Archive for 2009

Insights into the spirit world in my friend’s village

Monday, June 8th, 2009

My friend Don P’s people group, like most in our area, is quite animistic.  Animists have a far greater awareness of spiritual realities than the average westerner.  As I spent time with Don P on Saturday, he shared some interesting things:

First, he told me a story about the small lake they have in their village.  The lake is–or at least used to be–enchanted, according to the locals.  He said the water would move as if it were alive, and sometimes a wave would come up and grab people and drown them.  Two Catholic priests came to their village many years ago, and the first one was grabbed by the lake and drowned.  The second priest went and knelt beside the lake, Don P said, and began to pray over it.  After he did, the enchantment was broken.  The water ceased to move as if it were alive; now it is still like a normal lake.

Don P went on to relate a story his grandfather told him.  He said the village used to have five lakes, but now it only has two.  Maybe a hundred years ago, a village belonging to a neighboring people group was fighting with Don P’s village.  According to Don P’s grandfather, they had people who were good at casting spells and putting curses on others.  Through witchcraft, they were able to take some of the lakes from Don P’s village and have them brought to their own village.  From a distance, they also caused the (Catholic, I think) church building in Don P’s village to catch on fire.

One other interesting conversation we had was about belief in naguals (pronounced na-wals).  Most villages in our area that have this belief say a nagual is a person who turns into an animal at night.  In Don P’s village, it’s a little different.  They don’t think naguals are people; they think they’re devils.  He said a nagual looks like a person, but its knees don’t bend.  He went on to mention that his wife had just seen one a couple of days before near there house.  It was howling.  I asked how she knew it was one, and he said because it was shaking a large tree back and forth.  The tree is far too big for a person to shake.

Anecdotes such as these are common in the villages of our area.  Though the people are Catholic in name, their religion far more closely resembles animism, because they hold many of the beliefs they had before the Spanish conquest of Mexico.  The advantage in sharing the gospel with animists (and there are disadvantages, too) is they don’t have to be convinced of spiritual realities.  They are already aware of them.

Finally, a visit to my friend’s village

Sunday, June 7th, 2009

For a while, my friend Don P. has been saying I’ll have to come visit his village, and yesterday we were finally able to make it happen.  I was out there for about six hours and got to help him with a house he’s building, read quite a bit from the Bible, and eat lunch.

Don P. belongs to one of the two main groupings of indigenous people in our area.  I don’t want to use the actual names of the groups because I don’t want people around here Googling this, so here’s what I’ll do: I’m going to start calling the two groups the Mixed people and the Tree people.  If you’ve been around here, I think you’ll know who I’m talking about.  If not, and you want to know, send me an email and I’ll tell you who they are.  So Don P. belongs to one of the tribes of the Tree people.

When I got there he showed me a spring on his property, and we talked about ways to collect the water and pump it up to his house.  He then wanted to read the Bible, so we read the story of the Prodigal Son followed by the creation story.  Though Don P. didn’t know it, I was following the listing of stories for evangelism found in the Shepherd’s Storybook.  The Shepherd’s Storybook is a resource developed by our church planting coach and his wife, Robert and Anne Thiessen, and is available for free download at paul-timothy.net.

We enjoyed a tasty lunch of egg and bean tacos made with fresh corn tortillas cooked over a fire, then we headed outside and worked on a house Don P. is building for his nephew.  After two or three hours of working and talking, we came back around to reading some passages in the Bible that addressed questions Don P. was asking.  He wanted to know why, if God created all the animals, they kill and eat one another.  He thought it was pretty cool to see how Isaiah says they will one day live in harmony once more.  Then we looked at passages relating to death and eternal life, because Don P. was saying he’s heard Christians say you’ll have eternal life, but that can’t be because they all die.  Finally, he got pretty fired up hearing testimonies I shared of how we’ve seen God miraculously heal people, and he thought sometime soon we should look for a sick person who has faith in God to heal and pray for that person.

It was a good time together, with a lot of seeds of the Word planted.  Please pray that God will cause the seed to take root in his heart and grow and bear fruit.

I intend to write a separate post describing a couple of interesting spiritual things I learned about Don P.’s village.  Update: Read what I learned about spiritual realities here.

Another trip to the airstrip

Friday, June 5th, 2009

This past Saturday evening I headed back out to the airstrip for another visit.  I saw the teacher who was one of the two guys I talked to last time, and he invited me to sit down for a while and talk.  We had a good conversation about a variety of topics—generating electricity, culture, teaching, the Bible, his community, etc.  He strikes me as a pretty neat guy who (so far) doesn’t seem too standoffish around me.  He’s from a people group in our area that has been known for being very resistant to outsiders and tough to penetrate with the gospel.

