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MALI JAN09 - Pray for Village K to receive the Word

January 17, 2009

Lawrence called at 5:42PM our time, Saturday.  Everyone is well and God has blessed the villagers with the team’s faithfulness, even as He has blessed the team.  In addition to the recorded report, we discussed a couple of other things:
- a new recorded translation of Genesis from a language missions group was right on target for the local dialect.  The villagers were thrilled to hear the Word of God in their heart language.  This will be terrific reinforcement for Penny who lives only about 30 miles (but 2-3hrs) away in Senegal doing this translation work.
- It Is Cold!  Lawrence said his teeth were almost chattering as he was giving the report.  He added that they have all been warm enough in their sleeping bags, however.
Thank you for doing your part in supporting these men and this effort through your prayers.
(By the way, the photos combined with earlier recordings are from our previous trips.  There isn’t a way to send such files from the bush as of yet.)
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TRANSCRIPTION  (click here for audio  mali-report-01-17-09)

 

 

 

This is Lawrence calling from Village Z.  It’s 11:20 at night here.  We just got done with teaching time with 44 people from the village were here listening.  We taught this morning about some of basics of church life here with some of the believers.
Then after a while we went over to neighboring Village K to meet and share over there for some time.  Our group shared there once before back in June.  But when we got there several people were out in the field, so they asked that we come back at 7:00 AM Sunday to share and they would all be there before they had to go work out in their fields.  So that’s what we’re going to do tomorrow, Sunday, 7:00 AM in Village K.  Then we’ll go on to Village Y after that.  [Reports are that the Church in Village Y HAS been meeting together regularly so this will be very encouraging to the team. - ka]
The sharing time tonight consisted of the message from Acts chapter 2 giving others who may not have been here before when we shared the opportunity to hear the Gospel very clearly; and others learned about baptism in the Holy Spirit and how the believers were acting as the new church.  We encouraged them and challenged them to meet together regularly which is something they have not been doing over the months that we’ve been absent.  So we challenged them to do that, and they committed to do that from now on.  There were no new decisions tonight, but many people heard the Gospel and we’ll see what happens.  There’s been some hesitancy by the women here to be baptized.  Because of some cultural reasons, they were uncomfortable with men doing that; so we’re trying to work through that situation.
We’ve had a good day, a very positive and encouraging response from our believers here.  We’re looking forward to great things on Sunday!

sleeping in the villages tonight

January 16, 2009

mali-report-01-16-09-11
The team just called from the town of Pastor Bart, preparing for the final leg into the villages. Being blessed with a mechanically-sound vehicle, they had a flat tire and it was being repaired while we spoke.  The team remains in good health and spirits are high, of course!
Thank you for continuing on this mission with Lawrence, Tim, Doug, and Bobby!
TRANSCRIPTION
Hello.  This is Lawrence from K-ba, Mali.
It’s about 2:30 in the afternoon here, about 8:30 in the morning Texas time on Friday.  We’re getting ready to drive down about 4 hours into the Yalunka villages to see our people for the first time on this trip.  We found out that some of them had problems with their crops coming [washed out by rains] so we’re going to bring extra food in so they can make it until the next agricultural season.  This will assist even some families who aren’t believers.  It will be a good testimony of God’s love to them.
Also, we’ve already gotten word of several who have come to Christ in the last few months and are awaiting baptism.  We are excited about that and to see them, and to see what God is going to do in the coming days.  Please continue to pray for us, especially for the next 5 to 6 days.  We are spending 6 nights among the Yalunka including tonight.  We are excited to see what God will do!

Team Arrives in Senegal, Heads to Mali

January 15, 2009

report-1-01-15-09-1m 

Bobby, Doug, Lawrence, & Tim arrived safely in Dakar and are already on their way across Senegal to Mali.  Here’s a transcript of the audio on the attached movie.

