Vida en Mexico

Friday, March 11, 2011

Poverty

I don't know if you ever get used to seeing poverty or if you ever should for that matter! But every once in a while God opens your eyes again to the needs of people around you and He did that just the other day!

We took a group of about 11 Bible School students from Providence College to a small fishing village probably about 50 miles up the coast called something like Sahuimaro I believe. Let me just back up a little bit more first. Two days before this, we went to another fishing village a little ways up the coast where, together with a local pastor from that village, Pastor Guillermo we spent an evening playing with the kids and showing the Jesus film as an outreach into his community. As we were there, he shared his passion for this neighboring village, Sahuimaro, a very poor village with no church, and very little Christian influence. In a couple of days, he, along with the students of a local Mexican biblical training center, were going to spend a day in this town, going door to door, sharing Christ with the people and inviting them to a service he was planning to having with them later in the week. He was exciting at the possibility of having us join them with a kids program and the Jesus film.

So, we packed up the vans and made the two hour trek, first down nice four lane highway, turned into two lane pavement, then pavement with some potholes, the pavement with LOTS of potholes, to pavement which really should no longer be called pavement, to finally probably about 10 miles of continuous washboard. As we neared the village though, the scenery changed drastically as we neared the coast. From desert wasteland densely populated with cactus, large sand dunes of white sand rose up spotted with a type of pine trees. We drove up over a hill and descended into a narrow valley with a hill covered in cactus on one side and a sand dune on the other side.

The village, not having any power or water, was a collection of wood, tin, and tar paper thrown together with the houses sitting very close together, with the occasional cement block structure. Because of the sand dunes all around, there wasn't much room to build. But not only that, as we got there, the wind was howling off the water and I couldn't imagine you would want to build your house too much in the open anyways. The told us that the village would go from 200 to up to 800 people during the high fishing season, though you could hardly imagine half that many people living there in such a small area.


We settled in an area that has been relatively cleaned by the students for our use, at least with as much of the garbage cleared out as possible, and set out to invite the children to come. A modest crowd of about 20 children braved the wind and the blowing sand and we had a great time with them. You could bet we were the only attraction in town that day or that week or probably even month for that matter!


Two things in particular struck me during out brief stay there. One was the passion that Pastor Guillermo had for this place. God had definitely put a passion in his heart for it. It was a dirty, hard to get to place, and with the conditions, the wind and the sand blowing in your face, not an altogether pleasant place to be. And perhaps others had come and gone to share the gospel or reach out to these people, but no one had come and stayed. His desire was to come back and build into this community and eventually raise up a church. He had plans to come during popular party time Semana Santa and even to spend his vacation time here in this village, spending a number of days working with the children and the adults. Praise God for this pastor and his desire to reach his own people!

The second thing that struck me as we were there was the idea of poverty and wondering how God sees poverty. The physical poverty in this place as more than evident in the tar-paper, wooden structures for houses and the lack of basic services such as power and water. I know that God has a huge heart for those in physical need, many times commanding us to watch out and take care of the poor. But spiritual poverty is not always so evident, yet I know that God's greatest concern is for those who do not know Him. Looking over this village it was easy to see the physical poverty but if I had God's x-ray vision, what would I see? What does He see? How would He see our village or town, or wherever we live? If I think about my "hometown" Winkler, a small city with many beautiful homes, carefully manicured yards, what would He see? What would His x-ray vision find? Would He rather see a ghost-town, a bunch of shacks thrown together with spare pieces of wood, tin and tar-paper?

And yet even in this poor village of Sahuimaro, there were little lights that were shining. Dispersed among the tar-paper homes were a couple sturdy, block homes. As we were winding things down and preparing to show the film, a man came up to me and asked me where we were from and whether we were Christians. He shared how he himself was a Christian as well and was excited to see us here. Even in the darkest of places, God has His light shining, whether it was this man or Pastor Guillermo.

Give us eyes to see the true needs of the people around us and help us to lead them to You, the only One who can truly meet those needs!

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

8 days, 1600 patients, 1000 Bibles, many stories!

Each year we have had the opportunity to host Rocky Mountain Ministries from Montana who put on a medical clinic here in San Carlos and surrounding area. For a total of 8 days we go to different locations and setup a clinic offering free medical care, medications, and reading glasses to all who came. By 10:00 am the clinic would be up and running and accepting patients. By the times the last tent came down on any given day anywhere from 200 to 250 people would have come through, either seeking medical attention or sporting a new pair of reading glasses.

Though it is rewarding to see so many physical needs met from people who just had bad colds to things more serious like a young woman who had appendicitis, the most rewarding part is to help meet the spiritual needs of the people. There was always a table setup, loaded up with Bibles and manned by people ready to pray, share, and speak to these deeper spiritual needs. Personally, this was the most exciting place to be! There was one woman who served in particular the entire week, Maria Jesus. She was rescued from a past of witchcraft and is now a powerful testimony for Christ, sharing boldly with anyone and everyone the truth of the Gospel.


I could share a number of stories, but one story jumps out in particular. Many times we pray in a situation like this that people would be drawn to this place, that people would see Christ in us and that they would sense His presence as they come. Well, God showed us the answer to that prayer in one man...I don't even remember his name! He approached our table and shared how he had once been a devout Christian but had walked away from the faith for the last number of years of his life. He shared how he had a gift of discernment and as he was walking in the street past the clinic he could see a light coming from this place. He could sense God's presence and knew that he needed to come and to give his life back to the Lord. So, with pleasure we prayed with him and for him, and could see the joy in his heart at having come back.

If you want to see a 20 minute video highlighting the week of medical clinics check out this video!

It's exciting to see God touch one life at a time and it's also exciting that we can be a part of that in His ordained time and way. Thanks to those who have been praying! I can't say it enough how you are an invaluable part of this ministry!

Dios te bendiga!

Monday, January 24, 2011

4 Walls and a House...

Yes, four walls usually equals a house but in this case the Winkler MB church youth and later the adult team managed to put up four walls in addition to a little one room house for a young woman in need in a needy area of Guaymas called Fatima.

I'm sure many of you have heard about the pastoral house project that we have taken on this winter and I want to share just one of the stories that have come out of working in that community.

Last spring we were handing out food hampers in Fatima with a team. Each recipient was asked if there was something that we could pray for. One young lady, Elsa shared about her lifestyle caught in drugs and how she wanted to be free from that. The team prayed for her and to God's glory, shortly after that she left that lifestyle and began regularly attending Pastor Rafael's church where she still goes.

She has two sons, one two year old and a 3 month old. Her husband left her and she was living with her mother though it was not a healthy environment for neither herself or her sons. When the youth group came on the scene, she was living in the church temporarily until something else could be arranged.

Her situation touched the hearts of several people on the team and they as a group decided to take a love offering to raise money to build her a place to live. The next day they began to put up a 12' by 16' quarter on a piece of property donated by a member of Pastor Rafael's church. They finished the house and the adult team that came in right after them were able to paint and furnish the place. The last evening they were in Mexico, they were able to deliver the keys over to her in an emotional farewell.

The pastoral house projects is still going and we praise God for providing for these types of physical needs but we praise God even more for touching people's lives as He did in Elsa's case and as He does so often!

Check out the updated photo gallery to view pictures of this and more!