the G sides

the randomness of a distracted existential tour guide.
Posts Tagged ‘Brazil’

Topeka Food: Toucan Express



Image is from Food&Flicks.

Toucan Express
1003 S.E. Quincy
Topeka, KS 66612
(785) 233-5900

Grabbed lunch with my good friend Gary Manford yesterday and we decided to try the Toucan Express – Brazilian Buffet. After 10 years of visiting Brazil, my family has a love for the Brazilian food and culture.

Let me get the most annoying thing about this place out of the way right now. Parking. I realize that really isn’t the Toucan Express’s fault but this location has seen something like 37 dinner restaurants come and go. I think the biggest reason is parking. There is nowhere to park and the 4 places you can park is going to cost you about a $1 an hour – in coins.

START OF MINI-RANT: I wonder if the city of Topeka really wants the downtown area to thrive or not. They seem to do everything in their power to make life difficult for the customer. It’s a shame because I can count 6 places that I think are superior places to eat but are absolutely ridiculous to get to because of parking and parking meters. END OF RANT.

I didn’t have any coins. So I walk in and ask Gary if he’s got any coins and he doesn’t. The waiter reaches in his pocket and pulls out 3 quarters and gives them to me.
That has got to be the best service I’ve had in a long time. (And you can bet I rewarded him greatly with my tip after the meal.)

The decor is sparse. I wanted there to be this overwhelming sense of smells and sights that took me back to Brazil. The smells were there. The sights were not. Of course, they are still in their soft opening phase. If you aren’t familiar with what a soft opening is – see Oceans 13.

Toucan Express only serves lunch as of right now and every day is a different menu. Today being Thursday meant we got the Brazilian Roast Beef and Chicken Stroganoff. Of course, there were the usual rice, beans, yuka – potato like root from Brazil (very good), and their cornbread. Two kinds of cornbread – the regular and coconut. I’m not a fan of coconut but Gary is. I lost track of how many pieces he ate. I assume that means he thought it was very, very, good. Rice pudding was also served as a dessert.

The food was very good and hearty…and plenty of it. The beef skewers were outstanding. Thin pieces of beef wrapped and marinated — good night, it was good. I’m not really doing it justice. The cook came out and spent some time talking to us. She asked about our food and the conversation turned to her home in Rio de Janeiro.

Overall: Good place to eat. 10 bucks gets you all-you-can-eat buffet and a drink. Pretty reasonable.

Parking is a nightmare, I hope they can overcome that.

Future Plans: Chef said that the hope is to have a churrascaria on the weekend. That’s the swords full of meat for those of you wondering.

Brazil, Day 5

Ulbra school outside Gravatai.  Ulbra stands for University Lutheran, Brazil.  Basically this school is a prep school for the Lutheran University.  All grades are here.  This school isa trying to be a bi-lingual school.  Hard to do as so few people speak English.  Our presence is huge for them.  They begged Thomas for us to stay the whole day. 

The school paused to sing the national anthem together.  I think that is cool.  Wish most schools still did the pledge of allegiance.

We are picking up some Portugeuse phrases. 

Diablo Verde – green devil.  Chemical used to unplug toilets.  See yesterday’s post. This has become a nickname for one of the team…not me but I can not divulge the identity.

Quaim faz isou – pronounced ‘cane faz esue’ which means ‘who does that?’

Afternoon classes were all elementary schools. The kids were awesome and so interactive! They love getting their picture taken as well. They are very concerned that US kids have to go to school 7 hours a day.

Shelby gave us a little scare tonighti.  She started shivering but she wasn’t cold.  After a little food and then wrapping her up in a blanket, she still wasn’t feeling right.   We get Thays (pronounced tie-ees), the camp nurse, and start praying.  Between the prayers and Thays – Shelby was back to normal in 10 minutes. 

We went to Johnny and Thays house after dinner.  What great hosts.  Cake and soccer.  The women played dutch-blitz.

Brazilian Youth Workers, Part 2

Here is part of the Q & A I had with youth leaders across the southern states of Brazil..

Name a couple of early leadership lessons that still impact you today.

