Michael and Rachel Weller - June 2013 Update

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Dear Friends,

Micah 6:8 is a verse I have been thinking about a lot over the past several years.

What does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God.

There are a lot of things to say with that verse as a theme, but I won’t bore (or amuse) you with my amateur theology. This verse, however, has been a guide to much of what I have chosen to do. This week I was faced with a situation. It has not disappeared, of course. I am still in a dilemma.

I made friends with a family - the only other family living on the church compound where Michael and I make our home. They have moved now, but they were here when we arrived. Mary was living in the student housing of the Jack Jordan Bible School with her four children. Her husband had been a student the year before. He was a promising student, well-liked by classmates and teachers. So it was a shock to the school and a huge blow to his young family when he died suddenly. Because she didn't have anywhere else to go, the school gave Mary a room where she could stay for a year. That’s when I met them.

Nyak, pictured here on the left with a friend, being too young for school and old enough to wander around on his own, began to come visit me every morning. He is a bright, delightful kid. We became good friends. He helped me with housework, and I gave him things to do - paper and pencil, a mattress to play on… or with.

But Mary was struggling to find food for the family. She, along with the community, made the decision to move everyone out to Lare (lah reh) on the border of South Sudan, where her late husband’s family lives. According to Nuer culture, they are responsible for her and the children and since she has no way to support herself in Gambella, it made sense to move. There is probably some food there. Though they tell me there is a school there, is it any good? The best response I got to that question was a shrug of the shoulders. Schools in rural Ethiopia are mostly poor. The schools in Gambella Region of Ethiopia are some of the worst in the country. Nycieng, the oldest and only girl, is somewhere around twelve years old. Nyak is a smart kid.

As someone who has shown some interest, I have become an “African” relative. Relatives are expected to contribute to the well-being of the whole family. So now tell me, what is the just thing to do? What is the merciful response?

I don’t expect an answer. There are many answers … and no answers. I will do my best to figure out what God is asking me to do for this family. I know what he has asked me to do for the community. Rightfully, I can deny any obligation to specific people. I contribute to the church and to the community as a whole. Then why do I have a knot in my stomach thinking about Mary, Nycieng, Buom Koth, Nyak, and Bang Ping?

The one assurance I have is that no matter what I do, nothing I do will have any future without God’s hand of blessing on it. As much as I weep for the struggling single mothers of Gambella, I am humbled by the price that God paid so that they may have life and have it abundantly! I can only imagine the tears that he sheds knowing how much better life could be.

These books have helped me formulate ideas (not answers) about how to deal with poverty: 

When Helping Hurts by Steve Corbett, Brian Fikkert, and David Platt 
African Friends and Money Matters by David E. Maranz 
Toxic Charity by Robert Lupton

And if you want to hear Robert Lupton speak, come to Big Tent Aug 1-3, 2013 in Louisville. http://www.presbyterianmission.org/ministries/big-tent/

 

Rachel Weller

 

Prayer Requests

Please pray for Mary, Nycieng, Buom Koth, Nyak, and Bang Ping


Minimum Goal for 2014

$70,000 for a comprehensive church-based education project in South Sudan; $10,000 for ministry funds; $10,000 for support funds

 

Location

Ethiopia, South Sudan, Sudan