Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Update from Rachel Weller


Team Casas and
Spring Break Prep

This past weekend I got to help lead a Team Casas build with two other staff members. Team Casas builds happen periodically throughout the year and are for those who may not have a team to come down with. Team Casas builds are definitely a unique dynamic where most people on the team have never met anyone else before that week. However, some of my closest relationships I've made through Casas have been on these builds. Within two and a half days, strangers became family as we all worked together to build a home for Berta and her family. Berta was a single mother struggling to make ends meet since her husband was killed two years ago. It was such a blessing to be the hands and feet of Christ to provide for her in difficult times. It was also good for me to go out and build because I had forgotten some aspects of the construction process and I need to be ready to lead teams on my own by March. 

One night we got back from the worksite early so we went for a walk to try to find some hamburguesas (this is the Mexican version of a hamburger typically with ham, avacado, sliced hot dogs, and other toppings depending on who makes them). No hamburguesas were to be found but we did come across a fruit and drink stand. Jorge (one of the team members) bought a Sodasrusa (Russian soda). I can't tell you everything that went into this drink but it was so fun watching them make it. She poured tons of chili power in it so I passed on trying that one as I am not a fan of chili powder mixed with fruit.  Right next to the Sodarusa stand was a coconut and pineapple stand. The woman who owned the stand would take the coconuts off to the side and hack at them with a machete until she had made a small hole in the top. She then squeezed a bit of lime into the coconut and placed a couple straws in the hole to drink the juice out of the middle. There is nothing like walking down the dirt roads of Juarez with people drinking out of whole coconuts. It was one of the most fun expeditions I've had in Mexico by far!

 

Now I'm back in the office for the next two weeks preparing for the craziness of spring break around here. We currently are planning on building 39 houses in the month of March, which has some staff out building for 4 weeks in a row. I'm planning on leading two builds in Juarez so far with a potential third to be added this week. I definitely cannot be a procrastinator anymore with how the next couple months are looking. Thankfully, I found a little netbook on clearance two weeks ago and have been able to be super productive with writing papers and getting ahead in classes on my weekends and days off of work.   

I'm continuing to raise support to be able to officially go on staff. My awesome supporters are helping to give $575 a month out of my $2,000 per month goal and I thank everyone who has supported me financially, emotionally and spiritually thus far. Support raising is a period that can become very frustrating but I'm choosing to trust that God will continue to provide if it is His will for me to serve him with Casas por Cristo. 

If you wish to help support me in my ministry with Casas por Cristo, you can do that through our GIVE DIRECT site and choose 5472 Support: Rachel Weller in the Program area field. Checks also can be sent to PO Box 971070, El Paso, TX 79997 with my name in the Memo line.

As well as e-mail updates, I'm going to be posting stories and pictures on facebook, twitter (@rachelmweller), instagram (@rachelmweller), and will be using my blog at http://rachelweller.blogspot.com/ (I promise the blog will happen... 10 page papers come before blog posts right now)

Last but not least, I LOVE hearing from you! It has made the distance much easier seeing valentine's day cards in my mailbox, sitting in Starbucks having skype dates (we don't have internet at our apartment so I'm the awkward girl chilling in the corner of public places talking to my computer) or getting encouraging facebook messages from friends. - Rachel


Keep up with all of our staff missionaries as they update their supporters about Casas por Cristo and their work here!

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Nineteen


There are 19 families that have been on our waiting list to receive a home from Casas por Cristo for more than four years. Nineteen families that each have five or more members and are waiting for a three-room home that we call a “double.” These families have made their houses out of the same cardboard that we use to pack our belongings. They pray that their homes will weather the storm and long for the one that Christ will provide one day.

These families have been waiting since 2008. Since before the drug war began. Since before all the four-year olds in the world were born. Since before some of our college interns were old enough to drive. Since before many of these families’ own children were born. They have been waiting and hoping and praying, because a prayer is all they have.

If we continue at the present rate, these families will be waiting another two years before they receive a home. Children that were 12 when their parents applied for a home will be 18 and moving on, never seeing their prayers answered. Every day we meet countless families in desperate need hoping to be added to this list, yet are denied because our list is already too long.

