Check out our FALL Pete’n’Bree Newsletter HERE!
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Supporting Church Planting in the Unreached
At NTBI we like to have a some fun… so… we decided to hold an event were everyone created Medieval weapons and armor out of Cardboard and Duck tape ONLY and call it “NTBI Medieval Games!” What a fun day! We held four official medieval tournaments: Jousting, archery, sword fighting, and a fort battle. To top it off, we had Turkey Leg dinners and watched as the single guys had an all-out-battle with what was left of their battle weapons (and energy)! Fun for all! (lots more pics found on the link below)
Check out more great pics of the event HERE!

I found this great article written by Matthew McNutt the other day and was amazed at how well it articulated the challenges the MKs often face as they journey through transition.

Some may know Matthew as the former contestant on NBC’s Biggest Loser season 3. But Matt is a MK himself from Bolivia and decided to share about his experience. I talk to many MKs here at NTBI and I have found that they all have similar stories. Though every MK is completely different and cannot be put into a “stereotypical box”… they all have had to deal with unique challenges that come with an upbringing in more than on one culture.
Please take a few minutes and check out this article especially if you are an MK, a parent of an MK, a church leader, or a youth pastor. Matt is a youth pastor himself and gives some GREAT tips as youth workers in regard to MKs.
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MINISTERING TO MKs AND THIRD CULTURE KIDS – http://www.matthewmcnutt.com
Graduating from high school, an event eagerly anticipated by most teenagers, was one of the single most traumatic and devastating nights of my life. Looking back through my journals, I find now a repeated theme of dread and fear in the months building up to it. For me, it marked the moment in time when I would say goodbye forever to the closest friendships and relationships I had ever known, and leave for a country I no longer knew or considered as home. I was a missionary kid on the verge of returning to my country of birth.
Third culture kids (TCK’s), whether the children of missionaries, military servicemen, or parents whose employment takes them abroad, lead lives of constant transition. By the time I had finished high school, at the ripe old age of 17, I had had close to two dozen bedrooms, lived in four states, three countries and two continents. Many of my friends at the boarding school for missionary kids which I attended had me beat on all counts, though. Transition and instability is the constant companion for a TCK; frequent moves and transfers characterize life. And even when settled into a home, the peer group is in constant flux as well; friends returning to their birth countries for furlough, being transferred to other bases and/or countries, and new arrivals every semester. It is an intense lifestyle involving heavy travel, boarding schools, culture shock on a regular basis and a constant feeling of displacement and instability. For me, it was a constant struggle of wondering where I belong. My heart was tied to Bolivia, the country I considered home – and yet, I never truly felt at home there. Towering a head above the natives with my sun bleached blonde hair and blue eyes, there was never any doubt I was different. And yet, while the United States was the country of my citizenship, and home to my relatives, it was not my home.
To a lesser degree, many young people participating in short-term mission trips, whether abroad or nationally, can experience some of what I am describing. For most youth workers, interacting with students who have been briefly removed from their normal social context and immersed in another culture will be a more frequent experience. Students can struggle with feelings of displacement and culture shock, regardless of the length of the trip. My students from small town Maine struggled to process the transitions encountered during our trips to Uganda, thousands of miles away, and inner city Boston, only a few hours drive away. The distance is not the key factor, it is being removed from their primary culture.
Dr. Ruth Useem originally coined the phrase Third Culture Kid.[1] While a common misconception, it does not refer to living in a third world nation. Instead, it refers to the child’s perspective on the world. The reasoning behind the name is as follows; a child’s first culture is the one in which they are born. A child’s second culture is the one in which they grow up. However, the end result is a blending of the two cultures, resulting in the child being unsure of who they are and where they are from. Instead, their perspective on their surroundings and the world becomes a third culture – one unique to them and only truly understood by others with similar backgrounds.
For a TCK, the return to the United States at any stage is traumatic. The rapidly evolving culture and society is often times confusing and overwhelming for people living in the USA. For the returning TCK it can be far more so, to say the least. While some would assume that a global nomad, as TCK’s often call themselves, would be used to adapting to new places it is a different situation all together to return to their country of birth. When I lived in South America, people understood when I wasn’t familiar with local traditions, terminology, clothing styles, popular musicians, actors and so forth. It was obvious that I was not from there, and so people were gracious and understanding. My friends were quick to explain what was expected of me in different situations and forgiving when I unknowingly broke cultural taboos. However, in America I look and sound like everyone else. When I act differently or violate social norms, people just think I’m strange. Some of Continue reading “Matthew McNutt: Ministering to MKs”
And… we’re back at NTBI! After a busy-busy summer, we are back in the saddle in Wisconsin and ready for our last year of training here. One of the most exciting parts of this year is that we have been invited to be a part of this year’s NTBI Student Leadership Team. Our leadership “role” will be Sports Department and Campus Life Events Team. Additionally, we were able to go through the Leadership Training Program they have for student leaders.
For the first 6 days of training we took classes on leadership such as Identity, Ministry, Vibrancy, Ownership, Body Life, and Leadership vs. Management.
Along with the classes we worked through a great book called “Leadership as an Identity”. One of the themes that we took away was from the book was that a lot of the major milestones in our growth as spiritual leaders tend to steamed from times when we realize our personal brokenness and turned to God for strength and leadership.

We also did team building exercises. For one we had to work as teams to build a platform out of a certain amount of string and three 2x4s and transport a teammate across a field without them touching the ground. Also, there could not be any more than two points touching the ground at one time.
During another we had to build a floating raft in which we had to get all of the team around a cone in a lake and back without getting wet except two people who could pull the raft in the water. The materials were 10 Trash bags, 1 tarp, and two rolls of duct tape.

As a group we also went down to the lake front in Milwaukee for a social during sunset.
For the last 4 days we all went camping together at a lake in east Wisconsin. This gave us a chance to get to know the other leaders and staff in a relaxed fun setting. The lake was beautiful and the weather was perfect.


What was also fun was seeing the influence of the MKs who setup hammocks all around instead of the traditional “tents” that I’m used to. I have to say… it was awesome and I think I may just take a hammock setup next time I go camping.

We are so thankful and blessed to be a part of the team this year. What a great opportunity it is to be poured into by the staff and other students.

Bree’s parents, Steve and Donell Trostrud, have been serving in Papua New Guinea for 22 years and are currently in transition to fill a new vital role in PNG for New Tribes Mission.
Check out this great article about them!
Go Mom and Dad! We know God will use you in a mighty way.

I am VERY excited to introduce Bree’s new website and blog lightbluedesigns.com! If you have ever met Bree… you probably have come to realize that God has blessed her with creative artistic talent. I (Pete, her husband) am always amazed by what she thinks up and creates. After pushing her to post some of her work for years… she finally gave in and let me setup this site/blog. The purpose of the site is to simply showcase what God has done through her for His glory. It’s amazing stuff and I pray it will bless others as it has blessed me over the years. Please check it out and enjoy her Art, Photography, Graphic arts, and Crafts.



