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The
Victory of the Cross in Sudan
Amidst
a spectacularly successful series of SPLA military offensives
in Southern Sudan, the Director of Frontline Fellowship
delivered a further shipment of Hymn and Prayer books, with
medicines, to the persecuted churches. This was the 17th
shipment successfully delivered by Frontline Fellowship
into war torn Sudan. It brought to 26 000 the number of
Bibles, Hymn and Prayer Books and other Christian books
smuggled by Frontline Fellowship into the (officially Islamic)
Sudan in the first half of this year alone. This
is what he reports:
Christian
Flags Fly Over Newly Liberated Towns
During my latest mission trip to Sudan, in May, it was my
privilege to visit some of the newly liberated areas along
the Yei river battlefront. At every town I saw the distinctive
(red cross on blue and white) Christian flags flying. There
was a joyful atmosphere of thanksgiving to God for the remarkable
series of victories the Christian soldiers had so recently
experienced. Many soldiers related close calls and answered
prayers during the recent battles.

Sudanese
Christians celebrate the safe arrival of the Frontline
team which breached the blockade with a record amount
of Bibles. |
Several
SPLA officers, including commanders, commented that
the turning point in the war was when the SPLA had accepted
the appointment of Chaplains and decreed that all parades,
and operations were to be started with Bible reading
and prayer.
Our situation seemed hopeless two years ago .
. . but as we have turned to God, He has begun to bless
us with great victories, declared one officer.
Each
chaplain is worth many brigades of soldiers
they have done a great work in inspiring and strengthening
our men, said another.
These
Bibles which you bring, observed one commander
are very important weapons in our fight for
Freedom. The Christian Bible is more powerful than
the bombs of the Muslims!
There
are now six full time chaplains and 36 chaplains assistants
serving in the SPLA. To them Frontline Fellowship
has delivered thousands of Bibles, Hymn books, prayer
books and other Christian books.
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The
Chaplains reported that hundreds of soldiers have come to
faith in Christ in recent months.
Lui
and The Legacy of Dr. Fraser
One of my chaplains services was held in the newly liberated
town of Lui. Lui has been a very important and strategic
missionary, medical and educational centre in Western Equatoria.
It was the birthplace of Christianity in Moruland.

The graves of the first Christians in Moruland in the
foreground stand as testimony to the mission work of
Dr. Fraser. |
In
1920, Dr Kenneth Fraser, of the Church Missionary Society,
traveled up the Nile and felt led to Lui. He was a medical
doctor, a teacher, a pastor and also a decorated soldier
who had risen to Major General by the end of the First
World War. General Fraser implemented what has proven
to be one of the most successful missionary campaigns
ever.
His strategy was to fulfill the Great Commission by
ministering to body, mind and spirit. He started by
opening up a hospital, then a school, then a church.
Soon he had established nurses training courses, teacher
training programmes and pastoral training. He also translated
the Gospels and Acts into Moru.
As
I stood before the simple white cross which marked
the grave of Dr Fraser, I marvelled that what one
man started could have accomplished so much. All around
me was the evidence: a very large church, large schools,
the hospital, the Teacher Training College and the
Nurses College.
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It
was true that the Muslim government bombing and occupation
had forced the people to flee and had damaged many of the
buildings but Jesus Christ is the Resurrection and
the Life. Christianity is the religion of the empty tomb.
Out of death comes life abundant life.
Today
there are over 300 000 Moru Christians who belong to the
Mundri Diocese for which Kenneth Fraser laid the
foundations. Many of the key Christian leaders in Moruland
today received their education (and often medical treatment
too) at Lui.
The
signs of the Arab occupation were everywhere trenches,
gun emplacements, pill boxes, mine fields, the debris of
war, a newly painted mosque and many vandalised graves.
There were a shocking number of broken crosses in the graveyard
by the Lui church. (However, I noticed that none of the
Arabic signs on the graves of Muslim troops who had been
buried in Lui had been disturbed at all.)
Rev.Jeffery
pointed out the huge tree under which Dr Fraser had first
begun Bible studies and church services. Dr Fraser
chose that tree to start the first Moru church because it
was the same tree under which the Arab slave traders had
bought and sold our people as slaves. I looked at
the tree with renewed appreciation of God's work of creation
which made such a magnificent tree and God's work of redemption
(re-creation) which has rescued us from the slavery of sin
and death.
We
noticed that the memorial plaque which had been set up in
front of the Redemption Tree had also been vandalised by
the Arab invaders during their occupation.
I
preached the Word to the SPLA soldiers at Lui, and prayed
with them that the great work begun at that town would continue,
that once again the hospital, schools, colleges and church
would be fully operating to the Glory of God and for the
strengthening of His people in Moruland.
Medical
Clinic at Mundri is Operational
Despite a critical shortage of equipment and medicines,
the field medics and nurses who completed the Frontline
Fellowship Medical Workshop in March have managed to maintain
an operational clinic close to the Yei river. I was most
impressed with how much they had accomplished especially
with all the hundreds of patients they have had to care
for during the offensives of the previous 3 months The clinic
was clean, neat and efficiently run. There were over 40
patients in the 4 wards. Most were soldiers with gunshot
wounds. A few had been injured by landmines. Some were civilians
injured by mines or mortars. One man was in a very severe
condition. He had multiple fractures and his tongue had
almost been severed. The medics had effectively stitched
his tongue back together again. (We transported this man
back to the hospital at Maridi for further treatment). Some
of the patients had various tropical diseases. One 9 year
old boy was the only survivor of 3 who had been blown up
by a GOS mortar bomb. His mother and brother had already
died and he had wounds in each arm and leg and on his body.
The chaplains had organised a special service at the Mundri
clinic and well over 200 soldiers and civilians had gathered
and were joyfully singing when I arrived back from Lui.
After some hymns, prayers and greetings I presented the
Medical Workshop certificates to those Medics present who
had passed the written examination. They also received the
first red cross/medical armbands and special medic packs
with First Aid materials. In addition we delivered about
700 kg of antibiotics, pain killers, anti-inflammatories,
fever reducing agents, bandages, gauze and other vital medical
materials which had been donated by an American relief agency.
The
Mundri clinic urgently needs sheets (the patients are sleeping
on reed mats on concrete floors there are no beds
or sheets and very few blankets available), eating utensils,
mosquito netting for the windows, more paint (about half
of the clinic has been painted) and of course many more
medicines, bandages and gauze. The medics are also looking
forward to further training courses and medical teams to
come and assist them.
The
medical situation in Western Equatoria has become even more
critical since the Red Cross suspended their flights. The
Red Cross Hospital in Lokichoggio (Kenya) is the only fully
equipped hospital (with X-ray machines for example) available
for war wounded South Sudanese. The GOS and UN flight ban
on most of Western Equatoria also means that there is no
longer any opportunity to fly out patients. This makes it
even more urgent that we provide the trained and motivated
medics in Mundri with all the medicines they need to alleviate
the suffering of the war wounded in Western Equatoria. There
are not many places like the Medical Clinic in Mundri where
so much can be achieved with so few resources.
Literature
Distribution

