Sunday, April 29, 2007
Re-entry and Reflection, Part 1
We return home safe and sound and.... tired. We've been traveling for nearly 36 hours straight. The closer we got to home the more homesick we became. Embrace of the rest of the family was sweet. It's good to be away and it's better to be home - good mattress, cool pillow, and no mosquito netting.
Even though it's only two weeks, it seems a lot has changed. Our worldviews are rocked, are passion for the world increased, and our appreciation of family and friends multiplied.
Friday brings the barrage of unopened mail. Then the e-mail program finally works - 216 messages greet me. Most are the usual items, but tucked here and there are updates from Trinity that keep us tied in. And then, there is one that grabs me hard - a notice that Dr. Lyle Vander Werff has died. I rejoice that he is in heaven but grieve with Phyllis and with her children - David, Kristyn, and Kathy - all of whom were in church together on Easter.
Lyle was my first college professor - the first period of the first day of my college experience. I'll never forget it. In OT Faith he gave me the words "Biblical Worldview." He taught us what a worldview is, what a Christian worldview is, and why it matters. He taught a class on world religions and how Christ's claims were unique and exclusive and worthy of making known to the ends of the world. He taught a class on personal evangelism, the books of which still are useful in my library. His passion for international students and concern for the lost was contagious. His teaching was a key step in God turning my heart to ministry and I am so grateful for his life and witness.
And there is culture shock. Two weeks among the poor will do that. Lauren and I laugh at the suggestion that we "need" the A/C on in the car. At the store we marvel at our selection and wonder why we should be so blessed and others truly struggle for their daily bread. We travel to Sioux City - 45 miles in 40 minutes - when the same journey a week ago took us 2 hours. And while it is much better to be with family than away, we desperately miss our new friends - will Bright e-mail us? Will Titus and Steven and Charity remember us? What are they doing right now? When can we go back?
Lauren is making plans to move. OK, maybe not just yet, but at least to take a semester of Study Abroad.
Saturday, April 28, 2007
Uganda Days 10-12 - R&R
After more than week of observing and participating in mission and ministry, Lauren and I head north about 400 kilometers to Murchison Falls National Park where we stayed at Paraa Safari Lodge, a place Ernest Hemmingway made famous when his plane crashed near here and he stayed for some time.

Paraa Lodge is an amazing place, given the remoteness of the setting. Think Blue Mountain Passport Club and you get small picture of it. We visited in what is the "off" season, and there were never more than three groups on site. This meant the wildlife was more accessible. In fact, we were able to see every significant mammal species in the reserve with the exception of the leopards and the male lions.
Rather than talk about it, enjoy some of the 200+ pictures we took of our guide Ally, the lodge, and the sights we saw. Click on any picture to see a bigger image.
Friday, April 27, 2007
Uganda Day 9 - Preach-till-you-drop :)
Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ..... he as given us new birth into a living hope... (1 Peter 1:3)

Lauren has now heard my message on 1 Peter 1:3-9 at least 5 times! She could probably preach it. So, after the 7:00 a.m. English worship service, she grabbed a taxi with a new friend to take the short drive back to the guest house. Taxis in Uganda are 15 passenger mini-buses known for sudden stops and wild drivers. Thankfully, her drive was uneventful.
As with last Sunday, the church is nearly full each service and people are joyfully praising the Lord. Seeta church has a part of the service during the offering when people come to the alter area and pray prayers of praise as part of their offering, and a prayer time that lasts about 30 minutes.
The pastor also warmly welcomes guests, whom he asks to come to the front. He prays for them and gives them a big hug - not exactly seeker sensitive in the US, but in Uganda people love the attention.
As part of worship, the pastor asks the church to give a little extra for the church's next purchase to help their ministry. This church has limited infrastructure, no rest rooms, no kitchen, no fellowship area, and limited electricity (we start the 7:00 a.m. service with a generator because the city has turned off the power to save energy).
So, what does the pastor say the church is saving for? No, not a bathroom or a kitchen, but --- a computer, a projector, and a screen :-).

