Friday 27 September 2013

World Weekend of Prayer

It is so amazing, so comforting, and uplifting to know that we have so many praying for us at home.  These prayers have sustained us in everything we do.  Our God is an awesome God, and hears our cries and our praises.  Praying is the most powerful tool we have.
This is why Capstone Ministries participates and helps coordinate a large gathering near Kisumu, Kenya called the World Weekend of Prayer.  This event is promoted by Viva Networking, and their mission is to inspire "lasting change in children’s lives through the power of collective action because we have a vision to see children safe, well and fulfilling their God-given potential. The World Weekend of Prayer for children at risk is held every year over the first weekend of June. This global initiative brings together hundreds of thousands of adults and children across more than 40 countries."
Pastor Zadok's children
The Director of Capstone Ministries, Patty Schmelzer describes the event as "an opportunity for children to come together and consider that the challenges that they face are also faced by other children throughout the world.  So they have the opportunity to pray for others and with others including children in America. The kids here love it.  We’ve done it since 2005. The last couple years its become a full weekend.  You just find lots of excited kids."
I asked Patty to share any particular memory she had about the camp, and she shared "I think it was during a prayer that one of the girls prayed for her parents to be better parents. And that was so touching to me because that’s what Capstone is all about."
Capstone Ministries also invites their supporting churches in the US to join in praying during this weekend as an opportunity to participate with Capstone in lifting up the children of the world.

The Reward of the Year

George working at the Capstone office
Joel and I have experienced a lot of what Capstone does, but we won't get to experience everything.  For example, the Capstone Camp occurs once per year and is described as a pivotal event that rewards rescued children as well as the staff. 
Twenty boys are selected out of those that Capstone has reintegrated back home from the street.  In order to be a candidate, a boy must currently be at home, and be someone who the staffs feels would most benefit from the camp. They also take into account which boys are the most vulnerable of being influenced to run back to the street. It is a week long event that involves spiritual enrichment, scouting activities, and crafts and games.
The camp acts as a support group for the boys.  They are asked questions that prompt them to think about life on the street versus life at home.  On the street the boys have a freedom without restrictions and responsibility. Upon returning home they have to learn once again to follow the rules of their parents or guardians. At the camp, the boys come to find that they are not the only ones struggling with this change.  They see other boys that also have to fetch firewood after school, and tend to livestock. Interaction at the camp helps the boys focus on their future by being with other boys that are going through very similar struggles.
The Capstone Camp supports spiritual well being with Bible teachings and lessons on baptism. Capstone Director, Patty Schmelzer describes baptism as a highlight of the camp: "...children learn what it means to be baptized and they have the opportunity to make that choice.  If they’ve already been baptized we discuss what it was like and why they don’t need to be baptized again.  On Friday, baptisms are done and about half of the camp gets baptized. Eight to ten boys.  It’s amazing to see how serious the boys take the ceremony."
On the last day of camp, the parents are invited. Patty shares that "during the parents day the children give presentations, poems and songs. But, we also ask one or two parents to give testimonies and it seems like often others will feel led to also share.  It is just really encouraging to the kids to hear their parents say how grateful they are to have their child at home....We’ve even had mothers stand up and cry." 
The Capstone Camp acts as a reward for the children on many levels.  Patty shares: "I think that the greatest growth comes from the spiritual lessons in the morning, the greatest fun comes from the scouting and activities and games in the afternoon. And, I think one particular meaningful event is the community service – where the children go into a public market area and clean it in the early morning.  This is the typical area where a street child would hang out and beg and be called names and chased and be considered not much more than the trash on the streets.  Now when they come in and clean, the same people that treated them like trash are thanking them and admiring them.  And, they learn what it is to give something to the community, and contribute to the community without expecting something in return."
George, a Capstone Street and Family Coordinator, describes how the staff is also rewarded through the Capstone Camp in the video below.  My apologies for the poor sound quality.  I have added captions to help.  Please listen to what George has to add.



Video Dialogue:

[Jen] Can you tell me again how you've been inspired by the Capstone Camp?