People ask our ministry all the time, “What are your greatest needs?” Right now our answer is…

Sandra Almanza
Maria Cristina Reyes Hernandez
Ricardo Aguirre Hernandez
Santa Carrasco Aburto
Rocio Landa Martinez
Roselia Garcia Valdez
Luis Manuel Hernandez
Jaime Cueto Escanuelas
Emilia Mancinas Lopez
Maria Luisa Ramirez Macario
Jose Manuel Flores Leos Gabriela Espino
Marlit Ortiz Reyes
Maria de Jesus Rodriguez Tena
Amalia Gomez Ramos
Alberto Carlos Garcia Vazquez
Graciela Sierra Cana
Pedro Valenzuela Moralez
Francisco Trejo Juan Paulo
Perla Valverde Solis
...and their families are our greatest needs.

These are not just names. Together they represent over a hundred men, women and children in houses that are not fit to be called homes. They are mothers and fathers that want to provide for their children but can’t. These individuals have spoken up on behalf of their families and asked their local church for help; for our help. Theirs are some of the countless prayers around the world, crying out to God in need. Their prayers are not just open ended words spoken into the night sky, these prayers represent names, faces and lives that have now been brought into your life and ours.

Without teams stepping up to build these homes, these families will continue to wait and wonder. 

Will you help us change their future? 
Will you organize a team to build their home and answer their prayers?


Need: 18-25 people per team
Where: Juárez, México


Tuesday, February 12, 2013

HOME 4000



On May 18, 2012 we dedicated Home 4000 for Sandra Gutierrez, Alfredo Perez and their six children. Their family had been anxiously waiting and praying for this dream to come true since April 2008. In celebration of 4000 homes, this build was funded entirely by our supporters and built by our staff, pastors and interns. Home 4000 was truly an example of what has made the previous 3999 homes possible – God’s provision, partnership and YOU!







Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Everyday Mission


Are you changed? Really changed?

Did the trip that you took for that one week change your life? Is it still changing your life months or years later?

It did change you. It made you feel alive. It taught you about abandonment and selflessness and maybe even helped you see for the first time what really is important in life. It reestablished the belief that life, true life, is not found in things, but in relationships and in Christ. It is in giving ourselves away that we find ourselves. It is the way that we are created. And for one week, you were reminded of that truth. But how do you bring that home? How do you keep it going?

One of the biggest struggles with a short-term mission trip, is so often we don’t know how to transfer what we learned and experienced on our trip, back into our lives when we return home. We don’t know how to bottle it up and bring it back to our everyday lives.

But what if we did live every day like we were on a mission trip? What if we lived every day with intention?

You planned your trip for months. You packed bags, raised money and traveled to a new country to share the love of Christ and serve a family that you had never met before. For one week, you left your life, your job, your school, your spouse, your friends or your family behind to simply GO.

What if you lived with that same intentionality the rest of your life? What if you got up each day knowing that your main goal, regardless of the form in which it presents itself, (classroom, office, construction, etc.) was to work at whatever is set before you, with everything in you, sharing His love in the process? What if you were as aware of every action that you took, as you were when you were building that home; knowing that your example, whether good or bad, will be the example of Christ himself to those around you?

“Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as if working for the Lord, not for men." Col 3:23

What if you woke up and went about your day with the same selfless purpose that you do on a mission trip? What if you put yourself aside and set out with others in mind, thinking of what you can give, rather than what you can receive?

“Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit, but in humility consider others better than yourselves” Phil 2:3

What if you were as adamant about sharing what you have seen Christ do in your life daily, as when you were preparing for or returning home from your mission trip?

“We proclaim to you what we have seen and heard, so that you also may have fellowship with us. And our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son, Jesus Christ” 1 John 1:3

In Bob Goff’s book, Love Does, he says this...
Jesus’ disciples never said they were on a mission trip. I think they knew love already had a name and they didn’t need a program or anything else to define it. We don’t either. The kind of adventure Jesus has invited us on doesn’t require an application or prerequisites. It’s just about deciding to take up the offer made by a father who wants us to come.
We are offered this opportunity every day; to serve, to love, to give, to share Christ in the same way that we do on our mission trips. It doesn’t take an airplane or leaving your life behind to find it. It just takes a choice to live it.

Don’t let this be a trip that changes 4 days of your life. Let it be one that changes the next 40 years.

So, let me ask you again, “Are you changed? 
Really changed?”