Friday, February 18, 2011

Weekend with Friends: Love Your Neighbor

Sunday afternoon:  Love Your Neighbor 
project 

Knowing that Monday was going to be Valentine’s day--a big day here, our Kampala team  decided on a project called  Love Your Neighbor.  We chose three ladies to honor by giving a food basket full of the typical African food items:  posho, rice, beans, sugar, cooking oil, margarine, bread, soap, etc 

Molly and Lucy are leaders of the house church that Lynn used to lead.  He and Gene Wright have been training  leaders and they are two of them.  Molly's(left) husband has been without work for the past year and a half  and Lucy’s (right) husband just died a couple of weeks ago.



 Agnes is sick and also needed the food.  We did not tell the ladies that we were coming, so it was a big surprise.  They were blessed by the gift, but we were even more blessed by them.




Of course. there are always lots of kids, and again, they were all drawn to Mike.



 What a great day!  It is such a privilege to be living at this time in this place!

Thursday, February 17, 2011

A Weekend with Friends: Church in Kawempe



Sunday morning:  Pastor Deo’s own church in Kawempe
We chose to take Mike to Pastor Deo’s church.  It is somewhat different from some of the other churches in that you have to hike a ways to get to it.  There are no roads that will take you all the way.  So, loaded up with necessities that today included a sound system, we followed Pastor Deo.

This church does not have a building in which to meet, although they have found some property to purchase and are saving towards doing that soon.  Instead, one of the ladies consented to let the church meet on her property.  Each Sunday they put up a tarp to keep out the sun (it does not keep out the rain) and set up the chairs.











We were blessed to hear first, the children’s Sunday School choir and then the Adult choir sing songs for us with the drums as accompaniment.







Mike also sang a beautiful song then preached another wonderful sermon. 




A Weekend with Friends: House Church in Kimombasa

Saturday afternoon:  House Church in Kimombasa

This afternoon we traveled across town to a brand new house church led by Pastor Deo.  This area was so much easier to enter because the terrain was relatively flat. 




 It wasn’t too long after we got there that ladies and a few men started to congregate.  We all took time to greet everyone as they came.





Mike got to do what he does so extremely well - give the Gospel message simply and clearly.  


About 15 people responded; some for the first time and some to rededicate their lives.  It was amazing!



Afterwards, Pastor Deo gave out Bible Way materials to start them on their journey of growing in the Christian life.  




A Weekend with Friends: Soweto


 Saturday morning
This past weekend was spent with friends, Mike and Audrey, from the Northwest.  They came to see us and what we are doing here in Kampala.  The weekend was so full that I am going to divide it up into segments.  The first morning we walked through the Soweto slum where I work.  It was good to go with them because I am there so much, I don’t ‘see’ what it really looks like.  It was good to see it anew from their eyes. 




Audrey and Mike wanted to share bracelets with the children.  I started to tell them to wait, but I didn’t catch them fast enough.  


At first, there were only a few young children and they were so excited about having something from the ‘mzungus’.



But soon older children came and they crowded around and pushed the younger ones away.  I think everyone received one.




The children loved Mike and hung onto his arms.  I wanted to call him the Pied Piper because he soon had 15-20 kids following everywhere we went.



At my Bible study site we had so many children, we started singing songs in English -- which they didn’t understand.  But one of my ladies, Joscelin, knew the same song in their language so she led them.  


Audrey greeted them and gave an encouraging word from the Bible.




















   Pictures seen on the way.

A window in a house on the way
 The sewer system is getting backed up with trash.
                                                                                                Bags of charcoal that is used to cook with.




Chickens sold in the market.

Friday, February 11, 2011

Nsanyu Babies Home

Monday morning I accompanied a team from the US to Nsanyu Babies Home.    It was started in 1926 for orphan babies up to three years old.  I was impressed with the organization and cleanliness of the place.
The first hour we were there we worked -- making beds, mopping floors,  folding and sorting a huge pile of clothes.  I didn’t mind because there was so much to do.
But finally, we got to go to the  area where the babies were. 
 Lynn and I went to a room with about 20 little ones--from just a few months old to young toddlers.  The hard part is that we were not allowed to take pictures or to hold them.  How can you work with babies and not hold them?  The reasoning was that when they are held, they want to be held all the time. Too many for 2 teachers to hold all the time. 
 We played and sang and talked to all of them.  We also got to help feed and brush their teeth.  The babies went swimming in little individual pools and just like most babies, they loved splashing.  I didn’t swim but I certainly got wet.
After we fed the children. it was time to leave.  They were so tired some of them were falling asleep as they ate.

Jireh Orphanage



Monday afternoon we went to Jireh - a brand new orphanage.  So far there are only 6 children, all between 5 and 7 years old.    There will eventually be up to 25.   We met the children  as they came running down the stairs and threw their arms around us.  

Tomorrow is their first day of kindergarten so we took them all to the mall to the Bata shoe store to get school shoes for them.  
They were all so patient in waiting for their turn.  


And they were so proud of their new shoes.