32 children, all of whom became saints as they evangelised a vast area down to as far as Devon. Many churches are named after these saints. Its fun unblocking wells of blessing!  Talgarth was below us in the mist as though it were being bathed.  As we prayed over some farms the mist then spread to encompass them too! On the hillside opposite is an ancient graveyard where protestant believers were buried when the country was catholic, and probably vice versa.    The time before, as we prayed over the Lower Chapel valley, God put a full rainbow in the sky, arching right across the valley.  Special.  The farmer who invited us to pray from the top of his hill field  received a copy of Angus Buchan's daily journal.  Please pray he reads it.  He went off in his tractor whilst we were praying - and found the pain left his leg as he went!  Another farmer whom Ifor has come alongside is reading his copy unfailingly every day and  like Mervyn is telling people about what he is reading, is praying regularly and people are noticing a positive difference in him. Yet another farmer whom Ifor has been helping has not yet started reading his copy.  Please pray he does as it will help him enormously with what he is going through.

Continuing on the farming theme, Ifor is now milking a huge herd one afternoon a week near Glasbury which he is enjoying.  A bit of  "tent making" is good, gives more credibility, opens doors and builds relationship with those who also milk there. This was not a job he sought but was invited to do.

Our youth group aims to meet monthly but with so many county-wide and national competitions the Young Farmers Club are involved with, meetings often get cancelled.  However numbers have grown to eight now and we are slowly working our way through the Journeys testimony dvd series. The picture shows two of them covered in loo rolls - the old testament understanding of forgiveness means "covered up".... and we are covered by His blood. This was before looking at a powerful story where a father forgives the murderer of his young daughter.  The series is really making the young people think.


Over a period of just a few weeks we seem to have had a run on ministering deliverance to a number of people and also been called out to two homes where ghosts had been seen. We had already released three ghosts from one of these homes, but this time the husband, who had not previously believed in ghosts, saw an Edwardian figure so definite, he could not see the furniture behind.  Hopefully the house is now 'clean'.
We were asked to speak at Bristol Baptist College about our work, at a day seminar focussing on pioneering ministries.  We showed our dvd "There is a light in the Valley" then spoke of some of the things we are doing and what we are hoping to do.  This had the effect of encouraging us and sharpening our aim.  Ifor also spent two days in Birmingham as part of a group of ten leaders from BUGB and BUW from all over the UK, meeting to explore a way forward for the two unions as they look to put mission high on the agenda.  A couple from Pembrokeshire came to quiz us about how we are approaching setting up small groups who will have multiplication hopefully built into their DNA. They are considering starting something along those lines in Pembs.  All this has helped us revisit our original calling, assess what seems to be working and keep us focussed.

For Remembrance Sunday I organised "A Day to Remember" for the whole community of all ages in the Market Hall in Erwood.  Taking flyers around the village enabled me to knock on lots of doors and have good conversations as most people were impressed with the idea. About fifty people came (a large turnout for a village event) and most of them dressed in 1940's style clothing or camouflage. The primary school in the next village contributed lots of collage poppies and potato printed poppies which we pinned to the black stage curtains. They also created lots of beautiful paper poppies on twigs which were used during the evening to plant a Flanders Field as part of the act of remembrance.  This was followed by a two minute silence while we watched a clip of the petals falling from the Royal Albert Hall. I did a short talk after that about the poppy and its symbolism, including how the red could also signify Jesus's blood, etc.  Children and adults alike learnt a little about the two world wars whilst playing themed games, watching video clips and hearing stories from members of the local community.  A table display of wartime memorabilia attracted much interest, as did a wonderful display by a member of the British Legion of many uniforms and items collected from that period.  After a teatime spread of Spam and corned beef sandwiches, bread and jam or bread and 'scrape', all was rounded off with a wartime sing-along interspersed with more fascinating stories.  A new friend from the next village helped me with the games involving her parachute, trenches with dead rats (stuffed socks with string tails to remove to the other side's trench!), air raid sirens, etc. So as well as learning a lot, they all had a lot of fun!  Ifor was involved with two remembrance services and the cenotaph at Glasbury.

Our monthly film nights ceased when the daylight hours increased, but started up again this month with a showing of Chariots of Fire which seemed appropriate after the theme tune was played for all the Olympic medal presentations. Only six came but all enjoyed it, including our amazing neighbour, Mrs Pugh, who will be 103 in January and didn't nod off once!


On the home front, we have a new puppy!  Sandy arrived in September to keep Rosie company.  As you can see they get on really well.

Mary celebrated her 30th birthday with a group of friends staying the weekend at Waterloo, followed by more celebrations in St. Davids.  She will shortly be moving to another house in St. David's.  As well as being youth leaders,  Katie and Sam now both have jobs and have moved into their new home in Chester. My dad spent over two weeks in hospital having put on a stone in fluid after a change in medication.  They managed to get it all off before he was discharged.  No sooner was he back home than he emptied the compost bin to make room to start some leaf mould! Unfortunately these last few days he has developed a very painful hip all of a sudden which is making it hard for him to get about.
One very special event in our family this autumn was the marriage of our niece Emma to Richard, a lovely lad she met in university.  This was held in the wonderful setting of the Brecon Beacons Mountain Centre, overlooking Pen y Fan and Corn Ddu.  My 91 year old dad grew lots of pots of sunflowers which made a stunning entrance to the marquee and attracted lots of admirers, including his sprightly sister who travelled up from London for the happy occasion.

Thank you all for your prayer support.  It is greatly appreciated and needed.  Please feel free to leave any comments - its good to know if this is being read!