Friday, March 19, 2010

Coming Home in May

Dear Family and Friends:

How are you? I hope this letter reaches you in good spirits.
Some of you might be surprised, but I am returning to the States at the beginning of May. Please don’t be concerned for me because I committed my life to Jesus a long time ago, and I will go wherever He sends me. I am pleased to be where He is. I have led a very blessed and satisfying life, and I am looking forward to what He has ahead for me. The Bible says, "No eye has seen, no ear has heard, no mind has conceived what God has prepared for those who love him."
I served in Mozambique for a very fulfilling year, and there are going to be some things that will be very painful for me to leave behind. I am going to leave behind a dynamic Healing Place Church campus, friendships I’ve made with Mozambicans, and the simple, no fuss, no makeup lifestyle that I started getting use to. I was a part of something bigger than myself; “missionary” started rolling off the tongue pretty well.

I’ve grown so much during this time. Someone told me right before I left for Africa that God was going to teach me that things don’t have to go my way. I’ve known that truth only logically because I led such a disciplined life that I pretty much got the results I expected. Please don’t misunderstand me, I have not had an easy life, but I have had a blessed life because I applied the principles of God from childhood. And sure enough, none of it went my way. I was stretched beyond what I thought I could handle, but God is so very loving and gentle, I absolutely surrendered to His dealings with me. Romans 5:5, says that, “God has poured out his love into our hearts.” Andrew Murray, a South African minister in the late 1800’s, said it this way: “The love of God is always the love of God in its entirety, in its fullness as an indwelling power. It is a love of God to me that leaps back to Him in love, and overflows to my fellow-men in love.” When I couldn’t do it, God showed up and poured out His love into my heart. I would never trade that for sunburst or marble halls.

For my family and friends who are staying behind, I want to thank you from the bottom of my heart for every sweet word of encouragement you gave me to pursue God. You will never know how much you blessed me. Isaac and Carol, I love you; thank you for demonstrating a selfless life. Pastor Ben and Susan, thank you for waking up each day with such passion for the mission God gave you; Don and Diane, thank you for showing me that it’s never too late to do something crazy for Jesus, what commitment and faith; Jacci and Jessie, what can I say about you two, what gentle spirits, serving God without grasping for male companionship; Sandra what commitment to excellence. There are many more, Missy, Sarah, Zinty, and Janet. I am indebted to you all and I will take with me all the good memories I had with you.

How does this all fit with the rest of my life story? Well, only time will tell, but I believe this experience is a stepping stone for the next chapter of my life. My Portuguese has improved 100%, and now more than ever I realize that I am meant to work on an international level to some capacity. It’s no coincidence that I was born in Brazil, have an international face, and my heart yearns for the rest of the world. I plan on taking this to the next level. I want to learn more about helping people from other countries. How this will play out, I do not know, more schooling, an international company, I have no idea, but I am looking forward to finding out. In the end, my African experience has made me a better servant to the King and that is all that matters to me.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Thank You

I was able to raise enough funds to come back for 2 months. Thank you Jesus for any time I could spend in Mozambique with Your people. I do not take it lightly, I am priviledged to serve as a missionary. I don't have to understand everything, I am just grateful to be a part. Thank you all who supported me. Please pray that I can make the most of my time here with the Mozambicans.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Fundraising for 2010

