Showing posts with label Costa Rica. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Costa Rica. Show all posts

Monday, November 1, 2010

A New Path: Returning to the USA

The LORD is my shepherd, I lack nothing. He makes me lie down in green pastures, he leads me beside quiet waters, He refreshes my soul. He guides me along the right paths for his name’s sake. Even though I walk through the darkest valley, I will fear no evil, for you are with me; your rod and your staff, they comfort me. You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies. You anoint my head with oil; my cup overflows. Surely your goodness and love will follow me all the days of my life, and I will dwell in the house of the LORD forever. –Psalms 23


Dear Supporters,

  November marks the start of a new path for us. As we have mentioned in the last newsletter and our blog, Missions Costa Rica has been struggling financially the last few months. We have been praying and searching God’s word to find God’s will for our lives and for Missions Costa Rica.

   We can no longer support ourselves here in Costa Rica and will be coming back to the United States on November 3rd. We feel that God is currently closing the door for us here in Costa Rica, and that He has something else planned for us that He will show us in His perfect timing. This has been a very hard decision, and one that we feel we could have never made without God making it clear to us that we can not stay.


hiking at volcano Poas, Costa Rica

   We will surely miss our home and life here in Costa Rica, and the people we have ministered to will always share a special place in our hearts. We will remember them in the memories we shared and in our prayers.

  We ask that in this time of change for us that you keep us in your prayers, as we adjust to culture shock and the other things that come with moving back to the United States from abroad. We will be staying, for the next few weeks, around Columbus, Ohio with our families till we get our bearings again.

 We are scared about the future, but we know that God will guide us and protect us, and only with Him will we find true happiness.

  This has been a time of sadness for us, but also a time of joy. Our feeding program we have started will be able to continue. Thanks to our brother and sister in Christ (Fabricio and Hazel Solanos) our feeding program for the homeless of San Jose will continue. Fabricio was the one that originally felt the conviction and calling to start this ministry, and we are very proud and happy to give them the full reigns of this ministry.


Fabricio (in sunglasses) ministering to homeless


   We hope that you will pray about continuing to financially support the feeding program, so that Missions Costa Rica can continue long into the future, offering a loving hand, giving a hot plate of food, and sharing the Gospel of Christ with those who are in desperate need of the hope and love that He offers them.

  If you are still interested in continuing to support Missions Costa Rica, all funds will be collected and used for this ministry alone. God has different plans for Summer and I, but if your heart has been led to help this ministry we hope that you will continue to be involved in it!

  Please remember to pray for all missionaries as many like ourselves have had to return due to hard financial time within individuals as well as church communities!

  Thank you all again for your love, prayers and support during this difficult time. We have been so blessed to have so many wonderful brothers and sisters in Christ!

-Luke

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Panama (5th trip)

For our citizenship is in heaven, from which also we eagerly wait for a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ...
-Philippians 3:20 (NASB)
Well...it is that time again. Our 90 day visas will be up and we are preparing for our 5th visa run to Panama.

Costa Rica is a wonderful country with some of the most beautiful sightes we have ever experienced. Although Costa Rica has/relies on heavy tourism, it does not offer many options to foreigners for residency. Upon entering the country you will be issued a visa, the amount of days given depends on the country of your citizenship. US citizens are issued 90 days. Once your 90 days in the country are up you must immediately leave the country and remain outside the country for no less than 72 hours. There is little to no options for extensions on your 90 days. I say little to no because there are occasional exceptions depending on who you talk to. Officially, there is no option for extension.

All options for residency depend almost entirely on money. There are only a handful of options and most involve at least $200,000 in investments in the country. The only option offered that is not dependent on money (per-say) is to have a child born in the country. There is also a religious residency option but we are told this is usually reserved for those affiliated with the Catholic church. In short, we can apply for none of these options. 

