Friday, October 30, 2009

Good news!

Well folks, I have good news tonight!

Many of you know that the US has sent the big guns down to Honduras to help resolve this conflict. Up to now it has been a complete impasse--a stale mate between two enormous egos. Well the US decided to come down to push their weight around this week. Well, that actually seemed to work! Thursday night October 29th they announced that they were signing an agreement between the two parties and were just weighting on congress to vote. I will write more on that soon. Well in response, the US embassy announced this:




U.S. Embassy Tegucigalpa
Avenida La Paz
Tegucigalpa, Honduras

To: All American Citizens
From: American Citizens Services Unit, Consular
Section
Date: October 30, 2009
Subject: Warden Message: Re-Opening of Non- Immigrant Visa
Services


The U.S. Embassy is pleased to announce that in support of the recent
agreement reached in the political crisis in Honduras, the Non-Immigrant
Visa (NIV) section will re-open beginning Monday, November 2, 2009.
Initial interviews will go to emergency cases and those applicants who
had confirmed scheduled interviews when the NIV section closed August
26, 2009. All other applicants will receive appointments beginning
November 16, 2009.

For the latest security information, Americans traveling abroad should
regularly monitor the Department's Internet website
(http://travel.state.gov), where the current Travel Warnings and Public
Announcements, including the Worldwide Caution Public Announcement, can
be found.

Up-to-date information on safety and security can also be obtained by
calling 1-888-407-4747 toll free in the U.S., or for callers outside the
U.S. and Canada, a regular toll-line at 1-202-501-4444. These numbers
are available from 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Eastern Time, Monday through
Friday (except U.S. federal holidays).

Americans living or traveling in Honduras are encouraged to register
with the nearest U.S. Embassy or Consulate through the State
Department's travel registration website
(https://travelregistration.state.gov/ibrs), and to obtain updated
information on travel and security within Honduras. Americans without
Internet access may register directly with the nearest U.S. Embassy or
Consulate. By registering, American citizens make it easier for the
Embassy or Consulate to contact them in case of emergency.

The U.S. Embassy is located on Avenida La Paz in Tegucigalpa; telephone
(504) 238-5114, after hours telephone (504) 236-8497; Consular Section
fax (504) 238-4357; E-mail: usahonduras@state.gov; Webpage:
http://honduras.usembassy.gov






Yahoo! We were scheduled two days after they stopped giving visas so I imagine we will get a call this week. Praise God!

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Car wreck!

Hello!
I realize that I just wrote you but I have a new prayer request. This morning I was in a car wreck. I was turning a corner on my way to work and I thought I was clear. Unfortunately I wasn't. I hit a motorcyclist and a car. The motorcycle hit the second car as well. The motorcyclist flew through the air. In the middle of the air he turned. The other car described it like he was a cat turning in mid air. He landed on his back and we think just fractured his leg. His helmet had flown off and it was a miracle that he didn't hurt any more. It was as if the hand of God reached down and turned him just right. Also praise God that everyone involved were Christians: the car owner, the motorcyclist, the motorcyclist's brother in law who came to take care of the situation. This could have been way worse. I once scratched a taxi and it was half his fault and the man was irate and tried to take advantage of the circumstance for more money. However, these men were incredibly nice. After the ambulance took the motorcyclist to the hospital for his fracture, his brother-in-law prayed with me and prayed that God would give me a great day despite the accident. They also all decided that we would handle it ourselves and not get transit involved. If the motorcyclist had been injured more seriously, I think I could be in jail now. And I don't even want to think about what could have happened if he had landed on his head. Praise God He worked the way He did and that everyone is ok. Please keep praying for the motorcyclist in the hospital though. I can't remember his name but I will ask his brother-in-law when he calls me. I already paid for the car that I hit ($100). I still need to pay for the motorcycle, the motorcyclist's hospital bill, and for my own car. These bills are tough for me on my salary here along with paying for a wedding and (I hope) a honeymoon. As you remember there is extra money from your support from my internship last year but I dedicated that money to future missions and I don't know if it would be right to use it. Please, I need all your prayers. Thank you.
In Christ,
Mateo

