Tuesday, May 5, 2009

20090417 Our April Newsletter
















Dear Family and Friends:


We greet you from Minnesota, USA. A friend of mine asked us if we felt like we were in a washing machine with all the emotions and situations that you deal with returning from another culture but not really fitting into your own. It was a good analogy as I am not sure if we are on wash or rinse but sometimes it does feel like things are spinning.


Victor, Alex and I left PNG after talking to leadership and praying with the Pastor’s there. They understand that we are returning to see family, report back and reconnect with our sending church and family, and that Victor is graduating from Seminary. It was interesting how many Pastor’s came to our home right before we left to visit to receive council and for prayer. We left with their blessing and they know when we are returning. God helped us to secure our current accommodations here in PNG while we are gone so we didn’t have to move our books or supplies.


The ash was so heavy back in PNG that the first few days we were in Australia in transit to the US we were all coughing and Alex was coughing up ash after he would go running. We are very grateful for fresh air! In Australia, we received some books Victor needed for school and Victor took a final examination there. Now, we are in Minnesota visiting my parents and trying not to get lost in the huge grocery stores. Yesterday I went to the Mall of America and just about had a breakdown because there was so much merchandise and everything is so clean and it is like stepping into another world but it is my own culture. We have had actual American food and WOW is it good. I am on a banana hiatus.


We will be in the Pacific Northwest April 25th. Can’t wait to go to church at Northwest Church. We have attended the local Assemblies of God Church here in Minnesota with my parents and it was odd having seats with backs. There was also a noticeable lack of chickens running through the aisles and not a dog in site. And the service was so short. The Pastor was kind to us and invited us to share what God is doing in PNG during the midweek Bible study. It was really nice to be able to tell people I don’t even know that God is faithful and able to use anyone and always helps us and covers us with His grace.


Our schedule is already filling up it seems. We are going to the Foursquare convention in California in May– it will be great to meet the PNG Pastors here in America. Victor is graduating in mid June from the King’s Seminary in Van Nuys, CA and then he is working on fulfilling the requirements to be a International Foursquare Pastor. Victor also is taking his specialty medical board certification examination soon. And we hope to get to Texas to visit his family. Alex is having a wonderful time connecting with friends and I am trying to get all my ducks in a row about home school material that I need to take back to PNG with us.


Prayer needs:
  • protection while traveling
  • wisdom, guidance and anointing of the Holy Spirit
  • divine appointments
  • grace to handle situations with the love of God
  • softness of heart to hear and respond to God
I wish I could convey to you how grateful we are for your prayers and continued support. I remember one day before Victor and I left for PNG two years ago. We were praying about guidance and wondering how God was going to accomplish the things we felt in our hearts He wanted to do. It all seemed too big especially because of our personal past history. Then I saw a short vision. Victor and I were walking up a road. Ahead of us was a huge field of white as far as you could see and standing at a gate to this field was Jesus in a white robe. We walked up to Him and I heard myself say “What is our assignment?” He smiled and spoke to my heart to “come”. After that, God brought people into our lives and connected us and did the “impossible” to get us to PNG. So, I want to thank you for letting us be a part of your lives and for you being a part of our lives. With Jesus we are a team. We knew we couldn’t do anything without God or support.Looking forward to seeing all of you.

Love,Victor, Lori and Alex


Blessings,

Victor, Lori, and Alexander Obregon
Attempt Great Things For God.
Expect Great Things From God.
William Carey

20090309 Our March Newsletter











Dear Family and Friends:

Good morning. Sometimes I wish that you could hear the PNG people here praying for you and America. This morning one of the Pastor’s dropped by and we sat on the floor to pray together. She poured out her heart in Tok Pigin and quoted Bible Scriptures so powerfully that my own heart just rose up within me. How great is our God! Though we represent very different cultures and languages and are located on opposite sides of the world, when we pray in unity the Holy Spirit shows up and covers us with peace.

