Showing posts with label Zapotec. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zapotec. Show all posts

Thursday, January 09, 2014

Effective Mission... investing the time to get it right...


Mission takes time.  Okay, let me rephrase that... effective mission takes time.

Sadly this is problematic for many people here in the US, especially those pursuing short-term mission strategies that promise quick results, instant impact and life changing ministry, all in the context of five days of dedicated service in some foreign locale.

Here’s the reality.  

If a major issue manages to cut through all of the news clutter and become a headline grabber in the US, chances are it will have a limited run with our truncated attention span.  That’s because, as soon as, the next disaster, celebrity run amok or political faux pas happens, that cataclysmic story of yesterday is passe.    

We are living in an era where if something happens, we need to know about it yesterday.  If it happened yesterday, it is almost as if it doesn’t matter.  With our hyper-connected lives bringing us the latest news every minute, we have become accustomed to having what we want, where we want it, and at the moment we demand it.  In short, we want to be in control of all aspects of our lives from the moment we get up, until our head hits the pillow at night.  Instantly.

It is this mindset, and the belief that everything in the world should function with a sense of speed and urgency, that has little by little seeped into our mission philosophy.  And it is vastly changing the way those of us in the field go about our mission because so much of what we do over there, is funded here at home.

A Training Center

In the summer of 2005, my ministry, Adventures in Life, began, alongside a group of churches and leaders in Oaxaca, Mexico, the construction of what would one day, become a training center for indigenous Zapotec Pastors and Leaders.  Over the next few years, working together, Christian brothers from the US, Canada and Mexico worked side by side, pouring tons of concrete, laying thousands of bricks, and running the electrical and plumbing systems that would one day be necessary.


Fast forward to January of 2014, and in a few weeks, that day will finally be here.  Nine years after we began construction, and after a few failed attempts at starting classes, the first classes at that facility will be offered!

Over the years I have listened as many short-term people who have served with me have become discouraged about the perceived slowness and lack of progress of that particular project.  Questions as to why it has taken so long to move forward are posed from a mindset which holds that instant is the most important concept in life.


What is interesting is that no one in Oaxaca has asked these questions.  People there have been patiently waiting for all the construction to be completed and for all the details to fall in line before getting to work on the next phase of the project, curriculum. 

Understand what that means.  The people with whom we are serving and working in Oaxaca are satisfied with the progress we have made together.  And they are excited to be starting classes on that site later this month.

Tomatoes, Tomatoes Everywhere

In February and July of 2012 we helped a church and a small group of people in the village of San Baltazar Guelavila, Oaxaca, put micro-greenhouses on their properties.  Totaling 200 square feet, these greenhouses support about 70 tomato plants each.  That’s a potential annual yield of almost 2000 pounds of tomatoes for each greenhouse.  Plenty for a family to eat, can, and sell to others in the city.  This is a huge economic plus to a family.


Like the training center in the above example however, it took awhile to get everything right and in order.  After we put up the frames, designed with locally available materials, the screen and plastic we needed was nowhere to be found.  Since we were buying small lots, no one was interested in selling to us.

Once we got that issue solved, we turned to the tomato plants.  Again, needing only a few hundred plants marked us as a small player in the Oaxaca tomato world.  After sitting completely framed with no plastic for months, and then finally covered in screen and plastic, we were stuck waiting for tomato plants.


Days and weeks of delay beyond our control turned into months, the kind of delay that drives short-term folks crazy.  Finally in June of 2013, a full 16 months after the fist frame was built, those greenhouses were planted.

Recently they were harvested and guess what?  Those little greenhouses were a complete success!  People across the village reaped the rewards as families gave away, or sold tomatoes at below market prices, helping augment the daily diets of a segment of Mexican society that frequently is gripped by chronic hunger and malnutrition.


Better yet, everyone in San Baltazar knows that those tomatoes came as a result of the work, generosity and love of a local church striving to follow Jesus.   

A Way Forward

What are we to make of these two examples?  Let me speak honestly here as one who has also struggled to balance the need for speed and the reality of working in another country.

Both of these examples highlight the reality that effective mission, the type of mission that cements long term results and opens the door for the Gospel.  Whether you are addressing spiritual, economic or physical health, effective mission takes time.  It is a blue chip investment that, like our faith, matures over the long haul.  Effective mission is not, and should not be about the quick payoff.

