Friday, March 28, 2008

Zimbabwe Elections

I want to ask your prayers for the elections in Zimbabwe. They are Sat (3/29). Zimbabwe is 7 hours ahead of us, but even if you don’t get this email until Monday or Tuesday, still pray. The results can take a long time to get tabulated. You might know that the Zimbabwe economy has crashed over the last 5 or 6 years (“crashed” doesn’t even begin to explain the inflation and unemployment levels). This is largely due to the corruption of President Robert Mugabe and his party. Mugabe came to power after the white regime was thrown out in the 1980’s, but he has not proven to be the answer Zimbabwe was looking for.

Quick geography lesson. Zimbabwe borders the western part of Mozambique, and Mozambique has received many economic refugees. This is a reversal of the situation during Mozambique’s Civil War where many Mozambicans found refuge in a relatively stable Zimbabwe.
Thanks for your prayers.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Bridgeville Worship Update

To those who have been praying that we will find the right new place to meet for our Bridgeville campus of Crossroads Church, thank you. We are still looking and praying. I think he will use our looking for a new location to take us to the next level of growth and allow us to reach more people. God is in the business of changing lives, and we want to let him use us to do that in the Bridgeville area!

We are still meeting in the Star City Theater until further notice. Keep checking my blog or the Crossroads website for updates. If you have not heard otherwise, assume we are meeting at the Star City. Thanks for your prayers!

Sunday, March 23, 2008

The Day of All Days

What a blessing to be in worship Easter morning at Crossroads: Bridgeville! The Spirit of God was definitely at work this morning. Personally I wasn't sure how I would feel come Sunday morning. It has been a very tough week, and I didn't feel like I would want to celebrate. But in the morning I was reminded that the day wasn't about me, but that this day gives me hope to make it through any day, no matter how tough.


I thought about those days I was recovering in the hospital last year after my near brush with death. Times like that really bring life into focus. I realized that there is nothing I would rather do than whatever God has for me. It's easy to waste our lives away: entertainment is so pervasive, there are so many temporary pleasures to chase, and it's flat-out easier not to do anything too hard. But it's the hard things God calls us to that are going to make a difference into eternity.

It was anything but easy to suffer death on the cross. But Jesus did it, knowing the whole time that if at any moment he decided he had had enough, he could call it quits. But he didn't.

Jesus' choice to go through with it wasn't just a one-and-done decision. Even after making it, he still had the opportunity to back down. I don't know about you, but I find it a lot easier to make a one-time decision than one I constantly have the opportunity to reneg on, especially if it involves suffering. But knowing that Jesus continued to choose to suffer for us makes it a little easier to suffer through the tough weeks.

He is risen! He is risen indeed!

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Katherine's Crash Course in Sudan

During Maundy Thursday and Good Friday we take time to remember the suffering that Jesus endured before he died on the cross (For a good clarification between suffering and punishment in the Easter story, read here). Jesus' suffering is something that I cling to when I read so many stories of pain in the world. One area that has caught the attention of my family is the situation in Sudan. Have you wondered exactly what the situation is there? Some of my wife's friends asked her that, and she wrote up a short history of the issue. Here's her "Crash Course in Sudan." Warning, there are some very disturbing descriptions below.

A major aspect of understanding conflict in Africa (and this is the case with Sudan) is to realize that before Europeans explored and colonized the continent, Africa was not divided according to the current system of countries. Land was tribally owned, a tribe being a specific ethnicity of people with its own culture, language, and leadership. Tribes warred, conquering each other's lands and then ruling over or enslaving other tribes (hence, Africans willing to sell other tribes to white slave traders). When white people came, they established countries based on colonial rule, boundaries that divided a tribe between two countries or grouped enemy tribes into the same country. For example, Sudan was British, yet Darfur alone contains 30 people-groups, and Mozambique was Portuguese (Mozambique has over a hundred separate tribal languages). Jonathan points out, "In many places (such as Rwanda, Burundi, and Kenya) the colonial governments played the different tribes off one another. They would support one tribe over another, or would fuel tensions between them to keep them separated. If the locals were fighting against each other, they were less likely to unite against the colonizers." As African countries gained independence from colonial rule (Sudan in 1956, Mozambique in 1975), tribal conflict continued and continues today. Tribal conflict in Sudan is even more complicated because of its pre-colonial history with Egypt: Sudan is home not only to people descended from African tribes but also to people descended from Arab tribes-- and people of blended ancestry. Northern Sudan is more Arab and Islamic, and southern Sudan is more black and Christian or animist. Note that Sudan gained independence from British rule in 1956: The first civil war between the north and the south was 1955 to 1972. Before the country was even free from the British, they were already fighting over who would dominate the country, Arabs or Africans, Muslims or Christians. Interestingly, the agreement to cease conflict was reached through talks sponsored by the World Council of Churches (Wikipedia link). (The Church was instrumental in the Mozambican peace process during its major, post-colonial civil war, too. Jonathan wrote a massive paper about this.)

