Our family is in Peru for two years to serve with Extreme Nazarene. We are living in the jungle city of Puerto Maldonado supporting our team of 8 missionaries as 12 churches are planted here in 18 months! Please keep checking in to keep up on our our ministry and adventures in Peru!

Sunday, November 30, 2008

What We Will Be Doing

Our position with Extreme will be in the role of Cluster Support for Puerto Maldonado. The official job description says:
"Responsible for all local logistics, communications, accounting, safety, goals progress and results, security of 40/40 site work. Serves as pastor, mentor, motivator, protector, teacher, counselor to the 40/40 missionaries at this base of operations."

Let me give you a little background of the vision of Extreme Peru so this makes a little more sense. The vision of Extreme Peru is to plant 120 churches in 3 years. There are 7 different cities that they will be sending clusters to and there are multiple communities and areas within those cities that the 40/40 missionaries will be going to to share Jesus with.

First, what is a 40/40:
"40/40 is a revolutionary new missionary strategy created by Extreme Nazarene in a partnership with Nazarene World Mission that seeks, trains and deploys pairs of single volunteer missionaries. These missionaries are sent to share the good news of Jesus Christ through planting community centric churches using Jesus Film and other evangelistic tools, compassion projects and aggressive and personalized discipleship. The 40/40 pairs will consist of one single Peruvian National and one single North American (or other non-Peruvian). The pair will proceed through six months of accelerated job training followed by eighteen months of evangelism, compassion and discipleship to plant three churches."

Puerto Maldonado will be the first cluster deployed and we will have 4 sets of 40/40s (4 Americans, 4 Peruvians). We will live in a house with them, downstairs will be our home, the middle floor will be a place for short term teams to stay and the top floor will be where the 40/40s live. We are excited about our role because we get to mentor, support and love these missionaries as they spread the love and hope of Jesus Christ as well as work alongside them and take care of logistical details so they can better serve their communities.

This is a very rough and brief idea of what we will be doing. I'm sure things will change and adapt as we get there, especially since we are the first cluster so everything is new to everyone. But, this should give you some idea of how to begin to pray for us...

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Puerto Maldonado Cluster Base Biography

With a population of just 41,394, it's easy to overlook Puerto Maldonado. For precisely this reason, the gospel of Jesus Christ hasn't reached many of the local residents of the area. Once outside of Puerto Maldonado, small villages dot the dirt roads and rivers that crisscross the thick Amazon jungle.As with the other jungle sites, ecotourism is beginning to gain in popularity and as a result Puerto Maldonado has seen double and even triple digit growth in tourist visas granted through the small airport just outside of town. Puerto Maldonado exhibits the characteristics of a small remote town through its lack of infrastructure. The town is cut in two by the river and as of yet, no bridge exists to connect the two halves so car ferries are the only way to get people and vehicles to the roads on the other side.

In January 2008, the Nazarene Church touched down for the first time in Puerto Maldonado to establish church work there. Pastor Freddy Zapata arrived on scene without a single friend, not even so much as a contact and within 3 months had a mission church started with 15 members. The people are hungry to hear about the power and saving grace of Jesus Christ in Puerto Maldonado.

Just after dark, a tiny house sits quietly with a single dim red light that hangs from the hastily constructed ceiling. Standing in the doorway of this house appears the shadowy silhouette of a young woman in her early teens. A paying customer approaches her and they fade into the dark house. Her two year old son stays outside the house, playing in the street or just sitting on the curb waiting for his mother to reappear. This young woman's house is just one of dozens with similar red lights filled with dozens of young women, too many with innocent young kids left unattended along this dark dirt road cutting right through the middle of Puerto Maldonado. Many of these young girls are orphans or victims of a shattered family and have gotten trapped in this devastating trade that appears to have no exits. Pastor Freddy's vision for the Nazarene Church in Puerto Maldonado is to provide an exit. He wants to open up the doors of the church to the women of these brothels, to the drug addicts, to the alcoholics who have hit rock bottom and have nowhere to turn. Extreme Nazarene has agreed to partner with Freddy through the 40/40 project in this venture. The "Hope House" will be a place of detoxification, refuge and hope as the healing and redeeming power of Jesus Christ is displayed 24-hours a day for its precious and fragile patients

Sunday, November 9, 2008