Youth Love Monica!

Monica had a surprise birthday party!

1. First everyone quietly crept up to the house.
2. Then everyone burst through the doors singing Happy Birthday.
3. Then they called Monica outside so they could break raw eggs on her head.
4. Then we ate the chocolate birthday cake.

We Need Help

We are looking for help!

We are on our way to planting 1,000 churches and helping to start a national church-planting movement. We now have over 50 churches and church start-ups, and a maturing team of national leaders. We would like to spread out into more cities and more regions. The right Brazilians and the right missionaries, both groups have “learner” attitudes and a commitment to go the distance make powerful start-up teams. We are experiencing this here in Brazil.

PRAY

Connect with a missionary and pray for them and their family. Ask them how you can pray more.

GIVE

We are looking for faithful monthly support team donors, and for large gift donors. We money to live from day to day, we also need money to purchase large ticket items necessary to plant city churches and training centers from where we can reach surrounding villages and communities. In the business world a new company invests significant capital before getting a return on investment in a new region. In addition to monthly support we are praying for multiple financial gifts ranging from $5,000 – $100,000.00 so we can effectively establish works in the interior and in new regions. Please let me know if you would like to see our budget or if you can think of any way you can help.

COME

“The harvest fields are ripe. The workers are few.” Jesus.

It’s still true.

If you would like to apply email me at rick.bergen@xingu.org .

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Rick Preaches at Central Church Altamira

I always felt my role at our first big church plant in Altamira was to help Clenildo be as effective a leader and preacher as possible. The church started with a few small groups led by Clenildo, Elba, and Clenildo’s brother-in-law. Then it moved to our car garage where we managed to squish in up to 80 people on a Sunday morning. Then we rented a bar/club for almost a year before finally buying our Central Church property. I do not think I ever preached in Central Church on a Sunday night (the main weekly service.) In our next major church planting project I felt the Lord ask me to take a more visible role. I preached at the Mirante Church a fair amount of Sundays during the first couple of years. Last Sunday Clenildo had to leave town for a week, and he asked me to preach in his place. What a blessing! What a zealous congregation of young leaders! I was so overwhelmed by how far God has brought this group.

Clenildo’s Dream

Clenildo is the founding pastor of the Altamira Central Church. This church started in Clenildo’s home as a cell groups. Elba was in Grade 12 high school at the time and she joined the Altamira team, moving there with our family. Elba was part of these first house groups. Clenildo and Elba are both pastors of large churches in Altamira now, and also Regional Coordinators for Northern Brasil at a national level.

Years ago we were relatively new missionaries and local pastors. The way I remember it, us missionaries felt swamped with caring for many young churches we were responsible for. I don’t think we had planted a new church out of the Altamira congregation for about two years. Then Clenildo got an idea from the Lord, “We are going to plant 10 new churches this year.” So that is what he started to do. He talked about it for awhile. Then he got on his motorbike and headed out in the Assuriní region. Slowly people joined him, including us missionaries. If I remember right he had 10 little church plants started by the end of the year, and he jump started our church planting efforts. The Altamira team now has well over 40 churches and church plants now.

Fast forward to last week. Clenildo told me he feels God is asking him to plant 7 city churches in 7 northern states here in Brazil. These city churches will become training and sending centers for their regions. He doesn’t have a clue how to do this, but the Lord told him to just start talking about it so that is what he is doing. Could this be a little of what Jesus meant when He said (loosely paraphrased), “Well done good and faithful servant. You have been faithful with a little, now I will give you cities.”? Clenildo, Angelita and two small children had no much more than a wooden canoe, a black bicycle and faith in a big God when they moved to Altamira. I look forward to watching God’s blessings continue to unfold in their lives, and to being a part of this dream of reaching Northern Brazil. Please pray with us…and if you can think of a way you would like to help, please let me know.

END.

One Room Schoolhouse Meeting Place

Many of the villages still have one-room school houses with grades 1 to 5 or so. 
And sometimes we hold church services in these buildings.
We arrived at this village by boat, and left that night after the service, driving our two boats until 1 a.m. to find a secluded bay to sleep in without risk of being caught in a seasonal storm on the open river.

River Trip Memories

These photos describe part of our river trip.
The canoe ride in to our friend’s buffalo ranch for breakfast one morning is a great memory. They brought out kilos of cheese made from buffalo milk and were so grateful for our visit…talk about a royal welcome. These people still use a treadle sewing machine.
Another great memory is when Clenildo canoed in up some creek to where they were making farinha and tapioca. He bought about 30 kilos. It was still warm from the oven. He also had a bunch of abacaba fruit, which is similar to açai. It is a VERY special drink, abacaba and farinha, with no sugar (there was none on the boat we took home the last day.)

River Trip

Here are some photos of life on an Amazon River boat.
The Xingu River is a tributary of the Amazon. We spent a day in Porto de Moz, and four days on the boat together. The fifth day I boarded another boat with the Campos family that needed to be brought to Vitoria, the river port town for Altamira.
The boat is 20m long and two stories. With only around 30 people on board it felt very spacious. We sleep on hammocks, bath in the river, and Daisy cooked up delicious meals. For breakfast we bought clay oven baked bread in Porto de Moz. We held services in two river villages. I am sure that was good, but for me the real value of the trip was the unrushed time to hang out together, telling stories, sharing dreams, puzzling through life’s challenges and sometimes just sitting quietly together. Thank you, everyone who came, for taking the time to deepen our friendships in this way.

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