I’ve been running for a whole year. One trip around the sun and my life is not the same as it was before. I left behind my children, my congregation, and my country. I have spent hundreds of hours repeating tongue twisters and I still get lost in translation. I cope with a shortage of power and an oversupply of insects, and I am taking lessons on patience. Yet the Lord’s steady promises have kept me moving forward in the race I am running as a missionary to Malawi.
It is a relay race that started fifty-five years ago. The first WELS missionaries in Malawi, Ray Cox and Richard Mueller, arrived in 1963. Their initial contacts led them to the village of Khanyepa, where last week I attended the funeral of Evangelist Austin Chataika. Ev. Chataika eventually enrolled at the Lutheran Bible Institute in Lusaka, Zambia and graduated in 1971. Under the direction of missionaries, he served at three different parishes, feeding the souls of people with God’s Word and Sacraments.
But the missionaries’ arrival in Kanyepa touched not only Ev. Chataika and the members of his parishes. Three of his relatives who attended his funeral are also pastors in the LCCA, and they have touched countless others through the course of their ministries. It is hard to overstate the significance of this. Until the early 1990’s there were only two Malawian pastors, Deverson Ntambo and Daison Mabedi serving alongside a dozen or so WELS missionaries. By the end of the decade however there were 20 national pastors serving about half of the congregations of the LCCA – Malawi Synod.
As of 2018, all of the 130+ congregations of the LCCA in Malawi are served by national pastors. I am one of four WELS missionaries who provide administrative support and training to the LCCA. Although I do not stand in a pulpit on any given Sunday, I am working with the Publications Committee to produce sermon books and other tools for use in local congregations. Most LCCA pastors serve parish unions made up of 3-6 congregations, and travel by motorcycle or bicycle to serve people living in remote locations. Thus, the church body relies heavily on sanctified lay leaders to conduct services and to prepare people for baptism and confirmation. Two missionaries serve as professors at the Lutheran Bible Institute in Lilongwe, preparing the future pastors of the LCCA. The fourth missionary serves as the liaison between WELS and the LCCA as field coordinator, and provides ongoing training and support to pastors who are in the field.
As far as I have travelled during the last year, I realize that I am only the latest in a long line of WELS mission workers who have served in Central Africa. I am blessed and humbled to see the fruits of their labor, as evidenced at the funeral of Ev. Chataika. Several hundred people, including local village chiefs were present to hear a powerful sermon based on Job’s testimony, “I know that my Redeemer lives…and after my skin has been destroyed, yet in my flesh I will see God” (Job 19:25-26). As we have received the gift of faith from our forefathers, so the baton has been passed to the LCCA and is being carried forward. May their example of faithfulness in the face of adversity, and the great blessings that God has poured out on the LCCA over the last half-century encourage all of us to keep running strong until we cross the finish line.
Missionary John Roebke lives in Malawi
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
Caring for Body and Soul
If you need medical help, you want a care provider that not only understands what’s wrong with your body, but who can also relate to you as a human being. In the modern era of corporate hospitals and medical specialization, it’s a godsend to find a nurse with good “bedside manner” and the ability to connect with their patients. One of the goals of the School of Nursing at Wisconsin Lutheran College (WLC) is to instill in the hearts of nursing students Christian love and respect for patients regardless of their background. A vital step towards reaching that goal is two weeks of clinical work in Zambia, where the Wisconsin Synod has a well-established connection with the Lutheran Church of Central Africa (LCCA).
Since 2011, WLC nursing students have been travelling to Zambia as a part of their formal studies. Dr. Rebekah Carey, the first Chair of the School of Nursing at WLC, had served the Lutheran Medical Mission at Mwembezhi, so her familiarity with Zambia was beneficial when setting up the nursing trip. Most nursing programs in the United States offer some sort of cultural immersion experience, but at WLC the Zambia trip is a required part of the curriculum. Because of the longstanding relationship between the Wisconsin Synod and the LCCA, Zambia is a logical destination for these trips. The nursing students take advantage of housing at the Lusaka Seminary, and local WELS missionaries are available to provide invaluable logistical support as needed.
The majority of WLC’s students come from the Upper Midwest. For many of these future nurses, this trip is their first international experience. During their stay in Zambia, the students visit various health care sites in Lusaka run by both government and private agencies like the Special Hope Network, which provides services for children with disabilities. They also visited two primary schools, where the students taught on various health topics and conducted vision screening. The WLC Student Nurses Association collected over 2000 toothbrushes this past spring, which the nursing students distributed at the clinical sites during the trip.
Dr. Sheryl Scott is the current Chair of the School of Nursing at Wisconsin Lutheran College and has now made a total of four trips to Zambia with her students. Dr. Scott sees a clear connection between the nursing profession and Christian vocation. Christian Nurses are able to see physical symptoms, yet they also recognize the importance of ministering to the emotional and spiritual needs of the patient and the patient’s family. Observing health care professionals in the developing world exposes the students to people from a greatly different background than their own. Additionally, this experience helps students understand that even with limited resources, it is possible to provide patients with excellent care for their body and soul.
