Thursday, September 13, 2007

Scholarship Program Update

September 1, 2007

2007 SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS

Eagle Wings Bilingual School

Joel Méndez




Andrea Granados


Katty Granados



J
avier Granados


Escuela de Belleza Maradiaga

Bertha Pérez

Keidi Méndez





Instituto Cristiano Renacer
Erlin Ortiz

Centro de Capacitación San Juan Bosco
Ángela Sierra

Living Water Bilingual Academy
Gaby Ordóñez
Gabriela Martínez

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Pit Partners

Or, The Scoop on Septic

August 24, 2007

Deuteronomy 23:13 As part of your equipment have something to dig with, and when you relieve yourself, dig a hole and cover up your excrement.

Matthew 9:35 Jesus was going through all the cities and villages, teaching in their synagogues and announcing the good news of the kingdom, and healing every kind of disease and every kind of sickness.

Parasitic and diarrheal diseases are endemic in Honduras. The so-called potable water supply is untreated; sanitation substandard or absent. Poor people cannot afford bottled water, chemical disinfectants or extra firewood to boil drinking water.

Our pastors live in poor squatter communities on the sides of the mountains ringing Tegucigalpa, formed when people move in from rural areas and build shacks on unused land on the edges of the city.

These are not planned developments, though some of them have been in existence for more than 20 years, and through grass-roots community organizations have petitioned the government for community services. As a result, they have electricity and receive water twice a week; open drainage ditches have also been constructed. However there is no sanitation. The people use simple outhouses with a hole in the ground. It is not unusual for one outhouse to serve a pastor’s family of 10-12 persons as well as those attending four or more weekly church services. These latrines leach into and contaminate the soil. They also fill with water runoff during heavy rains and overflow into the streets and drainage ditches.

Septic Pit Pilot Project

In 2005, Doctor Rafael Maradiaga, with Pastor Elías Ramírez, conceived the idea to construct a septic field on the latter’s property. The pastor, with his 8 year old son, dug two large pits by hand, and we partnered with him by providing bricks, sand and gravel to construct the settling tank and leaching field. He also constructed a simple curtained outdoor shed to house the toilet. God multiplied the resources by inspiring a church member to haul the excess dirt away, and by providing a donated used toilet.

Pastor Ramírez and his family now have a bucket-flushable toilet with adequate waste treatment. They and their neighbors have a lower risk of diarrheal and parasitic diseases. He has planted a garden over the leaching field.

Seeing this, the community nurse constructed a septic field at her own expense (dug by the pastor!) Having a decent toilet has had an unanticipated secondary result: it has given her the confidence to start a micro-business in her home.

Three more pastors have begun digging septic fields for their homes and/or churches.

We hope to expand this project, as God provides resources, to other evangelical pastors in Colonia Villa Nueva (there are more than 50!) As God-placed leaders in their communities, their example, encouragement and help will inspire others to follow suit, with an expanding reduction in contamination and improvement in health.


PART ONE

THE PROBLEM

Typical outhouse serves family and church

THE PLAN



THE PLAYERS

Pastor Elías in 2006 with wife Melba, Eric and Nimer. She was expecting #3.

THE PIT

Interior structure of leaching field




THE PILE
Excess dirt to be carted away by hand.
One shovelful was enough for me!

PART 2

THE PLAYERS

2007 Baby Elisabeth has made her appearance. Eric is at school.



THE PIT

The settling tank is smaller and simpler than the leaching field.

THE PRODUCT

The throne

Slab over settling tank

Garden planted over leaching field




Jubilee

A story of the Kingdom in two chapters

August 15, 2007

Chapter 1

When you happen on someone who's in trouble or needs help among your people…don't look the other way pretending you don't see him. Don't keep a tight grip on your purse. No. Look at him, open your purse, lend whatever and as much as he needs. Don't count the cost… Deuteronomy 15:7-11

If one of you says to him, "Go, I wish you well; keep warm and well fed," but does nothing about his physical needs, what good is it? James 2:16

In 2006 we received a donation of $1000 that was designated as “seed money” – with no stipulations on how it was to be used. It occurred to me that seeds are supposed to grow. We could have used the money on many worthy projects, but then it would have been gone.

