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Mission Teams

Oakwood's mission team is leaving for the Czech Republic July 22. Those traveling are: Gretchen Weible, Michael Weible, Raedene Dejewski, and Noah Dejewski. They return Aug. 5. Please keep them in your prayers.

Oakwood's youth mission team is leaving for Jamaica in October. Help raise funds for the trip by participating in Parents Night Out, Friday, July 24. Drop off your children and let the team babysit. A donation of $5 per child per hour is suggested. The times are from 5 to 11 p.m. Also, Sunday, July 26 is a Pancake Breakfast from noon to 2 p.m. at the Oakwood Ministry Center. A free will offering will be taken for the Jamica team.


Worldwide Missions

Oakwood Community Church supports several missionaries across the country and around the globe. They are:

Tim & Sara Arfsten
TEAM Ministries
Philippines
www.teamworld.org

Cesar & Celina Alvarez
Repairers of Broken Walls
Nicaragua
www.rbwmissions.com

Vaughn & Aleda Hagberg
Far East Broadcasting
Philippines
www.febc.org

Bob & Kathy Helvey
Campus Crusade
Little Rock, Arkansas
www.campuscrusade.com

Rick & Sharon Mattson
InterVarsity Christian Fellowship
St. Paul, Minnesota
www.intervarsity.org

Ben & Melissa Nugent
The Navigators
Gainesville, Florida
www.navigators.org

Dana & Christa Olson
Baptist General Conference
Crystal Lake, Illinois
www.bgcworld.org

Jose & Juana Maria Ramirez
Repairers of Broken Walls
Nicaragua
www.rbwmissions.com


Team Serves in Nicaragua
January 2008: Six Oakwood men helped this church in Asedades, Nicaragua, construct a new building to better accommodate its growing congregation.
Hand-mixing cement and carrying it in buckets without handles in 90-degree weather thousands of miles from home is certainly a strange way to build friendships with people who don’t speak your language. But that’s exactly what six Waconia men did earlier this month.

The men, all from Oakwood Community Church, spent the first week of 2008 helping Oakwood’s adopted church in Asedades, Nicaragua, construct a new building to better accommodate its growing congregation.

“We speak almost no Spanish, but with just a couple of words, we were able to build strong friendships,” says Brent Smith, a member of the short-term mission team, which also included Oakwood’s Senior Pastor Steve Anderson, Larry Ketcher, Tony Kroening, Michael Barto, and Grant Gorres.

To complete the building – adding a floor, a porch, steps and a roof – the men worked with nearly a dozen local volunteers as well as the local pastor and his family, Pastor Cesar and Celina Alvarez and their 13 children. The new building is three times the size of the old building, which was so over-crowded that only the women and children fit inside. All the men had to stand outside, often in the rain because the average annual rainfall in that region is about 80 inches.

A nearly four-hour drive from the capital city of Managua, Asedades is a poor, remote, mountainous village of fewer than 1,500 people. Very few cars travel the rocky path through the village, mostly just cattle, horses, donkeys and people.
Alvarez, Oakwood’s adopted pastor, and many other pastors in rural Nicaragua have great difficulty providing for their families because they often receive less than $35 a month from their congregations. That’s according to a Willmar-based ministry called Repairers of Broken Walls (www.rbwmissions.com).

Nicaragua is one of the poorest countries in Central America; its economy is severely depressed. Civil war, hurricanes, earthquakes, floods, mud slides, tornados and economic collapse have caused devastating poverty in many parts of the country. The under-employment rate is 46%, and 48% of the population is below the poverty line, according to The World Factbook. What’s more, many Nicaraguan children don’t attend school because they lack money for shoes, uniforms, books, and lunches.

Although the primary focus of this trip was the construction work, the mission team ministered in other ways as well. Anderson spoke on a nationally broadcast Christian radio program twice, and he led a seminary training conference for about 37 Nicaraguan pastors and their wives, most of whom have never had the opportunity for any formal education. The National Association of Evangelical Pastors of Nicaragua coordinated the conference.

“I spent three to four hours speaking through a translator,” Anderson says. “I shared things that the Lord has taught me, and we encouraged one another. We all understood that pastors are not immune to struggles, and we committed to pray for one another.”

The men all say they fell in love with the people of Nicaragua, especially the children. They gave away children’s books, Frisbees, play dough and a suitcase full of Beanie Babies, which Oakwood’s children’s ministry had collected. They also distributed a suitcase full of medical supplies to the evangelical association’s clinic in Managua and a suitcase full of books to the pastors at the conference.

Repairers of Broken Walls was pivotal in preparing the men for this mission. Enrique and Carol Acosta of Willmar serve as the directors of this ministry, and they accompanied the men on this trip. They assisted the team by translating, cooking, offering first aid and helping with the construction work. The Acostas have coordinated more than 35 mission trips to Nicaragua and Mexico over the last several years. Their goal is to facilitate Christ-centered, international relationships that serve, encourage and disciple.

For the past several months, the mission team met regularly to discuss logistics and participate in a missions-oriented Bible study. Through donations and fundraisers – which included clearing tables and washing dishes at Pizza Ranch in Waconia, serving food at various church gatherings, and selling Oakwood sweatshirts – the team raised $15,000 for the construction costs and travel expenses.

The team from Oakwood returned to Minnesota on Jan. 8, but this trip is just the beginning, Anderson says. The church intends to become more than one-time visitors to Nicaragua. Lord willing, Oakwood plans to unite with Alvarez’s church through on-going team trips, correspondence, reciprocal prayer initiatives, and sharing of their God-given gifts with each other.

The Acostas say this partnership can be more than one church helping out another, poorer congregation. “It can be the Body of Christ working together to complete God’s purposes and to show the world that Christ was who He said He was because His people really do love one another,” they say.

For more about Repairers of Broken Walls, visit www.rbwmissions.com.
 
Oakwood Community Church | 952.442.4323
office@oakwoodonline.org

Sunday worship services at Waconia High School
(1400 Oak Avenue in Waconia)

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