We Finally Got a Vehicle!

1995 Toyota Tamaraw FX

I just want to praise God that we were finally able to purchase a vehicle!

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It is a very reliable 1995 Toyota Tamaraw FX with a diesel engine. These SUV-type vehicles are known for being workhorses and very rarely let you down. Also, the diesel engine is very economical as diesel fuel is much cheaper than gasoline here.

Although it is a 90’s vehicle, I have that feeling like I just drove off the lot with a brand new car.

I am so relieved that we can finally use this large vehicle to transport up to nine volunteers or lots of much needed supplies to around Mindanao. In the past, we have had to leave large amounts of supplies behind because either we didn’t have the space to move them and quite honestly sometimes not enough money for fuel to make the trips.

I’m so thankful to those of you who donated and prayed for us to help make this possible. I know God will reward you greatly.

Elijah is happy that we got what he calls a "Truck." We probably won't let him paint it though.

Elijah is happy that we got what he calls a “Truck.” We probably won’t let him paint it though.

Revival Atmosphere

I recently had the privilege of speaking at our home church in the Philippines, His Mission Christian Fellowship, during their retreat and had a wonderful time.

HMCF Retreat

I spoke on the Baptism of The Holy Spirit and He really moved in the church. The whole the church experienced a fresh filling of the Holy Spirit including several people who were filled with the Holy Spirit for the first time.

Revival Atmosphere at HMCF

One was a twelve-year-old boy who reminded me of myself as I was the same age when I was first filled with the Holy Spirit at a similar meeting at a youth camp and it changed my life forever. The cool thing about this is he started coming to the church because of the feeding program there. The church is in an impoverished area and feeds children several times a week.

This awesome church was originally founded by missionaries who came from the historical Pensacola/Brownsville Revival. I think it is just awesome that those same revival fires are still burning in the Philippines many years later. Elijah enjoying the Revival Meeting

Thank You for Helping Us Help Others

In December the monster category five Typhoon Bopha locally called “Pablo” hit our island and killed thousands of people. It destroyed entire towns, buildings, and infrastructure for miles in every direction. I just want to quickly review what we have been doing in response.
 Typhoon Pablo Destruction
For the past eight months we have focused primarily on disaster relief. From the start, several ministries teamed up together to bring urgent disaster rescue and relief. It is quite amazing how the various missionaries from different backgrounds have come together in unity.
Typhoon Pablo Destruction Cateel
Through this teamwork, we provided medical teams and saved lives. We brought food, tarpaulin shelters, clothing, hygiene kits, toys, and literally tons of construction materials to rebuild.  Along with the natural help, we were also able to bring spiritual renewal as well. Among the countless times we preached, we were also able to hold a big evangelistic concert with approximately 500 salvations with many youth added to the church.
We had to drive over this scary partially-collapsed bridge to get there.

We had to drive over this scary partially-collapsed bridge to get there.

Of the countless trips we have taken, getting there has never been easy. We have driven over partially standing bridges, drove though floods, avoided landslides, survived accidents, and floated on bamboo rafts getting in and out of there.
We had to use this bamboo raft to cross the river.

We had to use this bamboo raft to cross the river.

Also through a lengthy construction project, we have almost rebuilt a 2,000 square-foot church. None of this could have been done without your help and donations.  Thank you so much for your support.
Baganga Church Roofing Project
If you would like to support our work, please take the time to donate online here:

If you would like to support us through the mail, please send your checks, cashier’s checks, or money orders to:

Extreme Mercy International
P.O. Box 72266
Phoenix, Arizona 85050
U.S.A.
 

Thank you and God bless you.

We Built a Roof for This Little Boy

After our latest disaster relief  trip to Baganga, we are thankfully almost finished with the church roofing project. We covered the final rooms of the parsonage including this little guy’s room. It will likely take one last trip to put up the finishing touches on the roof.

Uriah Faith Tabernacle Baganga

On our last disaster relief trip to Baganga, Extreme Mercy International built a roof for this little boy named Uriah.

As far as functionality, everyone can worship under a dry roof and the families that live there can sleep under a stable dry roof. There are just a few things that need to be completed to add support beams to handle the weight of the roof and do some finishing aesthetics.

Baganga Church Roof Progress

This had been one of the costliest undertakings our ministry has tried to accomplish, and it will be wonderful when we are done with it. It has cost us thousands of dollars to pull this off and we are basically out of money for it.

The cost has not only been financial— It has been hard on my young family to have me gone so often and come home often exhausted, sick, and even injured from these trips.

Truthfully, most of the big aid agencies have pulled out of the area leaving half of the homes still covered with tarpaulins seven months after the storm. Even many of the government buildings and schools are still in shambles.

Church Rebuilding Team

We are one of the few organizations still helping. I spoke to a pastor who said 42 evangelical church buildings were destroyed and the congregations are still displaced. I would love to help them all, but praise God that through your generosity and giving we were able to help this one church and can hopefully help more as God provides.

If you would like to support our work, please donate here:

If you would like to support us through the mail, please send your checks, cashier’s checks, or money orders to:

Extreme Mercy International
P.O. Box 72266
Phoenix, Arizona 85050
U.S.A.
 

Thank you and God bless you.

We Need a Better Vehicle

We are in faith for a rugged vehicle capable of making road trips around Mindanao.

Our 1978 Mitsubishi Lancer that Emily has affectionately nicknamed "Sporty."

Our 1978 Chrysler-Mitsubishi Lancer that Emily has affectionately nicknamed “Sporty.”

We have been driving our little 1978 Chrysler-Mitsubishi Lancer for about three years now and it’s been faithful to get us around town. It is a tiny car and I enjoy driving around in a vintage car, but it has reached the point where it is not practical for ministry use. It can barely make it through the streets when it rains and floods here. We really need to upgrade to an SUV or a club cab pickup truck now that we are traveling to remote areas again.

Vehicles here are typically double in price to what they would be in the USA because of high import taxes.

Some of the vehicles we have been looking at are:

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1990’s Toyota Tamaraw FX

1. 1990’s Toyota Tamaraw FX  (2wd SUV) $4,000. These are old but reliable.

2001 Ford Ranger

2001 Ford Ranger (not the actual photo)

2. 2001 Ford Ranger  (Extended Cab 2wd) $7,500. The Ranger is missionary-owned and well maintained.

Canter

Mitsubishi Canter

3. Mitsubishi Canter (4×4 truck) $12,000. The Canter could be fitted as a rescue vehicle as well as a ministry outreach vehicle and pretty much go anywhere and transport large loads of relief goods.

We need your help to better serve the people of Mindanao. Please pray for us to be able to buy a better vehicle.

 

Healing Miracles in Baganga

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The church in Baganga has asked me to preach there on the Sundays that I’ve been out there. One of the services I preached on faith and then prayed for the sick. Every person that came to the altar to receive prayer left healed of one or more ailments. It was amazing! The first one to be healed was a lady with knee problems. 10-IMG_7548

Immediately after praying for her, I asked her, “What’s happening?”

She responded by saying. “There’s no pain!”

Several people were healed after that including an old woman with cataracts. Praise God! It is so wonderful and encouraging to see this type of move of God in such a desperate place. It is amazing to see such great faith in a church in so much need.

www.extrememercy.org

Helping the Thankful Church

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Truck loaded with relief goods and construction materials. We even helped other organizations get goods into Baganga because we are one of the few groups still going in to help.

After helping with the rescue operations and saving lives, we shifted our focus to help a particular church on the coast. It is Faith Tabernacle Church pastored by Pastor Proceso Puzon, a 70 year old year man and whose wife was killed in the storm.  The church is still standing, but it has no roof and some of the walls are on the verge of collapse. The thing that struck me the most about this church is the attitude of the people. Despite losing his wife, the pastor had a thanksgiving service to celebrate 24 years of being there.

We have committed to putting a roof on this church and it is taking some serious money and work to get it done. Our team has been out there numerous times and travelling the road to this remote place is dangerous, difficult, and it has cost us much fuel and damaged many vehicles. Honestly, I’m weary from all these trips. It’s cost me time, health, and money. I miss my wife and my son, but how much more does Pastor Puzon miss his wife?

Pastor Proceso Puzon who lost his wife during the storm.

Despite these hardships, we are not giving up on this church and these communities. Can you please join with me in making a financial sacrifice to help this church and these people?
A lovely church member receiving disaster relief goods inside the wet church.www.extrememercy.org

Super Typhoon Pablo

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On December 4th, 2012, the worst Typhoon (Pablo) I have ever seen hit Mindanao and changed the way I will view ministry forever. We prayed hard as the monster category five storm approached, it miraculously did not hurt our city. However, it totally annihilated entire towns and in some areas leaving no one behind to even report the dead and missing.