TRANSCRIPTION

Hello.  This is Lawrence calling from Africa.  We are safely in Dakar, Senegal.  Just landed about an hour a go and we got all of our luggage and got out of the airport in a little over half an hour from the time we landed.  We’re in a very nice 4-wheel drive vehicle headed across Senegal today to the city of Kayes in Mali.  Everyone is well.  We’re happy to be in Africa and looking forward to great things that God will do.

God bless you for your continuing role in spreading the Gospel!

 

Yalunka Ministry Overview

January 13, 2009

Our ministry area is highlighted.WHERE THEY LIVE:

The Yalunka people live in remote, primitive villages in the far southwestern corner of Mali, West Africa as well as the neighboring nations of Senegal and Guinea.  The majority of the Yalunka population (over 100,000) lives in Guinea.  First Baptist Church of Keller has adopted the roughly 10,000 Yalunka people of southwestern Mali.

 

LIFESTYLE AND CULTURE:

Like all West African peoples, the Yalunka live in a highly relational society.  Their villages are governed primarily by tribal elders and chiefs who make virtually all of the decisions for the people.  It is almost unthinkable for a tribe member to do something against the will of the elders.  The Yalunka people live in compounds comprised of a leading man and his wives (polygamy is still common) and children, sometimes including grown sons.  Young women When not cooking or washing, women are pounding millet or rice for a meal.are married in their early teens, and they do most of the work in the village (getting water, preparing and cooking food, cleaning, laundry, taking care of the children, etc.).  The women grind their grain (millet, rice, and corn) and peanuts by hand using long bamboo or wooden poles.  They pound it— sometimes dry, and sometimes after it has been boiled— in deep bowls carved out of tree trunks.  The men primarily work in the fields during the growing season.  The Yalunka people are very poor, living in mud huts with grass roofs.  Their villages in Mali do not have electricity or running water, and their few possessions consist primarily of things that they have made themselves from natural materials.  Staple foods are millet, rice, peanuts, and a few garden vegetables.  The climate in Mali is generally hot and dry, but there is a rainy season from June to October.

 

OUR WORK WITH THE YALUNKA PEOPLE:

First Baptist Church of Keller officially “adopted” the Yalunka people of Mali on April 11, 2007.  The church now sends about four teams each year to teach the Bible, evangelize, and establish churches.  Access is limited to the months of January through May because swollen rivers make it almost impossible to reach their villages during and immediately after the rainy season.  We are also working to provide other tangible ministries to them as the Lord leads.

 

ADOPTION COVENANT

Being led by the Holy Spirit, we, the members of First Baptist Church of Keller, Texas,

hereby covenant before God

to take the Gospel of Jesus Christ to the Yalunka people of Mali, West Africa.

As an engaging church that takes responsibility for this task,

we will devote our energy and resources to it until there is a viable, Yalunka-led

church planting movement among them so that the people of each village

have a chance to hear about Jesus personally and to become His disciples.

This covenant includes fervent intercession for the Yalunka people,

investment of our financial resources for gospel materials and other projects,

and sending our own members to disciple the Yalunka people directly.

We wholly depend on the power of God working in us to fulfill this covenant,

and we seek His glory above all else.  We will work alongside

the Engaging Team of the International Mission Board’s West Africa region

and other like-minded Great Commission Christian groups.

 The elders gathered to hear about Jesus and remained for several hours.

JANUARY 2007:

Though Christendom was unaware of these people, the Holy Spirit had been preparing their hearts.  As Keith Arnett and Lawrence Duhon completed the long journey (over 15 hours in flight and then at least two full days by road), they finally reached Yalunka village “F.”  They were welcomed hospitably by the chiefs of that village and offered a place to stay.  With local help the next day they traveled to the last Yalunka village at the border between Mali and Guinea.  There village elders gathered around.  “Why have you come here?” they asked.  “We come to tell you about God’s love,” we responded.  They listened for a few hours, then 12 men stood to say they wanted to know more about the Jesus Road.  Lawrence and Keith left rejoicing at the open doors they had found for the gospel.

