Busy, Busy, Busytown

This week, for whatever reason seemed very hurried along and busy for us.  We had a couple join us from JUCUM (Spanish abbrev. for YWAM) Panama to scout out Cusco as a possible outreach or place to continue to build relationships with. Although we only got to hang out with them briefly, Kenneth and Elaine, you guys are awesome! We hope to see you at the YWAM Americas Conference in 2013!

Language school keeps us on the go mentally and physically. Praise God that we are finishing with Level 1 (is that normal to complete an 80-something page book in 7 days?) and this week we with start Level 2! We are continuing to develop relationships with our tutors, Amauta and Jimmy. Tuesday night was a grand adventure for Jimmy, it was his first trip to Starbucks and although he said it was infiltrated with gringos, I think he rather enjoyed his first vanilla chai latte.  Lot’s of good conversation that night and got to share a little bit of my testimony with him and led him to open up about his faith (he’s Catholic). Then on Friday, he surprised us with our lessons while on a walkabout through the city.  We hiked through San Blas (the neighborhood north of the city) and sat outside the San Blas cathedral to view this:

photo courtesy of vagamundos.com

and walked through lots of streets and alleyways that looked like this:

photo courtesy of pamalaza.com

And on Tuesday of this week, we are having a home-cooked Peruvian meal with Amauta and her husband, Jesus.  Praying that our relationship with them would flourish!

PRAISES of the WEEK:

1. Joy got to Lima and back and was granted her residency card!

2. The Allen’s threw a joint birthday party for the kids (Aletheia is 4, Michaiah is 5 now!) and it was a huge fiesta success! Lots of sodas, arroz con leche (rice pudding that tastes like Christmas in a bowl), sugary treats, jello cups, pinatas, more chocolate, chocolate cakes and another missionary couple brought over homemade ice cream. Met lots of nice folks who have families and are here for long term.

3. After 2 weeks of waiting around the house every morning for the Moviestar internet hombre to come around, he did! So now, we have internet and Skype all day long…when we’re not in class…

4. We have been looking for a church the last few Sundays and this Sunday, we believe we have found our community….Voz de Victoria (The Voice of the Victorious).  It’s a smaller gathering that our friends’ Eric and Jen introduced us to that meets 3 blocks away from us at the university.  It’s a brain workout to pay attention when the sermon is in Spanish, but the worship was awesome and it’s a good mix of families, young and old.

5. Roque (found out Rocky is actually spelled Roque, which makes his cool points go up in our book), fixed our shower head so we don’t get zapped, and it’s easier to adjust the hot/cold water and the water pressure is now fabulous! He also liked our idea for a garden and supplied us with buckets and some flowers for our courtyard.

PRAYERS THIS WEEK:

-For Jordan to be granted residency when he leaves for Lima on Wednesday and also for him to have a restful and refreshing journey to the States for about a month.  Praying for doors to be opened up with finances and a breakthrough in people’s commitments through actions, not just in nice words. Pray for wisdom and authority over Joy, who will (with our help) have the kids while Jordan is away and for that transition to be a smooth as possible.

-Pray for love to deepen our relationships with Amauta/Jesus and Jimmy and that we can continue to improve our Spanish

-For the team from Australia that’s coming next month and for opportunities to serve them as they serve Cusco

First Week!

Hey everyone! We are continuing to adjust to life in Cusco, but so far we love it! We’ve spent the past week getting the apartment settled, learning the combi/bus route to school and town, visiting markets and learning where stuff is.

cusco.jpg (400×306)
The plaza near where we attend language school

For your entertainment, we will list a few situations that we have encountered so far that is a bit different than at home:

1. Latino culture is very laid-back (a plus for procrastinators) and relational.  You kiss everyone when you enter a room and kiss them again when you leave. “On-time” is what Americans would consider very late.  When in doubt, you can be 30 minutes late.  Sometimes, when the internet guy promises he will come at 10AM tomorrow, he may or may not come.  This week, he was a no-show, so perhaps next week we will have internet installed at our place.

2. Combis are a very cheap way to travel here (picture in your mind your mom’s mini-van but it can accommodate 26 people as opposed to the original “seats 12” design. For about $0.30, the ServicoRapido or the Batman can take you into town (45 min. by combi, 15 min. by taxi, hours if you walked).

3. This is a bargaining culture. You haggle pretty much every price (except at supermarket chains).

4. We saw a sign for a “LOST DOG”, which is pretty funny because ALL dogs here are lost.  Haven’t seen a “pet” yet.  The dogs are lazy around people and keep to themselves in packs.

5. The food here is very good! You will never run out of breads, eggs, fried chicken, rice and potatoes.  We are delighted to run into our old friends: Mr. Oreo, Mr. Ritz, Mr. Doritos and Mr. Pringles.

6. The warm water in our apartment is shocking….really! You have to flip the electric heater on (which is on top of the shower head while the water is running) and if we touch anything but the top part of it, it will shock you.  So much in fact, that if you aren’t quite fully awake in the mornings, it will jumpstart your morning. So we’ve learned to shower really fast because you either get zapped a lot, or the water is scalding hot.

In other news, we are spending a lot of our time, outside of our personal time with God, on Tuesday/Friday mornings/Wednesday nights praying and interceding for this city.  We joined the Allen’s and some other missionaries from different organizations on Wednesday night for dinner and praying for Cusco.  Jesus loves this city and this nation.  We are in agreement 100% with Jordan and Joy that YWAM Cusco should be rooted in prayer and worship.  God has set apart this city for his glory and is speaking Isaiah 61 over her.  It is clear that something will be birthed out of this valley and it is our job as the body of Christ to simply live love everyday. Whether it’s giving someone at the market flowers and telling them that God loves them, or buying them a drink, or praying for them, or simply asking “how are you, today?” we can love on people around us.

