Sunday, February 8, 2009
UPDATE 2 weeks after the conference
We were delighted to discover that rain has continued to follow repentance for two weeks.
Monday, February 2, 2009
Conference ending
Closing the conference
We were asking God in public prayer for a sign of His pleasure for all the confession and forgiveness. The translator reminded the people that the we had been praying for rain all along.
A light trickle began 15 minutes before the conference ended. I again prayed for rain as a sign of God’s blessing.
All the people said “Amen!”
Laying sins at the cross
and lay them down at the foot of a make-shift cross where communion
(actually, water in this case, because juice and/or wine are unavailable)
was poured over them.
Interested eaves-droppers
Pastors and Bibles
In Tanzanian rural towns, tribal languages are generally spoken, but not read. KiSwahili, the national language is read, but not necessarily spoken in their town. So, on Sunday, the pastor has the hard job to read the KiSwahili Bible out loud, but then translate it for the people into their spoken language. It just isn’t easy for the Bible to get into people’s ears.
At Midday we talked about the 7 Audio Bibles that we brought from the USA in the local tribal language. The news of these brought considerable excitement as pastors started to realize the potential of people hearing the Bible without the pastor reading it to them. More on these next month when the units are delivered. (http://www.asmtoday.org/)
Day 2 of Conference
A local church’s choir came to sing and dance for the beginning of several of the sessions. They were quite active, and we enjoyed watching them, even though we couldn’t understand much of what they were singing.
Steps Four through Seven (Rebellion, Pride, Bondage, and Generational Sin) were covered on Day 2, among which Pride was the “hard-hitter.”
Bookmark give-away
Day 1 ended on the topic of forgiveness. The attendees appeared convicted in their hearts and were led through prayers to release themselves and others from ties of bitterness. This was a very powerful event. Private lists of people and hurts written on paper were burned in a release ceremony. Public testimonies of forgiveness were given the next day along with reports of feeling relief.
Full house!
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