|
The Weaver Family
BBFI Missionaries to Belize
The Valley Of Peace
God called us to the villages of Belize. We visited a
village in July of 2002, called, “Valle de Paz,” (Valley of Peace), and
found a great need for the Gospel. There used to be a Baptist Church
there years ago, but the work had been abandoned for some time. The
jungle, bats, and termites had taken over and the building was in need
of major repairs. After seeing the church we were introduced to a Mayan
lady in the village named Ms. Petrona who was 64 years old. She has been
a widow for over 25 years and had been planting and harvesting her crop
of corn by hand to assist in paying for the electricity of the church.
She had been praying for a preacher to come to the valley and wanted the
church ready when he came. She knew God would answer her prayer. After
much prayer, we felt God calling us to help these people. We began with
a VBS and then started holding services the following week. To get to
the village, we used to have to cross the river by ferry, but God gave
us a bridge, and although the roads are still very rough, travel is
easier.
The “Valley of Peace” was given to a group of refugees from El Salvador
that were escaping for their lives during the civil war in their country
in the 80’s. Most homes are very primitive wood homes with thatch roofs.
Many of the villagers have no running water or electricity in their
homes.
They bathe and wash their clothes in the river at the pila in the
village. Very few have indoor plumbing. They are a very simple group of
people. Sometimes it seems we have gone back in time.
Language has been a very difficult barrier for us in the valley. The
children are taught some English in the schools but most of the adults
speak Spanish, Ketche, or Maya. Illiteracy is also a problem with the
adults, most of them being unable to read and write. So we visit and
talk with the people with our few Spanish phrases and get along the best
we can while getting a chuckle now and then from the villagers when we
say something wrong. My wife and I would like to start an English class
to teach reading and writing.
Our
compound has grown in the past 8 years. We have 2 Sunday school
buildings, one having two rooms. Since our attendance has increased, we
had to begin construction on a new auditorium, which is directly behind
our present auditorium. It is 60 ft. x 90 ft. in size, with no outer
walls keeping things much cooler. We will use our old auditorium for
youth ministries. We have a shop for building our own pews and doors. A
MANNA feeding center was built in March of 2006. We have a home on the
corner of the property that is 700 square feet (pictured here).
The most difficult goal to reach with the children is gaining their
trust. They have had bad experiences with outsiders in the past and are
a little reluctant to trust what people say. My wife and I both
understand the importance of gaining their trust first. If we can’t get
them to trust us, how will we ever get them to trust in Christ?
The valley has only two schools. One is Catholic and the other Assembly
of God. If your child goes to the Catholic school, they have to be
baptized into the Catholic faith to attend there. We feel this is so
wrong to force the children into the Catholic faith. There are just not
enough choices. The children have been deceived and are taught that
there is no hell and they don’t need to be “saved.”

With so many children we started a children’s program on
Tuesday nights, called
“TNT,” (Truth and Training) for
children
ages 5-12 years. We open the service with a time for songs and puppets.
The children then break up into groups and alternate with games or
lesson time. We usually end the service with a clear presentation of the
Gospel. Since our children are so shy we ask if any are interested in
salvation to raise their hand and we will come to their home and talk to
them individually. Once they pray the sinner’s prayer and accept Christ
as their Savior they are very proud to come forward at the next service
and present themselves as new Christians to our church. Parents
started coming and teenagers too so we added a Spanish service for the
adults and a seperate service for the youth ages 13-18 years of age. We
are all spread out on the compound, with every group hearing the Gospel. Click any
photo for a closer look and use your browser's back button to return.
Our rainy season here lasts about 8
months. We are talking approximately 165 inches of rain a year so you
can imagine the "mud" we have to deal with at game time. Our new
auditorium also is used as a multi-purpose building for AWANA games at
TNT, and activities such as volleyball on youth nights. We would also
like to build a dormitory for men and women to house a team when they
come here from the states. It would extremely cut the cost of staying in
a hotel, and they could also experience staying in a jungle village.
We
have a feeding center here in the Valley of Peace for school age
children. At this time we are feeding 60 for lunch each day. I wish you could see their smiling
faces as they sit down to a hot nutricous meal. At the end of each month
we have cupcakes after the meal to celebrate the children that had
birthdays that month. The first time we did this they asked, “Are we
going to do this each month?” When we told them yes, you should have
heard the cheers. It doesn’t take much to make these kids happy. But it
sure makes you feel good seeing them leave after the meal with a smile
on their face, a full belly, a quick wave and a thank-you.
We have established three other works in Belize. Bullet
Tree Falls, which is on the western border of Belize. Camelote Village
which is on the road to the Valley, and Arenal, which is just over the
western border into Guatemala. Each village has a unique culture of their
own. Bullet Tree Falls and Camelote are English speaking works. Arenal is
a Spanish speaking work. Ismael Lopez our Pastor in training does our
translating.

Please continue to pray for the ministry here as we plant other churches
in the villages of Belize and train nationals to take over the work
(click here for these and other random
photos of our ministry).
Web
Editor - Don Tarvin
Last Updated
06 Aug 2010
|