September 2018 Updates

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We have been approved as an organization for matching donations through Microsoft! This has been a huge blessing for our organization this year, & we pray it will continue in 2019. If you are a Microsoft employee, consider giving to Kings & Queens through the company for matching gifts!

We will be at the Giving Campaign at the Charlotte office on October 15. Stop by to see us!

A MINUTE WITH MISSIONARY MAC

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-The land is in the middle of its second harvest season, so we are busy selling coconuts and bananas.
-Our chickens will start producing eggs next month so we are preparing their nesting boxes to harvest eggs.
-Our huge mango trees are starting to bear fruit and the boys can't get enough of them- the favorite product of the land so far! 
-The fish pond is going to be harvested soon. We figure we have 700-1000 fish. Please be praying for a big harvest! 
-The boys are so excited to make the move over to the land! They are helping with farm tasks any chance they can get. 

STAFF SPOTLIGHT: Carmen Guerrero 

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Carmen has been married for 22 years and has two daughters. She came to know the Lord at age 16. She met Julio & Rosa (our Peruvian directors) during a very difficult time in her life where she had wandered from the Lord. They befriended her, offered her a job, and encouraged her to return to the Lord. This ministry is something very special to her, and she loves the stories of how the boys she serves were restored and rescued by God and have learned to forgive all the damage done to them. Carmen serves with her daughters in the Divine Grace Church. Carmen says she is a witness to the grace and mercy of God, and is very happy to work for Kings and Queens.

Carmen is one of our Peruvian staff members that serves Casa de Reyes and Divine Grace Church. We celebrated her birthday this month! 

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ALL ABOUT THE BOYS

  • The boys participated in a soccer tournament with all of the churches of Iquitos. They represented our church, Divine Grace, and played well. 

  • The boys helped with construction on the land this month. They also enjoyed perfecting the soccer field on the property and have played many games there.

  • The boys enjoyed youth nights at church.

YAIR'S TESTIMONY

My name is Yair. My family is from extreme poverty. They did not have the means to support my education or my well being. Where I am from, there is little interest in education. In 2011, when I was eleven years old, I was placed in a home for abandoned boys. It was not easy to be left in that beautiful place. I had many fears, and I was full of mistrust. I am from an ethnic group called Ticuna, and I spoke only my tribal language. I could not speak Spanish, the language that was spoken in the home. I did not understand anyone, not the boys in the home or the adults working there. I missed my mother, my brothers, and my friends. It was a very drastic change in my life. In the home, I was introduced to God’s love. I now understand the purpose of everything. Now, I can say it was worth it. My life has meaning, and I have goals I want to fulfill. It is not easy to be away from the people I love, but now all I want to do is reach my goals. I want to become a nurse and a great servant of Christ. I hope to do this so that I can help my family and contribute to their finances. Above all, I want to share with others the love of God and to teach them that with God everything is possible. I am grateful to God for getting me out of a society that is no good and for the purpose that my life now has. Thank you for the great devotion you give to this ministry; my prayer is that it will never end until Christ comes for his Church.
 

August 2018 Updates

Missionary News

Bronte Babson, Director of Community Outreach & Program Development, and Caroline Marvin, Director of Global Missions Development, are excited to announce their upcoming life changes! They will be serving on staff with Kings & Queens full-time, spending time both in Peru and in the U.S. growing our organization, raising awareness, coordinating work teams, and further developing the ministry in Peru.
We are excited to see how God will use them! 

