Dear Cherished Interested’s, June 5th, 2023
After a late Saturday night request for a specific message
about The Holy Trinity, I preached at the Cathedral in Usa River for the 7:00
morning English service yesterday. Smiling
folks came to tell me that it went well.
Amazing.. Always a struggle for
me with confidence and I am deeply thankful that I am not alone when preaching. Still, this is something I do because I have
to. Wanting to preach, wanting to be up
front, is not part of it at all.
Paul is imprisoned when he writes: Philippians 1 “ 14 And my being in prison
has given most of the believers more confidence in the Lord, so that they grow
bolder all the time to preach the message[a] fearlessly. 15 Of course some of
them preach Christ because they are jealous and quarrelsome, but others from
genuine good will. 16 These do so from love,
because they know that God has given me the work of defending the gospel. 17 The
others do not proclaim Christ sincerely, but from a spirit of selfish ambition;
they think that they will make more trouble for me while I am in prison. 18 It does not matter!
I am happy about it—just so Christ is preached in every way possible, whether
from wrong or right motives. And I will continue to be happy,..”
This position, this understanding, this expression of faith
by Paul has become ever more central to my encountering how Jesus is preached and
people are served everywhere; including here where at times we share very
little in common.
Later last week I was asked to attend another special prayer
service up on the mountain. As I walked
into the rectory with Mchungaji(pastor I traveled and served with) and sat with
the others gathered to run and serve the community through this service, I
noticed among the accumulating ever more familiar faces, the face of a special
pastor on this mountain. He is respected
by the others. He is requested for
special prayer services like this. He has
gifts of rare perception. He has inside
a kind of hard love that is so deep and powerful that it is willing to face
anything.
This prayer service is 90 percent music and dance then comes
simple direct preaching. The kind that
allows those who fear the worst to come forward, run away, run back, then enter
struggle to find peace they long for.
How do I write about possession? How do I write about those who fear it and
face it?
I would like to start with love that is so deep and powerful
that it is willing to face anything.
Reputation of that love follows this older pastor who has had me in
attendance now for two of these services high up on this mountain where fancy
visitors don’t go and are never asked to.
I have been taken there and into that fear and the face of it.
I sat listening to language I did not know watching the pain
and struggle that accompany the fear of what is faced. My job was obvious. I was there to pray. That is what I did.
As the struggling precious ones shook and dropped and
wracked. I prayed. As others flew from their seats to keep the
thrashing ones from hurting themselves or others, as women attended women
safeguarding their modesty. I
prayed.
The long line of women coming into and through the church to
the front where prayer, laying on of hands, and groups of helpers worked with
each precious one trying to come back to themselves, eventually stopped
coming.
That gruff old beloved and deeply loving pastor was
done. He did something that I did not
expect.
After putting down his microphone, he came and sat next to
me. Then he turned to look me in the eye
with such gratitude and thankfulness. He
knew that praying silently was what I had been doing. He chose to be thankful to this stranger who
has been brought now to two of these services for the desperate. He knew that I was not there to judge.
I love this hard old mountain pastor because as he viewed
that long line of fearful women coming seeking peace within themselves, his
spoken question was.. “Where are all the men?”
This is a universal heartache for pastors here.
Without the men seeking peace, the women return to
situations that are unimproved. Part of
the greater prayer then is that the women return to their situations as
improved people in themselves. These
desperate become missionaries into desperate situations that they cannot
flee.
There were still two struggling and writhing ones after the
church cleared. The old pastor was spent
and was taken to rest. Two groups of us
stayed with the remaining two who were carried flailing and straining from
church to the rectory where table and chairs were pushed without concern out of
the way so those lost from themselves could be laid safely on the floor.
Precious bibles were literally thrown across the room to
land on that table shoved out of the way.
Small yet powerful writhing women were throwing four to six people
around at a time. I came into the room
set my bible among those others that had landed on the table and without
thinking put my glasses that I do need to see, on top of my bible. Afterword I understood that not having
glasses safeguarded all around me as they were not on my face to be taken in
the thrashing and struggle.
Silent prayer like I’ve had drawn out of me before in bush
Alaska as well as here was all my mind and heart were focused on. My hands are attached to the rest of me which
is at times a gift of tremendous weight.
My hands were able to contain the right hand of one of these precious
struggling women who came for help.
