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A Father’s Day Spotlight: Pastor José Molina’s Leadership and Legacy

Joshua 24:15 

“…as for me and my household, we will serve the Lord.”

 

Family

 

On this Father’s Day, we celebrate José Molina, the pastor of Misión Cristiana Evangélica Fe y Gracia in San José, La Labor, El Salvador. We highlight not only his fatherly advice but also his amazing contribution toward community transformation as a pastor and respected community leader.

 

José Santos Molina has been married to Yenni Gloribel Argueta de Molina for 25 years. Together they have raised 5 sons and 1 daughter as well as taken in and nurtured other foster children, who are considered part of the family. They have been in pastoral ministry since they were married.

 

Pastor José and his wife Yenni

 

Historically, the hamlet of San José, La Labor was known for being a difficult community to organize. In addition to this, there were few educational and economic opportunities. However, with Pastor Molina’s leadership and with the support of the church and the local community development association, seven local hamlets have been organized to implement several infrastructure and health projects that will improve quality of life in the community. They have constructed eco-stoves, constructed roads, built a playground and perimeter wall around the high school, led a clean-up and fumigation campaign, and provided education and technical support for raising chickens, cultivating tilapia, and producing viable home gardens. 

 

Beginning stages of road repairConstruction of a road

 

The contribution of the Fe y Gracia Church to its community since 2010 is immensely significant. Over thirteen years, the church’s collaboration with leaders and members of the La Labor community has profoundly transformed the area, assisting hundreds of individuals in overcoming extreme poverty. Since 1998, Pastors José and Yenni Molina have demonstrated strong and effective leadership, deeply caring for and serving their church and community. Their dynamic leadership approach has significantly expanded their church and fostered a culture of loving service, with more than 80 percent of the congregation actively participating in community outreach efforts.

 

Pastor works on road repair

 

Reminiscent of the disciples and the Apostle Paul, José works an additional job to help provide for his family. Although they have had many challenges, he has taught his children to work in the bakery with him, to serve together and to trust that God will provide. “…We have even been able to share with others the blessings we have received.”

 

José is a committed pastor and father. He has learned to separate, balance, and organize his time between family and ministry so that he can be present and effective in both avenues of his life.

 

Pastor's family in the church

 

José has dedicated time to guide and develop his children in different areas of life so that they will grow to be responsible, godly men and women. He has also made a concerted effort to talk with his children every day during dinner and to make plans to spend time with one another once a week doing something fun. Being raised to serve others, Pastor José trusts that his children will continue to live out the gospel as they grow and mature. 

 

“Give your children space so they can develop their skills and learn to solve problems….When they can fend for themselves, they will be able to help people.”

 

Pastor José Molina is a committed father, pastor and community leader who not only loves and supports his immediate family but helps people with the greatest need within his community. We are grateful for Pastor Molina’s leadership and service. 

Transforming Lives Through Composting Latrines: A Story of Hope, Dignity, and Community Unity

Background:

The Eben-Ezer Church, together with the local community association and leaders, has identified the incredible need for proper waste management and education in Las Mañanitas, El Salvador. Currently, 70 families do not have access to adequate waste disposal, compromising the health of each family as well as the entire community. For the first stage of this project, the church and community have identified 30 families who are in great need of intervention. 

 

Make Shift Pit LatrinePit LatrineWaste Goes Into Ground Water

 

 

Impact Story Written by: Jackson Bueno

Las Mañanitas is a rural hamlet in the coffee-rich area of Sonsonate, El Salvador. The broader area of Juayua comprises approximately 24,465 people, 42% of whom are struggling with multidimensional poverty.  Most families rely on small-scale farming and seasonal coffee employment to survive, making roughly $140 per month. Homes are often built with makeshift materials and most families do not have running water or bathrooms in or near their homes. They use open-air pits that leak into water sources, causing a variety of illnesses, especially dangerous to children under five. 

 

Make shift Pit Latrine               Pit Latrine

 

As a member of the Las Mañanitas community, Ingrid, a young homemaker and mother, faced challenges similar to those of her neighbors. While Ingrid cares for their two children, her husband finds work harvesting coffee and farming their own small family plot of corn and beans. But when the coffee season comes to an end, he is forced to find work elsewhere, often causing him to be away from home for days on end. According to Ingrid, having a latrine right outside her door was a dream that seemed to be years away. Until they could save enough money, they had to use open-air pits, which lacked any privacy, was worrisome in terms of her family’s health and personal safety, and was incredibly taxing as she raised her children. 

