Monday, July 20, 2009

3,000+ Photographs of the Trip Available Now!

Just one of the more than 3,000 exciting photographs you'll miss out on if you don't hit the mission trip photo site.

Hey, team, to help expedite the post trip photo swapping process, I've uploaded the 3,000+ photographs that I had access to from the trip on a Walmart site.  Those of you who were on Skids's Mexico Team email list should have received an email invite from me linking you to the photograph albums.  If you weren't on the list but would like to look at/order some pics, feel free to email me at neddy824@gmail.com   From the Walmart site, you can order pics or post them on your Facebook or MySpace site.

Parents, knock yourself out...but wait a few minutes so I can buy some Walmart stock.

It's my hopes these many photographs will keep the fire burning and our hearts inspired to live the next 51 weeks like we lived last week.

Nelson

Friday, July 17, 2009

Stay Tuned

Over the weekend, I'll be putting together an extensive slide show of a whole lot more pictures from the trip.  I might also try to drop a number of them on the Walmart or Walgreen's site so that you can order prints.  Let me see what I can do.  

Again, thanks for everyone's prayers.

- Nelson

We're across the border!

We've just crossed the border and are headed to the airport. Thanks for your continued prayers for a trip that's been truly blessed.

Day 7 - Friday, July 17

Looking forward to seeing everyone at home.

We're getting up at 5:30 a.m. to start heading home.  The border should be interesting.  Say a prayer for our safe travel and, Lord willing, we'll be seeing you soon! 

Day 6 - Thursday, Skit Crew

Day 6 - Thursday, City of Children

Day 6 - Thursday, House Crew

Day 6 - Thursday, July 16

I Love It When a Plan Comes Together

Yo soy el Alfa y la Omega —dice el Señor Dios—, el que es y que era y que ha de venir, el Todopoderoso.

- Apocalipsis 1:8

8 Aunque soy el más insignificante de todos los santos, recibí esta gracia de predicar a las naciones las incalculables riquezas de Cristo,9 y de hacer entender a todos la realización del plan de Dios, el misterio que desde los tiempos eternos se mantuvo oculto en Dios, creador de todas las cosas.

- Efesios 3:8-9



Wow!  It all came together - all of the service, the stories, the skits, and the games - in one fantastic close...that was Thursday.

And it began at the house when we gave it to its new owners.  

Our house gets its family...and a quilt from the quilting class at North Boulevard.

The five shepherds who came along on the trip....  They proved to be truly servant leaders.  You want to get to know your eldership better?  I suggest you go on a mission trip wit them.  There's no hiding anything when you spend a week with someone in a foreign country.

In a way we're following in the great carpenter's footsteps.  Ever wonder what Jesus crafted?  
We build houses.  Only God can build a home.  

While the five elders with us on this mission trip were gathering to say a prayer for the house and the family that will make it a home, the family stepped inside and a wail went up.  It was the most incredible sound I think I've ever heard.  At first I thought someone was moved and crying.  Then  I knew it was a sound of joy.  This is the closest I think I've come to believing I'd heard the Holy Spirit speak in tongues through a person.  This was a pure voice of the heart and it went up over the conversation of the crowd and silenced it.  It was the sound of the family's youngest boy thrilled to unearthly moan by the prospect of moving into his new home.  I will never forget that moment or that sound.  I'm certain it was a groan the Holy Spirit translated for God....  I wish He'd translated it for me...though there was no mistaking the meaning.


Then in the afternoon the children raced one another to figure out clues left for them and save Inspector Gadget (Joe Mayes).  Then it was on to the skit where the next amazing sound of the day was the delight and wonder of the children as our story was brought to a close.  All week long our cast of spies (Alpha Omega) and enemy spies (Oscuro - Spanish for dark) have been fighting over control of a file that would reveal the mysterious secret truth.  There was mistaken identity - people not being who they claimed to be.  Fights  with the evil Oscuro in which we did more damage to our own than to the enemy.  Scriptural misunderstandings.  (Does any of this sound familiar?  Is the same show playing at a church near you?)  

We searched the stories of the Judges, Kings and Prophets all to discover the identity of the agent who would solve the great mystery for us and help us triumph over Oscuro.  But the person and answer we sought was not a Judge, King or Prophet.  He was all three.  The mystery of the ages is Christ.  In a wonder-full, emotional moment, children from the audience stood in front of us and raised the symbols from all the stories that lead to the story of Christ's birth.  All of those stories actually being part of one story, the story being written by God, the story that brings together all of our stories.  It was a powerful moment capped with all of the children cheering, proclaiming:  "We are Alpha Omega!  We are Alpha Omega!" 


