Saturday, September 29, 2007

ENTRY 3: MEXICO

Tomorrow we head into the slums. For the past week we’ve always had the reassurance that comes from the comfort of knowing that at the end of each day we can return to our well-to-do hotel room on the ninth floor of the Rosarito Inn. A few hours from now that all changes as our life becomes a little more similar to those we came to serve. I’m incredibly excited about the experience. While the last week has been amazing, it has felt largely like preparation for what is to come. So many things have fallen into place to make this next week happen that convince me it is anything but coincidence. Incredible connections with local pastors have meant we have accommodation and projects that will carry us through to Thursday when we head back over the border into San Diego.

Tonight we fare-welled the rest of the Global Tribe team who will head back to New Zealand tomorrow. What an amazing crew of people! They came from Miramar Baptist, The Rock, Blueprint, New Plymouth, and from the various states all across the USA. They have been an incredible support. To see them off we went out to dinner. Good times.

Yesterday saw us finish the school classroom we’ve been working on. By the time I arrived the room was largely finished, just a little plastering to do. We celebrated the event with many students and teachers during a fiesta held early in the evening. Hundreds of kids lined up for yet another meal of tacos, a piƱata competition, and various shenanigans involving water balloons. The kids have without a doubt been one of the most moving things about this trip. They have a child-like faith which is infectious to their whole community, and are some of the most photogenic people on the planet as demonstrated by the image nearby.

I was incredibly honoured to be asked to lead the dedication of one of the new houses on Wednesday evening. James (a zeal kid and one of my closest mates) got the privilege of handing over the keys to their new owners. Awesome!

Something key for me on this trip has been re-embracing a child-like understanding of who God is. I so often become bound up in the complexities of church doctrine and theology only to find I’ve missed the point entirely. Anthony Walton (Global Tribe CEO) put it perfectly on our first night here in Baja when saying (paraphrased),

“Come here simply to serve, if you come to serve your pride can’t be bruised and your ego can’t be damaged. Humbly lay yourselves down for these people and consider them more significant than yourselves.”

On our first day here I took a photo of a piece of street art. I never realised the significance of what God was doing until a couple of days later. The verse at the bottom of the painting reads this:

Mark 10:13-15
Some people brought their children to Jesus so that he could bless them by placing his hands on them. But his disciples told the people to stop bothering him. When Jesus saw this, he became angry and said, "Let the children come to me! Don't try to stop them. People who are like these little children belong to the kingdom of God. I promise you that you cannot get into God's kingdom, unless you accept it the way a child does."


Bless you all. I may well be away from any contact for a few days.

Will post again as soon as possible.

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

ENTRY 2: MEXICO


There was a full moon over Mexico tonight. We were singing songs of praise in the late evening to a group of ex-addicts at a rehabilitation compound near the centre of the Tijuana slums. What an incredible experience. The Mexican people are the warmest I’ve met. Between our very basic knowledge of each others languages I managed to have a few chats with some of the addicts. I met a 75 year old woman who, having her latrine fall apart, took it upon herself to dig her own long-drop ten feet down into the hard-baked Mexican clay. Incredible.

Any fears I had about being able to handle the intensive building project we’re working on have been quickly relieved. It turns out I share my father’s nouse for all things hands-on. This week we have been building two houses, and a classroom at the local school. I’ve spent most of my time working on the yellow house (as opposed to the blue house). It’s directly next door to the home the chosen family currently occupy; quite a surreal visual to take in. Their old life and their new life separated by less than a metre. On one side a ramshackled monstrosity of spare parts and corrugated iron, on the other a sunflower yellow villa. Quite often Orlando, the father of the family, comes over to visit and check out our handy work. He seems often on the verge of tears. In a strange way this is really what spurs me on.

I can honestly say I have never worked as solidly or as constantly as I have the last two days. Not because I feel pressured or guilty, but because this is so blatantly something that Jesus cares so much about. There is that verse which says ‘The Joy of the Lord is my strength’. I have really come to know what this means. Despite being absolutely physically exhausted, I feel a joy and a passion that overcomes my sore legs and aching shoulders.

In other news, yesterday I met a new friend in the form of an enormous Tarantula spider hiding under a pile of lumber at the construction site. Very impressive. I never thought I’d see one of these puppies in the wild. Before you all think I’m incredibly brave I would like to point out those are not my hands holding him.

Finally, God has totally hooked us up for our second week in Mexico. The main crew leave this Saturday while James, Mason and myself hang on to do further work. An American house-building team are short three members on their team for this weekend. Also, a woman has recently lost the roof of her house in freak winds so there’s good chances we’ll work on this for a few days as well. Add to this the fact that our accommodation next week will likely be provided by the home of a family right in the heart of the Tijuana slums. Amazing. I’ll keep you posted as this all comes together.

To finish, another verse I’ve been pondering on:

Matthew 10:39

“If you try to save your life, you will lose it. But if you give it up for me (Jesus), you will surely find it.”

I think I’m finding a little more of that ‘life’ over here.

