





A journey in far away lands




“I am the LORD, and there is no other; apart from me there is no God. I will strengthen you, though you have not acknowledged me, so that from the rising of the sun to the place of its setting men may know there is none beside me. I am the LORD, and there is no other.”
Isaiah 45:5-6
It is the season of Ramadan.The beaches are desolate; the public pool is empty; and, hours of offices are shortened. From sunrise to sunset the majority of the population in the city abstain from food and drink. At dusk the bakery lines extend out the door as people buy bread to break their fast.
I’ve been in West Africa for almost 15 months, and while I feel at home here, I have many areas I need to continue to grow in - language acquisition, culture sensitivity, ministry responsibilities, limits in generosity, etc.
I thought I would be spending a couple of months in a town closer to the villages, but Ndeye who I was going to stay with has been sick for the last month. She continues to struggle with her health. Please lift her up in your prayers.
In the month of August two training events occurred related to economic development. The first was a roof top garden training for twenty-one women in the local community of one of the Presbyterian churches. So far it has been a success! The women trained have done a wonderful job taking care of their garden and have already started to sell their produce. The desire for the project is to provide an on-going opportunity for the church to engage in their community. Please pray for the Gospel to go forth through this project.
The second event, towards the end of August, was a training of 16 church leaders in project management. Daniel who attended the Chalmers Institute in Ghana and works with World Vision graciously offered to teach this seminar. Management is an important aspect of the practicality of the church that is not always addressed - especially in this culture. Pray for the development and fruitfulness of the church leader's management skills and their project ideas. In the coming months I will be following up on the participants to help them carry out some of their projects.
Thank you for your prayers and partnership with me in West Africa.
Photo taken by Sarah E. at Virage Beach






This week I spent time with four pastors each in different regions of Senegal. I ate fish and rice or millet and talked about different aspects of their ministry. They each have different visions and challenges in their work but share a passion to advance the Gospel in their communities. We talked mostly about development projects - since this is my focus of work, but also talked about their struggle to make ends meet.
The support they receive is not sufficient, neither is their church capable of taking care of them. They desire to be self-sufficient and to provide well for the needs of their family, but their present conditions do not foster this. At the same time, they carry the burden of responsibility for their church members and mercy needs in their community. As I talk with them and they ask me for assistance, I join in carrying their burdens, but I also do not have sufficient means to satisfy their requests.
This afternoon I went with Pastor Moussa to visit a widow who recently moved to Mbour. She lives with her children in a squatter community near the church. When we arrived at her hut, we found her four children left to themselves while she was washing clothes in Mbour. Her older children recently arrived in Mbour to stay with her during the school vacation. They live in a one room hut with dirt floors. It is an improvement from their first hut that was thatch and did not protect them from the rain. One of her sons has a serious sore on his head probably caused from their living conditions.
When Deba’s husband died she was obliged to marry another relative, but the arrangement did not work. To fend for herself and her children she left her village to search for employment in Mbour. Her present house can be taken from her at any moment that the landlord returns. Moussa has asked me to find help for her - a permanent place to live and temporary support until she can have a more stable source of income. Truthfully, I want to say to him that I have too many other projects that need funding. I don’t think I can find enough money for this too.
At the root, I lack faith that God can provide for ALL the needs and requests that people ask of me - funds for projects for the pastors, their churches and communities. Though as I write this I am reminded of Ephesians 3:20 "Now to Him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to His power that is at work within us, to Him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, for ever and ever! Amen."




