New Face, Old Friendship

My name is Missionary Jeff Heitsch, and I just returned from my very first visit to Nigeria. I spend half of my time working with two independent Nigerian Lutheran church bodies. The rest of my time I serve the Lutheran Church of Cameroon, along with Missionary Dan Kroll who accompanied me on this first trip.

The initial date of our first visit to Nigeria had been set for the end of October, but as my wife and I just arrived in Cameroon we were not able to leave until the beginning of November. Due to political tension in Cameroon, and because the land border between Cameroon and Nigeria was closed we began our journey to Nigeria on Friday, November 24th.  Our purpose was to meet with the leaders of Christ the King Lutheran Church and All Saints Lutheran Church, the two sister church bodies with which the WELS strives to collaborate efforts and to provide financial support.

The majority of the congregations Christ the King Lutheran Church are located in the southeastern part of Nigeria, about two hours north of the town of Calabar. There are also congregations in Calabar and in Port Harcourt.  The church body’s headquarters are located in the town of Uruk Uso.  All Saints Lutheran Church is located in the central part of Nigeria in the area known as the Cross River State, about a 6 to 7 hour drive north from Uruk Uso.

Two buildings house students on the seminary campus in Uruk Uso

The two church bodies are independent of each other.  Each one teaches their own pre-seminary classes, but they jointly operate a seminary together.  At this time, Christ the King Lutheran Church of Nigeria has enrolled 9 pre-seminary students who will matriculate in March of 2018, and one other man who has already completed his pre-seminary training.  All Saints Lutheran Church of Nigeria currently has 12 students enrolled in their pre-seminary courses, so there is the potential enrollment of 22 seminary students. The seminary operates out of the headquarters of Christ the King Lutheran Church in Uruk Uso where there is a small classroom and limited dorm space.  A bigger classroom and more living quarters will need to be constructed before the new class of students arrive in 2019.

On this first visit we flew into Lagos, Nigeria but had to make a different connection than we originally planned. That added another two hours of travel time by vehicle, but we were eager to attend the worship services of each church body. Mr. Solomon George, who has been driving the WELS Missionaries and visiting teachers for years, agreed to meet us in Calabar. 

Christ the King Minister Group Officers prepare to start a meeting

On this first visit I met personally with various leaders and national pastors of each church body, and I heard firsthand accounts about the blessings and challenges that each group is facing.  Nigeria is currently in the midst of a severe recession and this has caused severe financial struggles for members, pastors, and the church.  I was appreciative of the opportunity to share the truth of God’s Word and God’s promise to care for us and give us what we need, and to focus on the truth that we already possess a treasure that all the world’s money and riches could never buy – the treasure of salvation through the blood of Jesus our Savior.  I assured all the groups that we would keep them in our prayers, and that we would continue to serve them with God’s Word and encourage good administration and stewardship as we work together in our Gospel ministry.

Opening Meeting and Fellowship Meal at All Saints Lutheran Church in Ogoja

After we booked our flight to Nigeria, the land border between Nigeria and Cameroon was opened up. We decided to return to Cameroon by car as a test case. We arrived at the border on a crowded and busy day, so we had to cross on foot rather than being dropped off with our luggage.  When we arrived in Nigeria there was an unexpected surprise waiting for us – our wives came to pick us up! We pray that this border crossing will continue to be open as it allows us to make much more efficient use of our time and money. I am looking forward to my next visit at the end of February, when I will have the opportunity to meet the seminary students.

Missionary Jeff Heitsch lives in Cameroon. His wife Stephanie has been blogging about their experiences at https://jsheitsch.wixsite.com/africa

Please pray for those working in fields that are ripe for harvest. Share their story, engage with future news and receive updates. Go to this link to learn more about our mission fields in Africa and how the Holy Spirit is working faith in people’s hearts  https://wels.net/serving-others/missions/africa




Chisomo Chodabwitsacho—Amazing Grace

“Amazing Grace”—we Americans love this song!  Recently I used this popular song and its local language equivalent “Chisomo Chodabwitsacho” as a springboard to truly understanding “GRACE” at a women’s meeting at Crown of Life Lutheran Church in Lilongwe, Malawi. With it we reviewed the theme, “Salvation comes by Grace,” which we had boldly proclaimed in red to celebrate the 500th anniversary of the Lutheran Reformation.     

Women love singing in Malawi Lutheran worship services!   My goal was to capitalize on the enthusiasm of singing to further reflect on the amazing truth that God saved us through Jesus.  I directed the 35 women in attendance to divide into 11 groups.  They quickly practiced singing a stanza of the hymn or reading a verse from Psalm 25 aloud.

The participants were well prepared to share their part with the large group.  First, I called forward the group that I assigned the first verse of “Chisomo Chodabwitsacho—Amazing Grace.”  We pondered the question, “What is Grace?”  We discussed how grace “saved me” and how it gave life.  Then I called forward the groups who I assigned to read Psalm 25: 6 and 7.  We discussed how “mercy,” “steadfast love” and “goodness” are the reason why individuals ask the Lord to “remember” them.  We answered the question, “Who am I?” with the song’s description – “a complete sinner.”  The group assigned to read Psalm 25:11 added that we are individuals who need the Lord to “pardon my guilt, for it is great.”

After listening to another group sing stanza 2 of “Chisomo Chodabwitsacho—Amazing Grace,” we pursued the answer to “What has the Lord done?”  In Chichewa we exuberantly exclaimed that “grace removed the fear of death when people believe in the Lord Jesus.”  The groups who read aloud Psalm 25: 7 and 11 connected us to the Lord, “the God of my Salvation.” We pleaded Him “for Your name’s sake” to “pardon” us and to not remember “the sins of…youth or… transgressions.”

Then we pondered, “So, what path do I now want as a Christian?” The group that sang stanza 3 of “Chisomo Chodabwitsacho—Amazing Grace” reminded us that the Lord has cared for us and will continue to care for us until we reach home.  The group that read Psalm 25:8-9 reminded us to stay in the Lord’s truth. We asked that we know His ways and paths given in the Bible.

The group assigned the last stanza of the hymn echoed, “I will sing of His grace at home, praising the Lord in unending time.” But are we “at home with God” only after we die?  The group that read Psalm 25:1 stated, “To you, O Lord, I lift up my soul.”  We asked God to “guard my soul, and deliver me” for “I take refuge in You.”  As a grand finale, our voices completely filled the church by singing all four verses of “Chisomo Chodabwitsacho—Amazing Grace.”  With this song study we had a foretaste of praising God our Savior in heaven.  We pray that it reminds us that God’s Word is for all of us to share and reflect on each day on the path home.

Nancy Roebke lives in Lilongwe, Malawi where her husband, Missionary John Roebke serves as the Missionary of Publications

Please pray for those working in fields that are ripe for harvest. Share their story, engage with future news and receive updates. Go to this link to learn more about our mission fields in Africa and how the Holy Spirit is working faith in people’s hearts  https://wels.net/serving-others/missions/africa

 




True Friends of the Bible

The members of Nyang’un Lutheran Church are true friends of the Bible

The Lutheran Congregations in Mission for Christ (LCMC/Kenya) approached The Lutheran Church of Central Africa (LCCA/Zambia) with a formal request to establish formal church relations.  On a prior visit to Zambia in 2015 the chairman of their Synod, Pastor Mark Onunda, invited the LCCA to come and start the process.  The LCMC had left the fellowship of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Kenya (ELCK) for compromising true confessional Lutheran doctrine and practice.   The LCMC desires to join in fellowship with a confessional Lutheran church body in Africa.

LCCA/Z members made their first visit to Kenya in October 2016.  Pastor Merven Shanzala and Missionary Daniel Sargent made a second visit to Kenya in October, 2017.   One Africa Team is working with the LCCA/Z to make these trips possible.

The members of Kadongo Parish

The purpose of the most recent visit was to present lessons on “Church Fellowship” and “A Confessional Lutheran Look at Pentecostals.” The meeting took place at Kadongo Parish in Kisi Province.  After the lessons an older gentleman by the name of Richard Ajure got up before the congregation to make a comment on the teaching lessons he had just heard.  He told the group that he joined the Lutheran church in Kenya in 1948, at which time the church was called the Swedish Lutheran Mission.  In 1968 he graduated from Bible school to serve as an evangelist in the church.  He said the Swedish Lutheran Mission used this catch phrase all the time: “We are true friends of the Bible.” He told the group his beloved church body, now called the ELCK, is no longer a “true friend of the Bible.”  Then he added, “Today the true friends of the Bible have come back to us.” Others who were present then began to comment that they also want to have a true confessional Lutheran fellowship with the LCCA and like-minded Lutherans.

A flat tire on the way to Nairobi means a shoeshine while you wait

Missionary John Hartmann and Pastor Simon Mweete from Zambia joined us as we met with the LCMC Synodical Council in Nairobi to discuss some doctrinal issues in their constitution.  The group discussed the doctrine of the Divine Call and the doctrine of Church and Ministry.  We agreed on a road map for discussing issues that are still unclear.  We then invited the LCMC to send a team of pastors to Zambia in April 2018 to continue fellowship discussions.

The LORD is truly blessing this work.  Keep the LCCA and the LCMC in your prayers as they work towards establishing formal church relations.

Missionary Daniel Sargent serves in Zambia

Please pray for those working in fields that are ripe for harvest. Share their story, engage with future news and receive updates. Go to this link to learn more about our mission fields in Africa and how the Holy Spirit is working faith in people’s hearts  https://wels.net/serving-others/missions/africa