There is so much to tell about this trip. In overview, an
emi project team is made up of design professionals, 12 of them on this trip. We had a landscape architect, architect, water/wastewater
engineer, civil engineer, structural engineer, alternative energy engineer
(which can be important for isolated sites), electrical engineer, and
surveyors.
| Tim (in orange) is the project leader and is on staff here in the C.R. office. Allison and I (standing next to eachother) are the two interns. Kneeling in front is the Muñoz family. |
We went to the site early in the week, then to construction sites
and hardware stores to familiarize ourselves with the materials and methods
used in the area. The rest of the week most of us sat at our laptops
architecting and engineering.
We are designing two houses for the first phase
of the project. One house is for the Muñoz
family and will include guest rooms that can house mission teams. These rooms
will only be used for mission teams until the other building, a house/dorm for
mission teams, is built. Electrical, water, wastewater, grading, and drainage
will also be designed for the site.
Testimonies have always been one of my favorite things. Testimonies stick with
me more than most sermons. Every morning we would hear the testimonies of 3
team members. I was inspired by these middle class design professionals, who
are in the middle of their career and life, and who desperately want to serve
God well. However, the highlight of my trip was hearing the testimony of
Jeovanny, who works with the Muñoz family. Allison and I had been practicing
Spanish with him during the week. He spoke about the same amount of English as
we speak Spanish. So we made a deal that he had to speak English to us and we
had to speak Spanish to him. This helped my Spanish a lot; I wasn´t afraid to
speak to him because he knew what it was like to not really know a language. I
also realized that in language it isn’t necessary to say something exactly
correct in order to get your point across. Kind of obvious, I know, but as a
perfectionist I was struggling to say anything if I didn’t think I was saying
it correctly. Anyway, getting back to my story, we asked Jeovanny to share his
testimony in English during a long van ride. He grew up going to a catholic
church with his grandparents, but remembers thinking that he did not need God.
By 15 years old he was staying out late, smoking, and drinking (in this culture
Christians shun smoking and drinking more than in the USA). One of his friends
invited him to a Christian church, and as he attended with his friend, God
started working on his heart through His word. One night he dreamt that he had
accepted Christ. When he woke up he thought, “that would be a lot better in
reality.” So he accepted Jesus that day. He got married at 20 to one of his
teachers who was 7 years his senior. They had a beautiful son, but he had
problems with his stomach. He was often sick and was in the hospital often. He
died at 8 months old on the way to the hospital. Two years later, Jeovanny’s
wife was sick also and died in the hospital. That was two years ago, when he
was 27. Jeovanny told us that before these things happened he would go to
church and read his bible, but it wasn’t really part of him. Since then his
love for God has grown and he has a strong desire to serve Him. That is why he
joined the Muñoz’s ministry a little over a year ago. His smile contains so much joy.
Then Allison and I shared our testimonies with him in Spanish. Praise God for
the unity He gives His children! Culture and language difference didn’t stop us
from sharing how the same loving God had worked in each of our lives.
| Me, Allison, and Jeovanny in the front of the 13 passenger van. (Yes, Jeovanny was driving) |


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