[George] I think that in my life this was the most difficult work that I've done in my life.
Sometimes when you do it you find that sometimes you rescue a child, you take a child home,
you find that the child is far, which is really discouraging.
And the next time you feel like, "ah, I've wasted my time."
"I've wasted my energy."
And, the next minute you wake up you are tired.
You feel exhausted so you say "let me try."
Another time I mean. So, you go, you get a child. You rescue a child.
And, the child goes home. And, the child stays home.
The child accepts home. The child goes to school.
The next time you do a follow up you find that the child is doing well.
Amidst all this, this [the Capstone Camp] is the climax of everything. This is when you see the whole fruit of what you are doing.
Whereby you can meet children smiling. You can see parents giving testimony.
Then you feel like, "ah"
I've touched.  Maybe I've touched the heart of-
I've done something worthwhile. An undertaking.
And, it makes me so happy, so inspired, so encouraged because of that.
Because now you can see the whole face.
I saw this. I saw this. I saw Moses.  I saw Titus.
I saw so many boys there.
So I feel very very happy and encouraged.
And, I thank God for the [work] that He is doing through that.
It is a whole reflection of the entire work throughout the year. You can really see it.
And, also it gives each and
everybody also an opportunity to see, maybe of seeing each and everybody.
Because they are not able to go and visit each and everyone.
So, through that they see something actually worth his hard work.
This is the Titus that we are talking about. This is the Moses that we are talking about.
Here is Titus, here is Tim. He is standing.
So, it is the climax of everything that we do.
And, we have become so much happy, and so much encouraged.
And, I really thank God for all that God has done.
Because it takes the hand of God.
Without Him we can't.
We are just an instrument.
It is not us. It is Him.
Because through Him.  That is when we succeed. Without Him we can't.

[Jen] Would you say the same is true for theother staff. So how has the camp encouraged
the other staff?
It's probably very similar right? They see the fruit of their work.

[George] Yeah, we work together as a team.
And, that is the climax of all that we do.  We move all around. Every day.
Every day we are in homes. Every day we are in villages.
So, it is a total reflection of everything that we are doing.

An Interview with Pastor Isaiah


Meet Pastor Isaiah. He has been a pastor since 2009 and graduated from the Lutheran Seminary here in Kenya. He works with Capstone Ministries to provide spiritual care for the more than 270 families that Capstone works with on a continuous basis. He organizes Bible studies every week for the parents who have children who have run away and have been rescued from the streets by Capstone. He also visits families at home to help rescued children stay home long-term and develop into grounded, productive and spiritual healthy young men. On the weekends he also serves as the associate pastor at the Cathedral Lutheran Church in Kisumu. The following is an interview with Isaiah in which he talks about Capstone from his own experience and work.

Where do you come from (region and tribe)?
I am from the Luo tribe. I grew up in Nyanza, which is the province that the city of Kisumu is located in and near lake Victoria.

How many brothers/sisters?
I have two brothers and one sister.

How many children do you have?
My wife is Sophy and we have one child. His name is Daniel. My wife's sister died and we also take care of her children. Their names are Dazy and Steve.

What church do you belong to?
I am an associate pastor at Cathedral Lutheran Church in Kisumu. I preach, teach Bible studies and Confirmation. I work mostly with the youth and teach Sunday School occasionally.

What do you like to do in your spare time?
I like to write. I write poems and plays. I also like to play soccer and watch it.


What brought you to Capstone?
I knew Dan and Patty from church. They shared what they do at Capstone and after realizing my talent for working with the children, they asked me to work with them. There was interest on both sides. I have a passion to work with children.


How long have your worked for Capstone?
I have worked with Capstone the longest. I started back in 2009.


What is your role at Capstone?
I am a welfare officer, but also coordinate spiritual development. I make sure that families have the Word of God shared with them and that their children have been taught the catechism. I perform baptisms and coordinate eight local Bible studies for families that have had their street children rescued and returned to them. The Bible studies are great because they help prevent problems in families before they arise and provide support from the community.

What good is Capstone doing in your community?
Growing up in Kisumu, I can definitely tell that Capstone is making a great difference. With families, God is using Capstone to restore and reconcile them with their lost children. Families are being made stronger. When families are stronger, then society is stronger and our churches are stronger. We would have no society without strong families. We are helping lost children come to Christ, which is our ultimate goal. The children are our future.


What do you like about Capstone (or why do you work for Capstone)?
I have a passion to work with the youth. I also like the way Capstone is organized. It almost runs itself. We have grown a lot since I began working here and everyone works together.


What is the hardest part of your specific job?
Working with street children is a challenge. It is a joy to take them home and reunite them with their families, but it is very difficult to spend all that effort and then see them run away again. I have to see it positively like preaching. Some people who hear God's Word backslide. Some receive Christ and with time backslide and fall away. Street children also have a tendency to regress back to their old behaviors.

