TRIP LOG AS OF DAY TEN
Trip Report #3 from the June 2010 VIM Team
Saturday, June 26, means that a week from today we will be landing back at New York´s JFK airport and going home from there. Our adventure in face-to-face mission with the people of the Central District of Evangelical Methodist Church in Bolivia will be over, but certainly not forgotten.
You may guess from the heading to this report that, in the manner of the Starship Enterprise going where no starship crew has gone before, we are traveling into new experiences and new examples of the Holy Spirit moving in our lives each day.
The five days since our previous report have been extremely busy, so much so that this report has been in process for three days because finding time to complete it was impossible. In that time, we have continued with our dual offerings of vacation Bible schools at four churches and construction work alongside members of the new congregation of Luz de Vida. Our evenings have been filled with by moving stories of ways in which the Holy Spirit has acted in people’s lives, visiting other areas of the city and similar adventures.
Looking at the start of each day can best be seen in the following description of some routine daily events from the perspective of the construction people:
After arising and gathering in the dining hall at 7 a.m., “. . . we were subsequently fortified for our day’s travails with a traditional Bolivian breakfast – traditional meaning large and delicious. Rachel (Bird) led us through a meaningful devotion and then the team broke into its work groups for the morning. My team – the bakery construction group – boarded our transport, a 30-plus year old Dodge short bus painted in a style ala the Partridge Family . . . traveling to the jobsite with much machismo, daring vehicles of lesser mass to prevent our incursions into their lanes and intersections.”
At Luz de Vida, we have spent most of our efforts preparing an area behind the garage chapel for equipment that will enable several women in the congregation to operate a bakery business. We have dug out a shallow hole measuring about 10 x 50 foot, carefully placed rocks into the hole and then spread concrete over the rocks for the bakery floor.
The church members erected the framework for the roof, and on Friday, the ovens, dough mixer and related equipment were brought from Emmanuel church. The guys who lifted and carried the equipment – Dan Abbot, Ed Dayton and Carl Franson along with several Bolivian brothers– earned special admiration because of the weight and awkwardness of the load. By today (Saturday), one oven was operational.
Two of our team, Rachel Bird and Holly Johnston, have experience as bakers, so baking the first batch proceeded briskly. Holly found a recipe on the Internet and adjusted the measurements for the elevation of Cochabamba. While she purchased ingredients and mixed the dough, others cleaned the oven. By the end of the afternoon, amid a great deal of celebration and a lot of pictures, we had several loaves of bread from the Luz de Vida bakery that will be used for communion tomorrow.
Considering that we approached our work a week ago thinking that we would be working solely to construct the new church facility, and that we were not even aware of the possibility of creating a bakery, it was really a remarkable accomplishment.
As Rod Wendt observed, many VIM teams leave construction sites having accomplished much, but knowing there is still much to be done by subsequent VIM teams. It is especially satisfying to have both started and finished a task that holds so much promise for the future of the congregation and those who will work as bakers.
The vacation Bible schools have attracted varying numbers of children, but all have had joyful days, meaningful lessons, and many hugs. There were many craft projects tied to the Bible lessons each day. For example, each VBS class created “quilts” to display in their churches by tying the children’s drawings together with bits of ribbon. The children at Luz de Vida serenaded the construction workers each day.
The VBS at Piedra Viva (Living Stones) had special meaning for two of our members, Holly Johnston and Kathy Silva, members of Mt. Rock UMC in the Susquehanna Conference. Since 2007, Mt. Rock has provided financial support for the children’s program at Piedra Viva. That support was inspired by a VIM team that worked in Cochabamba, and the similarities of church names – Mt. Rock and Living Stones.
Friday was a time of celebration and sad farewells as the VBS classes ended with presentation of ribbon stoles to all the children and a special snack for all.
Our evening activities have included: