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P.O Box 74, Newlands, |
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Angola's Agony - Reaching the Refugees Remember your Creator in the days of your youth, before difficult days come, and the years draw near when you say, I have no pleasure in them Ecclesiastes 12:1 Between August and September our Frontline Fellowship team had many wonderful ministry opportunities in southern and central Africa. Our Team continued with a program of Biblical Worldview Seminars in Zambia and Malawi, including a special program for Christian lawyers. We also had the privilege of ministering to the needs of Angolan refugees now inhabiting camps in Western Zambia. Zambia, a nation surrounded by conflict. Wars continue to rage in countries bordering Zambia, particularly Congo and Angola. As a result, Zambia is now host to more than 220,0 00 refugees! Occasionally, the fighting spills into Zambia. Throughout this year news reports of Angolan forces making brief incursions into Western Zambia were not uncommon. Since December 1999, more than 25,000 Angolans seeking protection from the MPLA Angolan military forces have fled into Zambia. Why is there such suffering and misery? It was after World War I, that a philosopher of that day asked, After so much death and suffering, how can we trust God any longer? The sad thing is that the worldly philosopher was asking the wrong question. Rather the wise man should ask, After so much death and suffering, how can we continue trusting in man? This question is relevant to the people of Angola today. En route to a refugee camp located in Western Zambia, we prayed that we might locate Pastor Armando (not his real name), a Christian leader from Angola, with whom I had ministered from 1994-1996. The road to the camp was very sandy. Four-wheel drive was essential. The camp is laid out in blocks. As more refugees arrive, they are assigned small plots of land to build their new dwellings. Refugees typically live in grass houses with roofs made from a blue UNHCR tarpaulin. A number of international agencies (such as CARE International) are working in the camp, providing basic necessities such as food and water. Our arrival
coincided with a meeting of the Angolan refugee leadership. After they
had finished with their main business, they requested that I address
them. They searched for interpreter, and after one was found, he came
and sat opposite me, staring at me with a big grin. He looked familiar.
At his first opportunity, he introduced himself to me and he reminded
me that in 1996 that I had been his Bible teacher in Angola. During
a brief message, I challenged the refugee leadership that in their present
circumstances, they should recognize the folly of trusting man
and rather putting their faith in the Lord. Cursed is a man who
trusts in man and makes flesh his strength, whose heart departs from
the LORD
But
Blessed is a man who trusts in the LORD, and
whose hope is the LORD. (Jeremiah 17:5,7).
He said
We suffered because of the December rains, but without the rain
we could not have survived. Many people yet remain in eastern
Angola, and Pastor Armando said that their suffering is very great.
He also said that, with exception of one man who is unaccounted for,
all members of his congregation from Angola are now in the refugee camp.
Pastor Armando says that he always remembers Angola in prayer.
The pastors, who are now in their sixties and seventies, have done their best to train some of the young men, yet they would hope that further training could be made available to the churchs future leaders. We discussed the establishment of an Angolan Christian Student Scholarship Fund to enable some young men to obtain theological training. Sunday Service at the refugee camp. More than a thousand people, possibly more, met for the morning service. The collection of the offering was an amazing sight. Over the period of about 20 minutes, first children, then everyone else came forward and deposited amounts of dried full kernel corn (maize) into a sack. In their difficult circumstances, the refugees might be tempted to reason that they have nothing to give, yet they tithe from the food allowance given to them by the various international agencies. This provides the church with the necessary means to conduct ministry. At the
service I was given an opportunity to preach a message entitled Why
Does God Allow Suffering and Hardship? We specifically looked
at the life of Joseph and what he suffered on account of his brothers
jealousies (Gen. 37:11-36, 39:1-3, 7-13, 20). Through no fault of his
own he became a slave in Egypt, he was tempted by Potiphars wife,
was falsely accused and subsequently imprisoned, but in all this Gods
purposes were eventually accomplished. Joseph, a man who walked with
God, understood this very well (Gen. 50:20). We also looked at some
other passages regarding trials and temptations: 1 Pet 1:3-9, 1 Cor
6:18. The Angolan refugees could readily draw a number of comparisons
between Josephs circumstances and their own. Circumstances beyond
their control, caused by their brothers greed and hatred, have
resulted in their having to flee into Zambia for their very survival.
We were able to assist the Evangelical Church with Bibles, study booklets, Gospel Recordings Messengers, tracts, love boxes and second hand clothing. Pastor Armando was particularly pleased to receive the booklet entitled O que e o casamento cristao? (Questions about Christian Marriage. A few days earlier while he had been with some youth, the topic of marriage had come up. It is worth pointing out that, in the midst of their hardship, even single refugees contemplate marriage. It was sad to leave our friends after such a short visit, but we look forward to future opportunities to assist them in their time of great need. Please do pray for the Angolan Christians in their trials and suffering. Remember the prisoners as if chained with them those who are mistreated since you yourselves are in the body also. Hebrews 13: 3 Report
compiled by Rob For Action:
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