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Appleseed Travel Journal

Baptism in a Bathtub

Our first day of training missionaries in Oaxaca was broken up in the afternoon by a baptism of a family.  The most natural place to bury the old life and rise up in Christ's new was the bathtub in a friend's house.  The occasion was marked by much feasting and celebrating as they shared the joy of their new life with their friends and family.

While this missionary team is new to church planting, they are already seeing several new groups forming and people reached.  In addition they are involved in providing medical care in villages as well as developing a Work Program to employ local people in well drilling.  Their vision is to see churches in every one of the hundreds of villages throughout Oaxaca.

Our friend, Brian, joined us as we brought three intensive days of training covering: 
  • Principles of church planting movements
  • Tools for disciples reproducing disciples
  • Team-building and vision-focusing
  • Tools for leadership development
Perhaps, even more important, is the way that God takes missionaries like this and knits us together with them.  In just a few days, we feel like we have become part of their family and that they have become part of ours.  I wish I could communicate to you the encouragement it brings to people who are serving in a foreign field to know that you have sent us to embrace them and join them together with all of you as part of their support system, so that they can continue to advance the kingdom in a needy part of the world.

We will continue coaching the team leader and are so excited to see this dynamic team becoming part of the Appleseed family.

Posted via email from Roger Thoman's Posterous

Out of the Starting Blocks

We are on the first leg of our journey to Mexico (Los Angeles to Atlanta) but not without some challenges.

Two days ago we unexpectedly took on the fulltime care of two of our grandchildren (ages 6 and 13) up until leaving.  So this morning started early as we had two kids to feed and get off to school before throwing our just-packed suitcases into the car and hustling our way down to L.A.  Then we faced a security line that snaked its way outside the terminal doors and along the sidewalk for at least a block.  It took us over an hour to make our way through.  This made our experiences with security measures in Africa (pat-down) look easy!

Ah well, we are on the plane and all is well.

We did take the time, on the way to the airport, to pray for the wonderful missionary team in Oaxaca that we will be working with.  It stirs my heart to think of their commitment to live among and reach these unreached villages in a needy part of Mexico.  We feel privileged to be part of their adventure in a small way and excited that all of you who are traveling with us, through prayers and concerns, have a partnership in this work as well.

So, I will wrap up with a little inspiration from Bruce Wilkerson's new book entitled "Your Were Born for This: Seven Keys to a Life of Predictable Miracles."  It has been stirring my faith today which is a great way to start a trip like this.  Here are a couple of quotes:
You were born to walk out your door each morning believing that God will use you to deliver a necessary miracle today.

Many have stopped expecting miracles, asking for them, or even knowing how to partner with God to invite them. In other words, they have abandoned the Everyday Miracle Territory and often measure success by how little they need God.
Wilkerson goes on to talk about how we tend to either live in the world of Glamorous Signs and Wonders (seeking to raise the dead) or the world of Good Deeds (no expectation of the supernatural).  He suggests that we miss the in-between territory he calls Everyday Miracles in which we can partner with God in everyday, ordinary situations and see him work powerfully in the lives of others by preparing ourselves to be open to his nudgings and let him work through us.  He is suggesting that it is far easier and for more accessible than we realize.
God is constantly at work in supernatural ways in our world, and He has much He wants to get done... God is regularly nudging people to respond, but most people miss His intentions or simply say no.
Next stop (Saturday): Atlanta to Mexico City; Mexico City to Oaxaca.  Thanks for coming along!

Posted via email from Everything Roger Thoman

Firing Up Our Travel Blog: Mexico

We are getting our Travel Blog up and going as we prepare to leave for Mexico in a week.

We will spend several days there working with a dynamic missionary team in Oaxaca.  Here is what their team leader says about their work in this unreached part of Mexico:
Our state, Oaxaca, has over 150 distinct indigenous people/language groups.  Many of these groups are still fairly unreached with the gospel.  (Oaxaca has the highest concentration of least-reached people groups in all of the Americas.) Our town, Tlaxiaco, is a market town centrally located to the Mixtec (and Triqui) region in western Oaxaca.  This region is the least-reached area of the state.  Our town has several churches, but many of the thousand or so mountain villages within a few hours of us have very little or no gospel witness.  We are working to make disciples of indigenous people in our town and then help them take the gospel back to their home villages.  We are integrating some community development work into our church planting efforts and currently have a well drilling project and a diabetes project that are just getting off the ground.
What a wonderful opportunity to see God raise up disciple-making leaders who can plant fruitful seed throughout this needy state in Mexico!

We leave Friday morning, February 19, fly to Atlanta to spend the night (the joys of flying with frequent flyer miles) and then into Mexico on Saturday...

