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©
2002 Display
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Pastor
helps build Honduran church
Sisters pastor
Frank Fraga traveled throughout Honduras last August, preaching the gospel
and encouraging the locals. Fraga returned to Sisters with a mission --
to raise $14,000 for a church building in village of Chapalapa.
"The first week I was there,
I spoke at meetings held in an old corn crib," said Fraga, who pastors
the Trinity Christian Center in Sisters. "There are no churches in Chapalapa."
Fraga's trip to Honduras was
sponsored by World Wide Crusades, a non-profit organization headed by
Oregon pastor Bill Smith. The organization strengthens and plants churches
in third world countries, then operates through the churches to distribute
food and provide medical care.
The impoverished conditions
of the Central American nation were eye-opening for Fraga, a seasoned
traveler.
"I thought I'd seen poverty
before," Fraga said, "but it was nothing like what I encountered in Honduras.
The average income in Chapalapa is only about $100 a month -- if they
can get work on the citrus farms."
Fraga said that the villagers
walked several miles -- some barefoot -- to attend the crusade services
that were held each evening.
"We'd see women carrying their
babies, walking five miles to the meetings," said Fraga. "We had an old
mini-van we used to get around. One night, we had nineteen people we'd
picked up along the way stuffed inside."
During the second week of
Fraga's trip, he spoke at crusade meetings in Cerro Verde, which is a
suburb of San Pedro Sula. Many churches had already been established there,
but the church Fraga spoke to was raising money for a school to educate
deaf children and their parents.
"The church did a survey and
discovered that there were over 4,000 deaf people within a three mile
radius of their building," he said. "So they started a school, primarily
to teach sign language to the parents so they can communicate with their
kids. They now have about 60 students, and need more room."
Fraga left Honduras with the
dream of providing the people of Chapalapa with a church building of their
own.
"A lot of the work World Wide
Crusades does hinges on having a building," Fraga explained. "Food and
medical supplies are distributed to the community through the churches."
Fraga has already raised enough
funds to purchase land. He recently sent a check for $3,100 to the pastor
in Chapalapa to buy the one-acre lot.
"The people there will do
all the construction of the building by hand," said Fraga. "They have
no equipment or machinery. The men use machetes, otherwise known as Honduran
chainsaws, to cut down trees to use as beams for the roof. The cement
is all mixed by hand. The finished building will measure 30-by-60-feet,
all out of cement blocks."
Part of the money Fraga is
raising will purchase motorcycles for the two men who pastor the small
church.
"One of the pastors walks
for nearly five hours one way to come to the meetings," said Fraga. "And
there are lots of snakes in that area."
Fraga has raised more than
half the necessary funds for the project, but still needs $5,800. For
more information, call Frank Fraga at 504-9221..
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