The world may be small but it’s still 24 hours of travel from here in Florinapolis Brazil to Haiti.

20 Oct

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October 20, 2014 at 04:22PM

God’s gift before preaching in another language & culture this morning.

19 Oct

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Responding to the ebola crisis: From Haiti with Love http://t.co/jO1VO1ldYl

10 Oct

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October 10, 2014 at 03:24PM

From Haiti with Love

10 Oct

equipe

an excerpt from the prayer letter of Steve Spellman, our team leader for Haiti:

Mind if I relate a pretty cool story from our GlobalFingerprints team in Haiti?

No doubt you’ve heard of the Ebola outbreak in Africa, with the epicenter being in the country of Liberia. Liberia is also home to one of our GlobalFingerprints programs. Word reached our Haitian team of how foodstuffs were having difficulty making it into the capital of Liberia in recent days. With stocks at all-time lows, prices have also skyrocketed, making it more costly for our GlobalFingerprints team to purchase the needed food for the children there. But what could these Haitians do? After all, they live in a country poorer  than Liberia! Well, what they could do would be to start by donating over $600 from their Haitian “emergency fund” to help the Liberian children in the midst of their  emergency. One of our Haitian leaders then asked that his entire salary for October also be sent to Liberia to help in this need. Lastly, they asked permission to put the need before their local church. And last Sunday, in this country considered by many to be the poorest country in the world, church members gave over $300 to help the children of Liberia.

The only stipulation made was that it had to be known that this help was given… from Haiti with Love!

Proudly married to a woman caring 4 women in need here in Costa Rica: Midwives & the Care They Provide: http://t.co/2yQqi9pPBX via @YouTube

10 Oct

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October 09, 2014 at 08:46PM

RT @alepooley: Nos comparte hoy la Palabra Miguel Ángel de Marco de @GoReachGlobal junto a @BDugganRN y @MarkLewisCR http://t.co/eehVqbJotm

5 Oct

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October 05, 2014 at 12:54PM

Celebrating 30 years with Encuentro con Christo in Santiago Chile.

5 Oct

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Praying for thieves…. http://t.co/UA5RCPwtL8. A different perspective on losing what we own.

17 Sep

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September 17, 2014 at 05:17PM

Praying for thieves….

17 Sep

It is no fun to lose things that belong to us, whether we misplace them permanently or have them taken by someone else.  It’s not always that those things mean too much to us, it can be that they represent work lost and more work to replace.  If things have been taken by thieves there can be the added feeling of violation.  How could someone do this to us? Why do they not understand how much it hurts?

Several months ago someone broke into the trunk of our car and stole some valuable medical equipment that Cathi uses in her ministry to women who have no other clinical options available.  Last week someone stole the whole car.  Double theft, double violation, and no one to point to.  There is just the bureaucratic process of reporting the loss, dealing with three different government agencies, and waiting to see if we will get anything from the only insurance available here.  Meanwhile, the loss is always in front of us, every time we might have used that car.

But what about those thieves?  The ones who live a life where stealing is a profession (they were quite skilled).  What does this lifestyle do to their conscience, their relationships, and particularly to their potential relationship with God?   To live a lifestyle of theft requires lying regularly to themselves and others.  It requires deception, mistrust and a constant state of fear of being caught.  Its very nature is disruptive not only to the victims of their theft, but also to their friends and family.  They know what they are doing is wrong and given our human nature’s inclination, they may think they don’t have a chance to have a relationship with the Father.  In fact, I’d propose that they are more “works” oriented in their view of relationship with God than those who are living a more “religious” lifestyle.  How might a thief respond to the message of grace?  To be offered a free gift of forgiveness for all they have done and for all the people they have hurt might be difficult to accept.  But what joy for those who hear that message, believe it, and claim it! Jesus said he came to proclaim hope for the hopeless, and who is more hopeless than someone who does wrong and knows it?

So join Cathi and me as we pray for those who have stolen from us.  This isn’t the first time in our seven years here. In fact, we’ve probably lost over $10,000 in various creative means of theft over these years.  But we have hope, and the thieves do not.  We have a Father who knows our needs and cares for us.  He provides for the sparrow, how much more for us?  Our desire is for these thieves to come to know the hope of the Gospel, to know the incredible riches of his grace, and to have their lives transformed by this amazing gift of salvation.  We know God knew this would happen, allowed it to happen, and that his plan incorporates these events into his tapestry of building his kingdom.  We can only speculate on how this fits into his story, but we can know that if he allowed it, he’s going to use it for his glory.

Praying for thieves may sound odd, but it reflects God’s heart for the lost.  May our hearts grow to match his.

A stomach full of Texas BBQ, a few hours with a kind and generous friend, and about to take the last leg on my journey home. Priceless.

16 Sep

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September 16, 2014 at 04:32PM