Wednesday, December 31, 2008

On the Road Again...

At this point most everybody has heard about our new adventure and plans. We will be moving back to Cape Town in late August of 2009. Sarah will be working with Living Hope again and with a Methodist Church. But I'll be starting Ubuntu Football Ministries with a good friend, Mike Jenkins.
This week we got our first gift/contribution to Ubuntu Football Ministries from a couple here at our church. It was such a blessing and encouragement to feel like people really do believe in what we God has called us to. It felt like God was using this family to give us that little boost to keep going and get this thing started. I know it's the first of many times that God is going to surprise us with his plans, generosity, and wisdom. I'm excited to be a part of all of it!!
On December 14 I was given the opportunity to preach a mini-sermon here at Grace about how God is moving in my life and how that movement is leading us to Cape Town. The feedback was really encouraging and people seemed to be challenged by it. If you are interested in hearing it, hopefully it will be up on our church website soon. (www.gracecommchurch.com). If it is not, and you want to hear it, let me know and I'll mail you a CD.
Thanks for all your encouragement and support. Please keep praying that God would move and provide for everything we need in the journey ahead!
Less than 2 weeks till Kieren should be here!! I can't believe the ways that my life will be transformed in that one moment!!

Cheers,
Casey

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Baby Kieren at 37 Weeks!



Hello friends and family and MERRY CHRISTMAS!

Just an update on baby Kieren - we are at 37 weeks this week. Can you believe it?? She is now considered 'full term' and should be healthy and fully formed anytime she comes from here on out. Praise God! This week she is the size of a head of swiss chard (not the most appetizing of examples, I know, but the biggest!). She is still moving, but getting slower in there as there is SURELY less room for her to move around. I am continuing to feel relatively good, and I just keep pinching myself because I feel so lucky! She is definitely growing bigger and bigger, but I feel good and am keeping active and happy. Casey and I are just so overjoyed that we are getting closer, and we are just enjoying this peaceful season before we get to meet her. All is good!

Lots of love,
Sarah

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Kieren Celebrations

We are so blessed! Casey and I have so many people in our lives that are SO excited to meet Kieren, and she's not even here yet! She is going to be one WELL-LOVED little girl! Here are a few pictures from a couple recent get-togethers to celebrate this little girl coming into our lives soon. Thanks friends and family!!

Love,
Sarah


Celebration with some of my favorite ladies, hosted by Kerry Mandulak, Blair Waldo, and Blair Winter






The staff at Grace had a wonderful lunch for us to celebrate Kieren! How fun!!


Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Baby Kieren at 36 Weeks!

Hey everyone!

Baby Kieren continues to grow and get STRONGER and STRONGER. On Monday night Casey took me on a FUN surprise Christmas date to see Raleigh's version of 'A Christmas Carol,' and Kieren moved the ENTIRE time we were at the show. She is going to be a performer!

Dinner before the show



All is well with baby and mom this week. I continue to feel good, just tired with carrying about this little girl, but NO complaints. I am blessed.

This week Kieren is the size of a Crenshaw Melon - and she feels like it :)


Lots of love!
Sarah

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Hello!

I came across this article today from Relevant Magazine, a Christian magazine for young people that I believe is progressive, inspiring, and intelligent. This article is about President George Bush's PEPFAR policy to help eliminate AIDS in Africa. We saw PEPFAR's reach in South Africa, as it was a major contributor to the organization we worked with in Cape Town, the Living Hope Community Center. The PEPFAR plan has done a GREAT amount of good in Africa, and this article highlights the heart behind it. Enjoy!

Love,
Sarah

Bush's Unexpected Legacy by Cameron Strong

Two weeks ago, on World AIDS Day, Rick Warren hosted a Civil Forum on Global Health in Washington, D.C. The event was an hour-long interview between Warren and President George W. Bush to discuss the unprecedented work being done in Africa through the President’s Emergency Plan For AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). As Warren said when introducing the president, “No man in history, no world leader, has done more for global health than President George W. Bush.” Not exactly something you hear much about in the media.I actually had the privilege of meeting President Bush that day and was impressed with his compassion and humility. He campaigned in 2000 on a platform of “compassionate conservatism,” and PEPFAR was birthed out of that promise. As our country faces enormous economic challenges right now, it’s easy to overlook the work PEPFAR is doing half a world away. But millions of lives are literally being saved—10 million have been affected since its inception in 2003—and this past summer, those positive results prompted Bush to pledge a tripling of PEPFAR’s funding. When I traveled to Rwanda this past April, I saw evidence of PEPFAR’s work everywhere. Its importance to Africa’s efforts in the fight against AIDS cannot be overstated.Below are some highlights from Warren’s interview with President Bush. It’s a RELEVANT exclusive, mainly because I covertly recorded it in my pocket and I haven’t seen it anywhere online. We’ll post more of the transcript on my blog at RELEVANTmagazine.com.

