Wake Up Call from Guatemala

At 8:40 AM our time on Wednesday morning—6:40 in Guatemala—my office phone rang with a call from Bob Switzer, our assistant pastor leading a mission trip of our teens and youth leaders to work in an orphanage and senior center in a fairly remote section of the country.

When Sandy, my administrative assistant told me it was Bob on the other end of the line, I thought to myself--this is either going to be really good or there are some big problems going on with this trip.

Turned out to be really good--really good.

Bob told me that the day before the team was slated to go to a small and poor village some distance away and distribute food to the people there. That seemed good. The students could get outside the bounds of the orphanage compound, do some very useful service and get a further sense of how blessed we are in our lives stateside. But then the director said that they would also be doing some evangelizing in the process.

"How is this going to work?" Bob thought. We can't speak the language; we don't know the people or the culture; these kids aren't Billy Graham. I hope that they aren't going to make the people file into the village church and get preached at before they line up to be given the meager bags of food assembled to distribute.

Then he had another thought, "We can evangelize in the way we are learning how to cooperate with God."

So the team travelled to the village. Bob spoke for a few minutes as the local village pastor translated. He told the people that the team had come from the United States to be a blessing to their country. He told them that they had come because the love of God was motivating them. He told the people that God loved them and had provided a Savior for them; that his name is Jesus. He told them that Jesus has brought us a better way to live--a Kingdom of love and forgiveness and the power of a new life within. Then he said the students would be happy to pray for any need that the people might have--any pains, sicknesses, infirmities, whatever. Or if they just wanted to be blessed the teens from America would pray for them. Again, the pastor translated.

The people lined up--not for the food, but for the blessing of the Kingdom of heaven. The students began to minister to them. Working their way through the English-Spanish thing the team listened to the needs/requests of the people. Then they did as they have been taught--they laid hands on the people and prayed. What happened next is why Bob called me so early.

Heaven invaded earth!

Fevers were dispelled in Jesus' name. Injured, hurting knees were healed. Pain and weakness was banished--to be replaced by comfort and relief. "These kids--our students--healed people!!!!" Bob said laughing and crying over the phone. Then he described more encounters with the radical goodness of God. The people began to be filled with the peace and love of God as the team prayed and they became overjoyed. Meanwhile, the pray-ers were also filled up by God's presence and power. Heat and power and tongues of praise broke out among the student ministers as they got filled to overflowing with the Holy Spirit.

Time came to distribute the food. While that was going on the village pastor began relating the testimonies of the people who had been touched, healed, and blessed. Not all the students were needed to distribute the bags of food. So the others on the team began to ask the Spirit to direct them to those in the crowd whom the Lord was still moving upon--so they could give away more of the blessings of the Kingdom.

At the end of the day our students turned in--exhausted but exhilarated. Heaven had invaded a small village in Guatemala through their prayers and hands. In Luke 11:21 Jesus was "full of joy through the Holy Spirit" as he reflected upon his "mission team" having had similar experiences in ministering the good news and saving power of the Kingdom. I praise you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden these things from the wise and learned, and revealed them to little children. Yes, Father, for this was your good pleasure.

Another good day in the Kingdom!

6 comments:

Andrew Springman said...

Woohoo!

Cyndi LaMay said...

Great and mighty work! Go Team

L.Briggs said...

How awesome is our God. How awesome are the teens for their willingness to follow the Spirit.

Lisa said...

Our God does not change. His word is true from generation to generation.

Anonymous said...

How awesome to have our kids release the power of our God.Amen that we are equipping them for the kingdom.How great and mighty our our warriors in Christ Jesus

Nancy said...

Go God!! Go yoots!!