I also noticed what looked like green cloth pouches that resembled our mail boxes. When I asked what they were, I was told they were offering envelopes. Each pouch is numbered, parishoners put their gift in the sack, place the sack in the offering, and the gift is recorded. Then a church volunteer puts the sack back on the rack - a reusable offering envelope!
At around 1 p.m., the preach-a-thon is finished. I'm tired but full of joy. The faith of the people is absolutely a blessing. I am energized by their passion for the gospel, their love for Jesus, and their concern for the lost. And, if Trinity needs to add a third service, I'm prepared!
After worship and lunch, the time has come for good-byes to our Ugandan friends. The week of ministry is over, many people came forward at evangelistic services, and Words of Hope Uganda has been launched. It has been a great privilege to witness and participate in this great week.
Rev. David Bast heads back to the airport for the 10:30 p.m. flight to Amsterdam and Detroit. Lauren and I head to Kampala for a night in a hotel before heading out to the north for a few days on a safari.

We stay in view of Lake Victoria and spend an evening meal with CRC missionaries Jim and Josephine Zylstra (friends of Orange City resident, Rod DeBoer). They welcomed us in their home and we enjoyed a meal at an Italian restaurant - our first without beans and rice in more than a week. We learned about the work that CRWRC is doing in Uganda and how missionaries experience life in Uganda.
Lauren asks, "Can we call our Uganda friends. I miss them already."
Uganda Day 8 - A Tale of Two Pearls
Matthew 13:45-46
A Tale of Two Pearls
Saturday saw a great contrast in experiences from morning to afternoon.
We accomplished in a short time on Saturday morning what we had hoped to get done on Friday. We exchanged some dollars for shillings (1705 to 1), we picked up a camera battery charger (PTL!), and we stopped at a new shopping district to pick up a few supplies.

Bright was especially keen to show us the new stores – a supermarket and a discount store – think Super WalMart with a Starbucks-type coffee place thrown in for good measure. Inside were all kinds of foods (processed with filtered water), products (made mostly in China), and people (all rushing after the latest thing). It was fun for a little while.
Then it hit me: will the developing world run after globalization and worship the gods of materialism like so much of the developed world? What will become of the 1,000s of little stands that families depend on for their only income? What does it mean to be truly "developed?"
What pearls is the world chasing after? What pearls am I chasing after?
Saturday afternoon brought into view a better Pearl.

A few hundred people showed up to march for Jesus and celebrate the beginning of Words of Hope Uganda’s gospel ministry. School children in their uniforms, choirs and praise teams from area churches, and many parishoners showed up to walk through the streets of Seeta’s markets, neighborhoods, and even the main road to Jinja to celebrate Jesus.


After the march, the people gathered in the hot sun and sang and prayed and listened to preaching to bless the ministry. The bishop also led a beautiful prayer for the gospel to reach the unreached. The day ended with a soccer match featuring Christian players from the national soccer program. They shared the gospel during timeouts and many young people came out for the event.
Here’s what I learned from this gathering of people: From their joyful determination to proclaim Christ, their absolute joy in the Lord, and their delight in making Christ known at every opportunity, they are showing to the world that they have found the Pearl of Great Price.
It is said that Uganda is “The Pearl of Africa,” but it is clear that for the Christians in Mukono Diocese that Jesus is their Pearl of Great Price.
As a post script, I want to share that one of the children’s groups was a Compassion Children’s Choir. The local church partners with Compassion International in their school program. I know that many families at Trinity support a child through Compassion. From what I witnessed, I can share with confidence and joy that Compassion is doing a great work.

