new england - umass

New Follower of Jesus from Laboring at UMASS

We just received exciting news from Tommy, Matt’s main contact at UMASS, Amherst. Your prayers have been answered!

A couple of months ago I (Matt) spent half a day training Tommy and a few students at UMASS before spending some time witnessing on campus. A week later we had plans to do the same thing, but I got sick. I felt I heard from God that morning to rest and postpone my meeting with them.

Tommy and a few guys met up and practiced without me before going out in pairs to try to share the gospel (they didn’t need me!). Tommy was with a guy named Gideon. The two of them received several rejections and ended up back in the place where they started in the student center. Gideon then pointed out a guy he saw when they started and explained he had a strong impression they should talk to him.

The young man they talked to was a Hindu-background atheist named Mrinal. After briefly trying to get out of the conversation, he opened up and agreed to read the Bible with Tommy. Since then they’ve met several times, and Mrinal repented in prayer just before Thanksgiving! Tommy is going to start talking to Mrinal about the cost of discipleship and baptism soon.

new england - sidewalk chalk

Please Pray for Northampton, Mass.

Just north of where we live, about a 30-min. drive, is Northampton, Mass. This is a strategic city that we very much want to see God reach in new and publicly noticeable ways.

Northampton was where Jonathan Edwards was the pastor in the 1700s when revival broke out, leading to the First Great Awakening. Our personal connection is that Hawley and our children are related to the Edwards family. And now 300 years later, Northampton is a very, very different place—quite the opposite. The people on the streets there are clearly confused by contemporary ideologies, pagan/Satanic spiritualities, and drug use. There is a lot of visible depression. The people are burdened. And there is a large and boisterous homeless community that dominates the downtown, which is also home to Smith College.

Please pray in compassion for the people of Northampton! Matt usually goes there one day each week to pray with a small group of believers, prayer walk, and witness on the streets. We sense a need to do something bigger than what we’ve attempted so far in order to shake things up considerably and repossess the territory for Jesus. Northampton is the “Goliath” in our area that taunts us, but we’re trusting in God to conquer this giant. Please pray for this, and pray for Matt’s protection especially as he increasingly goes to Northampton and takes others with him. Pray also for Nathaniel and Stefan, two men who were recently receptive to the gospel on the streets in Northampton.

“When he saw the crowds, he had compassion for them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd.“ (Matthew 9:36)

new england - car living

Pray for Andrew/Northampton Update

Thanks for those of you who prayed for Northampton  It’s working!

My friend Seth and I (Matt) have gone a few times in recent weeks to a park in downtown Northampton to pray and witness to people. Last week we met a guy named Andrew who was receptive to the gospel but living on the streets in his broken down car in the photo. I asked him if he truly wanted to get off the streets and offered to take him to a Christian recovery mission I trust a few towns over. He said yes.

Long story short, I took him there, and he’s been there for a week now. We were able to get his car started and moved to where he’s now staying. And this week I started discipling him and training him to make disciples. He’s very excited to be growing spiritually and sharing his faith with others, including his family.

Please pray for Andrew. He believes in Jesus but is just now learning to follow him. Pray that being in the recovery mission will help him not only get off the streets but to get right with God. Pray that his family, among whom there is much dysfunction, will begin to receive the gospel when he starts sharing. Pray also for my friend Seth who is witnessing with me in Northampton. Pray for our attempt to start a regular Bible study in the park on Friday mornings.

new england - cafe fire

Our Friends’ Cafe & Site of Church-Start Burned Down

Early Tuesday morning, the historic building in New Hartford, CT where our friends Glenn and Maja’s cafe was burned down and was destroyed. They met at the cafe, Farm River Cafe, where Glenn was the owner-operator, and they were later married there. They are also people we have been investing in spiritually, and they have been gathering friends on Saturdays with the goal of starting a church at the cafe. For them, this feels like a spiritual attack against what was happening there and their hopes to reach the small town.

There is still no known cause, and the building has been demolished for safety reasons.

Please pray for Glenn and Maja. Pray also for the other business owners, apartment residents, and the owner of the building. Pray for the firemen injured battling the fire. Pray for the town of New Hartford. Pray for the group that has been gathering in the cafe.

new england - three baptisms

Three Baptisms & an Evangelism Training

Three children submitted to Jesus in baptism at the Deerfield River today. This was at a gathering we had with our network in the Upper Pioneer Valley area of Western Mass.

