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list my tears on your scroll-
are they not in your record?
-Psalm 56:8 (NIV)
(Aug. 9, 2013 - by Ruth Pike and Ralph Kurtenbach) Returning to Ecuador after 40 years, Robbyn Booker has been thrilled by the "blessing of being able to come here and see what the Lord did with those tears that I shed." A child of evangelical missionaries, she grew up in the South American country during the 1960s.
Her former church in Quito, Iglesia Evangélica de Iñaquito, has grown 20-fold and is still growing. Iñaquito Evangelical Church is now led by Ecuadorians rather than North American missionaries. Offering five services every Sunday, the congregation meets across from Radio Station HCJB's campus in Quito where her parents, Leonard and Imogene Booker, served in English-language broadcasting. The church is now sending workers around the world, including countries often closed to North American missionaries.
For Booker, the hardships of growing up as a foreigner in another country were definitely worthwhile. Originally from California, she arrived in Quito with her family in 1962 just prior to her 11th birthday. Producing programs for listeners around the world via international shortwave radio, her parents also responded to listeners who wrote to the station.
Typical programming included news and cultural shows followed by a short Bible message. Every Thursday after school, the children of the radio producers would sing Sunday school songs and perform skits for live radio and television, including a popular children's radio program called Gospel Bells.
Booker also used to play the piano for church services at the Iñaquito church, whose congregation began decades ago in the home of Dr. Paul Roberts, founder of the mission's Hospital Vozandes-Quito. His wife, Barbara, who served as a nurse, held Bible studies known as "kids' clubs" in the couple's backyard.
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Robbyn Booker takes an excursion to the equator monument north of Quito. |
Daily life was an adjustment too. Shops were few and far between, prompting difficulties in buying even common conveniences, including shampoo.
Booker said that for the first four years, "every night I cried myself to sleep." However, a trip to the U.S. on home ministry assignment in 1965 involving visits to donors and family enabled her to see Ecuador as home and gave her a greater excitement for the work there.
In 1969 she began living in the U.S. In the ensuing decades, in spite of developing a successful career in banking, she declares, "I've always prayed, 'Please don't let this be my life.'" Then in 2006 a short-term voluntary trip to Ukraine reignited a longstanding interest in serving God overseas.
However, the real push came in September 2012 when she was unexpectedly laid off. This news came as a shock for Booker, but not to her daughter who confessed, "I was praying for you to lose your job!" As she came to terms with this, she asked God, "Are you freeing me up?"
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Helping at Pan de Vida (Bread of LIfe), a ministry that provides meals to people in Quito. |
Life is never without its challenges, and unexpected health problems greeted her in Quito. Yet she is still able to declare confidently that "the Lord is in control and He has a purpose."
"I'm feeling so blessed to be here," she relates. "This makes it like the full circle." Seeing the growth of her former church and the continuing work of HCJB Global has given Booker a fresh perspective on the trials she experienced growing up in a different culture. Looking back on her childhood in Ecuador, she can genuinely say that "not one tear was wasted."
Source: HCJB Global