I Felt Like a "Real Missionary"
/Last Saturday I felt like a “real missionary.” ECF’s Missions Team organized a week-long ministry effort on an island in the Nicoya Pennisula called Isla Caballo (Horse Island). Over thirty people from our church participated. Some went for the entire week and others went for a few days. Still others, like me, went for one very long Saturday.
We met at 3:30 AM at the Hilton Garden Inn (where our church meets on Sunday). 17 of us boarded a mini-bus for the nearly three-hour drive to a beach where a boat would pick us up. (It may bring to mind for some of you an old TV show that began as “a three-hour tour.”)
The beach was called Playa Blanca (White Beach), a hidden sliver of sand along the Nicoya Peninsula. To no one’s surprise the sand at the beach was...white.
We waited for a short while until a smallish boat arrived to ferry all 17 of us across the inlet to Isla Caballo. As most of you know, I swim decently. However, many in our boat did not know how to swim. As a result, as we jetted across the pristine calm water in the early hours of the morning, I was plotting in my mind what I would do to rescue the multiple non-swimmers if the boat hit a log and flipped.
Isla Caballo is covered with dense foliage, like much of Costa Rica. As we approached the island it seemed to me to be shrouded in mystery. I was reminded of the scene in the film King Kong when the boat first arrives at the island where they eventually encountered the oversized gorilla. (I told you at the beginning of the blog that I felt like a “real missionary.”)
But once we arrived, the mystery immediately dissipated and we were engulfed by the love of the islanders. It was breathtakingly beautiful.
It was also stunning for me to see the grace and commitment of ECF’s team. The island does not have a water source and the only electricity comes from a small generator. (Water is ferried over daily from the mainland.) The scarcity of water and limited electricity produced spit showers and multiple layers of inconveniences. But our team ROCKED with servants’ hearts and genuine smiles.
Our team served in a variety of ways throughout the week…
We built a new kitchen for one of the churches. The two churches on either side of the island are the heart of the community. As a result, the new kitchen will serve the islanders for both faith events and community activities.
In the evenings, we showed episodes in Spanish from The Chosen to encourage the islanders.
We ministered to the children with creative activities and Bible stories.
We held a soap-making workshop for the women with the hopes that some may use the skill as an income producing activity.
We were “present.” Many of the islanders commented that our presence made them feel noticed, that they matter, they are not forgotten.
Our team boarded the boats to return to the mainland about 4:00 PM. We had a beautiful journey across the Nicoya inlet just as the sun was lowering in the horizon.
After a long bus ride home, we arrived at the hotel where our church meets about 8:00 PM…very tired but very grateful to have been able to serve in such practical life-giving ways.
ECF is still a small church by most metrics. But we have a HUGE heart for missions. I could not have been prouder of ECF’s missions leaders and the team they pulled together to do missions in our own backyard!
Warmly,
Steve