One
of the 17 shipments of Bibles delivered by Frontline
Fellowship into Sudan. |
It
was a joy to deliver 1 050 Arabic/English Hymn Books,
240 Avokayo Hymn Books, 2 050 Prayer Books in Moru,
40 Prayer Books in English and two boxes of other Christian
books to the pastors of Western Equatoria.
The recent dramatic advances by the SPLA are now also
leading to other momentous upheavals as hundreds of
thousands of displaced people and refugees plan to return
to their, now liberated, home areas.
Leadership
Training
The Diocese of Mundri is planning to restore the abandoned
Bishop Gwynne College. This was the largest Bible
College and Theological Seminary in Southern Sudan
(named after the first CMS missionary to Sudan). As
the college had been so close to the battlefront it
had been abandoned for the last decade.
At present there are only 3 Bible Colleges for all
of Western Equatoria and none of them are in
Moruland.
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The rapid church growth and lack of adequate Bible training
has led to a desperate shortage of trained pastors. Frontline
Fellowship has been officially requested by the pastors
of Mundri Diocese to help restore the Bishop Gwynne College.
It would be a most strategically placed leadership training
centre to lay firm foundations for evangelism, discipleship,
pastoral ministry and Biblical Reformation.
Defying
Flight Bans
On this mission trip, as on many others, the logistics were
complicated by a flight ban by the GOS and UN over most
of Equatoria (that part where we are working!) We were told
by our hosts that when the radio message came through that
a plane was going to land that day the local officials didn't
believe it: No planes come here any more. We're under
a flight ban. Rev. Jeffrey explained: No, it's
a Frontline Fellowship team coming. To which they
responded: Oh! Frontline Fellowship, they just
nodded. Apparently we have a reputation for routinely breaking
UN and GOS rules and flight bans. The drama that ensued
over our return flight was another reminder of just how
often we take the Lord's protection for granted on these
(illegal) incursions into (the officially Islamic) Sudan.
I was walking to the Zande Bible College for the last speaking
engagement of my trip when I heard our aircraft an
hour early. I saw it coming in low and guessed that something
was wrong when the pilot landed immediately without first
circling the airstrip. I started running and collected my
kit on the way.
At the airstrip the pilot was very nervous and impatient
to take off. He had been warned by radio that the authorities
in Khartoum knew about this flight. The GOS had forwarded
official warnings that the aircraft did not have permission
to enter Sudan airspace and that it would be intercepted
and shot down if it continued. Within seconds we were zooming
out at maximum speed at tree top level straight for
the Zaire border. For several tense, prayer filled
minutes we scanned the skies for any sign of enemy aircraft.
By
God's grace we reached home safely. It had been another
successful trip blessed by God: The Medical Clinic at Mundri
was resupplied, the Field Medics had been equipped with
First Aid packs, 3 500 more Prayer and Hymn books in 4 languages
were delivered, Chaplaincy and Church services had been
held, including in newly liberated areas, our friends in
Southern Sudan had been further encouraged and important
plans and preparations were discussed concerning future
leadership training, educational and medical projects.
This
latest mission trip brings to 250 the number of church and
chaplaincy services and other meetings addressed by Frontline
Fellowship missionaries inside Sudan in the first half of
this year and 26 000 the number of Bibles and other Christian
books in 13 languages, delivered into 7 regions of Sudan
by Frontline Fellowship in the first half of this
year.
To
those who made this trip possible and who prayed for it
May the Lord abundantly bless and reward you.
Dr
Peter Hammond
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