First, I’m not God. Second, if I’m going to make it long term in ministry, I better get good at feeding myself spiritually.

Both of these lessons came at a great price – the price of failure. We meet students with huge needs and voids in their life – lack of a family, mom, dad, emotional or physical abuse, great hurt and needs – and part of what makes us good is that empathy and desire to meet those needs, to help. The danger is stepping in over our heads and thinking WE are going to make the difference.

They need Jesus more than anything else. They need that personal connection with Him because He is the only one that will heal completely, restore completely. If I step in and all of a sudden I am the hero – then I’m taking the place of God and it might be so subtle of a change that I don’t notice it until it is too late. So a student becomes more dependent on us than God or more in love with us than Jesus. Dangerous place to be for both them and us.

Eventually, we minister out of the overflow of who we are and what God is doing inside us. And if we aren’t consistently learning and feeding ourselves spiritually – there will be a crash.

If you are just starting out a student ministry, what’s the first thing you suggest doing?

Start with finding a couple of other people that are as crazy about students as you are. Then do life with them, grow with them and start investing in students. Size of group doesn’t matter at this point (if ever) but it’s the pattern of life on life discipleship that you want to learn and start reproducing in your workers.

Give students access to your life so they can see and hear and taste and touch Jesus in your everyday life.

How do you find volunteers

Pray like crazy. And start being observant. Teens are great at recruiting their own volunteers. Just watch what adults your students talk to and hang out with during church events or school events. What parents or mentors seem to attract students?

Get specific when you ask for volunteers. Have a task that is measurable for first time volunteers — like setting up this space, providing these resources, doing this certain job. Start this way and as they get ‘infected’ with the student ministry, they’ll move into deeper areas of serving.

Our culture is so sexual and there is this over-emphasis on physical beauty. The girls dress so provocatively – almost every media outlet uses sex to sell – how do we combat this? How do we speak to our students about this?

Tough question, one we face in the States as well. Amy and Lisa spoke to this question better than I did. I talked about ‘taking them to the crash site.’ In other words, walk the students to the inevitable conclusion of where their actions are taking them. Not a bad answer but Amy and Lisa’s answer was better.

They said — keep taking your students to the Word as to the kind of man/woman God wants them to be. Keep pushing a God-centered identity and being accountable to that. Mileage may vary but only a heart captured by God is going to be able to withstand the world’s temptation.

Youth ministry and youth workers have very little respect in our culture. How do lead in that kind of context? How do you deal with parents and students who won’t respect or follow leadership?

This was another tough question. After swapping war stories, I shared with them the passage God seemed to laser in my heart this last year and half as a new lead pastor — Philippians 2 — the whole chapter but here is the focal point for me happens in verses 3- 7:

Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit, but in humility consider others better than yourselves. Each of you should look not only to your own interests, but also to the interests of others.

Your attitude should be the same as that of Christ Jesus: Who, being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the very nature of a servant…

I’m not sure if there is any magic pill we can take to make others follow us or give us respect. The best thing I think to do is make sure every decision I make is because Jesus told me to do it. Nothing out of selfish-ambition. Having a team that is sold out to the vision will help discern what those decisions are but as leaders we have to make sure that we do what we do because it’s God-directed.

Talking With Brazillian Youth Workers, Part 1

One of the highlights of the trips for me had to be the opportunity to sit with over 20 youth workers from all over Rio Grande de Sol, Brazil. Most churches are very small and Catholicism & Spiritism still dominates the culture. Think Voodoo mixed with patron saints. We were told that most folks go to mass on Saturday morning then to their seance on Saturday night.

Here’s a quick list of the challenges they face:

* There are two kinds of Christianity competing in this culture. The “God wants you rich so do these things in order to secure his blessing” kind and those that stress the grace of God and Jesus death and resurrection. They are struggling hard to emphasize the Gospel and the grace of God, not man’s attempt to make God happy.

* So many churches fight against teens and children, fearing change.

* There are little to no student ministry resources in Portuguese.

* Churches are small and poor. Many times the Senior Pastor is the only paid staff of a church.

* Volunteers who run student ministries suffer from discouragement as there is no infrastructure of support for youth workers. There is also very little training for youth workers.

