It’s Friday
evening and I am sitting in the home of the pastor at whose church I
am
teaching. I’m wearing my coat as the Malila people live in the hills where
mornings and evenings are distinctly chilly. (Note: In Swahili the area where
any people live is written as the name of the people group preceded by a ‘U’,
so I was in ‘Umalila’.) Before it got dark I went for a short stroll along the
road, enjoying the soft sunset sky. On the way back I bumped into the pastor’s
wife and had a wee chat by the side of the road. Today was day two of teaching
an overview of the Old Testament and how it points us to Christ. The teaching
has felt like hard work for a number of reasons. There’s the fact that most of
the group were very quiet – it was hard to tell if they were too shy to answer
questions or were afraid of saying the wrong thing or simply didn’t know the
answers. Then there was the way people kept coming who hadn’t been there for
earlier teaching so they’d missed a lot of foundational stuff. Also very few
had Bibles and only two or three people ever volunteered to read and even they
read slowly and with some difficulty. And then this afternoon both my former
colleague, Mwangwale (who had made the arrangements for the seminar to take
place), and the pastor himself couldn’t be there, and they are the best two
readers of the Malila language, which meant I wasn’t able to use the Malila
Scriptures in the afternoon as I’d hoped to as we got into the New Testament. I
feel very alone when I have no-one with me who I know in a seminar. Even though
that person may not need to do much, their very presence encourages me; I know
I can call on them if I need support such as to explain something in the local
language or to do a Bible reading fluently.
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| Mwangwale teaches how to read Malila |
After teaching all day, I was then asked to preach in their evening service! I didn’t find out I’d be doing that until I got here. You’d think that by now I would be used to the unexpected, but somehow it doesn’t seem to get any easier. Indeed, last night was particularly stressful when I found out that I wouldn’t be staying with Mwangwale, who I am used to staying with, but instead would be staying here at the pastor’s home. I think it was a case of the pastor extending hospitality that it would be rude to turn down, so Mwangwale accepted their hospitality on my behalf. When I found out I felt my body tense in anxiety over this unexpected change and I began to worry about food and about doing or saying the wrong things and about whether they’d lock the door overnight and I wouldn’t be able to go out to the toilet. Of course, they are very gracious, and even if I am doing or saying the wrong things, they don’t let on! It feels awkward for me – I’m sitting in the lounge with other guests (men), but they sit silently much of the time. It would be nice to sit with the ladies, but they’re at work in the kitchen and I find the smoke of the wood fire (for cooking) hard to tolerate.
But at least now, on my second evening here, I feel more relaxed, that initial anxiety gone. I have a better idea of what to expect. I know they won’t lock the door overnight, that I’ll be free to go for a walk in the morning, that I can get warm water for a wash after my walk, that they understand I need to eat my own breakfast snacks because of my tummy problems, that dinner probably won’t be ready until 10pm and that my bed is warm and comfortable. My room feels a bit exposed, as all that separates it from the living room is a curtain that is rippling gently in the breeze that creeps through poorly fitted windows and doors, so I don’t feel I can get ready for bed until I know people are vacating the living room, and it always feels like I want to go to bed earlier than people here (even though they also get up earlier in the morning than me)!
Tomorrow we
begin another seminar – this one will focus on Ephesians. I am thankful that
Mwangwale has rearranged a meeting he had so that he can be there, as I can now
see that I will need to rely heavily on him for reading the Malila Scriptures.
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It’s now
Saturday night. I’m sitting in my room with the company of my solar light. The
battery for the solar powered house lights has gone to church where it is being
used to power the projector for showing the Jesus Film. The whole household has
gone to watch the film, which started very late after various issues and an
early (at 9pm) dinner, so all is quiet, except for the wind and insects
outside.
I was
encouraged this morning when the pastor told me he’d asked people what they’d
learnt yesterday afternoon while he was away, and the things they told him were
the very things I was hoping to communicate! Today we had a different topic –
the book of Ephesians. (The previous seminar was intended more for church
leaders with Bible teaching responsibilities, though I didn’t exactly end up
with
that kind of group, while today’s seminar was for everyone.) We worked our
way through the book, using the Malila translation of Ephesians. We explored
key themes: We are saved by grace (Eph. 1-3), therefore we can live in unity as
the body of Christ (4:1-16), loving one another as we imitate Christ (4:17-6:9)
and standing firm in all of this by reading the Word of God and praying (6:10-20).
When we asked people at the end what they liked about the book of Ephesians,
what it taught us about God’s character and how it impacts their life, they had
clearly grasped at least some of the key truths that I was hoping they’d get.
One lady’s comment was that through it all “…we have seen the greatness of God”
and later the pastor commented on how the teaching was helpful because it
worked steadily through one book of the Bible instead of their normal practice
of jumping around from text to text.
I’m
wondering what will happen when they come back from watching the film, because
that battery lives in the room I’m staying in. Will they sneak in while I’m
asleep to put it back, so that there can be light in the house? But I don’t
want to wait up for them as it’s already 10.30pm and the dim solar light makes
me feel sleepy! I think I’ll just go to bed and hope for the best. I’d better
head outside to the long drop toilet first, with my head torch so I can see
where I’m going; the good thing about needing to go outside for the toilet is
that as there is no electricity in the village the stars are amazing!
---
I’m now
back home in Mbeya, sipping on a coffee as I type and nibbling some Lindt dark
chocolate with sea salt – lush! (No, I can’t buy that here, I always stock up
on good chocolate when I’m in the UK!) Let me carry on where I finished off…
They did not sneak in to put the
battery back, but I still heard them come in well after midnight! Apparently
many had gathered and had been moved to tears by the film.
Sunday
morning. I had been asked to teach in the morning service – although I didn’t
know this before I went, I had a hunch it would happen, so I’d picked up notes
from a couple of previous sermons to take with me just in case. I decided to
talk about the importance of teaching our children about God and reading the
Word with them, looking first at the example of Timothy and his mother and
grandmother as well as sharing from my own life. I also taught the children the
song ‘Read your Bible, pray every day’ (which I have translated into Swahili),
which they enjoyed. I lost count of how many choirs sang and then I had been
given an hour to teach so it was quite a long service!
Back at the
pastor’s house, lunch wasn’t too long in coming, more rice, greens and meat.
Feeling like I had already been very blessed by their hospitality, as they
prepared food especially for me (no onions etc), I was then overwhelmed to
receive a gift of a big basket from a member of the church plus a sack of
maize, a bag of dried beans and a rooster from the pastor’s family! (I got my
househelp to prepare the rooster for me on Monday – it turned out to be the
toughest chicken meat I have ever eaten; it must have been the grandfather of
the flock!)
On the way
home, with the rooster lying calmly in the basket, on top of the sack of maize,
I picked up a couple of young ladies who flagged me down, needing a ride to
town after having been in the village working in their potato fields. It was
nice to have a bit of company as we bumped our way over the rough, dusty road
back to town and tarmac. I thank God once again for his care of me on the whole
trip – so much potential for things going wrong, but despite changes in plans,
God watched over me and I pray that those who I had the privilege of teaching
may know the width, length, height and depth of God’s love for them.
“And I pray
that you, being rooted and established in love, may have power, together with
all the Lord’s holy people to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the
love of Christ, and to know this love that surpasses knowledge…” Ephesians
3:17b-19a
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Thank you so much for the blog. As ever, interesting, informative and challenging.
ReplyDeleteYou are a blessing. None of us knows what all the outcomes of our service are or will be. Just keep on being faithful.
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