Posted via email from rogerthoman's posterous

Time for A New Shirt

As I walked into the area where the men had gathered for the meeting on church planting a very gregarious young man jumped up from his chair and ran over to greet me.  I guess there was no doubt about who I was since I was the only white woman there, so it must be fairly obvious that I was Roger Thoman’s wife.   With great excitement, the Kenyan man grabbed my right hand and shook it warmly, “You must be Brooks, Roger Thoman’s wife.”  A little embarrassed and not knowing quite what to do or say, I acknowledged, “Yes, I was.”He went on to introduce himself as “Jimmy” from Bungoma.  He told me all about how he had learned about simple church from a friend of his who then put him in contact with our website.  He had read Roger’s book, had read all the blogs, materials, everything.  Then he told me of his work in Nairobi planting churches, in western Kenya planting churches and about his wife and the church she had planted among single women.  Then, the clincher, Jimmy said, “You know, Brooks, I recognized Roger the minute I saw him . . . from the internet.” I thought to myself that surely it was his white hair (or for that matter, because he was the only white man present could have been a dead give-away), but no, here’s what he said:  “I recognized him by his shirt.  The shirt he is wearing today is the same shirt he is wearing on the book cover and the same shirt he is wearing in the photo on the website!”  I started laughing and laughing.  I couldn’t believe it.  Just the day before, I had said to my beloved, “Your shirt has a hole in it.  Now, will you let me throw it away?” Jimmy with a big grin asked me, “Is this the only shirt Roger owns?”  I just couldn’t quit laughing.  Even in Africa where some of the people we are working with own very few clothes, they typically own more than one shirt!  Then Jimmy confessed that he had asked my Kenyan friend Elizabeth on the side if Roger owned another shirt.  She had told him, “Oh yes, he owns three!  Last year he came for two weeks and he wore two others.” Roger is not a man to be concerned with what he is wearing or sitting on or living in. If money is to be spent on anything frivolous, it occasionally might be spent on something technological, but otherwise, this guy has ZERO needs or wants.  So, all of my suggestions of wanting to buy him this or that or that he might actually need something are met with a comment like, “No, I already have one or I don’t need it.”  So, you can see that as long as the blue and white Hawaiian shirt had a thread of life in it, I had little hope of replacing it…except for my new African best friend! Jimmy and his wife Roseline along with Elizabeth and Dawson all wanted to get together for dinner on our last night in town.  As soon as we sat down, Jimmy stood up and started to make a big presentation, thanking Roger for everything he had taught, the principles he had learned from him, etc., but the speech quickly deteriorated into the story about how he had recognized him the moment he had seen him…not by his face, but by his shirt.  We all started to laugh.  Then he graciously held out a wrapped gift to Roger.  (I was crying I was laughing so hard, just imagining what was coming!)  Neatly folded inside was a beautiful black tunic shirt with the continent of Africa sewn on the front.  As Roger unfolded it and held it up, Jimmy told him that the custom in Kenya was to put on the gift right away, so Roger quickly slipped it over his head, pulled it down and it fit perfectly.  He loved it!  He really loved it even more when he figured out that the continent was actually a pouch that he could carry things in.  Jimmy also pointed out that he had chosen this particular shirt with the blue and white appliqués on the front because they were the same color as his Hawaiian shirt, just so the transition to a new shirt wouldn’t be too hard! While Roger was proudly adjusting his shirt and sitting back down, Dawson who had been rather quiet up til now said, “You know the first time I ever met Roger was in Nairobi three years ago, and he was wearing that same blue and white Hawaiian shirt.” Then, it all started all over again.  We were all laughing hysterically. So, yes, I have a new best friend who I will be forever grateful to in Kenya, because we no longer have the blue and white Hawaiian shirt, and even Roger has admitted that it is saying something when an African tells you that you need some new clothes!

Posted via email from Brooks's posterous

Becoming Accustomed to Life in Developing Countries

I just wrote these words to a friend in an email:
We have now hung out in developing countries long enough to become surprisingly accustomed to a different standard of life.  It's funny how you can walk into a hotel that faces bustling city streets, walk up uneven stairs, walk down semi-clean hallways, step into a room with a hard mattress for a bed with a mosquito net covering, sit on a toilet seat made of plastic or no seat at all, turn on a shower that dribbles hot water, brush your teeth with bottled water, order food that tastes exactly like last night's meal (because it is exactly the same) and then say to each other: "Wow, what a great hotel this place is... We are living in luxury this week!"
It's been an exceptional trip!  We have many more reports to share, and can't wait to catch up with YOU on all that has been going on here at HOME!
Shower Head in the Aforementioned 3-Star Hotel:
100_5858 (Small)

Posted via email from rogerthoman's posterous

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