We must operate our ministries on a 90 day visa. We have always chosen Panama as our "visa run" destination due to the cheaper prices of food and hotels. The Nicaraguan border has less options and prices are higher. In the past we have gone to David, Boquete and Panama City. Panama is a more developed country and the roads within the country offer a much desired break from the bouncy Costa Rican roads. It is interesting because you drive through very dense jungles to get to the border but once you cross it the jungles immediately disappear.
Panamanian Indians
This is always a dreaded experience for us although we try to remain positive. It is an unwelcomed added expense and the bus trip leaves us with nightmares for several weeks afterwards. After each trip on the bus we vow to never take the bus again to Panama but come 90 days later we always find ourselves out of options. We have tried both bus options to Panama and both tend to be about the same in experience. Usually the air conditioning does not work, windows do not open, bathroom is clogged and offers unimaginable aromas throughout the bus for the almost unbearable 7 hours to the border. There are other issues with these buses involving the drivers and prostitutes during our stops and at the border but I will not go into all the unpleasant details. (We have heard of others having an amazing trip on the bus to Panama. We are told we have simply had bad luck). The border typically takes about 2 hours to get through as you must wait for all the bus passengers to get through. It is another hour ride from the border to the city of David. This is the largest city close to the border but offers very little in things to do. You can basically eat and sit in your hotel.

We are planning to leave for Panama on Sunday. We plan to take the Tracopa bus. We will be going to David again since it will be the cheapest option and shortest bus ride. It should take about 10 hours to get there if (Lord willing) all goes well. We are preparing mentally for the bus ride and hope the lack of excitement in David will at least offer us some time to pray about our personal future as well as the future of Missions Costa Rica.
We usually take only backpacks and carry everything with us since we stay in hostels.
 We ask that you keep this trip in prayer as well as the future of  Missions Costa Rica. We plan to write more specifically on this when we get back.




Saturday, October 9, 2010

Mission Vehicle?

Who will separate us from the love of Christ? Will tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword.
-Romans 8:35

If you have been following us on facebook, you may have already heard of the Missions Costa Rica financial troubles. We also mentioned it in our September newsletter. We have not been able to meet our monthly budget for a few months now. We have been able to function due to savings up until now. Those savings have now been depleted.

Yesterday morning we lost the mission vehicle to the Costa Rican government because we were not able to pay the taxes (about $4,000) for it. We had the money for the taxes in the mission bank account but had to use these funds to run the ministry due to lack of sufficient donations. The car is still in our name for a little while longer but is confined to a government "parking" facility and we are not allowed to remove it from this facility. We have been given the option to sell it but of course we will have to find a buyer that has no need to actually look at the car first. This happened quite suddenly for us as we technically do not have to pay these taxes until October 19th. There was a mistake in the paperwork made out by the government agent and they do not wish to fix the mistake. The whole mistake occurred when the agent looked at the wrong tab on his computer! Luke and I went down to the office yesterday to make a final plea for someone to fix the mistake but we were not received well. We spoke to a lawyer and we were told that ultimately this agency has all the power to do as they please and there was nothing we could do.

The loss of a vehicle means that the majority of our ministries have officially had to be canceled. We are currently no longer able to work in the shanty town of La Carpio. This includes our daycare work and classes with the women and children on Saturday mornings. We still have hopes that God does perform modern day miracles. He ultimately is in control of this ministry and He will do with it as He pleases. His will is perfect.

We were able to feed the homeless yesterday due to the graciousness of Fabricio and Hazel. They have been helping us feed the homeless from the very start of this ministry. They let us use their car to deliver the food. We believe we might be able to use their car for this ministry for now but there are no guarantees of its availability. We have been so lucky to be surrounded by loving and caring neighbors that have an incredible desire to serve. These neighbors (JJ & Jane, Fabricio & Hazel, Rachel and Flabio & Milania) have really done so much to keep the homeless fed. We are proud to be a part of such a giving group and we value their help, love and support! Thank you!!!

