As cold waters to a thirsty soul,
So is good news from a distant land.
Proverbs 25:25

How beautiful on the mountains are the feet of him who brings good news, . . . "Your God reigns!"
Isaiah 52:7
good news from a distant land (all posts)
quarterly

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Argyle Paddock

Coming home from Pando Sunday night—just hours before hearing of Dr. Paddock’s homegoing—we stopped at the home of some friends on the north side of Montevideo. We talked, drank carbonated water, and watched tennis. They told me that one of the tennis players is quite good (and quite famous, though I had never heard of him). As we sat I remembered an afternoon a number of years back in the home of other friends. The television was on, and the world was very aware that this was Andre Agassi’s last match. Even I had heard of this man. And this was his day.

We weren’t there to watch tennis, though. We had gathered to say “thanks” to Argyle and Wanda Paddock. We were a small group; only a few people knew we were there; and the crowds cheering Andre didn’t know that the Paddocks even existed. Somehow I have to think, though, that God was more interested in our living-room meeting than in the fame and spectacle that happened to form the backdrop that day.

The Paddocks had loved and served us in many ways, largely in the context of mission trips to Mexico or Spain. We had watched them defy the challenges of their aging bodies, driving vans full of immature youth to take the message of Jesus to the sides of steep mountains, the streets of tiny villages, and plazas of Old World cities. Most of us gathered that day had traveled with them to represent Camp META in Mexico, a vision that Dr. Paddock never forgot.

In one of the messages that we heard Dr. Paddock preach, he raised the question of why a Christian’s rewards will not be given to him immediately upon his arrival in glory. He concluded that one reason must be that even after a person finishes his race, the fruit that he sowed has not yet been harvested. The results are not yet in. He went on to talk about former students who had traveled on mission trips with him and how they were serving the Lord, revealing his interest not only in the immediate effects of these trips but the ongoing results that they had in the lives of the students that traveled.

Dr. Paddock will have to wait for his reward, too. And I think when Jesus’ mission has been fully brought to completion, Dr. and Mrs. Paddock’s privileged part in this wonderful, ages-long Story will be stunning. We’ll see how God made Dr. Paddock—and hundreds of students influenced by him—look like Jesus. And that will be Jesus’ day. I can’t wait.

But now, Dr. Paddock, for a few more short days, we have fruit to harvest from seeds you and your dear wife planted. We go gladly back to work.

Friday, January 3, 2014

January 2014 Report

Happy New Year! We are grateful for the many ways you have encouraged us and participated in the work in Uruguay over the past year, in addition to the ways in which you serve the Lord where He has placed you. All of us will undoubtedly need much of God’s grace for the days ahead. We are highlighting some opportunities here in Uruguay in the upcoming months—work in which you can participate through your prayers (2 Co. 1:11). Most of these needs involve not only our family but many others as well.
 
Campamento Emanuel in Guazuvirá. Most of the summer camp season this year takes place during January. JM will spend most of the month there (about an hour outside Montevideo), helping with counselor training, counseling and preaching. Please pray for long-term fruit from this effort to serve Uruguayan churches by means of the camping program. Please pray for Déborah and the children during his absence. Due to new immigration requirements, she and Elizabeth are working hard to finish the U.S. school year (at home) so Elizabeth can be ready to start the new Uruguayan school year (probably in a small Christian school on the outskirts of Montevideo) by the end of February.


FEBU. On November 16 a group of well over 100—including potential students, their pastors, and other interested people—met for a youth meeting designed to offer information about the Facultad de Estudios Bíblicos del Uruguay (FEBU) (College of Biblical Studies of Uruguay) (www.febu.org). On March 10 the school year will begin with sessions for teachers and an opening meeting for teachers and students. The following evening the first classes will be taught in an upstairs hall provided by EMU’s Iglesia Templo Calvario. A different, long-term facility—especially as the number of classes and students potentially increases each year—is a matter for which we would appreciate prayer. Matías and Kristine Espinel will return to the U.S. for a furlough following the opening of the school year. The timing of their trip helps to avoid an absence in upcoming years when he will be teaching more courses. JM will help to fill Matías’ place as director during these first six months.

Primer Instituto Bíblico F.V. Dabold. Classes ended for the semester in November, and Juan José graduated from the three-year program of EMU’s Bible institute in Montevideo. A separate, parallel course of study is offered in several churches in the interior, primarily via DVDs. In one of these locations (Iglesia Templo Betel in Pando) two young men, Rodrigo and Claudio, graduated a week later. Pray for the Lord’s leading of these three men.
 
Iglesia Bíblica Maranatha in Pando. On January 13 the Garwoods will travel to Jacksonville, FL, where Don (Déborah’s father) will undergo surgeries to correct blockage in a carotid artery and to replace a heart valve. These are high-risk procedures, and we would appreciate your prayers for him and for the group of believers whom he serves as missionary-pastor. The date of his return is indefinite, depending on his progress following surgery. We, along with Daniel and Viviana, Iguazú, and Cristian, will help to maintain weekend services at IBM.

