Project Description

MOVE, (Missionary Outreach Volunteer Evangelism) is a volunteer-staffed, faith-based missionary training school located near Orange Walk, Belize. MOVE exists to inspire, equip and mobilize missionaries to meet practical needs and give the three angels' messages of hope and warning to all the world in these end times. The mission reports posted here are stories of MOVE missionaries from all around the world, as well as updates from our campus.

Monday, August 06, 2018

“God’s Hand Still Intervenes”


The title of this mission report is adapted from that of an old book by W.A. Spicer and Helen Spicer Menkel published back about the time I was born.  The book tells 27 incredible stories of God’s miraculous intervention that surpass the wildest tales you’ve heard on Television, or the sensational facts and stories you may have seen in collections like Ripley’s “Believe it or Not”. As I read the astounding descriptions of God’s saving grace in action, I was struck with the thought that, if we are faithful, one day we shall all read from the records of our own lives in the heavenly registry, equally miraculous and epic accounts of God’s direct intervention. We may not now be often privileged to trace His providence in the details of our daily lives, but there are still times when the eye of faith captures the movements of His ever-present fiery hosts, just as Elisha’s servant saw them on the hills of Dothan. 
About two weeks ago, Lyli and I returned to our mission post in north-central Belize to help staff a five-day summit for missionaries from a number of different projects across central and South America. Jeff Sutton made a flight south in the Conquest to pick up eight of our visitors in Bolivia and Colombia, but suffered a series of setbacks ranging from the red tape of international aviation to malfunctioning hydraulics on the landing gear. Their prospective Wednesday noon arrival turned into Wednesday evening, then Thursday morning.  
“Please pray for the mechanic who is helping Jeff work on the plane” one of the passengers, our friend Jenny Cardoza messaged Lyli. “He has an important test today and he sacrificed his study time last night to help Jeff.”
Just before breakfast on Thursday, we learned the plane was still grounded in Medellin, Colombia.  I knew Jeff would be spending a lot more time working on the plane, and maybe it was the message we received the night before, but I felt impressed that God had more important plans than ours in all of this, and it could very well have something to do with this mechanic. As Lyli and I prayed, I felt compelled to ask for something specific.
            “Lord, please give special wisdom and patience to Jeff as he works on the plane, and despite the stress, frustration and discouragement he surely feels, help him not to miss any opportunities to witness that You may put before him. As he works with the mechanics, may they be open to receive truth, and may Your name be glorified. You know we would like the plane to get fixed and be able to come today, but we want Your will to be done and we leave everything in your hands.” 
It was hard to plan or decide how to proceed with the summit. Everything was up in the air, except for the mission plane and our would-be travelers, of course. More complications postponed the group’s prospective arrival to Thursday afternoon, and then pushed it back again to Friday morning. The needed tools to flare the tips of a piece of aluminum tubing were nowhere to be found in all of Medellin.
Meanwhile, here in Belize, Keila decided to begin the summit activities with the half dozen or so missionaries who had arrived from Mexico. By Friday afternoon, Jeff’s last-ditch effort to liberate the plane and make the final segment of the journey before Sabbath, fell through, and at least it was now clear they would not be able to join us even for the weekend.

