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

Monday, February 28, 2011

Winter 2011 Report

Dear Friends,

Some of Jesus’ last words to His followers were instructions to them to make disciples. Though it may seem presumptuous, these eleven men had the right to make disciples in all nations of the earth. They could have this confidence because Jesus is King: All authority in heaven and earth is His. We are convinced that the King’s orders apply to us as well, even as His accompanying promise encourages us: “I am with you ‘all the days’—even to the end of the age” (Matthew 28:18-20). We are going therefore, believing that God has specifically led us to have at least a small part in the ongoing teaching of “all things” to faithful Uruguayan leaders, who will in turn teach others. We look forward in faith to the day when Uruguayan churches are sending well-trained laborers to nations to which we will never be able to go.

We are currently serving among a group of North American churches and friends who, as they recognize God’s calling and preparation on our behalf, are helping in various ways to send us to Uruguay. At the end of December (2010), we resumed travel, presenting our anticipated ministry in three such churches in Ontario, Michigan, and Ohio. In Michigan we attended a family wedding in the Upper Peninsula and a conference in Troy. We are now dividing our time between South Carolina and Ohio. In April we return to the western states and provinces.

We would ask you to labor with us by praying for the following things:

  • Please pray that we would be faithful in what we view as our present work: “prayer and ministry of the Word” (Acts 6:4), introducing ourselves to churches, serving in these churches (Acts 13:2), and sharing information about God’s work—past, present, and future—in Uruguay.

  • Please pray for success in our present goals: First, that we would help to “present every person complete in Christ” (Colossians 1:28) and would help to equip and edify local churches (Ephesians 4:12); second, that our visits to churches would provide opportunity for them to evaluate their perception of God’s calling of us (Acts 13:1-4; Romans 10:15); and third, that God would continue to prepare us for Uruguay.

  • Please pray that the soon result of this would be our being sent to Uruguay. (We believe that it will!) Our being sent is not our work. It is our desire, it is a goal, and it will be the result—perhaps only when the Lord knows that His work has been completed for this stage of our lives and ministry. We are currently receiving 32% of our financial support.
  • Please pray for grace, strength, and safety for the entire family as we continue to travel this year.
  • Please pray for Bible institute classes which are now beginning (the fall semester in Uruguay).

  • Please pray for adequate oversight and continued growth of Maranatha Bible Church in Pando during the Garwoods’ furlough (April through October).

  • Finally, please remember to pray for the Espinels, who are also preparing to join us in Uruguay.
We appreciate your love, your prayers, and your encouragement! If a letter like this—especially words about Jesus as Lord or King—seems strange to you, we would love to talk with you about the gospel! Please contact us.

John Mark, Déborah, Elizabeth, and Daniel James Steel

Sunday, January 30, 2011

January 2011

This month took us to Michigan, Ontario, and Ohio. After completely circling Lake Michigan in January, the worst road conditions we saw were in Greenville, SC, within a few miles of home.

Today will preach in Linville, NC, from Psalm 63: Because God is all-satisfying, we should seek Him, rejoice in Him, praise Him . . . and take to the nations the good news of that all-satisfying God who offers salvation in His Son.

Hoping for gospel conversations with Uruguayans in coastal SC this coming week.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Campamento Emanuel

An average of ten kids from Iglesia Bíblica Maranatha (Maranatha Bible Church) in Pando are expected to attend this week’s and next week’s camps at Camp Emmanuel. A teen camp is being held this week and a children’s camp next week. Many of these young people do not know the Lord.

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Who is this?

For those who have ever spent a Christmas wondering about the identity of Jesus, or about your relationship to Him, but who now know—rejoice!

For those who rarely think about Jesus—make good use of the season to consider His claims!

For those who are still plagued by doubt—consider the individual statements and the overall impression that the Bible gives of Jesus.

The hymn is true:
Who is this so weak and helpless, child of lowly Hebrew maid,
Rudely in a stable sheltered, coldly in a manger laid?
‘Tis the Lord of all creation, who this wondrous path hath trod;
Christ our God from everlasting, and to everlasting God.
(William Walsham How)

Monday, December 13, 2010

Nate Saint's Christmas Letter

“As we weigh the future and seek the will of God, does it seem right that we should hazard our lives for just a few savages? As we ask ourselves this question, we realize that it is not the call of the needy thousands, rather it is the simple intimation of the prophetic Word that there shall be some from every tribe in His presence in the last day and in our hearts we feel that it is pleasing to Him that we should interest ourselves in making an opening into the Auca prison for Christ.

As we have a high old time this Christmas, may we who know Christ hear the cry of the damned as they hurtle headlong into the Christless night without ever a chance. May we be moved with compassion as our Lord was. May we shed tears of repentance for these we have failed to bring out of darkness. Beyond the smiling scenes of Bethlehem may we see the crushing agony of Golgotha. May God give us a new vision of His will concerning the lost and our responsibility.

