
Happy
to know she's in your family: Santa Lucia Viscencio Ramos. As is common in
Peru, her third name is her father's and her fourth name is her mother's.
Dear Friends,
The tiny woman
pictured above, Santa Lucia Viscencio Ramos, is not much shorter than
the average Peruvian woman living high in the Andes Mountains. Her poor diet
has not allowed her to grow beyond four feet. Now sixty-six years old, Santa has
never been married, and she's been a Christian for eight years. She lives in
two tiny rooms with walls of crumbling concrete and exposed log rafters.
Working eleven-hour days as a maid---six days a week---she is paid only $14 per
month plus three meals a day. Santa was quite happy to receive $100 for much
needed necessities from her spiritual family whom she'll one day meet in heaven
(that's you!).
In May, I spent ten
days in Peru, one of South America's poorest nations. It was my first time
there, and my first time to eat guinea pig, a Peruvian delicacy! I was so glad
to serve, on your behalf, precious children, the very poor, and devoted
pastors. My report and photos follow.
Thanks so
much. Your compassion is making a difference and testifying of the grace
of God in Peru, and in many other nations of the world. -- David
Micro Loans: Major Blessings
HF/I
Was Hungry

Dina
Zotica Diaz de Arnao, happy to expand her tiny store with a $200 micro-loan
from Heaven's
Family
People who start
businesses must have some capital to begin, and so most need a business loan.
But what if you were so poor that you had zero collateral and no banks would
give you a loan? Such is the plight of many of the world's poor, including
millions of honest and hard working followers of Jesus. Banks won't even lend
them $200. Shouldn't their faith in Jesus, however, and a consistent testimony
be enough collateral for fellow believers, like us, to trust them with a $200
loan?
Using gifts to
the general fund of I Was
Hungry, we gave micro-loans to
four Peruvian Christian women. One of them is Dina Zotica Diaz de Arnao
(pictured above). She already has a small store in the front room of her little
house, but her inventory is extremely limited. Along with the small
income that her husband earns from scavenging and selling recyclables, they are
just scraping by. Dina was overjoyed to receive a one-year loan of $200 that
will enable her to significantly expand her inventory. Her pastor, Jose'
Ernesto Castillo Medrano, has faith in her, and he is administrating her loan.
The other three
Christian women in Peru who received micro-loans also have small businesses
that they are now expanding with our help. When their loans are repaid, the
funds will be loaned to other hard-working believers. Micro-loans are a proven
means of helping the poorest of the world's poor rise from poverty with
dignity.

Maria
Gutierrez de Regaldo, Cardenas Currasco de Coral, and Bethsabe'
Pricila Arnao Diaz with her daughters
Jesus Still Feeds the Hungry
HF/I
Was Hungry

A
little bit shy of a gringo with a camera: A small girl coming with her mother
to the feeding center.
Lima, Peru, is a
sprawling city of eight million inhabitants, many of whom live in
"neighborhoods" of tiny shacks built with mud brick walls and tin
sheet roofs. Our primary contact in Peru, pastor Ruben Cano, has been reaching
out for many years in such places by feeding children three times each week and
planting churches in their neighborhoods. He doesn't believe that he should
preach the gospel to the hungry without giving them food. So pastor Ruben
follows Jesus' example, providing bread both from earth and heaven.
While I was in Lima, I
visited an impoverished neighborhood on the outskirts of Lima where Pastor
Ruben has a vision to open another children's feeding center and church. Many
of the families who live there make bricks for a living (see next story). I was
blessed to entrust pastor Ruben with $1,000 from Heaven's Family for start-up
funds, plus make a pledge of $200 a month to purchase food for his new feeding
center, and give him funds for a plane ticket to the U.S. so
he can raise more funds. (If you would like him to visit you, let me know.)
I also visited a
previous feeding center and church that pastor Ruben started five years ago.
There was lots of joy in that place where, three times each week, children (116
in all) gather for a substantial meal. Most of them folded their
hands to pray before eating. After lunch they stayed to watch puppets act out
Bible stories. I'm so glad we can support these good works.

Happy
for a good meal in a place of love and joy
The Brick Pit People
HF/I
Was Hungry

Their
bricks behind them: Romulo and Andrea Garcia pose for a happy photo.
Near the neighborhood
where Pastor Ruben will soon be starting his newest church and feeding center
there are wide pits that have been dug to a depth of ten feet or more. Local
families work in those pits making bricks by mixing top soil with water. The mud
is packed into molds, from which the wet bricks are then dislodged to dry in
the sun. Each family is paid about 3 cents per brick. Ten thousand bricks nets only $300.
We found Romulo and
Andrea Garcia and their five children working together one afternoon, using
forked hoes to mix water with soil. Everyone in the family works every day,
although child labor is technically illegal in Peru. The Garcia's 10' x 18'
"house" is made of stacked mud bricks (no mortar), and consists of
two small rooms with a dirt floor (see photo below). They rent the land their
house is built on from the man who owns the brick pit. I kept thinking to
myself, What if I had
been born into such circumstances?
My only consolation is
knowing that, because of our help, pastor Ruben will soon be starting a new
church and a children's feeding center in the Garcia's neighborhood. Perhaps
their hearts will be touched and they'll find Jesus. Please pray for them. To
view a two-minute video that shows the Garcias making bricks and some of the
children at one of Pastor Ruben's feeding centers, click here.

