John Corey just sent his August update to his friends and supporters:
Dear Friends,
...The MP3 project is growing, and the demands for the player are increasing. Yesterday I talked with Pastor Momo who is heading up the project in Liberia. He reported that they have set up a program where, after pastors and leaders have read Romans the required 20 times and copied it, that they come together for the presentation. They are then encouraged to continue in their reading of the Scriptures and to meet together to discuss this book and then do the same with other books. He told me, "There are many in my church who have read and reread Romans and have become excited about what the Scripture is saying in Romans and are wanting to do the same kind of study in another book. It has helped so much." Imagine how encouraging this is to a pastor. He said, "Now they understand salvation from God's perspective and not just a human point of view." Pastor Momo is so thankful for this project.
He told me "As we studied Romans in our church, when we came to Romans 13, the people realized that it was God's will that they submit to the governing authority, and they decided they needed to do so." The same is being reproduced in other churches as well. We have at least 350 pastors and leaders registered in the project in Liberia, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone with most of them still seeking to qualify to receive the MP3 player. Many others are inquiring about the project. The players contain 823 of Pastor Scott's expositions on many books of the New Testament and Genesis, Exodus, and Proverbs. Funding for this project is a big challenge. That will probably be the biggest limitation in its expansion. This is definitely helping many pastors to get more serious in reading the Word and in teaching it more plainly. For years I have sought to motivate Scripture reading, and expository preaching. Praise God!! If you want to know more, check out my blog at http://mp3project-mp3.blogspot.com/ There are some great testimonies there. Check the back posts. Continue to pray that God will prosper this in helping to build His Church as pastors are exposed to good expository teaching of the Word.
Pastor Daniel in Kenema, Sierra Leone, even though he hasn't received the player yet, told me today, "The book of Romans is a great help to me and to my church. I have actually begun teaching it verse by verse. Many people never read it because they thought it was too hard to understand, but now they are paying attention to it. Several other pastors have also begun to teach it in their churches."
Pastor Kellie in Sierra Leone, who is connected with the association of churches in the Konah district told me that reading and rereading Romans has really helped him to know the way of salvation and how we come to God, as well as giving a better understanding sanctification. Pastors in his area have been coming together to discuss the book of Romans.
What a great movement this project is creating!
Boakai Harleyson, from Kolahun is finishing up his Masters of Church Admin at JETS in Nigeria and will be returning in December. He has introduced this project at JETS and there are 60 pastors now involved in it there.
A team of 3 guys and I leave for East Russia on Sept 5. I will be gone for 6 weeks during which time we expect to hold Bible conferences in 8-9 churches teaching the book of James. Pastor Gary from SW Bible will join me Oct 9th to hold a pastor's conference. He will be teaching the book of 1 Timothy and I will be speaking on the heart of the pastor. God is building His church in E. Russia. What a privilege it is to be a part of this. I greatly appreciate your prayers during this time.
You see, I find I'm not as young as I used to be, and of course I continue treatment for that Myeloma thorn in the flesh. In the last lab test the Myeloma counts went down from 0.3 to 0.2 which was very encouraging since it had been trending up. God seems content to keep me around a little longer. As I have been working on our house this summer, I so often think of how temporal this stuff all is. Still, I do it, whether it's for a year or 20. It has been great to have 4 of our grandsons ( 17-19 years old,) when available, working for me as we tore off a wood shake roof, fixing a lot of rot and replacing it with a metal roof, as well as prepping and painting the outside and many other projects. It has been such a good learning experience for them, not to say that they didn't appreciate the money they made. It has been fun and certainly has deepened our relationship. They are neat kids.
Our family camp-out was near Florence on the Oregon coast where we had a group camp sight. Everyone seemed to enjoy it so much, and with so many teenagers preteens, and parents, there was lots of volleyball, football and soccer. But the two more "mature ones", (just celebrating our 48th anniversary) made up the cheering section. That was hard for me to take, but I valued keeping my knees and shoulders and back functional, so I watched. "Life moves on" is one of my acknowledging statements for more things than I like to admit.
We trust you had as great a summer as we did. And life moves on as Jeanette and I go our separate ways for a while, I to Russia, and she up to spend a couple weeks with her sister, Irene, in Campbell River, on Vancouver Island. Put those two gals together and you have two peas in a pod. It's great!
In His grace,
John and Jeanette

...The MP3 project is growing, and the demands for the player are increasing. Yesterday I talked with Pastor Momo who is heading up the project in Liberia. He reported that they have set up a program where, after pastors and leaders have read Romans the required 20 times and copied it, that they come together for the presentation. They are then encouraged to continue in their reading of the Scriptures and to meet together to discuss this book and then do the same with other books. He told me, "There are many in my church who have read and reread Romans and have become excited about what the Scripture is saying in Romans and are wanting to do the same kind of study in another book. It has helped so much." Imagine how encouraging this is to a pastor. He said, "Now they understand salvation from God's perspective and not just a human point of view." Pastor Momo is so thankful for this project. 