While up there, I met one other new family from a different people group and a lady who is their neighbor from across the strip.  I had a nice chat with them as well, delving into spiritual topics some.  They have a very outgoing five-year-old girl (their youngest) who wants me to bring Lauryn and Molly to play the next time I come for a visit.

As for generating electricity, that still seems to have possibilities.  The teacher is quite interested in the project and doesn’t seem put off by the idea of a simple solar system for one home costing several hundred dollars.  I got a better sense of how much electricity families up there use, which will help us be more focused in research.  It sounds like most families have a couple of light bulbs, and radios and TVs are common.  About four families have a kind of portable, wash-only (no spin cycle) washing machine that many in this area use.  The teacher said we don’t have too much else to worry about, so the needs aren’t too intense.

Rob, our church planting coach, was pointing out to me that I should take the teacher along to an internet cafe when I go to do some more study.  We want to include the people of the community in each step of the process as much as possible, so they’ll take ownership of the project.  To the extent that I do research by myself and bring my findings back to them, they’ll conclude that they’re not capable of figuring these things out.  The whole idea of community development is to help the people of a community organize themselves to solve their own problems, eventually without outside help.

I think things are going well out there.  I’m looking forward to my next trip out.  I had hoped that would be tomorrow, but now I finally have an invite from my friend Don P to his village, so I don’t know when I’ll make it to the airstrip.  Maybe Sunday.  The teacher mentioned he knows a village about ten hours away where a guy set up a nice solar system and sells electricity to his neighbors.  When I expressed interest, the teacher offered to take a weekend sometime and take me out there to check it out.  Hopefully we’ll be able to make that happen sometime this summer.

Thanks again to everyone who commented on my last airstrip post or sent me emails sharing your ideas and resources.  Your input has been extremely helpful, and I invite your continuing ideas and feedback.  I appreciate your being part of the team!

New call (no pun intended) for help

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

Okay, here’s the deal: I need a caller ID hacker.  No, this isn’t bad.  I’ll explain why:

In my last post I mentioned I’ve been putting out much more frequent updates on Facebook and Twitter.  I’m getting ready to head to Mexico City tonight to spend a couple of days exploring a business opportunity that could bring some new jobs into our area.  (We’ve been praying a long time for God to bring new jobs here so families wouldn’t be torn apart as husbands move to the U.S. to work and in many cases don’t return.)  While in Mexico City, I would like to have my phone configured such that I can post updates to Twitter and Facebook by sending text messages.

The problem is this: In order to post updates by text message, I have to be able to dial +44 762 4801423 to send them to Twitter.  My phone is an old model that will not let me enter the ‘+’ character at the front of a number I’m dialing.  Without the ‘+’, I can’t send updates from my phone.

I know some of you know how to hack around in caller ID and show your call as coming from whatever number you like.  Could someone please call me phone and show it coming from the number above?  Or it could be from any number, really, just as long as it starts with a ‘+’.  Once I have a number in my phone that starts with ‘+’, I think I can save it as the Twitter number and be good to go.  I hope.

So if anyone is able to help me out and do that today, that would be awesome, and I’ll give you public recognition right here on my blog.  (How’s that for an incentive?)  My cell number is [my number].  To dial it from the U.S., it should be [like this].  Or if that doesn’t work, try doing it [like this].

Thanks!

Update: After trying a host of different things, I couldn’t come up with any way to get a ‘+’ into my phone.  Thanks for everyone who tried to help, including a former MTS student who called me from North Africa!  Chino was the one who came up with the solution, even though we didn’t have the plus sign – turns out that dialing ‘00′ is the same as dialing a ‘+’.  Problem solved!

Connect with me through Facebook and Twitter

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

Those viewing the home page of this blog will see I have added buttons at the top of the sidebar allowing you to connect with me through Facebook and Twitter.

I have taken advantage of now having internet service at home to post a handful of Tweets/Facebook status updates each day.  These include prayer requests and little tidbits on things I’m doing and thinking about.  For those who use Facebook or Twitter a lot, it’s a good way to get a more constant stream of updates from us and a better idea of what our day-to-day lives are like.

So if you’re not part of it already, this is your invitation to friend me on Facebook or follow me on Twitter.  We’d love to have you as part of the community!

