Thursday, July 6, 2006

Well, we are up to our necks in boxes wondering how in the world we are going to fit all this stuff into our 20ft. container which is supposed to arrive tomorrow morning. I (Heather) thought I'd put up some pics of how things are going and looking.

Boxes, Boxes, and More Boxes


Maggie Guarding the Garage Sale Pile


Ally In Her Box Ready To Go


And John Keeping the Kids "Entertained"

Tuesday, June 13, 2006

The Date is Set: July26th. Peru or bust!!!

Since we hit the 85% mark, we went ahead and purchased tickets to move to Peru. The official date is set for Wednesday, July 26th! Yes, it was weird buying one way tickets out of the country. We're excited, but there remains much to be done, including packing up our house to ship down on a 20ft. container, as well as to have a garage sale or two before we go to sell off everything else.

Almost There....


Well, the latest report is in and I am thrilled to report to you that we have 85% of the monthly support we need pledged! This has been a long haul, but God is good. As most of you know by now, our work with RUF at Texas A&M was over at the end of May, so we are on board with RUF-Peru! Thanks to all of you who are standing with us through financial & prayer support. We couldn't do this without you!

Sold!!!

Well, things keep happening that keep us on the road to Peru! For example, we sold our house in 2 1/2 weeks, and I sold my truck yesterday (which was arguably more sad than selling my house!). We close on the house July 24th, so hopefully everything will go smoothly!

Monday, May 22, 2006

Anyone want to buy our house?

We are going ahead and taking a huge step by placing our house on the market. We have our sights set on moving to Peru on July 26th. We have a lot to do between now and then, including working on the remaining 25% that we need for monthly support. But we are going ahead and moving in this direction because it seems wise to us and to our couselors to do so. {Big breath in, exhale out....}
So, if you know of anyone in the market, we've got a great place for them! Please pray that our house would sell quickly! {P.S., We really love this place!}

RUF Summer Conference 2006

My Little Ducklings & Me Enjoying the Beauty of God's Creation


Well, we finished off the school year with a great RUF conference at the snow white beaches of Panama City Beach. Students from various RUF chapters across the nation converged here for a week of fun, relaxation, and some serious study of the Scriptures.

The Gang Representing the Fightin' Texas Aggies at the 2006 National RUF Summer Conference (Whoooop!)

Every morning, students attended seminars taught by various campus ministers on everything from pop culture to evangelism, apologetics to dating, and everything in between. Then they had the afternoon off to soak up the sun, play beach volleyball, build sandcastles (Texas A&M finished 2nd this year; of course, we were robbed!). Then, we all gathered for worship and heard a week's worth of sermons on the topic of Justification. John Stone taught the first week, and Brian Habig the second. You can listen to the sermons via podcast as well as messages from previous conferences.

This Was A Blood Red Moon Rising Over Panama City Beach

The sun rises and the sun sets. It is setting on our time here at TAMU. It has been an amazing ride, and God has been so good to us. We trust the sun will rise & shine on our next step in Peru.

Friday, May 12, 2006

What Others Are Learning, & We With Them

One of the joys of this whole endeavor is watching God work in the lives of our friends as God stirs hearts to join us in this effort. I received the following letter from one of our students here at Texas A&M as he joins us in sacrificing for the sake of the Gospel. His letter was such an encouragement to us that I wanted to share it with you (with his permission, of course):

"Learning to trust in God in all aspects of life has been and continues to be a struggle for me. Yet our great God has proven Himself faithful whenever I have trusted Him above all else. I want you to know how instrumental you both have been in God's work upon my heart to learn to trust and obedience to His will and His calling.

"I have been praying for you and your family as you prepare for Peru and wait upon the Lord to provide money to go....I have been thinking and praying about it now, and though it has never been a question of whether or not to give, I have struggled with how much to give.

"Tomorrow is guaranteed to no one and the Lord calls us to give out of the generosity of our hearts in accordance to the needs of others. I cannot, no that is wrong, I am without the faith to give you all that I have to give, trusting that God would provide me (a huge sigh has just been exhaled). But in small faith I hope that my gift will be increased by God's grace and your faithfulness.

"Perhaps one day I will sell all my possessions and walk by faith alone, forsaking earthly cares for eternal vision, as the prophets of old. Or maybe my measure is something less grand, yet of good use. Whatever becomes of anyone like us, may God be glorified in our living this life we have been blessed to receive.

With Love and Hope,
XYZ

How we are blessed and challenged to walk by faith as we watch our friends do so!

Friday, May 5, 2006

We're at 75%!!!