Just as a great portfolio of stocks, bonds and other investments takes time to mature, so does mission.  Many of us in long-term cross cultural mission know that we may never get a chance to see the harvest from our work.  But, that is okay because we view our work as pioneering and seed planting.

If we could get churches, groups, individuals and short-term teams to think of their time more as an investment, as opposed to a time to reap dividends, maybe short-term mission could see some real and profound improvement.

To do so would be a profound success.

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Stories from the Field... Joe Ramirez of Mission Focused Sounds Off...

Dave Miller, Co-Founder of Adventures in Life Ministry


Occasionally I get a chance to write for someone else's blog, magazine, or online journal. My good friend Joe Ramirez of Mission Focused, who has served alongside me in Oaxaca for years saw something that caught his eye.

And it is more than my ugly mug from the picture above.
I was touched by what he had to say about ministry, short-term mission, and trying to follow Jesus. I think you will be too!


Angelina, Louis, and Dave... Some Thoughts on Short-Term Mission 

I’m new to the whole Short Term Missions (STM’s) thang…and much of what I’ve learned has been with Dave Miller and Adventures in Life (AIL) in Oaxaca, Mexico.  A simple definition of short term missons: a group of volunteers coming for limited time period, anywhere from 1 week to 1 month, to “minister” and share the Good News of Christ.  For example it could be men doing construction work, a youth group leading Vacation Bible Schools in orphanages or folks doing street evangelism.
It’s been my pleasure to witness first hand the work AIL is doing in Oaxaca, as they work in partnership with local pastors and missionaries to help them reach the native Zapotec’s  with the Good News of Christ.

I was flipping through an old issue of Time magazine today when I came across this photo of Angelina Jolie, in Cambodia.  It was part of a full page ad for Louis Vuitton.  The tag line for the ad was “A single journey can change the course of a life.”
From a  photographic point of view, it’s a nice photograph.  Let’s be real!  Angelina Jolie plus an exotic locale…not hard to get a great photo.
I know that she represents the United Nations globally so it’s probably safe to say the image is not photo-shopped and I am sure she doesn’t roll with a $1500 tote while visiting third-world countries.
What does this have to do with missions…everything!
Dave shares stories from the missions field of good intentions gone wrong.  A big part of the problem stems from a viewpoint that the church in the United States knows best when it comes to “doing” missions cross-culturally.  From Dave’s experiences in Mexico he has seen short term missionaries from the states come into Mexico with big plans of evangelizing the “lost” for a week or two, only to leave and never return.  Leaving in their wake long term missionaries and the local church to clean up the mess that these short term folks left behind.
One of the things he sees frequently, and he tries to advise those coming on trips with him, is groups who come to work and minister that bring a change of clothes for every day they are there.  On the surface it might not seem like a big deal.  Work hard, get your clothes dirty and stinky, change into clean clothes…start all over again.  Often these short term folks are working alongside fellow Christians who live there and want to serve with them.  They will more often than not, where the same work clothes every day.  For some its because they have no choice, and others out of practicality…you have work clothes and you have non work clothes.
It is an issue of cultural sensitivity.  Like not bringing a $1500 Louis Vuitton tote on your missions trip…not that that has happened.  At least I hope not.  In my experiences, I have seen folks serving meals at the San Diego Rescue Mission in their $150 true religion jeans and $300 Burberry scarves.  I’m not judging them, it is just a question of choice.
I know I’m just scratching the surface here when it come to cultural sensitivity and short term missions, but i felt like I needed to share what out there and what I have see first hand.
Honestly, photographing in Oaxaca and Guatemala, in some areas where folks are truly in need, with some really expensive camera equipment, has made me pause and think.  It does get embarrassing to a certain extent when some of the local Christians I’m serving with ask me how much my cameras cost…knowing that my camera can feed a lot of folks or buy grain to feed the animals they raise for food.
Pastor Norma & Brian Douglas
But this is why I shoot.  I am a short term missions photographer.  Wanting to show the world what’s going on in areas like Oaxaca and to publicize the work of local missionaries and pastors like Americo & Norma. 
Pastor Americo, Paul & Jim