One of our goals for our pastors is livelihood sustainability. They do not receive enough in tithes and offerings to live on, and most work as semi-skilled laborers, which is seasonal. So there is often a struggle to make ends meet.

With this in mind, we used half of the seed money to initiate a loan program for micro-businesses. I gathered the pastors’ wives and had a chat with them about how they managed money. I wanted to make sure they had the attitudes and habits that would allow them to experience success with the loans.

Our first micro-enterprise loans:

Melba López de Ramírez - $25 to start a tortilla-making business

Maria Lourdes Pérez de Sierra - $50 to sell tamales in the market on weekends

Miriam Flores de Mendoza - $50 to purchase used clothing for resale

Familia Mendoza Flores

Chapter 2

At the end of every seventh year, cancel all debts… Deuteronomy 15:1

"The Spirit of the Lord is on me,
because he has anointed me
to announce good news to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners
and recovery of sight for the blind,
to release the oppressed,
to declare the year of the Lord's favor."

Luke 4:18-19

After my return to Honduras in 2006, my relationship with Rafael and Patricia moved to a new level. My returning as promised signaled to all of us that this was going to be a long-term thing. I had known they were struggling financially, but now I was led to ask, and they were willing to admit, that they were under a burden of debt. After praying, I loaned them 97,000 lempiras at 13% (it was a premature withdrawal from my IRA) for 10 years to pay off a business loan that they had been in default on since Rafael’s stroke in 2001. The interest and penalties had mounted up alarmingly:

Dr. Rafael Maradiaga’s business loan

Amount paid off in 2007 (L. 82,050) $4342

Amount previously paid by Rafael (L. 50,000) $2646

Total paid (L.132,050) $6988

Original loan amount (L. 75,000) $3969

Nominal Interest rate 23%

Actual interest rate paid 76%

This was a loan from a major bank, not a loan shark!

Remembering how God had blessed me with years of a good salary, and since I quit work, with much generosity from friends and family, I felt that I could do no less than pass on that blessing and generosity to the Maradiagas. The absolute amount was relatively small to me, but it was huge to them.

Thus began a series of bank (mis)adventures. Getting the exact amount due, much less paying it, was no easy matter, involving many trips and many lines and no small amount of rudeness from bank employees. Who would think it would be so hard to give money to a bank? It was clear that the Powers were not happy about letting anyone get out of slavery. But finally, after some months, the bank was paid and the two cosigners reimbursed and freed from garnishment of their wages.

At first I just viewed it as the right thing to do, and as something I wanted to do, that is, help a friend. But then I realized there was more to it. We had participated in the defeat of the powers and principalities of this world. We had enacted the Kingdom of God. Beloved children of God had been freed from slavery to debt. Heaven had broken right into the middle of this fallen world, and the year of God’s favor had been declared.

We had already started the loan fund for micro-enterprises, with the goal of promoting livelihood sustainability. Now I began to wonder, if Dr. Rafael Maradiaga had such a problem with debt, what about the pastors? And their debts would certainly not be to banks, so to whom would they be? Why, loan sharks of course. And if a bank could legally charge 23%, I hated to think what the loan shark would be charging. (20% per month, I found out later, and also that payment must be made daily!)

So what good would a micro-business be for livelihood sustainability if the profits went to a loan shark?? We checked it out with 5 pastors, and four of them were in debt. (Pastor Elías credits his lack of debt to the fact that he doesn’t work a paying job and so doesn’t kid himself that he can pay back a loan). So we gave each of the four a debt relief loan - $50 to $100 each, for debts like the electric bill or emergency repairs to a truck used for work. We made them cosigners for each others’ loans.