We finished the day painting our own mosaic of stories, a word painting of our week here in the City of Children.  We gathered at the stands on the hill to one by one offer up a phrase or few words that captured one of the many wonder-filled moments of our week.  Here are a few:

"Hey, it's Patrick!"

"Joe, thanking the children."

"We [our three youth group interns]  can't be in three places at one time....  Well, I guess we can."

"Having five elders on a mission trip."

"And still having fun."

"Hearing Macho Dinero's laugh again."

"Ha.  Ha."

"Seeing my son in a dress."

"AAAAAaaaaaaaaaaaa-aaaaaa."

"Hearing one mediano boy saying 'Waa-waa-waa'!"

"When are you coming back?"

"Karla's story and her smile."

"The sound of the youngest sons reaction to his new home."

"He's with me."

"Fifty-one weeks."

Ask a team member if you'd like to hear the story behind any of those phrases and get a peek into what a God-filled week we experienced.

And then it was time to clean up, pack up and get a few hours of sleep before we head home, tired and happy.  And, hopefully, changed.  The real test of our work here...will be our work at home.


- Nelson

Please, if you have any other thoughts or wishes or questions or needs, don't hesitate to make a post.  If you'd like to post some more of the comments we closed with on Thursday night, feel free to post them here.  Adios, amigos....

Day 5 - Wednesday, Skit Crew

Day 5 - Wednesday, City of Children

Day 5 - Wednesday, Food Crew

Day 5 - Wednesday, Painting Crew

Day 5 - Wednesday, House Crew

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Day 5 - Wednesday, July 15

Fifty-One Weeks

Sorry that my posts have been so intermittent. But the days here are so full...in every sense.

Full of things to do -- the house will be finished today, we'll also complete our painting at the local school and we'll wind up three days of distributing the food, clothing and toys so much of which was donated by our friends and family at North Boulevard.

Full of things to see -- a child smiling seemingly without a care in the world though we know better. We know the story of a child abused by their own father or abandoned by a mother and yet they smile and we can't help but grin with them.


Full of incredible heart -- you'll never know anyone better, peers, young and old, brothers and sisters, our elders, until you serve alongside them. Titles and socio-economic differences melt away when you pitch in together to accomplish something outside your self.


These five short days have been so very full, full of so many wonder-full moments. Perhaps that's why we Americanos are always clinging to a camera, ready to snap a picture at a moment's notice and of just about anything. A cute kid eating an elder-dipped ice cream cone or a comic exchange in a skit when our bumbling bad guys bump into each other or Skid gets so tickled in the middle of a skit that he and we just have to laugh. But mainly our cameras are focused on the children.


Sometimes I wonder what the children here at the City think about all of the lenses pointed in their direction? Is it unnerving? An invasion of privacy? Or do they know how much we savor this time with them? How, as one teen once put it to Skid, we like ourselves when we're here. The children, their needs and their innocent nature, draw from us our very best selves to service. And we relish the feeling of pure goodness that service imparts. 

We want to hold it in our hearts and its memory in our minds but knowing the power of our life at home, the noise and demands of our jobs and school and friends, we understand the immediate will quickly erase our memory of the good and eternal. We want to hold onto this feeling so desperately that we try to capture it in a photograph and commit to a memory card in a digital camera what we cannot preserve completely in memory. Some cultures believe that when someone takes your picture they've stolen your soul. Sometimes it appears that a camera lens is the window to our soul. Perhaps we take them in hopes that the shutter button is a pause button and we can linger in that moment, keep our children little just a little longer, remain on that spiritual high a few days or minutes or just seconds longer.

Do they know we will print and post and share their pictures, study them, smile over them, tell the story caught in the moment to a friend or a family member? Linger over them, trying to pause time until we're back again. But Skid reminds us that the theme of our trip to the City of Children is 51 weeks. Not 51 weeks until we're back...but 51 weeks to serve with the same passion and heart and attitude.


Fifty-one weeks not to hit pause or linger over pictures unless those pictures inspire us to make the most of all of the moments we have.

- Nelson


P.S. Tonight the Festival of Sharing went to Patrick Cole for his great nature and willingness to help.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Day 4 - Tuesday, Skit

Day 4 - Tuesday, City of Children

Day 4 - Tuesday, Food Crew

Day 4 - Tuesday, Painting Crew

Day 4 - Tuesday, House Crew

Day 4 - Tuesday, July 14

More...

We see many homes made of crates and tarps and scraps of wood.

