Sunday, October 24, 2010

Good Samaritan

“Then little children were brought to Jesus for him to place his hands on them and pray for them. But the disciples rebuked those who brought them.

Jesus said, ‘Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these.’” – Matthew 19:13-14

My beautiful friend

Robyn seeing a patient Last week, Colleen and I had the privilege of helping our friend Robyn Moore, a WGM missionary and Nurse Practitioner, at Good Samaritan orphanage in Nairobi.  Good Sam is located in Mathare, a slum with over half a million people living in it.  Robyn has an incredible ministry to several orphanages around Nairobi, providing medical care and food for the children. 

 

PB sandwiches

We mainly played with the kids and helped with crowd control as Robyn saw some patients.  It was so much fun spending time with the kids... Colleen taught a bunch of them “Skidamarink” complete with motions, so she was surrounded by kids singing and dancing for most of the day.  We had made peanut butter sandwiches the morning before we left, and the kids loved them… they lined up so quietly as we passed them out, and there were huge grins on all of their faces.  It is amazing how much joy a little Jiff can bring! 

Newton with Colleen We were shocked to hear some of the childrens’ stories – many of them have experienced more than a lifetime of trauma in their young lives.  Some of the things that have happened to them are horrible… Our only comfort is knowing that God loves them more than we can even imagine, and He promises to take care of them and set things right in the end.    Newton... how can you say no to those eyes

Early in our time at Good Samaritan, a little boy named Newton latched onto Colleen and they were inseparable for the rest of the day.  He was such a precious little boy who just needed some love.  Like many of the kids, Newton has already had so much happen in his little life.  He was so sweet and loved all the attention that he was getting… we wished we could just take him home and love on him! 

Please pray for Newton and for all the other children like him.  There are so many kids who have been rejected by the world, but are priceless to the Lord.  In the verse posted above, Jesus confirmed how important little children are to Him and how we are to treat them, even though so often they are cast aside in society.  “The kingdom of heaven belongs to them…”

Also please pray for Robyn and her incredible ministry.  She deals with things on a daily basis that most of us cannot imagine, yet she perseveres to help the children.  Click HERE to see Robyn Moore's WGM page. 

Thanks so much for reading and for your prayers,

Cason

Click HERE to see the whole album of pictures from our time at Good Sam... so many beautiful faces!

With some new friends

She was so beautiful and photogenic:

Posing

A view from the second floor of Good Samaritan out into the Mathare slum:

View into the slum from Good Sam

Colleen is always surrounded by kids… they love her!:

Colleen and her friends

I cannot get over how amazing orphans’ eyes are sometimes…:

Peter

The kids waiting in line for their peanut butter sandwiches:

Waiting in line for PB sandwiches

Newton getting checked out by Robyn:

Newton getting his checkup

As always, thanks for reading!

Monday, October 11, 2010

Salgaa Clean-up

Thumbs up for picking up trash

We’ve written before about the ministry that our church, Ngata AGC, has to the women of Salgaa and the local Internally Displaced Persons Camp.  Today we had the opportunity to go to Salgaa with our youth group and students from Kabarak University to help clean up the streets. 

Ngata girls with some kids Salgaa is located right along the main road from Nakuru to western Kenya, and is a popular truck stop.  Because of this, it is a poorer community with a large commercial sex worker industry.  It is difficult to get real numbers, but on any given night there are up to 300 women out working the streets.  Many of these women turn to prostitution because  they see it as the only viable occupation available – many hope it is temporary necessity just to get by, but they end up getting sucked into a lifestyle that won’t let them out.  The church hosts a weekly Bible study for the women, and partners in other ministries that teach health education and alternative occupation skills. 

Rivers of trash Because the town sprung up quickly around the truck stop, there is no working sanitation or refuse disposal… so trash is tossed haphazardly or piled by the streets.  It is everywhere, and is a big health risk since many kids run around in bare feet. 

For our clean up day, we met in Salgaa armed with gloves and garbage bags, and walked around the dirt streets picking up trash.  Kids came from everywhere wanting to know what we were doing, and many wanted to help.  We gave them gloves, which they loved, and they helped pick up trash for hours… I made quite a few little friends, mostly because they were interested in being around the crazy mzungu (white guy) who was picking up trash.  After a few hours, I had a little army of trash picker-uppers helping me as we tried to communicate in broken Swahili and English.   When most of the garbage bags had been filled, we loaded them into a lorry (truck) to be hauled back to Nakuru… again, because there is no refuse dump in Salgaa. 

There was a line-up to put trash in my bag

My helpers We realized that our overall message of cleanliness wasn’t totally sticking with the kids when we gave them each of them a piece of candy for their hard work…. almost immediately after they had the candy in their hands, the wrappers were tossed all over the ground… right next to the bags of garbage that we had just collected!  I guess old habits die hard, even when you’re 7 years old.  Someone explained to them about picking up the trash and keeping things clean, so hopefully they remember the lesson the next time the get a sweet. 

Keziah and some friends The goal of the day wasn’t to rid Salgaa of trash – that would take many days, shovels, and backhoes – but it was merely to show Christ’s love in the community and try to let people know that the are valuable.  While working, I talked with some women selling vegetables who were so appreciative of what we were doing and were asking about the church and Bible Study.  Just showing up with gloves and trash bags afforded us conversations that we wouldn’t have been able to have otherwise. 

It was also great for our youth to serve, and to think about how they were working for the Lord, not for men.  Sometimes showing Christ’s love means picking wrappers and condoms up out of the mud and sewage… there are many ways to worship the Lord, and they are not always pleasant.  He calls us to be servants, because He humbled himself and became the ultimate servant… willing to give all of Himself for each one of us.

So whatever you do… do it all for the glory of God. 1 Corinthians 10:31

Thanks so much for reading and for your prayers.

Cason

Click here to see the whole Ngata AGC Facebook album of pictures from the clean up day.

Here’s me and my army of helpers taking a break from work to show off our dirty gloves:

My army of helpers showing off our dirty gloves

Cute little girl that followed Colleen around all day… big thanks to Colleen for all of these great photos!:

Cute little girls who followed Colleen around all day

Pastor Paul, Rael, and a friend from Kabarak:

Pastor Paul, Rael, and a friend from Kabarak

I think this is my “stink” face:

Stinky trash face

The whole group in front of the Kabarak bus:

The whole group