The second civil war "was" 1983 to 2005. (I put was in quotation marks because the government has failed to follow through with the Comprehensive Peace Agreement of 2005.) The second civil war started when the government (dominated by the north) went against the peace agreement that had ended the first civil war. From Wikipedia: "The Sudan People's Liberation Army(SPLA), based in southern Sudan and opposing the Islamic government in the north, formed in May 1983. Finally, in June 1983, the Sudanese government under President Gaafar Nimeiry abrogated the Addis Ababa Peace Agreement. The situation was exacerbated after President Gaafar Nimeiry went on to implement Sharia Law in September of the same year." In addition, "observers say the biggest obstacle to reconciliation is the unresolved status of the oil-rich region of Abyei, which is on the north-south border."

In 2003, conflict in Darfur, Sudan's northwest region, added to the issues of the Civil War. Supported by Khartoum (the northern government), Janjaweed (Arab militia, Muslim) began launching raids, bombings, and attacks on villages, killing civilians based on ethnicity, raping women, stealing land, goods, and herds of livestock. Unlike north-south conflict, which pits Muslim v. Christian, Darfur is a Muslim region, so the situation in Darfur is Arab Muslim v. black Muslim. Here is an overview of that development: http://www.ushmm.org/conscience/alert/darfur/contents/01-overview/.

Also, here is the Human Rights Watch summary from May 2004 (Yeah, it's that old, yet not much progress has been made, even with the "Comprehensive Peace Agreement" of 2005.):

http://hrw.org/reports/2004/sudan0504/2.htm#_Toc71531687.

"On Sept. 9, 2006, the U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell termed the Darfur conflict a 'genocide,' claiming it as the worst humanitarian crisis of the 21st century. . . So far, over 2.5 million civilians have been displaced and the death toll is variously estimated at 200,000 to 400,000 killed." (Wikipedia)

I have read multiple accounts from women who escaped Janjaweed attacks on different villages at different times. All include murder of every present village male (including children), rape and brutalization of women, and burning of all village structures. Most also include bombs dropped from government military planes and contamination of wells. From an article in Time, this is one woman's account of a Janjaweed (Arab militia/ raiders) attack on a Darfur village:

The first sound Zahara Abdulkarim heard when she woke that last morning in her village was the drone of warplanes circling overhead. Then came gunshots and screams and the sickening crash of bombs ripping through her neighbors' mud-and-thatch huts, gouging craters into the dry earth. When Abdulkarim, 25, ran outside, she was confronted by two men in military uniform, one wielding a knife, the other a whip. They were members, she says, of the Arab militia known as the Janjaweed, which over the past 18 months has slaughtered tens of thousands of black Africans like Abdulkarim across the western Sudanese region of Darfur. Another man, rifle in hand, was standing over her husband's body while others set fire to her home. Two of the intruders, she says, grabbed her and forced her to the ground. With her husband's body a few yards away, the men took turns raping her. They called her a dog and a donkey. "This year, there's no God except us," Abdulkarim says they told her. "We are your god now." When they were finished, one of the men drew his knife and slashed deep across Abdulkarim's left thigh, a few inches above her knee. The scar would mark her as a slave, they told her, or brand her like one of their camels. By nightfall, says Abdulkarim, more than 100 women in the town of Ablieh had been raped and dozens of people killed, including two of her sons, four of her in-laws and her husband. The only survivors in her compound were Abdulkarim and her son Mohammed, 6. "They also wanted to kill me, but when they saw I was pregnant, they released me and let me live," she says. That was eight months ago. Sheltering in a refugee camp in neighboring Chad, Abdulkarim, her baby Mustafa playing in her lap, says she will never go home.

As for the rest of the article, the statistics are watered down (ex. It says "hundreds of women have been raped." In reality, thousands of women have been raped.). But here's the link if you're interested: http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1101041004-702074,00.html.

Here is one of the first articles that got my attention about Darfur: http://www.worldmag.com/articles/10479.

The link to "More Images from Sudan" isn't working for me right now. It had some significant images, such as aerial images of a burning village-- really undeniable evidence. It really is one of the most telling articles I have ever read on Darfur.

