Prayerwalking my City

Yesterday and today (Thursday and Friday), I (Chris) had errands to walk.

As I meandered my way to my destinations, I spent the time praying for the city, praying for the people, and asking God to show me how to love this city and minister to it’s people.  We desire for God’s name to be glorified.

Calle 50 Panama City Panama

The question that I’m asking God to show me is “What binds this city?”  “What are its spiritual needs?”

Two events happened today walking home from an errand.

Try to imagine with me

I stopped to sit on a platform and do some people watching and praying on a busy street.

Veneto Hotel Panama

Backpackers, lost tourists, homeless, and street vendors are all common sights.  I am often given a invitation to a over-priced taxi, or to buy cheap pirated CDs from a walking vendor.

Trash overflows from the cans.

Indigenous women and men from the Kuna people sell their molas and other handiwork.

Vendors sell knock off Ray-ban sunglasses and hawk newspapers.

The urban poor search trash cans for recyclables.

Beggars lean against the wall holding out little foam cups hoping for a spare change from a tourist.

This street has erotic shops, an active strip club and massage parlor, and I’ve often overheard male airline passenger share tips that high priced panama hookers are easily available on this street to service the casino and hotel patrons.

street vendors panama city

“Do you want a young girl?”

A young man, malnourished, tries to scrape a few bucks by managing the parking in front of a busy plaza.

Common practice in the city.  He tries to stop the flow of traffic to help people back out, cross the street, and directs people to park their cars in the stall.  Typically, folks give him a quarter to “watch their car” for his service.

My attention is drawn to him as I watch his efforts.  People don’t respect him.  He takes authority, as if he’s a traffic cop. Some people share their quarters with him.  I watch him also asks tourists for some change as well. He’s working hard. Confident in his steps.

He sees me sitting on my little bench and approaches.

“Friend” he calls me.  I find that I’m assuming he’ll hit me up for money.  Then he begins to say that

“If you want women, young women, I can hook you up.  I know where they are.  18, 19, 21.  They are pretty, they’ll do what you want, and you can have as many of them as you like. . .”

There is an eagerness to his voice.  I am both stunned and humored.  I let him continue to describe the fleshly beauty and the temptations that he offers (though I am not tempted).  He’s selling me the services of young girls.

I hold up my left hand, showing him the gold band around my fourth finger

“A Ha” he exclaims, leaning back to change his tone and sales pitch.

He’s obviously disappointed.

Refining his eagerness, he starts affirming my decision to stay with one woman and how all the hookers in Panama are infected and that’s its not good to use them because I might get a disease. . .

I chime in: “It is God’s perfect will that sex be expressed inside a marriage between one man and one woman.  I want to be pleasing to the Lord and always honor my wife.”

The shift to God’s calling in marriage quickly stops everything.  Knowing that he won’t get a sale out of me for his services, he then says “Friend, can I have some spare change to buy a soda?”

I turn down his offer.  I know he won’t buy a soda.  He’ll simply add it to the pile of change in his pocket he’s earned from parking cars.

Do you want a taxi?  A woman?

I resume my walk, pondering why was this offer made to me.

There is a section of this street where I’m always offered a taxi.  It’s a pattern that happens every time I walk this street.

A slightly overweight driver points to his car and offers “Taxi my friend?”

panama-taxis-024

Looking him in the eye, I smile and decline his offer.  “No thanks.”  Sometime the drivers attempt to make other conversation with a quick follow up question — “Where you from?” or “Where you going?” or something like that.

Today was different.

“You want a woman?  I can get one for you.”

Stunned, I simply hold up my left hand to show him my wedding band.

With a laugh, he says “that don’t mean anything.”

What are its spiritual needs?

I walked home continuing to pray for my city.  In the time that I’ve been here both as a tourist and resident, this is the first time I’ve been offered women and girls.  I’m sure it happens.

However, I’m also certain that God has shown me an insight into some of the spiritual bondage of this city related to prostitution.  He’s answering my prayer.

For now, he’s guiding me to pray for these men, for these women.

While that profession is very old and I can’t do much about it, I can certainly pray that the Church in this country can reach men and women for Christ and bring healing to the bondage that prostitution brings.

Spiritual Climate of Panama

I gave a talk this past weekend in Virginia where I was a speaker at a missions banquet for a church sending a mission team to Panama in summer of 2009 to work with Youth with a Mission.

We’ll be helping them for part of their trip, and as their event and my travel to Richmond coincided, I had the chance to share.

I recognize that I have only been here at this point for nearly 18 months and as an extranjero (foreigner) living here, my observations are somewhat limited.  I don’t presume to be writing the definitive description, but only as I see it, and as it is informed by pastors that I have spoken with.  Also, this talk had to be done in about 10 minutes or less, so it’s no where near exhaustive.

Allow me to introduce you the city that we pray for, that we feel called to, and that God has given us His heart for.

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Overview of Panama

01 panamasatellite Panama is a country in Central America, a small S-shaped Peninsula that runs generally east to west between Costa Rica and Columbia.

Nearly 3.2 million people live in this country the size of South Carolina, 1.8 million of which (more than half) live in Panama City, the capital.

