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How Apostolic Courage Is Transforming the Peruvian Jungle

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J. Lee Grady

A humble missionary couple in
Peru, Jaime and Telma Gomez, showed me this week what it means to be passionate
for Christ.

Peruvian schoolteacher Jaime Gomez and his
wife, Telma, gave their hearts to Jesus in 1969 through the influence of
Baptist missionaries who came from the United States to the Amazon town of
Yurimaguas. After Jaime’s conversion, he felt a strong call to ministry, yet he
knew he did not have the power to be a witness. Without any exposure to
Pentecostals, he felt God showed him he would be baptized in the Holy Spirit.

A few days later, after seeing a vision
of God touching his mouth, Jaime was overcome by heavenly power. “He spoke in
tongues for six straight days,” his wife told me this week in an interview in
Tarapoto, a city in north Peru where the Gomezes began their church planting
ministry.

“To reach the town of Santa Sofia, for example, the Gomezes and their team had to take a two-day boat ride through jungles infested with tarantulas, alligators, snakes, piranhas, giant bats and swarms of mosquitoes.”

Today, the Smyrna of Peru Christian
Mission Association has 160 churches, many in hard-to-reach villages in Peru’s
Amazon jungle. The Gomezes, now in their 60s, offer us a South American example
of authentic apostolic courage at a time when we in North America seem to lack
such zeal.


Jaime, a slight, almost frail-looking man
with a tender smile, doesn’t brag about any of the hardships he has faced in
ministry—including two arrests by Marxist terrorists in the 1980s. (Guerrillas
held a gun to his head both times, but decided not to kill him.) After those
close calls with death, he and his wife began to systematically disciple
believers in Tarapoto because they realized that most evangelicals had shallow
faith and weren’t fulfilling the Great Commission.

After they built one strong church they
began to reach out to nearby cities. They often faced demonic opposition
because of the entrenched witchcraft in mountain areas. They also had to
overcome insurmountable obstacles in reaching Indian villages that have no
roads.

To reach the town of Santa Sofia, for
example, the Gomezes and their team had to take a two-day boat ride through
jungles infested with tarantulas, alligators, snakes, piranhas, giant bats and
swarms of mosquitoes. When the river narrowed at one point, the group had to
move into canoes.

When they arrived in the indigenous
settlement, the residents were totally open to the gospel and embraced
evangelical faith. “Today the whole town is Christian,” says Telma, who still
preaches passionately when she is not doting on her grandchildren or feeding
the numerous visitors who pass through her modest home in Tarapoto.


In 1998 the Gomezes set their sights on a
distant Indian settlement led by a patriarchal chief who had seven wives. Like
many other Peruvian villages in that area, Parinari was dominated by a strange
alcoholic drink called masato. It is
made by women who chew chunks of yucca root, spit the juice into bowls and then
ferment the liquid for days. (Think of it as a form of beer made with saliva.)

“When we came there we were expected to
drink the masato. It is considered
rude if you don’t,” Telma explained.

Today, because the Gomezes and their team
from Smyrna were willing to invade the jungle with the gospel—often preaching
with crude megaphones—the town’s entire population of 383 attends church, and
the local pastor Jaime and Telma trained has broken the cycle of polygamy by
modeling Christian marriage to one wife.

I spent several hours with the Gomezes
this week, listening to their stories of mass conversions and miraculous
protection. They are true generals in the faith, with a depth of character that
matches their spiritual authority. They don’t carry the sense of entitlement or
egotism that is sometimes displayed by Americans who print the title “APOSTLE” on their business cards.


Jaime and Telma Gomez are the real thing.
After my visit with them, I was stirred to fast and pray about my own level of
commitment to the cause of evangelism. And I asked Brother Jaime if he had any
advice for Americans who seem more enamored with a trendy, camera-ready, 21st century
faith than with the authentic 1st century version.

The gentle apostle said, “The American
church has received a talent, but you have buried it,” referring to Jesus’
parable of the unfaithful steward.

“The power we found to have this strength
came from the infilling of the Holy Spirit,” Jaime continued. “When men and
women are filled with the Spirit they have no choice but to go out and share
Christ. After you are filled with the Spirit you are filled with a passion to
fulfill the Great Commission.” 

After meeting these true spiritual
generals, and seeing the lasting fruit of their ministry in Peru, I am asking
the Lord to give us all a fresh dose of the apostolic fire that ignited their
hearts more than 40 years ago.


J. Lee Grady is contributing editor of Charisma. He was preaching in the
Peruvian cities of Lima and Tarapoto this past week. Follow him on Twitter at leegrady
.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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J. Lee Grady is an author, award-winning journalist and ordained minister. He served as a news writer and magazine editor for many years before launching into full-time ministry.

Lee is the author of six books, including 10 Lies the Church Tells Women, 10 Lies Men Believe and Fearless Daughters of the Bible. His years at Charisma magazine also gave him a unique perspective of the Spirit-filled church and led him to write The Holy Spirit Is Not for Sale and Set My Heart on Fire, which is a Bible study on the work of the Holy Spirit.


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