Epilogue

The loan fund is set up as a cooperative. The terms are the same for all loans – 12 monthly payments of 10% of the amount loaned, resulting in a total paid back of 120%, of which the first 10% is a tithe to the ministry and the other 10% is savings for the borrower-investor. After paying off the first loan, they are eligible for another, larger one; having demonstrated their reliability and the fund having grown.

There have been unexpected side benefits – apart from debt relief and improvement in livelihood sustainability, it makes them feel really good to square their shoulders and walk into the bank to make their monthly payments (of $5 to $10.) They have more self-respect.

The loan cooperative began with $500 capital, and which is now close to $700 due to interest payments. To date, we have made 21 loans to 12 families (8 pastors, 4 church members), ranging from $25 to $200. As the recipients pay off each small loan, they are eligible for another, larger one. The Sierra family is now on its 4th loan; having paid off two micro-enterprise loans, they now have a 3rd micro-enterprise loan and a debt relief loan. Six loans have been paid off and one ($50) was written off.

Sunday, September 9, 2007

Divine Appointments Part 2

August 10, 2007

I rejoined the SonLight Power team in Choluteca on Tuesday, July 24, and took Bertha and Joel with me, because Allen was anxious for Joel to see what he does. The teams had headed out to the site before we arrived because it was so remote. My guide from Choluteca had never been there, but no problem. Someone who had been there printed off a satellite photo from Google Earth and marked the route. As we lurched over truly terrible dirt roads we checked in frequently by cellphone to verify that we we on the right track (literally). Sometimes the contrast here is almost too much to take!

The installations went very smoothly and Allen had plenty of time to share with children the reason why he does this: so they can have the Light of the world as well as electric lights.

The guys even had time to paint my apartment on Thursday. We were also able to visit one of the pastors I work with so they could see with their own eyes how God is working here.

In a final flourish of divine power, a member of Meilyn's church offered to arrange a meeting for Allen with the Honduran Minister of Education. None of us have any contacts that high in the government! It went very well and could lead to a partnership that would dramatically expand the reach of the solar power ministry.

The team flew out on Friday, July 27 and I spent a week washing sheets :-)

But the answers to my prayer for visitors keep coming - I was at the Marriott Hotel here in Tegucigalpa yesterday when I looked up and saw my former boss from Urgent Care in Cincinnati sitting across the restaurant! He had just finished a medical brigade and was heading out the next day. I was able to take him on a short tour of our ministry and show him how God is working here in Honduras. He said he had meant to email me about his trip, but forgot in the rush of preparation. Obviously, human forgetting has no effect on divine appointments!



Saturday, September 8, 2007

Divine Appointments

Or, "If You Put Sheets on It, They Will Come"

July 21, 2007

Long ago, in a galaxy far, far away...oops, I mean 2 or three weeks ago in remote Choluteca, a Honduran pastor spoke a prophetic word to the poor peasants his church works with, "Mission teams are coming, and you need to be ready." He had never heard of me or my church.

Meanwhile, back in Tegucigalpa, I had been praying for someone, anyone to visit me. I have invited a zillion people from my church, so many I have a reputation, and when I returned in March and saw the spare bedrooms in the apartment Rafael rented for me I immediately went out and bought bunkbeds in order to be ready for houseguests.

I thought the fulfillment of my prayer was a visit from an American friend who was transferred from Honduras to Spain two years ago. She arrived Tuesday and was due to leave on Friday. However, this was only a 'down payment'; while I was on my way to the airport, I got a call on my cellphone. Allen Rainey wanted to know if I could house a mission team from my home church consisting of 10 men. Well, sure! On Friday? Piece of cake!

This SonLight Power team was scheduled to go to Guatemala to do solar power installations, but there was a lynching of a suspected child-trafficker; they doused him with gasoline and burned him. Missionaries Virgil and Dara Stoltzfus told the team not to come (Dara emailed an eyewitness report AND PHOTOS.) (Please pray for the people in Guatemala.)