 

This changed when Eben-Ezer Church, working with its community, stepped in by helping them and many other families in her neighborhood build a composting latrine next to their homes.

 

New Composting Latrines

 

During the building process, however, Ingrid became worried that she could not contribute in the way all beneficiary families are asked. The project’s design relied both on donations from others but also on the participation of each beneficiary family in the form of labor and/or additional materials. When the project commenced, her husband was away working and her son fell ill, which threatened to drain the meager savings they had. 

 

When church members heard of her distress, they volunteered to help. Ingrid noted that it was the son of the pastor who led the volunteers as they transported materials to her home and helped to build, keeping her dreams of having a latrine on their homestead. 

 

Family in front of new composting latrine
Ingrid and her two young children in front of her new composting latrine.

 

The implementation of a composting latrine significantly transformed Ingrid’s family life and broader community, enhancing emotional well-being, safety, and environmental health. More than a mere physical structure, this initiative instilled hope, upheld dignity, and demonstrated a tangible expression of God’s love, marking a profound shift towards sustainable living and community unity.

Triumph in El Triunfo: A Community’s Journey to Clean Water

From Pastor Orlando’s earliest memories until last fall, the people of El Triunfo have suffered from water scarcity. In the dry season, they used to trespass to collect water from distant springs on private property. In the rainy season, they collected rainwater, filtered it through a cloth, and drank water the color of weak coffee that gave them parasitic dysentery. 

 

When vomiting and diarrhea grew severe, they either spent $30 for a truck ride to the clinic in Ciudad Barrios or they walked 10 km over washed-out roads while sick.

 

Contaminated Water

 

Water scarcity was not all that troubled “Brother Orlando,” as he’s known today. He was also haunted by questions about whether or not he’d be a good father, having grown up without a dad as a role model. 

 

In 2009, ENLACE began to accompany Emanuel Church in El Salvador  where Brother Orlando was pastor. His community, El Triunfo,  identified “scarcity and difficulty obtaining drinkable water” as their number one problem, so Brother Orlando helped found the Community Development Association of El Triunfo (known by its Spanish acronym, ADESCO). With Emanuel Church’s support, the newly-organized ADESCO began meeting with their mayor. Eventually, their efforts were rewarded with the donation of a plot of land with a spring on it! 

 

Community Meeting

 

Community Meeting

 

Community members immediately invested in improving the land, then started raising funds to build a water tank and distribution system. Fundraising for such a project proved too ambitious for the subsistence farmers of El Triunfo, but Brother Orlando didn’t give up. 

 

Salvadorans in community

 

From 2010 to 2019 Emanuel Church and community leaders worked together on smaller projects like eco stoves, composting latrines, and a crosswalk over a road. They hosted medical visits, repaired their local school’s roof, and even built homes.

 

“Those were not wasted years,” says Brother Orlando, smiling with pride as he shares that every step of the way the church and ADESCO were learning valuable lessons about building relationships, mobilizing local resources, project design, implementation, monitoring, evaluation, sustainability, and tangibly loving neighbors as an expression of God’s love. 

 

Ten years into their journey, in 2019, Emanuel Church and community leaders decided it was time to finally tackle the water problem. They designed storage tanks and a distribution system. They managed six to ten volunteer workers each day, women and men alike, for several months nonstop. Two ENLACE Short-Term Service Trip teams joined the effort. Then the rainy season hit. Work was delayed. Then COVID-19 brought everything to a halt…but Brother Orlando didn’t give up. 

 

Emanuel Church partnered with ENLACE, World Vision, and the mayor’s office to make sure the community’s poorest families had food and made visits to attend to people’s spiritual lives. 

 

Work resumed in June 2022, but COVID had taken a toll. Working-aged people had fled to the US for work out of desperation. Family economies were unstable. The government had abused its COVID-related powers, arresting innocent people, leaving few workers…but Brother Orlando didn’t give up.

 

Woman digging

 

Everyone at Emanuel Church prayed to God for guidance. The few church and community members left, mostly women, got back to work. Teenagers helped. People who had fled to the US heard about the effort and started raising money to pay day laborers from the neighboring town—God had answered their prayers. 