Oh, I should mention that the name or our mission summit was “By Many or by Few,” (taken from the words of Jonathan to his armor bearer before they launched their two-man attack on the Philistine hordes.) It would seem God was testing our willingness to put our theme into practice, as we watched our planned attendance dwindle away like Saul’s army.
Interestingly, one of the purposes of our mission summit was to encourage unity and teamwork between mission projects. God took that in hand, as few things unite people more than to pass through trials together! The stranded missionaries prayed together, shared food and resources, and no doubt bonded in ways they never could have simply through our summit meetings and activities!
            Sometimes it’s hard to understand why our carefully laid plans and best efforts end in apparent failure. Especially when all we want to do is something good in the work of the Lord. But it is a beautiful thing to know we can trust God anyway. I love that quote from the chapter “Help in Daily Living” in the book Ministry of Healing. 
            “Often our plans fail that God's plans for us may succeed.[…] Even when called upon to surrender those things which in themselves are good, we may be sure that God is thus working out for us some higher good.”  {MH 473.3-4}  
                  We had the privilege of seeing at least part of that higher good in this case when Keila shared an exciting piece of news with us. 
“Guess what! The mechanic who helped Jeff is quitting his job and coming to MOVE to take the next course!”
In a matter of three days, Sebastian Diaz, a 22-year-old aeronautics mechanic working for Avianca airlines, quit his job, sold his motorcycle, got his passport, packed his suitcase, and boarded the plane with the other missionaries, occupying the seat vacated by a missionary who was forced to stay in Colombia because of the delays.
As it turns out, Sebastian was the same mechanic our friend Jenny had written about and who we had prayed for! What a thrill to be allowed to participate in God’s plans even in such a small way! On Wednesday, August 1, the mission plane arrived in Belize.
Over the last few days we have had a rerun of our mission summit with the second batch of missionaries, and I have been able to piece together a little more of Sebastian’s story. His parents separated before he was born, and his aunt, who is the only Adventist in all his family, raised him until the age of eight years. He credits this early upbringing as the reason he is an Adventist today. After a couple of years wandering in the world as a teenager, he was reconverted, and felt God calling him to mission work. By this time he had completed most of his studies as an airplane mechanic, but had been unable to get the internship that he needed in order to graduate and obtain his license. For quite some time he was without work, and he began to study the Bible and the Spirit of prophecy three hours a day.
“That was when I read Counsels on Diets and Foodsand God convicted me I needed to change my diet.” Sebastian told me. “I quit eating meat. Then I quit eating animal products all together. When God shows me something, I like to implement it right away! I became very active working with the local church. All the while, my conviction that I must go to the mission field deepened. Somehow I found out about a mission aviation project in Guyana. I was so excited! I didn’t even know that such a thing existed! Since I couldn’t get an internship to finish my mechanic’s license, I decided to apply for every mission project that I could find that had anything to do with airplanes. Out of a half-dozen applications, not one responded. So I prayed and said, ‘Lord, I don't understand! If you want me to go to the mission field, please let one of these projects contact me! If you have other plans, at least help me get an internship so I can finish school and get my license but please don’t leave me hanging here with nothing to do!’ After that prayer I miraculously received an invitation from a company to intern with them without the arbitration of the mechanic’s school on my behalf. Usually the school finds internships for their students, but they had been unable to place me, and now I got an internship out of the blue without their intervention. I took that as the answer to my prayer, and started work with the company. Not long afterward, I received a response from one of the mission projects, and I had to tell them that I was finishing my certifications now, but I would be available in a year and a half, as soon as I had my license.”
During the first three months of his internship, Sebastian faced tremendous pressure to break the Sabbath.
“I knew that eventually the test would come where I would be forced to choose between getting my mechanic’s license and being faithful to God regarding the Sabbath, and I prayed that God would strengthen me to pass the test when it came.” Sebastian told me. On multiple occasions he was disciplined with pay cuts and was given the worst shifts and the dirtiest work for his refusal to work on Sabbath. Eventually the company gave him an ultimatum:
“If you don’t work Saturday, the next day you come in you will be fired!” they threatened.  
“My family told me I was a lunatic, and that my church had brainwashed me and that I was going to lose everything I had worked for. But when I went back to work after keeping Sabbath, no one at the company said anything to me. Somehow they never followed through.”
Then one day the licensing school called.
“We’ve been receiving a lot of complaints from the company about you. If it were anyone else we would have expelled you from our program long ago, but you have been one of our top students with exemplary conduct and service! We just don’t understand what is going on! The time has come for you to make a decision. Either you work on Saturday, or we will have to cancel your transcripts and your scholarships”  
“Cancel them” Sebastian replied without delay.
“Are you sure? You can’t be serious! You will lose everything you have worked for up until now!”
But Sebastian’s mind was made up.
“I literally felt a hand on my shoulder as I made my reply, and it was as if a voice in my head said, ‘you did the right thing.’ I have never felt such peace and assurance as I did at that moment” Sebastian testified.
God worked miraculously on behalf of His faithful child. Not only did Sebastian not lose his internship, but he finished with decorations as the best intern the company had ever employed. Of the three interns who finished simultaneously, he was the only one to be offered employment within two days of receiving his license. Not only that, but he had Sabbaths off!
“Even though God blessed me so much with such a job, I knew that I must still go to the mission field, but I didn’t know when!” Sebastian continued. “My coworkers pressured me to join them in their materialistic and worldly pursuits, and I vowed that after two years I would quit my job no matter what, because I was afraid that in my present environment I would lose my vision. Then Genith, a friend of mine, called and said that a mission plane would be passing through the airport where I worked if I wanted to see it and meet the pilot. That’s how I met Jeff. As we talked, I felt the great desire to go with them on that plane and take the course at MOVE, but I was sure it would not be possible. When I watched the plane take off, I thought ‘at least now I can forget about it.’ I was so surprised when Genith called me again a few hours later and said the plane had returned because of the problem with the landing gear.”
Besides helping Jeff work on the plane, Sebastian ended up spending Sabbath afternoon with the mission group. When Ruth, one of the traveling missionaries told Sebastian that she would not be able to leave with the plane because of the delays, she told Sebastian, “That seat is for you!”
And you already know the rest of the story! “God’s hand still intervenes!”
Sebastian is beaming, ready to board the mission plane for Belize

Missionaries finally able to depart after a week's delay.