Friday, April 20, 2007
Uganda Day 7 - Sabbath Friday




Thursday, April 19, 2007
Uganda Day 6 - Principalities & Powers



Uganda Day 5 - T.I.A.
T.I.A. "This is Africa." A phrase we hear when things don't go according to plan.
The power was out.... again. So I couldn't update you or do much of anything. The darkest dark I've ever been in. I'm writing late in the day on 19th.
But - GOOD NEWS! Half of East Africa showed up today with a camera charger! In Uganda, everyone's family. When someone has a need, everyone tries to help. Our friend Bright (yep, that's his name), the technology savvy videographer helping us, found a relative who worked in an office who had the same model, and our friends at the Christian Reformed World Relief Committee also had one. Praise God for small answers to prayer.
Wednesday morning borought a visit with The Right Reverend Elia Paul LUzinda-Kizito (Bishop of the Mukono Diocese) - Oh these Anglican titles! David Bast worked out details and plans for how Words of Hope can partner with the local church.
At midday we toured the facilities of the Spirit FM, on which the Words of Hope Uganda team broadcasts four programs a week. We learned that there is much response and much potential for growth. The Uganda staff produces among the best quality programs that the station airs.
The afternoon we visited with The Retired Most Reverend Livingstone Mpalanyi Nkoyoyo (Archbishop of the Province of Uganda and a Primate in the global Anglican Communion) - another title!. He is a champion for getting the gospel to the tribal areas via radio. We visited him in his beautiful gardens where he adopted Lauren and me into his tribe - the Monkey Clan.
The evening brought another crusade. Lauren came along to this one - at St. Luke's parish in Seta township. The same band led worship and testimony. I had the same translator as the last time, and we worked as a better team this time, since she knew where I was going. Once in a while she would whisper to look at the bushes, because some men were hiding there. They didn't want to come into the crowd, but they wanted to hear the gospel.
Afterward, Lauren talked a long time with the translator - Carol. They became good friends and Lauren has a new e-mail to add to her list of friends. It was loud in the background and Lauren missed part of the conversation. She realized later that she agreed to come back to Uganda to lead a conference with Ann to help Carol teach college women about real life!
I don't know if that will happen, but here's why Carol wants a white teenager from Iowa to talk to Ugandan young women: they have American television and think that all American women are sexually active and try to be just like Brittany Spears. The reasoning goes, "America is a Christian nation, Brittany Spears is American, so it must be OK to do what she does."
T.I.A. - "That is America."
Tuesday, April 17, 2007
Uganda Day 4 - Prayer Breakfast
Jet leg means we cannot fall asleep, and once we do, we can't wake up! But each day it gets a little better. There have only been minor inconveniences: I brought the wrong battery charger for my digital camera! I am praying for someone hear to have a Kodak Easyshare charger - that might be a major miracle! Another minor problem is that I can send e-mail, but cannot receive.

The day began with a 7:00 - 9:00 a.m. prayer breakfast, a ministry recently started the Mukono Diocese. The time is specifically geared toward government and business leaders to gather. It is primarily an outreach and leadership development ministry. The begin with a song, a fervent prayer, and then a Christian gives a talk on principle-based leadership. Today, a man gave a talk on balancing business and family life, along with the need for a personal mission, and ended with his testimony. Afterward, we ate a nice breakfast.
Lunch and supper were spent with Words of Hope Uganda team members. Lunch was with the program staff and supper was with management team (board of direction), which includes the retired Archbishop of the Church of Uganda. The picture is of the Words of Hope Uganda director (Steven Kabasaki) and programmer (Charity). Charity is the main voice people hear introducing the programs. It is absolutely amazing to see what quality she can produce on such limited resources and limited surrounding.
Prayer requests for April 18: I will again preach at an outdoor crusade. So please be in prayer for spiritual protection and for a the Word to accomplish God's purposes.
Field of Dreams?


Uganda Day 3 - Evangelism 101
We got to sleep in, but the neighbor of the Guest House played the bag pipes at 8:30 a.m.! It was a tune called "Scotland the Brave." Oh my, rise and shine :)
We enjoyed a leisurely lunch at Uganda Christian University and topped it off with a fresh fruit pineapple smoothies.
Rev. Baraka took me to the site he hopes to build a counseling ministry and a studio for Words of Hope Uganda. I hope to write another post about that alone. It is Titus' "Field of Dreams." Could it be Trinity's, too?

Then it was my turn - I preached the message "In Jesus, I am invited" from the call of Levi. The same student who testified was my translator. She covered for my cultural mistakes and probably made me sound better to them than I was. It was the first time in my life that I was the absolutely only white person in a group of people that size. It was good for me to taste that.
The alter call was given by the university chaplain - a fiery evangelist who looked a bit like Barak Obama and every bit as passionate as Tony Campolo. I was totally the warm-up act!

Many children and teens responded to the call, but I'm not sure what the call was, since it was in Luganda. After they went inside the church to meet the pastor, the evangelist invited people to come forward for healing and deliverance. The follow-up report the next day is that several people came back to the parish to turn in witchcraft items and other animistic materials. Praise the Lord!
I was completely outside of the norm, but totally at home in the Lord. A special experience I will never forget.
Again, thanks for your prayers.
Monday, April 16, 2007
Uganda Day 2 - Church