What is the most rewarding part of your specific job?
Personally, it is rewarding to see a child who is lost, found and going home. He will have a brighter future than being left on the street. Through Capstone, children know Christ and go back to school. They are reunited with their families who love them.

What is poverty?
Sure it is the inability to access basic needs. Families don't have shelter, food or health care, but this is not the entire problem. In a happy and healthy home a child will stay, despite lacking these things. There is usually a spiritual brokenness with their relationship with God that effects the whole person and the rest of the relationships. There also are psychological problems to deal with as well.


How can the poor be helped (or poverty alleviated)?
The only way that the poor can be helped is through empowerment, not through handouts. One mistake that so many organizations make when they come to Africa and try to help is that they give handouts. What poor people really need is empowerment like the knowledge of how to start a small business. It is better to give a hand up than a hand out.

Any other comments or advice?
Working with Capstone is very rewarding, especially because I feel called by God to be here. A personal call by God is required because the work can be frustrating at times. Every day we take risks. The roads in Kenya are not good. The drivers are very bad. The streets are dangerous. If you have not been called to do this work you can easily get frustrated, but you have to look at the bigger picture. I am called by God to bring Christ to children and to spread the Kingdom of God. What keeps me going is that every day God uses me to touch someone's life. Today, I am bring a catechism and a Bible to a child and his family so that they can know Christ. I would like to welcome you [Joel] and Jennifer here. I hope that you learn a lot and won't be frustrated too. The Lord is our banner.

Saturday 21 September 2013

You Are Worthy





I used to sing “Revelation Song” in worship service thinking “yes God, you are worthy of my worship.”  Just before leaving for Africa we sang this song and I started thinking “yes God, you are worthy of my everything.”

Can you think back to a time in your life, maybe it’s right now, when it seemed that everything you had planned in life was changing?  With difficult changes come feelings of helplessness, grief, frustration, and sometimes anger. When we are thrust from our daily routine into dealing with the stresses and struggles of life we find ourselves in free fall grasping for a state of normalcy.  Thankfully, we have One to cling to. We have One to catch us and sustain us. We have One that is worthy of us enduring the tribulations of life.

Revelation chapter 4 and 5 states “Holy, holy, holy is the Lord God Almighty, who was, and is, and is to come…. You are worthy, our Lord and God to receive glory and honor and power, for you created all things, and by your will they were created and have their being…. You are worthy to take the scroll and to open its seals, because you were slain, and with your blood you purchased men for God. You have made them to be a kingdom and priests to serve our God, and they will reign on the earth…. Worthy is the Lamb, who was slain, to receive power and wealth and wisdom and strength and honor and glory and praise!”

Whatever your struggle might be, remember that you are God’s missionary.  You live every day to be a witness for Him.  So when you are facing great difficulty remember that the Lord is worthy of your endurance.  He is worthy of our best despite the stress we wade through. 

Some of my most trying times have also been my most triumphant.  Today I celebrated a small victory as Joel and I traveled for the first time without Dan or Patty to the Kajulu moringa growers group.  The growers had a large crop for us, and were in great spirits.  It was a big pay day for them, and helpful for us to process increasing moringa orders.  My struggle with traveling turned into a small win today.

The Lord is the only one that knows completely what we’re going through. He sacrificed everything and triumphed over the greatest struggle of them all – saving man.  Yes, the Lord is worthy of my everything.  Not because I can repay Him, but because God is God.



Saturday 14 September 2013

One Body in Christ!


