Monday, December 15, 2014

Guard Your Heart for it is the Wellspring of your heart.


In Guatemala the water is very dirty and polluted, but God has blessed my family and Paradise Bound with clean healthy water to bathe and wash in.  We have access to a fresh water spring not too far from the Base.
    Many weeks ago when we would turn our faucets and showerheads on, the water didn’t really look like water. So as the days went on the water got darker and darker.
   Now many people can assume that maybe a pipe started to rot or the faucets were old, but what really happened was that there was a mudslide that ran through our whole water system. The fresh water spring was filled with mud and muck.  So the water system had to be drained and cleaned so we could have clean water again.
   For the past couple of weeks my brother Caleb, and I have been learning that our minds can become dirty just like the water was polluted by mud. Our minds can also be polluted by internet, pictures, videos, TV, and sometimes even books.
We are learning that it is up to us to not be tempted and to trust in God and do what he wants.  Always praying for you.


-AJ

Proverbs 4:23

Caleb hiking up the cement wall of the dam by the spring

some of our family hiking back to the base

Emilee in front of the pipes that bring the water to the base

Kira, Naomi, and Miya looking at the water

Mom, me, and Naomi posing for the camera

nice waling stick Naomi!

Monday, December 1, 2014

Dios Te Bendiga

God Bless You.

We say it when we want people to know we are thinking of them.
We say it when we want people to feel loved.
We say it when people sneeze.


God.

The creator of all things.  This wonderful and yet still mysterious deity that Loves us in such a way that we are continuously striving to fully understand and be closer to.

Bless.

A passing on or imparting an element of love.  This can be done with actions or with words.  It is something we all long for (a blessing) and is something that we when we truly know we are (when we are blessed), we are humbled.  We want to be a blessing as well with how we live.

You.

We often spend time doing things we want to do.  We work on our stuff and our schedules, and truthfully 98% of our day is centered around ourselves.  Yet, do we truly unpack what it means to be "You".  Who are you?  What are you doing here (on earth and in this place)?  How is God speaking to you?  I propose that "you" is deeper than we often realize.  Who you are is the beloved of God.  You are made in His image and designed to dwell with the Creator everyday and all day.


May this Christmas advent(ure) be just that.  A time of thrilling adventure as YOU dwell and encounter God with many blessings and be a blessing to others.  May you live a full and exciting life knowing that you are called to something greater.

As our tribe is in a time of rest in Iowa before we head back to Guatemala, we can honestly say we are blessed.  Blessed by family.  Blessed by friends.  Blessed by an incredible church family.  Blessed by God Himself.  We strive to live as a blessing.  Having our lives echo glory to what God is doing in Guatemala and in the States.  We try to live life like this:  God bless YOU....and  YOU bless God.  This means that we throw off the things that weigh us down and live a life that (actions and words and deeds) will be pleasing to God.
Yep, we fail miserably at this.  We are messy broken people.....yet....we have a desire that burns in our soul to keep on blessing.

May you be blessed this Christmas!  God Bless You! and may with your life.....You Bless God!

Dios te bendiga mis amigos!
~Justin
Our family, our pictures might not be perfect...but that is AOK

The "View" from our other living room window

Naomi and Yvon and Christian

Friday, November 21, 2014

Houston...we do not have a problem

So back in 2010 when our family was in Guatemala for the summer I acquired a new name.  Well, truth be told it was not new name but a variation of what my name (Justin) sounded like with the Spanish accent.  The team members of that day picked up on the name and it stuck.  There are still people today that call me Houston.

Often times it is jokingly expressed as the infamous line: "Houston...we have a problem".

Yet as we have been back in the states for three weeks, the communication we are receiving is not a problem, but rather a story: A story of God's goodness and provision.

We find our little tribe sharing stories and pictures with anybody and everybody who cares.  We go to churches and share about PBM and the Guatemalans that we have been blessed to encounter.  We have been to schools and spoke at chapels and even swung by care facilities and shared stories.

What have we found with this time back in Iowa:
~We have been busy the last few weeks and are looking forward to a quiet December
~We have thoroughly enjoyed reflecting on what we witnessed God doing the past 21 weeks in Guatemala
~We have some kiddos that absolutely love telling stories of what they experienced in Guatemala


We are blessed.


So what we are up now?  Well...

We are in the states still sharing about stories of God's faithfulness and provisions and grace.  We have our tickets to return to the "land of Eternal Spring" January 7.  We do also have return tickets for March 31 back to Iowa.  We are excited that PBM is bringing Tim Hawkins to Sioux Center on April 9!!!!

We appreciate your prayers and look forward to connecting with you at some point while we are in Iowa....or California....or ..  wherever!


Friday, November 7, 2014

In Iowa....

We are now back in Iowa for a 8 week furlough.  As I am typing this, Caleb is over at a friend's house, AJ is on her way, Emilee and Kira are on the playground outside and we are still un-packing some of the bags.  It is good to see family and friends.

"So what are you going to be doing?"

