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Geoff Whiteman

[Life Update] God's goodness is steadfast in this season of transition.

Published 11 months agoΒ β€’Β 4 min read

Hello Reader,

Our family is in a season of transition and would be grateful for your prayerful support.

Packi finished 5th grade and along with preparing to move out of the only neighborhood he's ever known, will be heading to middle school in the fall.

πŸ§—This week he's at Adventure Camp having a blast hiking, canoeing, rock climbing, caving, and learning camp skills. He made it about 1/3 of the way up the rock wall and felt good about what he was able to do, instead of bad about what he wasn't. He's got a growth mindset and is looking forward to seeing how much further he can go next year. What a resilient kiddo!

Dr. Kriss completed her PhD with distinctions. We began this journey 13 years ago with a very different timeline and trajectory in mind - to serve the mission effort of our Orthodox Church vocationally. Some of the doors we were sure would open didn't and the doors that did open we could never have imagined to hope for.

πŸ‘©πŸ»β€πŸŽ“Kriss has accepted a full-time position at Asbury Seminary in the Advance Research Program (ARP). It's a perfect fit - a chance to offer her experience and skills in gratitude for all she has received, and grow in her professional capacities while providing our family with benefits. Glory to God for all things!

One Year at VALEO we made it through the first year launching the Research Institute at Valeo.

πŸƒπŸ»β€β™‚οΈIt's been a challenging year. When I was serving missionaries directly in member-care, I received the challenges that accompanied that work as opportunities to deepen my empathy for what missionaries experience. The same is true now. Much of what's been challenging about this year is common to anyone leading the founding of an innovative ministry with potential to impact the Kingdom of God.

πŸš£πŸ»β€β™€οΈBeing on a large lake in a little boat. That's how my friend Keith Buhler describes it. I get to the end of most days and wonder - did I accomplish anything today? But I can look back at this first year with amazement of how far we have gotten with God's help.

☦️What has been most surprising is the loneliness that accompanies blazing a new path. It’s not that people don’t care, it's just part of the cross we are asked to bear. My friend Windfield Bevins shared this beautiful prayer by St. Brendan the Navigator that captures the deepest longings of my heart in this season:

Help me to journey beyond the familiar and into the unknown. Give me the faith to leave old ways and break fresh ground with you. Christ of the mysteries. I trust you to be stronger than each storm within me. I will trust in the darkness and know that my times, even now, are in your hands. Tune my spirit to the music of Heaven. And somehow make my obedience count for you. Amen.

Three Big Wins

πŸ“— Member-care Volume Coming this Fall In my voluntary role as the co-leader of people care and development track at MissioNexus I'm co-editing the publication of a new volume that brings together theological reflections, fresh research, best practices and strategies, and practical tools from a diverse group of experts.

🀝 First Organizational Partnership with a mission organization that provides both a clinical care component and research assessment of their global workers perspective of well-being to best focus their organizational support. It's an honor to get to work with organizations that demonstrate their commitment to understanding and proactively responding to their workers. I believe we can scale this to serve more organizations in this way once we successfully prototype the process.

✍️ Needs Assessment Analyzed we had 175 member-care professionals, directors and concerned global workers participate in our Needs Assessment. That's a little more than 4,600 cells of data.

  • Improving global worker well-being and development was important to participants because 1) they know and love them personally, 2) they understand the need is real, 3) they believe healthy people work better, 4) it's their job/calling and 5) our love for one another is our witness to the world.
  • Healthy / Wholistic Thriving / Flourishing: That's the miracle these professionals long 1) for global workers inner life, family life, and team life; 2) for mission teams with relationship skills to approach conflict constructive; 3) for organizations and sending churches with good support systems; and 4) for more accessible resources like affordable holistic care, retreats, mental health access, and training in relational soft skills.
  • Grading member care globally: ~80% scored our global effort between a B- and a C- but see the trajectory slightly improving.
  • Participants shared the obstacles and underutilized assets that will help focus our solution-focused research agenda to develop best practices resources and training for these professionals.

Ways you can get involved, Reader

πŸ™ Pray for wisdom as I prepare to steward year two, I'm keenly aware of the need for sustainable bandwidth and kingdom impact through a team effort. We will need recurring revenue to responsibly expand our team.

πŸ‘ $1,500 in monthly support will fully fund my salary. [translation: I’m receiving a reduced paycheck until those funds are given]. If you're prompted to support our family in this way, you can give here.​

πŸ§—β€β™€οΈI’m so thankful for Packi being able to celebrate what he did accomplish this week. I needed that reminder as I celebrate this first year anniversary. I can’t wait to see how much father we can get together next year. Glory to God for all things!

With Expectant Hope,

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πŸ”—Geoff Whiteman, ThM, LMFT​

β€‹πŸŽ access my promised resources.

πŸ’Œ Read and share my latest updates.

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β€œNow to him who by the power at work within us is able to accomplish abundantly far more than all we can ask or imagine, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus to all generations, forever and ever. Amen.” (excerpt from Ephesians 3:14-21)

Geoff Whiteman

Reflecting on the True, Good, and Beautiful of Missional Resilience.

What do we do when we reach the end of our grit? The Resilient Global Worker Study listened to the experience and wisdom of nearly 900 cross-cultural ministers of the Gospel. What they shared transformed our understanding of how to persevere with joy. GOOD NEWS: Missional Resilience can flourish when our grit runs out. Subscribe and join us on this lifelong pilgrimage.

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