One by one — Fort Hope, Ontario, Canda

Eabamet Lake lies under a blanket of ice in the foreground of this photo showing Fort Hope, Canada, an Ojibwe village in central Ontario.

Photographed in early March, Eabamet Lake lies under a blanket of ice in the foreground of this photo showing Fort Hope, Canada, an Ojibwe town in central Ontario.

(Eabametoong First Nation) FORT HOPE, ONTARIO-One by one, lives are changing in Fort Hope.
This year pastor Jim and Judy Walters coordinated three ministry trips to Fort Hope: one with a team to minister specifically to the children and provide a marriage seminar, one with a team of pastoral leaders–including Resurrection Life Church senior pastor Duane Vander Klok–to teach adults and meet with area leaders, and another trip to take a team of Native Americans to minister among their Canadian cousins.

An Ojibwe girl and a local dog peer at village guests through a wire fence

An Ojibwe girl and a local dog peer at village guests through a wire fence.

On the first trip, the emphasis was on marriages and children. A ministry team from RezKidz in Grandville organized ministry for children and drew crowds of more than 100 to the John C. Yesno Education Centre gym as they played games, sang songs and taught them about the love of God.

“The team is doing a lot of background work,” Jim Walters said. “They?re hugging kids. They?re talking with kids. They play with the kids. They?re making friends.”
The RezKidz team reported that five children responded to accept Christ as savior. During Vander Klok’s visit to the village the ministry team hosted a a five-hour long radio show and nine people accepted Christ.
As the Walters and others bring the practical message of God’s Word to Fort Hope, Chief O’Keese and other Ojibwe band leaders recognize that applying Christian principles to marriages will help families and the entire community grow stronger.
“When it was first brought to the attention of myself and my council, we had one hundred percent support,” O’Keese said of the plans for the marriage seminar. “We told our staff, ‘If you want to go to the seminar, you can go and take (the day) with pay.”‘

Pastor Scott Rogers animates  his lesson as he teaches a group of children at the Fort Hope elementary school gym during an outreach in Ontario, Canada.

Pastor Scott Rogers animates his lesson as he teaches a group of children at the Fort Hope elementary school gym during an outreach in Ontario, Canada.

O’Keese said he and the band leaders recognize that the status of families are reflected in the community and that suffering families equal a suffering community.
He said stronger marriages are “part of the healing the community is looking for.”
In this village where live-in couples and single-parent families are the norm, individuals also recognize the need for help when it comes to marital commitment and faith.
“We need that marriage counseling,” said Barb Oskineegish, a single mother. “It’s helping us a lot.”
With the help of mission teams, prayer and support the Walters are taking practical Biblical teaching to the Ojibwe people as God touches Fort Hope one life at a time.

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Another Fort Hope post

Fort Hope: Where hope grows

An Ojibwe boy lounges by his bike in Fort Hope, Ontario.

An Ojibwe boy lounges by his bike in Fort Hope, Ontario.

FORT HOPE, ONTARIO-Something was different about the twin-engine bush plane as it taxied to a stop on the dirt runway.
Unlike most of the freight and passenger flights that briefly land in this remote Canadian village, this plane carried 14 passengers who came to Fort Hope for one reason-to tell the Ojibwe people about the true hope they can find in God.
Led by Resurrection Life Fellowship pastor Jim and Judy Walters from Saint Ignace, Mich., the passengers were from Resurrection Life Church in Grandville, Mich. They came to help show the Ojibwe villagers what the Walters have been telling the local leaders for the past two years-that God knows them and wants them to know him personally.
Mission trips to Fort Hope began after the Walters had a remarkable meeting with a Christian Ojibwe chief in 2001. After months of prayer and calls to encourage the chief, the Walters made the first of what has become frequent trips to Fort Hope where they offer encouragement and Biblical teaching about building strong marriages and breaking spiritual strongholds.
“This is just a pocket of hopelessness,” Judy Walters said. “How can we say no? How can we stay away from here?”

Jim and Judy (pictured) Walters teach about building strong marriages during a seminar held at the village meeting hall in Fort Hope, Ontario.

Jim and Judy (pictured) Walters teach about building strong marriages during a seminar held at the village meeting hall in Fort Hope, Ontario.

Along with the Walters, mission teams from ResLife are helping show the people there is hope and point them in the right direction. Even with the short-term teams, the spiritual needs in the village require a long-term response-a commitment the Walters have willingly made.
“That’s one of the things the chief told us,” Judy Walters said. “He said, ‘Please don’t just come once and go away and forget us. Come back.’ So we keep coming back again and again. God’s heart is for these people.”
Indeed, the Walters have gained a heart for this Ojibwe village where they gladly travel 12 hours for each visit.
Located less than 1,000 miles from the Arctic Circle and only accessible from the air for most of the year, the Ojibwe living on this tiny reservation have learned to survive the wilds of northern Ontario, but their chief, Charlie O’Keese, wants to help them do more than just survive.
Faced with the social woes of alcohol, drugs, incest, suicide and broken families, O’Keese-a Christian himself-has been praying for a way to teach his people about the life God has in mind for the 1,200 people who live at Fort Hope.

(Then) Chief Charlie Okees takes a phone call while taking a break from making announcements on the radio. The night before this photo a local residence burned to the ground.

(Then) Chief Charlie Okees takes a phone call while taking a break from making announcements on the radio. The night before this photo a local residence burned to the ground.

“I want to see a Christian training center in our community,” O’Keese said. “We need more Bible teaching.”
With the help of the Walters and teams from Resurrection Life Church and other churches, the practical Bible teaching O’Keese has been praying for is starting to reach the people.
“Every time we come, we’re reaching one person or we’re reaching two people or six people, that’s how you win them-one person at a time,” Jim Walters said. “It’s not an impossible task and with God’s anointing upon not just our ministry, but the other ministries that are working with us, we can see things turn around in these remote villages.”
With each trip and each team that goes with them, the Walters are seeing a change in the people.
Already the villagers are showing openness to the idea that there is more to life than merely struggling through life’s troubles. They are starting to recognize that the truths in the Bible are for people everywhere.
After a recent marriage seminar, the Walters reported that several adults responded with requests for prayer and a desire to have the lives and families they heard are possible with Christ.
The Walters continue to minister at their church in Saint Ignace and make trips to Fort Hope. Future plans include taking a team of Christian youth to minister directly to the teenagers of the village.
“God is wanting to do something in the lives of these people,” Judy Walters said. “So we keep coming back and we’ll keep coming back as long as God keeps the door open to us.”

From heartache to hope…and beyond (ResLife Stories)

The story of Gisela Grant
From heartache to hope.

Gisela Grant’s life was a mess and she knew it.
After moving to central Canada and finding another broken relationship, she came back to Michigan and found out that when you keep running from God, something in life eventually wears out.
Gisela was in the middle of a life of “drugs, bars, and men” when she started slowing down.
“I had enough of my lifestyle,” she said. “I got down on my hands and knees and said, ‘OK, God, it’s your turn. I’m done.”
Change began, but she was about to discover what giving up really meant. Still looking for relationships, Gisela met another guy and he invited her to a singles group that met at Resurrection Life Church.
Something was different there so she decided to keep coming, but the draw of her past kept her struggling between the new life she wanted and the past that was hard to let go.
After almost a year of wavering, Gisela found herself on a hospital bed racked with a fever, kidney failure, and a body that was starting to shut down. Continue reading