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One of the organization's co-founders, Harry Westmoreland Jr., worked in the seismic drilling industry. He first saw how important clean water was in 1989 when he visited a missionary who was having difficulty drilling a water well in Peru. In 1989 he invented a portable rig called the LS 100 that could be transported in the back of a pickup ...
The ministry's logo incorporates the letters, WDJD, standing for "What Did Jesus Do?" and a reference to Mark 16:15: "And he said unto them, Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature." The Way of the Master is an outreach of Living Waters Ministries, also headed by Comfort. [2]
Christian-based non-profit, with a focus on addressing the crisis through local communities. Trains volunteer field trainers in shallow well drilling, hand pump repair, biosand filtration, sanitation, community health, and WASH. Focused on long-term change and improved community health. Living Water International [10] Founded in 1990. Christian ...
The Interior Department leases millions of acres of public lands and waters for oil and gas drilling. Chris Wright, the CEO of the fracking company Liberty Energy, is nominated to serve as energy ...
Ray Comfort (born 5 December 1949) is a New Zealand-born Christian minister, evangelist and young Earth creationist who lives in the United States. [2] Comfort started Living Waters Publications, as well as the ministry The Way of the Master, in Bellflower, California, and has written several books.
Living Water or Living Waters may refer to: Living Water, a biblical term which appears in both the Old and New Testaments; Living Waters Lutheran College, Western Australia; Living Waters for the World, an organization helping to improve the water supply and sanitation in Haiti; Living Waters Publications, part of The Way of the Master ...
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At the bottom of the "water ladder" are unprotected sources of water. The users "climb the water ladder" by adding protection to their water source or additional technology for convenience. For example, a user with an unlined hand dug well with a rope and bucket as a lifting device would be at the bottom of the water ladder.