Rewrite It!

Rewrite It!

I hear many people talking about what a year 2020 has been. It’s been full of, “I never imagined that ever happening.” Many people would like to rewrite the year. Well, what if you could? What would that look like? Would you rewrite it as a year of moving forward, of hope and healing, successes, and triumphs instead of…

Home for the Holidays

Home for the Holidays

Greetings to you and yours from all of us at the GROW HOME during this special holiday season. I am trusting the LORD that you are all well and experience His grace each day as the world lives through this challenging time. We hope only in Jesus Christ as we look to celebrate His birth and look forward to His second coming to bring His…

Education is Key

Education is Key

Many Thai parents, especially those from the Hill Tribes, have very little education, and often they cannot even read or write. This causes a cycle of poverty where the parents have little to no income, and they cannot afford to send their kids to school. This also creates a very vulnerable situation for the young children, where the parents…

God is Moving and Blessing Grow

God is Moving and Blessing Grow

Since we kicked off our 10 Year Celebration, so many things have transpired. The list includes: GROW hosts pastors’ worship and training time, outreach to local public schools with visiting U.S. teams, anti-drug march, four children graduate from junior high school, summer camp, passports and visas for 10 children were secured, plans were made for the U.S. tour, our co-founder,…

Winter 2019

Winter 2019

Hello Friends, Greetings in the name of Jesus Christ to you from Lititz, PA during my fundraising trip in this super cold weather welcoming the holiday season. I am so excited to see the snow fall out of the sky onto the ground. I said out loud, “Thank you,” to God for this opportunity to see snow…

They Are NOT Just A Number

They Are NOT Just A Number

In the mountains of northern Thailand hilltribe families in abject poverty often have multiple children. To facilitate day-to-day communication, sometimes they simply number their children—1 to 12, for example. It’s not that the children don’t have names, but they essentially live as if they didn’t. Every time someone needs something, all they need to do is yell a…