Allen talked to his group (four father/teenage son teams) and they all felt called to go ahead, even with airline change fees of more than $300 per person. But then Allen forwarded the email and pictures to Continental Airlines, and Continental agreed to change the tickets AT NO CHARGE (that is the most miraculous part of the whole thing.)

Meanwhile, Allen was already contacting Meilyn Chan and her husband, Mauricio Moncada, who was going to translate for the team. The team had a place to stay, with me, but they needed a project and the Moncada-Chans had already been scouting for future trips. Meilyn cast about in her mind to think who might have a project for them on short notice, and she thought of her cousin Tita, the wife of a pastor in Choluteca. She called her cousin's cellphone.

Meilyn: I need to talk to you.

Cousin Tita: Great, I'm in Tegucigalpa right now; I'll be over in half an hour.

(Tita arrives.)

Meilyn: I have ten men coming on Friday and they need 2 churches or schools in which to install solar power.

Tita: No problem, we have several that are off the grid.

Meilyn: They need a place to stay.

Tita: No problem, one of the church members owns a hotel in Choluteca.

Meilyn: What about feeding them?

Tita: No problem, one of the church members owns a restaurant.

Meilyn: How will they get there and get around?

Tita: No problem, one of the church members owns a minibus and can bring them from Tegucigalpa, and we have enough members with SUVs to take them out to the sites.

!!!

Allen usually ships the equipment ahead of the team, but had been unable to do so this time, so he had paid more money and gotten folding solar panels that would fit in the luggage. Therefore the equipment was not stuck in Guatemala; all they lacked were poles to mount the panels and storage batteries. I had already scouted out a solar company in Teguz for Allen, so Meilyn bought the batteries and poles on Friday afternoon, and on Saturday we headed down to hot, hot Choluteca, where it is so hot "even the devil strips down to his undershirt."

When I left them they were working on the equipment in the driveway. Co-leader Lance Brown was teasing Allen, "What is it you do with your time? It only took two days to arrange this mission trip, so obviously you've been leading us on!"

So not only did I get "someone, anyone" from my church to visit me, I got ten men! In the natural course of events, I expected to have to wait until the 2008 mission team season, but God swept aside all obstacles in a breathtaking manner and dropped them in my lap. I'm going to get more bunkbeds because I think the floodgates of visitors have now been opened!

Friday, September 7, 2007

Update for Pastor Sponsors

June 15, 2007

We have learned quite a lot since Pastor Rafael began the project in 2004. The vision to equip and encourage pastors has not changed, but the path has been rather long and winding!

The vision was for twelve, and we had twelve, but it appears that not all of those will be part of the final group. Of the original group, Angel Argueta left the ministry and Pastor Ambrosio and Pastor Izaguirre no longer participate. Pastors Dórmez, Castejon, Herrera, Diaz , and Andino still attend the video teaching sessions. We took in several new pastors:Gladis Gutiérrez, Mario Silva and Ana Julia Reyes, but the latter two have since dropped out. Those who are active and involved with us are Gladis, Elías Ramirez, and Francisco Sierra. This is the core group in late 2006.

Missionary Pamela Hanson

After my 3 ½ months in the U.S. last winter for little Joel’s surgery, I am thrilled to be back in Honduras. Here I am visiting the farm of an Educatodos student.

For me, 2005-2006 was a time of testing if it was really God’s call to be here, but now I am ready to put down roots. Rafael and Patricia and I are looking for a house to buy together that would have a mother-in-law apartment for me so we can live ‘juntos, pero no revueltos, (‘together, but not mixed up’) as Rafael says. Meanwhile I have an apartment a convenient five doors down from them.

I would say that up till now we have been ‘forming’ and ‘norming’, but lately we have done more ‘storming’ as we contemplate a long-term partnership and forge the strong partnership that will allow us to 'perform' as God desires. God has been faithful to give us discernment and I give thanks for the skills and tools I have learned through Equipping Ministries International, which allow me to recognize and weather the storms!

