Ministry That Began with Caring for 2 Severely Ill Children Dumped in Trash Finds Home
250 Christians Attend Grand Opening of ‘Beautiful Gate’ Orphanage in Mexico’s Baja
By Alex Murashko, Special to ASSIST News Service
MANEADERO, BAJA CALIFORNIA, MEXICO (ANS – Feb. 9, 2016)
--Christians from Southern California traveled by tour buses to a
suburb of Ensenada, Mexico, to join 150 local missionaries and believers
recently to attend the grand opening of Puerta Hermosa (Beautiful Gate)
Orphanage, a unique complex that serves as the home for abandoned and
severely ill special needs children of Baja.
It
is the incredibly heart-wrenching stories of the children that come to
Puerta Hermosa, and the call for Christians to take care of “the least
of these” that motivated groups such as Strong Tower Ministries, based
in Orange County, California, to build the complex and for others,
including 100 people from the U.S., to be a part of the well-attended
grand opening in Maneadero.
A
couple of days before the recent ceremony, Beautiful Gate Orphanage and
Genesis Diez (umbrella ministry) founder Greg Amstutz told this
reporter the story of two children that were the first taken in for
care, resulting in the start of the Beautiful Gate Orphanage 10 years
ago.
Amstutz
said he was told by one of the residents in the area he was serving
that a mother of four was so distraught about her two severely sick
children that “she was either going to dump them on the curb because she
could not deal with it anymore or she was going to kill them.”
“That
night, on a rainy, cold night in Baja we were taken to her home by the
man who told us about the situation and we were taken to a very low
income apartment complex,” Amstutz explained. “She and two of the
children were over in one corner sitting on a cardboard that was her
mattress resting on a concrete floor. The three of them were huddled
together in a blanket in a place full of cockroaches. There were mice,
and it was ugly. But the other two girls were nowhere to be seen.
“We
asked where the other two girls were, and their names were Maria and
Margarita, and she said they were here. I asked where, and over in the
corner there was a pile of trash, but when you looked, the pile was
shaking and underneath this pile of trash she had already thrown away
both of her little girls for I’m not sure how many days… the mother
agreed that we could take them to the hospital.”
The
two girls were in a hospital for a month before they were released.
Amstutz and his ministry tried to help the mother with day care and the
administration of medicines, but realized after a year of efforts that
she was not going to be able to handle the children and the procedure
involved with the medicine.
“We
prayed about the situation and it was obvious that God was calling us
to start an orphanage for disabled children,” Amstutz said. The girls
came under the ministry’s care, but a diagnosis for the girls was never
really found. A woman that served on a short-term missionary trip hosted
by the ministry was told of the symptoms and said the children may have
Huntington’s Disease, something rare for their ages. The care for the
two girls became a hospice care situation, and the children died within a
four-year period, he said.
He
added, “Beautiful Gate is out of Acts 3:2 which is where Peter did the
healing of the disabled man before that beautiful gate of the temple in
Jerusalem and not only was that healing representative of what we want
for our kids, to bring them to their fullest potential, but at that time
as written in the Bible, a huge amount of people accepted Christ. It’s
not only to be a help to the disabled, but to be a light to Jesus
Christ.”
In
addition to providing 24/7 medical care and a home for up to eight
children, Puerta Hermosa serves as the offices for Genesis Diez – a
ministry that has been without a permanent home since its start 22 years
ago.
Genesis Diez serves as the umbrella ministry for three other ministries besides Beautiful Gate Orphanage.
“After
I accepted Jesus into my life in 1991 I asked for God’s will in my life
and He showed me that I should take care of children in Baja,” said
Amstutz. “The very first projects were Rancho Genesis orphan summer
camps. That ministry still exists today.”
Another
ministry, “Footprints” under Genesis Diez serves children of the
migrant farm working families in the area. The ministry is “very
relational,” including bible study, food baskets with prayer in the
families’ homes and English classes. “Our emphasis for the children is
attending public school education which creates independence and a
future rather than dependency,” he said.
From
leukemia cases to severe heart and brain problems, Beautiful Gate
Orphanage takes care of these orphaned children “by embracing them into
our family as our own sons and daughters,” say the ministry leaders.
“Our prayer is to model and advocate compassion, justice, and proper
care systems for these children with the parents of special need
children, orphanages and all of the people of Mexico.”
“The Lord provided us with a beautiful base and home where He wants us,” Amstutz said. “It’s been an awesome blessing.”
The four ministries under Genesis Diez are:
*
Rancho Genesis: Spring and Summer camps for week-long church camps for
orphans, relationally paired with Mission Teams from the states.
* Beautiful Gate Orphanage (Puerta Hermosa): Full time care for special needs children with brain damage and severe illnesses.
* Footprints: English and Bible teaching for the indigenous children of the area.
* Koinonia: Helping other ministries in the area to “further the Kingdom.”
On the Web: http://genesisdiez.org and on Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/GenesisDiez
Photo
captions: 1) Some of the Mexican children that are being helped. 2)
cutting the red ribbon. (Strong Tower Ministries/Bob Ortiz). 3) Greg
Amstutz). 4) Inside one of the facilities. (Strong Tower Ministries/Bob
Ortiz). 5) Alex Murashko.
About
the writer: Alex Murashko, a regular ANS contributor, is currently
working with One Ten Pictures as an associate producer, developing and
working on projects that include stories about people and organizations
making a difference in this world as ambassadors for Christ. He
previously was a Church & Ministry Editor/Reporter for The Christian
Post. He also worked at the Los Angeles Times Orange County Edition and
at the Press Enterprise in its Southwest Riverside County bureau.
Current projects include working with Homes of Promise, a non-profit
that provides residential “restoration” homes for men in Southern
California. HOP facilitates a safe, sober and Christ-centered housing
environment for men in recovery. Murashko lives in Southern California,
and enjoys serving within life recovery and homeless ministries. Los
Angeles has a special place in his heart… as well as tacos and salsa! He
can be contacted at alex@alexmurashko.com .
** You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).
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