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Within four days, I joined a team to go on a twelve hour road trip to where the eye of the storm made landfall. I have never seen such destruction. In Cateel, the smell of dead bodies permeated the air as 90% of the homes were flattened. There was not a building in the city with a roof left on it. Actually, there was not a structure for miles every direction with a roof on it. Upon seeing the destruction, it made me wonder how anyone survived. We immediately went to help the hospital which had been stripped from the inside out by the wind. They had long lines of patients, but no medicine and almost no staff. It felt good to bring a vehicle full of trained volunteer medics to the hospital. We literally helped save lives over the course of the first three weeks and did more than I can write here. You can read more news by visiting our website at www.extrememercy.org/news

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www.extrememercy.org

Are You Thankful Enough?

Pastor Proceso Puzon (front left) lost his wife in the storm, but is still faithfully pastoring at 70 years old.

Pastor Proceso Puzon (front left) lost his wife in the storm, but is still faithfully pastoring at 70 years old.

Last Friday, I visited a church in Baganga, Philippines that was nearly destroyed by Typhoon Bopha (Pablo). The pastor’s wife was killed by falling debris during the category 5 storm. The pastor is 70 years old and instead of giving up, last Sunday they celebrated the church’s 24th anniversary with a Thanksgiving Service.

One of the few churches in Baganga that still has walls, but the roof was torn off.

This church just thankfully celebrated 24 years even though their precious pastor’s wife was killed in the storm and the building has no roof.

This is in a community that had the most reported deaths of any place from this monster storm. There has been no electricity for a month and probably won’t be for a long time. Coconut farming was livelihood of Baganga and almost every tree was destroyed by the storm for miles. Most of their members had their houses destroyed or at the very least their roofs torn off from the wind, and this church took the time to gather and thank God for their lives.

Children playing in the typhoon debris.

Children playing in the typhoon debris.

Did you go to church last Sunday? How did you feel there? Was the music too loud? Was it too hot or too cold inside the church?

Were you thankful that there was power and a sound system in your church? Were you thankful that you were dry inside the church? Did you thank God for your pastor’s family? Did you feel thankful to be alive?

We at Extreme Mercy International have decided that we are going to put a roof on this church. It will cost us about $1,500 to $2,000 to do this.

Baganga Church Roof

Would you please show your thankfulness to God for what you have and donate to help put a roof on this church?

If you would like to support us through the mail, please send your checks, cashier’s checks, or money orders to:

Extreme Mercy International
P.O. Box 72266
Phoenix, Arizona 85050
U.S.A.
 

Thank you and God bless you,

Matthew

Baganga Church Plans

You are Heroes for Helping Save Lives

What makes a hero?

Many people call going into a disaster zone to rescue people without knowing the risks heroic, but honestly all those who made this possible are heroes. A hero saves lives and by helping our teams go by supporting us financially, you are heroes. Thank you for helping us go.

Part of the seemingly endless destruction that spans for 200 km throughout Mindanao.

Part of the seemingly endless destruction that spans for 200 km throughout Mindanao.

My first trip to Cateel was almost disheartening because we were the first relief organization to assist the hospital there and the situation seemed hopeless. My second trip to Cateel had much more encouraging results. When we arrived, the hospital had a fully covered tarpaulined roof, a giant generator, and a full volunteer medical staff.

Cateel Hospital 10 days after Typhoon Bopha Pablo

We quickly made the decision to go further south to Baganga (which had a higher death toll than Cateel). Baganga was a very different situation from Cateel. Apparently due to a political situation, the aid agencies that were assisting Baganga had just pulled out and they were abandoned in bad shape.

When we made it to Baganga, the Hospital Clinic was only staffed by about three people including one over exhausted doctor overseeing the whole place. The roof was completely stripped off from the storm and the hospital had no electrical power for 10 days.

The Baganga Hospital Clinic which serves 50,000 people.

The Baganga Hospital Clinic.

Inside, there were about a dozen babies lying throughout the hospital on tables with IVs sticking out of their hands with exasperated parents huddled around them. As a new father, this was unbearable for me to see. I had to fight back tears as we helped light the place with a couple of lights from our generator. Later that evening after we set up camp outside the clinic, I went back in and prayed for all the babies and all the patients in the hospital.