 

MAY 2007:

On the next trip, Lawrence Duhon and Keith Arnett took picture books and recorded Bible stories in the Yalunka dialect.  The people of Village “Y” listened to those for many hours and understood enough to know that God has provided for their salvation through Jesus.  No one professed faith in Christ at that time.  We left the books and tapes for the people to listen to and share until we could return after the rainy season.

NOVEMBER 2007:

The ferryman & his wife pray to receive Jesus.FBC Keller sent Mike and Pat Anderson, Keith Arnett, and Lawrence Duhon on our third trip to the Yalunka villages.  Because of high waters, we could not make it to the Yalunka villages in our vehicle.  However, God was at work.  The canoe ferryman received the message of Christ and believed, and he immediately shared Christ with his household.  After “hitching a ride” into the village area, the chief’s son said, “I’ve been in the fields when you were here earlier, but I want you to tell me about the Jesus Road.”  He listened intently, and we gave him a recorded New Testament and the Bible picture books.  God was working in his life … but we didn’t suspect that this young man would immediately begin to carry the gospel from village to village as he did!

\FEBRUARY 2008

As Keith Arnett and Richard Harris approached the Village “F,” people in a smaller outlying village (Village “Z”) stopped them.  “You are the ones who are teaching about Jesus.  You must stop and teach us!” they insisted.  Sadly, they responded, “Our time is so short.  We will stop on our next trip and teach you.”

Shortly after we arrived in the base village, a foot messenger arrived with over 25 names on a sheet of paper – a petition asking us to come back NOW and teach them.  THANK YOU, GOD, FOR NOT GIVING UP ON US!  We returned to Village “Z” in a couple of days, and all the village gathered.  “We know we are in darkness, The first baptismbut we do not know the way.  Please stay 30 or 20 or 10 days to teach us about the Jesus Road,” they pleaded.  We taught them that afternoon and left materials … and the young man who, since the November trip, had taken on the mantle of evangelist.  God would work in this village.

Before we left the young evangelist (“Philip”) and two elders from Village “Y” believed and were baptized in a shallow river as a testimony that Jesus lives in their hearts.  One was so eager that he dove in headfirst!

 

APRIL 2008

This trip involved the introduction of more technology.  The team (Lawrence Duhon, Bobby Morgan, Jed Ford, and Jerry Kiser) carried in a DVD player, projector, and screen to show the JESUS film in the local languages in Villages “F,” “Y,” and “Z.”  For many, this was the first “movie” they had ever seen.  Their response was great!Jerry K helps local men understand the use of MP3 players.

Since the Yalunka language is not written and most of the people are illiterate, the only way they can hear God’s word is through oral means.  Jerry Kiser showed the villagers how to listen to the New Testament on the MP3 players that our church sent to them.  They listen eagerly and for long periods, sharing each set of headphones so that two people can listen at a time.

 

After a time of preaching the gospel in Village “Z,” almost everyone in that village ...they believed and were baptized.committed his or her life to Christ late one night.  This was the same village that begged our February team to come and teach them about Jesus.  15 men from that village were baptized in a water hole the next day, and another 13 men and women from Village “Y” were also baptized before the team left.

With these believers, access to the Word, and local leadership by the evangelist and other believers, the Yalunka Church is being established!

 Phillip (L) stands with interpretter to share Christ while a local pastor studies the Word.

JUNE 2008

The team (Keith Arnett, Alisa Arnett, Tim Dicken, and Jarod Pyron) found the people still listening to God’s word through tapes and MP3 players and also reviewing the Bible story picture books.  They communicate the gospel through the Storying Method – using narrative Bible passages taught and passed on orally to communicate spiritual truth to a non-literate culture.  One evening, the team asked a few of the local people to be actors in the story.  Not only did they enjoy participating, it also helped them REMEMBER the story so they could share it with others.  By the end of this trip, 2 chiefs and 1 teenager had been saved, local men were readily sharing the Gospel with their friends, and local leadership was clearly being established in the Church.

 

JANUARY 2009

The story continues as FBC Keller’s seventh team travels back to the same villages to share God’s word.

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