Earlier in the afternoon Matt trained everyone at the gathering in evangelism. The training was timely since we had a heckler at the baptism, and one of our folks was able to share the gospel with her. He used the 3 Circles gospel presentation with her that he had learned earlier (fourth photo).

Please pray for Kizzi, Phinnie, and Charlotte. Pray for those who witnessed the baptisms, especially the woman who heard the gospel. And pray for the large group of people who are now trained to share their faith. Pray for more of this.

ups angel

There are so many stories to share but this story from a girl named Anna really touched me. Her dad drives a UPS truck.

"On the day of the tornado (4-27-11) he got a call to leave his route early and come back to Tuscaloosa because the weather was getting bad. As her dad got into Tuscaloosa he noticed how much the wind was picking up and things were flying around the interstate. He called Anna's step mom to figure out what was going with the weather. She calmly told him a tornado was heading straight for him. Anna's dad knew he didn't have time to get to a secure building. He parked his truck under an overpass and ran up the cement hill. At the top of the hill he found a homeless man. Her dad told the man that a huge tornado was heading straight for them. The only way they would survive was to "hug" a cement pillar of the overpass. The pillar was too big for one man to wrap his arms around it. Anna's dad said they would have to hold hands and not let go. The two men locked hands around that pillar. Wind and debris flew around them, putting gashes in his back and head from the flying metal and wood. As the tornado was passing over the men, Anna's dad looked down at the interstate below. He saw a woman running up the hill toward them. The wind was too powerful, so she ran back down and crawled under her car. The tornado picked up the car and slammed it back down on top of the woman. He saw another woman get sucked out the back window of her car. And worst of all was a person who lost his head. When the tornado was for sure past, he and the homeless man let their hands go. Her dad leaned from under the overpass and took a picture of the tornado in the distance (see above) with his cell phone. As he turned around to check on the homeless man, he was gone. Anna's dad looked all around his makeshift home and where they had been standing and couldn't find him. It was as if the homeless man vanished. Her dad wouldn't have survived if that homeless man wasn't under that overpass. It took two people to hold onto that pillar. He never spoke a word."

We can all draw our own conclusions / thoughts on the homeless man. The bottom line is God is in control of the weather, tornados, the number of hairs on our head and the number of days on this earth. So whether God used this homeless man or WAS this homeless man, we will not know this side of heaven. We do know Mr. UPS was spared for God's glory and I pray this has changed his life and drawn him closer to our Heavenly Father.

hobbits tale

There and Back Again. A Hobbit's Tale... [4/27/2011]- please take this with a sense of humor and recognize God's influence. by Randy Robbins on Saturday, April 30, 2011 at 1:00pm

This is my experience during the tornado that swept through Alberta and Tuscaloosa in as much detail as I can muster with the medication I am on. I need to put this down for therapeutic reasons and for others to read because I can't keep re-telling this story. If you are to take anything away from this story it is two things: 1)God saved so many people that day including me and 2)disasters bring out the absolute best in some people...and the absolute worst in others. I am going to write down the events exactly as I remember them while I still can. I will add details that I have gathered from accounts by my neighbor and judging from materials stuck inside my body. I would also like to point out that any person I don't reference by name (such as neighbor) I had not really met before. Here goes:

At roughly 4pm on April 27, 2011, I was sitting in FI 414 class listening to presentation on industries and the severe weather alarms went off and the University cancelled classes for the rest of the day. I considered staying on campus, but I saw everyone else leaving and decided I would be fine going to my apartment (face palm). This is probably my biggest regret of my life purely for the fact that I let the actions of others sway my opinion and nearly kill me. I walked to my truck that was parked roughly a mile away near the Coliseum. I knew we were in for a storm when the wind knocked my backpack off my shoulder halfway there. I made it to my truck and drove to my apartment that was located at the intersection of University Blvd. and 25th Avenue East in Alberta City, AL. During my drive, I received several texts from both my older and younger sisters warning me that some severe storms were heading to my area. Naturally, I discounted them as hysteria and paranoia and continued on my merry way. I got to my apartment at roughly 4:30pm and popped a frozen pizza in the oven for dinner. I turned on my computer and pulled up my assignments for the night. As I began working through my homework, I got some more texts from friends warning me of the weather. I assured them all that I would be perfectly safe in my sturdy apartment. The timer for the pizza went off so I got it out of the oven and took two slices to my room. I hadn't eaten much for lunch so I was ravenous. I ate nearly the entire pizza. This small detail probably saved my life. More on that later.

