Local church group builds a home for family in Mexico

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TIJUANA, Mexico — A group from Newton recently went to Tijuana, but not for the usual reason. Some 17 people from First Baptist Church of Newton went south of the border to build a house for a Mexican family. The Rev. Aaron Loree and son Dylan, Jack and Charlotte Maples, Rick Coffelt and daughter Amanda, Dennis Evans, Linda Martin, Craig and Julie Murphy, Kathy Peterson, Jerry and Nan Schmidt, Shirley Schuring, Nancy Smiley, Linda Templeton and Steve Van Ryswyk built the house in conjunction with Puente de Amistad, which is Spanish for Bridge of Friendship. Mike Brandt, who along with wife Cathy, daughter Mikayla and son Aaron took over the program last November, noted Puente de Amistad is under the direction of Des Moines-based Open Bible Churches. The Newton group built Puente de Amistad’s eighth house this summer. Mike Brandt said groups building the homes and the Mexican families receiving the homes get equal pleasure. “The people who do the volunteering get the pleasure of serving,” Brandt said. “The recipients get the physical blessing they can enjoy for years to come.” When a family at a local church needs a house, the pastor from that church meets with Puente de Amistad staff — which also includes Lawrence and Bertha Kelley — and Marcial Morales, the association’s only fulltime employee, and prays about the situation. “We match a group coming with the family,” Brandt said. “The number of homes built is dependent upon the number of groups coming in a summer.” In this particular case, The Rev. Jorge Gonzalez of the Dios Le Bendiga Church helped his parishoners Adan and Refugio Larios, along with teenage daughter Guadalupe, have a house built in La Quinta de Altiplano, on the Eastern fringes of Tijuana.

The Newton group flew to Tijuana from Omaha July 29, and toured the building site that day with Puente de Amistad staff and Alex Peterson from Burlington. Construction started the next day, utilizing a foundation that had been laid by Morales, whose sons Osires and Fernando helped out. Framework for the first level was completed on the first day, along with much of the siding and some painting. Power, while primitive by American standards, was sufficient thanks to the generosity of a neighbor who let the group tap into his electricity, and due to a generator. The power was used for various saws and later a nail gun. All wood had to be measured and cut on site. The framework for the second level was mostly done on the second day, July 31. By the end of the third day the framework for the roof was mostly completed, the siding was done and windows were installed. Work was completed on the fourth day, Aug. 2. In the afternoon, half of the group finished the work on the house while the other half shopped for furnishings including a futon, a bookcase, a small refrigerator and a table with chairs.

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