Talk to the Beard

2014-10-30 12.39.54I have received some questions as to what’s up with the beard.  For many of you who have known me for a long time, seeing me with a beard is a bit surprising.  I’ve pretty much never had one before besides one summer when I was taking Intensive (“Suicide”) Greek.  Well, the reality is that I’ve never liked facial hair and still don’t for that matter… even currently at this very moment!  So.. the natural question is…. why do you have a beard???  Well, the answer isn’t quite as trite and simple as you might expect.  Here goes nothing…

I just wanted to share, be a little bit vulnerable, for the purpose of knowing that it is best to share with those who support you and pray for you in ministry so they know how you are REALLY DOING!!!  You know that I am not really a person that likes to talk about himself, but I feel like I need to share for the purposes of being transparent with those who are praying for me and my family and are there to support us in ministry and in life.
Please bear with me as I share a little bit of detail of my life over the last few years….
Our time of Home Assignment was a real struggle for me… not only for the obvious reason that I/we are away from Ecuador, our country of service. But more than that because it was extremely, extremely stressful in putting together all of that support we needed to.  In addition to doing all of that support raising which was very difficult and stressful (though there were many times of joys and blessings as well), I was also the main caretaker for Simeon since Kim was working full-time, so you can imagine a job where you work from home and also try to take care of an extremely active 3 year old who doesn’t like to play by himself at all, I might add.
Then, of course, after we finally reached 100% and received our approval in early December of last year, it just has seemed like we have had one thing after another as far as problems go, all the way up to the day we left (and hasn’t seemed like it has changed much since we got here!).  It was so much that way that we actually made the decision to move to Ecuador the day before we flew out.  So, it was definitely a lot of stress and difficulty that we experienced in the months leading up.  The biggest of these, as you know, was everything that was going on with my mom.  Not only was it difficult to find out that your mom is now fighting for her life but it was also a lot of stress and difficulty in taking her to appointments in Chicago and corresponding with many different doctors all around the country in searching for answers.  The other thing that was extremely stressful and difficult was planning out and then having our container cancelled.  Of which, we have a lot of stuff on that we have been waiting to get.
So, all of this stress, took a toll on me.  I put on weight (I’m about 15 lbs heavier than I was we first got back from Ecuador), my blood pressure rose, and my migraine headaches hit an all time high… I was having one every day in which the medication I always took was only deadening the pain and not getting rid of it.  I was having trouble sleeping… probably averaging about 5 hours a night and often woke up in the middle of the morning with a migraine.
And here’s the part where I am being really transparent….
I know all of this is ALL MY FAULT.  (Well… ok… maybe not ALL of it, but MOST of it.)  You see… I’m a work-a-holic.  (I feel like I should be standing up front at an AA meeting…. “Hello.  My name is Joel Delp and I am a work-a-holic”).  And I put a lot of stress on myself to be productive in ministry/work.  To explain, I was raised by two Mennonite folks who both grew up on farms and that only have known how to work hard and take care of the tasks on hand for the day, so I know a lot of what burdens me is brought on by myself.  I understand that.  This isn’t a new problem.  Kim and I have known this since before we got married and she has been a wonderfully supportive partner for me that has brought accountability and balance to our marriage in addition to her unending love and support.
But we have just gone through an extremely busy and stressful time which was preceded by a difficult and stressful short-term as missionaries (though you also know it was a time of many joys!) that was still preceded by about 5 years (finishing up seminary and serving as a pastor etc while Kim was working full-time and doing her Masters) of a time that was very similar.
What I am saying is that I have had enough… It’s time to make changes in my life and for our marriage and family that will better sustain us over the long run of ministry and life.  We just need to setup patterns in our lives, and my life specifically, that will provide a better balance of ministry and family/health.  In addition to having such a strong focus on ministry, I need to balance things out better with taking care of myself and my family.  Specifically, I need to focus on being a better husband and father, my health (eating, exercise, etc), spending more time dedicated to God, and having down time with my family and friends.
After Kim and I get through this  busy time of transitioning to Ecuador and getting our project going, we are planning working together to put together a life plan to do just this.  And I will be making a commitment to myself to do things different. All of these kinds of commitments will hopefully put us in a better place to be sustained over the long run of a life of ministry.  We don’t want to get burnt out.. I was feeling like I wasn’t going to make it to the age of 40 there for a while!!!  We want to be happy and content in ministry and not feel like it is a burden that God has called us to.
So, that is why I have the beard.  I told myself that as a way of holding myself accountable to getting this plan in place of creating a new me, I would grow a beard in order to have a daily reminder that I need to do better.  So, it’s Joel’s form of a goofy penance that I am forced to remind myself of each and every day when I look in the mirror.
Once I get myself in a more healthy state, I will shave my beard again.  So, you can watch for pictures of a beardless Joel and rejoice with me when that day comes!
Well, if you made it through this lengthy explanation of why Joel has a beard, you are truly a dedicated supporter and friend!  And I’d ask for you to continue your prayer support as I venture down this road of making a new me for the good of my family, our ministry and my health.