Financially support Bronte here | Financially support Caroline  here 

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Mardin's Testimony

My father was a youth pastor in my hometown. My mother supported my father unconditionally. She could sing beautifully. My mother died in 2005 when I was five years old. For this reason, my dad turned away from the Lord. It was such a hard experience. After she died, my father started working with coca leaves and became a drug dealer. I left home and became a street boy. I began to try alcohol with my friends. I had no control of anything in my life including myself. I entered a home for abandoned boys. I had a very unpleasant childhood. I did not understand 

why my mother died and why my dad turned to drugs. The days were dark, and my heart was filled with pain and anguish. Many years passed and I could not overcome my mother’s death. I had to seek God to find joy in my heart. Now I can understand that in Christ I am secure, and He has control of our lives. Now I can see that maybe my mother was taken away for a purpose. Maybe she was taken away so that I could exalt God’s name. In spite of everything, I will go on to accomplish my goals. I will be a psychologist and a great singer. I am currently in high school but will soon move on to college.  I serve in Divine Grace Evangelical Christian Church in the praise ministry. I will never stop worshipping my savior. I thank God that my dad is no longer involved in the work he was before as a drug dealer. I am happy to be in the home for college-aged boys in Iquitos. I am growing in God’s grace and with His help, I can achieve my goals.

Project J2:5 Construction Update

President & Founder, Titus Bowen, recently returned from Peru after checking in on construction of our house modifications to make the existing house on our property livable for the boys of Casa de Reyes. Once this first phase of construction is complete, we will have the ability to house 24 boys! We've begun to finalize construction and are ready to begin furnishing the house. If the Lord leads you to give in this way, please click here. We are so grateful for the generous donors who are making it possible to reach even more young men in Peru! 

All About the Boys

  • Waltahir and Alexander Huayllahua both celebrated their birthdays this month! They were each given a birthday party in the home. 
  • The boys are busy right now! They are in school, participating in extracurricular activities such as playing soccer, and are working on the land when they can.
  • The boys are learning the world of business by helping sell the chickens and crops from our farm in the local market. 

K&Q BBQ

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Please make plans to join us for an evening of family fun at K&Q BBQ including dinner, inflatables, games, live music, s'mores, and more. 

Date: October 13, 2018
Time: 4-8 PM
Location:
Duke Pavilion at Camp Thunderbird | Lake Wylie, SC

Stay tuned for how to purchase tickets! 

 

 

A Minute With Missionary Mac

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  • We have sold about 800 meat chickens.
  • Our first growing season is in full swing, so we are selling many plantains and papayas. 
  • Our egg laying chickens are getting big and soon will start laying eggs that we can profit from.
  • I planted about 2,000 corn seeds recently in hopes we can use that to feed chickens, feed the boys in our home, and have some to sell.

Winter Team Recap

      Our winter team had an incredibly meaningful and productive mission trip to Peru. They were the first team to ever visit our very own boys in our own home! It was an unforgettable experience! They were able to pray over the home, staff, and boys. The boys learned about what it means for them to be sponsored by individuals like you, and they were deeply grateful. 
      The team split their time between Puerto Alegria and Iquitos. In Puerto Alegria they served abandoned children in another home. The team built a brand new dock for the home which was much needed since traveling to and from the city, washing clothes, fishing, and bathing is all done from that dock. In Iquitos they served the boys and Peruvian staff in our own home. They were able to lead devotions and spend quality time with all of the boys. They prayed with the boys both in groups and individually. They were able comfort many grieving boys, give them Christmas presents, bring them the good news of the gospel, and show them the love of Christ.
      This was our first team ever to serve in the area of Belen, which is greatly impoverished. Our church plant, Divine Grace Evangelical Christian Church, focuses on outreach in this dark area. Our team went door to door inviting children to come to a bible study program. Over 150 children who were either abandoned and/or from extreme poverty showed up each day! For three days our team played with them, gave them food and drinks, and taught them about Jesus through bible study. It was a very emotional experience as many of these children were in very poor condition and begged team members to bring them home. 
      If there is one takeaway lesson from this trip, it is this: the work is plenty and the laborers are few! There is so much to be done. We are more motivated than ever to fight for the children of Iquitos. 

Perspective on the Harvest

 

Her eyes were big, brown, and serious. Immediately images of my own daughter’s big, brown eyes flashed in my mind. She forcibly was trying to tell me something, something I could not interpret. “What is she saying to me?!” I’d questioned Walthair, one of the boys in our home for abandoned boys who taught himself English.