Note: I have protected my Twitter updates so they’re not visible on the public timeline.  You’ll have to request to follow me, then once I confirm you’re a real person who is interested in our family or our work, I will approve the request.

Saturday afternoon trip to the airstrip

Saturday, May 16th, 2009

Who can help me with information on inexpensive ways to generate electricity for a household?  If you know something about this or can point me to a good resource, please comment!  Read on to hear why…

In praying about next steps recently, I sensed God leading me to put more effort into connecting with people on the outskirts of our town who have ties to villages.  I felt I wasn’t supposed to take on any new projects (water filters, solar dehydrators, and the like) until I had better relationships with people in need and could more directly respond to needs they wanted met.

On that premise, late this afternoon I headed out to a community about a half hour walk from our house, built on an old airstrip.  The community came to be about three years ago when a number of village families were invited to take small parcels of land and build houses on them.  They did so, constructing one-room houses out of wood and sheets of corrugated tin.  These humble dwellings line either side of what was once a working airstrip in our town, now a gravel runway with weeds poking through it.

The airstrip community enjoys a beautiful view

The airstrip community is an intriguing place, strategically.  Its families come from a number of indigenous villages and speak native dialects.  We (and many missionaries) have found displaced people in difficult circumstances to often be more open to the gospel.  The community is poor, meaning community development has an opportunity to make a more significant impact there than in other places.

I went out with no plan other than to try and connect with people.  I figured I’d let them know that God brought me to the region to come to know Jesus better alongside others and to spread the love of Jesus in any way I can.  Then I’d just see what happened.  Arriving at the airstrip, I saw a couple of guys loading wood into the back of a truck at one of the first houses, so I figured I’d see if I could lend them a hand.  As I got closer and called out a greeting, I recognized both of them as men I’d met last summer when GFM was doing some English classes up there.  (Carl and Lisa, students in the 2008-09 Mission Training School, were the first ones to begin building relationships in the airstrip community, which opened the door for our further involvement.)  The two men recognized me, as well.

We started talking, and in the first five minutes one of the guys asked if I know how to generate electricity for a home.  The families at the airstrip had been stealing electricity from some nearby lines, but they got cut off and fined and are now without electricity.  He explained several ideas he’d heard of involving windmills, solar panels, and car batteries.  I don’t know how to generate electricity for a home, but I told him I would look into it if they would help me make something once I found a design.  He readily agreed, saying to let him know what I found and then he would get people in the community together to chip in money for the project and help work on it.

After a half-hour conversation, he offered me a ride back to town.  I accepted, and on the way back we got into spiritual matters.  I mostly just asked questions and let him talk this time around.  He belongs to a sect based out of Guadalajara called Luz del Mundo.

So now I need some good ideas for inexpensive home power generation!  Does anyone know of anything?  We always say that our supporters back home are just as much a part of the team as we are, we’re just field staff, so here’s a bit of a unique way to participate in the work down here!  I’m looking forward to hearing from some of you.

P.S. I don’t have a photo of the airstrip community, but are there any GFMers reading this who have one they could pass along to me?  If so, I’ll add it to this post.  Update: Thanks to Nick and Sarah for providing the above photo.

Update 05 June ‘09: Read about my following trip to the airstrip here.

GFM has a new website!

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

Thanks to one of our recent MTS graduates, Ryan, dedicating about six weeks of his time, GFM has a brand new website! Check it out at GlobalFrontierMissions.org.

Note that our new web home is at the .org address, not the old .com address. Let us know what you think!

Mexico and Mother’s Day

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

This past Sunday was one of the rare times that Mother’s Day hits on the same day in both the United States and Mexico. The U.S. always celebrates it on a Sunday, while in Mexico it is always on May 10.

In Mexico, Mother’s Day is celebrated in much the same way as in the U.S. People give gifts and flowers to their moms and often prepare special meals or take them out to eat. Many restaurants give moms a free meal on the 10th. Our family enjoyed a nice meal at a restaurant with our upstairs neighbors, who wanted to celebrate with us.

Mother’s Day is a fairly big occasion around here. Here’s what a Mexican shared with me one time about mothers:

Mexico has had a lot of problems with fathers, so Mexicans aren’t as attached to their dads, but boy do they love their moms. Mothers really carry the family in Mexico. Father’s Day isn’t much of a big deal around here, but Mother’s Day is a really big deal. That’s why Mexicans are so attached to the Virgin of Guadalupe (a representation of Mary, the mother of Jesus). Many people have a hard time relating to God the Father, but they feel a strong affinity to the Virgin as mother.

