Thursday, 3 September 2009

New Year feel

Prayers appreciated for the deacons meeting tonight and for the coming weeks, so many things are starting up again, Alpha, Back to Church Sunday, New Sunday evenings with the next lot of young people now eligible, CAP public launch meeting, Discipleship groups, people off to Bible colleges, Oasis event, Trip to London, people off to serve God in new ways and many many more things...
An exciting time.

Tuesday, 18 August 2009

Tanzania Team update





Great to see the team back yesterday - I asked Tom if he could give me something to post here on the blog - here it is.

The short term mission team spilled out into the CBC car park around midday yesterday (Monday 18th Aug) having been en-route since boarding the bus in Iringa in Tanzania about 9 in the morning on Saturday. Richard and Debbie are still in Tanzania for a late honeymoon. We had also said goodbye to Katy and to Mairi, our excellent team leader and fluent Swahili speaker, at the airport. So we are all accounted for and full of joy and thankfulness to God for an amazing 19 days.

There were so many positives and a few (but very real) negatives:

The travelling was a bit tedious in places but you could mostly look out of the window and observe a ‘different world’, sleep or talk. It is not everywhere you can look out of a cross country bus and see elephant and giraffe!

The welcome we got in the little Anglican congregation in the Village of Uhambingeto was warm and heartfelt. We had gone to encourage them by kick-starting the building of their new church building (which we did) but have come back with a sense of loss from having to leave them. They live in great simplicity because they can not generate enough income to live in any other way. But their love for Jesus and their firm faith in a gracious God are deeply humbling. They love to worship in song and all that is required is a few voices and some clapping to sound amazing. Give them a guitar (which we did) a drum and some plastic tambourines and they are a delight. And they pray. We prayed with them every day on the building site, they prayed for our sick (see below) and joined with us in prayer whenever we were together in the evenings. A faithful few turned up every day at the building site to supply the constant need for mortar, bricks and water.

The weekday pattern was like this:

Three excellent cooked meals a day, always with fresh fruit, menu different to here but not so different as to be difficult.

Mornings on the building site (with Debbie and another volunteer for the day teaching at the preschool). We found the site with one course of bricks on a newly laid foundation and the corners about waist high. The three builders employed by EI were great guys and amazingly patient instructors: 7 working days later three walls were chest high, two corners were full height (to the ring-beam) and the 4th wall was a few courses above the base of the windows. By the end, we were building from the scaffolding (same function as ours but otherwise rather different!).

Afternoons, most days a few went back to the building site while the others spent 2 hours with preschool children telling a bible story, doing a craft activity, singing songs and playing games. After a low turnout the first day, we prayed that the Lord would send along as many as we could handle. So on the second day, the word having got around, we had 200 or so children, which was, well, memorable. But the combined gifts of the team came into play and order was restored after only one spectacular moment of utter chaos. So our prayer was answered. It turned out that a lot of children had bunked off school to check us out; it got sorted out the next day. From then on, 40 to 50 turned up and went away joyfully clutching their Noah’s Ark, lost sheep or wearing a crown.

Evenings, we did a bible study together in groups or had fellowship (singing and prayer) with Christians from the village. When the moon was not ‘up’ we looked at the amazing night sky before going to bed.

The middle Saturday there was a wedding and we were invited. It should be said that the Emmanuel International (EI) Reps in Tanzania, Andrew and Miriam, did an outstanding job managing our transport, food, accommodation, contacts and providing hygiene procedures as well as answering endless questions and translating back and forth from Swahili to English. But the wedding was a problem: a great experience not to be missed, an invitation not easily turned down but the catering (and associated hygiene) went out of their control. The outcome was that first Debbie and Katy, later Richard, became ill. After a few days Andrew insisted on taking Debbie (with Richard) into town to get tested and she was found to be genuinely ill and spent a night on a drip in hospital and taking some strong medication. That test showed that Katy might be infected with the same nasty bug (though she had not been so unwell) so she was taken to town for tests (which proved negative). All through this Richard had not been 100% and eventually, as the rest of us were travelling home, he was tested and found to have the same as Debbie. All being well the medication should do the job. Keep praying.


The day after the wedding (Sunday) there was a baptism (christening) in the morning and in the afternoon the Bishop came to confirm around 10 people, to visit us and inspect the progress of the building. So in the ‘hatch, match and dispatch’ line of things we scored 2 out of 3 and sang as a choir at each.

Other activities were climbing the local mountain and spending a night and a morning at the end winding down at a national park where the landscapes, trees, animals large and small are so spectacularly different to ours that it is breathtaking. Oh and did I mention the dark clear night sky where the sky is filled with stars and the Milky Way is as clear as can be? Awesome.

Any questions? Ask one of us. It would be great to lay on an event where we can report in more depth. There are loads of photographs, some interesting (if rough) video and some great stories to tell.

Thanks, CBC, for your generous support and prayers.

Bwana asifiwe sana! (The Lord is greatly to be praised!)


Monday, 17 August 2009

The Tanzania Team are Back!

The Team arrived safely back in the UK today!

Friday, 31 July 2009

Tanzania Team Depart!

The Tanzania Team left the UK on Thursday bound for Uhambingeto!

On route to Heathrow, they had to collect their T Shirts from a van on the hard shoulder! (there's nothing quite like a last minute panic!)




Arriving at the Airport!



Ready for Departure!





Please continue to pray for the Team, for safe travel, good health whilst in Uhambingeto, opportunities to demonstrate God's love in practical action and to witness in words despite the language barrier...

Thursday, 23 July 2009

Isaiah Chapter 39

“The word of the Lord you have spoken is good,” Hezekiah replied. For he thought, “There will be peace and security in my lifetime”. v8

Throughout his life Hezekiah had valued the power of prayer, (see Is 38 v 3) and had seen favourable answers to them. Earlier in the chapter Isaiah does not rebuke Hezekiah for his actions but foretells the future. Verse 8 shows it is a future which the king accepts, maybe because he feels he has done all he can. He is living in the present and feels there will be peace in his lifetime. He leaves the future to God.

How often do we worry about things outside of our control? Seek God to find out what he wants you to do, and what you should leave for others to do.

Rachel Charnick

Wednesday, 22 July 2009

Isaiah Chapter 38

I will make the shadow cast by the sun go back the ten steps it has gone down on the stairway of Ahaz. So the sunlight went back the ten steps it had gone down. - v8

The laws of nature would declare that such an event is impossible, as it would cause the death of every living thing, and indeed the destruction of the earth.
2 Kings 20 v 9-11 and 2 Chronicles 32 v 24 would seem to confirm the above verse as an historical fact.

How great is our God? He is the God of the impossible. If God is not the God of the impossible, He is no God at all.

Truly the Creator is greater than His Creation

Dennis Mason