Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Divine Appointment or Coincidence?

By Rayma Zugel
     Lead Center Director


Have you ever had a "divine appointment"?
A divine appointment is a meeting with another person that has been specifically and unmistakably ordered by God. Psalm 37:23 states, "The steps of a righteous man are ordered by the Lord." I can tell you that seeing God set up these "appointments" is a thrill that is beyond comparison.
Picture this:  Two peer-counselors at Care Net, two clients walk in simultaneously. The clients fill out their paperwork and the Receptionist takes the clipboards back to the peer-counselors. “Who will take who?” she asks, and just like that, a divine appointment set by God before the foundations of the earth takes place.
Then there’s the client who didn’t show for a scheduled appointment but walked in on a day when she would pray to receive Jesus as Savior because of the obedience of the peer-counselor that is volunteering that day.
We have seen things like this happen over and over again. Some would say coincidence; we say an appointment set by God.
At Care Net we just finished with our Spring training for new volunteers. Here was another Divine Appointment.
We set a date for registrations to be in by so that we can be sure we have all the materials we need for each individual. That date had come and gone. The day before the training was to start I received a call from a man interested in volunteering. I explained to him the need to attend the volunteer training. Oh but wait, he has plans that first weekend. “So maybe,” I tell him, “you can take the next training in October,” which is hard for me to say because of the need for volunteers, especially for men, in both of our Centers. His next words surprise me. He is going to see if he can back out of his previous engagement. When I spoke with him the day of training, he told me he will be there as well as his wife. The engagement they were going to was changed so that they did not need to be there, because God has plans for them at Care Net.
Have you felt a pull on your heart for volunteering at Care Net? We would be happy to do a 4 hour mini training that can get you started making changes in the lives and hearts of many of the men and women we see. Then in October, you will take the full training and answer the call God has placed on your heart. “Then I heard the voice of the Lord saying, “Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?” Then I said, “Here I am! Send me.” (Isaiah 6:8).

Are you the “Me”? 

Wednesday, March 1, 2017

A Day for Fun and Faith!

By Sue Chess, Executive Director

Sitting across from a young woman who attends one of our area churches, I sought to discover what her belief was about the baby she was carrying and considering aborting.  It can help to step back from the crisis and examine what a belief was before the present circumstances loomed larger than life--literally.  “I know my church believes abortion is wrong,” she stated, “but I don’t know why.”

With that statement, she brought into stark contrast the need within our culture for open dialog and integration of why we believe what we believe.  In NO area is this more revealing than in all points of human sexuality, including God’s opinion of when life begins.    If this young woman’s beliefs, or rather her Church’s beliefs, had reason and foundation in her own mind, she would not have been trying to sort it out when faced with an unplanned pregnancy.
   
That is why we promote the Walk for Life as one way to weave fun and faith into a strong sanctity of human life ethic.  Use the event to talk about the way that Care Net “saves babies.”  You and I realize that it is so much more than that. If a child is saved from abortion, then a mom is saved from a case of complicated grief where she will have to resolve the forbidden grief that is the “complication” in allowing herself to feel sorrow over the loss of her child.  How can she give herself the right to grieve when she was the one who made the choice? She’s been set up for a crisis of conscience.  The father may have been complicit in her choice or passive.  In either case, he will also have complicated grief for different reasons.

A quote from an article by Feminists for Life’s then-Vice President of Communications, Frederica Mathewes-Green, writing in The American Feminist’s precursor Sisterlife makes this point so well:

“For the question remains, do women want abortion? Not like she wants a Porsche or an ice cream cone. Like an animal caught in a trap, trying to gnaw off its own leg, a woman who seeks an abortion is trying to escape a desperate situation by an act of violence and self-loss. Abortion is not a sign that women are free, but a sign that they are desperate.”
Preparing our children for desperate moments should be part of their early training. By the time a child reaches the age of 12, their belief about when life begins is set.  What easier, positive, or more proactive way can you do this then to refer to a woman’s pregnancy as “a baby” and discuss the facts about a baby’s development in the womb.  Just begin with the positive option of LIFE.  In very fundamental ways, explain it or even show them using the app we use with our clients. https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/little-one-pregnancy-guide/id694348619?mt=8  