We thank you all so much for your prayers and support of this mission. We would not have made it to this point had it not been for all the wonderful people behind it, fueling it and supporting it! We are so privileged to have such a powerful Father in heaven with whom we can leave all our cares. We ask that you continue to pray for Missions Costa Rica and for Luke and I as well. We will have to make some very tough changes in the next month or so if funds do not come in. This mission has always been about Him and His will so we will leave it in His hands.


Therefore I urge you, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, which is your spiritual service of worship. And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good and acceptable and perfect.
-Romans 12:1-2

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

After School English


San Antonio De Escazu

  I have been teaching 2 students on Mondays and Thursdays since December of 2009. Both of these students did not know a single word of English when I started, but they have been working super hard and now know a lot of English. They both come from two of the poorest families, here in San Antonio de Escazu, and it is really a blessing to be able to share this skill that will give them the tools to a better future (economically).


  About 2 weeks ago, one of my students (her name is Jazmin) asked me if I would help her study more than twice a week, specifically with reading and writing essays. It turns out that she has been offered a chance to study in a technical school for high school students. Only the best in the class are offered this opportunity, so she was pretty excited and nervous.

  The school has several programs of study, and the one she will be going into is an English program. The program is specifically focused on getting the students a job as a bilingual manager at International banks here in San Jose, and in other well established parts of Costa Rica.


  Jazmin is very excited to have this opportunity, but she has to pass the entrance exam into this program on September 29th. The exam is focused on oral comprehension, reading, and writing an essay. I have full confidence she will do very well, and I am so proud that after  9 1/2 months, she feels comfortable enough in her English abilities to take on something this advanced. She has become a very talented English writer for the short time that she has started writing in English. I hope to post one of her stories on here in the next few weeks for all to read. So please keep coming back to see it.


  Please keep her in your prayers this Wednesday as she is taking this exam. This will be such a great opportunity for her, so that when she gets out of high school, she will have a well paying job lined up to pay for her college in the future. One of her greatest dreams is to be a Veterinarian, and this will get her one big step in the right direction.

*Luke

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

A-B-C (easy as 1-2-3??)

For the past two weeks now, Luke and I have been working with a group of 6-10 year olds every morning at the daycare center in La Carpio. We were previously working with a much younger group of toddlers but the need came up for these older kids. This new group of kids had been failing 1st grade and were in pretty desperate need for some extra attention.


We have been very busy trying to come up with ways to help teach them the Alphabet and the proper way to write these letters. It has been very interesting and different to work with this age. It is not something we are used to and personally would not be my first choice. The new experience has already given us the opportunity to practice patience! I am sure any parent of a child learning to read and write knows what I am talking about! It can be quite a daunting task and it is difficult to see a light at the end of this learning tunnel!

This week we have been able to take things a step further and we are so proud of them. We are now practicing writing words with the letters they have been working with. It has been interesting to see how they progress. One thing that stands out immediately is how much more advanced the girls are. We have even had to split them up by gender because the girls were too far advanced to work side by side with the boys. This makes me wonder how much Latino culture may play into this.

In addition to being behind, all of the boys struggle with attention problems as well as discipline issues. Even when we have only one boy present he usually must spend much of class in "time out" and often we have had to just send them home. It is so heartbreaking to see them suffer so much. There is no such thing as discipline at home, they are lucky if their parents even know where they are during the day. All of this simply continues the vicious cycle of female battery, gang involvement and family violence. We often find ourselves overwhelmed with trying to compete with the ideas these young boys are faced with as soon as they leave our class.

In contrast, young girls in La Carpio must cook, clean and take care of their younger siblings. This work for them starts at birth. It does not matter if they have older male siblings. The work load always falls on the first female child. Sadly this causes the girls to miss out on many opportunities. If mom is sick or unwilling to take care of the family the girls are held out of school etc. in order to cook and clean for their father and siblings. Many of the 6 year olds we are working with are constantly distracted in class because they must bring their younger siblings with them and care for them throughout the day. At first glance this is seen as something sweet. How calm and motherly the older sister cares for her brothers and sisters! Once you are able to recognize that it is in fact a hindrance it truly breaks your heart for them. Many visitors are not able to catch the underlying issues and actual suffering of the young girls.

