San Juan and Zion members |
At a local market in San Juan de Lurigancho, Lima-Peru |
Incredible image: meat, intestines, legs and thighs just hanging open at the local market |
It will take a couple of hours to shop for food that will likely only last in the household for a few days. This rhythm is repeated a couple of times throughout the week. Arms full of products, there is the return bus trip home. Heat, crowds, screaming babies, one waits at the stop for however long it takes for a bus to come along. Then the task of preparing food begins.
Life is gritty here. You have to be a survivor. You have to push your way through crowds and not be concerned about personal space or boundaries. Yet something else beautiful has emerged from the dusty, gritty, daily survival of life in the barrio: a deep trust and faith in the risen Lord, Jesus Christ.
And as we returned in February, we encountered it once again. We saw it in the faces of the children and parents, grandparents. We heard it in their prayers, in their stories of daily life. We experienced it as they asked us to dance and sing along with them.The trust and reliance on God is something that is not only deeply felt in the people, but it is a lived and daily reality. It is what we felt when we were there. And it is one of the missing pieces I feel upon returning to my own culture.
In Canada, we take so many things for granted: clean water; consistent electricity; basic services provided by the local and provincial governments; jobs that contribute to the running of the society; basic human rights that allow us earn a minimum wage; good health care services; an established, good education; opportunities for sports, music and arts. Yet, we often feel entitled and even deserving. We take these rights for granted and in doing so, can forget that they are gifts of God, that which God has provided for us. In our sense of entitlement, we forget that all we have has come from God and lose this sense of humility.
Yet in countries like Peru, in the barrio where San Juan Camino de Esperanza (St. John Way of Hope) is located, there is a deep sense of trust, of humility, of gratitude. There is an acknowledgement that people cannot survive daily realities of poverty, disease, poor education and health-care without God's intervention And what we have seen is God's glory, breaking into the darkness of greed and inequality which causes such disparity. We have seen God's glory, in a glimpse, in these ten days in Peru. It is here, too. God is here, in Canada. Yet it is seen with such clarity in a place like this barrio in Lima. Daily struggles, daily humility, daily walks to survive each day and make a better world for the children.
So, we continue in our mission and service to God and our neighbour, as we seek to deepen our understanding and bridge the gaps of culture that lead to strengthened faith and a deeper trust in God. May we come to acknowledge our need of God in our struggles, not the same as those of San Juan members, yet loss, change, transition. And in these times, we pray that with Christ at the centre, the church can be the safe, strengthening place for all.
With thanks to all of the participants of this Mission Exposure Trip, members of Zion Lutheran Church and Pastor Randy, for the opportunity to return to Peru and be a bridge of language and cultural understanding, to see and experience God on other soil....and become aware of how God is at work in all times and places in the world!
Pictured with Pastor Randy and Pastora Ofelia |
Grace and peace to all who pilgrim in these experiences of self-awareness and challenge. May God bless your journey and discovery, strengthening your sense of faith, humility and gratitude.
Pastora Fran.
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