News More news by category Pills, Compare pills, Reviews pills Cheap drugs online shop Download Ringtones Chronometer Sale Auto Cigarette Rington Green Card Information Online notebook shop furniture Chairs Tables Medical tests Dating Soma online Building materials Cases auto-moto Best Ringtones Top auto-moto Ambien online Fioricet online Credit Trousers Ladies handbag Intimate goods Phentermine No Prescription Cialis online Balans Evening dress Top casino Cars Loan Online Valium online Suits Free Ringtones Mobiles FDA Approved Pharmacy Fashions Boots Phentermine online Medicine news Sportswear Necklace Adipex online Tunings Boats Ornaments ya.by Free Ringtones Yachts

Home

About Us

Calendar

Rick's Blog

Rick's Podcast

International Ministry

Brazil Mission Trips

Photo Gallery

Musical Recordings

Donate Online

Our Newsletter

Contact Us

May 5, 2005

UMC team works with Brazilian family

Filed under: Rick's Thoughts — Rick @ 9:08 am

UMC team works with Brazilian family
By KRISTINE FORTUNATO
kfortunato@TheCitizenNews.com

As he clicks through the hundreds of pictures of past mission trips loaded on
his laptop, Randy DeGroot struggles to find the right words to describe his
experiences.

He finds it difficult to adequately describe the beauty of the country, the
poverty of the people, and his passion for international missions.

A captain with Delta Airlines, Randy has taken three trips to Brazil with his
church, Peachtree City United Methodist, starting back in 2001 and most recently
this past March, when a team of eight spent over a week in the hills surrounding
Rio de Janeiro, working to improve the quality of life for one special family.

Rio de Janeiro is a city well known for its ritz and glamour, beautiful beaches
and international vacationers.

Overlooking the city high on the mountain Corcovado, meaning Hunchback, is the
famous statue Cristo Redentor, or Christ the Redeemer, with outstretched arms
visible from all over Rio down below.

While names like Copacabana and Ipanema bring to mind vacations and fun in the
sun, the shantytowns covering the hillsides around Rio are hard to ignore.

More than one-third of the population dwell in these shacks clinging
perilously to the mountainsides. Because all their resources, water, food,
furniture, must be hauled up the hills manually, the poorest families often live
the highest up.

It was one of these families, living high on a hill in Santa Barbara near Rio,
that the Peachtree City United Methodist team focused their ministry on.

A previous mission trip had begun the work of restoring the house, and the
construction mission continued this past March.

Carlos and Christina and their four kids had been sharing two small bedrooms,
with not enough beds to go around, forcing some children to sleep on the floor.

The mission team purchased new mattresses for everyone, hauling them up the
steep slopes by hand.

Randy described the living situation this family faced everyday: To arrive at
their home you must go as far as you can on a paved road, then walk down a tiny
dirt road past garbage and trash. It is at this point the road truly ends, and
you begin a steep descent, followed by a sharp climb, he explains.

The house comes into view, plainly made of local bricks and mortar, with an old
rusted door to cover the shack and barbed wire to keep it safe.

New appliances were delivered, and running water was diverted to the house,
easing the burden of carrying water up by hand every day.

One of the most amazing things was bringing water to them, Randy says.
They had carried it up the hill for years, and now they could just turn on a
faucet. Think of the hours that were spent merely transporting water up that
hill.

The team was also able to tap into local electrical wires and properly run
electricity into the home.

Another improvement came from laying the concrete foundation for an extra room
attached to the house so a mother-in-law could move in and be cared for. Randy
says the team was rewarded by seeing the entire family join the local church.

We were able to take a hopeless family and give them hope, change their
lives, he says. That is what mission is all about, being able to touch
someone life, even if you live 5000 miles away.

One of the hardest parts of these mission trips happens at the end of each one,
when Randy struggles to convey his experiences to people back home in America.

It is hard to relate to that kind of poverty here in Peachtree City, he
says. In Brazil, you can escape it or look the other way; you are forced
to face it and find ways to deal with it. Here, it is so easy to avoid the bad
parts of town and ignore the problems.

After returning from a mission trip, you don’t look at the world in the
same way. You almost feel like you don’t fit in anymore. Buying that
$4-Starbucks coffee is a struggle, knowing the poverty you have just seen.

Trying to explain this, Randy feels he walks a fine line in opening people
eyes to the world around them without making them feel condemned for the wealth
Americans enjoy.

He is quick to point out that mission fields exist everywhere, and that everyone
can make a difference right where they live. Everyone should have that
life-changing experience of helping others, he says.

We can all do the same work, no matter what country we are in. It doesn’t matter where you are
or what church or mission you are with, because poverty is poverty, hunger is hunger.

We are all called to help others.

2 Comments »

  1. I took the time to read five or six of the “Blogs.” They are very good reading. Building up faith in the one true God and in Jesus Christ His Son. I can’t really comment on each one, but I can share in relating with the first story, as I went on one missions trip to Guatemala (Nebaj) in 2003. The Blogs that you have written keep on convicting me to find my specific calling. I keep on trying, through prayer and, unfortunately, lack of patience, to find what my calling is and by doing this I think I keep “forcing” a “calling” and I don’t want that! I ask for prayers in this for me, that Almighty God, through the Holy spirit, would make known to me what His specific calling for me is. (for the Glory of God)Amen.

    Comment by James M. Verbanac — May 5, 2005 @ 9:42 am

  2. I was just reading another one of the “blogs” and got to the point of where the question was posed, “What do you do when you return from a mission trip?” I remember certain things from the mission trip I went on. When I returned I tried to explain the things I saw and “learned.” It was very difficult. One was about time. Time is irrelevant there. When two men are going to meet the next day, when one gets to the place they are supposed to meet, he just waits for the other to get there. When I tried to explain what I “saw” to others, they looked at me and asked, “When are you going back?” As if to say, “What are you talking about? What are you trying to say?” Time is everything!” In my technical way, I tried to compose a way to explain it to them. In the mean time adopting the behavior some-what (work in progress) thinking others may see it instead of me trying to explain it. There were numerous other things I “saw.” I believe when God shows me these things, He shows me more and more of Himself. Probobly sounds silly, but (smile) it doesn’t matter, I see it that way. God is showing me many things these days, and one of them is to share what He shows me with others. I just have to open up and not be afraid to. It’s Gods stuff, and I just have to want to do it even if people don;t quite understand!

    Comment by James Verbanac — August 3, 2005 @ 5:45 pm

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment