African Inland Mission

African Inland Mission
"Christ-centered churches among all African peoples"

Monday, May 22, 2017

May 22, 2017

Wow, I can’t believe that it has been two months since I last wrote about what is happening here in Moroto District.  I kid you not; we have had more visitors in the last month and a half than in the three previous years put together. While our daily lives continue to blur with the pace of activity, we humbly live in gratitude to our loving Jehovah God Who sees each moment clearly.  Lyle and I feel His Presence leading and guiding us through the complexities of culture here that we so often cannot understand. As we continue to embrace cross-cultural living, I am reminded by the curriculum we are going through with our team, that living this way taxes us emotionally and physically every day just to make it through.  While some aspects seem more normal since we have been here more than three years, they have not become less challenging, just less shocking.  We continue to work on withholding conclusions about things we don’t understand and we do attempt to make deliberate efforts to gain understanding, but some things remain elusive to comprehend.

We struggle with how to process women getting severely beaten and it is accepted as no big deal and normal, children with injuries and wounds that should require hospital care, but families acting like they are ok, or people with severe wounds denied care because they are not clean enough. We ask questions and get one answer and as we try to process that answer, and respond, get a completely different answer than what was just said with both answers coming from the same person.  This is a regular occurrence no matter who we are talking to. It feels as though people just answer with what first comes to mind, whether it is accurate or not. Our ladies have come to the conclusion in their three months in Moroto, “That they know nothing,” to quote one of them.  Another challenge we are coming to understand is that the Karimojong people are not a storying people. So contextually, speaking with them is not woven through a thread that joins the preceding thoughts, which makes following their thinking very challenging for us as well as for them trying following our way of conversing, let alone understanding Bible stories.

The spring rains have come a month and a half late, but we are so grateful to the Lord that they seem to have come at last with some consistency.  This is the first year, that we have seen lots of preparation for large gardens throughout Moroto District.  Men as well as women and children are digging; my heart thrills each time I see a man, teenager on up, actually working.  Oh how I pray that the Lord will honor their labor with good harvests, and that the people will honor God with their harvest instead of thanking the gods at their shrines.  We also have planted our gardens since our chicken prison was finished about a month ago. They are sprouting once again.   Lyle and Simon and Paul worked hard to get the coop finished, so that planting when the rains came would be possible.

Mark's first planting
Lyle has continued to help the young man I spoke about in our last blog.  Mark has been able to get a small garden going inside his compound in one of the slums.  They visited GIZ, a German NGO that is here to help the Karimojong see different ways to garden in arid climates.  Mark was shown a keyhole garden, which can produce all year round with very little water.  He was so excited about this that before that day was out; he had gathered all the natural materials needed to create the garden.  Over the next two days he had completed the structure needed with Lyle supplying chicken wire to keep the goats out.  He has already had one harvest and has replanted for a second one.  We helped him to get seeds and a watering can, so he can water it.  That might seem logical to many of you reading this, but here the thinking is that the rains provide water, and if there is no rain there is no garden. 
Mark's second planting
Helping these precious people understand that God gave them dominion over nature requires us to move very slowly and demonstrate with our own gardens, chickens etc. and lives that this is the case.  


Mark was willing because Lyle had gained his trust through relationship. Lyle and Mark have a bible study each week, and they are going through the gospel of John.  Mark was very shocked that Jesus would speak with the Samaritan woman; he clearly understood the prejudice the Jews had toward Samaritans. When they read about Jesus clearing the temple because it was spoiled by the sin and greed of men, and then Lyle showed him, where we are now the temple of God, Mark started crying.  Please join us in praying that Mark, who asked to give his life to Christ, will allow the Holy Spirit to help him clean out his temple and fill it with Christ.  He lives in the midst of great darkness in the area he is in, and the daily temptation there is a real challenge to transformed life.