* Student culture is highly SEXUAL. Lot’s contributing factors to this – Brazilian teens can’t get a job until they are 18, school is only in session for half a day, and there are no sports or clubs for teens to get involved in after school. There is a lot of free time for students to do whatever they want with little to no accountability. Workers said they feel completely overwhelmed by sexuality in the culture – and it is everywhere – music, movies, fashion.

* Parent involvement is next to nothing in most churches. This has two huge negative side-effects for the churches. There is a very small pool of people to find volunteers. Whatever “good” the church does has to compete and stand against the 6 days, 22 hours they are away from church.

* Southern Brazil is called the Missionary Cemetery. The average lifespan of a Christian missionary in the area is 18 to 24 months.

All of these factors are what pushed Thomas Schneider to start Palavra da Vida Sul 20 years ago. Over the years, he’s developed a long-term strategy and team to help churches and communities in reaching teenagers with the clear message of the Gospel. Their Bible Club ministry is designed to train leaders how to teach the Scriptures to teens in a systematic way as well as providing Portuguese resources to churches for student ministry. Some of these Bible Clubs stand alone in communities where there is no evangelical presence, many of them partner with local churches as their student ministry. Their camp ministry and sports tourneys are opportunities for churches and these Bible Clubs to bring lost students to an environment where they can hear the gospel clearly.

As I listened to these youth workers talk about their struggles, so many of them were just like the ones we face in the States. Lack of parent involvement, the constant sexual pull of the culture, church cultures that seem to fight against teens instead of for them.

When I see what Thomas and PVSul is doing to help churches, I know I’m a part of something very special and unique in this culture. They are the pioneers right now, emphasizing to local churches the importance of life on life discipleship and engagement in the teenage world.

Tomorrow, Part 2. The Question & Answer session with these leaders.

Brazil In Retrospect

This Sunday morning you are NOT going to want to miss church. Our Brazil Team will unpack what happened during their recent mission trip to Porto Alegre. It was simply amazing and you’ll need to hear the stories from the students themselves. It was the first trip like this for each of our students, for one it was the first time on an airplane. To say it was a life-changing trip for them is an understatement.

Here are a couple of images of the trip. (I’ll post some more later…)

There are 156 Brazilian teenagers in this picture from all over the state of Rio Grande de Sol. 27 of them made the decision to follow Jesus the weekend of the retreat. About 2 of them spoke English. Immersion was the word of the weekend.

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Mr. Potato…not Mr. Potato-Head. He’s just as popular as Woody and Buzz. Had to get a picture with him.

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During the week we traveled around to all kinds of different schools – public, private, community, state, rich, and poor – telling them about life in America as well as why we were helping out Palavra da Vida. We were able to tell Jesus’ story in every single school we visited. And the students were treated like rock stars. More stories coming as a result of this.

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The Waterfall at the camp both up close and from a distance. There is a whole unique eco-system on the camp that one of their missionaries is taking advantage of. He’s discovered some new species of frog, iris, and a freshwater lobster. He’s like the real Bear Gryls.

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Brazil Update

We leave June 25 for Brazil to add another chapter to our partnership with Thomas & Agnes Schneider. We will take high school students to schools all over Porte Allegra, inviting them to a weekend English Camp. We’ll also do a retreat while we there. We are amped about the trip…the last time we took students to Brazil, we saw over 100 teenagers trust Jesus.

We are close to having all of our funds in as well. So many of you have been generous to me over the years, providing funds for these mission trips. We needed $7,000, you have given $6,500. How awesome is that?

If you haven’t given and would like to – I’ve got a couple of options for you.

You can shoot me an email — leave a comment or go to the contact page. I’ll give you all the info you need.

OR you could just send it straight to the church —

Grant & Amy English
c/o Western Hills Baptist Church
2900 SW Auburn Road
Topeka, KS 66614

Brazil in the memo.

Thank you all for the support – prayer and financial. I’ll be twittering/facebooking from Brazil but not sure how often I’ll get to blog.

Follow me @thegsides on Twitter.