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Still need a visa

Hello friends and family!
I hope this letter finds you well. I am sorry that I leave you all on cliff hangers between updates. When I last wrote you I was stuck in my house due to nation wide curfews after the ousted president Manuel Zelaya came back. The curfews fortunately ended after the first week. At first there were a lot of protests. During the curfews, a mass of Zelaya supporters broke into a supermarket and an electronics store near where Katia lives and looted it clean. Then the new government made it illegal to protest (as well as took certain opposition media off the air). They eventually allowed it again but the streets have been calm since. Zelaya is still seeking refuge in the Brazilian Embassy (about 4 or 5 blocks from my house) and his people have been in talks with the new government's people since he came back. They have still reached no agreement. We have just been in stale mate for a while. I think the new government is just trying to make it to the election at the end of November. Recently it's been very calm and no news one way or another.
Also, many of you have asked me about the prayer request I sent you about my fiance's visa. We want to come to the US for our honeymoon as well as have a reception in the US so that you could all come. However, as I wrote before, the US embassy stopped giving visas. Well, they haven't changed their minds. The embassy is still not giving visas. We decided that in order to plan for everything, we need to know two months before. So if I hear nothing by November 1st, we will make other plans. That means, we have one week for a miracle. Please pray! I would especially like to have this reception so that you could all be there. Please be praying for that as well as our whole political situations. Thanks!
God bless!
Mateo

Friday, October 16, 2009

Hugo Llorens's Letter

Many of the US has been adamantly vocal against the new government in Honduras. This could allow one to think that the US is also siding with the radical groups in Honduras that support the ousted president. One of the most adament US supporters of the booted president, Manuel Zelaya, is US ambassador to Honduras, Hugo Llorens. That's why I found this letter that he wrote to Zelaya supporting radio station, Radio Globo, when they went on an antisemitic outburst very interesting:

(This comes from the US embassy website )

Letter from Ambassador Hugo Llorens to Radio Globo

October 5, 2009

Mr. Alejandro Villatoro
Owner, Radio Globo
Boulevard Morazan
Tegucigalpa, M.D.C

Mr. Villatoro:

It is with astonishment and incomprehension that I write to you. I refer to a broadcast commentary by your journalist and news director David Romero which was aired on September 25, in which Mr. Romero denounced Jews and Israelis as “people that do damage in this country.” Particularly disgusting was the admiration he implied for Adolf Hitler: “After what I have learned, I ask myself why, why didn’t we let Hitler carry out his historic mission?”

Mr. Villatorio, Hitler’s concentration camps and Holocaust constitute one of the most shameful acts of human history. How can it be that your station employs as its news director a man who does not understand this? Torture and murder were committed against millions of innocent people. Mr. Romero’s commentary makes a mockery of any pretense he may have of solidarity with people who struggle against injustice.

I cannot help but note the irony that you and Mr. Romero came to visit me last week to seek support after your station was closed by the de facto authorities. I have spoken out clearly and will continue to do so that the decree under which your station was closed is wrong. Radio Globo deserves to be on the air. The right of free speech must not be abridged, but with it goes the responsibility to speak truthfully and soberly. Does Radio Globo accept its moral responsibility? Will you join me in denouncing this appalling act that was committed on your airwaves?

Sincerely,

Hugo Llorens

Thursday, September 24, 2009

The Biased Media

I know that for many of you there is nothing more biased than CNN or Fox (depending on which political party you personally align yourself with). However, at least those news agencies have a little bit of overlap. Here in Honduras, we do not have that luxury. The government sponsored TV stations like Televicentro tell one extreme. Then the Zelaya supporting news networks such as radio station Radio Globo tell a completely other extreme. There is virtually no overlap. The only thing that you can be certain of is that everybody is lying. Both sides are constantly contradicting each other and when one is proved wrong they continue as if they had never said it. So, when an international news network quotes a Honduran news source, be very careful. There are lots of rumors and lies floating around on every side. I normally don't like what the New York Times has been reporting on Honduras--they have been heavily biased in many of their articles--but the following article is the best I have seen on how both sides have been lying and stretching the truth:

Battle for Honduras Echoes Loudly in Media by Elisabeth Malkin and Marc Lacey

Keep praying for this country!