“Llévame contigo. Llévame a casa contigo,” she sternly said with hints of desperation in her voice. She couldn’t be more than seven years old. She was beautiful with her Peruvian skin, her black hair long and messy, thrown into a ponytail with a scrunchie. She was skinny. Too skinny. Her shirt, picturing a Disney character, was outdated, faded, and worn- an obvious staple piece for its impoverished owner.

I work for Kings and Queens International. We have a church plant and our own home for abandoned boys in Iquitos, Peru and were there with a mission team. We had been doing outreach in Belen, one of the poorest areas in Iquitos.

Belen is an area filled with floating shacks; they rise and fall with the river. And in every direction you turn, there is poverty. Often times poverty in the United States looks like Welfare, WIC, Medicaid, nonprofits with food and clothes pantries, homeless shelters, government housing, free public education, free and reduced breakfast and lunch at school, a car to live in. That’s not what poverty looks like in Belen, in Iquitos, in other parts of the world. Poverty in those places looks like hungry, starving, and malnourished children, shacks without walls, without indoor bathrooms, without air conditioning, without beds. It looks like children walking barefoot through the trash that covers the streets. It looks like sleeping on wooden boards. It looks like street children who steal or prostitute themselves in order to survive. It looks like zero education because there is no free education available.

That kind of poverty looks like the little girl who had followed me down several streets to where I could find a mototaxi, because cars aren’t even common- cars are owned by drug lords. It looks like the little girl who after Marissa, Walthair, and I slid in the seat of a mototaxi pulled herself up onto the platform and stood by our feet, looked me dead in the eye and pleaded, ““Llévame contigo. Llévame a casa contigo.”

“Take me with you. Take me home with you,” Walthair translated.

I felt like I had taken a blow to the gut. I wanted to lean out of the mototaxi and blow chunks. At the same time, I wanted to grab her in my arms and get her out of there, take her home with me. I knew I couldn’t do either.

“I wish I could take you with me, but I can’t. I would if I could. I am so sorry. I love you, and there is also God who loves you. Believe in him, trust in him. He will never leave you. You will never be alone.” I emphasized every word.

Walthair told her what I said. She would not accept it. She began to argue with me. She pleaded, on and on for me to take her.

"Lo siento. Lo siento. Te quiero." I muttered almost breathlessly. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I love you.

And I could say no more. I just stared into the beautiful, begging eyes of a little girl who did not choose to be born into Belen, into poverty, into darkness. She didn't choose to, but she was. But now she was trying to choose me.

She wouldn’t get off of the mototaxi. Rosa, the house mother at our home for abandoned boys had to come over and make her get off. The mototaxi pulled out. I could not look back to see the damage done in whom I had left behind. I asked kind Marissa, my teammate, to look back. She did; she told me what she saw. That little girl stood in the middle of the uneven dirt road, eyes fixated on our backs, our bodies getting smaller and smaller as we rode away. I knew she would be doing that; that is why, like a coward, I could not make myself look. We rode to the home with lumps in our throats, fire in our spirits, grief in our hearts, and tears silently striking our laps.

I do not know her name. In fact, I have no recollection of her until the instance on the mototaxi. Walthair, I’ve known him and the other boys since I started coming to Peru in 2012. But her, I don’t know her.

We spent three hours one morning going shack to shack inviting kids in Belen to a program with our church. Over 150 children showed up each day. Only about eight mothers showed up escorting their kids. No dads came. Five year olds would carry their one year old sibling up concrete steps to meet us. I’d say eight in ten kids had teeth rotting out of their heads, painful to even look at much less endure. Many had lice. Their clothes were often outdated, faded, stained, torn, and somehow still unbelievably beautiful against their skin. We gave them candy, snacks, and drinks. Chaos erupted. It was like they never knew when they would eat again, so they pushed and shoved and jumped and cried out… begging for you to place the gift in their desperate hand. It took all of the Peruvian workers and boys to ensure them we had enough for everyone. Finally by day three they somewhat understood the concept of a line. We played games with them. We danced with them. We had Tigger and Donald Duck perform for them. We taught them bible lessons. We prayed with them. We loved them. We told them about Jesus.

My Spanish is decent enough to have basic conversations, but I’m not close to being fluent. I remember sitting in a team devotion one afternoon, after we had only been serving in Belen for two days, bending over in my seat, placing my right hand on my forehead and muffling sobs as Marissa recalled, “All Emily did was bend down, ask them their names, ask how old they were, ask them their favorite color or if they liked to play soccer, smile at them, give them a hug… and they loved her. They chased her down the street.” The same was true of Marissa. The same was true of every team member. With urgency and joy we all poured our hearts and souls into these kids. I’m not the only team member who a child, a stranger, asked to take them home.

It had been a day from hell. An emergency had taken place that morning. And I didn’t know at that moment sitting in devotion that it would only get worse that very night. Another emergency would happen. And sandwiched between those emergencies and in the middle of our trip was Marissa basically saying that all these kids we had been serving needed was love, attention, and someone to get down on their level and show them they care. She was dead on.

What I did wasn’t heroic. It was not outrageous. It did not deserve an award or notice. It was incredibly small. It was basic. It was normal. It was a common response to seeing kids in need. And everyone who went with us did that. If you went with us, you would too. At some point, in the midst of talking to and hugging 150 kids, spending just a few seconds with each of them over the course of three days, what I had done was enough of an impression to a little girl to make her willing to leave everything she knew behind. It was enough for her to want to leave her family, if she had one. To leave her shack. To leave her street corner. To leave her world. She was so eager to leave. So eager to go with someone who didn’t even know her name or speak her language. She was so hopeful that with me it could not be any worse than what she had now.

The interaction lasted a couple of minutes, but the impact, for me, will last a lifetime. Three days of outreach won’t change Belen. One mission trip won’t make the biggest difference in the world. But love will. God will, if He wants to.

Andy Andrews wrote the book The Noticer. It is not the best book I have ever read. It is not the most interesting or the most well written. Yet, I remember lessons learned from it more than any other book other than the bible. There is a character in the book who notices things about people. He notices their wants, their needs, who they are. And then he tells them about themselves. The things that they don’t even notice because they don’t have the same perspective. They change when they are introduced to a new perspective.

I do not notice enough. I would like to notice more than I do. Furthermore, I do not act on half of what I do notice. But Andrews writes in The Noticer, “Consider that even the simplest actions you take for your lives matter beyond measure… and they matter forever.” And I think he is right. I think they do matter forever. The simplest actions, taken after noticing, mattered to that little girl.

Andrews goes on to say, “In desperate times, much more than anything else, folks need perspective. For perspective brings calm. Calm leads to clear thinking. Clear thinking yields new ideas. And ideas produce the bloom… of an answer. Keep your head and heart clear. Perspective can just as easily be lost as it can be found.”

I’ve been thinking about perspective. About that little girl’s perspective. About mine. About Walthair’s. About Marissa’s. About Rosa's. About President Trump’s perspective on Haiti and Africa. About people’s perspective of me. How sick of me they probably are for fundraising for our non profit like crazy. Their perspective about those of us who are so passionate about Peru yet when someone asks us, “How was your trip?” we feel immediately exhausted and a little jaded because there is no way anyone can possibly understand what we witness and experience each time we go. And sometimes we do not even feel like trying to get them to. What will people's perspective be of this little girl who wrecked my heart but whose life is more wrecked than they could ever imagine?

I did my absolute best to comfort and hold more crying boys ages four to eighteen this last Peru trip than I have ever had to before. Boys in homes for abandoned boys. Grieving, broken boys. Boys yearning for love and attention. Boys devastated by their past, their present. And my heart breaks for all of them. My heart breaks for the kids of Belen, for the little girl who wanted to go home with me. Out of my six trips to Peru, this was the scariest, saddest, hardest, most encouraging, most challenging, most inspiring, and best trip yet. It’s the trip I came home with the most perspective.