Warren: I want to talk about the results of PEPFAR in five areas—saving lives, creating new partnerships, building local leadership, encouraging behavior and reducing a stigma. When you first announced this in the State of the Union Address in 2003, you insisted on measurable goals. Most governments are afraid to do that. But you did. So, how are we doing? Tell me about what's happened in the past five years.
Bush: I insisted upon measurable goals because I felt that lives needed to be saved. When we started, 50,000 people were getting antiretroviral treatments in all of Africa. So we set a goal of 2 million people in five years to be getting ARVs. Thank you for setting this up, because today we’re able to announce that we’re over 2 million in less than five years.
Setting! goals is difficult for some. Bureaucracies tend to avoid goal-setting. In all due respect to bureaucracies, foreign governments tend to avoid goals. Nobody really wants to be held to account.
Setting goals also had to change the way we developed aid. In other words, we said to people, "We want to help you." But rather than being paternalistic about our help—which basically says, “We know better than you how to achieve your goals”—we expect [the African leaders] to be a partner in achieving the goals. Which is an attitude change, basically saying to the African leaders, "We trust you. We think we've got the capacity to be a good partner.”

Warren: You once said, "Africa's most valuable resource is not its soil or its diamonds, but it's the talent and the creativity of its people." You insisted that the people who were going to do PEPFAR, that the decisions and the strategy should be don! e by the people on the ground there instead of bureaucracy and centralized back here. So this principal of trusting the local leaders is a pretty innovative thing when you think about it.
Bush: Well actually, it’s the timeless management principal of aligning authority and responsibility. If you disassociate authority and responsibility, you can't have accountability. So we align the responsibility and authority.

Warren: The innovation of trusting leaders at the local level—instead of saying, "We over here are going to tell you what to do”—you've left them to determine the strategy in each country, and that's how you got the 2 million.
Bush: We actually helped them develop the strategy, but when they develop the strategy, it's easier to hold the strategy developer to account. It's not all that profound. The United States believes that paternalism is destructive, and! we believe partnership is constructive. That’s the basis of a lot of our foreign policy.
[We say to our African partners], “We believe that you can do better. We believe in setting high standards and helping you achieve high standards.” That's different from, “We are just going to give you money to make ourselves feel better.” And then the results don't end up accomplishing our objectives.
Warren: That makes me think of the old Reagan statement, "Trust but clarify." Because you did both. You trusted the local leaders but you also made accountability. Now let's look at this partnership for a minute because you brought in a whole new group of partners in PEPFAR. PEPFAR was not just a model for AIDS, but it's a model for all kinds of programs because you invited everyone to the table, including faith-based …
Bush: Especially faith-based. I say especially faith-based, not including faith-based, because I believe that when people join organizations to love their neighbor, it's a powerful incentive for effectiveness on the ground. One of the greatest things about our experience, we've seen people from the faith community in Africa share their stories about what it is to love their neighbor.

Warren: I've heard you say many times that government can't love.
Bush: That's right. Love comes from the heart, a higher calling, from God. So the whole purpose of including faith organizations was frankly to bring some order into that which was already happening. Your church, other churches, synagogues, people from around America who are motivated by faith are involved in the process. So why not bring some order and focus, and that's the proper role of the government in this case. And it's working. When you think about people volunteering in Africa to save lives, they are actually saving their own lives, in many ways.

Warren: Let me talk to you about your own personal motivation behind this. This was the largest initiative ever committed to a single disease. PEPFAR. When I heard about it in 2003, I thought, “Will that ever get voted through?" because it was such an enormous “BHAG (Big, Hairy, Audacious Goal).” From a purely political viewpoint, you weren't going to get a lot of votes for that. So what was it that motivated you to do PEPFAR?
Bush: Well first of all, I believe in this admission: "To whom much is given, much is required."
Secondly, I would hope that when it’s all said and done, people would say, “This is a guy who showed up and solved problems.” And when you have somebody say, “There's a pandemic that you can help,” and you do nothing about it, then you have frankly disgraced the office.
And finally, I am surrounded by people who are pushing hard on these initiatives. People I trust—Condi Rice, Mike Gerson, Mark Dybul. When I was first talking to Condi about being the National Security Advisor, she said, “I want you to make this promise to me, that you will focus on Africa."
I had a group of people around me, people I trust, people whose hearts I came to admire, that pushed this foreign policy as well. We have follow-through people, and it’s been a fabulous experience working with them.

For more of this interview, check out Cameron’s blog at RELEVANTmagazine.com.
Author: Cameron Strang

Sunday, December 14, 2008

The 'bump' at 35 weeks




Hey there!

Well Kieren is definitely growing - as my 'bump' shows! I am feeling pretty good actually, so that is really a blessing. Just tired and 'achey' at night - but all is to be expected as this strong girl keeps growing. My parents visited this weekend which was so fun!

Lots of love!
Sarah

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Baby Kieren is 35 Weeks!


Hello everyone!

I am 35 weeks along this week - and baby Kieren is the size of a honeydew! She is moving all the time and definitely doesn't have much room in there to move around. I am feeling good, just getting more tired and feeling this pressure of this baby in my belly. We're getting there...

Love,
Sarah

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Casey is Turning 30!



You are only young once, but you can be immature for a lifetime. -John P. Grier


Hello friends and family!

Casey's 30th birthday is right around the corner on December 17th, and I gathered some great friends last night for a party to celebrate him! We had a great time lovin' on Casey and enjoying pictures and stories from his fun life. Below are some pics from the night (near the end when I remembered to bring my camera out!).

Make sure you give him an EXTRA BIG HUG on Wednesday December 17th - he is going to need it :)

Love,
Sarah






Thursday, December 4, 2008

Baby Kieren at 34 Week


She is continuing to grow - and is very active! All is healthy and happy in the Prince home and we are just enjoying getting everything ready for Kieren. Getting closer...

This week she is the size of a cantaloupe - and I believe it!!

Love,
Sarah