Dr. Fountain's Discovery
Mission:
Moving Mountains was founded in 1979 by Dr. Richard Patterson. Dr.
Patterson, a dentist, had ministered in several countries and
repeatedly saw problems and situations that he knew could be prevented.
He believed that God’s love for people encompassed the whole person,
not just the spiritual life, but the whole life situation that a person
and community face. The vision grew in his heart to send Christians
from different denominations as missionaries to work together with
African communities. These missionaries would learn about the culture
and language of the people, they would help the community to identify
their challenges and resources, and equip them to solve those
challenges; all while community members grow in faith for Jesus.
He
didn’t think this ministry would be easy, rather it would require faith
in Christ and working hand in hand with God. We see this kind of faith
discussed in Matthew 17:20 which is where the name Mission: Moving
Mountains comes from: "...if you have faith as small as a mustard seed,
you can say to this mountain, 'Move from here to there' and it will
move. Nothing will be impossible for you." Our starting point in this
ministry is faith in Christ and that with Him, the mountains can be
moved, and the challenges of life can be overcome.
Dr. Daniel
Fountain, a friend of Dr. Patterson’s and one of M:MM's first board
members, tells about a three year old boy in Zaire. The boy’s family
carried the boy for three days to the mission hospital where Dr.
Fountain worked. The boy was close to dying because of a problem in his
abdomen. During the operation to save his life, Dr. Fountain found 500
worms in the boy’s intestines. The boy recovered and the family took
him back home. A year later, this same boy was again brought to the
hospital with worms and required another operation. Dr. Fountain
realized that this family’s life could be different if there was a
focus on prevention of this problem. This was not just a health
problem. It was an economic problem because of the cost of the
operation and hospital fees. The condition of the environment where
they boy lived and played affected his health. This problem illustrates
how complicated one illness is because many factors are related to the
problem. It is true in this story and in our lives that each area of
life has an impact on other areas of life. Dr. Fountain knew that if
someone could go to the village and train the people how to improve the
environment, sanitation, and personal hygiene practice, this boy and
many others could live free of parasites, thus saving them from
physical suffering and the great expense of hospitalization and
surgery. We say M: MM has a wholistic approach in our ministry because
we consider how many factors are involved making the issues individuals
face a community wide problem.