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Still going...

Hello friends and family!
Just a quick update. I am still on curfew. But the good news is that they lifted it from 10am to 5 pm today. And they have said that it should end tomorrow at 6am. So that will be 55 hours in all with a 5 hour break in the middle. I was able to get food and get my clothes from the laundromat. Pray that there will be peace. Tomorrow there are supposed to be demonstrations for both sides. And near my apartment! Blessings!
In Christ,
Mateo

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

My Most Recent Update

Here is my most recent email update followed by a you tube link from a friend of a demonstration happening while we are in curfew (the police afterwards started raiding homes and my friend heard shots fired).


Hello friends and family!
I hope you are all well. There is a lot going on in the world right now and whether you be in a flooded neighborhood or New York traffic, my prayers are with you. I am writing to inform you of our latest bit of news here in Honduras. Manuel Zelaya, the ousted president, has come back. This took everyone by surprise (the acting president, Roberto Micheletti, even denied it at first.) He is now holed up in the Brazilian embassy (international territory) with the police waiting outside to arrest him. The Resistance (Zelaya's supporters who are known for vandalism from spray painting to blowing up cars and restaurants with molotov cocktails) have been rallying outside of the embassy. Because of this, the government has declared a national curfew since 4 pm on Monday. We are still under curefew and not allowed to leave the house. Supposedly it will end tomorrow (Wednesday) at 6 am but they have already extended the curfew twice. This is very difficult for the many people in this nation below the poverty level that live day by day for money and food. Please be praying for them. Personally I have limited food supplies in my house (though I can afford to skip a couple of meals, unlike my poorer friends here) and all my clean clothes are at a laundromat I can't get to. The Resistence are still holding huge demonstrations in spite of the curfew and the police are fighting back with tear gas and in a few neighborhoods friends have heard shots fired. That includes my fiance's neighborhood. Please be praying. If you can get prayer groups together I would appreciate it. For more info, see my blog:

thethingsthatarenot.blogspot.com

or my twitter:

www.twitter.com/ThingsThatArent

Thank you!
Mateo






http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RDyO-ElWbC8

Monday, September 21, 2009

Return of the King...





Well folks, Mel has returned.

Mel Zelaya, the ousted president of Honduras has returned:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8267775.stm

Nobody was expecting this. At first the new president Roberto Micheletti got on the air and denied it. But sure enough, ousted prez Mel is back in town. He has been camping out at the UN and the Brazilian embassy. This means he and he followers have been hanging out in Palmira--my neighbordhood! I had to take another route home to avoid the people. Then they imposed a curfew at 4 this afternoon. And it will not end until 6pm tomorrow night! I will keep you all updated. Please be praying. Pray that nobody does anything stupid. Gather groups together and pray for the nation of Honduras.



All images are from the newspaper Dario La Prensa.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Letter to the President

The following is a letter that I sent to the president:

Mr. President,

My name is Mateo. I am an American citizen living as a third grade teacher in Honduras. As you are well aware, this country has had a very intense few months. On June 28th, many Americans learned about a small country called Honduras and their very sensitive political situation. However, many of my friends and family in the United States had already been keeping Honduras in their prayers for a while. The political crisis here did not begin on June 28th. President Manuel Zelaya Rosales had proposed for the day of the 28th to have what he referred to has the “Cuarta Urna” or “Fourth Ballot Box.” His proposal was to put another vote alongside that of the presidential election as to whether or not they should change the constitution. Exactly what they would change was not specified though it was understood that one part of this revision would be an amendment to the one term limit, allowing Mr. Zelaya to run for future terms. As you are well aware, Honduras (along with other Latin American countries) has had a rough time in the past with dictators who wanted to stay indefinitely. Because of this, the constitution states that if any president tries to change the term limit, they would lose the title of their office. As Americans, we are very proud of our constitution. It should not surprise us that Hondurans feel the same way. As of the week before the cuarta urna, polls showed that Mr. Zelaya had 20% approval (for comparison, that is lower than both Mr. Bush and Mr. Nixon at the end of their presidencies). The Supreme Court declared this vote unconstitutional and the Congress renounced it as well. This pitted one branch of the government against the other two. Unfortunately, the Honduran constitution does not specify impeachment procedures. In what was undoubtedly the wrong move, the Congress used the military to arrest and exile Mr. Zelaya. They then proceeded to the next in line for President, Roberto Micheletti.

I understand the United States’ awkward position in this situation. We have been on the wrong side of coups in Latin America in the past. In the name of fighting communism, we have supported dictators—in Latin American and abroad. At the surface, this situation sounds similar. It does not surprise me that you wanted to distant yourself from our past sins as a nation. However, what has surprised me is the strong tone of the US’s rejection of the new Honduran government. By rejecting it, we are rejecting their laws and constitution. We are telling them that we know what is better for them because we supply them with their checks and food for their poor. This sounds like imperialism to Honduran ears, the very thing you are trying so hard to avoid! I was overjoyed to learn that we are not planning on cutting back more aid to Honduras. By denying food to hungry people, we would have punished the poor for the acts of their government and could have incited a violent rebellion. But I have been disappointed by our decision to cease non-immigrant, non-emergency visa services to all Honduran citizens. I feel that this is punishing the majority for the sins of a few.

I know that you are already fully aware of the situation here in Honduras, Mr. President, and it is not my intention to presume to instruct you. Rather I would like to appeal for the Honduran people that they would have the support of a country that they have relied on for so many years (for the good and the bad that it has sometimes brought them) as well as for a more personal reason. I am engaged to a wonderful Honduran citizen named Katia. We are to be married here in Honduras this December. We would like to come to the United States for our honeymoon so that I could show her the country and people who mean so much to me before coming back here to Tegucigalpa, Honduras in January where we have jobs as teachers. I am not a political man, Mr. President. I am neither Republican nor Democrat—I am a registered independent. I am not pushing one political view over another. I am just a man who is very close with many Hondurans who feel very hurt by the country that they have so often counted on for support.

Also, I would like to go on our honeymoon.

Thank you,
Mateo

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Old Fashioned Military Coup?

I originally wrote this one to clear up confusion from the first one and to expand on some issues brought up by a precious email.

