Wednesday, October 19, 2011

The kind of people God uses

There is no one that God can't use, from Pharaoh and Judas on up. Weak people like Peter, uncooperative people like Jonah. Old people like me (this does not include Sharon). Imperfect people. And, of course, he is continually refining us to make us more useful.

It looks like there will be 6 of us that God wants to make into a team in this town (still working with Raúl as well, 25 miles away): Pedro and Sandrine have moved from our place into an apartment in town, their first place of their own in 3 years of being married. Even though he doesn't like agricultural work, that seems to be what he has to do, at our project, being paid from church offerings. We appreciate that they are putting serving the Lord above other interests

On Saturday the 22nd Leo and Ivon will be moving here. Both of them have studied biology and are interested in an agricultural project that will glorify God. Their situation is complicated by the fact that their income comes from Ivon's job in Madrid, 3 hours away by bus. She is temporarily on sick leave with pregnancy complications.

This couple moved here from Colombia and found a church in their neighborhood pastored by our friends Bruce and Merly, who have been discipling them. They have taken whatever jobs were available and now hope to settle into long-term vocational ministry.

Both these ladies are expecting their first baby. This is going to be exciting. La Vera is a good place to start a family.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Why We Work

Extremadura has about a million inhabitants in over 300 towns. There are about 20 (non-Gypsy) Evangelical churches and about the same number (with greater membership) of Gypsy churches. Almost all the pastors of these 40 smallish churches are self-supporting. That is, except where there are missionary pastors, which comprise maybe 15% of the pastors.

We are known in our town as those Canadians who are trying to start a sustainable agricultural project and who talk about Jesus. Sharon and I are also known as English teachers and in some high schools I'm known as the guy who gives talks on sustainability. We don't use herbicide in our olive and fig orchards, for example.

Never have we had as many good friends among the unchurched as we do now. We invite people over and they invite us, and they share their struggles and goals. We accept the fact that their antagonism toward Christianity has built up over the years, (besides all of Spain's history, such as the Inquisition) and it will be a process for them to find their way to God. They need to see us as ordinary folks who deal with some of the same things that they deal with. For instance the drop in the price of figs this year. They also know that we have people in, that need help (See the 12 who have been with us). So that is Why We Work (our very own WWW. Gathering figs this morning, a job that I do mainly on my knees, gives me a chance to sing, along with co-workers Pedro and Leo, and also to review people's prayer needs. Sharon was cutting off suckers in the olive orchard. Join us in prayer that the gospel will spread, and that people's lives will be rescued and not wasted like when the fruit is not harvested.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Parenthesis

Besides the couple who is living with us, there is one other couple who would like to come and be part of the ministry here. They are being discipled by their pastor couple, good friends of ours in Madrid.

I have told these four that we should consider this a parenthetical period until we see whether we have people with a firm commitment and sufficient stability and ability to make the agricultural project work.

We thank God for three people who want to be baptized on Sunday August 28. We are especially praying for  protection for them, as they come from difficult backgrounds. Helping them to reach this place has been largely a responsibility of Sharon, who has made regular visits to the town where they live.

Sunday, July 31, 2011

12 who have been with us

    "A" was the only drug addict that I have knowingly allowed to live with us. There are hundreds of good Christian rehab centers in Spain from which he could have chosen, in what has been a major move of God. But my concern was for A's widowed mother, a member of our church in Madrid, who was hopelessly tied to her son's manipulation. I wanted to give her a break. He had been in and out of centers, and complained that his bad health (he had AIDS) would not allow him to go through withdrawal syndrome again. The only method in Christian rehab is cold turkey. He knew a doctor who could give him something non-addictive that would make it a lot smoother. I said, OK, come, if your mother and the church OK it, and if Sharon allows and if you get rid of your car. This last was the most difficult for him.

    He started out well. I remember how he enjoyed jumping off rocks in the mountain streams. He came completely clean (I had him tested weekly) and he was making friends in town and took on the project of showing evangelistic movies in the open air. His case worker was talking of a paid subsidized job in which he could work on our agricultural project after a few more months. He made a prediction which proved true: in a few months I'll be OK and then my pride will get the better of me again and I'll start to go downhill. What got the better of him was his refusal to take advice. We told him, quit trying to go back to your old girlfriend. She's afraid that you will fall again. Just adjust to life here in the country. Well, he went back to the city and his mother took him in again, and the girl-friend firmly refused to get back together. He forgot his cell-phone here, and Sharon counted 100 calls to her on one day. And "A" was as lost as before or worse. We have had no news of him since his mother's funeral some years ago.

    "B" was one of the better students at the Bible College where I taught. He married a girl from his church and they had a son, and she left him and took the boy. After some years he remarried, a Christian girl ("C") from another country who had a radio ministry. He had his own online ministry of promoting cell groups. They offered to spend a year here helping in the ministry. We let them use an apartment that we had rented. Some believers that we knew in Madrid were giving them monthly financial help. We introduced them to our friends and noticed that they would have people over and not include us. Over time we hardly saw these local people any more.

    Then it came time to go and visit our churches and families in America, and we figured that "B", a good preacher, would be capable of looking after the believers here. When we got back we were informed that I wouldn't be preaching any more. They had "decided" that "B" should do the pastoring. After that B & C didn't stick around very long, and we heard that they ended up with no involvement in any church.