So where do we worship on Sunday mornings? I know that you were dying to know! It is the Cathedral Lutheran Church in Kisumu and last weekend I had the privilege and honor to preach at their English and Swahili services. The Gospel was on Jesus' words to His disciples about the Lord's Prayer from Matthew 6:19-24, “Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moths and vermin destroy, and where thieves break in and steal. But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where moths and vermin do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also. The eye is the lamp of the body. If your eyes are healthy, your whole body will be full of light. But if your eyes are unhealthy, your whole body will be full of darkness. If then the light within you is darkness, how great is that darkness! No one can serve two masters. Either you will hate the one and love the other, or you will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and money.”
Pastor Isaiah blessing the children.
The worship service lasted over two and a half hours, but it was really awe inspiring to worship and share God's Word with our fellow brothers and sisters in Christ halfway around the world. We actually got to worship God on the Lord's Day before all of you who are seven hours behind us! I made sure to share Christian greetings on your behalf from America and remind them that you are praying for them. If you are wondering if I spoke in Swahili, you can rest assured that I did not! Pastor Isaiah, a local pastor and fellow Capstone staff member, was gracious enough to wrestle with my American accent and translate my sermon for the congregation.
I have to say that it was very intimidating to preach in Kenya because a big part of preaching is application. God's Word is unchanging, but the way that we apply it to different events, times and cultures does change. I had a professor at seminary, who spent six months out of the year teaching at the Lutheran Seminary in China, remind us in class one day that in China Jesus is not the bread of life. He is the rice of life! To use and apply God's Word to a different culture is really difficult because it is not about WHAT you say, but HOW you say it that makes all the difference.
Pastor Joseph of Cathedral Lutheran Church
The Cathedral Lutheran Church in Kisumu is shepherded by Pastor Joseph Abour. You might remember him from when Immanuel Lutheran Church raised money a couple years ago to help purchase Bibles for Bondo in Western Kenya. He was the pastor of the Lutheran Church in Bondo at the time of our generous Christian gift to help underwrite some of the cost of purchasing a Bible for our fellow followers of Christ. The first thing that will catch your eye about this congregation in Kisumu is its youthfulness. There are over 200 youths in their Sunday School alone! It is pretty amazing to see them streaming out of the service to hear God's Word in their classrooms.
Also located on the church's campus is the Archdiocese of the Lake region, which encompasses the suburbs and small villages of the city of Kisumu. The bishop of this region is the Rev. Dr. Joseph Ochola. He is the bishop of 26 Lutheran congregations and his role is very similar to our New England district president's role, Rev. Timothy Yeadon. Bishop Ochola is very familiar with Americans because he studied at our fellow Lutheran Seminary in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Before I was able to preach at the Cathedral Lutheran Church in Kisumu, I visited with him to gain his permission. The first question he asked me was what seminary I attended, St Louis or Fort Wayne. Being a graduate from St. Louis, I assured him that I did not know there was any other seminary besides the one in St. Louis, which is a little seminarian humor. He quickly responded with a smile and a similar answer that he didn't know any other seminary besides the one in Fort Wayne! He then welcomed me to preach not only at the church in Kisumu, but also any of the rural congregations that he is bishop of as well!
All of this reminded me of how connected I have felt when worshiping with fellow Christians around the world. The Bible calls the Church a body. We may look different, speak different languages and even serve Christ in different ways and in different places in this world, but at the end of the day we are all connected to one Body, through the Savior Jesus Christ. Thank you Lord for making the Church a picture of real unity. As Johnny Cash sings in his song One, "we are one, but we are not the same." One in Christ that is! The Apostle Paul writes, “For just as each of us has one body with many members, and these members do not all have the same function, so in Christ we, though many, form one body, and each member belongs to all the others. We have different gifts, according to the grace given to each of us (Romans 12:4-6).” ~Joel

Cathedral Lutheran Church Children's Choir 

Friday 6 September 2013

Do Everything

It has been just over one month in Kenya, and we’re finally catching on.  It has been a challenging month, thus far.  We’ve learned how to drive, and how to look to the left side of the road first instead of the right while crossing the street.  We’ve created a mental map of Kisumu, and are now able to go to the grocery store, church, and the main street in town without Patty’s directions.  I’ve learned how to process salaries and balance accounts for Capstone weekly and monthly. 

We had this powerful and emotional send off to Africa at the end of July, and now … I can successfully cook a meal!  This all sounds anticlimactic, I know. 

I can’t help but think of the song by Steven Curtis Chapman, “Do Everything.”  The lyric goes:

“Do everything you do to the glory of the One Who made you
Cause He made you to do
Every little thing that you do to bring a smile to His face and tell the story of grace .”


This song stems from 1 Corinthians 10:31; “So whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God.” Yes, Joel and I are missionaries for Jesus Christ here in Kenya, but we are all missionaries for Him whether we are in Kenya or Connecticut. 

I miss home dearly.  I miss my family – my church family, my friends, and my immediate family.  I find myself grasping on to anything that reminds me of home.  So far, I’ve found this really great bar of chocolate, and a cozy spot on the couch.  And, today we stopped at a cafe that has green tea!  I used to drink it every day at home, but it’s not as common here.  The waitress didn’t realize it, but she made my day by doing such a small thing – making tea.  The small services we do matter just as much as the big ones because we are representing the Lord in all of it.  We are sent out as missionaries every day to represent our God.  So, just like so many have told us that they are praying for Joel and me, we are also praying for you.

Thank you and God bless you!

 ~Jen