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All Souls Day Celebration

On Tuesday, we had a special “Dia de Difuntos” (All Souls Day) Celebration at the IPEE offices on Tuesday.  All Souls Day is a special and unique holiday here in Ecuador in which we are basically celebrating the lives of those who have passed on before us, kind of like All Saints Day in the church in the States.  What’s different is that it is an incredibly popular holiday here which pretty much everyone celebrates.  The typical family will take time to visit the graves of the loved ones who have passed on to pay the respects and remember their lives.

One neat part of the holiday celebrations are the special treats of “Colada Morada” (Purple fruit drink) and “Guaguas de Pan” (Bread in the shape of Children – kind of like the “Gingerbread Man”) which are both pictured here.

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We also had the opportunity to celebrate the Birthday of our beloved Martita.  Martita is the Secretary for IPEE and has held that position for many, many years though she will soon be retiring so we need to take this opportunity to celebrate here when we can.

 

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Where are Kim and Esther???

SIFAT_Team_Members Kim and Esther are up in Cayambe this week.  There is a Medical/Dental Team working at the clinic this week and so she went to help out, getting to know them and learn from them.  The team comes from a church in Palm Bay, FL and has traveled to Ecuador the last 12 years!!!  They go through an organization called SIFAT.  They have had a long standing relationship with Pastor Jose and and Iglesia Emanuel and were part of the reason as to why Pastor Jose has dreamed about starting a clinic for quite some time.

Joel and Simeon are staying back in Quito so that way Simeon can be in school all week.  Please pray for Kim and Esther that they are ok up there without the rest of the family and the same for us down here.  Pray that Esther is happy so that way she is able to help out without too much work going towards Esther.  Pray that Joel & Simeon don’t starve throughout the week!  (That last one was a joke!)

 

 

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Iglesia Misionera de la Valle

I (Joel) finished up my short, 2-week sermon series at the Covenant Church – Missionary of the Valley today.  It was an incredibly positive experience and it ended with having the folks from the church offer to come help at the construction site as well as taking a free will offering for the project.  The church took up an offering of almost $175 which was incredibly generous.  We will never forget this church and its hospitality and generosity.

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Preaching

PreachingJoel will be preaching a 2 week sermon series at a Quito area Covenant church tomorrow and the following Sunday.  Your prayers are appreciated as he shares God’s word.

 

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Cultural Inadequacy

Let’s be honest, I feel pretty culturally inadequate most days as a missionary.  Language is of course how I mainly feel inadequate, every day.  Even when I feel I am having a good “Spanish Day”, it is still pretty pathetic.  There have been many times that I have made silly language errors and thankfully, our friends here are very forgiving and it usually brings a lot of laughs.  I still look twice when I see a family of 5 on a motorcycle and it stings my heart each time I see a child begging on the street.  This coming week I will be leading devotions for the Covenant Offices here (n Spanish of course), talk about not feeling up to the task-pretty much all of my inadequacies wrapped into 10-15 minutes.  But I need to push myself, I know that…

I wanted to share a recent experience with you that made me feel…well, I had a whole range of emotions.

We pulled up to the work site on Friday to work on the floor of the house.  We drove up to 22 Quechua church members from 3 Lote.  The majority were women who were carrying their babies on their backs and carrying pounds worth of dirt, or bricks or rocks.

Quechua women working hard with babies in tow.