Talking about babies does not have to end up with a discussion of sex, either.  Innocence is its own protection and as your child asks more questions, you can give more answers.  If you need to research, do not forget about Care Net as one of your resources. Make sure that Willow Sanders, our Director of Student Services, who is a certified sexual risk avoidance specialist, has been to speak to the youth at your church. We love to do “field trip” type visits with small groups at both of our Centers where we talk about life in the womb, the developing baby, and offer them a tiny 12 week old fetus model as a gift.  There is no charge for this visit.  We simply want to give them information that can prepare them to be a “first responder” should a classmate share a guilty secret with them someday.  They will know the truth! 

You may have heard of the amazing organization called “Students for Life” that had a very large group at the March for Life in DC this year.  Did you know that March 2nd is National Pro-Life Chalk Day?  Check that sweet movement out right here www.nationalprolifechalkday.com.  If you want to feel encouraged find this movement on Facebook. https://www.facebook.com/studentsforlife/ 
Our students are beginning to lead the way.
 
Since most of us cannot attend an event in DC, we invite you to involve your family in an event that will help you weave fun and faith into their belief system right here on the Treasure Coast.  We have heard from many young people that the day of our Walk for Life is one they look forward to immensely.  With a great praise band, fun booths set up and run by our area Churches and businesses, a petting zoo, great food, and face-painting, along with a Walk with purpose, we’ve set out the best kind of day for have an event where Fun and Faith meet perfectly.  Begin your family’s conversation about life before the Walk.

If the young woman I spoke to a few years back had attended a Care Net Walk for Life, or been involved with Students for Life, do you think she would have wondered why her church thought abortion was wrong?  Or would she have absorbed a sanctity of human life ethic into her faith that prepared her for her own life.

Sometimes it is the simple things of life that are the most profound.

It is not too late to make the Walk for Life on March 11th a part of your family’s fun times that will set you up for one of those very important conversations.
 

Start now by heading over to our secure website www.WalkForLifeTC.com and click on the “Participate” link.  Join the movement and start the conversation with your family.  You’ll be glad you did.  Here are some pictures from last year’s great event to prove it.  We hope to see you in these pictures next year!




Wednesday, February 22, 2017

A SHADE-Y Substitute

By     Willow Sanders. SRAS
         Director of Student Services

Although it has been more than two decades, I can remember so vividly the time I ‘needed’ to go see my college boyfriend. I was a college sophomore and everyone KNEW he wasn’t good for me. I picked every reason I could to reject their opinions. They’d give a really valid reason, I’d dismiss it immediately. Pushed into a corner, I began to hide my interactions with him. It became so hidden that the small ways became big ways of deceitful behavior. So much so that one night in February, I waited until my mother had gone to sleep, quietly put the car in neutral and backed it out of our parking complex until I was a safe distance away. Turned the car on and thought to myself, “I’m home free! I can go see him and be back before my mom ever knows what happened. No harm. No foul.” Or so I thought. Cue the snow. We lived in upstate NY and during the winter months snow could come out of nowhere. What I thought I was keeping secret was about to have very visible results. On my way to his apartment, I ended up in a snowbank. Stuck. I had no choice but to call my mom in the wee hours of the morning. She had to call a friend, since her car was ‘otherwise occupied’. I never got to my boyfriends that night. The very thing I was trying to avoid, being found out, was now very apparent public information. I was totally embarrassed but more upsetting than that was the look of disappointment on my mom’s face.  Not something I enjoyed at all. It was a hard lesson but cemented what I’d heard a hundred times over “What we do in the dark, will eventually come to light.” I now had a very REAL visual for that.

It’s happened dozens of times before. Girls hiding miniskirts in their backpacks. Boys hiding magazines under their beds. I can even remember the day I found out someone I held on a ridiculous spiritual pedestal was a smoker. Like somehow, she as a Christian wasn’t supposed to struggle with common things. I had literally NEVER seen her smoke. Like EVER NEVER and I’d known her for almost a decade.  It was the first time I really contemplated in my young naïve life that there really ARE things we do in secret that we’d never do in public. 