It is our prayer that these young kids might have great opportunities in life through education and the working of the Holy Spirit in their lives. We hope that they might be able to fight against the twisted ideas of gender in this society and hold firm to the truth given in God's word. We ask that you might join with us in prayer for their young lives and their futures. We pray that they might grow to be honest, godly men and women of great  self-worth and integrity.

14 You, however, continue in the things you have learned and become convinced of, knowing from whom you have learned them, 15 and that from childhood you have known the sacred writings which are able to give you the wisdom that leads to salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus.
-2 Timothy 3:14-15 (NASB)

*Feel free to leave your comments/ideas on this topic!

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Ladies English Class

I have been teaching a group of ladies for 3hours every Saturday since January. This small group of women have been a blessing and a challenge. Most of them can not even read or write properly in Spanish and many have not made it past the 3rd grade. The majority of them are Nicaraguan and are living illegally in this shanty town (This is very common in La Carpio). They currently all work as daycare workers for several daycares set up by the Humanitarian Aid Foundation.

I was asked back in January to teach English to these women. I am sure you can imagine the difficulty it has been. I have found myself not only teaching them English but also teaching them fundamental skills such as telling time. My academic year with them is coming to an end.  My goals for these women started out simply being to teach them English, but as our understanding of La Carpio and their role in it as daycare workers has grown so has my desires for them through this class.

As any leader or teacher, my foundational desire is to duplicate myself. In other words I hope to be able to touch their lives and in turn they may be able to touch the lives of others. The best way I felt I could do this was not only through education in the English language but much more importantly with Biblical education. Luke and I have found that there are several churches in this shanty town. Many of the people we have met claim to be faithful members of these churches yet, it seems that their knowledge of the Scriptures and of a personal relationship with Jesus Christ is lacking. (Many of the churches we have visited in Costa Rica do not place focus on any strong discipleship, leaving their members quite malnourished of the Scriptures and there applications.) It has been my desire to try and fill these voids in education through my simple class every Saturday. This has been a challenge as I have had to fit many different subjects into a short amount of time every week. Throughout this class I know I have grown a great deal as an educator and I hope my students have grown as well.
FROM LEFT: Gloria, Jorling, Yessenia, Summer, Yessenia's daughter, and Emilce
 I ask that you keep these women in your prayers as we gear up for the end of this class. I also pray that their interest in the Scriptures will continue to burn within them and they may continue to study the Bible and develop deep relationships with a personal Savior.They will be working the next several weeks on their final project. For their final project I have asked them to properly prepare and deliver a class to a group of children Luke has been working with on Saturdays. Our desire is to be able to have others take over these tasks so that we may be able to reach more with both Education and hope and salvation through Jesus Christ.

7 The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge; Fools despise wisdom and instruction.
-Proverbs 1:7 NASB

Saturday, September 4, 2010

Looking for Hope

“Poverty often deprives a man of all spirit and virtue; it is hard for an empty bag to stand upright"   -Benjamin Frankilin

  Looking for hope when you feel like you are losing everything, feels like you are holding on to the edge of a cliff, and being unable to grip it. All of your thoughts are anticipating the fall. After having fallen, with your body broken and frail, the mountain looks impossible to climb again.

  We see this time and time again, while feeding the homeless in San Jose, Costa Rica. It always starts the same way. We see a brand new face on the street. Their story is normally my family wants nothing to do with me, because I drink too much or because I am addicted to drugs, or I have lost my job. The next time we see them their clothes are all torn, shoes missing, they haven't bathed for days, and the hopelessness of their situation seems to have taken over. This process continues until the same person you saw the first time is completly unrecognizable. No longer understanding how it feels to be loved, having forgotten what love even was. This is the ultimate depravity of man feeling seperated from God, love, life, and your mental stability.


