Today we got to see more clearly what life is like for many
in Zambia. We spent some time in the
morning meeting the staff at Jubilee Center in Ndola where they serve in
partnership with 94 different churches in this country. They do leadership development and training
for church and community leaders, respond with care and compassion to those
suffering with and impacted by HIV/AIDS, work with both students and children
in evangelism, discipleship, and good health and wise living education, and all
in all help mobilize the church to truly be the hope of the world in this place
in a holistic way. They are making a
huge difference in thousands and thousands of lives as native Zambians in this
community!
We spent most of our day in a Zambian community helping to
build 2 different homes for families in pretty desperate need for housing. We were hauling bricks, mixing cement, and
laying block in rows as we helped move the construction process along for these
families chosen by local church leaders to be those in greatest need of a new
home. One family was a situation where a
widow with 7 children (her husband had died from AIDS) needed a place to live
due to her lack of income and losing their home when her husband passed
away. The other family was a home with 4
children, including one child with a tumor who was quite sick, whose old home
had literally fallen apart and had all their possessions in an outdoor space smaller
than the size of my office at CU. There
was no roof and clearly no other place to go.
There was obviously immense gratitude and excitement as both ladies
helped in the building process for their homes.
And of course, we were surrounded all day by hundreds of
Zambian children. Kids who want to be picked
up and twirled around over and over again.
Kids who want to dance with you and sing with their beautiful
voices. Kids who want you to play
Futball (soccer) with their little ball made of plastic garbage bags wrapped
together tightly with string. Kids who
want to bump fists and just be with a strange American adult who for some
reason is excited to see them and give them love and attention. Kids who should be at school but can’t afford
even the most modest of school fees and costs for the uniform they need to
attend classes. And kids who long to
have their pictures taken with college students from CU who have decided to
love and embrace them even in their first moments together.
All in all, the first day in a poor urban African community
can be more than overwhelming. The
poverty and obvious basic needs being unmet overwhelms you and impacts your
emotional and physical state. You catch
yourself watching little snippets and observing situations where it is obvious
that significant health and economic challenges seem to literally be everywhere
you look. And sometimes you just do not
know what to think or what to say or what to do. But you try to ignore the emotions and try to
serve and love and be fully present while you are in a place so different that
most people back home could never, ever imagine that life exists in this way
somewhere else on our planet.
In our debrief time tonight, there were lots of questions,
lots of moments of joy shared where the love of the children of Africa was so
clearly felt. In many ways, the journey
to try and understand what we are seeing and experiencing is just
beginning. And the responsibility to
respond as one who has been invited to come into the lives and community of the
people of Zambia is one we most likely will never feel like we can push
aside. I loved watching and hearing the
students in our group think deeply and biblically and openly about their first
full day with the people of Zambia. We
are so glad to be here and enjoying getting to know one another as friends who
are seeking to serve and learn together.
Tomorrow we get a chance to tell the story of Jesus…to
people in a community as we go out together with our Zambian brothers and
sisters in local communities to testify to what Jesus has done and what He
invites us into as we walk thru a neighborhood in Ndola. And then we get to play the game many of us
love and almost all Zambians adore as we use soccer as a platform for the story
of the Gospel to be shared with those who we will play against and those who
watch the community soccer match featuring our students from CU. I can’t think of a better way to spend a
Saturday in Africa! Your prayers for our
ministry are much appreciated!
For all the Zambia Team,
CHIP
3 comments:
As I read your blog, I was filled with God's presence and rejoice at all He is doing in and through all of you! Continued blessings! Praise be to God!
Through the Spirit of God I feel the work that is going on in your Team. The greatest gift we can give to the world is the message of God's love by our meeting people's needs. Thanks for doing in God's name.
Chip - I love reading all these details. Brings back so many memories. I can't wait to see and hear all the things God does through your team. Praying that He continues to "wreck" your lives. Shalenipo!
Post a Comment