Pastor Rafael Maradiaga, Founder
Sponsors: Jim & Trish Fatheree
Springdale, Ohio Vineyard

Pastor Rafael is still a dynamo. While I was in the U.S. last winter, the Lord brought him the opportunity to start the Educatodos literacy program, which is in line with our core focus of teaching and discipleship. I sent $500 for materials, and he did all the work. This photo is of him administering an exam to the Sunday 7th grade equivalency class.

Patricia, being a licensed teacher, is the Director, and shares the facilitation of the evening classes after working her two day jobs. Rafael facilitates all the daytime and weekend classes.

Pastor Francisco Sierra
Sponsors: Ken & Debbie Iding
Springdale, Ohio Vineyard

Pastor Francisco has told me that when I first came, he asked me for money. Later, he repented and asked my forgiveness. This was news to me; I had not understood him either time!

He wanted the money for a car, but although as he says, he never dreamed he could do it, he now has a pick-up truck, which he recently used to help me move my furniture. What a pleasant irony, that Francisco had wanted me to help him with a car, but instead he ended up helping me with a car (and the strong backs of himself and his son!)

He is taking on more responsibility for facilitating the Monday night DVD teaching for pastors. This picture shows him praying for Abigail, translator for our 2006 healing seminar.

More importantly, he is coming up with ideas related to his nephew Joel, and Joel’s mother Bertha and her other three children. We have been encouraging him to take on a pastoral role with regard to them, as the children’s father is not involved and their situation is very difficult. I am eager to help them improve their economic position, but it has not been clear exactly how to do so. Pastor Francisco is a key intermediary for me, since he knows them and their situation and Bertha can speak more freely to him than to me.

We have wanted to see him exercise more leadership, and I’m thinking that doing so with Bertha and Joel will be the training ground he has been needing. God’s plan is always so perfect!

Pastor Elías Ramírez
Sponsors: Mike & Laura Cummings/Ken & Debbie Iding

Springdale, Ohio
Vineyard

Pastor Elías always is the first to jump on the bandwagon. As soon as the idea of a septic system was mentioned, he started digging the leaching pit by hand. He has started three other groups using the International School of Ministry DVDs, two of pastors and one of church members. When I said I wanted a garden, he was there with his hoe hilling up the dirt in the front yard into raised beds, and now we are enjoying a bumper crop of sweet, hot radishes. (The peppers and onions take longer.) If my shower needs fixing, or my water reservoir needs the mosquito larvicide, Elías takes care of it with a smile. When we offeredscholarships for pastors’ children, Elías said, my son is not really a scholar, but there is an extremely bright boy in the congregation whom I would like to see receive the scholarship,and now young Erlin Ortiz is in his second year at a private Christian high school. Here he's constructing the settling tank for the septic system, the second and smaller of the two pits that he dug by hand.

Pastor Elías is in 5th grade in Educatodos, faithfully riding his bike down the mountain to class here every weekday. Mike and Laura sponsored a church wedding for him and his wife in 2005 (they were already legally married), and in 2006 they had a baby girl, their third child.

Pastora Gladis Gutiérrez
Sponsors: Georgia & Alan Kightlinger
Immanuel Presbyterian Church, Clifton

Pastora Gladis is a hardworking wife and mother with a servant heart who heard about us last year from Pastor Elías, who lives a bit below her on the mountain. She was in a difficult situation and praying fervently for help at the time.

Her church was started by two ladies from the Baptist mission who had a heart to evangelize in the neighborhood of Los Pinos. They started a church, but the (male) pastors who came never stayed. In between pastors, she would try to keep things going, with the blessing of the members. However, the Baptist mission would not recognize her as pastor because she is a woman. (None of our other pastorsget much interest or involvement from their [tiny/poor] denominations, but at least they are recognized as pastors!)