In the early years of teaching sexual risk avoidance education, I heard a term that really stuck with me:  Publicly Private.  Hands down the best use of an oxymoron I’d ever encountered.  We encouraged young people to set boundaries. To keep their behaviors marked by this thought, “Don’t do something in private, you would be hesitant, ashamed, or horrified to do in public, say in front of your grandmother.”  

So when I began again to see Fifty Shades in the news for their new movie release, my heart leapt within me.  I KNEW there would be scores of women (young to older) that had NEVER gone publicly to see the movie last time but maybe rented it and are totally ready for round 2.

The current level of porn saturation has led to a functional apathy about our porn habits.  According to a study conducted by the Public Religion Research Institute, about 77 percent of Americans say they watch porn at least once a month.  In contrast though, the same study found that only 29 percent actually believe watching porn is morally acceptable.

I sat thinking, “It’s nothing new really, is it? We are still looking for ways to do the taboo.” Have we not traveled so far from those miniskirt and magazine days? Have we not learned that what is done in dark will be brought to light? Is the subtle way we try to deceive ourselves to what quiet disobedience does to us really that different in 2015? I had to ask myself the same questions. Does my daily diet reflect the horror found in my heart or have I succumbed to the cultural standard. Would it be different for me? Would I settle for not thinking much had changed or view it as not much different from years gone by influences? Yet, with this movie EVERYTHING is different.

We live in a sex saturated culture; have been since the late 60s, increasingly worsening with each decade. Yet I think the issue of WHY we would shun going to the movie publicly but invite it into the confines of our home goes much deeper than just sheer entertainment. Typically, when something gives us pause there is a reason. More typical in today’s culture is to put that ‘something’ to rest. To pretend it isn’t important. To void any connection to the ‘why’ of the ‘something’. I think back to the Garden, when the serpent was tempting Eve. He wasn’t (as we can surmise) loud and bold. He was quiet, shifty, “Shade-y” if you will. Had Eve stood boldly, not given an audience, things could have been quite different. We have, through the many lessons taught within, opportunity after opportunity to do things differently.

It is so easy in our world today to be wooed to compromise. To think if we are keeping it to ourselves, what harm is it really doing? But stripping down, to the core, the design, pure and simple, of God’s intent for sexual intimacy isn’t yielding great results. Through inviting a steady stream of sexual images, innuendos, and false messages into our homes, we are playing right into the hands of a cultural world view that is destroying the fabric that makes sex so beautiful in the first place.

Sex is beautiful. Not dangerous. Sex is precious. Not a commodity. Sex is a gift from God. Not a tool for marketing purposes. The heart and mind are delicate things. Easily turned and twisted. Sex has been so twisted in the hearts and minds of our society that movies like Fifty Shades are calling us to trade in intimacy for domination, beauty for brutality, freedom in sexuality for shame, and most importantly, godly standards for worldly ones.

Porn, a polar opposite of the love and sex God created, can make lasting and deep impacts on human relationships.  Relevant magazine shared this: “Pornography makes it more difficult for your brain to experience pleasure. A study in the Journal of Applied Social Psychology found that men and women who looked at porn were less likely to be satisfied with their partner’s appearance and their sex life as a whole.”  Not surprised by this at all. We cannot take a substitute and a horribly poor one at that, for something as powerful and meaningful as sex and expect it to not have major life altering effects.

Thinking back to those times when secrets were kept or truth was ‘omitted’, I can clearly remember knowing there was something not right about it. Hence, the freedom I sought, false freedom I found out, actually bound me to the very thing I was trying to escape from inviting shame to the game. Accepting the fact that this movie can be viewed in the safety & secrecy of our own homes changes nothing about the impact that diluted, disfigured messages in movies like Fifty Shades create in the hearts and minds of women. Our culture deserves more. Our friendships deserve more. Our marriages deserve more. Our husbands deserve more. And ultimately we, as women, deserve more.

So when you pass the theater or video aisle, are tempted to click the ‘Add to Cart’ button or buy that ticket…think again. Don’t be fooled by culture’s push to give us a counterfeit version of sex, love and intimacy.  Remind yourself: YOU DESERVE MORE than some Shade-y substitute!

Friday, January 27, 2017

All Hands On Deck

by Rayma Zugel
Lead Center Director


“The strength of the team is each individual member. The strength of each member is the team.” Phil Jackson, President of the New York Knicks.

