Stories of Hope
& Resurrection: Week Four
Written on April 22nd, 2013
Filed under: Ground Update,
Hope &
Resurrection, Missionary
Update, News &
Updates
Below are stories from Congo on hope and
resurrection written by Christine Buettgen, a short-term missionary in the
Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). If your church is interested in receiving
these materials weekly via email, please email us at
covenantkidscongo@covchurch.org and request them today.
“Is there any encouragement from belonging
to Christ? Any comfort from his love? Any fellowship together in
the Spirit? Are your hearts tender and compassionate? Then make me truly
happy by agreeing wholeheartedly with each other, loving one another, and
working together with one mind and purpose. Don’t be selfish; don’t try to
impress others. Be humble, thinking of others as better than yourselves.
Don’t look out only for your own interests, but take an interest in
others, too.”
Phillippians 2:1-4
Ariel selling her goods.
Every morning, I walk down the “mbala
mbala”, the big dirt road that takes me into town, where I find my
motorcycle taxis. Every morning, I pass the same vendors of peanuts,
sugar, salt, tea, and coffee, all wrapped in little plastic bags costing
no more than about 5 cents. These vendors don’t often sell in quantites larger
than this because most can’t afford more than 5 cents worth of sugar at a
time.
Through these trips, I have come to know
Ariel, who will be having a baby any day now, because I often buy peanuts
from her. Three of her children are registered for sponsorship through World
Vision although none of have found sponsors yet. When the World Vision
International Leadership team came about a month ago, we asked if Ariel
would open her home to one of the US executives named David for one night.
World Vision believes in the importance of even the top leadership fully
comprehending the day to day challenges that Gemena community members
face. The local office in DR Congo wanted the US office to “live it”.
When I asked Ariel how it went, she
laughed as she told us how David pounded “mpondu” (cassava leaves)
with her and her neighbors. Usually this work is left only for the women,
so to see a big white American man accomplishing this task was a memory
she won’t soon forget. David also carried water on his head from the river to
the house, and he slept on a bed made of bamboo. I asked if he was afraid
during the night and she answered with a resounding, “Yes! He thought that
lions would come attack him!” We both roared at that, knowing there are
a grand total of zero lions in this entire region.
Ariel was honored to host a visitor from
the US in her home. But more importantly, she was able to build
a connection with World Vision to not only learn about their programs, but
get to know the kind of people that want to help her community. It is not
often in Gemena that executives of large international
non-governmental organizations humble themselves enough to sleep on dirt
floors and sit on low wooden stools to labor alongside the women.
But this is the example World Vision is
setting, and this is the beginning of a deep and committed relationship
to these people.
Hope can be found in the smallest of
things, even in a sleepover in a mud home under African stars.
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