Praying for Kenyans
It’s pretty easy to get focused on fairly minor issues, like the price of gasoline or who’s going to the Super Bowl or fill in your blank ______. In Kenya right now, people are fighting for their lives.
Ever since the results of a widely disputed president election were announced in December, tribal violence has exploded. Thousands of people have died in the violence and hundreds of thousands have been displaced from their homes, many of them Christians from the Kikyu tribe. It’s time to pray for the people of Kenya. Here is a link to a CNN page describing the desperate situation. Here is a link to CNN’s Impact Your World page
I was particularly troubled by the plight of an Kenyan pastor named George Mikeuli. Pastor Mikeuli leads a Baptist church in Molo, near the Rift Valley, with about 40 members. Last week, he woke up to nearly 1,000 refugees congregating in the backyard of the church property. He had nothing more than “beans and blankets” to give these people and he asked God and the international community for help in ministering to these people.
Will you commit to pray and to explore ways to help impact this situation?
About the Author
Jim Johnston has worked in a variety of roles, ranging from marketing to publishing to Internet development. Prior to coming to LifeWay, he worked as a reporter and editor for the Montgomery Advertiser and also as an adult-in-missions editor at the Brotherhood Commission in Memphis. Jim and his wife Tammy have been married for 23 years and have two sons, Spenser, 17, and Ethan, 10.
There have been 4 replies so far
Jim,
I am praying with you. I love your tender heart for missions and ministry. Your article on homeless ministry was touching and filled with truth.
How can we get more info on what our Southern Baptist missionaries are doing on the field in Kenya? All I found on imb’s website was a note that they were safe.
I also have a question re Mocha Club. I know I’m going to hear this from my group: “I just gave to the Lottie Moon/IMB offering. Why should I give to Mocha Club also?” Can you help me answer that question?
Thanks, Sandy
1 | Sandy B
Wednesday, January 16, 2008, at 4:41pm
Sandy, Thanks for your post and your spirit. Ever since I went to Zimbabwe in 1995, God has placed Africa in my heart. I do not know the answer to your questions about our missionaries. It may be that they are being tight-lipped in order to make sure our missionaries cannot be located by those who might harm them. Our contacts at the IMB tell us the same thing — that everyone is safe. That is a huge blessing.
Good question on giving to multiple agencies doing mission work. My answer is, because we can. We have so much in the U.S. I give through the Cooperative Program to the IMB and do give a special gift to the Lottie Moon offering, but I also want to support as many like-minded missions agencies as I can. We have a Compassion child in Guatemala, and we also support a couple who are campus ministers through the Navigators at the University of Alabama.
To whom much is given, much is required. Christians in America should be giving in proportion to the way we are blessed. I think it is OK to give to missions causes outside the SBC as long as we do not neglect our giving to our missionaries on the field.
Hope that helps.
2 | Jim Johnston
Thursday, January 17, 2008, at 12:13am
Because we can! Great answer!
I think you are also correct, though, that we should not give to other agencies and neglect SBC agencies. Our giving to outside agencies should be over-and-above our regular tithes and SBC offerings.
Thanks for your help!
3 | Sandy B
Thursday, January 17, 2008, at 1:36pm
Keep praying for our brothers and sisters in Africa. jj
Kenyan pastors share stories of violence, survival
By Sue Sprenkle
RIFT VALLEY, Kenya (BP)–The run-down minibus taxi rattles diligently up the rocky, potholed road. Inside, the mood is somber and tense. No one dares talk. All are too busy looking out the window for would-be attackers.
It doesn’t seem to matter that two Kenyan special forces officers sit guarding both doors with AK-47s and pistols. Everyone is restless and scared. Passengers react with despair and sorrow as the taxi slowly rolls past the charred landscape. Entire villages are now wiped off the map, others are ghost towns.
This hardest hit area in Kenya’s post-election violence may appear somewhat calm, but violence can erupt any second. On a recent weekend more than 70 people died in this Rift Valley province, pushing the nationwide total to almost 800 since the disputed Dec. 27 elections.
The minibus comes to a stop in front of a Baptist church with broken windows. It has obviously been looted – pages of hymnals are stuck in the weeds and part of a broken speaker sits in the road.
The Kenyan officers jump out to secure the area, then the delegation of Baptist pastors pile out to see the damage. One of the pastors’ wives lets out a soft cry as she finds a broken photo frame containing a picture of her 1-year-old. She dusts it off and tucks it in her purse.
This is the first opportunity for these Baptist pastors and their wives to survey damage. With each stop, the pastors share their individual stories. (Because so many Baptist churches have been burned or looted in this province, specific names of churches and pastors are not given.)
