Wednesday, November 10th
| Photo taken through bedroom window |
I met my former colleague, Casto Nyambo, just before we
needed to turn off the main road and onto a dirt road. He had come by motorbike
from his home on the other side of the Vwanji area (there are mountains and steep
valleys between his home and Ikuwo). He left his motorbike at a café run
by people he knows and joined me in our project Land Cruiser for the rest of
the journey. After a while the road deteriorated, with some very rough and
steep patches – I spent most of the time in first or second gear and was glad
to arrive safely at our destination about an hour and a quarter after leaving
the tarmac.Project Land Cruiser parked in front of some shops, the
guest house is right behind them.
So you may be wondering why I was travelling with a ‘former’
colleague. If you have been able to keep up with my newsletters, you’ll have
read in the last one that we had to retrench all of our literacy/Scripture
engagement workers who worked in areas where they now have a New Testament in
their language. He was one of them. But thank God, he still has a heart to
reach his people with the Word of God in the Vwanji language, so when he has
time he continues to distribute Vwanji books, show the Jesus Film and
facilitate the spread of the audio Scriptures, and he also helped with the
arrangements of the workshop and willingly gave his time to accompany me.
As I have walked around the village and spoken to people and listened to children at play, I have realised that the Vwanji language is not being used much by the younger generation. During the workshop I hear the participants switching backwards and forwards between Vwanji and Swahili, depending on who they are talking to and what they are talking about. At least one of the pastors isn’t Vwanji, and this is a common reason for finding that Vwanji is not being used much in churches, because the church leaders are not Vwanji speakers. In some ways I find all this discouraging and start to question whether Bible translation is really worth it.
But then yesterday evening, I listened to Casto tell me
story after story of how the audio Scriptures in Vwanji have changed people’s
lives. While it is true that people are not so interested in reading the Vwanji
Scriptures (it just doesn’t feel natural to them to read Vwanji, as Swahili is
the language they learned to read in at school), many people love to listen to
them, especially the elderly. I wish I had been able to record all he said, but
here are some of the things I remember (I may have mixed up one or two
accounts, but the sum total is still true)…
There was an old man who listened to the audio Bible and
said how the words he had heard hurt, they pierced his heart. After listening
he wanted to be baptised. His family were overjoyed. There was another who can’t
get to church because he is old but a youngster in his family got a memory card
for him so he could have the audio Scriptures on his phone or radio. And there
are others who, after listening, started attending their local church. There
was also a lady who had a MegaVoice player (a solar powered audio player – we have
distributed 40 of these across the region), but her husband wanted one too,
because he couldn’t get hold of it when he wanted to listen as it was always in
use! His wife listens to the MegaVoice players with groups of other women.
And I love this one: One day Casto was getting his motorbike
fixed. While the mechanic was at work, Casto got out his MegaVoice player and
the people hanging around there listened to the Vwanji Scriptures. They listened
and listened until eventually he said that he had to go. He gave one of them a
lift somewhere and he continued to listen and talk with Casto as they went. He
wanted the MegaVoice player so he could carry on listening! That wasn’t
possible, as we try to distribute them among people who we know and trust, but Casto
told him who had a MegaVoice player near where he lived and then phoned that
person and told them to expect an elderly gentleman to visit them and that they
should lend him the player. He did visit and I think the outcome was that he
started going to church.
Truly faith comes by hearing (Romans 10:17)! As well as
relating the impact of the audio Scriptures, Casto also shared how he is
invited to speak at funerals, because people know he will use the Vwanji
language and Scriptures, and he has shown the Vwanji Jesus Film at these
funerals as well as in many churches. In fact, this evening he will show the
Jesus Film in the open-sided market hall, using a special projection pack
provided by the Jesus Film Project.
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It is now Wednesday night and all is quiet. Tomorrow is the
last day of the workshop. Today was hard work – the teachers really struggled
to understand how to teach and apply Bible stories. Many teachers are used to
just telling the Bible story and maybe giving a one-liner teaching point, but
not really explaining what the story means and how it can be applied. After giving
them lots of examples and time to prepare, some were given the chance to stand
and teach. One just spoke without engaging us at all (despite my continual
emphasis on engaging the children), another went off the topic and another basically
read straight from the curriculum booklet with little real understanding. I
will try again tomorrow to help them understand a little better about how to
explain the meaning of the story, but when good teaching hasn’t been modelled
in church or even in schools, it’s hard for them to get a handle on how to go
about doing it themselves.Learning to use skits to teach
Thursday, November 11th
It’s 9pm, I arrived home a couple of hours ago. The drive
took longer coming back and was pretty tiring – I worked out that my average
speed on the dirt road section (which took about 1.5 hours) was 12.5mph! I have
returned with a sack of maize and a sack of potatoes – as always, I am so
touched by people’s generosity.
With more explanation and examples, the Sunday school
teachers did a better job of teaching today, so I hope that the workshop will have
helped them engage children with God’s Word more effectively. It’s great that
the Lutheran church there has recognised the importance of teaching their
children and that even the pastors joined the workshop!
A little aside… On Wednesday we invited the children from
the local school to come for a Sunday school lesson, so that the Sunday school
teachers could see a real example of how I teach. Before they entered the
church, they lined up their hoes along the side of a building. Yes, their hoes!
They have to take their own tools to school for working on the school farm.
What would children in England think if they had to start tilling the soil so
that they have food to eat at school?! But these are valuable lessons to learn
in these farming communities.Children play together on their way home from school
*Note: ‘Faith Comes By Hearing’ is also the name of an
organisation who’s main focus is making audio Scriptures available in all the
languages that have New Testaments. We have sometimes partnered with them to
record the audio Scriptures in our project.