The power in my apartment went out at roughly 5pm and so I opened the shades on my window to read and look outside. I noticed the trees behind my apartment swaying at a steep angle. Then I decided I should probably close all windows and doors. I did so. Just then my buddy Sean Philips texted me that I should find cover. I was coming up with a clever retort about how paranoid he is being when my ears popped really hard and I heard what sounded like a train outside my window. I had watched enough news to know this meant a tornado. I jumped into my closet and slammed the door shut. I felt the whole building shaking so I grabbed the door knob and held it shut with all my strength. Then I heard tearing and ripping noises which had to be my back wall tearing away. At this point, I wanna point out that if any of these events had occurred slightly differently or in a different order, I would have been buried. Anyway, the back wall tore away from the building and the door to my closet began shaking open and I kept pulling it back closed. After a couple seconds of this struggle, the door and I were sucked out of the closet and through the back wall. I never rose more than a couple feet off the ground but, judging from memories of where things were, I flew about 40 feet total. The winds flung me from the back wall into the chain link fence 10-15 feet behind my apartment with enough force to leave bruises of the chain links in my side. It then flung me back into some piles of rubble where I was then rolled around on the ground for about 15 seconds before it subsided slightly. I looked up from my prone position and I was lying on tile floor and I could see my neighbor lying on top of her baby trying to shield her. I also heard myself screaming and realized I had been screaming the entire time but hadn't noticed.

The winds were beginning to pick up again so I ran over to my neighbor and threw myself on top of them to try and shield them. Somewhere along the way I stepped on a piece of wood with enough force to shove a 3-inch piece through the bottom of my foot. Please take note, this was not an act of heroism, but desperation. As far as my concussed mind could think, I truly believed during that split second that we three were the only beings left in a world that had dissolved around us. I acted to try and preserve the only other people left in this Hell so I wouldn't be alone if I survived. I laid on top of her and immediately the winds picked up again. I was bombarded with (judging from wounds and what is still imbedded in my back at the time of this writing) glass, roofing shingles, pieces of wood, and a Bic pen. LOL. I know this for sure because I pulled it out of my side when I stood up. The storm finally dissipated after roughly 10-20 seconds and slowly stood up. Due to adrenaline and shock, I did not notice any of the injuries I suffered. However, I did notice that I could barely hear anything and my ears were bleeding from the pressure of the storm (the earlier popping that alerted me of the tornado). Everyone's ears were. The poor baby's ears were pouring blood. At this point, I surveyed my body. My jeans, watch, glasses, and shirt had been ripped from my body.Somehow, I was still holding my iPhone in my right hand. Just then a call came through. It was my older sister, Christina. I could only stare at it in disbelief before answering. I don't remember our conversation, but she later relayed it to me. Here it is as she remembers it:

Christy: Randy??? Randy???

Me: Kiki! My apartment; it's gone. The baby is bleeding. I lost my glasses. My foot is bleeding bad. There are people stuck. I have to go.

I then hung up the phone because people were screaming from within piles of rubble. I limped over to the nearest pile where one of my neighbor's head was sticking out from beneath a section of roof. I pulled off a couple small pieces of wood before collapsing. I think I blacked out for a couple seconds. Next thing I remember, he is digging himself out. He comes to check on me and almost slips in the puddle of blood and water at my feet. He tears off his shirt and ties it around my foot (I had no shoes or socks on before it hit). He helps me stand and we look around at the damage. I see my childhood friend Austin and his girlfriend Mary and their dog that live six doors down from me. They are standing in their bathroom. I yell to them and then begin trying to crawl out. At some point I believe a neighbor (maybe Mary) throws me a woman's loafer which I put on my left foot to protect it. It was a left shoe that was about 2 sizes too small but I barely noticed. I can't walk because of my foot so i throw some sections of my couch across the short wall of sharp debris between me and what's left of the parking lot and begin crawling on my hands and knees across. Due to the composition and layout of the debris, I am forced to crawl on my belly under my truck to get out (it was then parked in my living room and totaled).

I finally reach the parking lot covered in blood, dirt, oil, and sheetrock dust. I lend a neighbor my phone and then I spot my friend and neighbor, Brandon and hobble to him to check him out. Amazingly, he is unhurt. We both hear someone yelling that another storm is about to touch down in the area so we immediately take off to find shelter. I lose track of everyone else. Austin and Mary help dig out some neighbors. Brandon lends me his shoulder and we begin walking (me hopping) to the Piggly Wiggly down the street. We hear that they are not letting people in so we detour to the local Save-A-Lot and ask the manager if he is letting people in. He lets us in. I sit on the nearest checkout station while Brandon runs to find first aid supplies. He finds peroxide, paper towels, and scotch tape. I use what little Spanish I know to try to cheer up a small hispanic child that was crying near me. I begin to feel very faint from blood loss so I start chugging as much Gatorade as possible to keep blood sugar up so I don't pass out. The pizza I ate earlier also probably kept me awake and alive. Brandon begins cleaning and wrapping my foot. We then see that there is still wood sticking out. We wrap paper towels and tape over it to try to stop the blood loss.

I then begin to feel a slight itchy, burning sensation on my back so I asked him to take a look. He says that I have a few cuts on my back. I'm glad he didn't tell me the extent to which it was messed up. We stay in the store and wait for the next tornado to touch down. I sit on a rolling cart so that Brandon could quickly wheel me to the back if it came. We were all getting ready to run to the back and lock ourselves inside the freezer. I tell Brandon to gather some food and water in case we are trapped inside the store. I feel prepared, so I try to slow breathing and heart rate to slow blood flow. Some time later (I began losing track of time and events) we see people run into the bank to steal money and cops arrest them. This pisses us all off for obvious reasons. Brandon and I walk (and hop) up to the Texaco because we hear they have set up a triage center there. We get there and they turn us away so we go back to the store. I am exhausted from blood loss and hopping everywhere. I should point out that I am hopping down the street wearing only my silver cross necklace and boxers and the homemade bandages on my foot. It's funny now, not so much then.

We stay in the store for a while. A woman who was in the store earlier comes running back and leads a cop to where I'm lying. I owe her and Brandon both my life. I would have bled out within a couple hours if that cop hadn't found me. He calls in a truck and I jump in the back and they drive me to the hospital. I ask for pen in the bed of the truck so I can write my name and medical info and mom's phone number on my body in case I pass out again and can't talk to nurses. We get to the hospital and I am assigned a randomized name for legal reasons (Raja Ed Downtime). I ask over and over again for them to call my mom to check on Jessica because she is home alone in Homewood and I heard a storm passed by there.

I will never forget the nurse who helped me, Nurse Jackie. She checked up on me throughout my X-Rays and CT scans and stitches over the next 6-8 hours. I felt like I was her only patient although she likely had scores of them at this time. I plan on thanking her personally as soon as I can travel.

This is where the story ends. I am just one person among hundreds, possibly thousands of people hurt in a city where neighbors and strangers alike risked their own lives to save each other. I tried to help who I could any way I could and I owe my life to many others. Thank you, Nurse Jackie for consoling me while I was alone for those many hours. Thank you, Brandon for lending me a friendly shoulder and thinking only of others. Thank you, Lady from Save-A-Lot for finding me a ride to the hospital. Thank you, Mom for forcing Delta airlines to let you off of a plane preparing to take off. Thank you, Jimmy and Jessica for looking throughout hospital (and morgue) for me for hours before finding me. Thank you to the men and women of the National Guard, fire departments, and police departments around the state. Many of us wouldn't have made it without y’all. And, of course, thank you, GOD. Even as the clothes and material possessions were ripped from my body, your symbol stayed firmly around my neck and in my heart.

It is long, but I can already feel a massive weight lifted from my chest. This note has done its job. If you are reading this, you are my friend and share the honor of calling me "pal". ;)

Harare Help's - Zimbabwe

Tropical Cyclone Idai hit Zimbabwe eastern coast on March 15, 2019 after making landfall near Beira, Mozambique the day before as a Category 2 storm with sustained winds exceeding 105mph. As of March 20th, heavy rains continue making search and rescue operations and damage assessment almost impossible.

A Zimbabwean couple, the Kirk’s, living in Birmingham, Alabama will be traveling to their native country for a visit.  Some of their family members are involved in the relief efforts in the Eastern Highlands of Zimbabwe that was hit by Tropical Cyclone Idai, a little over a month ago. The Kirk’s are collecting donations and supplies for ‘Harare Help’s”, a ministry in Zimbabwe, helping get supplies to the ravaged areas. 

The request is for:  Pain relievers; anti-inflammatories; bandages; bandaids; children’s supplements; vitamins; wraps; slings; etc.

Scatter Christ is so thankful the Lord presented this opportunity to be involved in relief efforts across the globe and much of the needed items have been purchased and sent to Zimbabwe with the Kirk’s.