Friday, October 21, 2016

Oct 17 - Oct 21


Last Monday, the kids at the farm didn't have school. We took a few of them to the river which was within walking distance of the farm. It was a nice day and the kids seemed to enjoy it. Tuesday, Chuy and I went to Cazuca again to work with the kids there. Wednesday and Thursday were work days around the farm and today Chuy and I went to Cazuca again. Tomorrow we have the Jungla.
You can find some pictures, including pictures of the time we had at the river, at this link:

https://1drv.ms/f/s!ArvNj6ImbMIfhE8-tgfQG1OtGzdN

Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Oct. 8th and 9th

Last Saturday, I got to experience a kids' outreach that this ministry does every other Saturday. It's called La Jungla (The Jungle). In a neighborhood called Santa Fe, the ministry has a building which they open up to the kids to come and eat breakfast, play games, do crafts, and then hear a Bible message.

When we got there, Steve was explaining to me how this particular neighborhood was known for its witchcraft and drug dealers. As bad as it currently is, he was telling me it was even worse in the past. We then entered the building and started setting it up and getting ready for the kids to arrive. The walls were painted with animals from the jungle. Their was a little eating place in the back on one side and a playhouse on the other side. In the front was a stage. On the stage, you could pull off some boards which uncovered a little pool area which was filled with little balls (the type you'd find in a ball playpen). In the pool area was also a slide which we pulled out and set up so that the kids could slide down and land in the pool of balls. Upstairs was a place where they could do crafts, a shaky bridge they could run across, and a pole they could slide down to get back on the first floor.

When the kids finally started coming, I was put in charge of the slide and ball pen to make sure that the kids only went one at a time, feet first, etc. After the kids ate and played, we all cleaned up and sang some songs and Chuy gave a Bible message on Jonah. Then it was time for them to leave and a second group of kids came. While the first group was mainly younger kids, this second group was mainly older ones. We did the same routine with them – they came and ate, played and did crafts, sang a worship song, and then had a Bible message. It was a great experience and the kids definitely had fun.

On Sunday, I got to go with some of the kids and house parents from the farm to the kids' parents' visitation. The second Sunday of every month, the kids are taken to the “Luz de Vida” school. (This building belongs to the ministry and is used on Tuesdays and Thursdays where a handful of kids come for extra help after school.) This Sunday, though, it was the meeting place where the kids eagerly awaited the arrival of their parents so they could spend an hour or so with them. It was nice to see how excited the kids were when their parents and/or grandparents arrived. They would sit down and talk with their parents, some of them getting little gifts or goodies from their parents. The last half hour, the parents attended a workshop and then the kids said bye to their parents before leaving. Their were lots of pictures taken before we left. While some of the kids only see their parents this second Sunday of each month, some of the kids visit their parents or grandparents weekly or every other week. Unfortunately, though, on the flip side, there are one or two kids who didn't come with us this Sunday because their parents are completely out of their lives.

Please keep these kids in your prayers. I know how special kids are to Jesus and these kids are no exception.

I have also posted some more pictures, including pictures from last Saturday in La Jungla. I've had some feedback that the link I have for the pictures isn't working. So if you can't get to the pictures from the link at the top right of this blog, try using this link:

 https://1drv.ms/f/s!ArvNj6ImbMIfhCFZOR4qbTewZeAI

Monday, October 3, 2016

Update: September 24 - Oct 3



I've been in Colombia a little over a week now. Here's a little bit of what I've been doing here in Colombia so far:

So I arrived in Bogota, Colombia late Saturday night and was picked up by Alex, a young man that serves in the ministry here at Bogota. Sunday morning, I went to church with Steve (He and his wife Evie head up the Formando Vidas ministry). After church, I was invited over to Alex's place and got to meet some of the older teenagers / young men that live with him. He has about five or so youths that live with him – sort of like a mentoring program from my impressions. We talked, ate lunch, and had a good time.

Although I spent the first couple of nights in Bogota in the ministry house which they used to house guests, on Monday I went with Steve and Evie to the outskirts of Bogota where they have three homes and a cabin. I'm going to be staying in the cabin with a young man named Chuy who's 21. (His name's pronounced like the English word chewy.) He's from Venezuela and knows some English. Altogether, out of the three homes that they have here on their property they take care of about nine kids at the moment. I got to meet some of the other volunteers and staff here on the “farm” (which is how they often refer to the land here that has the three houses and the cabin). That afternoon, I helped Peter with some work around the farm. Peter is the same age as me and is bilingual. He grew up in Formando Vidas since he was very young.


