Shoveling piles of snow was a big adjustment for Walter Bonilla and his family when they moved from Honduras to Edmonton, Alta., in 2013.
But every time he steps out into that biting winter air, Bonilla has a reminder that he didnāt have to make this adjustment without helpāfor instance, his jeans.
āItās a pair of jeans with insulators, and I always remember those jeans because they came from my church.ā
Bonilla and his family came to Edmonton as refugees, where, along with the big adjustment to a new climate, they faced many other struggles that come with moving to a new place, including a lack of language skills, resources, and community.
āAfter a few weeks of living in the city, we knew we needed help,ā Bonilla recalled, āa place where we could get support.ā
For Bonillaās family, that place was mosaicHouse, planted with support from Christian Reformed Home Missions. Through a family friend, Walter connected with Victor Ko, mosaicHouseās pastor, and attended a Sunday service.
āWe were really nervous.We sat in the back row, almost like we didnāt want to be seen.ā
That feeling of unease quickly went away. That first day, the family joined in āTable Fellowship,ā mosaicHouseās weekly potluck.
Bonilla and his wife were able to have conversations with other adults in their first language instead of having their children translate for them.
They soon joined one of mosaicHouseās āhouse churchesā and began to feel like they were part of the community.
āWe want you to feel that God is a welcoming and hospitable God,ā said Ko, the pastor who planted mosaicHouse. āThis is a value that we cultivate; we appreciate, we welcome, emulating who God is. Many of us are in a house church; we build friendships and that naturally exudes into mosaicHouse.ā
āMosaicHouse is a family for sure,ā agreed Bonilla. āWe are a church. We are divided into house churches, and that is a small group of people that you connect better with. For us, this is a second family and the whole church is a third family.ā
As Bonilla gained a stronger sense of belonging to Edmonton, he and his family, in turn, felt a stronger sense of belonging to Christ. He and both his sons were baptized at mosaicHouse.
āWe have become more close to God here in this city than we were before,ā said Bonilla. āI was never so close to a church as here. Never involved at this level, never praying like I do now.ā
About the Author
Brian Clark, ReFrame Ministries