Sunday, October 6, 2013

October 2013 Report

Greetings once again from Montevideo! Most of you know that in July we returned unexpectedly to the US in order to clean up our house in SC following a robbery there. The Lord used the break-in to facilitate the handling of a larger problem that we had already begun to consider: the fact that while we waited for permission to bring our belongings (some of which were stored in the house in SC), our time to settle them into a fairly small living space here in Uruguay was slipping away. As we anticipated the busy-ness of the end of 2013, we had already lost interest in investing time and energy into dealing with a twenty-foot container of stuff on this end. Thus, as our pastor summarized it, the Lord (very kindly) lifted us up and shook most everything out of our pockets. We spent the last half of July and the month of August selling, giving, discarding, storing, and packing what remained to bring back in suitcases and boxes. Many decisions were difficult but freeing. We arrived back in Uruguay on September 2, in time for JM to begin teaching the following evening. This schedule has meant that unpacking suitcases has taken longer, but we are very glad that we will not be handling a shipping container.


We share our home with a new grandmother, Julia Piedad, who has lived downstairs for over 60 years, serving as hostess and caretaker for this house that has for years provided office and working space for the Evangelical Mission to Uruguay. The first floor is currently used for workers’ meetings, for some of the new FEBU meetings, and for Bible institute classes three nights a week. The basement houses the office. Living above all of this with only an open staircase between has a few disadvantages (your imagination can fill in the gaps), especially as we navigate the ruts and bumps of emptying suitcases, beginning homeschooling, preparing classes, teaching, and generally learning to function in an environment in which life takes just a bit longer to live. Yet we’re thankful for the relationships that the situation facilitates. We feel a bit like Paul at the end of Acts, who didn’t even need to leave his house (arrest!) to enjoy many opportunities coming directly to his door.
 

In our case these opportunities have included the kids’ (and adults’) participating in a weekly service in a nursing home up an adjoining street, our singing in and accompanying for a choir drawn from several like-minded area churches, and getting to know neighbors whose need for the Lord could hardly be more obvious. JM is teaching Bible institute classes (General Epistles and Systematic Theology III [Salvation]), which will occupy six hours of teaching time each week through the first part of November. Planning and work continue for FEBU’s opening in March, and we hope to begin more aggressive promotion of the new school among prospective students next month. We continue to travel to Pando most Sundays to help with Iglesia Bíblica Maranatha, and opportunities periodically arise in other nearby churches. Thank you for your prayers!

Monday, July 1, 2013

July 2013 Report

The following is our post from July 1 (more updates forthcoming):

Greetings from Uruguay!

We are grateful to report that by May 1 the Lord answered your prayers, providing the remainder of our required support and opening all doors for departure. Our final six weeks were divided between travel to churches in the eastern U.S. and packing in preparation to leave the country on June 11.
 
Flying over the Andes -- breath-taking and sobering...

We are renting the upper floor of a house owned by the Evangelical Mission to Uruguay, the building in which the mission’s office and Bible institute classes are located. The situation for the present appears to be advantageous, given the proximity not only to JM’s teaching but also to downtown Montevideo. Our home is extremely close to nearly any major bus route, including the route to Pando, where we have begun helping on weekends. Please pray for the ongoing discipleship and growth of people in Iglesia Bíblica Maranatha in that city.

Establishing legal residency in Uruguay is not excruciating but does take a fair amount of time. Though we completed what we could before leaving the U.S., this process involves visits to the immigration office and the gathering of required papers. Our belongings will not ship from SC until we receive official government permission (which in our case is connected to establishing residency); consequently, we will not be able to ship before late July and (depending on the source of information) it could be as late as mid-October. This does complicate our settling in, and we would appreciate your prayers.

JM has been invited to join the committee making plans for the opening of the new Facultad de Estudios Bíblicos del Uruguay (FEBU) (College of Biblical Studies of Uruguay). Over the last year and a half, this planning committee—with your prayers and with regular input from area pastors and missionaries—has spent many hours preparing for what we hope will be a Christ-centered, college-level program of study serving the churches here in Uruguay. Please pray as this process continues. An important need is the Lord’s guidance to and provision of the proper location for the school.

 
July: From July 22 through 26 Dr. Nick Uwarow (Division of Teacher Education, School of Education at Bob Jones University) will be holding  workshops for prospective teachers of FEBU. These will take place at Camp Emmanuel outside of Montevideo.

August to November: On August 19, the FEBU planning committee will again hold a meeting with pastors in Montevideo to share updates and make further decisions ahead of the opening of classes in March 2014. Also, EMU Bible institute classes, which will have begun the last week of July, will continue through early November.

June through August are not warm months in Uruguay. Please pray for continued health for us and for God’s grace as we adjust to life and ministry here. We are glad to be here and depend on your prayers. Thank you!