  We ask that you keep these men and women in your prayers. They truely have no one, and they need a Saviour to rescue them and for them to follow.


"As the deer pants for the water brooks, So my soul pants for You, o God."
                                                                                                                           - Psalms 42:1

Monday, August 30, 2010

Average "Jose"

17 But whoever has the world's goods, and sees his brother in need and closes his heart against him, how does the love of God abide in him? 18 Little children, let us not love with word or with tongue, but in deed and truth. 19 We will know by this that we are of the truth, and will assure our heart before Him.
-1 John 3:17-19 NASB

There are several comments that we hear as full time missionaries often from our wonderful supporters, friends and family. A few of them go as follows:
"You amaze us"
"You guys are incredible"
"How do you do what you do?"
"You are so strong"
"You are not like me"

These are all very encouraging statements for us but we can't help but feel unworthy. The truth is... we are no different from anyone else. Unfortunately there is no special magic dust we have been sprinkled with, no special conversion, and no extrodinary calling. We are about as "ordinary" as it gets. We have worries, fears, concerns, needs and desires. We have unbelievable student loans to pay off! We get tired, lonely, frustrated and scared. We don't have some huge plan mapped out and to be honest...most of the time we don't have a clue what we are doing!
I think that may be a big reason why so many people are not actively going out and reaching the world with the Gospel. As Christians we tend to place high admiration on pastors, missionaries or other leaders of ministries.This is great and I think they do deserve our respect for their sacrifices but it seems all too often we are misplacing our admiration. These people after all are just people like you and like me. What makes them extodinary is they have exchanged their lives for the extrodinary life of Christ!
As a missionary many people want to know our "calling" story. How did God call us to do what we do? Our answer is simple...we believe in Jesus Christ and His sacrifice for our sins so that we do not have to make that payment for ourselves. As a part of believing in Him we decided to exchange our life for His life and purpose. In doing this we took on His name and are now called Christians. To His followers, Jesus commanded:

19 Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations...
-Matthew 28:19a NASB
That's pretty much it. He said to go so we went. No big bang, bright light or calling to us in an audible voice in the night. There was no angel who appeared to us. It is God's love for us that compels us. We were once lost, dirty and cast away yet, Jesus came along and found us where we were, He woke us up, fed us and clothed us. He offered hope and incredible love. How can we not share this amazing story with others? So how do we share this story with others? We share this story through service and love not picket lines. 
As Christians we carry the name of Christ with us wherever we go. When people look at us they are to see Christ. 1 John 3:17-19 provides a very clear picture of how we are to show love. It states a difficult truth not only in our testimony of Christ but also in our personal relationships. Actions will always speak louder than words!
If you have not been serving or sharing the love of Christ with others, we would suggest you speak with your pastor or other church leader on ways you can get involved in the spread of the Gospel in a very real way! Do not put it off until the "perfect" timing comes along! The truth is there will never be a perfect timing. Jesus did not ask His followers to get their life in order, raise their kids and advance in their carreers before they followed Him. He said,
17"Follow Me, and I will make you become fishers of men." 18 Immediately they left their nets and followed Him.
-Mark 1:17-18 NASB

21 Another of the disciples said to Him, "Lord, permit me first to go and bury my father."22 But Jesus said to him, "Follow me, and allow the dead to bury their own dead."
-Matthew 8:21-22 NASB
While it may have been wiser (in human reasoning) for us to stay in the US with good jobs, make money and pay off our loans before following Him, this is not what He has asked of us. He is seeking your service now not later! 
Leave your nets and immediatly follow Him. He has so much for you and a greater purpose than you can imagine. All you have to do is let go and let Him drive! You do not have to be a "somebody"!
*If you would like to know more about Missions Costa Rica and how you can become an active part of what God is doing in Costa Rica you may email us at:
missionscostarica@yahoo.com

Feeding the homeless of San Jose