What is teamwork? The dictionary describes teamwork as “work done by several associates with each doing part but all subordinating personal prominence to the efficiency of the whole.”

Care Net Pregnancy Services of the Treasure Coast has two centers, one in Port St Lucie and one in Stuart, both governed by our local Board of Directors. We currently have 9 staff members and over 60 volunteers. The world might look at our organization and imagine a “trickle down” order of importance, but we know the importance of everyone doing their part as part of the whole team.

At Care Net we must work as a team and that was clearly illustrated in 2016. I was out of the office for extended periods of time due to 2 major surgeries, once for 6 weeks and once for 2 weeks.  As the Lead Center Director responsible for client services and the volunteers, that could have been a disaster. However all client services and volunteer needs were taken care of by other members of the team as needed.  Those times weren't easy on any of us, but as it is said, "A successful team beats with one heart."

Ralph Waldo Emerson said, “No member of a crew is praised for the individuality of his rowing”.   It must be “all hands on deck” for a rowing team to win.  It’s the same here at Care Net.  Clearly teamwork is a Biblical principle.  Consider 1 Corinthians 12:12-26:

“Just as a body, though one, has many parts, but all its many parts form one body, so it is with Christ…the body is not made up of one part but of many.  Now if the foot should say, “Because I am not a hand, I do not belong to the body,” it would not for that reason stop being part of the body.  And if the ear should say, “Because I am not an eye, I do not belong to the body,” it would not for that reason stop being part of the body.  If the whole body were an eye, where would the sense of hearing be? If the whole body were an ear, where would the sense of smell be?  But in fact God has placed the parts in the body, every one of them, just as he wanted them to be.  If they were all one part, where would the body be?  As it is, there are many parts, but one body.  The eye cannot say to the hand, “I don’t need you!” And the head cannot say to the feet, “I don’t need you!”…God has put the body together, giving greater honor to the parts that lacked it, so that there should be no division in the body, but that its parts should have equal concern for each other.  If one part suffers, every part suffers with it; if one part is honored, every part rejoices with it.”


It truly is “All Hands on Deck” here at Care Net to be sure God’s work is accomplished.

Wednesday, November 23, 2016


The tradition of setting aside a day to give thanks extends back to the earliest days of the United States and it finds us in November, on Thanksgiving Day. Far more than the flat surface upon which we dine on at Thanksgiving, topped with the moistest turkey and the draping of garland, is the gathering of family and friends.  A time when the clock stops and the rush settles down.  An opportune time to share, express the matters of the heart, and our gratitude towards one another.  We know within some of our families that may be hard to do, but whether or not we have a grumpy, a dopey, a bashful, a sneezy, or a sleepy at our table that day, being thankful is a gift.  So friends, would you find a place at Thanksgiving to share your gratitude and heart?  We would sure like to hear about it.  Be thankful, be gracious, be forgiving and remember, time is not guaranteed to us.  There’s so much power in Thanksgiving.

We would like to take this time to share our sincere, most appreciative THANK YOU.  Every day here at Care Net is precious and filled with the expectations for God to create miracles in the most vulnerable situations, because He is after the hearts of many.  We understand this and we are so blessed to join HIM.  Because of the support of our ministry partners, our doors stay open, the electricity is on, and we have resources to provide for the families in need.  We have the opportunity to challenge and educate our community youth to make healthy choices and infuse culture with biblical standards without compromise.  Your giving empowers the ministry of Care Net.  Your giving saves lives and restores them.  Every client can find rest, hope, forgiveness, love, and support during the storms they face.

Thank you to our Volunteers for giving their time and working with excellence!  Thank you to our Walk Liaisons, who rally and mobilize the church community to walk for LIFE.  Thank you to our Banquet Table Hosts who invite, share, and promote to give abundantly!  We LOVE you all.  Each of you bring a unique gift and give precious time freely and we are so touched by it.  We value every single one of you and call you friend.  We know that your seeds produce fruit at Care Net and what better time to express our gratitude than now!  Happy Thanksgiving my friends!

Thankful for YOU!!!

Nanette Maldonado, Community Liaison