It's remarkable in a place where there is so much need, we do find certain graces God has given.  It doesn't matter how poor or dirty the child is they're so beautiful.  And even in the most squalid and destitute of areas, you'll find the most beautiful flowers growing.  Mark Jackson has observed that it seems like every Mexican male is blessed with a thick head of hair.  There is also a beauty to the faith here, a faith that finds hope and happiness when there seems to us to be every reason to question God.  Perhaps it's a measure of faith given to those who truly require it.  It's been said God doesn't make muscle bound Christians.  He gives power and faith where it's truly needed.

The children of Ensenada are so beautiful.

God is their gardener.

Mark J. in search of hair-challenged Mexican male.


One thing I think all of the parents will be glad to know.  We are eating extremely well.  Our kitchen crew has worked tirelessly to prepare wonderful meals...biscuits and cinnamon rolls from scratch, marinaded chicken, hand-sliced piles of fresh fruit every morning!  Those who have made this trip will attest, it's a little bit embarrassing to realize you might come home from a mission trip where you were feeding the poor weighing more than you did when you left.  Significantly more.  Visibly more.  Thanks to our kitchen crew.



Thank you, kitchen crew!

The kitchen crew is just one of the many jobs folks are doing.  Some are a little more higher profile -- being part of the skit cast or working on the house.  Others aren't as glamorous -- helping the little kids do a craft or work a puzzle, playing games in the heat, sweeping up the cafeteria while others are relaxing, taking out the waste can from the bathrooms...and I do mean waste can (ask your kids about this one...it will be a real icebreaker).  But every job is necessary, every part needed to keep this body of people functioning. It only works when everyone is doing there part and no one is here just for the ride.   


Today there is more to do -- more food to give, more nails to hammer, more school walls to clean and paint, more cups of cold water to deliver in His name.  And for it we will know more about how most of the world lives and we will know something more about God.

Thanks for your prayers.  Can we ask for more?

- Nelson


P.S.  The Festival of Sharing hat was awarded to Sawyer E. (a.k.a Captain Mexico) today for encouraging and assisting others on the building crew and always with that classic Sawyer grin.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Serving and Seeing God

Monday I had the pleasure of being a part of the food crew. We went to the local Costco and bought food for one of the communities down here in Ensanada, Mexico. The one thing I noticed while helping that day was that everyone seemed to be in extremely good moods. I saw smiles on the faces of the crew that reflected from the people they were serving. I also possessed the same feelings. I felt that this was God's way of telling us that this is one of the things he wants us to do with our time on earth. He always wants us to be striving to be like his son, and by serving we show our likeness.

-Stuart P.

The true meaning of happiness

Hola Murfreesboro! It has been a blessing being here and has really put into perspective how much God has given us. Today I was on the food crew and we were delivering food and clothes to a small family. There were 3 children living there and the oldest girl couldn't stop smiling. We hadn't given her anything yet. She was filled with joy that we were there. It makes me think about what I depend on for happiness. I noticed that I don't need all the material things I have, but what I do need are strong friendships with my friends and family and more importantly with God. It's funny how a 5 year old girl living in a makeshift home can change a person living in America. 

- Justin B.

Day 3 - Monday, City of Children

Day 3 - Monday, Food Crew

Day 3 - Monday, Painting Crew

Day 3 - Monday, House Crew

Day 3 - Monday, July 13th

Finally, the Big Day

I worry a little bit that so many of the pictures we've shared with you up to now -- balloon figure making in San Diego, the well-manicured, walled compound of the City of Children and our wildly costumed skit performances -- might lead you to believe that our trip is just an out-of-the-way vacation at our sponsors' expense.

But, as David Alexander put it, today we began looking on the other side of the wall.

One of the many makeshift homes that are everywhere.

Today, we were out in the community, starting on the house we're building.  Imagine raising a house in three days?  Something biblical about that.  Except these homes, unlike ours, consist of two rooms, don't have indoor plumbing and cost about $3,600 to construct.  Sort of takes the miraculous out of raising it in three days. 


The home last year's crew built.  Hey, Jesse B., look, they've added a room already!
     
Raising the first wall 2009.

We worked at the church, cooking and distributing food and clothing for the surrounding community.  Not only do they flock to receive a free hotdog, they're just as enamored with the discarded boxes that the oatmeal came in.  For them, that small box could become a closet or drawer for clothing.  It could become patch material for a house made of crates and tarps.  It could become a matte for a child's bed or carpeting for a dirt floor.  These are creative people.  Life forces them to be.  

What will this empty box become?


Leaving filled...for today...with food and hope.

We also began doing some painting at a local school.  We're told that the City of Children kids who attend the school feel such pride that their peers will see us their American friends doing something for the school.


