Saturday, July 17, 2010

Lesson from Rwanda: Imagining a Different Future

"When they had done this they caught so many fish that their nets were beginning to break." Luke 5:6

As I listened to the story of John Damascene today I wondered how this 17 year old boy's life could ever be different. He never knew his dad and his mother died when he was eight. Since then he has lived with an uncle who abused him until the uncle died. Then John worked every day to try and feed himself and his two sisters Ruth and Jan.

When John joined up with a working group of other orphans through Zoe Ministry he was given training in farming in order to cultivate a small plot of land that his family owned, and he was given some rabbits to begin a small business selling them to make money to support his family. He was so hungry that he missed meetings with his working group to cultivate his land and all but one of his rabbits died. John continued collecting grass for a neighbor's cow in order to get a little food to eat for himself and his sisters.

How could John Damascene imagine a different future than the one he was currently living?

It is a question many have asked about their own circumstances. The disciples who had fished all night and caught nothing couldn't imagine going back out in the same waters and catching fish. But Jesus apparently could imagine it for them. Jesus said, "Put out into the deep water and let down your nets for a catch."

They did this without much expectation and were surprised by hope!

We share the question with John Damascene and the disciples. How can we imagine a future other than the one we are currently living?

Maybe we aren't worried about when our next meal will come from, but maybe we are worried about what life will be like after a loved one dies.

Maybe we wonder if we will ever know anything other than sadness after our divorce.

Maybe we wonder if our world will ever know a time without war.

Maybe we wonder what life will be like after foreclosure, bankruptcy, oil spills, cancer, hurricanes, economic crisis and job loss.

Is God at all a part of that future for you? If you want to have the capacity to imagine a different future from the reality you are currently living then God must be involved.

After hearing John Damascene's story someone asked, "Is there anything that Zoe Ministry can do for him?"

The answer began as 25 other orphans in John's working group showed up and joined him that day weeding his garden and helping him gather grass for his neighbor's cow as a show of support and hope that a different future wasn't all that far away.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Lesson from Rwanda: Bang For the Buck

I tend to be cheap. Some of you know that. Other words I'd use to describe myself are thrifty and glad to make a good deal. I also know that God has created me and all people to be good stewards of God's things. This is one reason I am drawn to this ministry of empowering orphans in Africa that Zoe Ministry is doing. Doing the most good with the resources God has given to us seems to me to be a faithful act.

There are many orphans and vulnerable children in the world. And followers of the risen Christ are rightly concerned for them since Jesus tells us that as you have done it unto the least of these my children you have done it unto me.

Now you could adopt an orphan for $20 a month for 18 years or so. That would be $4320 to help feed, clothe, and teach an orphan child. Say you decided to do that for 80 orphan children. That would be $345,600. But if you adopt the sharing hope empowerment method that Zoe Ministry is using then you would help those same 80 orphans with $18,000 over three years because at the end of three years the children are equipped to provide food for themselves, have reliable income, provide for their own shelter and have the dignity that comes from not only providing for their family but giving generously to help empower other orphaned children.

This is the principle of empowerment and multiplication and generosity. It has great "bang for the buck!" But because it is rooted in the gospel of Jesus it also has a tremendous bang for the kingdom of God.

Now the empowered orphan children of Africa are challenging me to think about how I am doing this (or not) in my daily activity.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Lesson from Rwanda: Empowerment

Empowerment. I like how that word sounds. But I have little understanding about how to do it. My time in Rwanda is allowing me the opportunity to witness empowerment in action.

Maybe you've heard the saying: "Give a person a fish and they will eat for a day. Teach a person to fish and they will eat for a lifetime." This is empowerment.

It is a step (or two) further than most of us go in our service to God. I know that is true in my life. It is easier for me to give somebody who is hungry a fish (or money). I feel good about myself when I do that. And there is nothing wrong with that, by the way. However, God invites us to get a little more involved. God gave us the best example of this involvement when He became flesh and dwelt among us in Jesus Christ.