It was at this point that Pastora Gladis heard about our ministry and started coming to the teaching sessions, and she has stuck to us ever since. The Lord finally resolved her irregular position by causing the Baptists to allow her church to become independent of the mission. It is now a daughter church of Ministerio Cristiano Jehová Rafah, which is the legal name of our ministry in Honduras. The two founding ladies (who do not live in the neighborhood) were led of God to give their blessing and withdraw, leaving the leadership in the hands of Pastora Gladis and the church leadership. Here she is in a lighthearted moment with Pastor Mario Silva.

Pastor Oscar Dórmez
Sponsors: Jim & Trish Fatheree

Springdale Vineyard

We will never forget the 2000 steps that we had to climb to get to Pastor Dórmez’ house! There were only two chairs, so he stood while we sat. Pastor Dórmez had only been a Christian for six months when the pastor of the church left and he was asked to take over. He works long hours for low pay but has persevered with the classes and now is in his fourth semester. We would like to see more of him but his current situation makes that difficult.

With Oscar and his wife outside their house in 2005

Pastor Omar Mendoza
Sponsors: Jeff & Roseann Walker
Springdale, Ohio Vineyard

Pastor Omar pastors a Nazarene church The Nazarene denomination has a few more resources and so Omar has a decent cement-block church and house. However, like the other pastors he receives no financial support and little other involvement from the denomination. His oldest daughter, Heidy, is very intelligent and motivated and received a scholarship from us for the last two years of high school. She then went to work watching kids while studying accounting in the university, but when Rafael heard that he found her a job at a local company. It is pleasure to see her use her abilities and gain valuable experience as well as a better income.

Omar, far right, at the start of last year’s servant evangelism activity

Pastor Miguel Medina
Sponsors: Ken & Debbie Iding
Springdale, Ohio Vineyard

Pastor Miguel and his wife Norma are both at the first grade level in Educatodos. Because of this, they were able to sign their names instead of just making an 'X' when they stood up at the wedding of Valerio Garcia and Mirna Sanchez in April.

Pastor Mario Silva
Sponsors: Ken & Debbie Iding
Springdale Vineyard

Pastor Mario is an ex-gang member and still has his gang tattoo. One night while high after sniffing glue he had a dream in which he saw a bright light. When he woke up, he knew he had to go to church. He met with the Pastora every day but was reluctant to accept Christ because of his sinful state (!) His father, with whom he was not on very good terms, noticed that he was no longer staying out at night and asked what was going on. Mario told him, and his father said, “If you accept Christ, I will too.” So they did, and now they pastor together!

Mario says that becoming a Christian is about the only way to get out of a gang alive. However, you must be fervent because the gang watches you and will kill you if you are not devoted to your new Master.

Mario has left the group because he has been taught that believers should not be unequally yoked with unbelievers, and part of our ministry is sponsoring Christian common-law spouses with children to get married. We are willing to pay the $30 for the marriage license even if one spouse (usually the husband) has not accepted Christ, following 1 Corinthians 12:12-14:

To the rest I say this (I, not the Lord): If any brother has a wife who is not a believer and she is willing to live with him, he must not divorce her. And if a woman has a husband who is not a believer and he is willing to live with her, she must not divorce him. For the unbelieving husband has been sanctified through his wife, and the unbelieving wife has been sanctified through her believing husband. Otherwise your children would be unclean, but as it is, they are holy.

If the unbeliever is willing to get married, we will help them. Legally there is recognition of common-law marriage in Honduras, but the believing spouses generally do not feel satisfied with that.

Pastora Ana Julia Reyes
Sponsor: Pamela Hanson
College Hill Presbyterian Church

Ana Julia also came to us through Pastor Elías. She lives rather far from where we work and has since dropped out.




Our Missionary in Burundi

May 11, 2007
Excerpts from a correspondence:

April 14 2007

Excerpts from the
blog of my niece Christine Buettgen, 23, short term missionary to Burundi.

…the past three weeks, five of the thirteen kids have been in the hospital with serious malaria, and both moms were sick with malaria themselves.