I have a new perspective on Matthew 9:35-38: “And Jesus went throughout all the cities and villages, teaching in their synagogues and proclaiming the gospel of the kingdom and healing every disease and every affliction. When he saw the crowds, he had compassion for them, because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd. Then he said to his disciples, 'The harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few; therefore pray earnestly to the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest.'”

The amount of work to be done is overwhelming. It is unending, burdensome, emotionally draining, and seemingly impossible. But Christians are not allowed to give in to that reality. Our hope is greater than any worldly strife. And we are called to act. We are called to free the oppressed, to give to the impoverished, to help the orphan. We are called to have compassion. We are called to be the few. We are called to enter the harvest. The harvest looks different for every one of us. But it’s our harvest to tend to nonetheless. We are called to have this perspective.

Passion’s song “Glorious Day“ gives me perspective about who I used to be before Christ. It gives me perspective on who I am now in Christ.

I needed rescue/ My sin was heavy/ But chains break at the weight of Your glory/ I needed shelter/ I was an orphan/ But You call me a citizen of heaven/ When I was broken/ You were my healing/ Your love is the air that I'm breathing/ I have a future/ My eyes are open/ You called my name/ And I ran out of that grave/ Out of the darkness/ Into Your glorious day

It gives me perspective on the harvest I am called to… the kids and young men of Iquitos, Peru.. and why I am called to it. More than about myself, it gives me perspective on what so many of these kids in Iquitos really need, and it is not to go home with me.

*This blog was written by Kings and Queens International's Sponsorship Coordinator, Emily Reeves.Photo Credits: Brandon Brown/ Fox and Arrow Studio/ Kings and Queens International Photographer & Videographer*

Stories that will change the world

For years we have been praying. Praying to do more. Be more. Give more

For so long we haven't known what is next for us in Peru.

In 2012, God allowed us to begin taking our own teams to the jungle. It was a step, but we still felt kind of stuck in a pattern of serving, but not making as much eternal impact as we hoped. 

Soon after, Kings & Queens International was born after a summer in Peru learning Spanish. God began to reveal the cycle of poverty and issue of child abandonment. He started to show us our part in it. 

But what did it mean for the precious boys we came to know and love over the past 7 years, ones who called us "Mom," "Sister," and "Friend?" 

After a meeting over the summer that didn't go as we had hoped, we sat with open hands and hearts. 

"God, we know you have something in store. Show us, and we will walk in obedience." 

After that, the pieces literally began to fall into our laps, one event at a time. 

First, we made the decision to partner in planting a church, Divine Grace Evangelical Christian Church in Iquitos. Our vision for K&Q is to help equip the church to reach its own people. We never expected that God would allow us to do something like planting a church, but God gave a beautiful vision to a precious couple, and we were able to come alongside them in establishing Divine Grace.

When we received word that 12 older boys-- ones we have mostly known for 6-7 years and have watched mature into men, be baptized, and desire to pursue a degree-- were aging out of the system and would no longer be provided assistance through college, we knew this was no accident-- it was distinctly from the Lord.

We never felt like God was calling us to open an orphanage. But to support young men who are aging out and help them be able to afford college, health care, and living expenses, all while mentoring them and offering biblical accountability? Now that we could do. 

So we went to work.

One of our board members, Emily Reeves (who has been serving faithfully in Peru for years) was given a vision for child sponsorship after learning of some of the financial issues that the boys home was having. However, this was always a closed door because of Peruvian law: sharing personal  information and names of minors without parental consent is prohibited. 

However, all these boys are adults, no longer minors and with their consent, we could legally share their testimonies, photos, and desires for the future. 

Our sponsorship program began to take shape.

Out of no where, we were invited to a corporate event with a potential $15,000 in matching donations right in the middle of beginning our program. Without a doubt, the Lord's favor and hand was upon this project. He was moving.  