God bless you all for your prayers and concern for this country. Latin America does indeed have a rich (and often violent and abused) history. To understand the present, it is so crucial to understand the past. In much of Latin America there has been political strife over the years. In the 70s and 80s there were a series of political coups (this one included). In the last email I made a side reference to Rios Montt. He was an evil, evil military coup leader in Guatemala. It makes sense to not want to see these types of things happen again. We do not want more military coups. However, this is not what happened in Honduras a few weeks ago. It is important that we are clear on this. What took place on June 28th here in Honduras was not a military coup. It was indeed a coup d'etat because there was no court trial and it was done rather quickly and quietly. But this was a governmental dispute. One branch of the government acted illegally, so the other two branches arrested and exiled him. Also, the coup had been in discussion on the floor of congress on national television three days before it happened. The coup came as no surprise to President Zelaya (except of course for the normal surprise that would come to being woken up at gun point and directed toward and airplane). But this coup was not military ran. That is one of the major differences between what happened two weeks ago and what happened in Guatemala and other Latin American countries in the 80s. The army was simply following congressional orders. Now their only continued roll is providing protection for the new government. The way they handled this was completely wrong. I think they were greedy and power hungry and that affected their judgment. However, the issue at hand is that there is still a lack in a constitutional way to impeach a president here and I believe in much of Latin America. It is important to speak out in the wrongs of forcefully exiling the president (even if you are the other two thirds of the government). However, it is equally important we understand all sides to the issue.
Some have said that whether or not Mel Zelaya is a good or bad person is not the issue here. We should instead emphasize that we have no place for coups anymore and that this must be stopped. I disagree. I think that whethere or not Zelaya acted illegally is a rather important issue. Mostly because most of the Hondurans I talk to think that it is one of the most essential issues. At its heart and at the beginning of this conflict, that has always been the focus.
Honduras is being seen through the eyes of history. It is important to remember that in this "crisis," there has only been one death (which is indeed one too many). Hondurans are traditionally very peaceful people. Before this coup, I used to joke about how the only times I ever saw the Honduran army was when they were directing traffic (they are much more efficient than the police!). The reason people are up in arms is because of what has happened in Latin America and other countries in the past. What Congress is doing with the help of the military reminds too many of our friend Pastor Efrain, military juntas, the CIA's secret evils, and banana companies. To many of the Hondurans, what Mel Zelaya was doing reminded people of the steps that Fidel Castro and Hugo Chavez took, or other former "Presidents for Life" such as Dr. Hastings Banda or Robert Mugabe (though Mel lacks the political charisma of such stars). History is a scary thing. However what we have right now is not a battle between Efrain Rios Montt and Robert Mugabe. It is a battle between two selfish, corrupt politicians who are incredibly out of touch with their people. What the future holds we do not know, because, well, it's the future.
Too many errors have been made in history because missionaries, activists, and politicians have assumed they knew what was best for a people without ever asking them what they want. It is indeed important to know whether or not Manuel Zelaya or Roberto Micheletti are corrupt (they are) or which side the people are backing (they are split--though with a majority at least in the two major cities of Tegucigalpa and San Pedro Sula against Zelaya but not necessarily for the new government). It is important that we seek understanding before taking sides. I argue that it is important that we do not take any sides but the side of Justice (and she's an Independant). As Christians we must learn to speak up for what is right without taking a political side. It is important to know that Mel Zelaya was spending millions of Lempiras (1 mil Lempiras = about $53,000 USD) on the referendum while ignoring those affected by Swine Flu. It is important to know that Micheletti sent soldiers onto the runway to keep Mr. Zelaya from landing on Sunday and when protesters tried to storm the airport the soldiers shot into the air (officially) and killed one young man. It is important to know that the news agencies here are only propoganda for one side or the other. It is important to realize that while the West has chosen to make Honduras a discussion topic for their own political agendas, the sanctions that they put on Honduras will devastate the poor and leave those in government as they were with their glasses of wine and carne asada--that the only thing political that they might accomplish is causing an upheaval that might force humility on the leaders but only after bloodshed. Even peaceful people become desperate with hungry stomachs. As Christians we must focus our energy on prayers, mediation between the extreme sides when we are able, preaching peace to all sides, and getting ready for practical assistence should (God forbid) the situation escalate. I am impressed with President Arias in Costa Rica (the first country without an army) as he tries to negotiate peace talks between two very prideful men. Pray that good would come of this and that these men would learn humility.
Again, thank you so much for your prayers and concern for the people of Honduras. If there are more practical things that can be done I will try to let you know. I thank God for all of you.