Pastor Samuel
There’s nothing left!
The entire village lay in shambles. Pastor Samuel quickly picks his way through piles of burned corrugated tin, keeping a watchful eye on the forest and hills nearby. Things are still tense and dangerous in Burnt Forest.
For weeks, this area was cut off from the rest of the country. Even the media and Red Cross didn’t venture into this dangerous territory. Gangs of youth blocked the roads, keeping anyone from coming or going.
Samuel stops in front of a piece of charred, ashen ground. “Here,” he says quietly. “Here is our Baptist church.”
His face transforms from a look of fear to an aching hurt as he recounts that fatal night four weeks ago.
“It started on Sunday (Dec. 30),” Samuel whispers. “That morning, people from four different tribes worshipped together in this church. A few hours later, after the election results were announced, they turned on each other.”
Shouts and screams pierced through the small village as gangs of youth ransacked and burned homes. The people ran up the hill to the forest. The youth chased after them, waving their pangas (machetes), spears, and bows and arrows. The villagers tried fending them off by throwing stones. The standoff lasted for two gruesome days before police could finally get to the villagers.
“Five churches burned to the ground. The rest were looted. Many of my church members died. We couldn’t get to their bodies before the dogs got to them,” Samuel says. “Those who survived lost everything. I am a pastor without a Bible.”
A slight movement in the tree line stops Samuel in mid-story. Fear returns as he spies a small gang of young men watching. The pastor ducks his head and walks quickly in the opposite direction.
“When will this thing end?” he mutters to himself. “We live in constant fear.”
Pastor Wallace
A complete living room set up in one corner makes this Baptist church look like a large one-roomed home. Hard wooden pews pushed together form makeshift beds. Bicycles and other precious belongings line the walls.
“Our house of God has really become a home,” Pastor Wallace says, proud of his church’s transformation. “It’s very important for a church to open her doors and help those in need.”
When post-election riots hit Eldoret, Wallace planned to pack up his family and seek safety. He didn’t want the two young men staying with his family on the church grounds to be pressured into carrying out violent acts with their classmates. As he locked the church compound, 20 families from the community ran to him seeking refuge.
“Right then, I revised my mind. I decided it was not good to go,” the pastor says. “I unlocked the gate, and ever since we have been a house of refuge.”
The church quickly became a transition house. Often, families knock on the gate in the middle of the night, having barely escaped their burning house. They stay in the church until they can get to a camp for internally displaced people.
Wallace admits there have been some tense times. A church just a few blocks away burned with 30 people inside. On several occasions, youth have also surrounded a Catholic compound not far away.
“We are scared but take courage with God’s help. People are safe here. We have seen God work miracles,” the pastor says, eyes resting on the two young men living with him. The two are so busy helping with the displaced that neither one has stepped outside the compound to join their classmates wreaking havoc.
Pastor Martin
White tents made out of tarp dot the show grounds for as far as the eye can see. More than 20,000 tents stake out plots in this camp for internally displaced people, with more added every day.
Each flimsy shelter is labeled according to quadrants. Despite this effort at organization, it’s still easy to get lost among the narrow paths and indistinguishable tents.
Pastor Martin and his wife, Ann, navigate with ease. Everyone from their village and church who’s still alive now lives here. Most sit in front of their tents with a distant, glazed look on their faces, grappling with the violence they have experienced.
When Martin and Ann walk up, blank expressions change to huge smiles. “Pastor,” they say. “Sing and pray with us.”
The couple’s joy is contagious, while their compassion is all encompassing. They, too, lost everything when gangs of youth raided their village. Instead of dwelling on what’s lost, Martin says God has called them to offer words of encouragement.
“The joy of the Lord is our strength,” the young pastor insists. “Even when thinking of our problems and other people’s problems, the Lord’s joy just overflows.”
An impromptu worship service starts in the narrow path between tents. People from three rows across hear the singing and quickly come over to join. Ann smiles and grabs their hands, welcoming them into the group.
“We must learn to trust in the promises of the Lord. The Lord has not forgotten us,” Martin preaches. “God has plans for our future and we must not forget.”
This sermon brings many to tears, even the pastor. Right now, it’s hard to think about the future or even life outside the camps. Ann admits she has no plans for moving back to her looted home.
“I’m scared to go back. There is still violence,” she explains. “I am fearful that it won’t end anytime soon.”
-30-
Sue Sprenkle, an overseas correspondent for the International Mission Board, has been reporting from Africa for 10 years.
4 | Jim Johnston
Wednesday, January 30, 2008, at 4:35pm
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