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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
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Local
couple returns from Mexico mission
Judy
and Mike Patterson recently returned to their home in Sisters after spending
six months in Vicente Guerrero, Mexico. They joined hundreds of other volunteers
to work at the 80-acre mission there founded by Charla Pareau in 1956.
The Foundation For His Ministry
is dedicated to serving God through His people. In this instance, those
helped are the poorest of the poor — babies-found-at-the-dump poor, people
in such dire poverty that life's basic necessities, even food, become
luxuries.
"We went this time with a
specific goal in mind," said Mike, a professional painter by trade, "and
that was to paint, but God turned it into so much more."
The picture the Pattersons
paint is not only about wall coverings, murals, decorative touches and
brushes. It is revealed in their faces as they relate how the needs among
the people are supplied every hour. It is a huge undertaking and dependent
upon the network and hands-on efforts of people willing to make a difference.
Orphans abound and were it
not for the care provided, few would know a bath and de-licing, let alone
being held.
The mission day care is serving
a population of 15,000, mostly migrant farm workers.
The Pattersons tell of the
townspeople going to the dump. Acres of horrendous-smelling garbage and
waste are turned over scrap by scrap for food, for a treasure.
There are photos of children
in it, smiling, as if it were an Easter egg hunt on the lawn of the White
House.
This kind of poverty is foreign
to our western culture, the Pattersons note. For some it is too much to
assimilate and so they turn away.
"We are insulated by our abundance,"
said Judy. "It's uncomfortable to touch that we throw away leftovers that
could ... Well, you get the picture ... No, no, you can't unless you've
been there and seen it, smelled it."
And that's where people like
the Pattersons come in. They fly in from all over and bring their talents,
treasure and the gift of their time.
The ministries multiply. Right
up there with medical facilities, soup kitchens, clothing and shoes, even
a local radio station and Bible school, there is a wedding dress ministry.
The mission marries couples
and the women dreamed of wearing a real wedding dress. Sixty brand new
gowns were donated.
There is a hair salon, a wheelchair
ministry and fire and rescue services. Operation Blessing, a team of eye
surgeons performed 1,700 operations at the mission in two weeks.
"People have reached out in
a million ways," Mike said.
"And it all began," Judy said,
"when each one of them said ‘Yes' to God."
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