In the country, nearly 1 million people live below the poverty line.  Extreme poverty is defined as below $100 a month.  This amount of poverty leads to all sorts of problems: hunger, malnutrition, crime, out of wed-lock births, and other social challenges.  The distribution gap between the rich and the poor ranks Panama as the 3rd most unequal country in the world.

By some standards, a group ranked Panama’s education system 108 out of 132 studied, and 6th grade math scores ranked worst in the hemisphere.

The business climate is improving, though showing signs of credit stress like the rest of the world.  In the last few years, gleaming skyscrapers have been built and completed units being delivered, but pre-construction speculators are now trying to sell their units before having to close.  Near where we live, there are a lot of dark buildings at night.

The canal is expanding, but with the worldwide slowdown in shipping freight, there are concerns that the expansion may not be able to generate the forecasted revenue — meaning that the government may need to defer spending to pay off the shortfall in expected revenue.

Positive Aspects Spiritual Climate

Receptive and Open

9r In my own experience, as also with many mission workers that I have consulted, most people seem to be receptive and open to talking about matters of personal faith.

Many will take literature that you distribute, and if they can, they will read it.

Conversations that I have had with people reflect that they recognize that something is missing in their life and are spiritually thirsty.

Tracts and literature distribution are a good form of working in partnership with a local ministry for groups that do not speak Spanish.

Gospel aspects

Several aspects of the gospel message are relevant.

Eternal life and the message of forgiveness has a great appeal.

Assurance of forgiveness also appeals to the heart.

Finally, I have seen that joining in God’s kingdom work to serve a greater cause than self is also an appealing aspect of the Christian gospel.

Challenges in the Spiritual Climate

But with these positive aspects, come also some challenges.

Pastors don’t work well together

I have traveled to this country since 2001, moving here in 2007.  On every trip, I have been told that pastors don’t

  • don’t work well together,
  • have great jealousy under the surface, and
  • have a protective competitiveness among church leaders.

While I may not have experienced this first hand, I’ve been hearing about this for 8 years.  It seems to be a problem then that many know it exists, but I don’t know who is seeking to solve it.

Syncretism

Panamanian spirituality seems also very syncretistic.  Jesus may simply be incorporated into the ongoing evolution of spiritual belief.

Good luck charms, mystical events, horoscopes, plus a cultural background in spiritism seems to make this characteristic prevalent.  I’ve watched TV shows on the news channels that feature body energy manipulators, meditation centers, and practitioners who claim to modify the force field around you.  New age spirituality.

The challenge to a mission team will be presenting Jesus as the only savior and the only Lord.  Working partnership with a local church, a local church team can follow up with a person’s spiritual development.  This kind of teaching doesn’t get absorbed over night.  Because of the prevailing worldview, Jesus can be incorporated pretty easy.  It takes time for a person’s worldview to change.

Connecting to the Local Church

Other workers who have been here longer than I have experienced difficulties in getting people connected to a local church.  This may be for a variety of reasons.  Some that I have heard:

  • Hurt in the past by legalistic church
  • Bad rumors about legalism
  • Untrained pastors preaching destructive doctrines.
  • No compelling need seen for church integration.
  • The failure of the prosperity gospel to work.

The last one can be a struggle.  Many times the gospel has been presented with the idea that following Jesus will make you wealthy.  While no one will flat out say that, it is the obvious conclusion one can draw with the way the prosperity gospel is preached.  Of course people respond.

The downside is, that for many, their life doesn’t change after a few months and so it seems that “following Jesus didn’t work” like the preacher said, so why stay connected to a church that didn’t deliver?

Praying for Panama

As a family that dreams to minister cross culturally long term, we seek to make the observations in partnership with those that have been here longer than we have.  We admit that we are on a learning curve.  We seek to serve this culture that God has given us a heart for and a dream to see fulfilled.

If you are thinking of sending a mission team to Panama, keep these things in mind.  For the team that is coming to be with us this summer, keep this in mind as you come.  I look forward to seeing you in a few months.

Videos for Trip in Richmond

vista-wow-video-reel_256x256 This weekend, I’m going to Richmond VA for some events and will be showing these videos.

These will be up here for just a little while.

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About our Family

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About our Ministry

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We are an international evangelism training ministry, based in Panama City Panama.

Ignite Evangelism Training Project

We have an awesome opportunity to expand the reach of our ministry and we need your help to do it.  This eight minute video will explain it.

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Thanks for watching our video and choosing to respond.  Here is how.

1.  Donate towards our $18,000 portion.

In addition to our monthly support, this will provide a 6 month part time salary for me to write, edit, teach, and revise the course.  A portion of this will go towards project expenses such as filming and travel.  A tithe will also go to evangelist training.

2.  Prayer

We need intercessors for this particular project who will join the team.  We are compiling email addresses that we can use for this particular project.  You might choose to stay on as intercessors for us, but the call is for this project.

3.  Volunteer test run.

You might be able to volunteer your church for a test run of this project.  Either the 10 week video and / or the Ignite renewal event.

Respond

Please fill it this response form.  Instructions on how to donate, if you so choose, will be available after you submit this form.

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