Sunday, June 30, 2013

Last day-R&R




On our last day in Belize, we put away our work tools and construction clothes and got to play on Spanish Lookout Caye, an island off Belize City.  It was a day of snorkeling and lounging in beach chairs, followed by a final devotional time where we reflected on the events of the week; but first we had to get there.  One of our vans blew a tire on the way from Corozal, and changing it out for the spare required a team effort to provide enough leverage to remove a rounded and uncooperative lug nut.

This picture answers the question: how many Presbyterians does it take to change a flat?



Our first glimpse of our home for the night on Spanish Lookout Caye

Science teacher Pam Collins consults her fish chart as she prepares to snorkel on a coral reef.

Ready for a swim




Our last sunset in Belize




Saturday, June 29, 2013

Home, safe and sound



Just a quick note to let you know that we're safely back from Belize.  It's good to be home. A bunch of us will be at church in the morning.  Be sure to ask us about our experiences in Belize.  We'd love to tell you about them.

This won't be the end of the blog.  The story isn't finished yet. We have more pictures and tales to share, so keep coming back for the next little while for updates.

Evangel has three members who are still in Belize and will be continuing their work there through Wednesday.  Keep praying for Steve, Carlton and Jeff who have been meeting with success distributing thumb drives containing training materials for pastors in both English and Spanish.

Above is a picture of the team this morning just before we left Spanish Lookout Caye for the mainland and the Belize City airport. 

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Images from Thursday

It's been another long and satisfying day as we closed out our ministry in Corozal, Belize.  Tomorrow we will be at play as we go snorkling and get ready to head for home.  We'll be staying on an island and I'm not sure of the internet connectivity, so the blog may be dark for the next day.

Here are a few images of our final day in Corozal.





















Wednesday, June 26, 2013

To reap and not grow weary

Jeff Lowman speaks to youth from the neighborhood
Let us not lose heart in doing good, for in due time we will reap if we do not grow weary
-Galatians 6:9

Supposedly the heat index was 107 here today.  It sure felt like it.  We think we're used to hot summers in Alabama, but the heat and humidity of Belize can sap your strength and wear you down in a way it doesn't back home. After three days of construction work in the tropical heat, we are scraped, tired and sore. If it weren't for our twin primary fuel sources of Gatorade and tortillas, we'd be running on empty already.

We're a happy team, though--smiling and singing through our work.  There's been a lot of joy on our team and not a bit of whining or grumbling.

We've been working hard and putting in long hours since we arrived in Belize.  So, what is it we are accomplishing exactly?  Well, we've been putting on a Vacation Bible School that has been growing each day.  Today we had around 50 children in attendance who learned about Heaven.

We've gotten a lot done on the construction front at Prince of Peace Church.  We've worked to repair roof damage from a hurricane, we've added walls and rooms to an extension to the church building that will eventually serve as the home for Pastor Juan Patt and his growing family.

We've painted and cleaned and weeded.  We've been giving guitar lessons and even put on a modest medical clinic with fluoride treatments for the kids and blood pressure and blood glucose measurements for the adults.

We think we're doing good things here, and we all feel strongly that we're in Belize for a good reason. But it's impossible to know which of the seeds we've planted here this week will germinate and ultimately bear spiritual fruit.  After all, we've dropped in out of the sky into this tiny church community, and we will be gone in another day or so.

Prince of Peace Church and the people in the surrounding neighborhoods face a lot of challenges.  The church is tiny--perhaps a dozen or so members--and it currently doesn't have a single elder or deacon to help Pastor Juan with the burden of running the church and ministering to its people.  Belize is a poor country relative to the U.S., so there's not much money for programs or supplies or much of anything, really.

There's so much to be done here in Belize, and so few people to do it, the job seems overwhelming.

The children coming to VBS, are very used to short term mission teams coming in from the United States, and the kids know that VBS means a few days of candy, love and attention--things that are in short supply for many of them at home. Other mission teams have been here before us, and the next VBS at Prince of Peace Church will be conducted by another mission team from another church in just a couple of weeks.

As much has we'd all like to look into the future and see what our work here this week will lead to, that isn't going to happen.  No one likes to leave a book unfinished, and we may not learn the end of the story here, but we can take joy in knowing that our part in the story was for good.

Yes, on a sweltering summer day in Belize, when our muscles hurt and we are overwhelmed by the magnitude of the job to be done at Prince of Peace and the meager resources we can bring to bear on it,  we can take comfort in God's promise that in due time we will reap if we do not grow weary.

Wednesday in Belize in pictures

Today the children learned about Heaven in VBS
Caitlyn can build a mean wall

Kim and Sydney prepare cinder blocks

Nate muds a door frame
Anna on the job

Ali and Mary Katherine

Kent and Lisa on paint patrol
Choir practice for Thursday's service
Teri gives Patricia a guitar lesson

Nate administers a flouride treatment

The daily puppet show is a hit with the kids

Kelly and some new friends