 

Building Water Tank

 

Water Tank

 

Once again, Emanuel Church and the ADESCO were meeting regularly with the mayor, who sent two excavators to help bury pipe. “They did six months of work in six weeks!” said Brother Orlando. And then World Vision kicked in to help buy the remaining water pipe that was still needed to finish the project.

 

People digging

 

At the end of 2023—14 years after he helped form El Triunfo’s ADESCO—Brother Orlando helped form a new Water and Sanitation Administrative Board of El Triunfo, and enlisted ENLACE to train its members. For his great commitment and trustworthy character Brother Orlando was elected as Treasurer of the new Water Board.

 

Today, church and community leaders are at work connecting the water distribution network to every home. Each homeowner must build a grease trap and sump pit for greywater treatment to be eligible for water service. The community works with a harmony that would’ve been difficult to achieve had this been their first project. 

 

Adding underground pipes for water

 

Brother Orlando thanked God repeatedly as he recounted this story for World Water Day. He wiped away tears as he remembered taking church member Sister Reina to the hospital, close to death caused by contaminated water. He remembered Sister María twisting her ankle in the mountains walking for water, and everyone getting sick and walking 10 kilometers to the clinic, managing their vomiting and diarrhea along the way.

 

Salvadorans with a thumbs up

 

Never again. And we pray that Brother Orlando will never again wonder if growing up without a dad would result in parental shortcomings. With God as his Father, the prayers of his church community, and ENLACE as a guide, Brother Orlando is not only a loving father at home, but also a trusted ADESCO President, Water Board Treasurer, and now pastor of a new church, God of Justice Church in El Zúngano, where the adventure of loving his neighbors begins again. 

Celebrate International Women’s Day: 4 Portraits of Empowerment and Hope

International Women’s Day is celebrated around the world in March of every year. This year, we celebrate and recognize ENLACE Church Coaches who work tirelessly to invest in women every day. Women who are valued, supported, and trained play an especially important role in community leadership. Whereas men often work away from home, women leaders are more likely to care for children and represent their needs in community development plans.

ENLACE’s Church and Community Program makes a meaningful impact through leadership, vocational, and technical training, and offers social, physical, and emotional support to women in each country that ENLACE serves. Here, we share four unique portraits of women of all ages from El Salvador, Guatemala, Nicaragua, and Nepal.

 

Salvadoran woman

 

Reina’s a remarkable young woman from El Salvador who’s grown up seeing her parents make a big difference in their church and community. She took those lessons to heart, diving into everything from teaching kids at church to singing in the worship band and even getting her hands dirty with major community projects such as building gutters, improving roads and school infrastructure and participating in leadership training in community development initiatives like chicken farms through ENLACE’s Church and Community Program.

 

Due to her incredible love and commitment, others in her community recently elected her as a community leader. She now serves on the Community Development Association for the village of Chantusnene. People aren’t just impressed by what she can do; they’re inspired by who she is—her endless joy, her grit in facing challenges head-on, and her heart for helping out where it’s needed most. 

 

 

Guatemalan Woman

 

Growing up, Maria Jose saw firsthand the limited opportunities for girls to engage in sports, not to mention the safety concerns that come with it. That all changed when local church and community leaders introduced a soccer academy as part of a violence prevention initiative, welcoming over 80 kids and creating a safe space for everyone. This academy is more than just playing soccer; it’s about building character, teaching life values, and pushing for gender equality. Maria and the other participants got more than just soccer training; they were inspired by talks and supported with the right gear, thanks to the contributions of the Comunidad Cristiana Maná church, where a majority of the members are women and young people who have a strong desire to serve their community.  For Maria, the program was a game-changer. It taught her that her gender doesn’t define her limits—in sports or life. Today, Maria’s not just better at soccer; she’s made many new friends and has grown closer to her family, all while breaking stereotypes and paving the way for other girls in Guatemala.

 

 

Nicaraguan woman

 

Before ENLACE’s Church and Community Program introduced vocational workshops to her community in Nicaragua, Ana was a woman of limited resources. She had no hope of a decent living wage because of her lack of education and training. Ever since she was a teenager, Ana worked in other people’s homes washing, ironing and doing other chores. There were times when Ana had insufficient food and could not afford hygiene products. Her children did not always attend school because they lacked basic food for lunches and supplies. But thanks to ENLACE’s church accompaniment model, the church can be the entity that brings hope to women through tools that contribute to their personal growth and drive women like Ana to dream of a transformed community. Women can be trained to create businesses and become entrepreneurs. 

 

Ana was trained in a beauty vocational workshop and now specializes in manicures and pedicures. This new skill generates more income for her and her family. She bought new clothes for her children and encourages them to participate in school and play with other kids. Today, Ana is part of the local church and supports other women who want to learn a trade in vocational workshops like she did. “I had always been taught that I was born to be poor and forgotten, and that I would die in the same condition.” But Ana’s heart and mind have changed. She now has a new vision for herself and her children.

 

Nepali women and children

 

In Nepal, women like Ranjita confront daunting challenges. Born into families of low caste, they face societal disdain and struggle with self-acceptance. This cycle of poverty and rejection makes education and securing a living wage nearly impossible, further isolating them from their communities.

 

Ranjita’s story, however, takes a turn toward hope and empowerment. With the support of the local church and the ENLACE Church and Community Program, she transitioned from a life of marginalization to one of leadership and impact. She became a teacher and joined the staff of a school founded by the local church that serves the most marginalized children in Durgabhawani. Ranjita not only educates her students but also instills in families the value of learning and the understanding that they are loved and accepted by God.

 

Beyond teaching, Ranjita received training in proposal writing and running development projects. She has embraced this role in community advocacy, raising awareness on critical issues like human trafficking and child marriage. Through the church’s emotional, spiritual, and technical support, she has found her voice and purpose. Ranjita feels empowered to make a difference and is motivated and equipped to serve her community. The church has helped her see her worth, and she now sees that she has an essential role in helping her community’s poorest to live with dignity and hope.

 

Ranjita’s journey from exclusion to empowerment exemplifies the profound impact that a church can have when walking with its community and looking for ways to serve. Liberty Church and others working with ENLACE Nepal, are nurturing hope in some of the world’s hardest places.

 

 

Nepali woman

 

We hope you will join us as we invest in women like Reina, Maria, Ana and Ranjita to feel valued, loved and supported, nurtured and trained, and empowered to create positive change in their own lives and in the lives of others. 

5 HIGHLIGHTS OF 2023!

While there are many more stories of what God is doing through people at ENLACE, we would like to highlight 5 that were possible thanks to the gifts and prayers of supporters like you!

In 2023 ENLACE…

 

…answered prayers in Guatemala!

Check out this webpage or this video to learn why Church Coaches like Marielos Morales say ENLACE’s long-term accompaniment is exactly what churches in her country need. 
Group of Women
Mica Shive Bueno visits Marielos and Karla, two church coaches in Guatemala.
 

…helped women empower women! 

ENLACE’s Mica Shive Bueno launched and led the Shine Collective, a network of people who gather to learn, build community, and empower women through ENLACE because investing in women builds healthy communities
Group of Women
Mica Shive Bueno on a recent Shine Pilgrimage trip to Guatemala.
 

…saw church demand for ENLACE skyrocket in Nicaragua! 

Last fall we shared this video about the Orellana family’s adventures from El Salvador to Nepal to Nicaragua where hundreds of churches asked for an ENLACE partnership. Well, that number is now in the thousands. We’ve never seen anything like it, so please pray with us as we seek God’s guidance to meet even a fraction of that demand. 
People in front of a church
Executive Director, Ron Bueno visiting a church in Nicaragua.
 

…saw God at work in Nepal!

This year you helped churches in Nepal train and equip women to work as seamstresses. You helped churches equip marginalized neighbors to start family businesses raising chickens, pigs, and goats, making the love of Jesus visible in places where it’d once been unwelcome.
Nepali woman sewing
Nepali woman in seamstress vocational training.
 

And we celebrated our 30 years of helping churches end poverty in their communities! 

In this video, ENLACE’s Executive Director, Ron Bueno, tells the story of a few Salvadoran pastors from poor communities who created a development methodology that now helps transform churches and communities across Nepal, Guatemala, and Nicaragua. As we look back at 30 years of faithfulness, it becomes clearer what God has been preparing us for all along. 
Balloons Celebrating 30 Years
30 Years Celebration in El Salvador.
 

We hope you’ll share the joy of taking part in our work in 2024!