Then, when one of the older boys (who no longer lived at the home but who we grew to know and love for several years) tragically took his life 2 weeks ago, it was further confirmation that we had to do this. We had to bring hope, give tools, and offer loving, biblical accountability for boys that needed us. Needed guidance. Needed a way to not end up exactly like their parents did in a cycle of poverty, substance abuse, and domestic violence. 

Emily worked endlessly to translate, format, and edit. I coordinated changes to our website, printed, marketed, and put together packets. 

With faithful prayer, truthfully some fear (that I have been praying against because I know it is of the enemy), and so much excitement, it's now time for us to introduce you to the incredible young men who are our brothers. 

And they need you. 

As we begin sharing their stories, some of deep tragedy, grief, abuse, anger, and hardship, we ask you to read them with the eyes of Christ and through the lens of the gospel. 

As I mentioned, the boys stories we are sharing are all over the age of 18 and have written their testimonies, some very vulnerable, to share with you because they desire to be in our college program, and they are praying for a sponsor. The sharing of testimonies was optional, and the consequences of sharing such personal information with the public were explained beforehand. Even so, each of them willingly and proudly chose to share their stories to impact others and bring glory to God.  

 We are reminded of Luke 8:39, “‘Return home and tell how much God has done for you.’ So the man went away and told all over town how much Jesus had done for him.” 

We are so proud of each boy that has chosen to share his story with you.

By visiting our sponsor page, you can learn more about our 5 options of monthly contributions, the background of the boys in our program, and their personal information and testimonies. 

We truly believe these stories will change the world. 

As you get to know them, will you prayerfully consider sponsoring one? Sponsorship allows former orphaned, abused, or abandoned boys the opportunity to go to college or receive vocational training, health care, shelter, and food, instead of being sent back to live on the streets of Iquitos. It also goes towards Christian house parents who have a trusting, loving relationships with each boy. Under their provision, the boys will be discipled and continue serving in their local church (Divine Grace Evangelical Christian Church). The boys have committed to living in a way that honors the message of the gospel and serving one another through cooking, cleaning and keeping up the home they will reside in together. 

Each day this week, we will highlight one boy's testimony and story. 

So, I would like first to introduce you to Alexander. 

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Read all about him by clicking here.

We may not be able to change the world or fully stop child abandonment. But as the body of Christ, we can change the world

one child at a time

www.kingsandqueensint.org/sponsor/

In His love, 

Kailee Bowen 

Administration & Marketing

Being the Church

What does it mean to be The Church?

I've been pondering this thought for the past several months.

Membership? A building with a tall steeple? VBS programs? Wednesday night suppers? Hymns and organs?

The more I've thought about it, I've realized how negative the church is seen by many believers today. When overseas recently, I talked to a large sum of Christians that do not go to church due to corruption. I myself have struggled with the decision to partner with the church we've been a part of for a year now, due to being burned by the church in the past.

The Church seems to be viewed as a negative thing in modern America in many cases.

But what about when you strip it all away?

Get rid of the lights, the guitars. The projector screens, the pulpit. The fancy clothes and the steeple.

What are you left with?

People.

God's people.

Humans.

Sinners.

Imperfect beings.

Recently, I sat outside, covered in sweat with mosquitoes buzzing in my ear. There wasn't a piano or a guitar, a fancy projector, and no one was dressed in anything other than shorts and t-shirts. I sat in a plastic lawn chair amidst voices that spoke a language other than my own. Horns beeped and commotion went on outside the walls of the place I gathered with around 40 people who were there for one purpose— to praise the God of the universe, the Maker of heaven and earth.

And truly... it was one of the most beautiful sights I've ever beheld.

This was the Church.

Just people. Sinners and broken. Coming as they are. Worshiping the One True God.

It wasn't about the style of music, the temperature of the building or the fact that we'd be heading off for a meal after the service was over.

It was about worshiping as one.

The Body of Christ.

And these people I was with? They weren't strangers. These were MY people.

My brothers, my friends, some even called themselves my sons. And seeing them praise the Lord without fear, filled with confidence and passion— I was moved to tears.

They were children that I've watched grow— many of them from 6 or 7 years old. They’re now in middle and high school—and they are the ones leading worship.