    Adding everything up, it seems like these and other "helpers", although at some point may have encouraged us, did not bring any permanent benefit to the outreach.

    "D" was our friend from when we lived in Madrid, whom we had known shortly after he finished his treatment in a rehab center. We were able to help him through some struggles. Before we even moved out here, he took an interest in the outreach and rented an apartment in a nearby town, and helped others who were ministering here at the time. At one point he thought he might be helping here permanently. But eventually he got a job in Madrid, and got married. Every once in a while he and his friends come for a visit.

    "E", supposedly had come off drugs and his pastor in southern Spain sent him here to get away from all the bad influences in his home town. He had teenage children back home, who had told him he needed to make a break with his old connections. We liked him. He had this southern charm, he played the guitar and knew the songs from the church and made friends easily. His family were olive growers and of all the people who came here, he fit most easily in our farm project. We talked of the possibility of selling his property in the south and moving here with the hopes that he could win back his wife and family.

    But what was in the little backpack that he always wore? I should have arranged, like I had done with "A", for him to have a weekly drug test. His behavior eventually became erratic and we knew that if he was not being honest with us he would have to go. Later I heard that he said we weren't feeding him enough and that he didn't like Sharon's food. The only thing people ever say about Sharon's food is how good it is, and what a good hostess she is.

    "F" was a sailor from a North African country. His story was that his ship left ahead of schedule from a Spanish port, and he was stranded here. When he and his 2 friends "G" and "H" came here specifically for a Bible training program we began to focus on our Muslim friends in different towns around here. We had some good times together. Our morning Bible sessions were grounding them in the Scriptures. There were some bumps in the road. When we came to the story of Ishmael and "H" read that "he will be a wild man; his hand will be against every man, and every man's hand against him" (Genesis 16:12), he got so upset that we had to postpone studying for a while.

    All three of these men left for economic reasons. "F" figured we should hire him so he could get legal status in Spain. But that's not what we are here for. "G" was able to get a job in another part of Spain and eventually bring his family over. He became involved there in a local church and in evangelism. We are still in touch, and he appreciates the help he got. "H" also keeps in touch, and appears to be active in a church in another part of Spain. We remain in contact with immigrants from North Africa in towns around here, and pray that God's Spirit will move among them, and that an Arab-speaking church will develop.

    "I" with his friends crossed the deserts of Africa in a 4-year journey to make it to Europe. He was sent to us by a refugee agency. He became popular in town through participating in a soccer team and made friends with the mayor. He could have had a future here over time, but he wanted to see things move faster, and found his way to Switzerland, where I think he has the benefits of official refugee status. His faith seemed genuine, but sometimes secondary.

    "J" is an old friend of ours and of our daughters from when they were teenagers in Madrid. Abused as a young girl, she has struggled with alcoholism and lesbianism. She received a lot of help from YWAM (Youth with a Mission) over the years. Then, after a visit here, she decided that she liked our friends and wanted to stay. Our hopes were to work together closely in outreach to her kind of people in this area. But she has always had a problem adjusting to a group. Now she is working near here, and we see her occasionally.

    "K", who is Spanish with his wife "L" from Africa, feels a strong calling to evangelism and ministry in the church. They met in Africa where both were working with YWAM. But it turns out that he feels no calling to look after a garden. He says they made a mistake in coming here. He has always said he would like to return to Africa. She doesn't want to. He can't because they have clamped down on HIV positives. Because of his health and small disability pension and the economic crisis they have nowhere to go so they are still with us. She refuses to go back to living with his mother.

    Just before they knew that she was pregnant she was not feeling well, and he was going to have to take over her garden. At this point they had a major disagreement and he was doing the work unwillingly. I asked him why he let all the vegetables dry up. There was plenty of water and I had showed him how to set up the drip irrigation. He said, "Because I'm rebellious". I said, "I'll give you 2 out of 10 for the garden". He responded, "I should get a 0".

    Most of these 12 people shared in the farm responsibilities. I worked with them on a daily basis. You can imagine what is like to teach the same tasks repeatedly and then deal with things that were not done well. When I walk through the property I see one reminder after another of simply doing things differently from the way I showed them. Then there were the numerous confrontations when I tried to help them improve how they did things, for example, which tools to use for which jobs.

    Other people have also been with us, various immigrants from Latin America, who needed help and whose help we could use, in construction and agriculture. But none of these were candidates for an ongoing relationship, although they could have been.

Our decision to do things differently

After being part of teams that had begun 5 churches (Canillejas, Alcobendas (about 40,000 people when we went there, no Evangelical church), Navalmoral, Aluche, Fuenlabrada (60,000 with no church), our vision was progressing. Rather than concentrating on one town, we should work an area. Because of increasing anti-evangelical sentiment (largely fomented by negative TV reports on American megachurches) we should become known as good neighbors first, rather than jump in with an evangelistic campaign. Rather than a missionary pastor (in some places this still seems to be a temporary necessity, to hold back rivalry among church members), we should start groups that are simple enough to have local leadership whom we will train. 

Saturday, July 30, 2011

For our friends in Canada and the US

Hopefully this will be a means of being in touch, for those who are praying for David and Sharon in La Vera.