I have observed the above to be true. It provides a real challenge in making disciples of Christ. About a month and a half ago, I visited the Basilica of Guadalupe in Mexico City and was blown away by the devotion of the pilgrims who had come for a blessing.

Being a connector of people

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

I realized not too long ago that an aspect of my job I have neglected somewhat is being a connector of people.  In cross-cultural church planting and discipleship, I find it easy to get tunnel vision.  Without noticing, I start focusing almost exclusively on the one-on-one discipleship that our team is doing with different people.  We meet with this person over here, disciple that person over there, but very little of it ends up being connected to much of anything else.  Each relationship is in its own little bubble.

I see two problems with that:

  1. One of the outcomes of this discipleship should be to see people coming together into new church fellowships.  It’s hard for that to happen if each disciple is on an island, not connected with any other followers of Christ.  It seems harder to connect people later on, when one-on-one discipleship has already happened for a while.
  2. This is a more communal culture than our own.  Focusing on your “personal relationship with God” doesn’t get you quite so far around here, because culturally it might not be quite so personal.

We have never wanted to be the leaders of church fellowships.  We have wanted to see them come together somewhat naturally and help the locals step into leadership almost from the very beginning.  I think God is showing us, though, that we have an important role to play in connecting people.

Before, my mentality was more that we would disciple new people individually, and then when they are ready (whatever that means) we’ll bring them together into groups.  But it could be that bringing people together into groups is what needs to happen first, and then the discipleship will come a little later.  I’m wondering what it would look like to get groups of neighbors together for nothing more than fellowship, and then from there see what kind of spiritual interest there is.  Before having to suddenly go home, Pam and Tucker were working with their friends in a village to see about putting on a meal for the people of the village.

Around here, I think establishing the connections with people first can help remove many of the barriers to them living as the Body of Christ later on.  It may be that one of the best things we could be doing right now is throwing parties!

Recognizing pride

Monday, April 27th, 2009

God has sobered me a lot the past couple of months regarding the danger of pride.  Pride was Lucifer’s sin, and I think if you could say that one sin is more deadly than all the others, pride would be it.  It is so dangerous because it is so blinding.  Think about this:  Unless your conscience is totally seared, you know it if you’re living in sexual sin.  You know if you’re robbing people, too, even if you refuse to deal with the sin.  You feel the sting of conviction when you gossip about someone.  Few people, though, know they have a big pride problem but refuse to deal with it.  Most people in bondage to pride have very little idea it’s there.

John Bevere explains that a prideful person will always become more religious.  Religiosity covers the pride, and pride keeps a person from seeing the religious spirit.  Nasty little cycle, huh?  That’s why Jesus said that many people who have done all kinds of great spiritual things will be blown away on the day of judgment to be rejected by God (Matthew 7:21-23).  What a scary thought!

I haven’t always taken pride that seriously.  I sort of assumed that as long as I was in “mostly good standing” with God, He wouldn’t be too put off by a little pride.  I recently realized how ridiculous that thought is when I started meditating on James 4:6:  “God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble” (emphasis mine).  In other words, God isn’t just a little disappointed if I’m prideful.  It doesn’t slow down His work in my life a bit.  God is flat-out opposed to me if I’m proud.  Every good thing in our lives comes because of God’s grace, and He gives that grace to the humble, not the proud!  That got my attention.

I am learning that a prayer God is quick to answer is, “God, I don’t care what it takes, please expose every area of pride in my life.”  I never used to have the guts to pray that prayer, but now I do.  I am growing in the fear of God, and I see that pride can separate me from Him without my ever knowing it.  I don’t care what it costs me anymore, I don’t want to fall away from God.  So I’m asking Him to expose pride, and He is.

The trouble with a blind spot, of course, is that it’s hard to see.  Something John Bevere said in a sermon I recently listened to really helped me.  He explained how humility is simply fully trusting God in absolutely everything.  Looking at it that way, I have begun to see my pride more readily, because I can recognize a host of areas where I don’t fully trust God.  Until my life is 100% submitted to God in everything, pride has not yet been fully conquered.

Oh God, keep me from pride.  Expose every single area of it in my life.  Don’t let one little bit hide in darkness.  I only want to do what you want me to.  I don’t want to fall away from you.  Give me your grace as I walk in humility.  Knowing how susceptible I am to falling, I’m trusting you to keep me.  It’s only by your grace.