This questions is one that has been asked often.  Our November will be spent speaking at various places and sharing stories and pictures of what God is up too in Guatemala.  We will also be getting things ready for the Tim Hawkins concert/comedy extravaganza on April 9 in Sioux Center, IA.

The blessings are abounding.  We were blessed with a safe trip back and the adjustment (can you say cold weather?) has been fairly well.

We will keep you posted on more happenings and the excitement that comes around each new corner.


Funny story:  Yesterday Emilee wanted a drink of water so she went and got a glass and went to the faucet and filled it with water and started to drink.
Naomi, from the corner..."Emilee....NNNNNNNNOOOOOOO that is bauchy (bad) water!!!!!"
Oh let the adjustments begin.

Dios Te Bendiga

Justin

Monday, October 27, 2014

We are now down to 8 days....

So today we took some Iowa and California friends back to the airport.  They were here for a week with a few people from MI to work at the base.  We are nearly done with the medical clinic and the offices!  YEAH. This much needed space will allow our pastors to study and prayer and maintain a place for administration details to all of the villages that they go to.

The expanded clinic will only enhance our care and services to the people surrounding the base.


So, as we prepare to have the Paradise Bound Ministries Board come on Thursday......we are just trying to survive.  Let me explain.  2 adults, 6 kids, one flu.  Everyone except for AJ is sick.  Fever, headaches, burning eyes, and a cough.  It has been around for three days and is starting to work its way out, BUT is kicking our tails.

We ask for a quick time of healing as we prepare for the board, as we pack to head back to Iowa, as we are engaging in the preparations for our times of speaking, and as we say goodbye, for now, to some friends.


Addios for now.


~Justin

Monday, October 13, 2014

NO HAY CLAVO!

My confession is that the title is actually a Guatemalan slang term meaning that there is no problem.  This is used mainly with the youth and is not rude or bad, but usually can be said among friends.  My admission is when I say this, I feel like I am hanging out with the youth group again.  Seeing the fellow Guatemalan missionaries giggle when I say it, or they do, brings me a bit of joy.


                                                          It literally translate as: There is no nail.



     We find ourselves down to three weeks before we  jump on an airplane and head for cooler weather.  So, the question begs to be asked, “What are we doing with our time?”

let me introduce you to the next group of WORLD CHANGERS!!!!!
    Well, I am glad that you have asked.   We find ourselves getting things ready for the construction team to come down here on Sunday and help expand our onsite clinic and build some much needed office space.  We also have an Open Doors Children’s Home team that will be coming and spending time with the kiddos (we are NOW up to 13 babies!!!!!! Plus 3 other toddlers).  Shortly after these teams leave, we have most of the board members for Paradise Bound coming for a Spiritual Retreat and Vision Casting. 

    We are now done with our 30 days of Spanish classes, but a small forest of notes to keep going over.  The kids are still plugging away at school and enjoying it. 

    We are busy gathering info to bring to the states, lining up our speaking engagements, planning for a big event in Sioux Center in April, and trying our best to continue building the relationships among the other Guatemalan missionaries here. 

    We appreciate the prayers and thoughts that come down south.  Each day we try our best to soak in this beauty.  The people, the mountains, the volcanoes, the earthquakes, the paradise, and this over all “land of eternal Spring”.  This journey, this followed the Lord to another Country has been, is, and will be a alteration to our lives.  We pray that the alteration is one that will only bring us closer to His heart and that our kids will learn a language of dependence on Him.


"God's Patch Work Quilt"......how would you like to farm that!
                      Dios te bendiga y con mucho amor yo digo adios.

Buenas noches amigos.

Thursday, October 2, 2014

The Cross of Jesus is everywhere we go...


My title might be different than this post...but look to the bottom of the pictures and you will see what I mean...
Un lugar para Pastores en La Reina...Martes de 30 de Septiembre

Yes....that IS a volcano irrupting a mile and a half away from me...