Can you imagine your pastor doing this, and what an impact it would have on him and his preaching? Bill and Judy were able to deliver a supply of MP3 players to Pastor Jeremiah F. Kollie, who is the ECUL Todee-Careysburg District Chairperson. In a recent letter to his supporters, also posted on his 
Moses Paye "I am having a wonderful time reading Romans the 20 times. It is a great spiritual experience for me. It is so encouraging, reading and playing the messages of the book (Romans). I am enjoying it so much, and am teaching it in my church in a Bible study. Two years ago (15 months) when you were here you challenged us to read through the Bible. I have been doing that and am almost finished now. It has been a new experience for me. I am so glad. This has helped me so much to focus on just one book. So wonderful. Pray this program will open for many others. People see me with the phones in my ears and ask me about it. Then I have to tell them all about it and how wonderful it is. When I get up in the morning I read and at night time I read and any other time I can get I am reading Romans. I am encouraging the people of my church to be reading it. I am telling people about it everywhere I am going." 














A brand new theater program for youth called 

But entrepreneur Stephen Tamba said he is determined to help end a nightmare of guns, violence and destruction in this neighborhood of bushy, green, open space outside the traffic-clogged capital of Monrovia. "We are about to change that dream. Their next dream will be one of hope. There is a future here," he said.
secure private investors. It took about $120,000 to open the cafe. All the equipment, including 10 computers and a generator, had to be imported. The cafe gets its speedy wireless connection via a satellite company in Florida.
For now, hundreds of Liberians are trying to pay their way by working on an expansive plot of land known as "Rock Hill." Deep within holes bored into the red dirt and along jagged cliffs lined by murky water, the "rock crushers," as they are known, chip away at giant slabs of rock.
They sell the crushed gravel to construction companies - the result of grueling and dangerous work in which bits of gravel fly from crude hammers as if stray bullets. Even small children and pregnant women can be seen pounding away jagged pieces of stone in the heat of the day.
A burning tire smoldered on a rock slab behind him, generating heat that makes the rocks easier to chip apart. Many days, Mr. Gbavah pounds away for 10 hours, alongside his mother and older brother. A pile of gravel will yield him a little more than $2.
person out of Liberia, half-built houses made of concrete blocks are planted on a deep-green landscape of grass and palms. Houses can take years to build because Liberians construct their homes as they have money.
ELWA kid Stephen Tamba is an entrepreneur in a very necessary industry for modern Liberia, as Bill and Judy Slater found out. I thought you would be interested in finding out more about Stephen's "Sapata Internet Cafe", and Judy Slater graciously agreed to write about her experience.

We went in and were surprised to see Stephen Tamba and to learn he was the owner of the cafe. Then we saw Jusu Tamba and Matthew Paye working there. It was a neat reunion.
use. People of all walks of life come and go using the computers at reasonable rates. The guys are quick to give any needed technical help in a gracious way without making you feel illiterate. They also have a pop machine and we drank our "non-diet" coca colas, much to the neglect of my waistline. They always put me next to the guys at the main desk which I enjoyed and felt was a compliment. Because I have a MAC it took a little while to iron out the kinks but it worked fine after that.
The young man who helped me with the yard work while we were in Liberia asked if I could help send him to a computer class. Again, I was surprised to find he wanted to go to classes at Sapata. Apparently, they offer classes too. Liberians are getting up to speed on the internet like you wouldn't believe. It's a riot to see all the things the kids can do on the cell phones there too.