…I ended up staying 5 extra days to help be a mother of 8 African children… I wore the same clothes everyday, was cooking over coals to feed the kids and staff, washing dishes and clothes by hand, and all the while trying to love on, discipline and raise these orphans. We made regular trips to the hospital to bring food and encouragement to the sick ones, and you honestly wouldn't believe the conditions of this hospital.

Earlier on in the week five year old Blaise fell and cut his head, and I [took] him to the hospital …[where he] received four stitches without any anesthesia, because it wasn't available, and the way that [he] looked at me…

I saw conditions that would be unacceptable even in the poorest hospitals in the States… an old man being carried by four nurses because they don't have a single wheelchair in the entire hospital…

…the lack of doctors on staff can be credited to a generation of educated people lost to war and disease…

…it becomes an awfully inescapable reality when you live it, when you see it with your own eyes…There shouldn't be such an enormous gap between the way people live in America and the way people struggle to survive in Africa.

Where you live should not decide whether you live or whether you die…I wonder how many children, and adults for that matter, lose their lives because they simply live out of reach of any medical treatment?

Imana iguhezagire. God bless you all.

Christine

April 19, 2007
Email excerpt

Dear Christine,

…your mom sent me your latest post and I read it to Pastor Rafael and he said, “let’s send some local anesthetic and malaria medicine to her in Burundi” and I said, “That is from God” so on Sunday we’ll take an offering.

Just tell me where to send the medicine or the money!

Love

Aunt P

April 20, 2007
Email excerpt from Cindy Buettgen, my sister and Christine’s mother

…What a blessing, praise God for you and for Pastor Rafael. No wonder you want to work with him. I am truly humbled by his generosity and God’s grace.

Thank you for your words of encouragement re: [Christine’s safety.] I am praying for the devil of negativity to be gone!!!!

Love you,

[Cindy]

April 23, 2007
Email from Christine

Aunt Pam, you are an enormous blessing to me! When I read your email, I cried right here in the internet cafe. God is truly bringing nations together and is using the humble and poor of this world to shame the rich...thank you for supporting me in so many ways.

I am sharing in a small group in Bujumbura tonight and I will use the example of your church, being the hands of God even when they don’t have much to give, really incredible.

I think it would be best if your church could make a monetary contribution that we could set aside for medical needs of the children. You could send a check to my mom and she can put it in my account and I can transfer it to the YFC orphanage account here in Bujumbura. Is that okay with you?

Please keep me updated on how I can be praying for you and your people in Honduras. How are Joel and Bertha? I come home in a little over a month, hopefully we can reconnect before we both leave the country again.

Blessings on you Aunt Pamela!

Imana Iguhezagire,

Christine

May 11, 2007
Email
cc: Cindy Buettgen

Dear Christine,

We are all doing well. I saw Bertha today and she and Joel are fine. We can use prayer for the Lord to bring more workers for the harvest. Our projects are starting to take off and be more than we can handle by ourselves. We are praying for God to show us those he has appointed to partner with us – both in person and financially.

I just sent your mom $100 as the offering for Burundi from the churches of Honduras. I wanted you to get it before you leave there! I’m sure you are right that shipping actual medicine would be far too difficult.

We are so excited about the opportunity to partner in the ministry in Burundi. I translated your blog into Spanish and put it up on the wall along with maps and information in Spanish from Wikipedia. Several of our literacy students used Burundi for an assignment they had!

Pastor Rafael says with pride that you are our missionary in Burundi. We can’t wait to see what God is going to do through this connection, both in Honduras and in Burundi. I have been saying that my dream is to see missionaries sent out to other countries as a result of our work with these slum churches, but I didn’t think we’d begin sending support to a missionary so soon! God is so faithful – when we are aligned with his will, we don’t have to figure everything out. He will show us the steps!

So, from the churches of Ministerio Cristiano Jehová Rafah in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, grace and peace to you and to the brothers and sisters in Burundi. We praise God for you and pray that this gift may not only save people from malaria, but also be multiplied by God in ways that we can’t even imagine.

Your loving aunt,

Pamela