In 2012, Wisconsin Lutheran College graduated its first class of ten nurses. At this writing there are 80 students pursuing a major in nursing. During the first year of the nursing program, students are required to take prerequisite classes including chemistry, biology, psychology, English composition, speech and theology. Admission requirements for the nursing program include:
A cumulative GPA of 2.75
Criminal background check and drug screen
Minimum grade of C on prerequisite courses
Personal essay
Pre-admission exam
Faculty interview
The School of Nursing is served by four full-time called faculty, one part-time called faculty, adjunct clinical instructors, and a program coordinator. The nursing program is housed in Generac Hall, a state of the art facility that includes two nursing labs, two simulated patient care rooms and a simulation control center. WLC nursing students also have patient care experiences in a wide variety of clinical sites throughout the Milwaukee area during the junior and senior years of the program.
The Lutheran Church of Central Africa and the Wisconsin Synod Board for World Missions is thankful to play a small part in preparing these students for a lifetime of serving people’s physical and spiritual needs, whatever their background may be.
For more information about the nursing program at Wisconsin Lutheran College visit http://www.wlc.edu/Nursing/
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
Kingdom Workers in Malawi
The 1987 WELS Synod Convention encouraged the establishing of a lay organization to support home and world missions. The organization, now called “Kingdom Workers” (www.kingdomworkers.com) has been involved with Africa missions for a long time. Among the first projects associated with Kingdom Workers was supporting a full-time lay couple to assist the WELS mission in Zambia, Africa. In 2010 former WELS World Missionary Bill Meier became the national executive director of Kingdom Workers. Currently, Kingdom Workers partners with the Lutheran Church of Central Africa – Malawi Synod congregations to include people with disabilities in church and community life. This week’s post features Kingdom Workers staff members Dan and Liana Tyrrell, who manage and train local staff and volunteers, as well as coordinate short-term mission trips by WELS members to Malawi. Listen to Dan and Liana tell their story:
Although we had met briefly several years earlier, our relationship started once we were both living in Shanghai, China. Dan had been living in China for three years when Liana first arrived in Shanghai. Liana had grown up on the WELS mission field in Taiwan so had some experience in that part of the world as well. We were working as part of a team, teaching English, building relationships with Chinese friends, and studying the Bible in the evenings and on weekends. Our relationship grew in part out of a mutual love for the work we were doing, and for China in general – especially its people and food, and for travel.
After returning from China in 2014, we settled in Minneapolis for a year. When the opening to work with Kingdom Workers Malawi appeared, Liana applied since she was the one with a background in non-profit work and some community development experience in Kenya during her college days. We were not planning on going abroad again so soon after returning from China, however after conversations with Bill Meier and other Kingdom Workers leaders, we felt that God was leading us in the direction of Malawi. Once it became clear that both of us could use our gifts in positions with Kingdom Workers in Malawi, we made the decision to move after prayer and discussions with family.
We Plan, God Laughs
When we initially accepted positions with Kingdom Workers and began plans to move to Malawi, we had the usual things to take care of that a young couple might. Giving notice at our jobs, selling some possessions and putting some in storage, alerting our landlord that we would not renew our lease, spending extra time with family. These things were going smoothly, and we planned to move to Malawi in September of 2015. However, about one month before our departure date, God gave us what has been the biggest surprise of our lives so far. We found out that Liana was pregnant, and at our very first ultrasound discovered not one, but three beating hearts – triplets. The next weeks were a blur of shock, joy, uncertainty, and specialist appointments. After meeting with the specialist, we decided to keep the same departure date, but return to the US in a few months’ time for the remainder of the pregnancy, birth, and subsequent hospital stay.
Leaving Malawi after only being there for a few months was difficult. We had no idea how long we would be gone. We had been given a due date but triplets are rarely born full term. Just how early they would be born was out of our control, and so was how long they would be in the hospital after birth. We did not even know if a return would be possible at all – it was a very real possibility that one or more of our children would be born with medical needs that would prohibit an international move.
What followed was a period of giving up – giving up our plans, giving up stability, giving up ideas of a “perfect” pregnancy and birth story – giving up control, or the illusion of control. Giving those things up and realizing that they were never ours to begin with. All that we had – jobs, precious new lives inside Liana, a future in a new home – was all God’s in the first place. We also had to give up, in some ways, the plans that we had formed for where we thought the ministry in Malawi could go. In the short time we had been working for Kingdom Workers, we had learned about the amazing work being done to serve people with disabilities. We had gotten a chance to see the intense need for this work and see how far it still had (and has!) to go. We had met dedicated pastors and volunteers and staff, and we wanted to help set the direction and make a strategic plan. But, this period of being away and working remotely forced us to see was that we were not the drivers of this ministry. First and foremost, God was and is. He is going to take care of His lambs in Malawi whether we are involved or not. Just as we were being blessed with three new lives to take care of, God had also blessed us with the opportunity to be involved in this ministry in Malawi. It is His ministry, not ours. And our first task was not to come in, take charge and make changes. It was to listen, to learn, to get to know the leaders on the ground who had been doing this work before us. And what God showed us was that the physical distance between us and Malawi that was created as a result of Liana’s pregnancy was perhaps what we needed to truly listen and learn. Dan was still able to be very involved through the miracle of technology, but our physical absence meant that local volunteers and leaders were able to build the foundations of ownership of the Disability Ministry. That ownership is the key to making this ministry sustainable – not our presence!
