
...God...leads us in triumph in Christ, and manifests through us the sweet aroma of the knowledge of Him in every place. 2 Corinthians 2:14
Cheas Ponleu trains and equips Cambodian pastors to practice wholistic ministry in their villages and communities.
A Story In Pursat Province . . .
A Pastor and his assistant began dreaming how they could make a difference in their village. After participating in Cheas Ponleu training, they were introduced to the idea of Seed Projects, which are small short-term projects that involve the whole community, use local resources, and give praise to God.
The village road is always in bad repair. The monsoon rains each year keep eating away at the dirt until pot-holes the size of cars make travel difficult.
Monsoon-damaged road in Cambodia
In the past, the village chief had collected money from the all of the villagers, but kept the funds for himself. As a result, the village was distrustful of new attempts to repair the roads, thinking they would lose their money again.
However, to give respect to the village chief, the pastor approached him and asked permission to repair the road. He readily agreed.
The pastor talked with his church members and organized a day to repair a 400meter stretch of damaged road. But was afraid to approach the rest of the village, thinking they would refuse to help because of their past experience of betrayal.
A simple plan to repair the village road turned into an amazing event where past failure and betrayal was overcome. Where a village that was divided was brought together, where animists and atheists praised God, and the fatalistic attitudes of the village were challenged.
10 people from the church turned up to begin repairing the road.
Church members gather to repair the road
As the day went on, villagers traveled the stretch of road and saw what the church members were doing. Intrigued, shamed, excited, the villagers stopped what they were doing, paused their journeys, and helped out. Soon over 20 villagers were helping to haul dirt, drain puddles and set up refreshments for the workers.
Villagers stop to help out
No money was used for this project. Just labor, personal equipment, and
food.
Local resources used
By the end of the day, a long stretch of road had transformed from a muddy, treacherous path, to a street useable for travel and work.
By the end of the day . . .
The village chief was amazed. He was grateful that the church had taken in upon themselves to plan this seed project. He was awestruck that the rest of the village had stopped what they were doing to help out. And by the end of the day, though he is not a Christian, he was thanking God for this wonderful situation.
The village chief who praised God
A village elder, burned out by the lack of action by Buddhists praised the Christians saying, "Christians actually do what they preach!" He offered money to the village chief to erect a shrine on the road with a sign saying, "The road was made by the Christians". The pastor smiled politely and declined the offer of gratitude. "We don't need a sign. This road is for everyone."
At the end of the day, the villages got back on their bicycles, or started walking on their way again. And they all decided that they should repeat this day's effort regularly. Once every month. To keep the road in good repair.
Before
After
The seed project was more than a success. The patch of road was repaired, and streets of openness were built from the Christians to the rest of the village. Relationships that had been hurt by past betrayal were open again to each other.
A road repaired and broken relationships healed
In many villages across Cambodia, Cheas Ponleu is helping pastors and their churches to engage the villages and communities they live in, to find ways to practically help out the needs of their community, and repair broken relationships, so that God would be praised by all.
What are Seed Projects?
The point of Seed Projects is to help pastors, churches and communities start development on a small scale that is manageable and achievable. Many pastors and communities want to jump straight into large-scale development projects that cost lots of money, and need large organizational resources to maintain.
For easy reference, Seed Projects should exhibit the following 9 points in some shape or form:
The 9 characteristics of a Seed Project