7 years ago, I took a leap of faith. I went on a trip I was NOT cut out for. I went to a jungle to do construction work in a place that housed abandoned boys. I was uncomfortable, unqualified, and frankly, quite annoyed. Why would God bring me to a place I was so far out of my comfort zone? I wasn’t of any use on the construction site, I hated the food, I was miserable in the 100% humidity with no A/C to run to, I couldn’t speak to the kids around me. Selfishly, I never wanted to come back to that place.

Why should I?

Well, 6 months later something {read: GOD} brought me back. And again, 6 months later. Fast forward to today… I’ve just returned from my eleventh trip to this place I never planned to return. All because of these people.

Who, despite their own pasts, discomforts, scars, and heartache, welcomed me with open arms. Called me sister. Mama. Friend. They showed me what it meant to be the Church.

All that to say, it is certainly NOT of me, but completely ALL of God.

He used a place so foreign, so different, so hard on me physically and emotionally to bring me closer to Him, to a place of complete humility at His feet, clinging to the foot of the cross, to bring Him glory.

And in it, I have found abundant joy.

That place, Puerto Alegria {which means Port Joy}, is truly one of my favorite places on earth. I feel at home there. I feel alive. At complete peace. Like I’m exactly where the Lord wants me to be. And I just can’t stay away.

Over the past 7 years of serving, a lot has happened in that place. We’ve seen kids come and go. We’ve seen leadership falter and fail. We’ve seen people make promises and say they will do amazing things for these children we love so much, only to disappear months later. We have been on our knees, crying out to God for an answer. We’ve felt the spiritual warfare as the Enemy has tried to make the home collapse from the inside out.

But he will not win.

Three years ago, God sent a couple. A husband and wife, newly married. We had seen it all before. I’m always extremely apprehensive of new leadership. People I trusted and believed in have hurt my brothers. They’ve abandoned them. They’ve lied and stolen. Why would they be any different?

Rosa was someone you couldn’t ignore. She lit up the room with her vibrant personality, passion, and quick-speaking tongue. With a huge smile, she was an instant mama to those boys. She knew them by name within days. She could look at a stack of clothes and know exactly who needed which item and in what size. She danced with them in the evenings, laughed with them at meal time, hugged those who were hurting. I struggled to keep up with how quickly she talked, but truthfully, it was hard not to like her. The love of Jesus was so evident in the way she walked, spoke, and even laughed.

Julio was the complete opposite of his wife. Quiet, observant, slow to speak. Honestly, I hardly heard him speak more than a few words in he first year of him being in leadership. Would this be the man to lead these boys? He was certainly qualified with a history of 5 years of youth ministry and a bachelor’s degree. He was educated and smart. But he led in a way I hadn’t seen before. A way that was quiet, selfless, but demanded the attention and respect of the boys. They listened to him. He wasn't loud and certainly didn't have the "take charge" personality you usually think of when you describe a leader. But in his gentle spirit, they followed.

In all his humility and even-tempered ways, he really reminds me of Jesus when I think of it.

Oh, and they loved each other. Never before had I seen a couple so affectionate and in love. They were so tender toward one another, so gentle and respectful, passionate. Really, it was beautiful.

They were the perfect duo. They perfectly balanced each other in their strengths and weaknesses. We may not have known it then, but they were the ones we had prayed for. 

You see, that church I told you about before? It’s a church that was recently planted by Julio and Rosa. And the kids I told you about? They are the ones that are being raised in this ministry, even to the point of leading their own youth worship services. 

Julio saw that there was a problem.

The organization that houses the boys could not afford transportation to the church where Julio worshiped in town. So instead of letting that be the end of it, he chose to plant a church, right there where they were, within the walls of the boys home. God has used Kings & Queens to make this a reality by getting the church established as a legal non-profit organization in the city of Iquitos, Peru. We are now partnering together with Julio and Rosa to establish our first church plant, Divine Grace Church.