On Tuesday, Chuy and I went to Cazuca which is an hour or so from Bogota. In Cazuca is a woman named Mary who moved to Colombia from Australia and has been with the ministry for eleven years. Since 2007, she has been working with the kids and families in the neighborhood of Cazuca. In the morning on Tuesdays, Chuy runs a soccer program for some of the older boys. In the afternoons, there's a kids' club that Mary runs in her house. From 2:00 – 3:00 the younger children can come and play with games and toys in a playroom which is the first floor of her house. (She lives up on the second.) Then, from 3:00 – 4:00 it's the older kids' turn. The clubs meet every Tuesday, Friday, and Saturday. Fridays are similar to Tuesday with the exception that the kids in the soccer program come to Mary's house to play instead of having the soccer program. On Saturdays, it's a time for Bible study and teaching the kids about Jesus. Mary was telling me how her vision was to have a time to build relationships with the kids (which we do as we play and interact with them on Tuesdays and Fridays) and then go further by giving them God's Word and helping them learn more about Jesus. Altogether, it was a long day, but a good day.

Wednesday and Thursday Chuy, Leidy, and I (Leidy is one of the older girls that lives here), did some work around the farm. Friday and Saturday, I went with Chuy again to Cazuca to work with the kids. On Saturday morning, the soccer group came to Mary's house to have a Bible lesson and then we all went outside to the soccer court so the kids could practice some soccer drills and then play a game of soccer. After the soccer group, we helped with a group of little kids that came to Mary's house. We sang songs and talked about how the Holy Spirit is the one who gives us joy in our hearts. The kids then colored a heart as a craft to go along with the lesson.

On Sunday, I went with a couple of the families on the farm to a church in town that they attend called La Calera. Today (Monday) we went into town for a meeting. Every Monday, everyone in the different ministries of Formando Vidas get together and have a meeting. We sang worship songs (in both English and Spanish since many staff are bilingual and a few only speak either Spanish or English). We had a sermon from a pastor who was visiting from Venezuela and then we had a time of prayer.

Thank you to all of you who are praying for me and for the work God's doing here. Please keep it up. I have also uploaded a few pictures. To see them click on the link at the top right of this blog.

Friday, September 9, 2016

A Summer of Waiting

Psalm 25:3a “Indeed, no one who waits on you will be ashamed. ”

This was just one of the promises in God's Word I had been holding onto this past summer. As many of you know, my plans to work at a Christian school in Mexico City fell through. It would have been the school's first year, but due to the fact that they were not able to get the zoning paperwork from the people who own the property, the Mexican government would not allow them to start the school.

I found this out the end of June with a mix of emotions. Of course I was disappointed with realizing that there was a chance that I wouldn't be going to Mexico if the school didn't get the paperwork in the next few weeks. I was also excited, though – excited because I was hoping that God was shutting this door to open up a door to an opportunity even better. Although I've had much experience teaching and even went to school for a degree as an elementary teacher, my heart has always been to help orphans and street kids. Deep in my heart, I was looking forward to teaching in Mexico, but I also saw it as possibly a way God wanted to get me to Mexico City where I knew there were street kids. I figured that perhaps I could work with the street kids when I wasn't teaching. The problem with that was that after teaching full time, it wouldn't leave me with too much time or energy to work with the street kids. As I saw this door slowly closing, I was hopeful that perhaps this was God's way of bringing me to a different ministry that focused more on street kids and orphans.

However, in addition to the mix emotions of disappointment and excitement at hearing the news that the school in Mexico City might not be starting, there was yet another feeling – confusion. What was I supposed to do? At this time, things weren't definite; and it sounded like there was still a possibility that the property owners would provide the documentation in time and the school could start. I figured I would start looking for other opportunities – but this time, I would target Christian organizations that work with street kids.

I narrowed my search to Mexico City and Bogota, Colombia as both those cities seem to have a large population of street kids as well as neither seems too humid for Latin American cities (since I knew I don't do too well in hot, humid weather). There were three organizations that I found online and contacted via email. A lot of waiting was involved and it got very discouraging. For one of the places, I was told that the person I needed to speak to was out on sick leave until the beginning of August. So, I waited a month for the right person to talk to only to find out after the month of waiting that it wasn't the right person after all. I had contacted the UK branch and I had to go through the United States branch of the agency. Of course, I was discouraged and confused as to why God would have me wait so long just to find out I was waiting for the wrong person. Fortunately, once I got in contact with the US branch, it didn't take long to get an answer. Unfortunately, however, that answer was that the US branch wasn't taking volunteers for Colombia or Mexico at that time.