Would that we could comprehend the lot of these stone-age people who live in mortal fear of ambush on the jungle trail . . . those to whom the bark of a gun means sudden, mysterious death . . . those who think all men in all the world are killers like themselves. If God would grant us the vision, the word sacrifice would disappear from our lips and thoughts; we would hate the things that seem now so dear to us; our lives would suddenly be too short, we would despise time-robbing distractions and charge the enemy with all our energies in the name of Christ. May God help us to judge ourselves by the eternities that separate the Aucas from a comprehension of Christmas and Him, who, though He was rich, yet for our sakes became poor so that we might, through His poverty, be made rich.”

(From Elisabeth Elliot, Through Gates of Splendor, 165-166)

Monday, December 6, 2010

“My testimony is that of a dishonorable man that God has saved and honored in every conceivable way. Every good thing that I’ve ever wanted to do, God has let me do; and every good thing I’ve ever wanted to have, God has let me have. That’s the way dads are to their children.”    — J.D. Crowley, missionary to Cambodia

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Fall 2010 Report

Dear Friends,

Thank you for your prayers, your kind support in various ways, and your interest in our activities this fall. We are thankful for the Lord’s provision and leading—not only during these past several months but throughout the entire year. Pictures, highlights, and requests for prayer from 2010 are included below.

September: At the beginning of the month John Mark returned from Alaska, having visited multiple churches and individuals on the drive home. (Déborah and Elizabeth had returned by plane in August.) We then took part in meetings or conferences in GA, TN, and SC. JM preached twice in our church’s neighborhood Spanish service.

October and November: We are thankful for these months in our temporary home (Greenville, SC)—time which has given rest and renewed connection with both our home church and other local churches nearby. JM began work toward the Doctor of Ministry program at BJU Seminary to further prepare for our mission of assisting Uruguayan churches, particularly in the area of ministry training. (For information, along with an introduction to the Steels and the Espinels, please see:

On October 30 God blessed us with Daniel James Matías. We are grateful to God and stand in need of His grace. And little Daniel James stands in need of the gospel if he is to be inspired by his biblical tocayos: faithful Daniel (Dan. 6); James—unbelieving half-brother turned slave of the Lord (James 1:1); and Matías—ordained a witness of the resurrection (Acts 1:22). Daniel James left the hospital the day his cousin Jonatán Torres entered for another surgery in connection with his ongoing battle with osteosarcoma cancer. Please pray for God’s grace and glory.

We are hoping that by this time next year we will be making detailed plans for our move to Uruguay. Meanwhile we anticipate what promises to be a very full schedule of meetings and other opportunities for ministry and preparation in 2011. We look forward to the continued privilege of preaching, teaching, ministering musically, and—of course—communicating the needs and opportunities that lie before us in Uruguay. We learn much from this time of local church ministry, and we thank the Lord for putting us into His service in this way. Please pray that He would accomplish His good purposes among His people and that He would continue to prepare us for work in Uruguay. We do want God to use our fleeting lives and otherwise meager service to further His kingdom; but without His grace and strength we waste our time. We trust that the Lord is putting us into the churches of His choosing, but we cannot take that for granted. Please pray for God’s guidance in such planning. Travel plans this coming winter include Michigan and Ohio. Contact us if you would like a detailed itinerary.

Bible institute classes in Uruguay end as their summer begins; and preparations there are underway for the January and February camp season. Not only will many young people and families be exposed to God’s Word, but the camp ministry also provides training opportunities for Bible institute students and others. In March of 2011, Don and Pat Garwood plan to return to the States for a six-month furlough. Please pray that the Lord would provide for adequate oversight and continued progress of the work in Pando during their absence.

Friends, do pray. Without Him you and we can do nothing of eternal value. And apart from God’s forgiveness offered in the gospel, the nations die without hope of knowing and glorifying God. Consider taking a more active role in the cause that cannot fail—that of making disciples of Jesus Christ, both on our continent and beyond!

For the sake of that Name,

John Mark, Déborah, Elizabeth, and Daniel James Steel


2010 in Brief Review:

Our future co-workers, Matías and Kristine Espinel, spent a week with us in January. Please pray for them (and their Baby Boy, due in January 2011) as you pray for us.


We spent February in Uruguay—teaching at Camp Emmanuel, spending time with Deborah’s family and Maranatha Bible Church in Pando, and visiting EMU churches in the interior.




In April and May we made a significant transition to full-time ministry: preparation for Uruguay, travel, and meetings in a group of local churches that are helping to send us to Uruguay. We enjoyed conferences and services in Iowa, Colorado, and Utah.


We participated in Vacation Bible School in one church in Alaska where we presented our anticipated work in Uruguay. Pat Garwood’s parents helped to start this church in the 1950’s.


A pleased big sister with her 9 lb. 14 oz. bodyguard (At last! Non-blurry pictures of Sasquatch!)



The Torres family is in Uruguay until December 13. Please pray for God’s name to appear very big to those in Uruguay (and North America) as we watch Him work in this difficult situation. Jona’s situation affects many of those with whom we will serve in Uruguay.



Please do pray!