Although the Khartoum tried to stop Darfurians from fleeing the country, Chad has been flooded with refugees. As for what it is like to be a refugee, here is a very telling article from the New York Times:

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9F06E5D8163BF937A25757C0A9629C8B63.

By the way, refugee means you have fled to another country. Displaced means you are in your home country but have fled from your home.

You asked why all those people are still in refugee and displacement camps if the conflict is over. For one thing, the conflict is not over (see the next paragraph). Also, the villages are obliterated, and the wells are contaminated. Besides, would you want to return to a place of such horrific memories? The woman whose story you read said she will never go back.

The genocide started in Darfur, but further genocide is brewing in Southern Sudan. Here is an article from a little more than a week ago:

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/28/opinion/28kristof.html?_r=1&ref=opinion&oref=slogin.

This struck me: "Only 1 percent of girls here finish elementary school, meaning that a young woman is more likely to die in pregnancy or childbirth than to become literate." Also, here's more from the NY Times: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/02/opinion/02kristof.html.

Add to the painful Sudan mix: war with Chad, rebel groups on the Eastern Front, on-going slavery, floods in 2007. . . and UNICEF recently reported that around 80 infants die each day in Darfur as a result of malnutrition.

If you want to keep up with this, I suggest Eric Reeves' blog, especially his "news" section with links to the best coverage. Pretty much every website on the Darfur/ Sudan crisis has a link to the blog of Eric Reeves: http://www.sudanreeves.org/index.html. This quote from a website that links to him sums up why I recommend Eric's blog over any other conventional source of news about Sudan: "By far the best independent analysis of the developing situation--and usually much more pessimistic than official accounts. Also usually proves to be more accurate." He is a college English professor but has been on partial leave for the last 9 years to work full-time as a Sudan researcher and analyst. Here is a short NPR audio clip for an idea of why I consider him the most reliable source of information on Sudan:

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6788320.

"He has shown you, O man, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God." Micah 6:8

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Mozambican Preschool

While Katherine and I were in Mozambique, we attended a church in an area called T-3. This was the first church planted by OMS International (or here for their work in Mozambique), the mission organization we were with. The established a preschool at the church that meets a great need in the area. For one thing it provides the first steps toward success in the public schools. For another, when people do find jobs, often it is difficult to provide care for their children while they are at work, (and it helps that lunch at the preschool is included!).

Both the church and the preschool have grown since we were there almost 7 years ago. Recently the government has decided to raise its standards for receiving a license as a preschool. There had never been a problem with the walls being made of cane, but now their permit cannot be renewed until they have cement block walls. As of now, the work has now been completed, and they are having to go through the recertification process. You can read more about it on Dave and Ann Dedrick's blog. Unfortunately, they had to spend more money they didn't have in order to get the preschool opened as soon as possible. As a parent of 2 preschool boys, I know what a life-saver preschool can be. If you feel moved to give a gift to help this preschool, there is information in their blog post on how you can do that. Perhaps you would like to give a gift (even a small one) in honor of a preschooler in your family or neighborhood, so that a child on the other side of the world can enjoy an early education. Most of all, pray that this preschool will be a powerful way for the church to speak to its community. God hears the prayers of his people.

Oh blog, oh blog, I have not forgotten you...

It seems like when things are so busy that I have a lot to blog about, I don't have the time I want to write an entry!

Here are some of the major ministry happenings right now:
- We are looking for a new worship space for our Bridgeville campus. This is an exciting thing, because we hope to have a space that will allow to continue to grow to the next level. Of course, the building does not make the church, so our main focus will continue to be serving, evangelizing, and making disciples in the community. But the time is right for us to work on making this move. I will try to get a link to the verbal announcement I did at our service on March 9.

- Pastor Steve (the senior pastor) and I will be going on an exploratory trip to Mozambique to look for opportunities for our church to partner with Mozambicans in a variety of ways. We will be building relationships and learning ways that our church's gifts might be used to influence different domains of life. Two of our congregation's strong suits are medical/health work and education. We will not be limited to those fields, but we hope to use the natural connections within the field that our people have in order to connect with Mozambicans. God has given us our occupations, and we want to use them for his glory.

-Holy Week: We have Maundy Thursday services, a Good Friday "multi-sensory worship experience," and many Easter services. Easter has always been one of my favorite times of year. I remember loving the atmosphere of celebration and joy, even when I was young. This will be my first Easter celebration as a pastor, and I am really looking forward to leading our congregation. Easter is the central day of the Christian calendar, and really of all history. Jesus was raised from the dead, and the world will never be the same! Hallelujah!