The Crisis As I Am Seeing It

I feel that many of the news organizations have been misrepresenting the situation here--at least from where I see it here on the ground level. It seems that no news agency--either here or abroad--is able to take anywhere near a neutral stance on the crisis here and only paint one of two extremes. I will try to state what I am seeing with as little personal opinion as possible (though I do preach a little bit at the end). I am not a politician; I am not a human rights activist; I am a pastor/teacher. Most of my life is spent around Hondurans and I have a front row seat downtown in the capital. All that being said, here are my humble (hopefully) comments. Honduras is stuck between a battle of egos amongst self-interested politicians and are having to take sides between two corrupt evils. Though (at least here in the capital) a large majority are still choosing the new government.
Mel Zelaya was voted in as a center candidate from the liberal party. He remained a fairly bland president without people hearing too much good or bad about him for the first two or three years. During this last year of presidency, he has moved along more socialist ideals making decisions to join ALBA (a Latin American leftist trade agreement), making use of a lot of rhetoric, and making good use of his Leftist connections (Chavez gives us gas.) His most recent hoorah was the "Cuarta Urna" (the referendum to change the constitution). The Cuarta Urna was a vote (or better said, a survey) to see if the Honduran people would like to vote to have a committee rewrite the constitution. If the Cuarta Urna passed, they would add this vote along with the electoral vote this November. If that vote passed, they would scratch the rest of the election and start over. The specific part that Mr. Zelaya wanted to change is one of the four unchangeable parts of the Honduran constitution--one term limit for presidents. A lot of Latin countries have this specification (or did) as somewhat of a response to elected leaders holding on to power. However, it has never been specified what all this committee would change in the constitution.
The week before the vote of the Cuarta Urna (scheduled for June 28th) things became tense. On Tuesday, the Supreme Court declared the vote unconstitutional. Mel Zelaya declared that he was going through with the vote anyway--meaning he was ignoring the checks and balances of the three branch system and acting illegally. He asked the head of the armed forces, Romeo Vasquez, to assist him in the vote on Sunday. Mr. Vasquez said that he could not follow an illegal order. Zelaya then fired him. Three other leaders of the military resigned in support of General Vasquez. On Thursday, a plane came in from Venezuela with boxes of voting "materials." The vote being illegal, Mr. Zelaya was not allowed to retrieve them. National TV showed Zelaya entering the air force base in a mass of supporters and taking the boxes. That night, Congress met on national television (not a custom here). They re-hired General Vasquez and then discussed in length on whether or not they were going to throw a coup ("golpe de estado"). This was Thursday night. By Saturday, it was estimated that 80% of Honduras was against the Cuarta Urna and people were getting tired of Mel Zelaya. After Congress's meeting I heard people talk of the possible coup very hopefully.
Then came Sunday morning. As you are aware, the vote didn't happen. The military came into Mr. Zelaya's house and arrested him and shipped him to Costa Rica. However, this was not a military coup. The military was only following orders. It was technically a coup--it was certainly not an impeachment!--but it was ran by the government. This had become a showdown between executive branch and the legislative and judical branches. Technically, coups are not illegal in some Latin American countries. I had been told that of Guatemala (Rios Montt still has a position in the government) while living there and also of Honduras long before this current crisis became underway. I am not sure if they have a clear impeachment system. Regardless, they handled it all very poorly. While they arrested and exiled the president, they shut off power for the entire country. We woke up to absolutely no news or lights with military planes flying over head (which we still have flying over the capital throughout the day). They also instituted a curfew and we are still under it (it was 9pm-6am and is now 10pm-5am; this last Sunday night it started at 6.30pm) They turned the power on at noon, and then news channels started to drop like flies. Monday there was only one newspaper on the stands--a popular rag that doesn't have much substance. Now, at least most of the newspapers are back and I think one or two of the tv stations. Though the news has been obviously muted. The news are vastly one sided and often the channels are oddly lacking in any news. However the local ones that they shut off were often propoganda for the other side. There are no center news agencies here.
However, the international news has not been fair on what they have reported from Honduras either. Everything they have been saying is true, but they are leaving out some big truths as well. There have been lots of pro-Zelaya protests--some of them semi-violent (throwing rocks at store windows, robbing Duncan Donuts of their...donuts, that sort of thing). They have not been showing the anti-Zelaya, pro-government protests. These are much, much larger and always peaceful. I have seen both sides demonstrate here downtown and I feel perfectly safe with the latter but the former are very loud and all the shop keepers roll down their gates (sometimes with customers inside) to keep from getting hit with rocks. Though I am against many of the things the new government has done, a majority here (though by no means all) are ok with it if it means no more Zelaya. The new president by the way, Roberto Micheletti, was the President of Congress and the next in line for the presidency legally (Elvin Santos, the former VP, recently resigned so that he could run for president this November). Micheletti is the same party as Zelaya. The other major party and thier candidate (Pepe Lobo) have been oddly silent during the whole crisis. Many of the people here fear that Zelaya was on his way to be like that of his companions--Chavez, Ortega, Castro. Micheletti (though known for being a corrupt man himself) has promised he will not run in November (and we all know promises mean so much in the mouths of politicians...).
Now, many Hondurans feel outraged by the light that they are getting portrayed in the press and by the countries that are condemning them. The shame here is that many of these countries are threatening to cut aid (the US and World bank have already started giving less) and put sanctions. Honduras is the third poorest country in the Western Hemisphere. How does that punish the people who made the coup? The poor suffer for the sins of the rich and powerful. That is injustice. People like Micheletti and Zelaya and politicians using Honduras as a podium for their party, are using the poor of Honduras as tools for personal gain while they suffer. That is sinful.

