by jimmy | Feb 7, 2009 | buildingaboat, missions, Uncategorized |
Buenos dias amigos. Yo soy muy cansado. That means I am beat. We had a great day today and I am meeting many new folks. There are 19 people on this trip and we are really having a great time laughing and joking around. There are both men and women on this trip and we mixed up some serious concrete with the ladies today. I like to call them “las Chicas de Concreta”. We put concrete in a house for a family today and they were so much fun. We had two of the kids helping us today. a girl and a boy (5 and 6) it was great they were.shoveling concrete and just covered in concrete dust. We passed out a bunch of candy to kids all day long. Our hosts down here are a couple named Larry and Dr nancy they have a clinic and hospice for many people. There are a couple of guys in wheelchairs with CP and a little girl named Lupita also with CP. They are truly inspiring folks and really dedicated to their clinic Casa Bugambilla. The donations that the Harts made has almost doubled the size ofthe clinic and they are hoping to have room for 20 One of my favorite parts of today was a bit of time we spent with one of the guys that we work with down here named Roberto. He lives here and works with and for Larry. He took us to see his family and we had a fun time talking amd laughing with his kids. He has twins and little...
by Hampton | Feb 7, 2009 | buildingaboat, missions, Uncategorized |
Buenos dias amigos. Yo soy muy cansado. That means I am beat. We had a great day today and I am meeting many new folks. There are 19 people on this trip and we are really having a great time laughing and joking around. There are both men and women on this trip and we mixed up some serious concrete with the ladies today. I like to call them “las Chicas de Concreta”. We put concrete in a house for a family today and they were so much fun. We had two of the kids helping us today. a girl and a boy (5 and 6) it was great they were.shoveling concrete and just covered in concrete dust. We passed out a bunch of candy to kids all day long. Our hosts down here are a couple named Larry and Dr nancy they have a clinic and hospice for many people. There are a couple of guys in wheelchairs with CP and a little girl named Lupita also with CP. They are truly inspiring folks and really dedicated to their clinic Casa Bugambilla. The donations that the Harts made has almost doubled the size ofthe clinic and they are hoping to have room for 20 One of my favorite parts of today was a bit of time we spent with one of the guys that we work with down here named Roberto. He lives here and works with and for Larry. He took us to see his family and we had a fun time talking amd laughing with his kids. He has twins and little...
by jimmy | Feb 6, 2009 | buildingaboat, missions, Uncategorized |
Here’s Jim’s first note from the airport heading out to Mexico again. He is texting through transitions, like crossing over the border, letting me know they’re safe and all is well. He’s excited for another mission and excited to hear about his journey there. I’ll be updating the blog with his posts as he emails them out. Here’s his first note from yesterday: I am sitting in the airport about get on a flight headed to Harlingen to join up with the group that got me hooked on this mission work. I am excited to see these guys because I have not seen most of them in a year and lots of things have happened in my life and theirs since then. I have to be honest this trip has been different in that I am finding myself truly caught up in our world and where the future will take my family and I have not had time to reflect on the trip and focus. For example, every time I have come I asked the kids to donate a toy and this time it slipped my mind. I know it is a silly thing to be concerned with but some times I wish we were all required to take some quiet time and reflect on the lessons of life. Man pretty deep considering I am still in the airport. Take some time over the next few days to get quiet and just listen to that voice in your head. It is the truth inside.
This will be the first mission for the Custer Road church since they lost Matt Hart...
by Hampton | Feb 6, 2009 | buildingaboat, missions, Uncategorized |
Here’s Jim’s first note from the airport heading out to Mexico again. He is texting through transitions, like crossing over the border, letting me know they’re safe and all is well. He’s excited for another mission and excited to hear about his journey there. I’ll be updating the blog with his posts as he emails them out. Here’s his first note from yesterday: I am sitting in the airport about get on a flight headed to Harlingen to join up with the group that got me hooked on this mission work. I am excited to see these guys because I have not seen most of them in a year and lots of things have happened in my life and theirs since then. I have to be honest this trip has been different in that I am finding myself truly caught up in our world and where the future will take my family and I have not had time to reflect on the trip and focus. For example, every time I have come I asked the kids to donate a toy and this time it slipped my mind. I know it is a silly thing to be concerned with but some times I wish we were all required to take some quiet time and reflect on the lessons of life. Man pretty deep considering I am still in the airport. Take some time over the next few days to get quiet and just listen to that voice in your head. It is the truth inside.
This will be the first mission for the Custer Road church since they lost Matt Hart...
by jeannie | Jan 11, 2009 | buildingaboat, Uncategorized |
As I’m beginning another great book and I’m loving the insight of Mark Batterson, who talks about how we ought to be good stewards of our opportunities, it makes me reflect on how I view my own. He suggests we have the courage to chase God-sized dreams, and respond with action as we seek God’s will in our lives. Reminds me of John Burke in Soul Revolution talking about how we’ll never know, if we don’t GO. love it. and I love how God gives me the ability, energy and desire to keep going, striving, and having an experience rich life so I can better know who I am in Him. One thing I mention a lot to my YL group is how conforming in this world feels good for a moment, but it’s not where we ought to be necessarily and how many times feeling greatly at odds with how the world is and its messages, is actually when you’re on the right track. I thought Mark Batterson said it so much better though! He said… “The courage to swim against the current will get you where God wants you to go.” I think it’s great to think about what that current entails, and see it when it pulls us in. great book and I’m only on Chapter 2. If you’re interested you can check it out too. it’s a title you can’t possibly forget. In a Pit with a Lion on a Snowy...
by jeannie | Jan 11, 2009 | buildingaboat, Uncategorized |
As I’ve thought long about where I am in life, and try to see and soak in the world around me, I’m taken with the vast messages that cause me to find so much adoration in the human spirit. And so thankful for the God that gives us that ability to love, to smile, to be…human. Human alone is quite something, but with Him, all things are possible; all experiences can be rich, and I know this is true. As I enjoyed my lunch with Libby on Friday, thinking and talking to her about her class, and associated social issues that come up from time to time in 1st grade, I found another opportunity to laugh, see deep inside her heart and mind, and enjoy the amazing smiles and insight this little 7-year old brings to the table. As we sat, and talked, a friend whose father is severely impacted by LG disease sat with us. He was in a wheelchair, couldn’t lift his hands, and yet his amazing spirit and outpouring gratitude of being there in that moment with his daughter just practically spilled out on the table. I engaged, talked with them, and Libby too.We enjoyed the lunch and talked of favorite movies, foods we liked, and their teachers, but what hit me hardest was just the way she lit up, with her father there, the way the nurse that helped him eat was so gentle, and gracious, and nurturing, and how this is their “normal”. The way I saw how they could literally live the sweetness of life out and enjoy it, and be bold,...