Saturday, January 10, 2009

Back Alive From Lichinga!

Our outreach team to Lichinga arrived back in Pemba very early Monday morning after two long days of travel. As some of you heard, I had gotten very sick on the second and third day of our three-day journey to get there. I was running from both ends, so to speak, and had to ask our driver to stop every hour or so to let everything come spilling out. We think it may have been food poisoning, as we had eaten chicken the day before in a local restaurant. Thankfully the family that oversees the IRIS center in Lichinga had already planned for me to stay in their home, so I was able to rest comfortably and get my strength back during the first few days there. Jesus really held me in his hands on this journey, and I learned a great lesson through it all… Never eat chicken on a long trip in Mozambique! ☺

Unfortunately, I wasn’t able to participate in most of the events that the team did, except for the feast we had Christmas day for the lame, blind, deaf, etc. We took the scripture literal where Jesus says when you have a feast to invite those who cannot repay you. It was beautiful! Some of the local village children also came and we had enough food to feed them as well. Many of the crippled gave their hearts to Jesus and were so touched. They said that no one had ever done anything for them like that. We serve such an awesome, loving God!!

The team was also able to share the Jesus film with two local communities and in the local prison, and many of those who heard the Good News also received Jesus as their Lord and Savior. Another day they hosted a fun day for the kids of the community where the local IRIS church is located. Many seeds were sown in the hearts of the people of Lichinga through all that the Lord had us do there.

As for my seeing what the Lord might have for me longer term in Lichinga…. I feel that it is a wonderful place to walk out some of the dreams and visions that Jesus has put on my heart. The IRIS Lichinga team also has a vision to see local communities learn to take care of their orphans by being self-sufficient through agriculture. The first step is to get the children’s center to be somewhat self-sufficient by planting food and raising goats for meat and milk and chickens for meat and eggs. I am excited to help with all of these things when I return to Lichinga at the end of January.

Another amazing venture that I will be part of will be the process of taking in orphan girls. We plan to go on a ten-day journey to the villages where the team has already given out registration forms to register the girls who are full orphans between the ages of five and ten. We will collect and give the forms to Social Services so that they can verify each case. Then we will prayerfully choose 24 girls from about 140+ that have been registered and go out again to bring them “home”. I am so excited that the lord is allowing me to be involved in this process. It has been about 16 years since Jesus first spoke to me about taking in children that need loving homes and families, and finally I will be able to be a part of that reality for 24 precious treasures. Yeah, God!!

Thank you so much to those of you who have been praying for me (especially during the trip to Lichinga), and supporting me financially. Without you I would not be able to walk out the “beautiful hope and future” that the Lord has for me and also help bring it about for the people of Mozambique. Thank you for praying for the Mieze farm project divisions, which we accomplished in time for the families to plant before the rains came, and for praying for the preparation of Christmas gifts for the kids here in Pemba. The children were elated to receive their gift bags overflowing with amazing provisions of clothes, toys and other goodies, and it only took about 6 hours to give them all out. Hee! Hee!

I hope that you all had a wonderful Christmas celebrating with friends and family, and I pray that this New Year will be filled with the abundance of the Lord’s riches in your life and many ‘kisses’ from heaven!

No comments: