For the past week, Juanito has gone out to a different village each day, sometimes a couple in a day. He has come home exhausted, but with stories of how God has moved and worked throughout each visit. Reminding me of how Jesus sent the disciples out in two's, he has coupled with a pastor from different areas in each of the villages he has gone to, working side by side to assess the need in the home through a list of criteria and also to be able to talk with the people in each home, evangelizing if led to. The first village that he went to was a village called Terrero, a part of Canilla. We had gotten a list of people in need from a pastor there, but as he and Tomas were entering the village, they ran into a friend of Juanito's who is the pastor of church in Terrero. He left the tasks that he had planned for the day and joined them on their mission, soon relaying to them that most of the people on their list were not actually in need, but that he could show them many people that truly were in need. After visiting a few houses in Terrero , he took them into a neighboring village, Chimul. Juanito was amazed to find that there was an actual line dividing the areas that had gotten rain and the areas that had not; the areas that had not covered a little bit of Terrero and all of Chimul. The families they visited in Chimul were also all Catholic families which gave them an amazing opportunity to talk with them about and show them the love of Jesus, and also showed us the heart of the pastor that worked with them as he led them around to people who truly are in need instead of just his own parishoners. Each of the villages that Juanito has gone out to have yielded more families in need, and we now have a list of over 150 families that have been personally visited. We started giving out corn on Saturday here in Canilla, and are planning to start with the tickets in San Andres in two weeks, although we have been giving out corn in all of our clinics for a few weeks now to those that present with need.
We have also been able to identify better the areas that truly were hard-hit by the drought this year, and through this assessment, we have decided that while there are many families in need at this time, the corn will be given out to the needy families that live in the areas that have been affected by the drought, while other families in need have been entered into our already existing (yet growing weekly) nutrition program we have in place in our clinics. We gave out food to 9 families in San Andres alone yesterday, buying food for the last one because we had not brought enough with us for the need that we encountered.
And yet we all know that more important that any of the numbers or systems that we put into place is the people themselves. The stories that we are hearing and being confronted with are often hard to believe, even after hearing similar ones for years. We know that true freedom will only come as God breaks into the hearts and lives of the people here in bondage, but we also know that Jesus came to bring physical as well as spiritual healing, and each of the food packs is given out with prayers that these people will see the love of Jesus through each one.
Thank you for joining in the work that God is doing here in Guatemala. Your prayers and support are not going unanswered!
Monday, October 26, 2009
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