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Light
in the darkness
A report by Dave Palmer, elder of
Tavistock Community Church
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Dave
Palmer from Tavistock Community Church and Bishop Sadiki
of the Family of God churches. Dave and Sadiki spent a week
working together in Rwanda and the Congo this Easter.
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he
border is closed for three days!"
Those
were the words I heard as I sat in a crowded minibus-taxi in Kigali,
Rwanda on my way to DR Congo. It
was the voice of the person sitting next to my friend Sadiki Zacharie.
Sadiki is a Rwandan Bishop with whom I was travelling to the neighbouring
country to do a three-day church conference. We had been planning
this conference for some weeks earlier, believing that God was
directing us to go at this time and help establish churches strong
in faith in Jesus and able to stand before the opposition and
uncertainty of civil war. The neighbour had been talking on his
mobile to someone who lived there. At that moment it all looked
as though my main reason for coming to Africa had fallen apart.
Nevertheless Sadiki and I decided we would go on by faith, not
accepting that God had called us to give up.
ive
hours later in the pouring rain we arrived at the border crossing
with Congo, only to find that no-one was crossing over! After
making enquiries at the customs office, I discovered not only
that Rwandans such as Sadiki could not cross while Europeans could,
but also that there were all kinds of rumours about what lay on
the other side. Rwanda was remembering its 10th memorial of the
genocide, and the Congo is still suffering from forces opposing
the government. There are still tensions between the two countries
and they view Europeans especially with suspicion. So, after a
quick prayer for courage, I crossed alone hoping that all would
be well. I waited at the customs for a friend who was to pick
me up. He was late in arriving and I was eyed suspiciously by
the Congolese officials. Eventually he arrived, we sorted the
official administration and he took me to stay with his family.
Everything seemed normal but there were rumours of soldiers around
the town. Sadiki, who had booked a room in a hotel and was soon
fast asleep, was woken up with a message for him to go to the
border. When he did, he was given special permission to cross.
Hallelujah! We met up again and in the next three days the conference
went ahead.
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Dave
preaching at the Bukavu pastors' conference
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It was a
great opportunity to meet and see again fellow Christians who
had seen tremendous growth in their churches in two years. What
were two churches two years ago are now thirty-six churches, all
needing help and support from us. Our aim was to set in a good
foundation on Jesus as owner and builder of the church and to
encourage them to trust in Him and follow the teaching of the
Bible and become a spiritual force in the nation for good. We
did begin to do this with much appreciation from the Pastors whom
we met.
After that
I visited a school in Kabarore, Rwanda where we are supporting
a church-based project for a primary school and eventually, we
hope, a secondary school in the east of the country. The Headmaster
of the school, whose name is Emmanuel, is also the leader of the
growing number of churches in the South East of Rwanda. Here we
brought some financial help and encouragement to the Christians.
The school particularly needed help because owing to some opposition
they had not been able to pay the three teachers and the Headmistress
for four months!
mmanuel
is a short stocky quiet man with a round face and a great sense
of fun. As we sat over a meal in his small house he told us of
how he had on two occasions nearly been killed in motor accidents
when the taxi he was in overturned and on both occasions spent
time in hospital recovering from broken ribs. Worse to follow
was the death a few months ago of his youngest son through illness.
But his faith and vision for his country and the Lord of his country
is undiminished. He said God is good, and pointed up at the ceiling
where a light bulb dangled. A few weeks ago electricity arrived
in his village for the first time. A friend of his, an Anglican
priest then came up to him and said, "It is not right for
a pastor with such a large church and school responsibilities
to live in a house with no light." The friend said God had
told him to pay for the installation, the wiring, the switches
and even the light bulbs so that Emmanuel could have light in
the evenings. And as the light comes on in his house, so the spiritual
light of the gospel of Jesus is beginning to light up Rwanda.
The nation
has changed greatly in the last ten years. It is beginning to
look outwards and find healing, with many plans for tourist parks
and investment. The infrastructure is better than I have ever
seen, with even a high road being built to western standards to
connect the countries of East and Central Africa. As it says in
the Bible, where sin abounds, God’s grace abounds more!
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(Above)
Dave with members of team in Bukavu
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Dave
(far right), at the end of his stay in Africa, with (L-R)
Colin, Sadiki, Evelyn and John Bosco at John Bosco's Nairobi
church.
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