My name is Peter Wickwire, and I'm part of a group of three that has come to ELWA Hospital in Monrovia, Liberia for 6 weeks. We've had a blast so far. It's been about 4 weeks, and each week has given us something entirely different than the one before it.
for me in the clinic. The OR is pretty much like the functioning ER, the functioning operating room. The first couple days were difficult to get settled into. I don't think they were used to premed students coming in. They didn't understand back then that we were really here to be taught, and then, using what we're taught, serve. It was really just watching people, shadowing from the corner, silently watching people.
here to be taught and really here to just serve them, and they really started understanding that and utilizing that. Also, I think what helped was founding relationships with them and spending time just talking, and learning, and exchanging personal stories and life stories of how the war has shattered this country. It's good to hear their stories of what they had to go through. It kind of opens doors for you to be part of their lives.
I think my favorite thing of being in the clinic has not been delivering a baby or stitching up patients but getting to know the Liberians and speaking Liberian English to them and joking around with them and them loving to see that I'm trying to learn their culture. People are really grateful.
going into medicine internationally, to use it for furthering Christ and his kingdom, and I couldn't have thought of a better experience for me. They're kind of teaching me what it looks like to use the resources that you have, which here are very limited, to give the best health care possible. There is just such a pressing need for help in this country, and it was good to visualize that. It's a renewed fuel to the
passion and fire I had to become an international physician. I really hope to someday come back and serve in a country like this, if not maybe here.
However, it is obvious that ELWA/SIM needs both financial and personnel help with the property. Many roofs need to be replaced including the one where we stayed. Judy interviewed Rusty Laird (SIM Acting Services Director) who expressed his thankfulness for EMA's help and mentioned other needs such as the roofs. Rusty and his family leave in a week. We pray Alan Shea and other replacements will be able to come and help in this area soon.
We will carry home and profit by the example of Liberian believers especially Kedrick White, James Kesselly, Joe and Nene Wankollie and the ELWA Department Heads. Their patience, kindness, and leadership are surely the fruit of the Holy Spirit. We are thankful too for Ben Colby (pictured with his family) and Rusty Laird who run here and there keeping things in working order and meeting ELWA's functional needs.

Steve Kejr and Les Unruh to come to ELWA to help the ministry contingent on Kedrick White's approval. My responsibilities were to: (1) act as a consultant for both ELWA Hospital and ELWA administration; (2) mentor the Acting Hospital Administrator, James Freeman Garway; (3) encourage and support Kedrick White,
Joe Wankollie's office, we met Pastor Jeremiah and delivered the players.
We both strongly believe that the financial and administrative processes and procedures that Mr. White is attempting to put in place are both necessary and correct and we affirm both his leadership and his heart for the ministry of ELWA. As a Liberian he brings together the cultural understanding of Liberia and the technical/administrative functions of the U.S. Coupled with this is a high level of patience and tolerance. He is courteous in meetings, allowing individuals to speak and listening to all views of a given situation. One of his key goals is to see staff come to an understanding of the needs of the ministry and the role that their good job performance could play in meeting them. We believe Kedrick to be a Godly man, intelligent, able to manage multiple responsibilities and many interruptions in an amazing way. We are sure God has gifted him and placed him in this position.
James Kesselly was unfailingly helpful to us during our time in Liberia with his experience and qualities of patience, humor and a Godly attitude. Judy interviewed James who spoke of the benefits of EMA's hosting social events and repairing the Administrative buildings as well as the educational scholarships given to children.
At Kedrick's request, Bill developed a voluntary retirement form and an employee profile, intended to provide information on the various working positions at ELWA ending in the ability to produce meaningful position descriptions. We collaborated to compile and edit a first draft of the Employee Handbook for submission to the Board of Directors, to ultimately be adopted for the current ELWA operation.
The Principal, Benedict Nagbe, "has his act together," and the school appears to be well run. Mr. Nagbe is also the EMA Coordinator of Scholarships. He and Judy interviewed several children who are receiving EMA scholarships using the camcorder and then took their pictures to update the EMA website. They traveled to some of the students' homes and had enjoyable visits with their parents or guardians. It is obvious that the scholarships are meeting a great need.

This dream of Christine Tolbert Norman of REAP is an unbelievably huge undertaking, and she wants it to be surround by prayer, for it is only by God's grace that this will be the life-changing, nation-restoring event that is desperately needed. It will take many people working together to make this happen. Here is more information from the 

Alton and Helen Buck's son-in-law, Tim Graham, is 41 years old and in the hospital in Atlanta with Congestive Heart Failure with scarring. The doctor says his heart is only functioning at 5-10%. He and Sara have 4 children ages 5 to 12. He had a defribillator put in on July 26th, but has a long road to go. Please pray.
Jonathan Stoll helped his folks (Fred and Goldie) move to Sebring, Florida on May 13th before he left for Ethiopia on May 27th. Jonathan's support was provided in less than 6 months. PTL! Please pray for Jonathan's health and adjustment to a new culture.
Andrea and Monte Wilson (Glenda and Gerry Johnson's daughter and son-in-law) have been in the process of adopting Nicole in Bolivia. Nicole has been a part of their family for several years now as they have been trying to adopt her. Glenda writes, "Things were looking good and now are at a total standstill, and there is much confusion in the court system. All four of the judges in Cochabamba who were overseeing juvenile cases, including adoptions, have resigned and no one is quite sure what the process will be for appointing/choosing new ones. Of course this is a major disappointment to all of us." 
and have an interview. Last year, Crystal Molenhouse Miller interviewed many of the students, and this year we asked Judy Slater to interview and videotape our scholars. Hopefully (if I can figure it out!) we can post those at a later date. Here's is Judy's report about those interviews.