We went with our buddy, David Snyder, on a city outreach on Wednesday despite having quite a stressful morning with losing a debit card.  We wanted to freak out about it, but felt like we should stay to pray for people.  We watched a parade of school kids go by and they were for the empowerment of girls and against child abuse (a big, but unspoken injustice in Peru).  So we got to stand on the steps of the Palace of Justice (yes, that’s what it’s really called!) and pray out loud (because who can understand English here?) for God to raise up a generation of God-fearing and loving men and be the Daddy the protector of thousands of little girls.  Snyder prayed for a woman and because she couldn’t understand his Spanish or English, her brother could translate.  She said her back was in pain and after he prayed for her, she said she was 100% better! (YAY GOD!).  She told him he must be a priest and he was delighted to inform her that he was just an ordinary guy.  We walked to the Plaza de Armas and sat on the steps of a cathedral.  We met a young guy from California named Rob who approached us handing out flyers for a restaurant.  He told us his story about how he was volunteering with a social project in town and is taking the year off to volunteer around Latin and South America.  David asked if he could pray for him (the guy was not Christian and looked totally confused) so David starts speaking into his life and praying blessings over him and Rob becomes filled with joy.  He invited us out for drinks and even though we had another engagement that night, we want to try and meet up with him soon.

We also started language school on Thursday with two 2-hour sessions at MundoAntiguo School.  We seem to be cruising through our level 1 book (we know it won’t always be this easy, but THANK YOU for your prayers and keep them coming that God would give us the supernatural tongue of deep conversation in Spanish). Shout-out to Miss Katie Isaacson for all of your tutoring sessions. They are so helpful already!  Our teachers this week were Amauta and Jimmy.  Jimmy reminds us a lot of a Peruvian version of Zach Miller (super cool guy). We hope to form deeper relationships with both of our teachers, especially Amauta (who let us pray for her after class), who is a newlywed as well. We hope to double-date with her and her esposito, Jesús and get to know them better.

And, yes, we saw 2 llamas already (both downtown, drinking out of the water fountains!) next to Quechua families who want you to pay for a picture with them (or the llamas).

Hasta semana, amigos! Nosotrosteamamos! 

Nosotros Somos Aqui! We’re Here! (Almost)…

We made it safely with all the luggage from Miami to Lima. Going to pull an all-nighter at the Jorge Chávez International Airport then off to Cusco in the AM. thanks for the prayers amigos!!

Had so much of the Lord’s favor on us already! Praying for more!! (Got the exit rows…yay for leg room….that NEVER happens to us) and sat next to Larry on the flight over and had some great English conversation about Peru. Then a wonderful Peruvian hermano helped us find all of our luggage (which half of it was at another belt) and all of the security people are cheerful and in good spirits. David and I just had our first cup of REAL Peruvian coffee at one of the airport cafes and it is “potently-delicious”!

Buenos noches. More adventures tomorrow!

Friday September 7th

So it’s official Friday, September 7th, we’ll be doing a worship night at St Johns Church, in the sanctuary, on Johns Island, SC. Starting around 8 pm. We’re recording the whole thing and a 6 song EP will be available for sale (itunes & CD’s) to support Jen and I as we travel to Peru as missionaries. God is gonna show up in huge ways, hope to see you there!

Throw back post #2 Thailand Pics

Throw back post #2 with some select pictures of our time in Thailand. Enjoy!

Making lunch with our host family
One of our host family’s crops:  STRAWBERRIES
More tasty strawberries
Jen Teaching English in Khun Wang (outreach)
“Waiting for the kids to arrive so I can fill their little heads with English”
On the way to an assembly
Little Runners

Taking a break after the long walk to the tea fields.
Shan kids being shy

Christmas morning/new year celebration
Jen copying my pose
Friends
Boys playing a game where they spin and battle tops
Papaya Salad – Sum Taam – Delicious
Our Fireplace on Christmas Eve
Christmas eve with homemade soymilk,
Pounding rice to make rice cakes, New year tradition

Creche that Jamie made from Coke cans

Jen posing for a pic
Roasting tea leaves
Typical Dinner with the team
The tea fields
Tea field hedge rows post-pruning
Whenever I imagined “The Oregon Trail” in real life this is what I imagined. David is very happy to be living here
Our House 🙂
Working
Our room 🙂
Thailand – Burma border at Mai Sai
David and Ek
David at the ‘Golden Triangle”
The Golden Triangle – Where China, Thailand and Burma Meet on the Mekong River
Jen at the Mekong
David at the Mekong
Shade tree over the Mekong
Shortcut through a rice-paddy in Chiang Rai–praying for no cobras

Temporary Home for hilltribe kids in Chiang Rai
YWAM Chiang Rai Base
David found a puppy! Can we keep him?!
Wat on the way to Chiang Rai
Worship at the Night Market in Chiang Mai
Mural in Chiang Mai
Mural in Chiang Mai
Side street by the UN Pub

Narrow way
Encouragement from you!
Night Market
Wat stairs near our base
Wonder
jasmine flower necklace
Wall of Won Gen
Mural of the Gospel
Mural of the Gospel
Tuk Tuk ride
the “back door” at a wat
Young Monk
front entrance
Fresh Eel, anyone?
Market Shade
Mural Outside the US embassy
2,000 year old wat
Eno view
Wit’s village