Brazil Tour – Summer 2010

This summer, I get to return to my second home – Porto Allegra, Rio Grande du Sul, Brazil and my awesome friend at Word of Life. If you are curious exactly what goes on when students invade Brazil?

Take a gander at our 2005 trip. It is a pretty awesome trip. This year we are not only taking students but we are taking our own kids (Cooper, Camber, and Cayden).

My first trip to Brazil was back in 2001. I met Thomas and Agnes for the first time as well as their missionary team. Over the last 9 years we’ve watched the ministry grow and grow. I’ve been down there 6 times. Thomas and Agnes have been stateside probably that many times as well. There hasn’t been a year go by when we didn’t connect with this ministry in some way.

They minister in the region of Brazil called “The Missionaries Graveyard.” Average lifespan of a missionary there is around 18 months. The occult and a mix of Catholicism and Voodoo are the major religions. Public and private schools shut out any kind of ministry.

Thomas & Agnes have been there 18 years and are from that region. Thomas had a simple plan for the work.

First, create an outdoor educational experience that no schools could afford – soccer camps, adventure camps – and make it ridiculously cheap for schools to experience it.
Zip lines, climbing adventures, sport camps, ropes course, nature education, English camps – all part of the ministry. And because they are supported by US churches, they can offer these opportunities for next to nothing. Schools are lining up to experience what WOL offers. Thomas makes it a point to have poor schools come on his dime as well.

Second, be clear and consistent with the Gospel. Always. When schools sign up, Thomas is very clear with the administration – “You know why we are doing this, right? We want to make sure you understand the reason because we aren’t the real Hero, Jesus is. Let me tell you about Him.” Then every kid that hits the campus gets to hear the reason why they were able to enjoy that experience – because of Jesus. A couple of professional soccer players have heard about WOL and now they show up and tell students about Jesus as well.

Third, grow our own staff. Thomas is a people-developer person. The staff at WOL all have grown up inside the ministry. They are both products and producers of the vision. Listening to Thomas talk about discipleship (with his Brazilian accent) is like getting a drink of water from a fire hydrant. Read this here — you’ll be blown away. It’s pretty simple (not easy) – win the lost, grow them up, train them to lead others to Jesus, release them back to the wild.

Fourth, take this vision and training to local churches throughout the region. Thomas knows that his organization can’t do all the work. It’s crucial that local churches grow and embrace students so that the gospel can take root in the culture. And to that end, he and his team are investing in churches by training them how to do student ministry, how to do a small group Bible study and disciple teens.

In fact, this last piece of the puzzle is the center of Thomas’ latest push. He is building a dorm and some classrooms to establish a ‘seminary’ for student workers in southern Brazil. It would be the only theological training center located within thousands of miles. That’s part of the reason we’re going down this time. To figure out how we can help, what we can do.

We take off in late June, I’ll be bringing more updates the closer we get.

A Taste of Brazil

Thomas, Agnes, and Melissa Schneider were in town this weekend. I first met the Schneiders in 2002. I just arrived at Grace Church in Little Rock as the new youth pastor and a group was taking off for Brazil that November. So I went. It’s been 7 years, 4 more trips with dozens of students later and I can’t wait to go back.

We’ve watched each other kids grow up through email and pictures, catching each other whenever they are stateside. There are some people you meet once and your friends forever – that is the Schneiders.

My Western Hills family got to meet 3 of the 5 this weekend. What a blessing for me to see the connection between the two.

Let me quickly preach why we’ve stay connected to them.

They are about seeing teenagers meet Jesus.

They are about reproducing leaders who love introducing teenagers to Jesus.

They are about serving their community schools with educational programs they couldn’t otherwise afford so they can introduce teens to Jesus.

They are about serving and helping small, local churches do youth ministry so they can introduce teenagers to Jesus.

They are funny and cool as heck.

I think that pretty much sums it all up. Some of favorite pics of the weekend.

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Thomas is here

Oi to the bain…

Forgive my Porteguese spelling but Thomas Schneider is here for a day or two and I LOVE HANGING OUT WITH MY FRIEND!!!!!!

Here is a little something to get you up to speed on Thomas.


Leadership lessons from Thomas


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