The woman Ingrid is treating for lymphatic TB
Mark introduced Lyle to his aunt who was very ill with huge open, infected abscesses on her neck.  He said that she had been chased from the hospital for not being clean enough and was not treated.  Lyle came home and told me about her, he said she had dirty rags covering the wounds and that he promised Mark I would come and look at her.  So a few days later, Lyle took me to her.  She was sitting in the dirt, frail and skinny, I think she is in her late 60’s. She speaks a little bit of English, and said I could look at her wounds.  They were round balls of open pus about the size of grapes all over her neck.  She allowed me to clean them and dress them.  I did this for about two weeks every two to three days with good healing results.  She is so brave because my loving care was very painful for her, but she endured it well.  My concern was what had caused them, and a local man had mentioned to Lyle that it could be lymphatic TB.  I took a photo with the lady’s permission and sent it to a friend who is a nurse at the hospital.  She responded immediately and told me to bring this lady in for tests, and so as we escorted her to the hospital to my friend, she was seen immediately and admitted into the inpatient ward. Sure enough, she has lymphatic TB.  So she is now on 6 months of treatment, which brings another challenge.  Apparently the medication causes great hunger in the patient and is very hard on the digestive system without a lot of food.  May I say, on the best days these people get one meal a day, and that could just be sorghum beer.  So we are providing her with some flour and sugar to make posho and porridge to take her medicine with.  Please pray for her to hunger to know the Lord more than she hungers for food.  Her wounds are almost completely healed now.  She is very appreciative of our care for her.  I keep letting her know how much Jesus loves her.

Church at Lotirir
Lyle and I continue to minister in Lotirir on Sundays mostly with a young karimojong couple, John and Esther.  The Church of Uganda here in Moroto has organized for them or others to interpret for us. This couple has been very faithful to come, but when others are assigned most of them do not show up.  We have learned to have a back up plan for interpretation.  Lyle and John and Taryn have faithfully gone out for Bible study on Thursdays and the feedback they have gotten is that this time is more fruitful for them than Sundays to understand whom God is. They told Lyle that they now see that the God of the Bible isn’t the same as their traditional God. There continues to be 20-30 people coming on Thursdays and at least that many, but often more on Sundays, even with their gardens needing work.   Oh how our hearts rejoice in this.  We are recognizing that the instructions the Lord gave us three years ago to live incarnationally and to let the Karimojong people ask us to teach has now happened. His ways are above our ways, and we treasure His ways. The precious couple, John and Esther, and us are getting to know each other better, and I have such a tender heart for Esther.  She has joined Veronika, Hailey and me in ministering to the women in prison.  In the last month, 7 women have asked us if they could give their lives to the Lord.  The Spirit had been very clear with me that I was not to offer this opportunity but to wait till the women asked for it.  How amazing it has been for me to see this actually happen.  Oh how I praise our Lord Jesus for Him drawing people to Himself and allowing me the privilege of being a part of this holy and sacred time.  Veronika’s husband Moses continues to join Lyle and Reverend Raymond in ministering to the men in prison. 

Mark front left, Moru rear left, middle back Ariyan, second
from right back row Lotuk
As I type this, I have three of our young students out on the porch with a tutor, as the school term is over and they are getting help in the subjects they are weak in.  They have two to three sessions per day, each about 2 hours, for 5-6 days for two weeks.  Then the next term will start, on May 29th, and they will not be able to have any tutoring for three months.  Lyle and I went to the PTA meeting at the secondary school where we have 6 students and 4 of them were in the choir that sang to greet everyone that came to the meeting. Ariyan (one of our boys) had been chosen to conduct the choir; this is a very big honor as he is in S1, which is like a freshman.  We are so very proud of all of them.  When we left for the USA last July, there was only two of the boys as tall as me, now out of 12 boys, only a few are my height or less, most of them tower over me.  It is amazing what a half a year can bring in physical changes in children.  They are very pleased to be taller than me.   When I remind them that we pray for them each week (we break up the week and pray for 2-3 each day) most of them respond that they also pray for us and thank God for us.  One of the boys, Louse Richard, is reading the Ngakarimojong Bible so well that he has been asked to give the message on Sundays when Pastor/Mayor Noah is out of town.  That is a big responsibility for a 15-year-old boy.  I asked the man who takes care of them; how they make sure what he says is correct.  This man and most others cannot read their mother tongue but know the bible in English and make sure to teach him properly.  I would like to make sure that this is true as our experience would say otherwise, I wish I could be in many places at once but am trusting the One Who can be in all places at once to insure that the message is accurate.  What a privilege the Lord gives us to be a part of these wonderful children’s lives. Miriam is heading out to Corsu in the Kampala area for her last checkup and I hope to regain her artificial leg as well, which should be having the socket refitted.