I can’t believe it’s already been a year since I left you to serve on the field in Mozambique. With all the preparation and prayer, I could not have anticipated how much this country would charm and break my heart. I am charmed by the little children who have nothing, but can still sing at the top of their lungs about the goodness of the Lord. I am charmed by the simplicity of life and the natural beauty of this tropical paradise. But a year later, my heart is broken because there are still so many people to be reached with the Gospel of Jesus Christ. My heart breaks because I feel too weak to do anything about the poverty and sickness. Mozambique is still struggling to rebuild after 16 years of civil war, and they must turn to God for the answers.
Romans 10: 14-15 “How then will they call on Him in whom they have not believed? How will they believe in Him whom they have not heard? And how will they hear without a preacher? How will they preach unless they are sent? Just as it is written, "HOW BEAUTIFUL ARE THE FEET OF THOSE WHO BRING GOOD NEWS OF GOOD THINGS!"
And that is what you have done: you have sent me to bring the Good News to the people of Mozambique. Healing Place Church and Children’s Cup International Relief are still operating a CarePoint to reach the impoverished families of Nkobe, a village 20 minutes outside the capital city of Maputo. We provide free meals, medical care and education to about 300 children. We have given the people hope by planting a church that serves the community in the same style that Jesus did. God is moving in the hearts of the people. I feel honored to serve Campus Coordinators and Pastors Isaac and Carol Williams with the growing church by assisting them in reaching the lost and hurting in this area. I want to thank you for supporting me on this mission. Every soul I reached you reached. Every child I hugged you hugged. I could not have done any of this without your financial and prayer support. I am truly grateful, and I pray God’s wonderful blessings on your life. I pray you consider supporting me for this coming year. It can be a one time gift or monthly support, and all support is still sent to Healing Place Church 19202 Highland Rd., Baton Rouge, La, 70809. Make sure to designate it to Deborah Williams-Mozambique. And, please, if anything, I need your prayers. More than ever, I realize I can do nothing apart from Christ.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Visit to the States

I am having a wonderful time visiting with my family and friend back in the United States. I tell everyone who asks me what the most challenging part of being a missionary is being away from family and friends. I love the work and I enjoy helping people, but not having someone to talk to really takes a toll on me. However, I wouldn't trade it for the world. When I am most miserable I am most content. I don't understand it, but I think it has to do with discovering God is your all in all.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Fish




I really don't like fish. I like salmon and tuna, but that is about it. Mozambicans, on the other hand, love fish. Here are a few pictures of our Nkobe kids cleaning fish for the next day.

Saturday, September 19, 2009

Family Visit, Culture Shock

Mom and Aunt Grace came for a visit. I enjoyed having them here. We spent a few days in Mozambique, but we spent most of our time in Cape Town. I realize now more than ever the importance of taking a break. Isaac told me that living one year in Africa is the equivalent of 3 years in the States. Time flies here, but it also feels like forever. And if you leave for any amount of time and come back, its culture shock all over again. When I arrived in January, I had no idea what I was getting into. Living in Mozambique is difficult--physically, emotionally, and spiritually. When I travel outside of Mozambique and come back, its a challenge to come back because now I know. Missionary Morris Plotts says, "The greatest qualification to be a missionary is ignorance. If you knew what you were getting into, you wouldn't do it."

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Devotional Reading


With my highly prized cup of coffee, I sit and think about the Imitation of Christ by Thomas a Kempis. Its good, but it doesn't really challenge me, and I am trying to figure out why. It talks about some intense stuff like, "It is vanity to wish for a long life, an to be careless about living a good and useful life." Book One 1:4. Another one, " A humble knowledge of yourself is a surer way to God than in involved intellectual search after learning." Book One 3:4b.

I guess I am not that into the style of the book. At least in the first book, it is broken down into small exerts, but they are ramdom, on various subjects. Its good, so I am determined to get through it, but I am having a difficult time making it apply to me. Or maybe a Kempis has not convinced me that it should apply to me.

I really enjoyed reading Real Christianity by William Wilberforce and Absolute Surrender by Andrew Murray. It challenged me so much, "devotional reading has more of the character of a spiritual awakening out of cultural sleep than it has the idea of improving existing attitudes... We readily "sleep" within our culture until we travel abroad and are surprised by how differently other societies live and behave...Often this requires a renewed brokenness of spirit, a new or deepened sense of sin, or a profound reevaluation of our priorities...We may need then to "travel abroad" as the Desert Fathers did when they left the cities of men. We may need to explore as the medival mystics explored, or suffer as the Puritans suffered, in order to learn how secular their contemporary species of Christianity really was, and ours is today."