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Sunday, August 10, 2014

Last Day


by Selise Miller

This is our last full day in Malawi. We headed to worship at the Cathedral Church on the ELCM campus where Pastor Kelly was preaching. Church started at 9:30am and people were still coming in for worship at 10:10am - must be a Lutheran thing!  The music was beautiful--youth choir singing and drums being played--music truly is a part of this nation. 

Pastor Kelly had a wonderful sermon with an interpreter delivering in Chichewa. We finished church about 11:15am and headed back to get ready for lunch. After lunch we started packing to head home and hoping that suitcases were under the weight needed. After dinner we gathered to reflect about our trip.

On Tuesday, we were up and ready to leave at 9:30am for the airport and say our good byes to Dereck and Mphatso.


So long Malawi, we will keep you all in our prayers.

Saturday, August 9, 2014

Drive to Lilongwe


by Selise Miller

We said good-bye to Lake Malawi and headed to Lilongwe with a stop over in Dedza for lunch. We left Luther Cottage with fish tied to both side mirrors and the wiper at the back of the van--yes I said fish!!! Mphatso assured us they would be ok and be refrigerated once they got home.


He also told us we were taking a short cut to Dedza, which use to be a dirt road with unbelievable potholes, but was now a paved road. Boy were we in for a surprise and the ride of our life! He told us to look at the mountains ahead for we were headed up them.  The view at the top was unbelievable as was the ride! 

Lake Malawi's elevation was about 1600 feet above sea level and  Dedza about 6500 feet above sea level--up the mountain we went. There were villages scattered along the road, selling of produce, and many folks walking or pushing their bike with a 50 lb. sack of flour or metal sheeting for their roof on the back of the bike.


We arrived at Dedza Pottery and Lodge where we ordered lunch from a menu that had many American dishes--yippee! We headed over to the  pottery shop to make some purchases while our food was cooked. Lunch tasted so GOOD for it was not the usual rice and chicken dish.


We finished up with lunch and headed to Lilongwe. We arrived back on the ELCM campus to meet a group from Germany that will be traveling to their sister parish in Balaka. We settled in for the night. We were greatly thrilled to find out we had hot water!

Friday, August 8, 2014

Lake Malawi


By Selise Miller, member of St. Philip Lutheran Church

We awoke to the lapping of Lake Malawi in front of Luther Cottage at Monkey Bay. It was so peaceful to lay in bed, reflect over the past 2 weeks, and give thanks to God for bringing us safely this far.


We gathered for breakfast and then headed out to Malembo Health Center where patients are tested and treated for malaria. We meet John Bvumbe, an ECLM worker with the HIV/Aids-Malaria Program and Dr. Faustin Kabanmand for the clinic. We ask many questions about this disease and what is being done to help eradicate malaria, a disease that is deadly to many, especially babies and children.



Patients walk as far as 12- 15 miles for a simple finger prick and are told within 20 minutes if they have malaria or not. If a patient should test positive, they are given medicine (if it is available) and are told to follow up if symptoms should not improve. All pregnant women and babies are given a mosquito net to cover their beds at night. John told us that through educational programs they have seen a drop in malaria cases but they have a long way to go.

We left the clinic and headed to the village of Malembo, where once again we were greeted with singing and dancing. John introduced us to a group that have established a "savings and loan program" for their village. If they are a member, they can buy shares and receive dividends monthly and take out loans that have to be paid back within 30 days.


The members meet once a week, have no age limit to be a member, and will never have more than 25 members. Many members have a small business; maybe selling rice, oil, sodas, cookies or goats, that they were able to start with a small loan.  They are able to buy netting to sleep under, improvements to their home such as iron sheets, or donate money to the Health Clinic with their profits.

After eating with the new Abusa, we headed back to Luther Cottage to see what the vendors had made for us and pack as we were headed back to Lilongwe in the morning.

Thursday, August 7, 2014

Safari and a Day of Rest


By Kathleen Radtke

After a long drive to Liwonde, we spent Wednesday afternoon and Thursday morning in Liwonde National Park.  Seeing the variety of God's creations was amazing.  Some of the animals that we came across were elephants, hippos, baboons, kudus, impalas, hartebeests, warthogs, crocodiles, monitor lizards, guinea fowl, mongoose, and bushbucks.


We then made our way to Luther cottage in Monkey Bay.  I could not have imagined a more serene setting right on Lake Malawi.  Local villagers set up a small market just for us, and we enjoyed a very peaceful afternoon searching for shells and relaxing by the lake.  Yet again another example of God's wonderful work.

Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Chigumukire Feeding Center


By Kathleen Radtke, member of St. Philip Lutheran Church

We started on our journey to the Chigumukire feeding center on Tuesday morning with a quick stop at the house of the dean of the parish.  Dean Mawkala has been instrumental in helping the people of Chigumikure make the feeding center self sustaining.  It was great to see a community pull together to take care of the young children (ages 1-5) on their own.  

The church helped them get started, but since 2009, they have been growing the maize and soybeans and making their own cooking oil.  Combined with water, they are able to make a very nutritious porridge 6 days a week.  It is inspirational how the feeding center assistant volunteers his time to make all of this happen.


After helping to serve the porridge to the children, we all gathered in the church for a bible lesson led by Pastor Kelly.  We then gave out health kits and cross bracelets (made by the children of St. Philip).  Some of the younger children were frightened coming up to Azungus (white people), but it was so cool to watch the older kids that weren't getting kits help them come up and get one.

We left the same as we were greeted, with lots of singing and dancing.  The smiles and laughter of a united village will never get old and will always fill my heart with love and joy.

Celebrations and Dedications

Dedication of the borehole well built with support from St. Philip.
by Abusa Kelly

Over the weekend we had multiple worship celebrations.  On Saturday, we gathered with Mponela Parish, Bishop Bvumbwe, several choirs from Lutheran Hour Ministries Evangelism Team.  We gathered to dedicate the bore hole well and the feeding center.  What a celebration!!  Three hours of singing, dancing, speeches, drama, thanksgiving and so much praise to God!  The people of Mponela are so very thankful for good, clean water.  This will greatly reduce the amount of disease coming from water borne illness.  They are also so thankful for the feeding center; it will open in October to feed many children from the area.  Some of the church youth did an absolutely hilarious drama, with a powerful message of caring for the well and the feeding center.  Such a gracious and gifted people!


On Sunday, we worshiped for 6 hours - no joke!!  But it was a magnificent day!  Worship included the ordination of three new pastors in the ELCM.  I processed in with the other pastors, which felt just like we do in the ELCA when we gather together for synod assembly.  One of my colleagues translated the service for me, but apart from the difference in language everything was the mostly the same.  We follow the same liturgy for the order of worship.  We pray the same creed.  We say the same Lord's Prayer.  The pastoral candidates even said the same words of promise that I said at my ordination.  I got teary-eyed as I pondered the incredible gift of the one body of Christ - across the street and across the world.  God is good, all the time; all the time, God is good (they even say this same phrase here in Malawi!).  We processed out to a song based on Romans 8 - "Nothing can separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus."  That's a great theme for this trip - both because of our connections to the people of Mponela but also because of our continued connection to all of you back home.  We are all one body of Christ and we cannot be separated from God - ever, for any reason.


Today (Monday), we spent some time with Chitenje Congregation - part of Mponela Parish, where we had helped build the vestry on Thursday.  Today I led a bible study with the congregation, then we had a Q&A with one another.  As a sign of the oneness of the body of Christ, which had been the focus of my bible study, we all sat together in the congregation (usually visitors are placed in a seat of honor at the front of the congregation).  Such great questions - both from us and from the people of Chitenje!  We learned so much about each other - how life in the USA is different from in Malawi but also how it is the same.  A fantastic way to end our time with our sisters and brothers in Mponela Parish.  They gave us gifts to share with you all when we get home.  But mostly they have given us the gift of the love of God in Christ Jesus. 

Thank you for your prayers while we've been gone.  You all are in our prayers as well.

Mulungu akudalitseni (God bless you!)
Peace+

Friday, August 1, 2014

Smiles, Songs, Joyful Praise


By Heidi Speakman

Friday August 1 - We made a very long drive on a dirt road today to Mphemba.  On the way, we had the opportunity to stop in Kagwamtipenya to see their newly built church.  We then traveled to Mphemba to make bricks.  We made 820 bricks in the morning.  They did not have a well in the village, so when water was needed to make bricks, they had to walk to a nearby river and carried it back in a bucket on their head.  Kathleen helped the ladies cook this time. 

Lunch was at 2:15pm with eggs, greens, pork, rice and nsima.  Then we had the children perform for us, singing and dancing.  Two of the men had instruments.  Thank you Lord for the smiles, the songs, and the joyful praise.  And thank you for all we have back home. 

We have come back to the hotel to change into skirts (after working in pants) and went back to Mponela congregation for a music presentation by the Lutheran Hour Ministries Evangelism Team.