Babies on IVs in Baganga Hospital

Babies on IVs in Baganga Hospital

The next day, we rearranged the lighting situation and properly wired the hospital with about eight lights with switches and granted them the full use of our generator. Unfortunately, during the rewiring I was cutting some wires down and slipped with the knife and stabbed myself in my thumb down to the bone. With blood gushing everywhere, I quickly sat down and received first aid from another volunteer. The medical team conveniently arrived within the hour and they patched me up as best they could.

I got in a knife fight with myself and lost.

I got in a knife fight with myself and lost.

It was a bad start to the trip and made my right hand useless for a few days. I had the last opportunity for days to head home right after that, but instead decided to stay. By evening, we had covered the roof of the hospital with giant tarpaulins. Thankfully, we covered the roof because it rained very hard that night and we got soaked in our campsite. Actually, it rained hard every night. We were pretty much soaked in our camp just outside the hospital the whole time each and every night.

Setting up Camp outside Baganga Hospital.

Setting up Camp outside Baganga Hospital.

As I checked the hospital after the lights were installed and the roof was covered, I noticed that only two of the babies I prayed for stayed there that night. No one from the medical staff had released the other babies, but the parents took them out of there on their own accord. I didn’t hear any reports, but I can only hope that they were healed after I prayed for them and they didn’t need hospitalization any more.

Babies on IVs sleeping on tables (no beds) with no roof on the hospital.

Babies on IVs sleeping on tables (no beds) with no roof on the Baganga hospital.

The next few days, the medical team went out with the Philippine Army to remote communities to treat wounded people. They were treating about 70 to 100 people per day with some serious untreated wounds from the storm.

Philippine Army Truck carrying our team.

Philippine Army Truck carrying our team.

One man had his ear cut off during the storm and needed emergency transportation to get help. We used our private team vehicle (a very simple SUV) as an ambulance for these cases. One of the worst cases was a man who stepped on two rusty nails in the debris and his untreated foot was terribly infected. Our team took him to a better medical facility where he likely had to have his foot amputated. We provided emergency medical transportation at all hours of day and night up until a few hours before I left. The last night I was there, I heard about 3am, “The baby’s not breathing! We need to transport it to Cateel.” It’s about a 40 minute drive to Cateel hospital, but unlike the Baganga clinic, they had oxygen there, so our camp woke up to facilitate the transport. Thankfully, we got the baby to Cateel in time to stabilize its breathing along with some other patients that needed better care. I am certain that these “ambulance” trips saved many lives during our time there.

With a mix of natural help and spiritual help, we were able to save lives and change lives. As a team, we kept our camp running for two weeks straight with teams rotating in and out for 4 to 5 day rotations. We even had a team stay over Christmas sacrificing time away families to help people in need.

We had to cross the river with this bamboo raft because the bridge was washed out.

We had to cross the river with this bamboo raft because the bridge was washed out.

This effort was made up of many ministries and agencies working together in unity to make a difference. Extreme Mercy International teamed up with Global Impact Foundation, Stitch of Truth Gear, First Responders International, and Mercy Maternity Clinic.

Happy Kids in Baganga. One of them had his grandma die in the storm.

Happy Kids in Baganga. One of them had his grandma die in the storm.

What is next?

During the course of our interactions with the locals and hearing their stories, we came across a heartbreaking story. Our team met a pastor whose wife was killed in the storm. This family lost everything and are still holding services in a roofless church and ministering to people in need when they need ministry themselves.

The pastor (far right) lost his wife in the storm and is sitting with his daughter and grandson. We are going to roof this church. Will you help us?

The pastor (far right) lost his wife in the storm. We are going to roof this church. Will you help us?

We have decided to take on the project of roofing this church. It will cost us about 2,000 US dollars to buy the materials. Our team and the church will do the volunteer labor. This roof will span the church and parsonage and keep this grieving family dry and provide shelter for their services. It will also serve a dual purpose as headquarters and a superior shelter for our teams when we stay in Baganga. Even though the rescue stage is over, we intend to help these communities recover. We intend to keep going back and helping these people as long as we can.

Will you please donate to help put a roof on this church?

If you would like to support us through the mail, please send your checks, cashier’s checks, or money orders to:

Extreme Mercy International
P.O. Box 72266
Phoenix, Arizona 85050
U.S.A.

We are also looking for a good vehicle with good clearance to make the rough road 700km (435 miles) round trip to Baganga and back. The vehicles we have been looking at will cost anywhere from 5,000 to 7,500 US dollars and will be used for recovery efforts now and rescue teams in the future.

Will you please consider starting out the new year as a hero by helping us change lives?