Quechua women working hard with babies in tow.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Quechua woman from 3 Lote.

Quechua woman from 3 Lote.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

As we pulled up, I made sure to have Esther’s pacifier, blankets, eventually her stroller to push her in to calm her down and go to sleep.  When she started crying, I got back in our car to feed her and burp her (Now, in my defense there was a lot of dust blowing around) AND I wasn’t even working, didn’t pick up one shovel or wheel barrow or hammer.  I had to make sure everything was in order and Esther still was SERIOUSLY crying and I couldn’t console her.   The bottom line is a felt like such a privileged American **GASP**, yes I wrote that!  I had all my STUFF and still couldn’t calm my kid down or work.  Talk about feeling like a failure with a capital “F”!  Please hear me when I say, yes, I was embarrassed, not to be an American mom, but just that I felt I needed all this STUFF to take care of Esther when the moms I was around were “doing it all”.  We have similar comparisons in the States.  We see the PTA mom with her 4 perfectly behaved kids at the meeting drinking a latte after being at work for 12 hours.  As a pastor’s wife we see all the other moms with children in the pews dressed nicely saying yes mommy and no mommy as our kids barely GET to church with breakfast and their hair brushed.  There are comparisons everywhere in Ecuador and in States and around the world.  NO ONE has it all together.  We are all broken and it is a good reminder to me as I face my inadequacies daily.  It SHOULD be a reminder that my hope and my worth do not come from speaking Spanish perfectly, working and taking care of my children all at the same time and the list goes on.  It should be a reminder that my hope and my worth come from my heavenly Father who formed me and created me to be who I am-my faults and my short comings and ALL my inadequacies.  This experience was also a GIANT reminder of how much I have to learn as a missionary and as a mom here in Ecuador.  I have so much to learn from those around me and I need to have an open heart to learn not a heart of comparison that I can’t do it all.

For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them.  -Ephesians 2:10

For you formed my inward parts; you knitted me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made. Wonderful are your works; my soul knows it very well.    -Psalm 139: 13-14

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3 Days, 3 Mingas

What a joy it is to have partnership in ministry!!!  3 Days = 3 Mingas = 1 Floor for the entire home.  Iglesia Emanuel, our partner church in Cayambe, finished pouring the floors and they look beautiful.  It was a wonderful day of work, fun and food.  As any good minga ends, we ate together a delicious meal at Iglesia Emanuel after the floors were done!_DSC_1125 DSC_1101 DSC_1102 DSC_1103 DSC_1104 DSC_1105 DSC_1106 DSC_1107 DSC_1108 DSC_1109 DSC_1110 DSC_1111 DSC_1112 DSC_1115 DSC_1116 DSC_1117 DSC_1122 DSC_1128 DSC_1131 DSC_1132 DSC_1134 DSC_1135 DSC_1136 DSC_1137 DSC_1138 DSC_1140

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Una Minga de Distrito Quechua

On Saturday, partnership in ministry was in full affect as an entire conference of the churches came together for a minga to work on the construction of the first home for at risk children.  The Quechua Conference of Covenant churches, which is the conference that surrounds the area of Cayambe, sent over 40 representatives from its various churches to come to work a long day of pouring the floor for our first home.  See the pictures and enjoy God’s blessings with us!

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Una Minga de Tres Lote

What a blessing to have over 22 people from a small Quechua community called Tres Lote (“Third Lot”) come out to work on the home for at-risk children.  They came on Friday because they had plans on Saturday for the scheduled minga, however, they still wanted to help.  Most were women with children they were carrying on their backs working hard, carrying dirt, shoveling, carrying rocks and blocks.  Progress is for sure being made and we are so excited to be a part of it.  THANK you to the church of Tres Lote for all of your help!

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La Minga de la Iglesia Emanuel

Good folks from our partner church in Cayambe, Iglesia Emanuel, came together yesterday for a minga, which is a Quechua word meaning that the greater community comes from all around to work on something together for the greater good.  Over 30 volunteers from Iglesia Emanuel worked almost 6 hours on the construction of the home.  Look at all that was accomplished!

Oh and we have another minga this coming Saturday as a whole conference of churches is coming together to help out… watch for pictures to come!!!

 

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