The latest tally is in and we are pleased to report to all our friends and supporters that we have 75% pledged toward our monthly support!!! A huge mile-stone, no doubt! We still have a ways to go, but the summit is in sight.

Please be in prayer for these four specific things...


1) Obviously, that God would continue building our support network of folks who want to be a part of this mission. We are amazed at the ways in which God is bringing this together right before our eyes. God is granting us favor in the eyes of our fellow Christians and churches. May He continue to do so.

2) We also need wisdom for all the details that need to be attended to that make my head spin. For example: when do we put our house on the market? We'd like to put it up for sale somewhere when we have between 80-85% pledged, but this entails knowing a departure date.

3) Along with this comes considerations about having a moving sale, as well as shipping a container to Peru with some of our belongings (and the all important books!). We need to ship stuff there about three weeks prior to when we want them to actually arrive in Peru.

4) We are praying specifically for a move-to-Peru date of July 26th. (That's the day after Kevin's 9th birthday: "Happy Birthday to you / you're moving to Peru!") Ambitious? Perhaps. Impossible? Nah! Don't forget Who moves mountains....

Saying Goodbye to our Aggies

We had our last official RUF Gathering on Wednesday. It was a time for singing our favorite RUF songs, remembering God's goodness to us over the course of this academic year, and simply enjoing Christ & each other. We're going to miss these students like crazy, but rejoice for the time we have spent with them. It has truly been the highest honor of my life to be able to open the Scriptures every week and teach them about the supremacy and infinite worth of Christ and His redeeming love.

Our Graduating Seniors after Senior Share

Miranda Hanging Out with Michelle, Erin, & Ashley

Fun with the Aggies!

"Aggies Up! Longhorns Down!"


Thanks Aggies, for all the memories! You have challenged us, encouraged us, inspired us! You will be in our hearts forever. We love you and will miss you!

Monday, May 1, 2006

Another Hurdle Cleared...

This past weekend, the South Texas Presbytery unanimously approved sending me as a missionary of the Presbytery to labor out of bounds in Peru. What this means is that I am still accountable to and must report back to my presbytery here. And they have given their unreserved blessings in this endeavor.

Keep praying! We're another step closer!

Monday, April 24, 2006

From Up Above

In case you were wondering what Trujillo, Peru looked like from space, here is an idea from Google Earth.


Just in case you were wondering.

Wednesday, April 19, 2006

The Surreal Life

Well, we just returned from RUF and I preached my last sermon on the campus of TAMU. (We have one more RUF meeting, but our graduating seniors will be giving their testimony as to what God has taught them during their time here). This is a weird experience. I know in my mind that this was the last time, but in my heart it feels like I will have many more opportunities. Next week. And the next week. And the next semester.

When I got up to speak, one of our students who shall remain nameless (ahem...Hannah Wachdorf) pointed to her face like streams of tears were falling! She almost got me there, but I recovered. I preached from Luke 7, the story of the woman of the city who crashed Simon the Pharisee's party in order to demonstrate her love for Christ by washing his feet with her tears and hair. It is a good text, and just like everywhere else in the Bible, you have to present it and just get out of the way.

At any rate, I feel weird right now. I'm in denial. This is all surreal.

Thursday, April 13, 2006

Call Me Sick...or Crazy...or Something Like That....

This is bizarre, but with May quickly approaching, I'm realizing that everything in our lives is about to get turned upside down, and I'm beginning to feel rather nostalgic about things around here.

For example, I had a dentist appointment this morning. Usually, not a fun thing to do. No matter how much I floss, I could always do more. I mean, is anyone satisified about their flossing? There is a parallel here to being satisfied with one's prayer life, but I digress....

As I left the dentist office of Dr. Birdwell, I realized that I'm going to miss this place. Not that I'm going to miss the dentist office per se (though the staff there is great), but what the dentist office represents: trusted friends that make Bryan / College Station a great place to live. I know my dentist, my mechanic, the regular faces behind the counter at the stores & restaurants that we frequent, the connectedness of this place.

Pastor & writer Eugene Peterson said in one of his books that he wanted to get to know the place in which he is ministering. Having spent over 10 years in Aggieland, I feel like I know this place. It is my place. My home. I know it. And yet there is so much more to know. And like a good friend you are just getting to know who unexpectedly gets reassigned to another city, our time here has been too short. But as someone has said, "Home is wherever God calls you to live."

Man, we don't want to leave. I wish that we could pick up this place and drop it right next to Trujillo. We don't want to leave, but we are willing to go. And I think that is a good thing. The people & places of Trujillo will soon fill our hearts, and I trust God will once again wed our hearts to our new home.

Friday, April 7, 2006

Half way up / down the mountain!