She came for help and everyone there was willing to do
anything, including throwing expensive tables and chairs out of the way and
pitching precious expensive prized bibles through the air, so their hands were
immediately free to safeguard as they strove to bring that help.
The one whose hand was now in mine was no longer able to
throw anyone around with that hand. We
prayed, we safeguarded, she returned in time peacefully to herself. Her wet eyes opened and looked fearlessly
into mine and after a time pulled my hand to find her way shakily onto her
feet. Immediately we got her to a
chair.
In about half a minute she was talking normally again with
Mchungaji. Mchungaji who did not judge
her but simply smiled hugely at her success.
He then translated introduction and told me she had a young child. He translated my thanks to her for her hard
work as a mother to that precious child.
She stood, squared her shoulders, and was able to walk home before we
left.
The last struggling one was taken by about eight people to a
dark office in the rectory as Mchungaji and I were leaving. Those loving people will not leave her even
if it takes all night and into the next day.
Love doesn’t judge. Love doesn’t
give up either.
This is something I pray can be re-learned more
broadly.
The desperation and situations lived among the most impoverished
people have analogs among the lives of people like you and me. People who have rare moments of insecurity
can learn from people who have only moments of insecurity.
My time in bush Alaska is alive here. My time among we who have only rare moments
of insecurity is alive here. This is
what shepherds’ do. Protect the
vulnerable and battle what seeks to consume and destroy them.
Faith is academic and vociferous. Faith at times needs to be uncompromising.
Faith as love is also quiet, strong and in motion willing to
give time, hands, protection and prayer. Faith as love leaves room for hope. Faith as love leaves room for God to be
God. Faith as love does not seek to be
God, judge, condemnation or self-righteous source of shunning.
That can happen among people here like it does
everywhere. However those shepherding,
these moments of pleading with God for those desperate enough to be vulnerable
in their need, also live lives with only moments of insecurity. This empathy builds wisdom many elsewhere
never find. Wisdom that lets
breathtaking good come in hard moments like these that too many ignore and run
from.
Love doesn’t judge.
Love doesn’t give up either.
Yes, an older term is used here. Witchcraft.
Mostly women coming to seek help in reclaiming themselves from the
destruction of situations that don’t change so, they have to find the strength
to be the change themselves. Here
witches are never burned. Here they
self-identify and come among people who will do anything to help.
Love doesn’t judge.
Love doesn’t give up either. Everyone
goes back to doing the best they can the next day. They go together.
How do I know that these events are sincere and
un-staged? I was the only white person
trusted to be there. I may be the only
white person many know. I am the only
white person many of the children have ever seen and they cannot hide
that. Not one person asked this white
man for anything. The ones wanting me
there knew I would pray. No one wanted
any money.
Thank You for any discomfort this report may bring for any
of you reading. Your willingness to face
that discomfort is beautiful. Thank you
for your prayer. It really does matter
more than anything else.
-----------------------------------------
From last time…
I cannot describe the spiritual attacks we have been facing
as the time hopefully approaches (latter half of June) when we will engage with
the University again. Relationships here
on the ground in addition to my imperfections and mistakes are being used to
try to drive us away from our striving. Each
day is a sincere struggle. Hopefully
that means we’re on the right track.
Please pray for those around us.
Please pray for the local faces which fearlessly now smile and greet us
as we walk.
Please keep crumpling us up and throwing us at God. That is where we need to be. God will sort us out.
One day at a time.
Just like how you each live. Just
one day at a time.
Thank you, each of you.
-------------------------------------------------------
What to Pray for:
Our armed forces families, our leadership, our people, whole
world round, all of Gods kids -
All the tough and blessing expressed above –
The love of folks –
Whatever is on your hearts and minds for us –
For our children and grand-children who miss us..
For Makumira Secondary School looking to share stories and
partner in some way with a foreign school, Great leaders, teachers, students,
programs, strong backs, minds, and hearts –
For our health to stay ahead of whatever is before us –
For those who have braved the donate button to discover
Kajun Crofton, our daughter who helps getting each one of your donations to us and
every blogpost to where you can read it -
For each and every one of you –
Each and every one of your prayers, your precious
conversations with God –
Prayers, Your Prayer, Even your groaning prayers makes all
the difference..
Vern W
May life be as Music to your Heart – May Music be as Heart to your Life –
May Heart be as Life to your Music
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