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Written by Eddie Trygar


There are many ways you can pray for schools as teachers and students prepare to return this fall. You can pray for God to provide for staffing needs amid the national teacher shortage facing our nation since the COVID closures. I do not know of many schools that are fully staffed with an adequate number of custodians, bus drivers, teachers or instructional assistants. Pray for teachers and the lasting impact they will have on the young people they work with each day. Pray for students who lack food, structure and social skills to be successful in an academic environment. The biggest thing I would ask you to pray for, in regard to school, is that people would have grace with one another.


Schools, like every workplace, are communities full of sinful people. On top of that, every teacher, student, parent, instructional assistant and counselor is dealing with struggles in their personal life and are fallible when doing their jobs. Even their best efforts are fraught with failure because of the multitasking the job requires.


When working with 700 people, conflict and mistakes are bound to occur multiple times a day. As assistant principal, I often call parents to inform them of infractions to the code of conduct. Sometimes their child is the victim, sometimes they are the perpetrator. In either case, these are not pleasant conversations. Many times, the parent questions, “Why didn’t someone prevent this?” Their reaction is almost always to blame someone.


Recently WRAL published an article about a parent who was outraged that her child was put on the incorrect bus. She threatened Durham County Public Schools for what she saw as negligence with her child. This is most certainly regrettable, but when you have hundreds of students going to numerous school buses (which all look the same), mistakes will occur from time to time. The child was never unattended or unsafe; his return home was delayed. Incidents like this have occurred in schools for decades, but social media and the 24 hour news cycle amplify these mistakes and people want heads to roll when they hear these stories.


I realize that it is scary for a child not to get off the bus, or to get a call that they had been injured at school. But what if the reaction of the public was to assume the best about people? What if we had grace with one another the way Jesus has for us when we fail him over and over again?


When you work in a factory and something goes wrong, you can stop the production line and correct the problem by making mechanical adjustments. But when you work with people, the solution is not as easy. It takes time to implement new policies and procedures with fidelity. Add to that that children, and adults for that matter, are not machines. Students will sometimes make impulsive or poor choices, teachers will sometimes drop the ball. But nobody wants to be a failure. Teachers don’t set out to make mistakes to upset students and parents.


Over my past 20 years working in the field of education, I have seen a crescendo of criticism aimed at teachers. Especially since Covid complicated the world of education, hopelessness, cynicism, criticism has multiplied at an alarming rate. Please join me in praying that our God of peace, who saw it fit to extend grace to sinners before we ever asked, would take the brokeness in schools and the flawed efforts of parents, students and teachers and make something beautiful for His glory.



Written by Toni Anderson


Many of you know that I’m new to the Children’s Ministry Director role and so VBS this year was a new experience for me. Over the past few weeks of planning and praying for VBS, each day I wondered how things would go. How long would this craft take? Would the kids have fun? Will this game work out? It was easy to lose the purpose within all the details. I deeply hoped for this event to be spiritually impactful on the children at Waypoint.


VBS this year centered around the theme of God as our imaginative creator and designer. We focused on how David and Jesus both trusted God as their creator and followed the plan that He laid out for them. The kids joyfully sang and recited the theme verse this year which was Ephesians 2:10, “For we are God’s workmanship created in Christ Jesus for good works which God prepared ahead of time for us to do.” As the kids heard the Bible stories and sang songs, they learned about how God created them with purpose and intention. They were taught about how Jesus followed God’s plan by his death and resurrection on the cross, so that he would take the punishment for sin. I hope the kids absorbed what we were singing and talking about, the message behind each song and each Bible lesson. However, sometimes, especially for the littlest kids, their takeaways are “Jesus loves me”, but often it’s “my favorite color is purple.” Either way, I know this event was a spiritual investment in the children at Waypoint that will impact their lives and relationships with God.


I’ve heard people say that to a child, love is spelled T-I-M-E. God showed me that any amount of time invested in our children is invaluable because in God’s economy, nothing is wasted. It’s sowing seeds in a garden that you hope to see blossom one day. Every Bible story, complicated dance move, and craft is an act of love and service that we can render to God in worship. My prayer is that this type of love and service for our kids would nestle deep in their hearts, that it would play a part in their journey to Christ.


VBS is not only a spiritual investment in our kids, but also in our own lives. When I reflect on VBS, I remember the joy that was present each day and the excited (but sometimes confused) looks on the kid’s faces as we learned the songs and dances. It reminds me how Jesus promised the disciples that even though there would be sorrow in this life, their sorrow would turn into joy and no one could take away their joy (John 16:22). How often do we lose our joy as we get older? We let our joy be touched by the hardness of the world around us. But childhood often represents uncomplicated joy and finding delight in the simplest things. It seems to me that this is something that we can learn from our children at Waypoint. May we receive full joy from God, like the children in our lives.

Updated: Jul 21, 2022


Written by Lawrence Yoo


Jina and I recently got back from a trip to Kuala Lumpur, the capital city of Malaysia. While there, we had the opportunity to meet with ministries that prayerfully recruit, train, coach and resource leaders who cultivate gospel movements in global cities primarily through church planting) and hear about their shared vision for the city.


They shared with us that Christians make up only 3% of the population of Kuala

Lumpur. However, because of the great influx of people moving to the city, to even maintain this small percentage would require planting two churches a week! Needless to say, churches are not being planted every week. There is a great need in this rapidly growing global city and that need has captured my heart. During these meetings with those who have invested their lives to minister in Kuala Lumpur, we saw a picture of the vision that God has planted in the hearts of these joint ministries. They stated they wanted to see a church within walking distance of every major metro stop in the city. We love that vision! We want to be a part of that vision!


If the future of evangelism and kingdom advancement in “KL” is through church planting, we need workers with that same vision. In the current climate of most developing cities, traditional missions’ strategies are not as effective. The local missionaries are praying for Christians in the workplace and at home (retirees, stay at home parents) who live out their faith in their everyday lives, who place Jesus above academic and financial success, who value church involvement, who can befriend their neighbors and invite them to church.


Our desire at Waypoint is to pray, support, and send so that the kingdom of God can advance. I believe we have a wonderful opportunity before us in KL and I look forward to sharing more with you in the future.


“ When he saw the crowds, he had compassion for them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd. Then he said to his disciples, “The harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few; therefore pray earnestly to the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest.”-Mark 9:36-38

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