We are Stephen and Laurie Erickson with our two daughters, Karin and Johanna. In 2003, after working as an architect for 20 years, I received a pink slip and suddenly was unemployed. But God provided me with small jobs to pay the bills while, unknown to me, He was preparing us for cross-cultural mission work. An elderly saint in our church said to Laurie one day, “Maybe God wants you to be missionaries. Do you get the AFM magazine?” I attended a Christian men’s conference and heard a fiery young preacher talk about the need for missionaries in unreached areas of the world. But it was another eight months before I started thinking seriously about AFM. One night, I experienced some serious doubts and prayed for clarity and assurance that God was leading. Before dawn the next morning, I woke up realizing I had just seen myself in heaven surrounded by a dozen PNG men thanking me for coming to share the gospel with them.
Now we’ve been working with the Gogodala people since 2007. We’re building a training-center campus that will also serve as a camp meeting facility. Twelve young men from Kewa village are helping us. None of them were church members before, but now, nearly all of them are baptized. Our plan is to use the training center to equip local missionaries to take the everlasting gospel to other villages up and down the Aramia River.
When my mom and dad got an e-mail from Mr. White last year saying that he had been impressed that a family named Erickson would be coming to help them,
By:
Karin Erickson
January 01 2007, 12:00 am | Comments 0
The Gogodala have some interesting beliefs about their race’s origin.
By:
Laurie Erickson
December 01 2006, 12:00 am | Comments 0
“What will you do if your house doesn’t sell?” We have been asked this question more than once. Our house has been on the market since February of this year. We still owe a lot of money on it, therefore it must be sold before we go to the mission field.
By:
Stephen Erickson
November 01 2006, 12:00 am | Comments 0
Illness, exhaustion, ideological conflict, Cambodian hacky-sack, beach volleyball, singing, prayer, inductive Bible study, suturing turkey legs, worldview issues, The Crucible, church planting, bush hydrotherapy, inner healing, language learning, flavorless tapioca.
By:
Stephen Erickson
October 01 2006, 12:00 am | Comments 0
Praise the Lord! Thanks to God working through David and Cindy White, things are being prepared for us at the other end in Papua New Guinea.
By:
Stephen Erickson
September 01 2006, 12:00 am | Comments 0