Monday, July 17, 2017

Where did June (and most of July) go?

Sorry this update is LONG overdue! We are in the midst of team season and it has been BUSY to say the least.  We had the Oregon Vision Team back in June, which was a great experience for all involved.  It was awesome to be able to share our hearts for Ecuador and the need that still exists throughout all of Latin America to reach the unreached.  I learned more about the culture here in my first two weeks on the field because of this team, than I would have otherwise.  The people of Latin America are spiritually hungry and seeking answers in all the wrong places.  The culture as a whole is turning back to their indigenous roots and practices, and has become inundated with Shamanism and a blended form of Catholicism with indigenous traditions (Syncretism).  There is a lot of worship of the Sun and other elements of the earth.  It saddens my heart to see that the people here simply don’t know and have never known the love of Jesus.
After that team, we had about a little over a week until the next team arrived, so we went into full on planning and preparation mode.  This side of it is way busier than I ever knew coming as part of a team. Making sure we have everything in place for the team from hotel reservations, to transportation, to water, to food, to decorations prepared for the VBS, to a first aid kit prepared, to you name it and we have it ready.  One of the things I’ve learned most in this culture is that you may have 10 things on your to do list for the day, but if you accomplish at least two of them, you can count it as a success! It just takes way longer to do the little things, and there isn’t a Wal-Mart to run out to where you can get it all at once.  It’s a lot of running around, but it’s all worth it once the team gets here and you see what God is doing in and through them!
Our first 3 days with the team were spent doing a VBS for a local church in the next town over from where we live.  We did a superhero themed VBS (with Jesus being our ultimate superhero) and went out into the streets everyday beforehand to invite kids to come.  Many many kids came to know Jesus as their Lord and Savior during this time; praise the Lord!  There were about 100 kids present each day (more on the last day), and we had some teenagers too who would come. So we would do a separate break out session for them with a couple of the team members and some of the Master’s Commission students from here in Ecuador, who were helping us out.  It was awesome for me to meet some Master’s Commission students here! It was also neat to see how Master’s Commission here is both similar and different from Master’s Commission in the States.  If you are in Master’s here in Latin America, it means you feel called to missions specifically and you are being trained to take the Gospel into all the world. Students are actually assigned various countries where they will go and serve during their three years in Master’s Commission. It’s so cool that they get hands on experience in different places!
While we were doing the three days of VBS, we were also spiritually preparing ourselves to go into another city that would be much harder called Pedro Vicente Maldonado in the secondary jungle region.  This city has been more closed off to the Gospel, and the people have been complacent, letting Satan have his rule over them.  One of the things Ashley (my mentor missionary) challenged the team about on day one was that we could either make peace with the enemy or wage war against him.  If we made peace, he would let us think we won and lie dormant for a time, but if we were to choose to wage war, he would try attacking us from whatever angle he could.  The team as a whole decided to wage war, and the first three days we dug in and prayed and prepared ourselves for what was to come.
I kid you not, as soon as we wrapped up VBS on day 3 and started packing up the bus to head to Pedro Vicente Maldonado, team members started falling ill.  About half the team was throwing up their insides as we made our way on a bus through winding mountain roads towards the jungle.  On top of that, the bus driver told us that literally the day before the team arrived, his air conditioning went out.  He was quoted that it would be $10,000 to fix, so he couldn’t do it beforehand. So imagine yourself on a bus full of sick people with no air conditioning as you move from the mountainous region to the humid jungle region.  Let’s just say that that trip was not fun for anyone.  Spiritual warfare is real, and in this situation Satan brought physical circumstances against us in every way possible before we headed into that city that he had a hold of.
The team pushed through though and within 24 hours almost everyone was back to normal.  They had decided to wage war and they weren’t going to run and hide now that Satan had made himself known.  The team members rallied as we did street outreaches in parks and went door to door handing out tracts and telling people about Jesus.  It was an awesome time of ministry and many more gathered around then we expected to.  God was moving and while children were coming to know Christ through the programs, their parents were watching in the background.  Each program we did, there were a handful of adults that came to know Jesus as their Savior, and the church members that we were working with were able to go out into the crowds to get follow up information and invite them to the local church plant there that we were partnering with.  It was humbling to see that because of our obedience to go and to wage war against the enemy, God was able to move in the lives of people where previously they had been so closed off to anything dealing with Him.
It was awesome to see lives changed! Not only was God moving among the people in those communities we went to, but He was also moving in the lives of the team members.  We debriefed on our last day together and the stories that were told from the team of God moving in their own lives were so touching.  We were all in tears and remembering all the good things God had done, and is going to continue to do!  A few students and leaders were even called into missions and ministry while they were on this trip! That makes my heart so full because it was on a trip, much like this one, that God called me into missions, and I am so honored that I got to be a part of that in someone else’s life!

After the team left, we took a day to celebrate the Fourth of July here as a missionary family, and then it was right back to work prepping for the next team that arrives early tomorrow morning.  We are near Riobamba, and helping with a church plant that has been started in a little town called Guano.  I’m so excited to see what the Lord does in and through this next team!  More updates to come, but it probably won’t be until after this team leaves.  Thank you all for your continued support and prayers as I am settling in to my time here in Ecuador.  Pray for the team’s health and safety as we minister with this next team, but most importantly pray that lives would be changed and that the people of Guano would come to a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ!

Here is a pic of a sunrise during rooftop prayer with the last team:


**Unfortunately, I do not have great internet access here, so it took me forever to upload one picture.  I will have to upload more pics later to this post, or you can go check out my facebook page and see all the pics I posted while we were there!