Email Conversations

Recently I participated in an email conversation with some friends talking about what was happening here in Honduras. You might find my emails helpful. I have posted them here but edited them so that they are more bloggish. Thanks!

(By the way, I've changed my Twitter address: www.twitter.com/thingsthatarent)

Sunday, June 28, 2009

The Coup

Theres been a coup! Mel was arrested overnight and shipped to Costa Rica. Please pray. More tonight (as long as theres electricity).

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8123126.stm

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Saturday

Today was calm. Tomorrow is the vote. Please pray.

Friday, June 26, 2009

Prayer Groups

By the way, I am asking that you get prayer groups together this weekend wherever you might be to pray for Honduras. You may print, email, or distribute my last blog post to use as pointers for prayer. God bless you all!
Matt

The Situation in Honduras

Greetings all. I want to use this blog to talk for a moment about what is going on here in Honduras. You may send this article out to help people know what to pray for. I do not claim to be an expert in this, so my apologies if I got any facts wrong or am unfair in any way.

Mel Zelaya is a leftist leader with some socialist tendencies in his last year of office as President of Honduras. The next election is in November. However, Zelaya would like to change that. He has been promoting an international survey for this Sunday that would allow an extra "ballot box" on the November ballot asking if you would like to have the constitution changed. Amongst other unspecified things, this would allow President Zelaya to run again (Honduran presidents are only permitted one term)

The problem is this, on Tuesday the Supreme Court declared the survey illegal (at least doing it so close to the election). Mr. Zelaya decided to go through with it anyway (calling the Supreme Court the "Supreme Court of Injustice." On Thursday, he asked military to help with the vote on Sunday and the leader of the armed forces, Romeo Vasquez, said no. He would not follow illegal orders. Mr. Zelaya then fired him.

The congress met and decided to order Mr. Zelaya to reinstate General Vasquez. However, he refused. The congress also discussed last night whether or not to throw a coup d'etat. They decided against it for now. Hugo Chavez has stated that he will support Zelaya if there is an attempted coup.

Meanwhile, there are protests here in Tegucigalpa and also in San Pedro Sula. There are some dreadful rumors floating around. The country is pretty nervous.


That is the rundown. Here is what you can be praying for:

Nationally
*Pray for peace in this country. That nobody would resort to violence in supporting their cause.
*Pray for the leaders to be calm and humble enough to find an agreement without going to dangerous extremes.
*Pray for the right decision to be made in the country.
*Pray especially that Sunday would be peaceful and that the voting would be fair.
*Pray for unity in the country.
*Pray that the Church would be Christ-centered and loving in our responses. That we would stand against injustice but would not mix company with any political ideal. Pray that the Church would stay wholly the Church and not divided over human things.

