Rochester L'Abri Prayer Letter - June, 2026
“And we desire each one of you to show the same earnestness to have the full assurance of hope until the end, so that you may not be sluggish, but imitators of those who through faith and patience inherit the promises.” Hebrew 6: 11-12
Dear Friends,
It is hard to believe that we are already halfway through the year. As Jock and I get older we find that time is speeding up as each year passes. And sadly, we no longer have the same energy we once had. As you know, we have been short staffed for a while now and have been having helpers on a rather ad hoc basis, which is also tiring. However, God has been providing, and we are very thankful that we now have two helpers in place for our First Summer Term, even as more students are pouring in this week. One of our helpers has spent many times in our branch as a student and she is now volunteering for the next few weeks, which has been aided by the completion of the carriage house where she is able to stay with her two children.
The Carriage House apartment continues to be a main source of encouragement and thanksgiving for us as it is now completely finished and furnished and has been well used already by two other families. This is truly a miracle in our eyes and has been realised after decades of prayer. Wonderfully, one of the first families to stay there actually met at Rochester L’Abri many years ago, and we were glad to be able to host them for 7 weeks while the wife received radiation treatment and while we were in Missouri hosting our Spring L’Abri Retreat. Please do be in prayer for Blake and Melanie Mosher as they receive further treatment.
The Spring Retreat was well received once again, with good attendance and great weather, and we were very glad to have the same Missouri family help us again; in fact, they will also be helping us up here in Rochester during our Second Summer Term and will also be staying in the carriage house. With the husband working from home and their daughter being home schooled, this works well for them.
Today, I have been thinking about continuity - which was a regular word in the Schaeffer’s vocabulary. At this stage of life, I am enjoying, in particular, the continuity of relationships. Again and again, we have had the joy of calls and visits from former students that have become friends, and even more. Time simply increases the experiences shared and our depth of understanding of each other, deepening our bonds. It can also reveal the activity of the Spirit at work in human hearts and minds, producing growth in relationship with God, and growth in maturity. Maturity, in fact, is often tied to infusing the ‘Now’ with an appreciation of history - and lessons learned, not only by us as individuals, but learned through past generations. I sometimes wonder about how yeast bread first came about and how we learned which mushrooms are edible – we have previous generations to thank for this. Education at its heart is about passing on generational knowledge.
Continuity in history and continuity in relationships is, I believe, ultimately rooted in the unchangeable character of God - and is at the heart of the bible. This is where we find our anchor, our foundation in a world that we often experience as chaotic. As this generation increasingly embraces the existential ‘Now’ and the constant reinvention of the ‘Self’, this continuity becomes increasingly important. It is our comfort - and a light, as we shape the future in the light of learned wisdom and truth.
“For people swear by something greater than themselves, and in all their disputes an oath is final for confirmation. So when God desired to show more convincingly to the heirs of the promise the unchangeable character of his purpose, he guaranteed it with an oath, so that by two unchangeable things, in which it is impossible for God to lie, we who have fled for refuge might have strong encouragement to hold fast to the hope set before us. We have this as a sure and steadfast anchor of the soul, a hope that enters into the inner place behind the curtain…” Hebrews 6: 16-19
Yours in Christ,
Alison