Sunday, September 23, 2007

ENTRY 1: MEXICO

Sitting ten thousand feet above the Pacific Ocean puts a few things into perspective. Below me, an enormous crashing ocean, above me the stars and the heavens. Sitting in my little section of Row fifty-five at 3am NZ time, I can't sleep and I start to think about the power of the sea beneath me. I'm not a good swimmer, and I know that the waves could roll over me, break me and dash my life in a second. At that moment early in the morning above the Pacific, I finally understood the writers in the Bible who talk about God's power being like a mighty ocean or a mountain.

What power! What glory! And yet God chooses to use us as feeble humans to work out his plan for this world. What an incredible honour! God's power must be so much more than the oceans he created, and yet he places his representation on this world in the hands of broken and desperate people like ourselves. Despite being completely underqualified for the job, Despite lacking the skill-set and the maturity to handle it, God calls us his workmanship, created for good works in him. If God offers this power to us, then what have we to fear?

And yet, several hours later I faced the first challenge of the trip. Heading down the Freeway between Los Angeles and the Mexican/US Border was one of the scariest experiences I've been through in a long time. Our very Kiwi driver has a nasty tendancy to drift to the right from time to time, resulting in the best part of half a dozen near misses with American motorists. I found myself having to ask whether I believed the God of the oceans could be the God of the freeway.

Luckily he was, and arriving at the border was an incredible experience. On the American side were all the familar Capitalist landmarks. McDonalds, Dennys & Walmart. Once through into Tijuana the glass-frontages were now replaced by concrete walls and tin shacks. Graffiti covered nearly every wall. This theme continue today as we visited the slums we'll be working in to have a fiesta with some local families. Tacos and fresh Guacamole were on the menu. Awesome! I got the chance to exercise my brief understanding of the Spanish language, and managed to find out the names and interests of a few kids. We played with trucks together, and one young guy was a particular fan of Spider-Man. We got our web-swing happening together :) Wild!
The most amazing thing about this trip so far has been seing how God provides for people in the slums here in Mexico. I expected to break down in tears when I saw the conditions they were living in, but the truth is that as I ate with these families I could only notice how joyful and welcoming they were. God's joy is REALLY their strength. They offered us everything they could, and the community does the same when any member is in need. It's not uncommon for families here to give the little food they have to another household to make sure they don't starve. They know that a spiritual poverty is far greater than a physical one, and are happy to go without knowing that God will provide. Incredible.

That all I can really add for the moment. Something to end with...

JOB 1:21
"We bring nothing at birth;
We take nothing with us at death.
The LORD alone gives and takes,
Praise the name of the LORD".

Indeed.




Wednesday, September 12, 2007

OUTRAGE AND FRESH UNDERSTANDING...



In 1994 the American and Mexican governments came to the North American Free Trade Agreement (or NAFTA).

The agreement was the hope for Mexican people of freedom from the poverty that gripped much of the nation. The hope was that as a fair trade agreement came into effect, Mexican farmers and producers would now be able to trade with American distributors - thus bringing greater wealth to the impoverished Mexican, and providing new produce to the US. The effect was very different. As with every other 'lesser-nation' in the world, the US used the opportunity to increase subsidies to local American farmers, thus allowing them to sell their produce at prices Mexican producers could never compete with. Over one million Mexicans were cast into poverty, and families who had farmed there for generations had to leave their blocks and pursue low-paid jobs in the cities - thus providing cheap labour for American manufacturers who now had freedom to work from within Mexico.


As a long-time fan of Rage Against the Machine I always admired their passion, but felt that sometimes their means were a little barbaric. Zach de la Rocha often talks of the Zapatistas; a revolutionary Mexican army who often demonstrate with great violence and intimidation. Now, heading to Mexico in just over a week, the message of the Zapatista's means something more to me. As I read the key demands of the liberation front I am astounded,


"The Zapatistas' demands are simple, but provide a powerful critique of the distribution of wealth and power in Mexico; work, land, housing, food, health care, education, independence, freedom, democracy, justice and peace."


It's funny how much these words resonate with the truth, hope, justice and righteousness mentioned in Ephesians 6, or how about the call to offer shelter, feed the hungry, heal the sick and clothe the naked in Matthew 25? Do I agree with the actions of the Zapatistas'? No, definitely not. But do I believe it is a suitable reaction to the more subtle form of conquest and genocide the US administration has carried out through NAFTA? Yes, completely.


I never understood it much when people claimed that if someone had too much of something, someone else must go without. Now I understand. The Mexican people have in no way chosen their lot. If the American administration is aware of the task they are executing, then this can only be considered most cleverly constructed conquest in history. From Mexico to Haiti, and Sierra Leone to Iraq, The US is taking poorer nations, not by brute force, but by the subtle weight that gradually pushes each nation and it's occupants to their knees.


I cannot describe the outrage that I've felt tonight as this all begins to lock into place for me.


I wonder how for so long we in the Western world have allowed this to continue. Perhaps because even as I write this, the warmth of American clothing comforts me while the hum of capitalist-driven news television lullabies me to sleep in the background. My heart is paralysed with indecision and an overwhelming feeling that there is nothing we can possibly do but pray that Jesus will work a miracle in Mexico. That, and feed the hungry, clothe the naked and welcome in the stranger - all of which I can't wait to do when we touch down in Tijuana on the 22nd.