|
Paradise
Mountain Ministries (PMM) began
in the home of its founder, Carolyn
Eckman, and her four children.
Carolyn and her husband, David, had been
missionaries in Indonesia for 18 years,
and they were living in the United
States when he was diagnosed with cancer.
After David's death, Carolyn and her
children returned to Irian Jaya for
several weeks. Upon arrival back
to her home in Toccoa, Georgia, in 1982,
she found that their house was occupied
by 10 MKs who needed a place to stay.
For a time
there were regularly 15 people at the table.
Through these experiences, God gave a vision for
a home specifically to care for the college-age
MKs who had no where to call home in the United
States while their parents were serving in an
overseas ministry.
 |
Soon Carolyn's attention
was drawn to an old, vacant farmhouse on 25 acres.
The appraised value was much too high for this widow to
afford, yet in 1990, God opened the way for her to have
first choice on the property. She was given six
days to come up with 20% of the price, after which the owner
would then hold the mortgage for 10 years. |
She spent five days in
prayer, shedding tears and making phone calls. On
the sixth day, an interest-free, ninety-day loan for the
20% was offered. That offer was accepted and the
loan was paid in full within the 90 days.
|
More people caught
the vision of caring for MKs, and within four
years the property was paid off. The
old
farmhouse was renovated and young people began
to move in to the house. |
 |
 |
Before long, the
need exceeded the space available, so a
second
house was built to accommodate 16 more young
people and a resident manager family.
This, too, is debt-free.
In a span of ten
years, more than 200 young adults have made PMM
their home away from home. |
|