Saturday, June 29, 2013

Hope

Guatemalans live closer to the edge than most Americans.  To keep their families safe, healthy, and fed, it takes strength and a level of faith most have never had to muster.  Here, tears surface in an instant, sometimes without warning.  The sense of being in this together as a Christian community is compelling.

In devotions this morning, Guatemalan, Sandra said that if she could be an animal, she would like to be a butterfly, because a butterfly goes through stages in the process of acquiring its freedom.  She likened the process to the stages of faith acquisition on the way to freedom in the Lord.  Christians go through many stages; we ask the Lord to change us so that we can be free.  She asked us, how are you changing?  Jeremiah 29:11 was the basis of her answer and our faith lessons this week.  "For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord, "plans to proper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future."  Hopefully, these few photos will illustrate the hope we found during our day in Guatemala City working in the ministry house with the kids and adults who live next to the Guatemala City garbage dump and a glimpse into their future.  I am having a little difficulty with the blog tonight so it will be short with fewer photos.  I need to post it quickly before I lose it again.

Tomorrow we will head to Antigua, Guatemala before leaving on Sunday.


                                 Groundwork and Trinity, minus the photographer, Kevin


                                                      Man talk, ministry style






























Thursday, June 27, 2013

Connections

Today was all about connections.  Groundwork Guatemala is a relational ministry.  They don't build houses, they build relationships and connections, and today that occurred in spades.

After devotions lead by Rudy, a friend of the ministry but new to us, we were off to Amatitlan and a day of activities in the small city about 45-60 minutes from the Cuidad (City).  For the past two days we have been out in the country; today we walked among the poor in the city.

For Kelsey, Jeannie, and I, this was a long awaited day.  It was the day we got to visit the homes of the children we sponsor all year.  It is a very small gift each month to sponsor a child with Groundwork. That gift enables a child to go to school and includes the uniform and the required supplies necessary to attend school here.  Today, for three of us, it was all about Joel (Sally), Karen (Kelsey), and Ana Victoria (Jeannie).  We each spent time in the morning in their modest homes with their families, and in the afternoon they all attended our faith lessons.  It is humbling how grateful these families are, because we know the gift is very small, but that gift is the difference between sending a child to school or not, and that is a deal breaker for any child, anywhere.  It is especially critical for the extreme poor; without an education here is no hope of breaking the cycle of poverty that exists for too many families.  Joel was sent out to buy a bottle of Coke and five crackers for us to share (and his father came home from his work in a nearby street), Karen's mother had prepared a nut candy for Kelsey and everyone in her group a bean tortilla, and Jeannie and her group was offered a "mystery" fruit drink and had the opportunity to make corn tortillas.  It was "living a dream" to be a part of a young life/family so far away from home.

We ate our peanut butter and jelly sandwiches on the shores of Lake Amatitlan...looking better than usual from a distance, but still polluted beyond understanding up close.  It is there, just like "the tree" in
Buena Vista, that we took a group photo with the Guatemalans in the ministry.

Then we were back to Gonzoles Park (a not-so-large slab of decaying cement between two cement block buildings) to prepare for the next round of adult, teenage, and children's lessons.  I think by now there have been about 250 adults, 400 children, and 60 teenagers.  It was daunting yet exhilarating to get out in the afternoon sun to give it our best knowing we were the face of Christianity from the North.  Bruce and Gordy, again, did a spectacular job with the adults, Katherine, Emma, Riley, Rachel, Kelsey, Jeannie, and Sam excelled with the children, and I was blessed with the light-hearted/good-hearted comedy of Andrew, the many gifts of Emily which today included slamming limp cords inside tiny holes in the side of wet, slippery beads, and the unassuming, down-to-earth dependability of Michael. It was a great day and it ended as most days do here, in a tropical rain storm.  We came home soaking wet, especially the guys, but happy and looking forward to another adventure tomorrow.

Each day we share our highs and lows.  The lows usually involve frustration with the language (our problem, not theirs), and the highs are always the connections we establish.  I hope the pictures capture our faith walk today.  God was so good to us again.


Blessings,
Emma, Gordy, Riley, Emily, Kelsey, Jeannie, Sam, Bruce, Michael, Rachel, Katherine, Andrew, and Sally, connected!

