Gratitude! What a blessing to be a part of the Body of Christ!
Occasionally we hear of churches that will not support missionaries that are not located in the tribe. We wanted to share our experience of how God uses all of us on the field and at home in His important work.
Gratitude and love fuel our hearts these days. So many of you have been used of the Lord to support us that we just had to let others know just how far and wide our Father has given strength and encouragement through the Body of Christ to pour out His love to us during this trying time. We have included names where we could for those of you who like to pray for folk by name.
Settle back and enjoy praising the Lord with us for all He has done as we count our blessings to give God all the glory!
1. The pilot, Ken, fueled the plane the night before and was prepared for a quick take off for a different emergency at another location. That emergency never happened.
2. The next morning, a gorgeous Sunday, Chris accidentally cut his hand, severing two tendons completely, and the often temperamental weather was beautiful and clear; perhaps a little windy, but manageable for our skilled pilot.
3. A dear young friend, Pasin, ran all the way from our house down to our partners’ house to ask them to turn on their walkie talkie radio.
4. As soon as our partner, Albert, heard the news, he was answering us all the while walking up to our house to help.
5. Once Albert saw the injury, he was able to immediately radio our partner, Lynne (his dear wife), and she quickly fired up the computer to call in the emergency to the pilot, Ken. He later informed us that the internet, which is very temperamental these days here, was only working for 20 minutes the whole day – just the amount of time he needed to hear of the emergency in our location, and change the plans for our flight out of the jungle.
6. Our precious Banwaon brothers and sisters, Amay and Inay Binaldu, Jelna and Tilma, Inay Elsa, Inay Gadya, and Amay Isil rushed to the house to pray and help us prepare for our hurried departure and to take care of the house and animals after we left. (They are continuing to do so during this long recovery time! Pets need food and care, tropical house keeping presents it’s own unique demands, grass continues to grow, plants need watering; the list is extensive! All during their very busy weeding and harvest seasons).
7. As soon as we landed at the airstrip, our co-workers and friends, David and daughter Rachel, pulled an ambulance-style sprint the 45 minutes to the hospital – flashers going and horn blowing the whole way! I’ve never seen such a flurry of chickens, dogs, cows, and people moving out of the way of our fray! (Our pilot Ken made it to church on time!) David’s wife, Helen, joined us at the hospital where another David and Abigail jumped into support roles to run around gathering medicines, food, and supplies for our hospital stay.
8. No orthopedic surgeon was on staff at the little hospital and none available in the larger town two hours away. The medical friends all stressed that it is best to repair the tendons within 24 hours. We still looked to His mercy – AND GOD had one located 20 minutes away and willing to come into the hospital as a guest surgeon, Doctor Cui – on a Sunday – to operate without benefit of microscopic equipment. Our Christian doctor friends, Doctora Ruthie and Doctora Hope, scrubbed up to stay close by Chris during the long procedure.
9. God provided a Christian therapist, Jenny, to come to the mission’s guest house for treatment after the stitches were removed to work with the now frozen hand. Good friends and co-workers there in town and the world over prayed and encouraged us the whole time. One couple from New Zealand, Trevor and Judy, even followed us around from city to city and doctor to doctor with their own medical issues and kept us laughing and looking to the Lord.
10. Meetings at our NTM home office in Manila required us to travel and so we arrived for what we thought would be a week of meetings. God had other plans to bless and heal! Other co-workers, Tim, Peggy and Cherith, called orthopedic surgeons here in Manila (the official sports surgeon to the Philippine Olympic team, no less!) and arranged for him to examine Chris to schedule physical therapy while we were in the big city.
11. God permitted two situations to occur on another island to allow Chris to help with evacuations from their locations and assist our missionaries with follow-up and re-entry into their tribal locations.
12. Meanwhile the surgeon here, Dr. Canlas, was concerned that no measurable improvement could be recorded on his hand so he arranged for another surgeon – a hand specialist, Dr. Carillo, for a second surgery on Chris’ hand October 1. He prepared Chris’ arm in order to harvest a tendon from the arm to repair the two in his hand, but when he opened the hand he saw the tendons had completely ripped apart from the first repair BUT strong adhesions and scarring held the four severed ends of those tendons and had not allowed the tendon pieces to retract in areas of his wrist! Even the doctor said he had never seen this in all his years of hand surgery.
13. Friends and churches mobilized to send encouraging notes and emails as well as practical support to meet our overwhelming needs in housing, travel and medical expenses. One dear family asked what the second surgery would cost and completely covered the expense. Other special gifts came through our sending church, Calvary Baptist, and sacrificing individuals to encourage us and help whittle the debt down bit by bit. Expenses continue for housing and travel beyond our normal support but we are confident our God will provide.
14. Our co-workers from Mindanao sent cards and flowers to cheer us along (forgive me for not mentioning each and every name!). Manila office co-workers along with Anja and her guest house crew keep us housed and fed as cheaply as possible and as comfortable as pampered guests. Our Palawan co-workers, Danny and Pip, spent hours encouraging and supporting us with Skype and in person.
15. Brent, Tonia and PR along with our amazing family and friends from home have been abundant in their love and support shared across to this side of the world! Our co-grandparents, Don and Sara, even emailed current pictures of our precious shared grand daughter, Jaiden, to brighten our day like little else can!
16. The time for immobility is over and he has begun his second stint of physical therapy with Tessa, the faithful therapist that works daily in the rehabilitation of Chris’ hand. Another wonderful doctor, Dr. Magpantay, a rehabilitation specialist, is prescribing the new therapy for the once again, frozen hand.
Undoubtedly there are invisible ways that God has protected and helped us that we won’t realize until eternity, but we gratefully praise Him for all He has allowed us to know and for the many ways that He plans to love us and use us to bless others. To God be the Glory!