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Adventure, ministry on Pathfinder missions
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Pathfinder Missions
The Pathfinders are men dedicated to hands-on missionary work in various areas
oftheworld. The purpose of the Pathfinder's program is to meet a special need in
MissionsAbroad Placement Service (MAPS) construction: to go and serve where other
teams are unable.
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NY DISTRICT FCF PRESIDENT CHARLIE LASHURE RETURNS FROM PATHFINDERS TRIP TO BOLIVIA.
Our team met in Miami Fl. for our flight to Bolivia, we had flown in from all over the Northeast Region for our final leg of the long journey to build a church in Urubicha. After an overnight flight we arrived in Santa Cruz just before 8 am the following morning where we loaded up for the seven-hour bus ride to Urubicha By Charlie LaShure
GOALS
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Around the world, hundreds of people groups are still unreached. That's why Pathfinder Missions teams part of an international fellowship of like-minded organizations working in cooperation.
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By plane, boat, mule and foot, Pathfinder Missions teams — an outgrowth of Royal Rangers ministry — have traveled to remote villages to build and remodel churches, schools and orphanages.
"It’s an adventure — and that’s what Royal Rangers is," says Fred Deaver, president of Frontier Camping Fellowship, an arm of the Royal Rangers ministry that reaches boys through the application of early American tradition. "We go to areas where others aren’t able to go."
To some people, bricks, mortar, hammers and nails are simply construction tools. But to a growing number of Assemblies of God church members, they represent much more. They are missions tools.
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| In some communities, the church or school built by the boys and men in the Pathfinder team is the only permanent structure among thatch dwellings. |
The result is always ministry. In some communities, the church or school built by the boys and men in the Pathfinder team is the only permanent structure among thatch dwellings. Newly constructed churches are often filled to capacity immediately after being built.

Pathfinder teams have worked in Panama, the Dominican Republic, Chile, Bolivia, Honduras, Nicaragua and Mexico. They have even worked in Mongolia in the middle of winter.
The idea for the trips was birthed in 1991 while Paul Etheridge, a lieutenant with the Missouri Highway Patrol and a member of the FCF executive committee, was on a MAPS trip in Mexico.
"We found out from a missionary that the construction missionaries can’t really get down into the brush," he says. "There were hundreds of churches in those areas that needed help."
Since then, interest in the program has grown as teams come back and share reports, Etheridge says. It’s teamwork that makes the Pathfinder trips successful, says Darren R. Geesaman, northeast region coordinator for Royal Rangers.
"When you go on a Pathfinder trip, who you are and what you do for a living seems so far away. … Everybody pitches in, works hard, has fun — and we get the job done to the glory of God."
Gerald Jackson, who coordinates builders trips for the Missions Abroad Placement Service (MAPS) of the A/G, went on a Pathfinder trip up the Amazon.
"It was an eight-hour boat trip, and we slept in a hammock on the boat," he says.
Etheridge remembers a trip in the Andes when a team had to rebuild a roadbed to get out of the mountains.
Like all MAPS teams, the Pathfinders raise their own travel costs and money for the project they are going to complete. But the Pathfinders focus on remote areas where projects must be completed under harsh conditions.
"Occasionally there are projects and needs where it’s not practical to take a [typical MAPS] team because there aren’t accommodations for them, specifically food or lodging," Jackson says. "It wasn’t an effort to be ‘Rambo’ or anything like that; it was an effort to meet a need. These teams are self-sufficient. They take their tents, camping stoves, water purification system and MRE’s (meals ready to eat)."
— Becky Walters Reigel and Paul H. Walters II
For more information on MAPS Builders contact:
Assemblies of God World Missions
Special Ministries
1445 Boonville Avenue
Springfield, MO 65802-1894
Voice: (417) 862-2781, extension 2082
E-mail: AGWM MAPSBuilders@ag.org
Gerald Jackson is MAPS construction representative for Assemblies of God World Missions.
| This information is available through Gospel Publishing House in hard-copy format in the brochure “MAPS Builders.” Item number 717-650. |







