Jesus Christ modeled ministry methods through His examples of discipleship. He lived in community with others. How can we follow His example?
In Cotahuasi, the Lord is effectively utilizing a Ministry Center where Quechua brothers and sisters work and visit. An "open door" to needy people and a community approach to ministry is helping to model biblical faith in context to the reality here. A busy and fruitful ministry location, it provides housing for our family plus several other visiting missionaries and Quechua church planters, room and board for visiting and orienting of new missionaries, a multipurpose room used for: reading and study, book and literature lending library, bible and book sales, and group Bible study/conference room. It also has a volleyball court used for youth groups, a workshop, a corral for mules which are used for visiting communities without roads, small fields for farming animal feed, and a radio studio. It is where teams meet, relationships grow, discipleship occurs, and resources are shared.
Although maintenance is intensive and very “rustic” in construction, repair and improvements could make this location safely function long term for continuing ministry. Our family has recently begun purchasing the property The entire area of the property is about 3/4 of an acre and the various buildings are of traditional simple rustic adobe construction.
Church planting with the Quechua people of the Cotahuasi Canyon
Donations directly to the Shaws toward this effort will help make payments toward the principle of the loan to purchase the property and free up resources for ministry. To give for this purpose, first
contact the Shaws.
Donations toward the Shaw’s SIM “ministry support” account will help provide for extensive repair, construction, and improvements.
Additional land somewhere near the ministry center may also be purchased for growing vegetables and feed for livestock. Helping full time ministry workers develop marketable garden products is also in view here.
The buildings are old simple adobe structures common to rural mountain towns and need a lot of maintenance and repair.