Narrow and Deep with Vineyard Delaware (VCDC)

It’s
my first time traveling with a short term team on a river trip and it’s our
last day on the river. We’ve taken
the canoe down one of the smaller rivers to visit an elderly lady and her
husband of over sixty years. Their
small wooden home lies at the end of a ‘dock’ comprised of small tree trunks. I try to imagine them navigating this
pathway after paddling away from the service the night before into the
impossible darkness.

For five days the team of twenty travels along the rivers
near Portel delivering water filters and the gospel together, sleeping in
hammocks on the boat and getting to know the habits of people who, for me, were
strangers just days ago which always leads to good memories and funny
stories.
At each stop we meet with the families from the surrounding
houses to worship and share the good news of the gospel. Team members share their own stories of
how God has changed their lives. The
services are simple, and the fragrance of God’s love is heady and sweet and many
are touched by His presence, including those on the team.
It is often said that a better use of resources would be to
send money instead of teams. I
whole heartedly disagree. Not only
is the team a blessing to all the lives they encounter (including mine) while
they are here, but the lives and hearts of the team are transformed and become
bonded to the people here in way that money could never accomplish.
Money can build churches and Sunday
schools but it can’t pray for a wizened face old lady living in a wooden shack
somewhere in the Amazon basin.
Teams build relationships and partnerships that span years and
continents, something no amount of money will ever do.
Comments
Amazon coupon