Zambia #5: It Takes a Village...

by Ebralie Mwizerwa, for the team

We arrived in Lusaka last night from Harare. We were warmly received at the airport by Rev. Victor Chilenje, former Moderator for CCAP Zambia. We were delayed and Kenya Airways had canceled our flight but transferred all five of us to Emirates airline. What a joy it was to finally arrive in Lusaka and meet our friends!!

This morning we visited the House of Moses and delivered some supplies, held babies and visited with House of Moses staff. The House of Moses is one of two crisis nurseries managed by Christian Alliance in Zambia. House of Moses receives vulnerable babies, even newborns. Some of them may be critically ill but thankfully the ones we found today are very healthy. House of Moses has a capacity of 30 children, all under two years old. When they reach two, they are transferred to the Bill and Bette Bryant Crisis Nursery not far from House of Moses.

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Zimbabwe #4: Worship

by Ted Wright, for the team

This is the day the Lord has made; let us rejoice and be glad in it!

We five did rejoice – along with 300 +/- at CCAP City Church in downtown Harare. People had gathered from near and far to celebrate its formal dedication. Founded in 2011 as a prayer house adjoining Harare Synod headquarters, this worshiping community has now achieved the status of mpingo (congregation). Its brick-and-steel structure resounded with joy as choir after choir brought songs of praise. Some had come from as far as Bindura: more than 100 km (62 miles). In local vehicles on Zimbabwean roads that’s saying a lot.

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Zimbabwe #3: Masvingo

by Sue Wright, for the team

The British called Masvingo, Fort Victoria. It is a clean city with wide boulevards through the center of town. All types of shops line the streets – small department stores, trendy clothing stores, auto supply shops, drug stores, groceries and open-air vendors on the sidewalks. The jacarandas are blooming in beautiful purple, though it is very dry and dusty.

We arrived at a very large government high school where we joined a massive gathering of the Uniting Presbyterian Church of Southern Africa. Three large tents had been erected to protect the participants from the sun. It was a sea of black and white uniforms of the women’s and men’s guilds from many congregations.

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Zimbabwe #2: Nyabira CCAP Primary School

by Jennifer Ellis, for the team

Dear Outreach friends, 

Our morning started with a trip to Nyabira CCAP primary school. Nyabira is a poor community of displaced farm workers. We were accompanied there by the Moderator of CCAP Harare Aston Galanti and the General Secretary Kingstar Chipata. On arrival, we were met by the Head of School Ms. Asnath Gondwe, who hails from Malawi and has been working at the school for seven years. She is a single mother and lives in housing on the school compound with her family, along with 28 teachers and three student teachers.

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Brazil #3 - Much Bigger than the Amazon Rainforest

by Juan Sarmiento, for the team

“Where is Venezuela?” The continental proportions of Brazil, in addition to its character as the only Portuguese speaking country in the hemisphere, must have been some of the possible reasons behind the many times that I used to be asked this question about my country of birth when I was a student here in the early 90’s.

One of the biggest surprises that I received on this visit to Brazil after all these years is that Venezuela is in the news and a common topic of conversation. Thousands of families from Venezuela are walking days through the Amazon rainforest in search of what appear to be better living conditions in communities in the northern state of Roraima. According to the Economist, this is “the largest movement of people in Latin American’s recent history.” BBC estimates the number of Venezuelans arriving here to be 35,000.

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Zimbabwe #1: Home of Hope

by Frank Dimmock, for the team

Dear Outreach friends,

Our first full day in Harare was busy. We were eager to learn about the impact of recent national elections and the economic situation on Outreach church partners. How are they coping with challenges of high unemployment and widespread poverty? How is the church nurturing God’s Kingdom in Zimbabwe, building hope and demonstrating compassion? Our team began by meeting with the new officers of the CCAP – Synod of Harare at their office.

The Synod’s geographic coverage extends beyond the nine congregations in the Harare area, with a total of 26 within four Presbyteries. In addition, there are many prayer houses (i.e. with less than 100 members), evolving into new congregations. Currently there are 23 ordained pastors and 43 lay evangelists that minister in these locations.

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Zimbabwe and Zambia 2018 - Arrival!

by Ebralie Mwizerwa, for the team in Harare

Dear Outreach Friends,

Greetings from vibrant Harare – Zimbabwe, where we arrived last night. Our Outreach team of five (Ted and Sue Wright, Jennifer L. Ellis, Frank Dimmock and Ebralie Mwizerwa) was well-received by friends from our partner denominations (POZ and UPCSA – not pictured but present was the General Secretary of CCAP Harare Synod). Our friends braved the rush hour to greet us – not fun in Harare these days! It took us an unusually longer amount of time to drive from the airport because of all the traffic but we finally arrived at the hotel where we are staying.

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Brazil #2: Purposeful Gatherings

by John Terech, for the team

At another wonderful lunch offered by one of our hosts for our trip, the host family I had first met two years ago to the day, Juan said to me, “You have been bitten by the Brazilian bug!” I knew he was totally correct in that analysis. I love this country! This is my third trip to Brazil to work on reverse mission partnerships, meaning that I am here to find church planters to come and plant with our denomination back in the United States to serve Brazilian communities. It is not hard work. Granted, finding the right planter for the right place is never easy. But the process here is so enjoyable. The people of Brazil have the gift of hospitality. They are warm, affectionate, caring and a people full of faith. They want to make sure your visit is special and indeed, every time I am here I feel that way.

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Brazil: Hospitality, Folklore, Pop Songs and Bearing Fruit

by Tim Lee, for the team

I have only been in Brazil for a short time, but there are so many things that have amazed me about this county. For starters, I could easily rave about the warm hospitality that I’ve received, the delicious food I have eaten, and the number of extra pounds I have put on. Or in visiting a number of churches, I could share of a long-standing Presbyterian church that has adapted old traditions to fit contemporary culture. I was mesmerized by the use of modern art and stained glass to communicate its eight values, its multiple choirs for the adults, youth, and children, and a converted prayer chapel with the soft blue glow in the outline of the cross, rich with tradition, silence, and symbolism yet fitting a chic, calming ambiance.

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Lebanon: Final Trip Blog - "With"

by Marilyn Borst, for the team

“Assume selfie position!” became my good-natured “order” to my team when we had yet-another-opportunity (and there were hundreds of them!) to freeze a moment in time and place with one or more of our Syrian and Lebanese sisters. Our ever-present cell phones were a gift, affording us the blessing of taking back home a memory of these relationships, distilled in the long days spent together at the women’s conference. For long after we would be absent from one another, these images can recall our togetherness, our “with-ness.”

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Lebanon Day: Eleven - The Preaching Life

by Sheryl Wood, for the team

It’s Sheryl Wood on the road again in Lebanon. Greetings everyone. We started out this morning at 8:30 for about a two hour drive to get to our destination, which was The National Evangelical Church of Tripoli for a church service. There were just a few little spits of rain and then sunny skies ahead.

We arrived at the church around 10:00. It was a little earlier than we had expected. We went down several steps and the door of the church opened widely before we could even grasp the doorknob. There she was with a radiance that is hard to describe. Introductions were not even necessary. She had been following our group on Facebook and knew our names perfectly, along with a little something about the newbies, Evangeline and me. Her name is Pastor Rola Sleiman.

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Lebanon: Day Ten - Remembrance and Community

by Julie Burgess, for the team

After a full Saturday, I ask that you walk through it with us in reverse, for that is how I found the message of today that birthed the title of this blog.

While he was in Bethany, reclining at the table in the home of Simon the Leper, a woman came with an alabaster jar of very expensive perfume, made of pure nard. She broke the jar and poured the perfume on his head. Some of those present were saying indignantly to one another, “Why this waste of perfume? 5 It could have been sold for more than a year’s wages[a] and the money given to the poor.” And they rebuked her harshly. “Leave her alone,” said Jesus. “Why are you bothering her? She has done a beautiful thing to me. 7 The poor you will always have with you,[b] and you can help them any time you want. But you will not always have me. 8 She did what she could. She poured perfume on my body beforehand to prepare for my burial.9 Truly I tell you, wherever the gospel is preached throughout the world, what she has done will also be told, in memory of her.”  Mark 14:3-9

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