So there it was. Over a month of the summer had gone by, it was the beginning of August, and out of the three agencies I had contacted, one wasn't taking volunteers, one I got to talk with the director but afterward felt that God wasn't calling me to that particular ministry (although it was a great ministry), and the other I just lost contact with – I was emailing the secretary back and forth when she said she happened to be going to Colombia in a few days and would pass on my inquiry to the directors there and get back to me the next week, but I never heard from her since.

So with one month before school starting, I thought maybe I should broaden my search and look for teaching jobs here at home. Maybe God was calling me to stay. That was when I found online yet another agency in Bogota, Colombia – one that I had seen many times in my online Google searches, and even checked out their ministry, but never felt led to apply to – that is until now. For some reason, as I looked at the description of the ministry again and all that they do with street kids and other underprivileged children, I realized it was exactly what I was looking for. They have a children's home (with nine kids), they have a school for kids that struggle in regular classes, and they do outreaches and clubs for street kids. I questioned myself as to why I didn't apply before and kept assuming this wasn't the place for me – especially when the ministry was often the first three or four results in the google searches.

Anyway, with renewed excitement, I quickly got in all my application materials. It seemed like a great place, and the secretary was a huge help and replied to all my emails quickly. With it already being August and having already “wasted” over a month of summer searching, I was eager to get an answer, which is why when I spent a whole week thinking I had all my application materials in and that I was spending that week waiting for the leadership board to look over them, I was devastated to find out at the end of the week that they were the ones waiting. The materials never got sent to the leadership board for approval because they were still waiting for a reference that I thought was already sent but evidently got lost in cyberspace. Anyway, that problem was quickly fixed and then it was on to more waiting. It was said that it would take about one or two weeks to get an answer back. Although I didn't hear anything the first week, I was told that I would probably hear a reply toward the end of the next.

It was Wednesday night of the second week and I still didn't hear back. It was now September and many schools already started. I began wondering and praying to God how long do I wait? If the process of waiting goes any longer, when do I settle down here and get a job substitute teaching or something? That was the other thing – with school already starting, the best teaching job I could hope for if I did stay was an on-call substitute teacher like I had done before. It was these past couple of weeks when Psalm 25:3 often came to my mind and I struggled with believing the promise. To help my faith, God brought to my mind other times when He came through for me – one of them two years ago when school had just started and I was expecting to just be an on-call substitute teacher for the school year when I got a phone call out of the blue from an assistant principal for a full time tutoring position which I never even applied for! It was that story and other “stones of remembrance” like it that God brought to my mind as school already began and I was still waiting.

Finally, Thursday night, I got a call from the director of the agency saying that my application had been approved. The summer had been long, full of waiting and disappointment as doors were closed one after the other. But, though there were definitely times when I struggled with seeking God's direction and waiting in faith, and though I felt like a broken record repeatedly telling people who have been praying for me that I'm still waiting, God has brought me through this summer and trial of waiting and I'm excited to see what He has for me in this next chapter of my life. It may have been a long summer, but at the end of it all, I have one more “stone of remembrance” to add to my pile.

I also wanted to thank all of you who have been thinking about me and lifting me up in your prayers as I know that many of you have faithfully been praying for me this summer. I'm excited to share this upcoming journey with you all and hope that this past experience, as well as my future experiences in Colombia, will be a blessing as I continue to share them with all you back home. Also, if you would like to check out where I will be going, the place is called Formando Vidas (which is a branch under Youth With A Mission - YWAM) and here's the url to their site: colombiastreetkids.org .

Saturday, March 26, 2016

Preparing for Mexico City

Hello everyone,

I'm going to be moving to Mexico City in a few months as a fourth / fifth grade teacher at a new Christian school there. The school's name is BridgeWay North American School and is a ministry of Teach Beyond.

I won't be moving until early August, but I figured now would be aa good a time as any to revive this blog for those of you who would like to be kept updated on my life in Mexico. I know God is going to do great things and I'm very excited for the future.

Please keep me in your prayers as I will be preparing to leave for Mexico City these upcoming months.