My weekend began at 4:00am Saturday morning. A fellow
missionary here in Yurimaguas has started a Bible institute that meets every
other Saturday. The institute is located
in a town called Santiago De Borja. The town is accessible by road but the travel
is complicated. We left early to go to the taxi company on the other side of
town. We then caught a taxi to Pongo, a town an hour and half away. From there
we waited by the side of the road for a pickup carrying cargo to Santiago De
Borja, basically it is hitch hiking. We had to go early because the road is
under construction and closes at 7:00 am. It then is open for an hour at a time
at 10:30, 12:30, and 2:30. We climbed into the back of a pickup and headed down
the jungle road for another hour, through the early morning mist. It was a
cold ride, but beautiful passing rivers and mountains and through fields
and towns.
We arrived in town about 7:30 and ate breakfast at a local restaurant
(tables in front of someone’s house). The house next door had this cow looking for breakfast.
The institute started around 9:00 and went till 1:30. Twenty
eager believers gathered together to study about prayer.
My companion is a
gifted teacher and maintained their attention the whole time. At 1:30 we left
to return to Yurimaguas with a donation of plantains. The road wasn’t open and we had to wait for a while to
pass through. Once through we again attempted to hitch a ride from Pongo back
to Yurimaguas, but none were available. After an hour and half in the hot sun
we finally found a pick up with seats in the cab, a gift from God. We returned
to Yurimaguas about 5:30. After a shower and supper we were back in a local
church by 7:30 to preach. I preached about the great commission and how we are
all called to be missionaries. After service we talked with fellow believers
and finally I returned home by 10:30, exhausted.
But at 6:00am Sunday I was back up, loading the family in
the furgon. This week there is a pastor’s conference here in Yurimaguas. Shawi
pastors come to town for the week to study the word of God and they need to eat. At the farm we had some
goats but they don’t like our fences and when we planted the yuca they enjoyed
eating it. As a result, we hauled them to a Shawi village called Nueva
Yurimaguas. The goal Sunday was to head to the village to get a goat and
butcher it for the pastor’s conference. But God had other plans. First we went
to the farm to pick up one of the workers, Devincen and his family. Then we
drove another hour down bumpy rutted dirt roads to Nueva Yurimaguas in time for
church at 9:00am. To get to the village we had to cross the Aramanyacu river.
The kids loved the little raft which was nothing more than four logs tied
together. After greeting everyone we sat down on wood benches on the dirt
floor. The church has no walls but it does have a roof to keep the sun and rain
off.
When it came time for the message the pastor got up and in front of the
whole church asked if I would preach. Luckily I was ready from the night before
and preached a similar message. After church we enjoyed the fellowship at the pastor's house.
Maggie enjoyed talking on her watermelon phone.
A woman approached Jennifer with a
new born baby. The baby was only four days old and not eating. As Jennifer held
the baby he went into convulsions and we knew this was an urgent situation. We
talked them into coming with us to Yurimaguas and to the hospital. The problem is the mother is mute so the
grandma was coming to talk for her, but the grandma only speaks Shawi. I don’t know
how it happened but soon we were headed back to Yurimaguas with fifteen people
in the furgon, our family, Devincen and his family, three Shawi woman, three
Shawi babies, and no goat.
Our intent was only to get a goat but God had other plans,
we were able to share His word and save a baby’s life! He can change my plans
anytime. But this was only the beginning for Jennifer. After returning to the
Hogar we sent Jesusa, the woman on duty at the Hogar, to the hospital with the
Shawi women because she speaks Shawi. That left us alone at the Hogar. Jennifer
cooked supper for 15+ people, bathed the kids, cleaned, dispersed meds and
more. When Jesusa returned from the hospital they still had not admitted the
baby so Jennifer went to the hospital. The health care here is rough even if
you speak Spanish and worse for minorities like the Shawi. The hospital wanted
to take the babies temperature but that requires a thermometer and of course
they don’t supply that. So Jennifer had to go to the hospital pharmacy to buy a
thermometer, but they were out of thermometers. So she asked the guard where to
buy one and he said, “it is Sunday night, there are no pharmacies open, but
there is one on the other side of town where the owners live beside the store
and if you bang on their door they can open up and help you.” That is
healthcare in Yurimaguas.
The poor Shawi women were in culture shock. Jennifer had to
teach them how to turn on a faucet because they had never seen one. And to
translate she called Jesusa and handed the phone to them, but they had no idea
what to do with a cellphone.
The baby had bruises on his belly and through translation
we found out that they had taken the baby to a local witch doctor. The
witch doctor said the baby was cursed and had a bad spirit. He tried to remove it
by sucking it out his stomach, hence the bruises.
The baby does not have a government ID to receive free health care so Jennifer had to pay for him, it cost $2.50. Finally, they admitted the baby and Jennifer returned home around 11:00pm. And that was
our weekend. We had trouble getting out of bed Monday morning, but there still
is a goat to butcher and he is two hours away and across a river.
Please pray today for this baby in the hospital and for the
Shawi people. Please pray for the pastor’s conference this week. These men are
being trained to bring light and truth to the dark corners of the jungle. They
are workers being sent out into the harvest.
Jesus went through all the towns and villages, teaching in
their synagogues, proclaiming the good news of the kingdom and healing every
disease and sickness. When he saw the crowds, he had compassion on them,
because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd. Then he
said to his disciples, “The harvest is plentiful but the workers are few. Ask
the Lord of the harvest, therefore, to send out workers into his harvest
fields.”
Matthew 9:35-38