Pray for the student leadership conference in Cambodia

It’s not easy being a Christian student in Cambodia.

You’re one of a tiny minority. There are no other Christians in your class or in your dormitory. In this Buddhist country, your teachers frequently scorn the Christian faith. You’re not allowed to meet publicly with other Christians on campus. You feel isolated. On top of that, money is tight. You have to balance studying with a part-time job, and that makes it difficult to get to your fellowship group. Just keeping going is hard.

That’s why the annual FES/SONOKO Cambodia student conference is such an important time. As student leaders come together from different universities across the country, they’re reminded that they’re not alone. They’re reminded that they have a great God and a great gospel to share. They’re reminded of God’s heart for the lost. Last year one student at the conference said:

“If we want to reach all universities, why are SONOKO student groups only in Siem Reap and Phnom Penh? If we want to reach more students we need to go to other cities too!”

In a couple of weeks’ time, around 30 students will attend this year’s training conference: ‘Walk with Jesus on campus’. Local staff will lead workshops on discipleship, inductive Bible studies and leading small groups.

Join us in praying for this conference and for the needs of FES/SONOKO:

  • Pray that that students attending would be envisioned to live and speak for Jesus on campus.
  • Pray that students would be equipped to start leading Bible studies.Pray that student groups would be started in other cities.
  • Pray for FES/SONOKO as they work on the process of affiliating with IFES.

Thanks for praying with us!

Philippines: thursday café

Good music. Fun games. Free food. Friendly people. Students the world over love these things. That’s why more than 200 students were drawn to IVCF Philippines weekly Thursday Café. It was a safe place to chat and ask questions, a safe place to find out more about the person of Jesus. It was a highlight of the week not only for the guests, but also for the Christian students serving there week by week, learning to share the gospel with new friends. As a result of the café, five small group Bible studies have been started.

The IFES Innovation Project supported this and many other student initiatives to share the gospel on campus in creative and innovative ways. Find out more about how IFES is supporting student evangelism around the world.

Creation care

‘We were still metres away but I could already smell the coast. I was so excited the night before our coastal clean-up because I would be able to help nature and restore its beauty. But I also felt pity because I never thought that people like us could destroy something so beautiful that God has given us.’ (Mae, a student)

Every year IVCF Philippines in the Southern Mindanao region holds an event that focuses on caring for God’s creation. This year three groups participated. One group cleaned up a coastal area, another swept and picked up rubbish at a public market, while a third planted 803 cacao seedlings.

And it’s hard work! Kimberly described herself as ‘tired and exhausted’ at the end of the day:

It takes a lot of effort to plant a single seedling. It takes tremendous amount of energy to climb to the planting site. It takes courage to finish the work before the day ends. It takes perseverance. It takes strength.’

Why would they do such a thing? Shouldn’t they be holding Bible studies with their friends or attending a leadership development conference?

Or is caring for God’s world something that is part of moulding student leaders, part of equipping young people to reach out to others?

Ruth, another student participant, explains what God showed her during the event: 

‘I realized that being a Christian is not only focusing on your own spiritual growth. Being a Christian includes a responsibility to be involved in community.

‘Some of the people living on the coast were not responsible enough to take care of their own place and it’s a sad thing. The waste that they had created will probably affect them especially in regard to their health. It’s an eye-opener for me as a Christian to pray for those people and not think always of praying only for myself. 

‘Sometimes we can only see the things that we are near every day. It could be the limited number of friends that we chat with, or the usual things that we do. Sometimes in life we need to see the bigger picture, to realize what’s going on in our world outside.’

Merit sorted the trash for recycling and was reminded of the need to steward God’s creation. 

‘Participating in the clean-up drive reminded me that even little things, when accumulated, can have a disastrous effect. And it further encouraged me not just to actively take the role of steward but also to influence the people around me to do the same.’

There are many lessons to be learned as we care for the world around us. Let’s pray for students as they strive to show the love of God in the communities around them by bringing restoration to the created world. And let’s pray too that we might know how we can better care for the wonderful world that God has entrusted to us.

Blessings.

Written by Penny Vinden for IFES