We had told you last month that we were planning to go to the Pomeo area for a medical/evangelistic outreach. After practical research and preparation, we had to put that trip on hold as it would actually take 12 hours to sail via our banana boat in the ocean. That is a very long way and time to be in a little boat on the ocean. The Pastor who wanted to go to this area was unaware of the distance. Here in PNG distance is measured very differently. If someone says a place is not too far, that could mean anything from just up the hill to 12 hours away. So, we are researching more how much diesel we will need for the trip and how the budget ought to look like. In the meantime, our medical outreach this month was held in the highlands of Enga Province PNG as you will read below.
The airport here in Rabaul opened just when Victor needed to fly out to go to the Highlands for the annual Foursquare Pastor’s convention in Goroka in Eastern Highlands Province. This represented a couple miracles as the airport had been closed for weeks due to the volcanic ash fall out. The airlines refused to sell new tickets and the people that held tickets couldn’t use them because of the ash, So, long lines of people wrapped around the Air Niugini building as everyone tried to get their tickets refunded. A couple days before Victor was supposed to go (we had been praying and asking God to help us) the ash changed directions and the airport opened up. Even though the ticket we had was old and weeks past the 24 hour hold – the airlines gave us a ticket at the cheaper fare. Amazing. Then, when it was time for Victor to come back home, God opened up a window and Victor was able to fly back home. The last few days the ash has returned and is covering the plants, cars, and my clean laundry. Alex usually likes to run at dusk along the beach near our house but has been unable to that as the ash gets into his eyes, mouth and lungs.
While Victor was in the PNG Highlands, Alex and I remained here in East New Britain doing home-school. During that time, I spoke to the United Foursquare Women’s Regional meeting on “Walking in the Spirit” to start off the church program for 2009.

In Goroka, Victor spent four days at the National Pastor’s conference (see picture). There, he met Jonathan Hall the overall Missions Coordinator and director at Foursquare Missions International. Pastor Hall and Dr. Jerry Stott preached some powerful sermons that impacted and encouraged all who were present. For example, at the end of one sermon, hundreds of Pastors and leaders went forward to renew their commitment to preach the gospel to all nations. Very powerful. People were spontaneously repenting and worshipping and drawing near to God. After the conference, Victor travelled by bus across several provinces to Enga Province to visit with the PNG Foursquare President, the Reverend Timothy Tipitap. Ps. Timothy had recently dedicated the U.S.K. Kuncumanda sub-Health Centre up in the Tsak mountain region near his home in Wapenamanda and it was now operational. The sub-health centre emphasizes women’s and children’s care. Victor had the opportunity to see many patients (many of them women) and to work with the two staff nurses and two community health workers (see pictures). One lady walked for two days to the health centre because she had heard that there was “a man of God” coming. Ten years ago she had placed a curse on herself to keep from having children and now no matter what she did she couldn’t get the “curse” off. The lady repented for not turning to God for help and cursing herself and then Victor and Ps. Salome (Ps. Timothy’s wife) laid hands on her to break the power of the curse off her in the more powerful name of Jesus. After prayer time, she was told that she no longer had to live with the guilt and shame of that curse – that Jesus had place the curse on Him at Calvary and that God had plans for a future and a hope for her. She left the clinic with peace on her face and a smile on her lips.

Ps. Timothy took this opportunity to share the PNG Foursquare Health vision with Victor. For example, Ps. Timothy shared that he wanted to build a nursing school up at U.S.K. where people from all over PNG, including the islands, can come and be certified as community health workers for the Foursquare Health projects throughout the nation. Later, there are plans for the school to be a nursing college as well.

While Victor was with Ps. Timothy, he also had the opportunity to preach at the Sunday service in Wapenamanda and share at the United Foursquare Men’s Ministry night on Monday. He also had the opportunity to hear Ps. Timothy’s heart for the new four year Bible School that is being built in his home town.

Well, that is our update for now. As most of you know already, we are planning to come back to the U.S. for a furlough for about three months in May-July and then come back to PNG. We are planning to visit family, reconnect with Northwest Church, and attend Victor’s graduation from the King’s Seminary in California. While back in the U.S., Victor will also sit in for the International Foursquare Pastors licensing interview. We are need God’s wisdom and guidance for His plans for us this next year. Thank you so much for your prayers and financial support. We thank you in advance for your continued prayer and financial support during the furlough. Please continue to pray for our protection and for our travel back to the U.S. We look forward to seeing all of you again.