Front to back, left to right - Hailey, Taryn, Ingrid, Nita, Lyle
Our team has a regular time to meet each week and we spend about 5-7 hours together, going through a scheduled agenda, which includes curriculum.  Ivan, the Ugandan man I mentioned, joins us after he finishes work and we consider our times together very special.  We are coming to understand so much better what Paul was describing in Romans 12:4: that Christ’s body has many members, that we are each parts of only one body, Christ’s body, and we all belong to each other.  We are finding that when one of our team hurts we all hurt, that the choices one of our team members makes affects our entire ministry, that there really is no independence here from one another.  Oh how I wish the American church could have the perspective to understand this.  It is an easy perspective to have here where everything seems foreign and at odds with our contextual reality. I meet with each of the ladies 1-1 each week, and Lyle and Ivan meet each week.  When Ivan’s work allows he joins Lyle in the bible study with Mark. We are so grateful for fellow workers, I just can’t say it enough!

We are grateful for each one of you who prays with us and for us.  The Lord continues to faithfully place those He desires for us to have relationship with in our path.  My Saturday afternoon was spent with a young Karimojong man, a medical officer, who has been accepted into Oxford. We worked on the essay he needed to whittle down to 500 words, for applying for a scholarship.  As he and I sat and read what he had written, and he shared the parts he felt strongly needed to be left in, I felt such a privilege to be a small part of his life and future.  Lyle came home from the prison part way through, we had it down to 520 words, and then Lyle read it with fresh eyes.  So he and Paul sat and talked and worked and got it to within 8 words of 500.  That was about 3 and a half hours total of working on this.  We are praying for him, for his future.  He knows that God has brought him this far, and his attitude is one of gratitude not entitlement, so unusual here. Please join us in praying for Paul’s future, if he gets to go to the UK, this area will lose one of it’s brightest medical stars.  I was very strong in pleading with him that he would return to Karamoja afterwards. He assures me he will, but….he has never been to the west, and that is a lure that can seem irresistible. 

As I close this, I want to share the challenge the Lord continues to place on my heart as to what my life is about.  2 Corinthians 11:3 says in part that Paul, the writer of this letter, was afraid that the Corinthians’ pure and undivided devotion to Christ would be corrupted. The Holy Spirit speaks softly into my heart that I also must guard against this corruption.  Please pray for me that my devotion to Christ would be pure and undivided.  Jehovah God created me, gave me life, and saved me from destruction both here on earth and eternally through Jesus Christ.  My life is His! I pray that I will truly live for Him, for His glory and renown to be made known, for He is good and His ways are good.  I remind myself of this daily as I see the starvation here both physically and spiritually and the suffering of a people struggling even for daily life.  God’s word never promised that life would be free of physical or emotional pain, but that knowing Him would be enough in the midst of it all.  The wonderful mystery of Christ is that when people come to know Him, they change from the inside out.  I have been privileged to see this with the women in prison who accepted Him.  A joy glows out of their eyes, although their surroundings haven’t changed. Jesus truly is what each human needs for fullness of life no matter where that life is lived.  This is a reminder to me of what David wrote in Psalm 16:11….granting me the joy of Your Presence and the pleasures of living with You forever.  I have the pleasure of life with the Living God right here and now in Moroto, Uganda as well as the hope of eternally living with Him.  What wondrous love is this?  Praying that this joy is your reality as well, wherever you live.


Love Ingrid (and Lyle)