Every Saturday night, the gate is opened for students in the community. The boys invite their friends and classmates to a service that is 100% run by them. They lead worship, share testimonies, take offering, and pray together.

When I last visited the jungle in May, it had been a year since my last visit. As I sat down in this church service, my mind drifted back to those little faces 7 years before...

Full of so much mischief. Some of them full of deep anger and hurt because of their past. Most of them without families and just barely getting by.

And here now, they stood before me:

Their hands raised in worship, lifting their voices high with complete abandon. Their minds were not on the friends that surrounded them. Not once did I see their expressions ask, “What are they thinking of me?”

Their praise was evidence of changed hearts. Their worship was full of passion and expression.

Many of them have given their lives to Christ and have walked in the waters of baptism. The Lord has done a mighty thing within the bare, stone walls of that place. His spirit is so evidently present.

And He has used this precious couple to reveal an awe-inspiring picture of hope, restoration, and new life.

We spent a lot of time talking with Julio and Rosa this trip. They shared with us their needs, their vision, and their heart; their desire to grow, to reach more children, to serve broken families within their city.

But they were doing it alone and needed help.

Never once has this couple ever asked us for money. They’ve never complained about the position they are in. Their hearts have remained so humble and so willing to do whatever it takes to serve.

But we could see the look in their eyes—they were tired.

They needed rest. Restoration. Some more hands on deck. Relief. Help.

As we came back home, our heads were spinning. What can we do? How can we help? Feelings of guilt rushed over me as I pondered how these precious friends of ours were so deep in the tireless trenches of ministry and here I was sitting behind my MacBook with my coffee in one hand and my iPhone in the other.

“Not another fundraiser…” I thought.

My mind reasoned with the fact that we had just adopted our two children and there was no way we could ask anyone in our circle for money.

But God wouldn't let me rest.

Over the next few weeks, my mind kept going back to Julio and Rosa time and time again. I could feel the Spirit moving my heart to action. Sometimes it would keep me up at night.

"God, what is it you want me to do?" I asked.

As we met with our Board of Directors, we came to the conclusion that the first goal of Kings & Queens would be to hire some workers to further the outreach and lighten the load that this couple is bearing all alone.

Most of the outreach of our church plant is geared toward student ministry. Having the help of some additional adult leaders within the church would be a tremendous asset to them. We pray God will make a way to provide through the help of the Church, our brothers and sisters in Christ.

In addition, the walls of the boys home will not be the church's home forever. With a vision for serving street children and being a center to aid families in their community, they need a building. The goal of our church is to defend the fatherless and serve the widow (James 1:27). We desire for this church to be an orphan care center that provides feeding programs and after school tutoring the keep kids fed and in school, preventing them from being abandoned. It will act as a filter for the ever-growing problem of street children due to poverty.

Divine Grace Church is growing quickly while also raising up young men of God to be the future leadership of their community. The vision is big, but our God is bigger.

As you sit here today, would you consider coming alongside us in this vision to reach the fatherless and to uphold the cause of the widow in the city of Iquitos?

We greatly value your prayers during this time for the work Julio and Rosa are doing, for the young men they are serving, and also for the church of Divine Grace in Iquitos.

We cannot do it alone.

If the Lord impresses it upon your heart to give in support of this project, your financial donation would truly be a blessing to these believers who are living out what it means to serve the least of these. A recurring monthly donation of any amount will aid in our mission efforts to 1) pay workers, 2) purchase a church building, and 3) provide food for street children.

Click here to support these efforts and choose “Orphan Care in Iquitos” as the campaign for your donation.

Kings & Queens International is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization and all donations are tax deductible.

In His Everlasting Love,

Kailee & Titus Bowen

 

Meet Julio & Rosa

Here we are with the sweet people you've read about. {And aren't they just the cutest?!} They've been married 5 years and serving together in ministry since their marriage began. The past 3 years of their lives have been spent serving the children of Iquitos, Peru. They are the founders of Divine Grace Church and work as the directors of a home for 25 boys ages 13-18.