Showing posts with label Pastors Seminar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pastors Seminar. Show all posts

Monday, September 26, 2011

IT IS 3:00 PM IN LUBUMBASHI ON SATURDAY (This escaped the process of being mailed and is now old.)


WHAT HAPPENED ON FRIDAY EVE?

I was sitting in the breeze way of the guest house listening to singing coming from the church.  I thought that there was a service in progress, but did not feel free to go by myself. The singing which I heard was just a musical practice session.  

Pastor Peter left the church to walk to his house which  is really just a small part of the guest home.  Soon he left his room for the Church, on his way he graciously greeted and invited me to the Church Service.  Before long two other men had invited me so by then I would have been ashamed to not have gone. Since I was dressed in walking shorts, I hurriedly put on long pants and walked about fifty yards to the Church.   The Church is really just a wooden framework wrapped in and covered by corrugated tin sheeting. Inside the building are plain white plastic chairs which are readily available in a Wal-Mart for about ten dollars each.  The floor is a cement pad.  No sound system, no decorations, no screen for Power Pointing sermons.  Just the necessities.

I did not count but there was probably about twenty-five people in the service plus a medley of children.  Junior church and nursery were not in existence.  One young mother was nursing her baby.  Little children not much past the walking stage danced  to the music.

A young man named Stefan—a teacher in the public school-- led the service.  He had two pieces of what looked like iron in his hands. He struck the pieces together to establish a very pleasing melodic beat.  Pastor Peter went to a wooden drum  shaped like a World War II torpedo. Between the two of them the music rocked out.  There was music, singing, preaching, praying.  The music and singing was interspersed with short passionate sermons in the Swahili language.  There were lots of hallelujahs and amens.  At the given points for prayer all prayed at one time including many children.

Pastor Peter left the drum, went to the pulpit, spoke to the congregation in Swahili, then in English welcomed me.  He told me that everyone knew that I was a Pastor from America. I nodded and smiled a thank you.

More singing, Pastor Peter did a solo which introduced a choral response from the congregation.  The total effect was to cause a delighted sensation to run down my spine.  It was the closest things to angels singing I will hear in this world.

Everything came to a stop, Pastor Peter spoke to me in English asking me if I wanted to preach.  I didn’t understand him, I thought he wanted me to close in prayer. Which I did. It would be this morning before I found out what he had really said.  I cannot imagine saying anything in English that would have helped this Swahili speaking congregation and Peter’s English is not good enough to serve as an interpreter.


This morning we went to our usual internet café to find that it had no electricity.  Remember the rolling brownouts, they were having one in this area of Lubumbashi. We went to another café.  For some unknown reason I could not use my computer, so had to use one with a French Keyboard. I was finally able to get to my email account. I wanted to answer some mail, but was totally confused by the keyboard,  I had to ask Didier to find an e which was on the top row of keys. I was stressed by the keyboard, it was very hot, sweat was soaking my clothing, I was feeling sickly and needed to get out of building which I did.   Outside I cooled off, drank some water and ate a Cliff Bar.  Soon I was feeling much better.  (No posting today).

While I was standing outside regaining my strength, I was a major point of focus for pan-handlers and street merchants.  Someone had jewelry, another screwdrivers, a lady with bananas, another had plastic maps of Africa and the Congo.  I manfully resisted all.

I almost forgot to tell you that we had a major dust storm going all morning and it is beginning to pick up again as I write this.  My guess is the wind was blowing at least 40 MPH.  At one point on our way to Lubumbashi I am sure that we could not see six feet in front of us.  Fortunately the major visual impairment was very short lived.

About 2:30 this afternoon I ate my first MRE—meals ready to eat.  It is what the military and firefighter live on when in the field.  I ate just the main course which was a chicken and rice dish (480 calories with 70 mgs of that stuff which clogs your arteries forever). The food is heated by pouring a small amount of water into a chemical.  The water reacts with chemicals and soon you have boiling water to heat the food.  It was delicious. I am drinking Dasani water which is a Coca Cola subsidiary—no problems there.

Yes, I take my Malaria pill and vitamins daily.


Tomorrow I preach to Didier’s Congregation, but that is another story.

Friday, September 9, 2011

Arrived In D. C. During The Monsoon

I had an uneventful flight from Sacramento to Washington, D. C.  Several times during the flight the crew announced that the weather was warm and humid or that it was showering lightly in the D. C. area.  When we arrived the captain announced that we were going to think that we had arrived in Seattle instead of D. C.  As I exited the plane, thunder shook the airport.  Unloading of baggage was delayed for at least two hours due to lightning virtually closing down the airport.  Ann phoned to let me know that she was about ten miles from the airport, but could hardly see due to the heavy rain and to tell me that she would be late as she was about to float off the freeway.

Eventually the warning buzzer sounded to let people know that bags were going to be on the carousel and there were my bags.  I grabbed them and went to the exit, phoned Ann and in about 15 minutes we were happily reunited and on our way to her house. 

We walked into the house to the delightful smell of some to the best chili I have ever eaten.  My son in law, Terry, is an outstanding cook; he had filled the slow cooker with the makings for dinner and it had cooked all day.

We dined then I went downstairs and rested. Traveling makes me so tired, but by about 9:00 pm I was feeling good.  Ann drew me a map showing me the way to take Hannah to her school.

I took her to school, met her teacher and will return to school at noon to help in the lunchroom.  The teachers desperately need help at noon as the children require so much help during lunch.  They eat in a large room at tables.  There are Lunchables  (sealed meals purchased from the grocery store) to be opened.  Spills to be wiped up. Children with hands up, needing permission to go to the bathroom. Tables that need to be wiped down after the children go back to class.  And then there are things on the floor to be picked up

I got lost on the way to the school so I had to apologize to the teacher.  It was raining and I missed an exit.  So after driving too many miles, I just returned home.  As I was driving I saw things that were scary. A road was completely washed out. The paving material had dropped into a sink hole.  The street was completely impassable.


I got an email from the Congo we have five new children in the orphanage and again they are mal-nourished. That is to be expected. Between 1996 and 2000 more than 1/2 of the children did not live to see their 6th birthday. Typhoid, starvation, malaria and other easily treated problems  wiped them out.

Things I have yet to shop for: toys for orphans (2-3 year old), clothing for six month old babies, battery operated lantern for the orphanage and some twin bed sheets.

Sunday, July 31, 2011

It is Sunday PM


Yes, we were in Church this morning.


Heard a great sermon dlivered by Pastor Bill.


Came home for a light lunch.


I then booked round trip ticket for the flight from Sacramento to Washington, D. C. I am glad to have that done. I was spending to much time looking for bargains.


Tomorrow afternoon I have an appointment to meet with a lady who purchased Tupperware to sell and went out of business with a rather large inventory. She is planning on donating it to us to further the work in the Congo.


That is good news, because I am going to have a Pastors Seminar while I am there. The Pastor and men who want to prepare to be Pastors will need food while they are away from home. In the U. S. we are not inclined to think to much about feeding ourselves. I have attended a large conference for Pastors in Chicago. There they open the school cafeteria and seat 800 men at one seating. No problem. At another one in Vallejo, you can walk across the street and buy a burrito—no problem.


I have been told that in the Congo, if you get one meal a day you are doing well. Two meals is wonderful. Three means that you are rich.


I want to make sure that the men who come in from “the bush” have plenty of beans and some chicken while they are at the Conference. I want them to be fed physically and spiritually.


Tupperware sold will equal men fed.