Blessings,

Victor, Lori, and Alexander Obregon

Attempt Great Things For God.
Expect Great Things From God.
William Carey

20090205 Our January Newsletter







Dear Family and Friends:

Hello. As some of you know, we took a short family break in Australia for relaxation, medical care and yes, once again relaxation. The airport here in East New Britain was closed down due to ash fallout from the volcano almost the entire time we were gone (see picture). Then it opened up for a couple days and we flew back and it is once again closed down. The ash covers everything inside and out. You have to clean dishes and utensils before you can began to try to cook or you will end up eating grit. Every time someone comes into or out of the house a trail of black ashy footprints follow them. Nasty stuff. My PNG neighbor, Joanne, surprised me with planting some little blooming flowers in my garden and in front of our house while we were away. I had admired them once in her garden. It meant a lot to me and now I am trying to keep them alive! Everyday, we rinse all the vegetation and wash the car and boat to keep the hot acid ash from burning and killing everything. Please pray for us and the people here. It is a big health concern and without God’s protection asthma and all sorts of lung conditions are only going to continue to increase in this area. The PNG people live their lives outside and it is difficult to see the little children breathing all that sulfuric ash. We are praying that God would have the winds blow it out to sea or just plain put a cork in it. God can do anything.

People often ask us what a typical day looks like so I thought I would describe some things that happened yesterday. We got up in the morning with about 1/2 inch of black ash covering everything. So the first thing was to rinse off everything before the hot tropical sun baked it into place. Then at breakfast a Pastor came over and stayed about 4 hours. Meanwhile a young PNG girl came with her rake and asked if she could rake my back yard. I knew her Mom was having back pain so the little girl and I made a deal that if she raked my lawn I would give her some pain medicine for her Mom. She was smiling a big smile as she shook my hand on the deal. Then laundry was done but hung inside for minimum ash infiltration. It is so hot here that even inside our house all of the laundry dries in 2 hours. Sort of a natural built in dryer of sorts. During all this Alex is doing school and Victor is writing a term paper. Then I accidently cut my finger on a can while cooking, Victor prays over it, and the wound closes up without stitches. All of this before 1pm. We are busy like you- just in different ways.

We have started the preparation for community entry on the next medical/evangelistic outreach. It is an area that the Pastor’s have a heart for and the home village of one of the PNG nurses (Jenny) who helps us on the outreaches. Jenny’s dad has been dreaming of a Foursquare church plant in the area for some time. We will go by banana boat as it is 5 hours down the coast in the Pomeo district on the east side of our island of East New Britain. This area lacks medical care due to the isolation and difficulty of traveling there. We are very excited to have the Pastors take the lead in choosing the area as this is an answer to prayer for the people to take ownership of the ministry. We will be going on the “community-entry” visit next week.

Also at the end of February, the annual national Foursquare Pastors meeting is held in Goroka and Victor is planning to attend and then travel to Enga Province with Pastor Timothy Tipitap for a week to work in his clinic in the remote area of USK. Alex and I will stay here in East New Britain as Alex is back in school and it is easier for one to travel in the Highlands (see picture). Of course, that is all subject to our island airport opening up. It has been closed for four out of the last five weeks – yes, that is right, we are “land-locked.” To leave here now, we would have to take a boat to New Ireland and fly to Port Moresby and then out of the country.

Finally, we remain busy with Leadership Training. Victor is teaching the pastors about home churches and home-church based congregations. Next up, will be a series of teaching on the process of crisis intervention (see picture). We are also on the newly formed Foursquare East New Britain Province operational Board. We are helping the Province to set up an operations manual for the churches.

That is it for now. Please pray that our volcano will settle down and for the airport to open up again. We also need prayer coverage for the upcoming trip to Goroka and for the community-entry boat trip next week. We will be hugging the coastline the whole way and won’t have to do a big open seas crossing, but we are praying for calm seas nevertheless. We thank you very much for your support. One last thing is that Alex’s arm that was broken still doesn’t not have full range of motion - please mention this before our Father.

Blessings,

Victor, Lori, and Alexander Obregon

Attempt Great Things For God.
Expect Great Things From God.
William Carey