Looking back, Liana’s pregnancy was a humbling time. A time to realize God is the Director, not us. And a time to be humbled by the amount of prayer and support we received from all over the world. From family and friends in the US, from those in our former home of China, and from our new home in Malawi. Our babies were born 11 weeks early and spent about three months in the hospital. When they were 6 months old, we were cleared by their doctors to return with them to Malawi. And if you’re reading this and wondering what a cross-continental flight (or two) is like with infant triplets, I will just say that we have learned it is much easier than a cross-continental flight with toddler triplets.
The Least of My Brothers and Sisters
Kingdom Workers mobilizes Christians to connect people to Jesus while addressing physical needs. The disability ministry in Malawi began in 2012 when former KW Field Manager Stefan Felgenhauer recognized that some people with disabilities were hidden in homes and not part of church or community life. Stefan began working with Jesus Cares Ministries to bring Worship at the Cross (worship designed for people with intellectual disabilities) to Malawi. A small group of Lutheran Pastors were willing to try to reach out to people with disabilities although they knew this would be very challenging in their communities. The Pastors organized volunteers from their church, met with village leaders, and started holding special worship services. It took time, and encouragement from God’s Word, for the volunteers to begin to actually interact and touch the people they were serving. Stigma which came from false beliefs about the causes of disabilities and had taken root in the communities took time to overcome.
The home-based care portion of the program began in 2015. Giving the volunteers tools to help children practice and learn new skills at home was a big turning point for the volunteers and program. Home-based care is also right in line with KW’s vision to partner in sustainable ways to address physical needs. In 2017, the LCCA leaders encouraged our KW Malawi team to focus our efforts on improving and expanding the disability ministry. Now, we are actively working with 12 disability outreach teams who serve over 500 people. Through the power of the Holy Spirit, people have been baptized and confirmed. Parents have been encouraged and shown ways to continue to help their children develop.
Although we were both hired for full time positions, after the triplets were born we decided that Liana would work part time and Dan would remain full time. We do our best to give Liana a day outside of the home to work from the KW Malawi office, but she is often seen sneaking into our home office to work remotely while our housekeeper, Esther, watches the kids. We have found that the key for Liana working during this season of life is to be realistic and honest about which tasks she can take on, while still taking care of 2-year-old triplets. We make it work in a large part thanks to Esther, who the children love, and to KW as an organization and allowing us to have flexible schedules!
Our roles with KW are indefinite and but our roles may change as we see developments in Malawi programs, in local leadership, and in other opportunities to serve. We will have to see how the Lord blesses and leads these outreach programs.
The work we are a part of would not be possible without our local team. Dave Duwe (Disability Outreach Coordinator), Tendai Lucio (Field Assistant), and Allena Chaima (Field Assistant) are all doing their best to support disability outreach teams. Our KW Malawi team would like to continue improving the support we provide to disability outreach teams and work with more LCCA churches throughout Malawi. We are working with about 10% of LCCA congregations right now in Malawi. More congregations would like to partner with us so we hope to increase this percentage significantly in the next few years. We are seeing our Malawian staff continue to take up more responsibilities in Malawi and we are encouraging this.
Kingdom Workers is supported by individual WELS members. Donated bicycles help volunteers visit homes to provide devotions and physical care. Donors also support the cost for training workshops, visits from our staff, and materials for disability outreach teams. You can also visit us in Malawi! We regularly offer service learning opportunities for mutual encouragement to take place. Find out more at www.kingdomworkers.com or contact the Kingdom Workers office directly at 414-771-6848.
Malawi is a country of incredible physical beauty, and its people are kind and welcoming. Its challenges are many, also – from damaging colonial policies that still affect the economy, to corruption in government, to many people living below the poverty line. Our encouragement to anyone who comes to Malawi or who is thinking about coming here is to take the time to listen to and encourage our fellow Christians here. It is easy to think we can enact change in a short amount of time, but the reality is change comes through building relationships and trust- and those things take time! And most importantly, change is not brought about by us or by our Malawian brothers and sisters – but by God.
Dan and Liana Tyrrell live in Blantyre, Malawi
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
Editor’s Note: Last summer I had the privilege of traveling to Malawi to observe the work being done through the Disability Ministry. Every volunteer I meet was absolutely thrilled to be sharing the Gospel through their service to those with disabilities. Pray that their work might continue, and that their service to others might spread the love of Jesus to even more people.