So we're moving in many different directions, working at the orphanage and in the community and praying that God will magnify the use of every talent, every man hour and every dollar that we spend in His service.

Even in the City of Children, what appears so lavish a complex, providing so much material blessing and love and care and spiritual instruction for the children here, is still lacking the one thing the kids long for most.  There isn't a child here who doesn't wait for the day a parent or family member will arrive at the gates of this city and take them home.  And that, for all that we give, we cannot give.  Only God can.

In truth, aren't we all awaiting the day our Father takes us home?  The children here are just more attuned to that longing than perhaps we are.

And, as far as this being a fun vacation...it is.  There is wonder-full fun to be had in making a difference and doing something of value and purpose for someone other than yourself.  It's a deep felt joy.  And we are here to vacate.... Vacate our ties to the many things that distract us at home and keep us from seeing what God is doing in our lives.  We're vacating ourselves from daily pressures and stress that is inevitably tied to the stuff that owns us.  So, yes, this is the fun-est sort of vacation imaginable.


And so we thank our many sponsors for the blessings they are giving this place and these people...and to us.

God bless you.  

- Nelson

Callie is crowned...I mean capped.

Callie showing the form that made her today's Festival of Sharing cap recipient.

P.S.  The Festival of Sharing of hat was awarded this evening to Callie Kerbo for jumping in with the school painting crew today.  Congrats, Callie!  And, congrats to all of our parents!  You're kids are doing some amazing things here.  You may only get out of them three words when they get home - something like "it was good" - and so you may never know all the really cool and good things they did this week.  You may never know.  Lord knows.

Day 2 Photographs - Sunday, July 12

Day 1 Photographs - Saturday, July 11th 2009

Monday, July 13, 2009

Day 2 - It's a Mystery!



"I have become its [the gospel's] servant by the commission God gave me to present to you the word of God in its fullness -- the mystery that has been kept hidden for ages and generations, but is now disclosed to the saints. To them God has chosen to make known among the Gentiles the glorious riches of this mystery, which is Christ in you, the hope of glory."  Colosions 1:25-26

Our theme for the week at the City of Children is Super Secreto or Top Secret.  Over the next few days, we will be trying to reveal a great mystery concerning the love our God has poured out on us.  But there are many other great mysteries that touch us here.


  • How is it we have so much while others have so little?
  • Why are so many of us blessed with parents who love and care for us while others yearn for this blessing?
  • Why was I born into the family and place and economic situation I was born into?
  • Who has God given a more difficult task?  Those born into poverty or those born into riches?
  • And how is it that these children are so very happy and so loving to us?  Who is truly serving who?  Who is truly teaching who?


Good mysteries for us to struggle with.  And being here without so many of the distractions of our lives at home allows us to look at things that normally get lost to the noise of our lives.  We've come to work with orphans, feed those in need, build a house for someone without shelter.  On the surface that's what we tell people when we explain our mission here.  But in truth, we, too, are being ministered to...finding our father, being feed spiritual, working on home for sometime down the road.

Sunday and our day of rest is over.  The dorm mamas feed us a wonderful, authentic mexican Sunday-after-church meal.  Our real work begins today.  And so does God's...on us.  

- Nelson


P.S.  The Festival of Sharing hat for Day 2 was awarded to Justin Bowen for always being there asking what he could do to help and doing it.  He is just one of so many servant hearts here and the award could have just as easily gone to so many.  Parents who are reading this...thanks for sending such good kids.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Sunday~the beginning :)

Hola from Ensenada! Today's activities have been very calm- a brief church service with all of the children, a tour of the entire compound, and an AMAZING lunch! I've enjoyed playing games and coloring with the younger girls while the boys played soccer. Now that the younger children have gone back to their houses, the jump ropes have come out and become the center of attention. All the teens are very friendly to the american group, even if the language barrier is a bit frustrating. The teenage girls just laugh and smile as we all try to communicate with the limited Spanish phrases we know. Most of the girls know at least a little English so they can figure out what we are asking, but not without an innocent laugh. At this point we are just beginning our week-long journey through another culture that i'm sure will be life-changing. Today is just the beginning and i'm anxious to see wht is ahead. :)
~Marilyn J.

Day 2- July 12, 2009 continued. Comments from Catherine :)

Its still day two here in Ensenada and we just finished having our delicious meal prepared by the Mexican dorm mothers here, and boy am I stuffed! If you were ever wondering why we have restaurants named La Siesta (in spanish that means nap) and were confused by the meaning, in mexico lunch is a pretty big deal, so big that you need a siesta when you are finished, which I understand now cause I am in a great need of one. At the moment, everyone is outside playing and socializing in the courtyard/play area, and soon we will get to go play in the dorms with the children here. Earlier today we took a tour of the home, seeing the dorms in which the kids here lived and their "Main Street" where their barber shop, doctors office, Patty & Ricardo's office and their huge pantry stocked with three months supply of food is located. They are well taken care of here and don't take anything for granted, which really makes me appreciate what we have back home. God really has blessed us, not only for the great opportunity to come down here and let us serve others, but also through everything we are given back home.

We're having a great time here and I know it will only get better!
Love, Catherine

Day 2- July 12, 2009

Words from Callie our first teen blogger

On day 2 of being in Ensenada, Mexico we wake up to a nice breeze coming off the water.It is majestic. How can you not worship God in a place like this? The campus is breath-taking. Because it is Sunday, we joined the entire campus for church service. We participated in an english-spanish service. Everyday we have a teen devo where Skid reiterates some things that were talked about in the service and observations from the day. Today we talked about struggles we felt that God has presented us with on this trip. I can already feel some of the tension between the children and ourselves going away.

Today we are playing with the children and it is very much like a relaxing day. The following days will involve much more energy and running around. Today we play with the kids. I am excited to embark on what will be an excited and tiring adventure, but I can tell God already has big plans for our group and that is really exciting. The trip has been great and the weather is wonderful.

-Callie K.

Day 1 - Saturday End of Day

Hey, Dorothy, we're not in Kansas anymore...


As we sat for or very first team meeting here at the City of Children in Ensenada Mexico, our American hosts - Jeff and Natasha Fincher - used a powerful illustration to help us understand we're not in America anymore.  While we were reviewing the rules, Jeff had us draw at a random treat from a box.  Each one of these treats was something you could only find in Mexico and then, once everyone had one, we were invited to taste.  

Jeff and Natasha, our American hosts here

Hmmmmm, the black, gooey Tamarind pulp in a bag (Jeff Mc thought it was a tire patch).  Ohhhhh, and I've got something like ground up sweet tart mixed with chili powder (Sugar and chili powder...how's that going to come out?)  Sam has something like a dinner-sicle -- tastes like ribs on the outside and I think I'm getting to the green beans now!  Ahhhhh, what am I suppose to do with this? 

Treats?

In an impressive exhibition of daring and gastrointestinal faith (most of us couldn't even read the ingredients list) we put they oddly textured and colored and flavored "treats" in our mouths.  And, yes, facial reactions underscored Jeff's point...we are in a foreign country.  Tastes are, indeed, different here.  It was Jeff's way to help us understand that we need to be sensitive to the cultural differences.  

But there are some things we do share and that are already bringing us together.  One is a love of fun and so the evening ended with Mexican and American teens gathering for arousing game of Musical Chairs of Death.  The other is a love of the Lord.  We gathered in a circle to pray and sing in our different languages but with one heart.  It's always a wonderful feeling to hear others praising God in a different language that you don't understand but because you share the same spirit and hope and promise...you do.

Tomorrow is Sunday and we'll be treated to another taste of the local culture when the dorm mothers make us a real, authentic Ensenada Mexican meal.  But unlike today's "treats" we'll be begging for more!

- Nelson

*  *  *  *  * 

Day 1 Festival of Sharing Winner - Rebecca Y!
 
Teenage Mutants in San Diego

Birthday Girl!

P.S. Rebecca Y. was awarded the Festival of Sharing hat today.  The Festival of Sharing hat was rescued from a yard sale and now has found new as the award given each day to the team member who best exemplifies the spirit of service.  Rebecca received it for taking one for the team when she agreed to get a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle balloon made while we were in San Diego to complete a set of four the guys had made.  Not her first choice, we're sure.  Also, Rachel Y. celebrated her birthday today with a cupcake and group sing on the bus and getting something "good" from the "treat" box. 

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Day 1 - Saturday, July 11

We All Made It! (And our luggage, too)

In transit leaving the San Diego airport.  Forty-one people in the same t-shirt draw a lot of looks and questions.  No, we're not all here for a family reunion...though in a way we are.  The t-shirts are great icebreakers for telling folks why we're here and what we're doing and how a few teenagers are spending part of their summer vacation. 

Just a quick note that we've just arrived at the City of Children after a safe flight and an amazingly easy crossing of the border.  So keep us in your prayers that God is glorified and a cup of cold water is delivered to those in need.  And look for more posts from Ensenada and the City of Children all this week.  

Oh, and if you happen to have messages to pass on to loved ones here, just post them and we'll deliver them.