| The
Garcia's home |
|
4-year-old Roger knows how to make bricks |
TDMM: Now Distributed in 18 Languages, Including Spanish
H/F
Shepherd Serve

To date, 79,000 copies
of The Disciple-Making
Minister have been printed in
eighteen languages and distributed in at least twenty nations, mostly to
pastors. I brought copies of the Spanish version to Peru and gave
them away at our pastors' gatherings in Hauraz and San Marcos. I also made
arrangements while in Peru for our first printing in South America.
Thanks for helping us
equip pastors in Europe, Asia, Africa and Latin America (and even the U.S.)
with a 500-page book that many of them cherish. I was astounded to recently
learn of a $1,000 gift from a Kenyan pastor (a huge sum in his
economy) who wants to see every Kenyan pastor have his own copy! To order your own English copy click here.

Three
Peruvian pastors with their new copies of TDMM
Our Older Orphans
H/F
Orphan's Tear

Dawt
Par, age 18, lives in Myanmar and must soon leave her orphanage
Note: This section of our newsletter is a partial reprint of
last month's Orphan's
Tear Update,
sent to all orphan sponsors.
Praise God that 862 orphans and unwanted children in seven nations
have been sponsored through the Orphan's
Tear division of Heaven's Family. But what happens to the older children
once they must leave their orphanages?
Very few, if any, move on to higher education. Most must find a way
to support themselves, and so they look for a job. Without skills, however,
only the most menial jobs are available---the kind that pay very little. For
example, a laborer in Myanmar who works in the fields will earn just one dollar
for a ten-hour work day. The same rate is paid to road workers. These
hard-working laborers are trapped in grinding poverty all their lives.
For those who have skills, however, there are better jobs. So we're
beginning to make an effort to provide some skills training for our older
orphans to help them better support themselves once they leave their
orphanages.
In Myanmar, we've just launched a sewing school through the purchase
of fifteen treadle sewing machines and by providing a teacher's salary for a
year. We've also just begun special English language classes by paying for two
teachers' salaries for a year. And we hope to start classes for computer
training, hair dressing and watch repairing. These kinds of skills can open
doors of opportunity for our older orphan children that would otherwise remain
closed.
We hope to do much more of this kind of thing, not only for our
older orphans in Myanmar, but also for our older orphans in Pakistan, India,
Tanzania, Kenya, Sri Lanka and Haiti. Many of our orphanage directors have
talked to me about this, but I've always explained to them that we just don't
have the funding. But I've been praying, and I think I have a God-inspired idea
to turn dreams into reality. To learn about that idea click the link below.
Hope to See You in Colorado, Louisiana, or Virginia
This Month
April
Schedule
April is a month of
more travel. I'll be in Colorado Springs and Denver April 6-11, Baton Rouge April 19-20, and Newport News April 24-27. For more information please send us an email.
From My Heart...
I can't express
how much we appreciate your partnership as we reach out around the world,
building God's kingdom and caring for the "least of these" among
Christ's family. This newsletter only reveals a small part of last month's
fruit that has been made possible by your prayers and gifts. May God bless you
so that you can continue to lay up treasure in heaven where your heart is.
David

Parting Shot

| Not
everyone in Peru is happy all the time! |
|
Photo courtesy of Gretchen Jones |
All contributions to Heaven's Family or any of its three divisions are fully tax-deductible within the United States. All three divisions of Heaven's Family share the same mailing address. Please send all gifts to either Heaven's Family, Shepherd Serve, Orphan's Tear or I Was Hungry at:
P.O. Box 12854
Pittsburgh, PA 15241
If your gift is for a specific project, please indicate which project on the memo line of your check. Most of our current projects are described at IWasHungry.org.
To donate securely by credit card to the Heaven's Family general fund though PayPal click here. You can donate securely by credit to any specific project by visiting IWasHungry.org. Thank you!
This Ministry Update is a communication of Heaven's Family, and it is our primary means of keeping our partners informed of their fruit. We are striving to serve Jesus by loving "the least of" His brethren”poor believers who live in less developed nations and who often suffer persecution for their faith. We are focusing on equipping Christian leaders with essential biblical truth, supporting Christian orphanages, and meeting very pressing material needs. We'd love to have you join our growing family. Please visit the websites of our three divisions: ShepherdServe.org, OrphansTear.org and IWasHungry.org. |