We pleased to let you know that we have 50.1% of the monthly support needed pledged!!! This amount is what individuals and churches have committed to so far. Please join us in praying that the remaining 49.9% comes in quickly. As many of you know, my call with RUF at TAMU expires May 31st. We have 3 weddings that we are a part of in June. Thus, we hope to be able to leave sometime in July. So keep praying with and for us!

Post Spring Break Missions Trip Report

John & Justin Downtown Lima


Friday, March 10th
We headed out from Bryan/College Station around noon and headed over to Bush Intercontinental in Houston. After getting stuck in traffic on I45 (surprise, surprise!), we made it to the airport in plenty of time to catch up with the RUF group from the Univ. of Texas. We boarded the plane about 3:30pm, and sat on it for a long time while they made a repair to the engine (!). If that wasn't enough, the pilot came on and informed us that as soon as the repair "dries", we'll take off. I thought about offering some duct tape if they needed any additional strength for the glue! After a long 6 hour flight during which we watched "Walk the Line", we landed on Peruvian soil and headed out to the Hotel Meleia which was very nice. I think we turned off the lights and jumped in bed around 2:30am.

Justin at the deck of a restaurant overlooking the Pacific Ocean in Lima


Saturday, March 11th
After eating breakfast at the hotel, we drove to downtown Lima and tour a few amazing cathedrals. The main cathedral housed the bones of the Spanish conquerer, Pizarro, as well as some 25,000+ bones in the underground catacombs. After eating at a nice restaurant that overlooked the Pacific Ocean, we headed back to the airport and caught a one hour flight up the coast to Trujillo. After checking in to the Hotel Country, we headed out to an italian restaurant just off the town square and had some very good pizza.

A Monestary in Lima


Sunday, March 12th
We headed out to the church plant in Arevalo where we spent the week working. I preached in the morning service on Mark 8:27ff. Rev. Bill Bradford translated for me, and I'll tell you, I'm convinced that he worked 10x harder than I did. I had the easy part. After church, we walked the neighborhood with some of the church members and invited adults and children out to the church for the week's Vacation Bible School outreach. After church, we headed out to Wes & Jami Baker's house for lunch and an afternoon of singing psalms and hymns. Sunday evening, we headed back out to Arevalo where my collegue, Benji Slation (RUF UT), preached on Mark 9.

John & his amigo, "Ben-hi"

Children at the VBS Outreach


Monday through Thurs, March 13-16th
We started construction after morning devotions at Arevalo. The team started out with much gusto and vigor having waited many months to get to this point. We busted up concreted, uprooted trees, and moved rocks & boulders in preparation for the digging for the foundation of what will be the medical clinic. At 4pm every afternoon, many of us split up the work and some attended and helped out with the VBS outreach. We had 50+ kids and a handful of adults attend. This served as very good relations to the neighborhood, many of which were greatly surprised that many of the girls on our team were working hard.

The church at Arevalo under construction.

Josh & Kara working hard on the foundation for the medical clinic.


Wednesday night, we met with students from the English Language Institute which is an outreach of the mission to the community and university students. We had many opportunities to tell folks about the Gospel and invite them out to the church. As you might expect, many of the students were very self-conscious about speaking English with North Americans, and a handful were very excited.

Our meeting with the university group.


One evening, we went out to eat at Chelsea's which is a very nice restaurant. We had chicken & beef kabobs which were very delicious. I sat with Gerado who is one of the seminary students who is working with the university students, Percy who is another seminary student who will be working with the youth at the Arevalo church, and Pastor Ricardo and his family. He is the pastor at the Larco church. 90% of the conversation was in Spanish. My head was swimming after about 2-3 hours of conversation. My brain never processed that much Spanish in one setting. One of our students, Kara Zeiger, helped me understand some of what I couldn't, but I was surprised and encouraged with how much I did understand!

A handy and pretty way to remember how to spell "Huanchauco."


Friday, March 17th
We toured the Moche ruins in the morning, which is an ancient paramid that is only about 25% excavated. After that, we headed out to Huanchauco which is famous for their handmade bamboo-like canoes and surfing. We ate out there and then stopped by a market to look for souveneirs, and then headed out to the airport. We flew back into the Lima and waited about 6+ hours in the airport until our flight left at 12:54am.

One of the carvings at the pyramid ruins at Moche.

Brian Franklin at the Beach

Heading back to the Lima from Trujillo's airport.

Saturday, March 18th
After a long red-eye flight (during which, I slept more than I thought I would) we arrived around 6:05am back in Houston. After a smooth transition through customs, we headed back to Aggieland.

Justin and his new friend, Luis.