More personally:
*That our church, Roca de Refugio, would know what we should do, even if only be a heart of love in a potentially dark time.
*That I would know when to speak and when to be quiet.
*And you can always pray for my upcoming marriage. Thanks!

Monday, March 9, 2009

2008 book list

So I decided to steal from my friend Marco, and begin writing the books I read over the past year at the beginning of each year. Unfortunately, I am lazy and am just now getting around to it.
Note: These are the books that I finished in 2008, not the ones I started. That would be a different and longer list. I have a bad habit of starting books and not finishing them.

Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck-- I had never read this before. Recently, I've really gotten into John Steinbeck and my family is all from Oklahoma with many having done the disappointing pilgrimage to California and back again during the Great Depression, so I thought it was time to read it. Wow. This is one of the best works of fiction I have ever read. And it was really interesting to read what my grandparents and great-grandparents had to go through. Especially since many in my area now treat illegal immigrants from our southern border much the same horrible way we were treated in California. How quick we forget our past...

Companion to the Poor by Viv Grigg-- I have only read a handful of books that have rocked my world. This was one of them. Grigg, a missionary in the Philippines, decided that the way he and others were doing missions to the poor was not working, nor was it very biblical. He decided to follow the incarnational model of Jesus Christ and move into the slums of Manila to reach those that live there, not just swoop down in his SUV and give away rice, beans, eternal salvation, and toilet paper like everyone else. This book mostly chronicles that time and explains the theology behind it. Grigg helped start multiple incarnational missions organizations, one of the main ones being Servants to Asia's Urban Poor. Because of this book, I checked it their North American branch in Vancouver, Canada this past November. I am still very interested in them and other similar ministries.

Cry of the Urban Poor by Viv Grigg-- This is another book by Grigg that goes into a little more of the practicality of this type of ministry as well as some further Biblical study. He uses many more examples of other inner city ministries in this book.

Pollution and the Death of Man by Francis Schaefer. Excellent book! If you are frustrated by the shortage of Christian books that talk about the importance of taking care of God's world, this is a great one to read! Plus, it's nice to read a book written about the topic before it was faddy to do so.

The Ethics of Smuggling by Brother Andrew-- I don't suggest you do as I did and take this book as your in-flight reading... It might raise some eyebrows. Brother Andrew was a Bible smuggler behind the Iron curtain during the cold war and is still in the biz in closed countries. Unless of course he recently died. Then he's not. He's getting up there in years so I'm not real sure... It's a nice short read and straight to the point.

The Life You Always Wanted by John Ortberg-- I read this book in college, but like most of the many books I had to read in that period and pulled all-nighters to do so, it was a bit of a blur. Good book on spiritual disciplines.

Celebration of Dscipline by Richard Foster-- Another book on spiritual disciplines. I like this one better. It's a bit deeper and more along the lines of the reflective traditions than the Christian bookstore in your local megachurch bestseller. I liked it.

Leading with a Limp by Dr. Dan Alexander-- I ran accross this book in an airport, believe it or not. God had been teaching me a lot how he always uses the weak so that He might be glorified in them. He can use your strengths but he wants you because of your weaknesses. I had actually been thinking that it would be a good idea for a book some day because I had never really read anything on that idea. Then I found this book. It was exactly what God had been teaching me (and much much better written than if I had someday tried my hand at it). I really didn't know what I was getting when I got it, but I am so glad I did. One of the few impulse buys I have made that I felt good about later and didn't even have a sugar rush of any sort.

Love Poems from God translated and edited by Daniel Ladinsky-- A collection of spiritual poems by 12 poets (I believe 6 Christians, 3 Muslims, and 3 Hindus). This was interesting, though a little over the top for my taste. I read in one day at a spiritual retreat center in Canada. I really enjoyed the poems by St. Francis, St. John of the Cross, Teresa of Avila, and a few others. However I don't trust the translator's translation at all. There were a lot of anacronisms and it really felt like he kept inserting his own theology.