                                                           Jeannie and Ana Victoria
                                                                  Sam and friend
                                                                    Emily and friend
                                        Riley and Katherine (daughter and mother) passing out bananas to the kids.
                                                                 Karen and Kelsey
                                        Rachel and Emma doing what they do best, kids!
                Sally, Riley, Andrew and Gordy with Joel's family.  Joel has on the striped shirt.
Andrew and Bruce with Guatemalan missionaries and friends, Odi and Sandra (The size difference between us and the Guatemalans is substantial.)



Bienvenidos a Buena Vista! (Welcome to Buena Vista!)

We are on our way to Buena Vista.  The blog will be in two parts today...pre and post Buena Vista.  It is 7:00 A.M. and the trip is about 2+ hours toward the Pacific.  About an hour into the trip we will follow smoking, volcanic mountain ranges to the coastal plains where the temperatures will rise from 65 to 85 or 90 degrees in minutes, and the humidity will sky rocket.  Throw in the tropical sun, sugar cane fields, rubber tree fincas, and a giant leap back into time, and you have the picture.  We will turn right at the big tree and we will be there.  As I have said many times, there are many National Geographic moments in Guatemala, but today is an entire day of them.  Bienvenidos a Buena Vista.


                             
              One of the problems with having been here before is I don't see things quite the same way I did the first time... which makes this hard to write.   I want you to see it the way we did, but you can't, because photos cannot capture the human tragedy there.  They do, however, capture its beauty.  People are people, even if they are poor in the middle of a rainforest.  Our kids, their kids....there is very little difference, but the standard of living in Buena Vista is shocking.  There is no electricity, no running water, no plumbing...nothing except people just barely surviving in shanties, and by in large subsisting on the rainforest...and still they have and are open to faith, lots of it.

Again, I need to rely on photos to share our day; it is late.  However, I think you will see how extraordinary our day was, from faith lessons in a shelter and on a machete cut soccer field, to visits, prayers, and medication for the sick, to a walk through rubber trees to a ravine into a river where people bath and wash clothes (as we discovered to our embarrassment).  We walked where they walked, we played soccer with their children, we talked about the plans God had for each of them, and we hugged and received their blessings as often they received ours.

This is a random collection of photos from today, but at least its a hint of our time in Buena Vista.

                                                       























Good night!






Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Whew...

I sure hope that is how "whew" is spelled.  To the point, adrenaline is a beautiful thing.  I am writing on the way home from El Rincon (about 45 minutes from Guatemala City into the countryside) and we are  extremely happy and relieved after of our first day of faith lessons, music, and crafts.  I don't know how many people were there but I would guess about 200.  I am going to rely on photos to tell our story today, because they will do it better than I would; there is just too much to tell.

  Today we climbed a mountain to visit Luis, a two year old with cerebral palsy, delivered a gift on that same hike to Marelia from Kara Hecker, her sponsor who was unable to return this year, met newly sponsored children/adults, Freddy (Riley and Katherine), Mario (Gordy and Michael), German (Rachel), Odi (Kelsey), drew hot water from a well heated by the volcano "next door" , huddled under a pop-up tent in a tropical rainstorm, shared stories of hope in the face of hopelessness, and stepped about a mile outside of most of our comfort zones... and survived.  It was a great day.

There wasn't a single soul on the team that didn't give it their all, and that is not just the public relations department speaking.  I wish you could see "your people" in action.

Thank you Trinity, families, and friends.  I wish you could have walked this one with us today.

Blessings,
Sam, Katherine, Andrew, Michael, Kelsey, Emma, Emily, Riley, Jeannie, Rachel, Gordy, Bruce, and
Sally

 
                                                            Pacaya, an active volcano

                                          Rachel and her newly sponsored child, German

                                                          Katherine and a new friend

                                                  Gordy and newly sponsored, Mario

                                Pre-game planning...this is where the adrenaline came into play

                                                  Jeannie and her highlight of the day

                                      Luis with his mother, Sally, and Emily...during the rain


                                              Guatemalan, Anna, and her medical ministry

                                                              Margarita in her kitchen


                                                                 Kelsey and friend

                                                                  Children's Lesson

                                                           Youth (teenagers) lesson


                                                                    Sam and friends

                                                           El Rincon (the corner)



                                                                        Papaya plants

                                                            Off on a home visit