Friday, April 19, 2013

Significance of Jesus' Humanity (Heb. 2:9-18)

Hebrews 2:9-18 gives in a short amount of space several reasons the incarnation is significant:
  • Jesus, fulfilling Psalm 8’s words about “man,” (cf. Heb. 2:5-8), “was made . . . lower than the angels . . . so that . . . He might taste death for everyone” (v. 9).
  • “Through sufferings” Jesus, “the author of [our] salvation” was “perfect[ed]” (v. 10).
  • “He . . . partook of [flesh and blood], that through death He might render [the devil] powerless” (v. 14).
  • “He . . . partook of [flesh and blood], that through death He . . . might free [captives]” (vv. 14-15).
  • “He [was] made like His brethren in all things, so that He might become a merciful and faithful high priest” (v. 17).
  • “Since He Himself was tempted in that which He has suffered, He is able to come to the aid of those who are tempted” (v. 18).
NASB

Saturday, April 6, 2013

April 2013 Report

We appreciate your prayers for JM’s questioning and ordination service in February. We feel God’s kindness and the love of our sending church. We are thankful for each of the twelve churches and fifteen individuals who are currently partnering with us on a regular basis. Many, many others—including our parents and numerous teachers—have had an important part in our preparation for the gospel ministry and for work in Uruguay. We thank God for you and invite your continued prayers, counsel, and gracious accountability. You are part of God’s means for our growth into Christ’s image.


Please continue to pray that we will be able to leave for Uruguay on June 11. Our monthly support is now at 87% of the amount required by EMU before we can leave.
 
Please pray for wisdom and efficiency in making decisions and packing our belongings during the month of April and during the weeks following our return to SC toward the end of May.
 
We have meetings scheduled each weekend for the entirety of April and May, including about three weeks in MD, NY, and PA. We desire that each of these opportunities be used by God to equip His people for the work of service and to edify these churches. We always need His protection in travel.
 
We also request prayer for the salvation and growth of several people with whom we have had contact here in SC. In some cases these friendships are new; in others the relationships are many years old. We do not feel freedom to share the names publicly, but please do pray for the Lord clearly to work in the lives of this list of people who need to respond to the gospel.
 
Instituto Bíblico F.V. Dabold in Montevideo: Please pray for Matías Espinel, the other teachers, and the students. JM is preparing course material for the second semester, which will begin in July.
 
Facultad de Estudios Bíblicos del Uruguay (College of Biblical Studies of Uruguay): Plans continue for opening of classes in March 2014. Those involved would still ask for your prayers for efficiency, discernment, and unity.
 
The purpose for all of this is, of course, not the building and maintenance of institutions. Rather, we desire to see Uruguayan churches strengthened as their pastors and other members of these local bodies are trained in the Word and work of God. This is the work that you are doing where God has placed you: the making and maturing of disciples of Jesus. To our friends who do not follow Jesus, we urge you on His behalf to believe the gospel!

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Winter 2013 Report

Thank you for your continued interest in the work in Uruguay. God is answering your prayers:
 
We have received approval from our mission agency to plan on a June departure, though this permission depends on our receiving the entirety of EMU’s monthly support requirement. The Lord has provided excellent airfare out of Miami, and we now have tickets for our final move to Uruguay. We will leave the U.S.—the Lord willing—on June 11. Our current support level is just under 80%.

On November 19, 2012, approximately thirty-three pastors and missionaries met in the Parque Batlle neighborhood in Montevideo to hear and consider the work of the committee making plans for the new FEBU (College of Biblical Studies of Uruguay). There is considerable enthusiasm for this project, and plans continue for classes to begin in 2014. Much work remains to be done in the coming year.
 
 
During the past three months we visited churches in SC, NC, IL, and OH. We pray for fruit that only God can give from the preaching of His Word. These months also included a good deal of study—not only for JM but also for Elizabeth. Déborah is homeschooling her this year; and she is on schedule to finish first grade in time to begin second grade in March (in order to be in sync with the Uruguayan school year). Daniel James turned 2 in late October, and Elizabeth turned 7 the end of January. If anyone knows how to keep them from growing so fast, we would like to hear from you.
 
 
We thank the Lord that Sofía Belén was born safely to Matías and Kristine (and big brother David Misael) Espinel in Uruguay on December 12.
 
We would appreciate your prayers during these next several months:
  • February 13: JM’s public ordination questioning
  • February 24: Our commissioning service, along with friends Jon and Andrea Crocker, who hope to begin gospel work in Mexico City this year
  • March through May: Safety in travel and God’s gracious work in churches we visit (U.S.)
  • June 11: Travel from Miami to Montevideo, Uruguay
Thank you for the calculated ways you focus your energy and resources toward what God is doing in the earth: the making of disciples of Jesus Christ for His glory. The outcome is sure. Stay encouraged!