God entered into the messiness of our lives to show us how to live with self-giving love. He said as much to the disciples after having washed their feet - modeling a life of self-giving love. Jesus said, "I have set you an example, that you should do as I have done for you." Jesus empowered his disciples to serve like him.

Imagine if you can that you are orphaned because your parents died of AIDS or they were killed by genocide. You are stigmatized and isolated from your community and treated like garbage to be thrown away. You have no home and no one wants to take you in. You don't know how to prepare or cook food. So you either steal food from someone's garden or you work for someone who exploits you by paying you very little. This is the typical life of an orphan child in Rwanda before they get involved with Zoe Ministry (www.zoeministry.org).

Today we met Burnadette who is 15 years old. On top of experiencing all of those things above, she was born with a medical condition so her bowels were not working properly. She smelled really bad. Not even her family wanted to be around her and she wanted to die.

Was Burnadette hopeless? So it might seem.

But a working group of orphans was being put together by Zoe Ministry in Burnadette's villiage. She began to realize she was not the only one who felt like she did. Through help from Zoe Ministry she was able to get medical treatment to repair her bowels so that she wouldn't smell anymore. Through the help and support of other orphans in her working group, she was able to learn to farm and breed rabbits to provide food and income for her and her sisters and brother.

Today while we were meeting and talking with Burnadette a group of 30 members of her family group were busy at work putting up a fence around her home and building a small kitchen garden by her house. Next week Burnadette will go to the home of someone else in her working group to help them too.

Burnadette has been empowered. She has been given dignity. She has been given hope. She is becoming the person God has created her to be - passing on to others what had been given to her.

With this empowerment model of ministry with orphans, the ratio of paid Zoe Staff to orphans is about 1:900. This is because the orphans are caring for one another. And when they graduate from the 2 to 3 year program they are then sponsoring new working groups of orphans themselves - passing on to others what they have received.

I wonder who you are empowering?
Are you just a disciple? Or are you a disciple maker?
Are you just doing good things for other people or are you teaching others to do good things?

The children of Rwanda have challenged me with these things.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Seeing God's Kingdom in Rwanda Africa

I have the privilege of spending this week in Butare, Rwanda Africa with Zoe Ministry (www.zoeministry.org) whose purpose is to share God's hope with AIDS orphans through the ministry of empowerment. Many good ministries to AIDS orphans offer aid/relief through financial gifts, but what happens when the giver of that aid quits? Often the orphans are left in the same place that they began - poor, hungry, isolated.

I'm learning about a new model for ministry to orphans in Africa that is so simple, but seems so revolutionary. It's basis is in the concept of empowerment and is deeply rooted in the gospel of Jesus Christ.

Rather than a traditional orphanage model, this ministry finds orphans and vulnerable children in villiages and groups them together in what they call "working groups." These working groups might be 20 to 25 families (around 60-75 children altogether). At the beginning of what is often a two to three year process the working group is "coached" by a indiginous social worker who helps them decide on leadership and goals for their group.

Often the first goals are "food security" and finding "income generating projects" that will help the children who are currently eating once every 3 to 4 days to start eating once a day. Indeed in a period of a month or two the group goes from being sick, hungry and homeless to eating food that they grow and purchase from money they make through selling food they grow. What the Zoe Ministry gives them is the support and tools the orphans need to do this work for themselves.

What we've seen are children who were once homeless, hungry and isolated now with the dignity that comes with providing for themselves and others who are in the same spot they are.

One really cool story happened today. After members of three different working groups finished sharing with us some of their stories they expressed their thanks to us by singing and processing toward us with several bags of vegetables full of things they had grown. They said, "Because of all that you have given to us we want to bless you with a portion of what we have been given." Keep in mind that these children are now eating once a day and they are giving us enough food that would likely feed them for a week! We received the food with humble and grateful hearts knowing at that moment they were giving us far more than we could ever give to them.

It was the extravagant generosity of the Kingdom of God embodied right before our eyes!

I can't wait to be able to share more pictures, video and stories upon our return. Thank you for your prayers for Lonnie, Kathy, myself and the rest of our team as we travel. And thank you also for your prayers for the orphans and workers with Zoe Ministry in Rwanda!