Imigdio and his wife have lived in Izatapa for about a year and a half.  They are church planters.  The church is small, only about ten families.  The invitation to come and visit him came from when both of us were in Cobán, over 6 hours away.  Imigdio said that I had to come and visit, but I had to bring the family.  Hermano Jesus mentioned that he lived close to the Ocean.  So I proceeded to ask if he could see the Ocean from his village.  His response: “Um…yeah” (in Spanish of course).  What he did not say was the village is literally five blocks away from the Ocean!
When we got to the house, we were greeted with a snack of over ripe corn.  Yet, we were close to the Ocean…the closest cornfield was miles away!  It was the best they had…they bought the corn just for us.  The kitchen had half walls and a dirt floor.  There was no fridge.  The property was maybe a 1/6 of an acre.  We then were offered some eggs and beans and tortillas.  They were very delicious and a typical Guatemalan meal.  It was the best they had….and his wife was not feeling well, yet they served us.
We (my family and Hermano Jesus and Pablo and Anya) went across the way to the church.  Normally they would have a devotional in the afternoon, but moved it to the morning so that all of us could be a part of it.  AJ started off by playing a prelude on the piano.  Now, when I say that this church is simple, I mean it is simple.  The floor is sand, the chairs are plastic lawn chairs, the stage is only half done with cement, and was maybe fifteen feet wide by fifty feet…but it was the best they had.  I was asked to bring a greeting and prayer.  Then after some simple singing, praying, and a message, we were then ready for lunch….two and half hours later.  Our kids did not mind the sand floor as it allowed them to play and build sand castles during church.
Lunch was wonderful.  Grilled fish….the whole fish.  We had to pick the meat off, but it was delicious.  After eating rice, fish, and tortillas, we walked to the beach.  Now, the hospitality did not end there.  Imigdio wanted to make sure we went to a good beach so our kids could swim.  So we hopped into a small boat that took us across the channel and landed at a part of the beach that was a cove.  The water was calm and clean.  The kids played, collected shells, and swam.  Imigdio, his 11 year old daughter, my family, Hermano Jesus, Anya, and Pablo all enjoyed our time together.  Our kids latched onto these new friends quickly.  We were just about done and ready to walk over the hill to look at the Ocean unhindered when a wave knocked down Hermano Jesus.  When he stood up….no glasses!  We quickly went over to him and began to look.  When I say that this man of God is blind without his glasses, it comes across as mild.  We needed to find these glasses.  But where do you start? The waves kept coming.  So, we prayed.  Said our amen and then about 30 seconds later Pablo stepped on the glasses….in the Ocean…..in the waves.  THAT is the power of prayer!
After a good day we headed home, but ran into some problems with the van overheating.  As it was raining and waited for the steam to stop coming out of the overflow area for the radiator, I thought that I had waited enough time.  I was wrong.  The lid blew off and I quickly found my left arm and my left side covered with very hot water.  I was very grateful that the burns were there and not on my face.  The blisters are looking better and I am slowly improving, each day, having less and less pain.  Some spots were indeed 2nd degree (or whatever they call it now).  But, the hospitality gets better.
The Cross is beside us...
The Cross is always before us...
ImigdĂ­o
            Today (Tuesday) I went to a village called La Reina for a gathering of pastors.  There were 17 of us in all.  Imigdio was one of them there.  Today he did not feel good, but he came.  When he saw my arm, he asked what happened.  I began to tell him and immediately he started to pray and ask for healing.  He also said he felt like it was his fault.  I asked why.  He said that he had an unusual feeling when we were leaving, but did not say anything.  He says he wished he had said something.  He felt like God was trying to tell us something and he was not obedient to God.  He felt like he needed to give more.  Give more?  A man who makes VERY little money, spent a weeks worth of pay to feed us (and refused to accept anything) and 















has a deep heart for the Lord, felt like he needed to give more?  Yes, give more.  When we listen to God and He speaks and we do not follow through, we miss it.  All other things fall short.  Yet, I was very grateful for his heart, his hospitality, and what he gave me: a great insight to the heart of God.  A new friend has been made in Guatemala. 





The Cross is always behind us...
And yes, we will visit the Ocean again in Guatemala!

Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Oceans




Black sand and many sea shells.  Caleb even took
home an alive Blue crab!  
as a tribe we went to the ocean on Friday Sept 26th.  We visited a pastor and received hospitality that was hard to accept.  I am going to wait to tell you those stories.  I will focus on the fun we had on an empty ocean shore!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Oceans - Hillsong United
Verse #1
You call me out upon the waters
The great unknown, where feet may fail
And there I find You in the mystery
In oceans deep, my faith will stand
This is the boat we took across the canal.
Talk about increasing your
prayer life :) 
And I will call upon Your name
And keep my eyes above the waves
When oceans rise
My soul will rest in Your embrace
For I am Yours, and You are mine
Verse #2
Your grace abounds in deepest waters
Your sovereign hand will be my guide
Where feet may fail and fear surrounds me
You've never failed, and You won't start now
Chorus:
So I will call upon Your name
And keep my eyes above the waves
When oceans rise
My soul will rest in Your embrace
For I am Yours, and You are mine
Bridge:
Spirit lead me where my trust is without borders
Let me walk upon the waters
Wherever You would call me
Take me deeper than my feet could ever wander
And my faith will be made stronger
In the presence of my Savior x 3
The Tribe
Ending:
I will call upon Your name
Keep my eyes above the waves
My soul will rest in Your embrace
I am Yours, and You are mine
I am Yours, and You are mine
I am Yours, and You are mine
I am Yours, and You are mine
SONGWRITERS
JOEL HOUSTON, MATT CROCKER, SALOMON LIGHTHELM
PUBLISHED BY
LYRICS © EMI MUSIC PUBLISHING
Naomi eating over rip corn on the cob, but it was the best They had!

We brought brownies to share with the family that hosted us.  We ate them for breakfast.  The kids loved brownies for breakfast

After a sneak peak at what was for dinner, I had a long chat with the kids on how to respond when the food was set on the table.  I had all I could do to 'enjoy' my fish.  I will admit that the food was delicious!








If pictures are worth a thousand words, I have said enough for the day.  Thank you Lord for a day of fun and hospitality!  What a beautiful day!

Vicki